Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
National

KPU Tech students honour fallen workers

Darpan News Desk, 27 Apr, 2016 09:58 AM

    Students at KPU Tech built a brick installation to pay tribute to the B.C. workers who died on the job in 2015.

    The installation – consisting of 122 bricks, or one for each life lost last year – was unveiled last week in advance of the Day of Mourning April 28.

    The annual Day of Mourning is held on April 28 across Canada to remember the workers who lost their lives on the job, and to renew Canada’s commitment to creating healthy and safe workplaces.

    According to WorkSafe BC, work-related death claims were highest in construction, wood and paper products, and transportation and related services in 2015.

    “It’s important for new workers entering the trades to acknowledge that their health and safety must always be paramount,” said Brian Haugen, dean in KPU’s Faculty of Trades. “That’s why we felt it was so important to deliver this message in a way that will mean something to our students, and that they will remember when they graduate and go on to hold positions in these subsectors.”

    Day of Mourning ceremonies are held throughout B.C. and co-hosted by the B.C. Federation of Labour, the Business Council of B.C. and WorkSafe BC.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Parents Of Dead Provincial Inmates Grieve As Demands For Accountability Rebuffed

    Parents Of Dead Provincial Inmates Grieve As Demands For Accountability Rebuffed
    "I want to know how he died. I know he could have been saved. He didn't deserve to die like this," says the 64-year-old resident of Sydney Mines, N.S.

    Parents Of Dead Provincial Inmates Grieve As Demands For Accountability Rebuffed

    Messages Of Support, Well-Wishes Pour In For Rob Ford As Mayor Battles Cancer

    Messages of support are pouring in for Rob Ford as the former Toronto mayor goes through a "difficult time" in his battle with cancer.

    Messages Of Support, Well-Wishes Pour In For Rob Ford As Mayor Battles Cancer

    Homeless Youth With Pets Less Likely To Be Depressed, Use Hard Drugs

    Homeless Youth With Pets Less Likely To Be Depressed, Use Hard Drugs
    A new study suggests that homeless youth who keep pets have lower levels of depression than their counterparts who are without a dog, cat, or even rat by their side.

    Homeless Youth With Pets Less Likely To Be Depressed, Use Hard Drugs

    Parties Accuse Each Other Of Over-promising In Manitoba Election Campaign

    Parties Accuse Each Other Of Over-promising In Manitoba Election Campaign
    NDP Leader Greg Selinger says the Liberal promise to institute full-day kindergarten across the province would cost a lot more than the $50 million a year they say it will

    Parties Accuse Each Other Of Over-promising In Manitoba Election Campaign

    Accused In Murder Of Nova Scotia Officer Confessed To Crime: Police Affidavit

    Accused In Murder Of Nova Scotia Officer Confessed To Crime: Police Affidavit
    Christopher Calvin Garnier is facing charges of second-degree murder and indecently interfering with a dead body in connection with the death of 36-year-old Catherine Campbell in September.

    Accused In Murder Of Nova Scotia Officer Confessed To Crime: Police Affidavit

    Oil Industry Downturn Makes For Low Bidding For Stampede Chuckwagon Ads

    Oil Industry Downturn Makes For Low Bidding For Stampede Chuckwagon Ads
    The 45-year-old chuckwagon driver was one of the first to lose his job in 2015 in community relations at a major oil and gas company after 15 years on the job.

    Oil Industry Downturn Makes For Low Bidding For Stampede Chuckwagon Ads