logo
Ground search for missing Pictou County kids likely to end Sunday

Ground search for missing Pictou County kids likely to end Sunday

CBC18-05-2025

The ground search for two missing Pictou County siblings is likely to end Sunday, according to a person helping oversee the ground search and rescue effort.
Six-year-old Lilly Sullivan and four-year-old Jack Sullivan went missing from their home in Lansdowne Station, N.S., on May 2. The sparsely populated area is about 140 kilometres northeast of Halifax.
Initial ground search efforts were called off on May 8, with ground search and rescue teams only returning to the area on Saturday.
Amy Hansen, one of the search managers, said Saturday's search went very well. She said searchers covered 1.5-square kilometres of area they hadn't examined before, as well as "higher probability areas" around waterways.
She said the search would probably wrap up Sunday at 8 p.m. AT. Hansen she wasn't aware of anything being found during Saturday's search effort.
"We're not anticipating continuing tomorrow, but that's a conversation that has to happen with the RCMP incident commander later on in the day," said Hansen.
Hansen said the searchers did not cover as much ground as expected Saturday. She said searchers are being hampered by fallen trees and branches left by post-tropical storm Fiona, which hit Nova Scotia in September 2022.
"The ticks are always a problem," she said. "We had some fresh bear prints found yesterday ... it's Nova Scotia woods at this point."
Hansen said 115 people are taking part in Sunday's search.
Search for missing N.S. kids restarts as questions grow about investigation
2 days ago
Duration 1:57
Searchers will resume scouring the area near the remote home of two missing Nova Scotia children, Lilly and Jack Sullivan, who disappeared two weeks ago, as questions grow over the RCMP's handling of the case.
On Saturday, the Sullivan's stepfather told CBC News he was grateful for the search efforts.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

State of emergency ends in Puvirnituq, Que., as water flows again
State of emergency ends in Puvirnituq, Que., as water flows again

CBC

timean hour ago

  • CBC

State of emergency ends in Puvirnituq, Que., as water flows again

A state of emergency declared in Puvirnituq, Que., three weeks ago amid a severe water shortage is now over, officials in Nunavik say. But the chair of the Kativik Regional Government says the crisis has shown "that inexplicable living conditions still exist in this country," and that the region needs more resilient water systems. The emergency was declared in May amid a worsening water shortage in Puvrinituq, a community of about 2,100 people. The problem actually began weeks earlier, in mid-March, after a water pipeline that connects the pump station to the treatment plant froze. Severe weather conditions also made it difficult for trucks to collect water and deliver it to homes. The Quebec government ended up air-lifting 145,000 litres of bottled water to the community. The prolonged water shortage caused problems for the local hospital, which ran out of water at times and had to fly some patients south for care. Nunavik's chief public health officer also warned that illnesses like gastroenteritis (stomach flu) could spread rapidly as the water shortage impacted access to sanitation, and officials last month ended the school year early. In a news release on Friday, town officials said things have improved in the last couple of weeks after a temporary water pipeline bypass was installed with help from the Kativik Regional Government (KRG), restoring the flow of raw water to the treatment plant. "This is a stabilizing, interim solution until more permanent repairs can be completed throughout the summer," the release states. KRG officials say it's not the first time Puvirnituq has dealt with water distribution problems, and they blame "chronic underfunding of resilient water supply infrastructure" that can endure Nunavik's harsh winter weather. Puvirntuq mayor Lucy Qalingo said in a statement that she's relieved that things have stabilized and that "the worst of the water crisis has passed" in her community. "There remain steep obstacles to ensuring that Puvirniturmiut can rely on the current system when they need it most," she said. KRG chairperson Hilda Snowball also issued a statement, reassuring the community that the KRG is committed to addressing water infrastructure issues "by any and all means." "We are more determined than ever to make governments accountable for providing a resilient water system comparable to what people outside of Nunavik take for granted," she said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store