WorkSafeBC investigating crane incident at Oakridge in Vancouver - Action News
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British Columbia

WorkSafeBC investigating crane incident at Oakridge in Vancouver

A crane incident in Vancouver's Oakridge neighbourhood Tuesday is the latest in a wave of crane mishaps across Lower Mainland construction sites.

Last week, a crane's mechanical failure temporarily shut down the VCC-Clark SkyTrain station

A highrise building under construction against a blue sky. There's a crane next to the building.
New regulations for tower cranes came into effect in B.C. on Oct. 1. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

WorkSafeBCsays it is investigating a crane incident in Vancouver's Oakridge neighbourhood, two days after new provincial regulations for tower cranes came into effect.

A spokesperson said in an email that the workplace safety agency had been notified of anincident inthe 600 block of West 41st Avenueat about 2 p.m. PTWednesday. The address is the site of the huge Oakridge Park redevelopment.

WorkSafeBC sent an officer to the siteand is investigating what happened. It said itwould not releasespecific details of the incident until its investigation is done, but no injuries were reported.

It's the latest in a wave of crane mishaps across Lower Mainland construction sites, including a fatal incident at the Oakridge site in February, when a worker was killed after a tower cranedropped its load onto a building that fell onto a person below,killing them.

Last week, a mechanical failure of a construction crane forced the temporaryclosure of surrounding roads and the neighbouring VCC-Clark SkyTrain station.

New crane regulations

The new regulations will give WorkSafeBC more information on where and when tower cranes are used in the province and help the company ensure they are operated by qualified workers. They came into effect on Tuesday.

Under the new regulations, employers must submit notice to WorkSafeBCtwo weeks before erecting, climbing, repositioning and dismantling tower cranes.

They must also inform the agencywhen the work will happen, who is responsible for supervising the work, and what the supervisor's qualifications are.

Earlier this year, WorkSafeBC conducted a review and consultations to address safety issues after a series of crane incidents. Thereview resulted in the new regulations, plus astrategy that aims to improve crane safety in B.C.

Recommendations from the strategy include a review of the existing crane operator certification program and expanding the agency's existing crane inspection team.

The fatal incident at Oakridge Park in Februaryis still under investigation by WorkSafeBC.

Through a freedom of information request, CBC News unearthed a series of complaints from workers about safety at the sitebetween Jan. 1, 2023, and Feb. 29, 2024.

WATCH | Series of crane incidents in Vancouver:

FOI documents show list of crane incidents at Vancouver construction site

2 months ago
Duration 3:52
CBC News has obtained documents through a freedom of information request that show numerous crane incidents were documented at the Oakridge construction site over the course of a year. As Jon Hernandez reports, workers had raised concerns about several near misses at the site before a woman was killed in a crane incident in February.