Absolutely.
Andy Ferguson died in November of 2011. As you said, he fell asleep at the wheel. He was working two positions at the same time. He was working, paid, for a radio station for some hours, and then for other hours he was working, unpaid, as part of a school program. The combination of both of these hours was well beyond any minimum requirements. But because one came from federal jurisdiction, and the other job, the school-regulated internship, was provincial jurisdiction, there was no regulation in terms of health and safety and the hours of work that he performed. He was extremely tired—he had had a long shift—fell asleep, and, unfortunately, got into an accident.
The Alberta government has responded. They've done a comprehensive review of student internships as well as unpaid internships in general. Hopefully we'll see some results come from that.
Aaron Murray is very similar story in Ontario. He was doing an unpaid internship as part of a school program. He worked an overnight shift and was killed the next day.
The other two interns I mentioned quickly were Wayne Affleck, who was an apprentice electrician killed during a co-op, or an apprenticeship position, and Adam Keunen who was actually only in grade 12 when he was killed at a recycling facility during a co-op.