Tuesday, 31 May 2016

Competition for the Arctic!

     With global warming in effect, this has started to melt the ice and snow in the Arctic. The Arctic is estimated to hold the world's largest remaining untapped gas reserve. Currently only a few countries have a piece of the Arctic to claim to be theirs, but most of the Arctic is neutral ground.

    Why does this matter?

   With millions of people using gas to do their basic needs everyday, natural gas will not last forever. Once gas and oil is used, you cannot get it back. With the Arctic potentially holding the most remaining natural gas left on this planet, this could be an international problem as many countries will be fighting for this land.

How will this effect our environment?

   If an oil spill were to happen in the Arctic, it would truly be almost impossible to clean up as there is no effective way to clean up oil in icy water. Also, it would take days for help to come, as the Arctic is very hard to get to. Finally, ocean noise could injure marine mammals because they use sound to navigate.

   In conclusion, with the Arctic melting it could potentially be a disaster as many countries try to get their natural gas, which could hurt the environment and animals nearby.



Suburban Sprawl, Its Causes, and Its Effects on Your Area

http://www.useful-community-development.org/suburban-sprawl.html



This article is is focused on the effects of suburban sprawl. Suburbs are cheaper to live in than compared to the city. They are desirable places to live and raise a family while having a lot of open space whether it be from the open roads to your front yard. Suburbs have many similar housing designs with most of them being fairly close to each other.The people are friendly and are apart of their community.Its just like living in the city but cheaper, quieter,and more comfortable,also buying goods coasts less.Those are just the positive parts of living in the suburbs and there are many negatives.Suburbs are usually being built on excellent farmland which is causing less and less crops being harvested each year.If your jib is in the city you would have to drive there but there would be many others doing the same thing causing lots of traffic,air pollution, and would cause you to spend more on gas money while wasting some of your time. Houses in the suburbs maybe cheap to buy but building those houses in the first place are a lot more expensive. If you live in a new suburbs but the metropolitan area continues to sprawl soon enough it will be your housing that will be considered obsolete and while the government loses money. There are more reasons why suburbs are a bad development and to stop more of them being built is by having more development around the edges of cities instead.

Terrifying footage captures the moment an entire truck is swallowed by a sinkhole in the middle of a Chinese city 
Shocker: The disaster only affected the unlucky truck, which passed by the section of road at wrong moment
A cement truck was traveling over a road in Tiantai, Zhejiang, east China well a huge sinkhole opened up under the truck and swallowed it. The driver escaped the vehicle as the back trailer was overturned and splintered. Traffic video cameras captured the incident and released it to the public. The road has been closed down and city has not giving out word of when it will be back up. 



  • Sinkhole shuts down northbound I-5 near Tracy

    Caltrans Officials have shut down all northbound lanes of Interstate 5 because of a sinkhole that opened up. The sinkhole opened up at 11 am and is near highway 132. The sinkhole has reported to be 5 feet wide in diameter. It is not know what has caused the sink hole at this time. 

    http://www.abc10.com/news/sinkhole-shuts-down-northbound-i-5-near-tracy/225028715

     Global Warming’s Terrifying New Chemistry





    http://www.thenation.com/article/global-warming-terrifying-new-chemistry/

    Global Warming’s Terrifying New Chemistry

    The article titled as Global Warming's Terrifying New Chemistry, talks about how methane is taking the place of carbon dioxide due to companies shutting down use of coal fired factories, and replaced with ones that burn natural gases. The reason being that these types of factories release less carbon dioxide but the problem with that is studies show that these natural gas infrastructures are leaking large amounts of methane gas into the atmosphere.The leaks have enough methane to completely wipe out most of the gains Obama administration’s work on climate change has done. This effects Canada because we are America's neighboring country and with all that methane being blow north it will effect us as well.We should care about this not just because of the amount of pollution being made or how it would effect global warming in a disastrous way but to our safety as well. Methane is a fire hazard so unexpectedly a fire could go off, secondly it can effect humans in terrible ways such as sickness,vomiting, nausea,even frostbite (turns exposed skin whitish/yellowish), and intestinal pains. That is why we should care because of all these reasons.










    Aurora borealis

    Aurora Borealis
    Canada's northern latitude makes it an ideal place to catch the aurora borealis. Created when charged particles from the sun collide with Earth's upper atmosphere, auroras vary in color from red to green to blue and vary in shape from drapes to arcs to bands.

    “Into the bowl of the midnight sky / Violet, amber and rose…” Famed gold rush poet, Robert Service, was inspired by the North and enthralled by the northern lights.
    Those same mesmerizing skies arrive each fall as darkness returns to Yukon nights. You might first see a hint of neon colour, then a jagged burst of green, and soon you're transfixed by shimmering aurora borealis. Dependent on auroral activity and clear skies, every appearance of the northern lights is special.  
     http://www.travelyukon.com/Explore/Northern-Lights
    House prices in Canada have jumped through the roof!

          According to CBCNEWS, house prices in Canada have risen by 15% in March 2016. Since March 2015 the average house price has risen by 15% to $508, 567.

         Why Care?

         If a family were to buy a house, this could be tricky for the family since house prices have increased quite a bit. Houses that you were to think are perfect, might just be too much for your budget. This could force families to move to a different house, that is not as comfortable as the previous house that you looked at.

    What could you do?

        Nowadays, there are many different ways of buying or making your new home, that is much cheaper, such as a house made out of recycled material, or a house that is shared by many other people. These types of houses will help you get away from those expensive houses in the city and help you save thousands of dollars! If you don't mind living with other people or living in a house made from recycled material, then these two options are definitely the way to go.


    Monday, 30 May 2016

    Climate Change!

    Why should Canadians be more aware of climate change?

          Climate change has been a large topic in many countries around the world as it will affect everyone! As most people know, our world is warming up with the affects of us humans and/or natural process. This has been melting snow and ice in the northern hemisphere, increasing the ocean level.

    What should us Canadians expect from Climate change?

          Canadians should be expecting an increase in the fishing industry as fish populations are expected to increase. Also, some northern and remote communities should find it easy to harvest food and hunt food, but for some other communities they might notice finding food is harder, as our world continues to heat up.

        The health of people in Canada could be impacted as climate-sensitive diseases could move north towards Canada, such as the Lyme disease. Climate change could also create new diseases that can be harmful to humans and animals.





    How will Syrian refugees affect Canada's economy?

         With roughly 25,000 Syrian refugees coming to Canada, how will this affect our economy? Refugees offer a lot to many countries, as it increases the population of the country and increasing the amount of workers, which is great for some places in Canada, such as Atlantic Canada. In Atlantic Canada they have been experiencing a shortage in young workers and an increase in older workers, which has caused many workers to demand their share of refugees, to increase the amount of businesses and expand our tax base. Starting from 1979 Canada has taken in roughly 60,000 Vietnamese refugees and this has been great for Canada's economy. The Syrian and Vietnamese refugees are very similar, they are both coming into Canada with little English or French knowledge, and are both coming from a country that is currently in war. By bringing in the Syrian refugees it will increase the amount of workers, expand our tax base, and help our medical system that will help us citizens.

    Sunday, 29 May 2016

    Canada must be ready for reality of climate change, forum told

    Canada must be ready for reality of climate change, forum told


    Calgary flooding



    Summary:

    This article is about the extreme flooding occurring in Toronto and Calgary. With these events happening, the Canadian federal government almost didn't meet it's budget. These floods costed the Canadian economy a lot of money, $4.8 billion in economic loss to be specific according to the insurance agency at a forum on livable cities. The initial clean-up had costed $1.9 billion, which happened to be the most costly natural disaster in the history of Canada! These extreme weather conditions are caused by the effects of global warming. This article basically talks about how they plan to get ready to face this new reality of extreme weather.

    What's There: 

    The issue is that Canadians need a plan to deal with these climate changes Canadians are facing. Where this is happening is in places such as Toronto and Calgary, and the previous year in Atlantic Canada. The following causes of such climate change is by the effects caused by global warming. Turley-McIntyre says that events related to climate change will not stop. This has happened the previous year in 2013, and has carried on to 2014, when this article was published. Who this affects is every Canadian who are living in these places, because in Calgary, people were evacuated. This also affects the Canadians who experience this because they have to pay insurance, and some of them have even said that they can not afford flooding insurance. This also affects the government because they have to pay for the clean-up after the flooding. 

    Why is it There:

    Why this is an issue is because there is a lot of work to put into when disasters such as these occur, for the government and citizens. The government has to take money out of the budget to pay for the riddance of the destruction caused by the change of weather. Of course, this money has to come from somewhere, which is the tax payers. They will suffer if the government feels the need to increase taxes because some of the affected citizens cannot afford flood insurances. They will also be affected because this will cause some devastation, such as a water logged house and destroyed property, and they will have to pay for the repair of their house and replace the important property. This happens in Canada because the global warming had an effect that had caused weather changes that were a downside to those affected. The water nearby, like Lake Sikome (and more) which is near Calgary, is where the flood might come from, so the change in weather can make those places a more dangerous source of water.

    Why Care:

    This issue is an important thing to focus on because as Turley-McIntyre said that this is not coming to an end, and people need aid, mostly financial aid. It is also important to look into this issue because if this is too happen again, there needs to be quick acting to get things back under control with the flooding. This affects people because they in some cases have to evacuate and they have to pay for the damages. The connection this has to our course is when we are talking about liveable cities. When we talk about what makes it a place where people want to live, this article talks about the downside, what makes it a non-liveable city, based on safety and the cost of living their. 

    Thursday, 26 May 2016

    Canada Expects 'Strong' G7 Statement Against Paying Hostage Ransoms


    The G7 is a group of 7 (G7) that consists of the United States, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, and the United Kingdom this group is ready to take a strong stand towards the exercise of governments paying ransoms for hostages kidnapped by groups with links to terrorism, one of the Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's top priorities at this summit of world leaders.  
    "I think it's very likely that we will have a reference in the communique to not providing ransoms to terrorists groups who kidnap our citizens," said Peter Boehm
    The kidnappings haven't stopped but this agreement some of these payments may help some more people, But Canada and United Kingdom have strict policies of not paying ransoms for hostages. 
           These statements follow with what we have been learning in class on the thought of liveable communities and the safety of out citizens.

    Tuesday, 10 May 2016

    Building on recent work on the legal production of illegality and non-dichotomous approaches to migratory status, we review Canadian immigration and refugee policy, and analyze pathways to loss of migratory status and the implications of less than full status for access to social services.

    We argue that binary conceptions of migration status (legal/illegal) do not reflect this context, and advocate the use of 'precarious status' to capture variable forms of irregular status and illegality, including documented illegality.


       http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/13621020902850643

    Syrian crisis





                                 
                       
    The ongoing conflict in Syria has triggered the worst humanitarian crisis in the world today. According to the United Nations, 13.5 million people inside Syria need urgent help, including 6.5 million who are internally displaced. It is estimated that well over 250,000 people have died in the conflict, with hundreds of thousands more wounded. Almost 4.6 million Syrians have sought refuge in the neighbouring countries of Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, and Turkey. Thousands more have made the harrowing journey to Europe in search of a better life.

    Canada has given generously to the various international efforts to support the Syrian people, including those living as refugees in neighboring countries. To date, Canada has committed almost 1 billion in humanitarian, development and security assistance in response to the Syria crisis.

    Earlier this year, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced Canada's new strategy to address the ongoing crises in Iraq and Syria, including further increases over the next three years to Canada's security, stabilization, humanitarian and development assistance.




    http://www.international.gc.ca/development-developpement/humanitarian_response-situations_crises/syria-syrie.aspx?lang=eng

    http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/why-some-syrian-refugees-decline-canadas-resettlement-offer/article27985618/

    Why some Syrian refugees decline Canada’s resettlement offer

    In the article Why some Syrian refugees decline Canada’s resettlement offer, this article informs us that there are many people who are declining immigration to Canada. Many of them who are declining are the people which Canada wants to come for example Omayma al-Kasem has completed four years of law school and volunteers as a mental health worker, but she isn't interested in coming.
    Three out of every ten households asked to resettle to canada chose to just relocate. Some are hoping to return home, others don't know if they will be able to integrate into the new country. People would have to learn a new language and some don't come because of cultural reasons.   
     Omayma al-Kasem has chosen not to come because her brother and his wife would not be able to come and she doesn't want to split her family up.They are struggling to put food on their table but she believes that when the civil war is over she wants to be one of the first people to rebuild her home back in Syria. She is not the only family with this kind of story there are many others like her. They don't want to leave their homeland and move to a foreign area.

    Big Question: How might Canada’s response to the Syrian refugee crisis affect Canadian communities?

    Canada's response to the Syrian refugee crisis affect Canadian communities because the people that are educated, care about their family, and highly religious people are declining the offer to come to Canada. But these are the people that would help our Canadian communities. The government should try and help people with their needs so they are able to come to Canada not splitting up families etc.   
    BY:RAHMAN

    5 things to know about Canada's Syrian refugee program


    1. It's not what the Liberals promised during the campaign.

    Initially, they said they would bring 25,000 Syrians to Canada by the end of 2015 under the government-assisted refugee program that sees the government take on the full cost of a person's resettlement for a full year. The Liberal campaign platform said they would work with private sponsors to do even more.

    2. How many privately sponsored Syrian refugees will be accepted to Canada remains unknown.

    While the government has set a target number for Syrians they'll support, they've not yet set a cap on how many private sponsorship applications they'll accept. As of Feb. 27, there were 8,527 Syrians in Canada with private sponsors and applications continue to be received by government.

    3. There are more than 25,000 Syrians here.

    The previous Conservative government had also accepted Syrian refugees, albeit on a smaller scale and in a program that was over a much longer timeline. Their original program was to resettle 1,500 between summer 2013 and the end of 2014, but that goal was not met until March 2015.

    4. Canada is officially resettling more Syrian refugees than many other countries.

    An estimated 4.7 million Syrians have registered as refugees since the outbreak of the Syrian civil war in 2011. But the UN refugee agency is not seeking permanent new homes for that many. They've reached out to countries to absorb about 10 per cent.
    Only Germany has made more official spaces formally available than Canada. Just under one million Syrians, though, have sought asylum in European countries, meaning they've travelled on their own and have claimed refugee status upon arrival. Some have UN refugee status, some don't. Since July 2013 and until the end of last year, 1,502 Syrian nationals already in Canada have requested, and received, refugee status

    5. Syrians who've arrived in Canada mostly do not come from refugee camps.

    Only about 10 per cent of Syrian refugees are in formal refugee camps in the countries surrounding Syria, according to the United Nations refugee agency. The rest are living everywhere from rented apartments to farm fields.

    This article relates to the big question by taking what we learned from the Syrian refugee crisis and making suring the government doesn't make us go through the same situation.
    http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/syrian-refugees-by-the-numbers-1.3469080

    This article is about the Canadian Prime Minister (PM) Justin Trudeau spending more money on Syrian Refugees, then the Fort McMurray wildfire. It says that PM Justin Trudeau spent 1.6 billion dollars on Syrian Refugees, but will only match red cross donation already totalling  54 million dollars.
    This affects our community because we should be taking care of this devastating situation in Alberta first, or spend as much dollars as we did to bring Syrian Refugee to Canada. The Slave Lake Wildfire cost the government 1.4 billion dollars. Fort McMurray will cost way more but they don't have any final cost yet. 

    http://www.cknw.com/2016/05/09/how-true-is-it-canadian-government-spends-more-on-syrian-refugees-than-fort-mcmurray-wildfires/

    http://www.theglobeandmail.com/opinion/syrian-refugees-are-they-really-a-threat-to-canadian-security/article26341278/

    Blog Task: Syrian Refugee Crisis


    This article is explaining that it's Canada's tradition to bring in new refugees from Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Uganda, Vietnam and Kosovo. This article is suggesting that there should be a special program set up in Canada that focuses on selecting families and those with Canadian connections will decrease the chances of security risks from these refugee groups. Security is a huge issue, there were a lot of security problems back in 1979 because the public was worried that the refugees might have been criminals. Mayors of Calgary, Toronto and Vancouver are getting involved with private sponsors to partner with the federal government to ensure that they will support one of the most serious refugee crisis in their time. So relating this article back to the big question, Canada's response may have some serious effects. Obviously these newcomers can't be trustworthy, so therefore Canada is risking chances of there being crimes occurring in the communities. But at the end of it, we should still continue to accept refugees into our country.




    Link:
    http://www.theglobeandmail.com/opinion/syrian-refugees-are-they-really-a-threat-to-canadian-security/article26341278/
    How might Canada’s response to the Syrian refugee crisis affect Canadian communities?

    With the Syrian war going on and with millions of syrians fleeing syria they all need a place to go. Canada has promised to bring 25,000 and this is very a very big deal because it can affect canadian communities in a big way. This could make it that we need to have more special schooling in different communities because some of the refugees may not know english. Also, canada would have a much higher demand for doctors because of our higher number of people and they way canada's health care is set up. We would have a lower amount of job employment rate and canadians would start to get angry because syrian refugees are getting jobs before some canadians. But because of that canada's economy will go up with a lot more workers.

    Syrian Refugees will boost Canada's econamy

    http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/2015/11/26/refugees-economy-canada_n_8658076.html

    Syrian Refugees will boost Canada's economy

    syrian refugees


    The article's main thesis states that actual fact states the benefits outway the cost for Canada to be taking in refugees, in actual sense Canada needs them and their statistics of high birth rate E.G. We need workers.


    Importantly is Canada’s aging workforce all over the country. The article sites Atlantic Canada which in fact continues to age without workforce replenishment in less than a decade there would be a serious population crisis. The refugees offer the perfect solution to their problems by supplying work willing young people to fuel and drive the economy of Canada's future.

    Statistical Data sourcing and details can be found by clicking the link.

    Open The Doors

    Matthew.K

    To sum up the article I chose, Canada response to the syrian Refugees is very positive and believe that everything is going to go smoothly. The communities response is different tho people are worried about people taking their jobs away and there homes. If you think about it lots of people are coming in to canada so it is possible. The government says some of them are going start their own businesses so there are going to be more jobs available.          





    http://www.international.gc.ca/development-developpement/humanitarian_response-situations_crises/syria-syrie.aspx?lang=eng

    Is there enough resources for the Syrian Refugees?

    Canadians were asked if they think communities have enough resources for the Syrian Refugees. The total of the poll of people who think there is not enough resources for the Syrian Refugees is 61% and the rest of the 33% agreed there is enough. This could just be a few communities but this is still a problem that can affect the settlement of the Syrian Refugees. Syrian Refugees need settlement services such as a home, language classes, food services, clothes, etc. Without all of this services, it will be difficult to communicate and help them. This problem can also slow down the settlement of the refugees in the future.Syrian refugees Rahaf, second left, and her brother Ramez, centre, get new winter clothing at Pearson International Airport in Toronto on Monday, February 29, 2016. (Nathan Denette/THE CANADIAN PRESS)

    Not enough resources for syrian refugees

    the article talks about how we let in 27k refugees but we don't have enough resources to support them because most of them had health issues, it costs a lot of money to build places for them to stay,etc

    Monday, 9 May 2016

    Sinking of the RMS Titanic.

    The sinking of the RMS Titanic occurred on the night of 14 April through to the morning of 15 April 1912 in the north Atlantic Ocean, four days into the ship's maiden voyage from Southampton to New York City. The largest passenger liner in service at the time,Titanic had an estimated 2,224 people on board when she struck an iceberg at around 23:40 (ship's time) on Sunday, 14 April 1912. Her sinking two hours and forty minutes later at 02:20 (05:18 GMT) on 15 April resulted in the deaths of more than 1,500 people, which made it one of the deadliest peacetime maritime disasters in history.
    Titanic received six warnings of sea ice on 14 April but was travelling near her maximum speed when her lookouts sighted the iceberg. Unable to turn quickly enough, the ship suffered a glancing blow that buckled her starboard (right) side and opened five of her sixteen compartments to the sea. Titanic had been designed to stay afloat with four of her forward compartments flooded but not more, and the crew soon realized
     that the ship would sink. They used distress flares and radio (wireless) messages to attract help as the passengers were put into lifeboats. In accordance with existing practice, Titanic's lifeboat system was designed to ferry passengers to nearby rescue vessels, not to hold everyone on board simultaneously. So with the ship sinking fast and help still hours away, there was no safe refuge for many of the passengers and crew. Compounding this, poor management of the evacuation meant many boats were launched before they were totally full.
    Titanic sank with over a thousand passengers and crew still on board. Almost all those who jumped or fell into the water drowned within minutes due to the effects of hypothermiaRMS Carpathian later arrived on the scene about an hour and a half after the sinking and had rescued the last of the survivors by 09:15 on 15 April, some nine and a half hours after the collision. The disaster caused widespread outrage over the lack of lifeboats, lax regulations, and the unequal treatment of the three passenger classes during the evacuation. Subsequent inquiries recommended sweeping changes to maritime regulations, leading to the establishment in 1914 of the International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea (SOLAS), which still governs maritime safety today. The number of casualties of the sinking is unclear, due to a number of factors, including confusion over the passenger list, which included some names of people who cancelled their trip at the last minute, and the fact that several passengers traveled under aliases for various reasons and were double-counted on the casualty lists. The death toll has been put at between 1,490 and 1,635 people. The figures below are from the British Board of Trade report on the disaster.

    1887 Nanaimo mine explosion

    The Nanaimo mine explosion on May 3, 1887, in NanaimoBritish Columbia killed 150 miners. Only seven miners survived and the mine burned for one full day. The explosion started deep underground in the Number One Coal Mine, after explosives were laid improperly. Although many miners died instantly, others were trapped by the explosion. These men wrote farewell messages in the dust of their shovels. Nearly 150 children lost their fathers and 46 women became widows. A plaque at the foot of Milton Street commemorates the event.
    Although past documents put the death toll at 148,
    researchers have since revised the number to 150, including 53 Chinese workers. Chinese workers were listed in the government inquest and annual report of the Minister of Mines as "China men, names unknown", followed by a tag number. B.C. employers did not have to report the deaths of Chinese employees until 1897. Some accounts suggest that 48 of the 53 miners had the surname of Maj — records may have been destroyed when Nanaimo's Chinatown burned to the ground in 1960. The monument on Milton Street lists the names of white miners, but only the tally number for Chinese miners, who were blamed by many white Nanaimoites for the disaster, claiming they could not read signs or instructions.
    Operated by the Vancouver Coal Company, the Number One mine opened in 1884 at the foot of Milton Street in Nanaimo. Its shafts and tunnels extended under the harbor to Protection Island, Newcastle Island, and the Nanaimo River. After the explosion, the mine re-opened, and produced 18 million tons of coal before permanently closing in 1938.

               1946 Vancouver Island Earthquake.

    The 1946 Vancouver Island earthquake occurred with a moment magnitude of 7.3 that struck Vancouver Island, on the Coast of British ColumbiaCanada, at 10:15 a.m. on Sunday, June 23. The main shock epicenter occurred in the Forbidden Plateau area northwest of Courtesan. While most of the large earthquakes in the Vancouver area occur at tectonic plate boundaries, the 1946 Vancouver Island earthquake was a crustal event. Shaking was felt from Portland, Oregon to Prince Rupert, British Columbia. This is one of the most damaging earthquakes in the history of British Columbia, but damage was restricted because there were no heavily populated areas near the epicenter, where severe shaking occurred.
    This earthquake is Canada's largest historic onshore earthquake. However, the greatest earthquake in Canadian history recorded by somersetted was the 1949 Queen Charlotte earthquake, an interpolate earthquake that occurred on the ocean bottom just off the rugged coast of Graham Island, which reached magnitude 8.1 on the moment magnitude scaleThe tectonics that caused the 1946 Vancouver Island earthquake are poorly known. No surface expression of the offset was noticed, most likely because the epicenter area is very remote and densely forested. A comprehensive examination and computer interpretation of seismic data from over 50 stations has shown that a possible explanation of the earthquake includes a strike-slip fault corresponding to the lengthy axis of Vancouver Island, known as the Beaufort Range Fault. A fault running across Vancouver Island, corresponding to the projection of the underwater. Nootka Fault on the British Columbia Coast, is also a possibility but an unlikely one because the earthquake no evidence of offsets along a series of highways that follows much of the eastern coastline of Vancouver Island, called Island Highway, and other roads between Courtesan and Campbell River. The estimated depth of the earthquake places it within the continental crust, not at the margin with the Cascades subduction zone, and certainly not inside the subduction zone itself. Specifically, the earthquake's epicenter was positioned somewhere in the Forbidden Plateau region, in central Vancouver IslandThough very destructive, the earthquake caused only two casualties: Jacob L. Kingston, aged 69, and Daniel Idler, who was 50. Kingston suffered a heart attack, while Idler drowned when his dinghy was swamped by a wave.

    In Vancouver, damage consisted of lofty buildings oscillating violently, and a piece of masonry fell from the local railway station. In addition, within the city, at least one gas line cracked and several power outages occurred. Fires broke out in several chimneys, and at least one swing-span bridge was fractured by the shaking. In the Hotel Vancouver, which housed the elderly and caught on fire, more than 500 war veterans' families fled the flames. One writer, George Finley, stated that the Lions' Gate Bridge "swayed like a leaf", coinciding with a "low, rumbling sound, like a deep growl." The 1946 Vancouver Island earthquake demolished 75% of the chimneys in the communities of Cumberland, Union Bay, and Courtenay and caused extensive damage in Comox, Port Alberni, and Powell River, on the eastern side of the Strait of Georgia. Some chimneys were fractured in Victoria, and people in Victoria and Vancouver experienced great fright, with some seen fleeing into the streets.
    Landslides created by the earthquake were common throughout Vancouver Island. Land subsidence resulted from the earthquake, most commonly around shorelines on the Strait of Georgia. This included the bottom of Deep Bay which sank between 2.7 m (9 ft) and 25.6 m (84 ft). These measurements were reported by the Canadian Hydrographic Service. Also, a 3-metre (9.8 ft) ground shift occurred on Read Island. Ships throughout the region were affected, and those on board them during the earthquake described it as similar to having run over a sand bar or striking a rock. Undersea power lines were destroyed in the long narrow Alberni Inlet and near the city of Powell River. All lighthouse keepers in the surrounding area felt the earthquake, and experienced damages including shattered windows and smashed dishes. A tsunami struck the west coast of Texada Island with two waves, the first being 2 metres (6 ft 7 in) high and the second 1 metre (3 ft 3 in) high. The earthquake caused a landslide near Mount Colonel Foster. One fortunate occurrence allowed researchers afterward to review the effects of the earthquake: an aerial photographic survey of Vancouver Island had commenced in 1946, soon after the earthquake, and these photographs were eventually studied by a geoscientist in the late 1970s.
    South of the Canada–United States border in Washington State, some chimneys fell at East sound on Oscar Island and a concrete mill was damaged at Port Angeles. In Seattle, some damage occurred on upper floors of tall buildings, and one bridge was damaged. The shock was strongly felt at Bellingham, Olympia,Raymond, and Tacoma. The earthquake was powerful enough to knock the needle off a seismograph at the University of Washington, and was sustained for about a minute even in Seattle.
    The earthquake caused somewhat astounding movement among structures, moving one 300-foot (91 m) wall about 35 feet (11 m) and caused one home to shift for 5 feet (1.5 m) off its foundation. The total affected area in Canada and the United States was about 260,000 km2 (100,000 sq mi).