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How lessons can be learned from B.C.'s Red Chris mine to help future rescues

How lessons can be learned from B.C.'s Red Chris mine to help future rescues

CTV News17 hours ago
The entrance to the Red Chris mine near Iskut, B.C., is shown on Wednesday, July 23. (Dave Middleton / The Canadian Press)
A rescuer who has experienced the relief that comes with successfully freeing people trapped underground, says lessons learned at a rescue operation at British Columbia's Red Chris mine can help teams across the country.
Mine operator Newmont Corp., has promised an independent investigation into the factors that led to the rockfall that trapped three workers underground for more than 60 hours before they were rescued late Thursday.
Danny Taillefer, deputy chief mine rescue officer at Ontario Mine Rescue, said it's common for reports that detail such rescues to also be made public for anyone who wants to read them.
'Even a successful rescue has its ups and downs. There's definitely always stuff that you could do better. So why not allow others to learn from your mistakes and make sure that the next one goes off even smoother?' he said in an interview on Friday.
'At the end of the day, we care about miners. We care about the people going underground to make a living for their family, regardless of where you're from, whether it be another province in this country or another country altogether.'
Taillefer said he was following the B.C. rescue closely from Ontario and is relieved the three contractors were brought above ground safely. The men moved to a steel refuge station more than 280 meters below ground after the first rockfall on Tuesday and their communication was severed during the second rockfall.
Taillefer was involved in the 2021 rescue of 39 miners at Vale's Totten mine in Sudbury, Ont., where the workers survived being trapped almost a kilometre underground for four days.
He said while rescues are underway it feels like 'you've got the weight of the world on your shoulders' and that's followed by the relief that comes with success.
'When (rescuers at Totten) finally got to see that last gentleman that got to the surface hug his wife, and know that he's going home to his kids after he gets checked out by the medical professionals, it's an extreme amount of relief,' he said.
The three contractors in B.C. were trapped by what the company said was 'localized' ground falls.
Bernard Wessels, global safety chief for Newmont Corp., told a news conference Friday that open-pit mining has resumed at Red Chris but the underground work will be halted as an investigation is completed.
'Newmont will do an extensive inspection and investigation into this incident, and ultimately we will share the results of this incident so that we can learn from that. But it's not a common thing, and it's not a common thing for this operation,' he said.
This report by Ashley Joannou of The Canadian Press was first published July 25, 2025.
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