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Order of Excellence for Alberta woman who turned tragedy into life-saving advocacy

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EDMONTON – Kim Ruether lifted her son’s eyelid and saw his still, dilated pupil staring at the ceiling as he lay on a stretcher in a northwestern Alberta hospital hallway a decade ago.

She says she didn’t need a doctor to tell her the boy was dead.

“I just looked at his little face and I thought, ‘How could this big, beautiful 16-year-old boy be in this situation?'” she says.

“Then the doctor came over and he said, ‘I’m sorry, but we are not going to be able to save your son’ … I remember pinching my stomach so hard, thinking I just need to wake up.”

Ruether’s son, Brock, stopped breathing and collapsed that day while playing volleyball in his high school’s gym. An autopsy found it was due to cardiac arrest.

She later discovered the device that could have saved his life sat unused beside him during what would be his final moments.

Ruether heard the recording of the five-minute call his peers made to 911 and learned an automated external defibrillator, or AED, was hanging steps away, next to the gym’s doors.

But she said it would have only been helpful had the dispatcher told Brock’s peers how to use it while waiting for paramedics to arrive.

“(The dispatcher) said, ‘Get it in case we need it later,'” Ruether said.

“So they got it and they put it right beside him on the floor and then just never used it.

Reuther has since become a staunch advocate for dispatchers around the world to learn how to walk callers through how to use defibrillators within seconds of someone going into cardiac arrest.

She is to be recognized for her work during a ceremony in Edmonton in October, when she is to receive the Alberta Order of Excellence from Lt.-Gov Salma Lakhani.

Lakhani says the Alberta Order of Excellence celebrates people who “have contributed so much for the greater good.”

“While the recipients this year have made stellar contributions to many different fields, what they share is a dedication and commitment to service and leadership. May they inspire us all to build compassionate and thoughtful communities,” she says.

Emergency dispatchers in New Zealand, the United Kingdom and parts of Asia now teach people how to use AEDs.

Ruether also goes to schools across Canada teaching students how to use them.

“I pretend that I have a cardiac arrest, I’ll flop down on the floor, I’ll say, ‘OK, I’m timing you,’ and the kids have to run to wherever the AED is, come back running as fast as they can, put two patches on my chest and prepare to shock me,” she says.

She says she teaches kids the shock can revive a heartbeat, and the defibrillator won’t work if the patient’s heartbeat is normal and they’ve collapsed for other reasons.

Ruether says she’s been told her work saved the life of a boy who collapsed while playing basketball in British Columbia.

“The call-taker called me to let me know that she right away recognized the similarities between that call and Brock’s call,” Ruether says.

“It was profoundly lovely to know there’s a boy walking around now because of the education that Brock provided.”

Ruether grew up in a town north of Fairview, and also currently works as a senior X-ray technologist and operates a farm with her husband.

She has three other kids.

She says she’s still in disbelief and “it’s insane” that she’s getting the Order of Excellence.

She says her work with emergency dispatchers across Canada and the world has taught her how difficult their jobs are and that they need to be celebrated, too.

“Life is chaos. You have bumps and bruises along the way and, despite that, they are extraordinary people who are trying really hard to do good things and make positive changes.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 29, 2024.



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Man dead after collision with OPP cruiser in Bala, SIU investigating

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Ontario’s police watchdog is investigating the death of a pedestrian in the province’s Muskoka region who was allegedly hit by a police cruiser.

Provincial police said the incident happened before 6 a.m. Sunday on Muskoka Road 169 in Bala, Ont.

The 25-year-old man was taken to hospital where he later died from his injuries. The officer driving the police vehicle was also transported to hospital as a precaution.

Due to the officer’s involvement, the OPP said it notified the province’s Special Investigations Unit which has invoked its mandate to look into the case.

The officer was driving in an unmarked police vehicle, according to the SIU.

The police watchdog said three investigators, three forensic investigators and one collision reconstructionist have been assigned to the case.

The SIU investigates situations involving police in which someone is killed, injured or accused of sexual assault.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 29, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



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One dead, large police presence at B.C. First Nation on Vancouver Island

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LAKE COWICHAN, B.C. – Police on Vancouver Island say emergency response officers had to be called in to make an arrest after a man was found dead at a British Columbia First Nations community.

The RCMP say police were called to Ditidaht First Nations some 150 kilometres northwest of Victoria on Saturday morning, where officers found the victim as well as a “situation at hand” requiring multiple support units to be called in.

Police say the support units included the Emergency Response Team consisting of tactical officers trained in “penetrating blockades and strongholds,” as well as “responding to barricaded armed subjects.”

Officers then successfully arrested one male suspect in what police are calling an isolated incident and a case of suspicious death without releasing further details.

Ditidaht First Nation chief councillor Judi Thomas says in a letter posted to the Indigenous community’s Facebook page that residents were advised at one point during the police operation to stay indoors and keep windows closed.

In another letter released later in the day, Thomas says police will remain in the community “for a couple more days” while health and spiritual support services including counsellors will be brought in to assist community members.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 29, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



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Fire destroys Anglican church in Saskatchewan village

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LOON LAKE, Sask. – An early morning fire has destroyed an Anglican church in northwestern Saskatchewan.

Loon Lake Mayor Brian Hirschfeld says the blaze levelled St. George’s Church in the village on Saturday morning.

RCMP say no one was in the church at the time and no injuries have been reported to police.

Police say the investigation is in its preliminary stages, and they’re asking anyone who saw anything suspicious in the area of the church on Saturday morning, or who has information about the fire, to contact them.

George Rothenburger, who was the secretary at St. George’s and was also a lay reader, says the building was constructed in 1938 and still held a community service once per month.

Rothenburger says he learned of the fire when he got a phone call shortly after 5 a.m. on Saturday, and when he got dressed and stepped outside his home, he could see the flames towering into the air.

“It was going hundreds of feet in the air like a torch,” Rothenburger said in a phone interview Sunday.

“There was no wind. So thank goodness it was safe for the rest of the town.”

The roof had already collapsed by the time Rothenburger got to the scene, but he said the tower with the bell was still standing. It, too, soon fell, and firefighters worked to keep the flames from spreading to surrounding trees.

Hirschfeld, meanwhile, said there’s been a lot of crime recently in Loon Lake but he doesn’t know if the church fire is related to any of it.

He noted the area’s MP, Gary Vidal, has been supportive in connecting the community with organizations that can help with the issues.

“People are concerned that there has been a lot of vandalism over the last four months and maybe this is all part and parcel of it, but we don’t know,” he said.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 29, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



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