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Cindy E. Harnett

Cindy E. Harnett

Cindy Harnett is a Times Colonist reporter focused on health.

Cindy is originally from Toronto, where she attended York University and Ryerson University before taking her first newspaper job in northern Ontario, where she learned about forestry, wildlife, block heaters, and snowstorms in May. She has worked as a reporter in Quesnel and a managing editor at Black Press, and has contributed to publications including Maclean’s magazine.

In 2008, Cindy and her Times Colonist colleagues picked up a Jack Webster Best News Reporting of the Year award for coverage of the 2007 Lee family murder-suicide, which highlighted gross inadequacies in domestic violence and child protection services and police co-ordination.

Over the years, Cindy has gravitated to issues of justice, including the 1997 swarming and murder of teenager Reena Virk, the 2012 botched firing of eight B.C. Health Ministry researchers during which one committed suicide, the 2018 toxic drug poisoning death of Elliot Eurchuk, and the 2019 William Head jailbreak that saw two prisoners charged with murder.

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Recent Work by Cindy E.

Dec. 12 to be proclaimed Christine Sinclair day in B.C.

Dec. 12 to be proclaimed Christine Sinclair day in B.C.

Canadian women’s soccer star Christine Sinclair will play her last game representing the Canada Women’s National Soccer Team tonight at B.C. Place, which will be temporarily renamed Christine Sinclair Place.
'Unbearable severe pain': Victoria woman opts for private hip surgery in Alberta

'Unbearable severe pain': Victoria woman opts for private hip surgery in Alberta

B.C. resident Tracy Porteous added $28,000 to her mortgage to get the surgery at a private clinic in Alberta
Sproat Lake voted best lake in B.C.

Sproat Lake voted best lake in B.C.

Sprawling fresh-water 37 square kilometre lake near Port Alberni was victorious over Shuswap Lake in final round of voting.
B.C. announces incentives to get more nurses working

B.C. announces incentives to get more nurses working

Coverage of application and assessment fees for internationally trained nurses, bursaries for those who return to practice, and faster processing are all part of a package unveiled Monday to address the nursing shortage.
Couple goes to court in fight to register child's name with unique characters

Couple goes to court in fight to register child's name with unique characters

B.C. couple is taking the Vital Statistics Agency to court after the province refused to register their child’s Indigenous first and second name.
B.C. premier calls Smith's comments on discrimination against unvaccinated 'laughable'

B.C. premier calls Smith's comments on discrimination against unvaccinated 'laughable'

“I just disagree with her, I believe the vast majority of Canadians understood that we had a collective responsibility (to get vaccinated)," said B.C. Premier John Horgan.
Hospital staff being trained for Code Silver: how to respond to an active attacker

Hospital staff being trained for Code Silver: how to respond to an active attacker

Training is underway across B.C. to prepare hospital staff for a new type of emergency — Code Silver — so they learn to run, hide or even fight in the face of an attacker.
54 newly graduated doctors sign incentive contracts in B.C.

54 newly graduated doctors sign incentive contracts in B.C.

The Health Ministry offered the incentives to recent family medicine graduates through a new-to-practice family physician contract.
Liberal leader says B.C. could learn from Alberta's approach to drug-overdose crisis

Liberal leader says B.C. could learn from Alberta's approach to drug-overdose crisis

Kevin Falcon says Alberta has invested heavily in addiction treatment and recovery programs rather than harm reduction that keeps people in an “addiction lifestyle.”
Man stabbed by stranger when he refused to give him a cigarette

Man stabbed by stranger when he refused to give him a cigarette

The victim told police he was outside his home in Victoria when a stranger stabbed him in the chest.
More work by Cindy E. >
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