Saturday, February 7, 2026
ADVT 
National

Safety report expected after 11 killed in vehicle ramming at Vancouver festival

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Jul, 2025 11:49 AM
  • Safety report expected after 11 killed in vehicle ramming at Vancouver festival

The British Columbia government is expected to release a report today on ways to improve safety and security at events two months after 11 people were killed in a vehicle ramming at a Vancouver festival. 

Premier David Eby asked retired B.C. Supreme Court chief justice Christopher Hinkson to conduct the commission of inquiry. 

Attorney General Niki Sharma said last month that the government had received the report and would be releasing it as soon as possible, so people can feel safe attending and celebrating at events this summer. 

Eby said after the April 26 attack that Hinkson's report would help guide event organizers across B.C. to “maximize safety,” while not retreating from the fact that people want to gather. 

In addition to the 11 deaths, dozens of people were hurt as a vehicle raced down a street lined with food trucks as the Lapu Lapu Day festival was wrapping up.

The Union of B.C. Municipalities has said it made a submission to Hinkson, asking him to avoid using a "one-size-fits-all” framework, as local governments struggle with numerous responsibilities, and budgetary impacts could lead to some event cancellations. 

THE CANADIAN PRESS/Ethan Cairns

MORE National ARTICLES

Sikh protests set to continue in Calgary as Indian PM Modi arrives for G7 summit

Sikh protests set to continue in Calgary as Indian PM Modi arrives for G7 summit
Some Sikhs say they plan to continue protests in Calgary on Tuesday, condemning Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi as he visits the G7 leaders' summit.

Sikh protests set to continue in Calgary as Indian PM Modi arrives for G7 summit

Federal government says it will move open banking forward at 'earliest opportunity'

Federal government says it will move open banking forward at 'earliest opportunity'
The federal government says it will introduce legislation to implement open banking at its "earliest opportunity" as some advocates warn the project's momentum may have stalled.

Federal government says it will move open banking forward at 'earliest opportunity'

128-year-old shipwreck on Vancouver Island charred by fire

128-year-old shipwreck on Vancouver Island charred by fire
A shipwreck that has been part of Vancouver Island's history for more than a century is a charred skeleton after a fire earlier this month.

128-year-old shipwreck on Vancouver Island charred by fire

Canada pledges $4.3B in support for Ukraine as Carney, Zelenskyy meet at G7

Canada pledges $4.3B in support for Ukraine as Carney, Zelenskyy meet at G7
Prime Minister Mark Carney outlined $4.3 billion in new support for Ukraine's defence as he met with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on the sidelines of the G7 summit in Alberta on Tuesday.

Canada pledges $4.3B in support for Ukraine as Carney, Zelenskyy meet at G7

Alberta doctors association raises concerns over premier limiting free COVID vaccines

Alberta doctors association raises concerns over premier limiting free COVID vaccines
The organization representing Alberta doctors is joining health-care unions in raising concerns over Premier Danielle Smith’s decision to charge most Albertans for a COVID-19 vaccination this fall.

Alberta doctors association raises concerns over premier limiting free COVID vaccines

Lack of appropriate safeguards led to 23andMe data breach, joint investigation finds

Lack of appropriate safeguards led to 23andMe data breach, joint investigation finds
Inadequate security measures opened the door to a data breach discovered two years ago at genetic testing company 23andMe, Canada's privacy watchdog says.

Lack of appropriate safeguards led to 23andMe data breach, joint investigation finds