Alberta company fined after worker dies of carbon monoxide poisoning
NC Equipment Ltd. — a heavy equipment rental company and dealership based in Nisku, Alta., — has been convicted of a single contravention under Alberta's Occupational Health and Safety Code in the 2023 death of its employee.
The company pleaded guilty to a safety violation for failing to ensure that the equipment used by the man would perform its intended function safely.
According to court documents, Jeffery Simmons died on Feb. 22, 2023, in or near Edmonton, while conducting sandblasting work for the company.
Investigators determined that he was using an air respirator equipped with a supplied air system when he was exposed to carbon monoxide.
A co-worker found him unresponsive on site. He was taken to hospital in critical, life-threatening condition but later died.
The risks of carbon monoxide poisoning are well known. Exposure to the colourless, odourless gas in excessive levels can prove toxic, resulting in arrhythmia, seizures or death.
According to the court documents, Simmons had been using a sandblasting system which included a portable air compressor, a Radex airline filter, a Nova blasting safety respirator, and a Mod-U-Blast sandblasting machine.
NC Equipment Ltd. was convicted July 14 and ordered to pay a total of $330,000, inclusive of a victim surcharge.
The company had been charged with a total of 22 counts, but all other charges were dropped.
According to the company's website, the family-run operation rents and sells heavy equipment.
When reached by phone Thursday, company officials declined to comment.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
11 hours ago
- Yahoo
Members of 'theft ring' suspected of registering stolen vehicles using loopholes
The Alberta RCMP have laid charges against members of an organized vehicle theft ring that relied on registering stolen vehicles under the names of unsuspecting individuals. In a news release Wednesday, RCMP stated that this group was registering stolen vehicles with fraudulent vehicle identification numbers (VINs) by primarily exploiting loopholes in Alberta Registries' Third-Party Authorization System. It can be used by people involved in organized crime to legitimize stolen, "re-VINned" vehicles. As a result of an investigation by the RCMP Auto Theft Unit that began in December 2024, five individuals from Edmonton and two from High River, Alta., have been charged with a combined total of 99 criminal charges. RCMP Staff Sgt. Luke Halvorson said the individuals who have been charged are not directly part of a named gang, but he said RCMP believe they have connections to a criminal organization. Police said at least 30 stolen vehicles have been linked to the charged individuals, and six of these vehicles have been recovered so far. According to Hanna Beydoun, the Insurance Bureau of Canada's director of auto policy, re-VINning refers to when a person illegally alters the Vehicle Identification Number to "hide the true identity of that car, mislabelling it essentially." WATCH | EPS hopes to address vehicle thefts in Edmonton: RCMP said that more than one kilogram of cocaine, more than 200 OxyContin pills, and nearly $10,000 in cash were also seized. Since the beginning of the investigation in 2024, the RCMP Auto Theft Unit has identified and is working to locate more than 150 registered stolen vehicles that have been re-VINned. Overall, the wider investigation by the Auto Theft Unit has resulted in the recovery of approximately $1.9 million in stolen vehicles in Alberta. "We're alleging that someone would go and steal a vehicle, then someone would create a VIN for it, and then utilize one of the other people in the organization to register that vehicle through the third-party authorization system, therefore legitimizing that vehicle," said Halvorson. Halvorson said thieves will sometimes insure the stolen vehicles once they are registered, and report them stolen and collect the claim payment. "So, they essentially steal an $80,000 vehicle, insure it, say it's stolen, [then] they still have the $80,000 vehicle and the $80,000," said Halvorson. He said that criminals will also often sell the stolen vehicles that have been re-VINned. "They've sold them to unsuspecting citizens who are now driving a stolen vehicle that could be seized at any time." Halvorson said the RCMP is starting to see a shift from criminals stealing vehicles to commit other crimes or just to be used as transportation, to more criminals starting to register and re-VIN stolen vehicles. Beydoun said criminals are starting to come to Alberta to take advantage of these registry loopholes that have been closed in other parts of the country. "We're seeing criminals start moving west. In Ontario … they've tightened up their provincial registry system, [so] we're seeing them move west into Alberta." "[Ontario is] making it harder for people to register fraudulent vehicles, which is what we wanted to see," said Beydoun. "Over the past year, we did see about a 21 per cent decrease in theft claims in Ontario, whereas we're not seeing the same decrease or change in Alberta." Beydoun said the Insurance Bureau of Canada wants the Alberta government to begin prohibiting VIN override functions at provincial registries, which she says allows criminals to enter an illegitimate VIN for a vehicle. She also recommended that the Alberta government restrict third-party vehicle registrations to just dealerships. "Until those loopholes in provincial registries are closed, the auto theft crisis is only going to continue to persist and worsen," said Beydoun.
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Police watchdog clears Edmonton officer who hit man multiple times during 2023 arrest
Alberta's main police oversight agency has cleared an Edmonton police officer who punched a man multiple times during an arrest in 2023. The man had tried to punch the officer after they spoke for a moment, so the seven punches the officer landed were reasonable to defend himself and make the arrest, according to a decision by Matthew Block, assistant executive director of the Alberta Serious Incident Response Team (ASIRT), that was released Tuesday. As a result, Block found there are no reasonable grounds to believe an offence was committed, the decision says. An Edmonton Police Service (EPS) spokesperson issued a statement Tuesday, thanking ASIRT for the review and its findings. A video of the incident, which triggered the investigation, lacked context, the statement said. But EPS appreciates that ASIRT found evidence that "provided this context and subsequently confirmed there are no reasonable grounds to believe that an offence was committed." ASIRT investigates incidents where police may have caused serious injury or death, as well as "serious and sensitive" allegations of police misconduct, such as sexual assault, fraud and obstruction of justice. Its investigation into this incident, which occurred Feb. 22, 2023, started after EPS learned a video of the arrest was circulating online and then informed the Alberta director of law enforcement. According to the ASIRT decision, police had caught the man speeding significantly and ignored speed bumps. Video shows a white vehicle parking smoothly into a parking spot. A police cruiser parks behind it seconds later. A man gets out of his vehicle and walks toward the cruiser. The officer behind the wheel, who was the subject of the ASIRT investigation, gets out too. They appear to talk with each other. WATCH | Video of Edmonton police officer's use of force during 2023 arrest: The decision notes that, at this point, the man and police officers provided conflicting accounts. The man, during an interview with ASIRT just over a year after the incident, said he approached the vehicle calmly, asking what was going on and how he could help, before the officer ordered him to return to his vehicle. The officers told ASIRT that the man was confrontational and told them to leave the property. The subject officer declined an interview, as is his right, but supplied ASIRT with multiple reports and his notes. The witness officer did an interview and provided her notes and reports. The video shows the man return to his vehicle. The decision says he told ASIRT he was taking the keys out of the ignition. But the subject officer, who followed him, said the man seemed to be reaching under the seat or console, which led him to believe he may be getting a weapon or hiding something. The officer put his hand on his gun and ordered the man to show his hands, the ASIRT decision says. He said the man complied but kept acting aggressively, so he told him that they had to discuss the driving pattern. The man eventually steps away from the officer again until he is hidden in the frame by a pillar. Another officer steps out of the cruiser. The man had told ASIRT that the first officer permitted him to leave, and he didn't hear the officer tell him to stop. But the officer said he had told the man he was not allowed to leave, the decision says. When the man reappears in the video, he is walking away. The first officer jogs up to him. According to the decision, the officer then grabs the man's left arm and spins him video shows a struggle, during which the man puts his hands up, either to punch the officer or to shield himself. The officer then lands at least four punches before the man drops to the ground. He hits him four more times before he and his partner make the arrest. The man's injuries included a concussion and marks on his face, a left-shoulder injury, cuts from the handcuffs and post-traumatic stress disorder, the decision says. Man swung first: ASIRT Whether or not the man tried to punch the police officer was a major factor in this investigation, said Block, from ASIRT, in the decision. Under the Criminal Code of Canada, police officers have the right to use as much force as is necessary to perform their duties, and that force must be reasonable and proportionate given the perceived threat. Officers, like anyone else, also have the right to defend themselves. The man and officer accused each other of throwing the first punch, according to the decision, and the witness officer told ASIRT she may have missed that part of the conflict while reaching for her stun gun. Block found, however, that the video showed the man took what "appears to be a fighting stance" and clearly tried to punch the officer at least once, the decision says. He also noted that the officer's punches happened within several seconds. As a result, the reasons for using such force would likely succeed in this case, the decision says. So there is no reason to believe the officer committed an offence. Lawyer disagrees The man's lawyer Heather Steinke-Attia, however, disagrees with Block's assessment. "It determines — and focuses on — my client reaching his arm out in front of him, and determining that that was an attempted punch at the officer," Steinke-Attia told CBC News. "He instinctively put his arms up in anticipation that he was about to get punched — which anyone would do — and ASIRT refused to give any consideration to that possibility," she said. The man was charged with obstruction and assaulting a police officer, and issued two traffic tickets — although the charges were withdrawn on Jan. 12, 2024, the decision says. Steinke-Attia felt the decision unfairly weighed the length of time between the incident and when her client spoke with ASIRT. He likely would have been instructed by his then-lawyer to exercise his right to remain silent until the charges were withdrawn, she said. The EPS professional standards branch will review the decision and determine next steps, per the provincial Police Service Regulation, its statement said. Shortly after the incident, the officers' duty status was under review. An EPS spokesperson confirmed Tuesday that they are both on active duty.
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
Calgary sees big decline in crime severity, now well below the national average
Alberta's crime severity index — a measure used by Statistics Canada to track the seriousness of crime across the country — fell sharply in 2024, while Calgary's index reached a near-historic low. "Crime was nine-per-cent less severe in Alberta in 2024 than it was in 2023," said Warren Silver, an analyst with StatsCan, which released the new figures Tuesday. He attributes the drop to fewer break-and-enters, thefts and sexual assaults across the province. "And additionally there were 19 fewer homicides in Alberta than the previous year," Silver said. The crime severity index for Calgary, specifically, fell by 14 per cent to 62.3. That's now well below the national average of 77.9, which marks a notable turnaround from five years earlier, when the city was well above the national average. Calgary's index is also near its lowest point ever recorded, which was 61.1 in 2014. Insp. Travis Juska with the Calgary Police Service says those numbers are encouraging, but he recognizes not all Calgarians necessarily feel safer. "Just because we've seen a decrease in certain amounts of property crime or violent crime, doesn't mean that a Calgarian might feel safe or unsafe in a setting that they are somewhere in the city," he said. The StatsCan data shows crime rates (measured in terms of incidents per 100,000 people) are generally down across most types of offences in Calgary. But the rate of violent crime, while down from 2023, remains significantly higher than it was at its low point in 2013. Crime severity also dropped significantly in Lethbridge, falling 19 per cent year-over-year to an index score of 105.5. Mayor Blaine Hyggen attributed the downward trend to recent investments in the city's police service, including 26 new police officers and four new peace officers who were sworn in last year. Lethbridge Police Service Deputy Chief Gerald Grobmeier said the city saw reductions in break and enters, mischief, and car theft, in particular. Red Deer also saw a big drop in its crime severity index, which was down 20 per cent year-over-year to 118.7. Edmonton, meanwhile, was down 5 per cent to 101.1. Despite these decreases, Red Deer, Lethbridge and Edmonton remained on the higher end of crime severity across the 40 cities that Statistics Canada tracks. The overall crime severity index for Alberta remained the third-highest of all the provinces, at 95.6. Only Manitoba, at 141.2, and Saskatchewan, at 153.9, were higher. StatsCan calculates the index by assigning all police-reported crimes a weight based on their seriousness, which is determined by actual sentences handed down by courts. More serious crimes are assigned higher weights, less serious offences are assigned lower weights. The year 2006 is taken as a baseline and assigned a national index score of 100.