Friday, December 26, 2025
ADVT 
National

Event planners across Canada rethinking security practices following Vancouver attack

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Apr, 2025 11:26 AM
  • Event planners across Canada rethinking security practices following Vancouver attack

Event organizers across Canada say they're combing over their security practices in the wake of Saturday night's deadly attack on a Vancouver street festival, hoping to fill any gaps to protect attendees.

Politicians are also turning their attention to the issue, with British Columbia Premier David Eby saying he would call an independent commission to gather information about how other regions handle festival safety.

Eby says he wants to ensure residents of his province feel safe going out to community events this summer, despite the van attack at the Lapu Lapu Day festival that claimed 11 lives and injured dozens more.

Kelly Kurta, executive director the Greater Victoria Festival Society, says she got in touch with police and the fire department on Sunday morning to make sure there wasn't more they could do to secure the upcoming Victoria Day Parade.

She says their plans were already fairly comprehensive, but they might bring in more vehicles to barricade parade routes.

She says security can be costly: roughly 75 per cent of her budget goes to "risk management."

"You prepare, you anticipate, but nobody could have imagined what happened last Saturday," she said. "Nobody."

The tragedy's reach extends beyond the West Coast, with the CEO of industry group Festivals and Events Ontario saying he too is looking at safety issues after Saturday.

Dave MacNeil says those in the business always re-evaluate their procedures after an event is targeted.

That's mostly because they want to keep their clientele safe but also because insurers require robust security plans.

"We have to sit down and really look at it through the lens of what else could possibly happen, what could possibly go wrong. And every time something like that happens, wherever it is around the world, it always comes back to impact all of us," MacNeil said.

He said the high cost of security can make hosting large events difficult.

"Risk management is one of those things that's making it harder and harder to execute events," he said. "It's what's making them more and more expensive to execute, to insure."

Last year, the City of Toronto announced the Special Events Stabilization Initiative, a funding program meant to cover some expenses related to health, safety and security, including fire and paramedic services, and "hostile vehicle mitigation," which is a security measure meant to lower the threat of a criminal or terrorist attack.

The money was a one-time grant for organizers hosting events in an outdoor public space in 2024.

City spokeswoman Laura McQuillan pointed to that fund when asked about festival security, but didn't immediately say whether it would return in 2025.

She said that all event organizers are required to arrange a traffic management plan that includes barricades and "road closed" signs, as well as event marshals and security in those places.

"While hostile vehicle mitigation measures are not a formal requirement for every event, the City and its partners identify and assess potential threats during the event planning process, including identifying high-risk events where hostile vehicle mitigation measures should be implemented," McQuillan wrote in an email.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick

MORE National ARTICLES

Nanaimo woman charged in fatal parking lot crash involving modified truck

Nanaimo woman charged in fatal parking lot crash involving modified truck
A woman in Nanaimo has been charged with dangerous operation of a vehicle causing death partially due to what police say were modifications made to her truck. RCMP say the 24-year-old driver was parked at Woodgrove Mall on March 21 last year when an 85-year-old woman parked her vehicle beside the truck.

Nanaimo woman charged in fatal parking lot crash involving modified truck

Trudeau says Canada will push back on U.S. tariffs with Trump administration

Trudeau says Canada will push back on U.S. tariffs with Trump administration
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Tuesday Ottawa will work to convince U.S. President Donald Trump that his "unacceptable" steel and aluminum tariffs will hurt both countries. A senior government official said that Trudeau spoke with U.S. Vice-President JD Vance about the impact steel tariffs would have in Ohio, which Vance previously represented in the U.S. Senate.

Trudeau says Canada will push back on U.S. tariffs with Trump administration

Canada's privacy czar launches investigation into student information data breach

Canada's privacy czar launches investigation into student information data breach
The federal privacy watchdog says he has launched a formal investigation into a cybersecurity breach involving a student information system used across Canada. Privacy commissioner Philippe Dufresne says the probe was launched after his office received a breach report from U.S.-based PowerSchool, which provides the affected software, and a complaint about the incident.

Canada's privacy czar launches investigation into student information data breach

Leger poll: Carney as leader would have Liberals tied with Conservatives

Leger poll: Carney as leader would have Liberals tied with Conservatives
A new poll suggests that if Mark Carney wins the Liberal leadership race, he would erase the massive lead the Conservatives have enjoyed for the past year and a half. A Leger survey suggests a Carney-led party would boost Liberal support by six points to 37 per cent, putting them in a dead heat with the Tories.

Leger poll: Carney as leader would have Liberals tied with Conservatives

B.C. elementary music teacher suspended after child pornography charge

B.C. elementary music teacher suspended after child pornography charge
A Vancouver Island school district says an elementary school teacher has been charged with accessing child pornography. Court records show the man faces a charge for an offence alleged to have been committed last March in Central Saanich, B.C.

B.C. elementary music teacher suspended after child pornography charge

Teens body recovered after fall through ice on B.C.'s Shuswap Lake

Teens body recovered after fall through ice on B.C.'s Shuswap Lake
The body of an 18-year-old man has been recovered from Shuswap Lake in British Columbia's Interior after he fell through the ice over the weekend. Police say in a statement that the RCMP's underwater recovery team found the teen's body on Monday.

Teens body recovered after fall through ice on B.C.'s Shuswap Lake