Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
National

Two-Thirds Of Snowmobilers Who Died In Avalanches Over Past 5 Years From Alberta

Darpan News Desk, 03 Mar, 2017 10:58 AM
    VANCOUVER — All the avalanches that killed snowmobilers over the past five years occurred in British Columbia, but two-thirds of the victims were from Alberta.
     
    Avalanche Canada says March is the deadliest month for snowslides and it is focusing its safety message on Alberta's snowmobilers this year.
     
    The avalanche safety organization says of the 45 people who were killed in avalanches over the past five years, 24 were snowmobiling.
     
    It says about 66 per cent of the snowmobiling victims were male Alberta residents, and of those, 73 per cent were from communities within 150 kilometres of Edmonton.
     
    Last year, 12 of the 15 people who died in avalanches were snowmobilers, including five Alberta men who died in a major slide near McBride, B.C., in January 2016.
     
    Curtis Pawliuk, the general manager of the Valemount and Area Recreation District, a popular destination for Alberta snowmobilers, says far too often he sees terrain choices that do not fit the conditions.
     
     
    "These people are getting lucky. While the snowmobile community has come a long way, we need to start seeing greater buy-in and respect for the hazards of the backcountry," he says in a statement.
     
    Gilles Valade, executive director of Avalanche Canada, says unlike other user groups, snowmobiling avalanche deaths are showing a clear pattern.
     
    "When we see such a cluster in terms of place of residence, it raises a concern that our safety messages aren't reaching the people who clearly need it most," he says.
     
    Valade urges anyone going into the backcountry to take an avalanche skills training course offered by his organization. More than 8,000 people take the training each season, but less than 15 per cent are snowmobilers, he says.
     
    Avalanche Canada says everyone in the backcountry needs to have an avalanche transceiver, probe and shovel, and is asking people to check its website for training courses and avalanche conditions.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Federal Government Approves Three Supervised Injection Sites In Montreal

    Canada currently has two drug injection sites in Canada — both in Vancouver — and existing laws allow such sites to operate only in exceptional circumstances.

    Federal Government Approves Three Supervised Injection Sites In Montreal

    Vancouver Police Appeal For Public’s Help To Solve Homicide

    Vancouver Police Appeal For Public’s Help To Solve Homicide
    The VPD’s Major Crime Section is appealing for the public’s help to solve the Wednesday night homicide in Stanley Park.

    Vancouver Police Appeal For Public’s Help To Solve Homicide

    Health Ministry Gives Nod For Patient Care Tower In Kamloops, B.C.

    Health Ministry Gives Nod For Patient Care Tower In Kamloops, B.C.
    Health Minister Terry Lake says the government expects work on the $417-million project to begin in 2018

    Health Ministry Gives Nod For Patient Care Tower In Kamloops, B.C.

    Imam Hassan Guillet Says Speech That Was Re-tweeted By J.K. Rowling Came From His Heart

    Imam Hassan Guillet Says Speech That Was Re-tweeted By J.K. Rowling Came From His Heart
    An imam who spoke at the funerals for three Quebec mosque shooting victims says he believes his words have become popular on social media because his message came from the heart.

    Imam Hassan Guillet Says Speech That Was Re-tweeted By J.K. Rowling Came From His Heart

    Shafia Brother Convicted Of Killing 4 Women Asks Top Court To Hear His Case

    Shafia Brother Convicted Of Killing 4 Women Asks Top Court To Hear His Case
    Hamed Shafia and his parents were found guilty in January 2012 of four counts of first-degree murder — killings their trial judge described as being motivated by their "twisted concept of honour."

    Shafia Brother Convicted Of Killing 4 Women Asks Top Court To Hear His Case

    Judge To Give Verdict For Winnipeg Woman Accused Of Hiding Dead Babies In Locker

    Judge To Give Verdict For Winnipeg Woman Accused Of Hiding Dead Babies In Locker
    A judge is to give his decision today in the case of a woman charged with disposing of the remains of six infants in a Winnipeg storage locker.

    Judge To Give Verdict For Winnipeg Woman Accused Of Hiding Dead Babies In Locker