Dr. Bonnie Henry To LNG Canada: Your Worksite Is A COVID ‘Health Hazard’

New B.C. health order restricts workers at the Kitimat gas operation.

Shortly before B.C. rang in the new year, Dr. Bonnie Henry sent a stern message to LNG Canada in Kitimat, warning that its worksite poses serious health risks to the province. 

“I have reason to believe and do believe,” B.C.’s provincial health officer wrote to LNG Canada on December 29, “that the risk of an outbreak of COVID-19 arising from the mass return of large numbers of workers to worksites and industrial camps associated with the Projects constitutes a health hazard under the Public Health Act.” 

Source: Twitter / John Horgan on tour of LNG Canada on January 17, 2020

The provincial order was also sent to the Coastal Gas Link pipeline, the Site C Dam, the Trans Mountain pipeline and the Rio Tinto Kemano project. 

It warns that these projects have become potent sources of coronavirus outbreaks, potentially causing “transmission of COVID-19 to surrounding communities, including Indigenous communities, increasing the risk of hospitalizations, intensive care admissions, and deaths in the Northern Health Authority region.”

Source: BC Hydro / Site C worker accomodation

The order limits the workforce at these five industrial projects to prevent COVID spread from happening. From an initial baseline of 450 workers, LNG Canada can increase its workforce to 1100 by late January. 

But before this can happen, the order explains, “the Project Manager must submit a restart plan to me, and to the Chief Medical Health Officer for Northern Health Authority, which sets out how the increase in the number of workers will be managed so as not to increase the risk of transmission of COVID-19, both onsite and in the surrounding communities.”

The Kitimat-based LNG project has been a major source of outbreaks in the Skeena Region, resulting in dozens of cases over the past few months. An additional outbreak in December, which caused 16 employees to be infected, hasn’t resulted in new cases over the holidays, according to Northern Health

Written by The Skeena

2 Comments

Leave a Reply
  1. It was asked by communities to shut these projects down to minimize traffic coming in and out when this panedemic first began for the reason of communities not having proper health care nearby… that fact was ignored they want the project finished. This fact was ignored now theres is a rise in cases in small communities coming from the camp sites … they neglected to consider health care facilities dont exist in small communities.. its a no-brainer why put them at risk? They were put at risk so tgese big corporations can still profit, why is it big corpations have more say than society? They will never include input or knowledge from small communities were in a colonized setting where they have always had a plan.

  2. Dr. Bonnie Henry, you missed the mark on this one because you your lenses were clouded by your bias and pressure to keep LNG going. It is like waiting for someone to die, before making the decision. Be proactive instead of reactive. Or maybe that is just a continuation of the governments strategy to eliminate First Nations.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

ADVERTISEMENT

Episode 5 of ‘Fighting COVID in the Skeena’: Scientists Answer Your Questions About The Vaccine

PHOTOS: Watch History Being Made As First Terrace Residents Get Vaccinated