Thank you, Mr. Chair.
As I was saying, Sherry, I just want to thank you and congratulate you on this legislation. Again, Parliament is at its best when it's bringing forth legislation that will make a real difference in people's lives, and everybody from all sides of the aisle recognizes it. I know there are a million issues that you could have brought forward—and many that are important—but this is a really critical one that I think we all look forward to passing as soon as possible.
Being from British Columbia, I had the good fortune to go through the firefighter training school for a day. Now, I always admired firefighters, but after that experience, I was a changed person. I was certainly a changed politician. I knew it was a tough job, but I didn't know the full scope of that.
Firefighters don't just put out fires. They have to deal with electric car accidents where there's complicated chemical and electrical stuff going on; downed wires during storms; difficult rescues in extraordinarily tight spaces, I found; accident response and—where I come from in Vancouver—even first response in overdoses.
What I was amazed by was the vast degree of knowledge, experience and skill sets they have to bring. They are true heroes, and I want to put that on the record. They are unbelievably well-trained professionals who exhibit a high degree of knowledge and professionalism every day.
I've been fortunate to be on this committee for seven years—since 2015—and one thing that has really come to dominate my thinking is the importance of prevention. I don't think we spend enough time on that in health care. We wait until people get sick or hurt, and then we have a pretty good system for dealing with it. However, I think we have to put way more money, time and resources into preventing that in the first place.
Before I get to some specifics, I do want to mention that I am blessed by having the guidance and wisdom of some of the best firefighters in the country. Gord Ditchburn, Rob Weeks, Lee Lax and Dustin Bourdeaud’huy are all wonderful people in British Columbia who have played a significant role in this as members of Local 18. I want to give them a shout-out.
They told me that, in the IAFF database, 84 B.C. professional firefighters have died from occupational cancers, and those are ones who have been recognized as being covered under WorkSafeBC. Interestingly, most of those cancers—40%—are colon, brain and lung cancers, and there are many cancers, I understand, that are occupationally caused and for which firefighters are at risk.
I think that significantly—and maybe grossly—understates the extent of the real situation because there are many more, I think, who have suffered from and maybe passed due to cancer who are not caught by these statistics.
Do you have any comment, Sherry, about the state of statistics right now? Are we capturing the extent of the problem, in your view?