$15,000 worth of SAR lifesaving gear stolen and damaged in Hanes Valley BC...

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From Global News....
I Hope the Police catch up with thieves before the Volunteers from the NSR do.
Rob

Volunteers with North Shore Rescue are stunned to find out one of their remote emergency caches — stocked with supplies to help rescue people — was recently broken into and ransacked. Tanya Beja reports.

Members of the North Shore Rescue were stunned to find one of their remote emergency caches stocked with lifesaving supplies and equipment to help in the event of a rescue was broken into, vandalized and items stolen.

Members of the North Shore Rescue were stunned to find one of their remote emergency caches stocked with lifesaving supplies and equipment to help in the event of a rescue was broken into, vandalized and items stolen.

At some point over the weekend, someone broke into the cache located in a remote area in Hanes Valley and stole $15,000 worth of equipment that included sleeping bags, first aid kits, rescue ropes and a chainsaw. Adding to the theft, they used SAR’s own chainsaw to destroy the helicopter emergency landing pad at the site

The vandalism to the cache in Hanes Valley, which is a three to four hour hike from Lynn Headwaters, is a huge blow to NSR. The equipment is paramount to the members rescue efforts and without it, any rescue mission in the area is severely jeopardized.

“Someone took a lot of effort to smash the lock off and get into our kit and steal a lot of lifesaving equipment,” Curtis Jones, member of NSR, told Global News.

“We’re not talking about a couple of stoves. We’re talking about rope rescue gear, first aid kits, the stuff that saves lives.”

For Jones, son of the late NSR team leader Tim Jones, the theft hits close to home because the cache program was put in place for the team by his father before he passed away this year.

The caches give rescue members access to critical equipment in remote areas without having to carry it in themselves and as NSR manager Mike Danks says, the caches are a huge priority for them and the people they’re trying to save.

“Number one they’re here for our members’ safety… and when members of the public are lost back here, we can access these caches to get stoves, chainsaws, tents, any lifesaving equipment we can use to access those patients and keep them safe and alive overnight,” Danks says.

Along with caches, NSR has landing zones where its helicopter can land safely and at the Hanes Valley site, the pad was cut up with their own chainsaw. The alleged vandals also used the chainsaw to cut up the map board that was posted to show people their orientation and where to go in the area. NSR will have to haul in more timber to rebuild the pad.

Three NSR members spent the afternoon going through the cache and trying to figure out what equipment was missing, damaged or destroyed. Danks says that half of the cache’s contents, essentially the expensive equipment, have been taken.

Now the team will have to find a way to replace the lifesaving equipment, which was provided solely by public donations.

“We’re going to have to reach out to the community for support,” Danks says. “All the equipment we have in these caches is from donations from the public. It’s not cheap stuff, it’s very expensive equipment we need to save lives.”

I’m trying to make sense of it, it’s hard for me. It’s a really poor thing they’ve done.”

Anyone with information regarding the theft and vandalism is asked to contact NSR at (604) 969-7005.
 
^^^^ agreed
but..... ya know.... did you see those caches? I think in this day and age it's pretty irresponsible of them to store them in a manner that screams break into me.
lord knows I support the hell out of what those guys do in the coastal mountains for all the hikers and skiiers who willfully go out of bounds and need constant rescuing and time on the evening news to tell us all about how they got rescued....... but seriously, a big barrel up on a stand in the middle of an exposed area in a valley....... great idea if thieves didn't exhist..... but they do and that's unfortunate.
 
^^^^ agreed
but..... ya know.... did you see those caches? I think in this day and age it's pretty irresponsible of them to store them in a manner that screams break into me.
lord knows I support the hell out of what those guys do in the coastal mountains for all the hikers and skiiers who willfully go out of bounds and need constant rescuing and time on the evening news to tell us all about how they got rescued....... but seriously, a big barrel up on a stand in the middle of an exposed area in a valley....... great idea if thieves didn't exhist..... but they do and that's unfortunate.

Fantastic logic, blame SR for securing supplies in an area that helps them respond quickly. Thieves exist in the world, so you can't keep your guns at home anymore, someone might steal them. Can't leave your car at home or at work anymore, might get stolen. You can no longer have money or material possessions so they can't be stolen from you.
 
45ACPKING, I kinda agree with you ... they shoulda figured someone would have tried to smash the well exposed master lock from its hasp.
They are now going to make it a little harder by affixing some sort of metal box over the lock and hasp area.
I wonder how far the perps actually carried the stuff they stole and where they on foot?
They just might find the kit not to far off the path in and out.
I really hope they find the pukes and shame them publicly .
Best Regards and Stay Safe this Canada Day Holiday.
Rob
 
There is a cancer spreading north east in BC and it starts in Vancouver and Surrey. Lately anything I don't lock up or bolt down disappears.

The city guys were clearing the blackberries beside my house today and I asked them to leave some of that natural barbed wire near my fence because it was the only thing that was keeping the crack heads out of my yard. I had 2 propane tanks stolen last week.

He told me when they cleaned up the local 'homeless' camp they found 82 propane tanks there. Those useless mother ####ers. Get a ####ing job.

I'm so pissed off at those pieces of #### right now I could scream.
 
Fantastic logic, blame SR for securing supplies in an area that helps them respond quickly. Thieves exist in the world, so you can't keep your guns at home anymore, someone might steal them. Can't leave your car at home or at work anymore, might get stolen. You can no longer have money or material possessions so they can't be stolen from you.

Well... I drive a jeep that has no door locks and a 6500.00 stereo system. All of 100 mile house knows my jeep :D I'd be foolish to park it unattended anywhere, if I did and my stereo got stolen... Yes blame the thieves but it would still be my own fault.

Woulda been pretty simple to install game camera devices to catch images of thieves. But now every thief in BC knows where they can get free camping and wilderness gear.

Likei said, I support SR outfits and respect what they do but leavin those caches the way they appeared on TV .... Would be like me parking my jeep at surrey central and expecting my subs and amps to still be there when I came back from shopping :D
 
Hope the scum bags gets lost in woods and because of lack of equipment..... Search & Rescue couldn't go out and look for them, only to find them dead with the stolen goods weeks down the road.
 
.45ACP it sort of depends on your upbringing and the location of where you grew up. And then add in life experiences with theft.
In general most back country cabins are treated with respect and for the most part the people in the backcountry are respectful people.
Is this an unimaginable crime? No. But it is somewhat shocking to me. I grew up in a small town in the mountains though.

I wonder if there was booze in the stash? Cutting up the landing pad is bizzare?
It's either pure senseless vandalism or someone didn't like SAR using the sight for staging Helicoptor support.

Who knows maybe they just wanted to see what the saw could do?
 
Well... I drive a jeep that has no door locks and a 6500.00 stereo system. All of 100 mile house knows my jeep :D I'd be foolish to park it unattended anywhere, if I did and my stereo got stolen... Yes blame the thieves but it would still be my own fault.

Woulda been pretty simple to install game camera devices to catch images of thieves. But now every thief in BC knows where they can get free camping and wilderness gear.

Likei said, I support SR outfits and respect what they do but leavin those caches the way they appeared on TV .... Would be like me parking my jeep at surrey central and expecting my subs and amps to still be there when I came back from shopping :D

The cache was only accessible by either a 3 hour hike in, or a helicopter. Its not like it was on the side of the road.

Also, game cameras are fine and dandy, but they dont exactly help in identifying thieves in most circumstances. If they are not wireless, then the thieves can just steal those too, and even if they are wireless it can be hard to ID someone. My inlaws live in rural Ontario, off the grid. They have a serious problem with punk kids blowing up their mail box, and the OPP have put out trail cameras on more than one occasion without any real results.
 
I grew up in north delta and surrey and live from blenheim and 23rd in van all the way out to rosedale so I've had the FULL lowermainland experience , believe me.
I now live 6 hours north and have few neighbors. It's a 45 minute drive in summer just to get basic groceries :D

Anyhow, I don't want to offend or come off as a moron here LOL but I've also had experience in the construction of back country tool/electronics and gear caches. I used to be a steel fabricator for forestry and mining bridge construction. Designing and fabricating theft proof caches isn't hard and what I saw the SR gear stored in is pretty ridiculous considering what they had in there. A vertical, concrete reinforced cylinder with a pry proof hatch and recessed dual lock set would be near impenetrable save for use of explosives
 
Well 45ACPKING the comments you made were taken out of context...
I was stumped at first by your first comment, but stopped to think a little harder and when I recalled the locking mech.
I too thought it would only be a matter of time...

I do not know the thinking of the guys who built those containers, but maybe they had the idea of coming back with something sturdier in the near future... we will never know cause what is done is done.

Some people can not leave what is not theirs and we all know this, but rest assured those brave volunteers will continue with what they have and Chive On.
Rob
 
I grew up in north delta and surrey and live from blenheim and 23rd in van all the way out to rosedale so I've had the FULL lowermainland experience , believe me.
I now live 6 hours north and have few neighbors. It's a 45 minute drive in summer just to get basic groceries :D

Anyhow, I don't want to offend or come off as a moron here LOL but I've also had experience in the construction of back country tool/electronics and gear caches. I used to be a steel fabricator for forestry and mining bridge construction. Designing and fabricating theft proof caches isn't hard and what I saw the SR gear stored in is pretty ridiculous considering what they had in there. A vertical, concrete reinforced cylinder with a pry proof hatch and recessed dual lock set would be near impenetrable save for use of explosives

No doubt that is where they are headed.
 
Well... I drive a jeep that has no door locks and a 6500.00 stereo system. All of 100 mile house knows my jeep :D I'd be foolish to park it unattended anywhere, if I did and my stereo got stolen... Yes blame the thieves but it would still be my own fault.

Woulda been pretty simple to install game camera devices to catch images of thieves. But now every thief in BC knows where they can get free camping and wilderness gear.

Likei said, I support SR outfits and respect what they do but leavin those caches the way they appeared on TV .... Would be like me parking my jeep at surrey central and expecting my subs and amps to still be there when I came back from shopping :D

Wow, your attitude is just... wow.

It would be your fault if some low life went and took your stuff? Whether your doors are locked or not, your stuff is your stuff and not for the taking by some random stranger. I should be able to leave my doors unlocked and windows open and be able to return to my vehicle and/ or dwelling without it being touched or disturbed. If it is, that is not, ever, my fault because no one had any right whatsoever to go in and take something in the first place without my permission.

It's no wonder thieves get away with their "lifestyle", even when caught, considering their (potential) victims will just be blaming themselves instead of them.

It's like the police telling us that we should be vigilant and never leave our doors unlocked and windows open... how about telling scum to keep their fingers out of things that don't belong to them? Too difficult?
 
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