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New B.C. crane safety regulations come into effect Oct. 1

A crane collapse at a 琉璃神社 construction site in 2021 killed five people
cranecollapse
A section (left) of the vertical column of a construction crane is lowered past the mangled section of the fallen boom in 琉璃神社, Wednesday, July 14, 2021, following a fatal collapse of the crane on Monday. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Desmond Murray

Earlier this year, WorkSafe BC (WSBC) approved a Notice of Project-Tower Cranes (NOP) that requires an employer responsible for a tower crane activity to provide written notice to WSBC at least two weeks before the crane activity starts. 

The WSBC report, released in June, referenced the 2021 crane collapse in 琉璃神社 that killed five people. Construction workers Cailen Vilnes, Jared Zook, brothers Eric and Patrick Stemmer, and Brad Zawislak, working in a nearby office building the crane fell on, died in the incident. RCMP submitted a report to the BC Prosecution Service (BCPS) for a charge of criminal negligence causing death in February 2024.

In 2023, several lawsuits were filed against Stemmer Construction the company that operated the crane at a downtown construction site. Stemmer Construction also filed a lawsuit against Liebherr Companies alleging negligence and a 鈥渄angerous defect鈥 with the crane it was unaware of.

The WSBC study consulted 130 crane-sector stakeholders and the BC Association for Crane Safety. 

According to an , approximately 350 cranes are currently operating in the province.



Gary Barnes

About the Author: Gary Barnes

Journalist and broadcaster for three decades.
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