Charity pulls 146 donation bins from across B.C.
Canada

Charity pulls 146 donation bins from across B.C.

A non-profit organization says it will remove its clothing donation bins after a Vancouver man died in one on New Year's Eve.

Inclusion BC says it has 146 bins currently placed in North Vancouver Island, the Fraser Valley, Sunshine Coast, the Interior and Central B.C. and Greater Vancouver —​including the one in West Vancouver where a 34-year-old man was found trapped and unresponsive and subsequently died at the scene. 

A non-profit organization says it will remove its clothing donation bins after a Vancouver man died in one on New Year's Eve.

Inclusion BC says it has 146 bins currently placed in North Vancouver Island, the Fraser Valley, Sunshine Coast, the Interior and Central B.C. and Greater Vancouver —​including the one in West Vancouver where a 34-year-old man was found trapped and unresponsive and subsequently died at the scene. 

In a statement, the charity said an emergency meeting was held following the man's death and all member agencies agreed to pull their bins and put them in secure storage until safety modifications can be made.

Member organizations include:  Autism BC, the North Shore Disabilities Resource Centre, the Sunshine Coast Association for Community Living, the Richmond Society for Community Living and Inclusion Langley.

Most donation bins are found in parking lots and along roadsides. While the design of these bins varies, most have hatches to protect donations from pests or thieves. But a person can become trapped in the mechanism, which can be fatal.

Four people have died in Metro Vancouver clothing bins since 2015, prompting homeless advocates to call for safer designs to protect people.

The bins are sometimes used by people who live on the streets and climb into them, trying to find shelter or looking for clothing.

Inclusion BC said it is working with mechanical engineering students at the University of British Columbia and the Canadian manufacturer that supplies the bins to design a new model that does not pose a safety risk.