
Union pleads for action four years after B.C. crane collapse that killed five people
BURNABY — Officials from a B.C. construction union say it’s been four years since a crane collapse killed five people in Kelowna, and their families and the industry are still waiting for answers from WorkSafeBC about what happened, and from prosecutors about possible criminal charges.
The International Union of Operating Engineers Local 115, which represents hundreds of crane operators in the province, says it’s calling on the BC Prosecution Service to move forward with a criminal trial to “deliver justice to the victims’ families.”
The union says there’s been four more crane collapses since the tragedy in Kelowna on July 12, 2021, that killed Cailen Vilness, Jared Zook, brothers Patrick and Eric Stemmer and Brad Zawislak, who was killed when the crane fell on the building next door.
Josh Towsley, the union local’s assistant business manager, says Kelowna RCMP’s investigation recommended that prosecutors lay a charge of criminal negligence causing death more than a year ago, and WorkSafeBC has also probed the crane collapse but has not released its investigation report.