British ColumbiaVancouver police and city officials are calling for stronger vehicle barriers, clearer safety planning and more provincial support for festival organizers in the wake of April’s Lapu-Lapu Day tragedy, where an alleged vehicle-ramming attack left 11 people dead and dozens more injured.Final review urges vehicle mitigation framework, provincial support as city looks to bolster public safetyCBC News · Posted: Sep 04, 2025 11:16 AM EDT | Last Updated: 1 hour agoA young girl lights a candle on May 2 during a vigil on a provincial day of mourning for the victims of the Lapu-Lapu Day festival tragedy in Vancouver. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press)Vancouver police and city officials are calling for stronger vehicle barriers, clearer safety planning and more provincial support for festival organizers in the wake of April’s Lapu-Lapu Day festival tragedy, where an alleged vehicle-ramming attack left 11 people dead and dozens more injured.The recommendations are part of a final report presented Thursday by Mayor Ken Sim and Chief Const. Steve Rai, following a months-long review into how outdoor events are planned and secured.Sim says a review of public safety at outdoor events found the Lapu-Lapu Day street festival was appropriately assessed as low risk, with no indication to suggest it would turn deadly.”All the right steps were taken, including multiple reviews, site-walks and coordination with first responders,” Sim said while presenting the findings during a news conference Thursday.WATCH | Safety recommendations after Lapu-Lapu Day festival tragedy: Report on B.C. event safety makes 6 recommendations, months after Lapu-Lapu Day festival tragedyIt’s been just over two months since 11 people were killed in an alleged attack at Vancouver’s Lapu-Lapu Day festival, which saw an SUV being driven into a crowd of people. Now, a report has been released with several recommendations meant to boost safety and help those who organize events across B.C.The report concludes that planning for the Filipino cultural festival followed existing protocols, including the development of a safety plan, and the risk assessment was appropriate, based in part on the success of the inaugural event in 2024.The final report builds on an earlier preliminary review released in May and outlines several measures, including: Updating the city’s special event policy to reinforce public safety as a core objective. Standardizing safety planning and access controls for outdoor events. Developing clear guidelines for hostile vehicle mitigation, including when to deploy barriers such as heavy or mobile units. Expanding training and resources for event organizers, with access to shared equipment. Creating a Vancouver-specific framework for permanent hostile vehicle protections in public spaces, and incorporating those features into new capital projects. Advocating for provincial and federal supports to ensure consistent safety standards and help offset security costs. “I know these findings won’t ease the pain felt by so many who are still grieving. We must continue working together to ensure everyone is safe and secure at special events,” said Const. Rai.A teddy bear adorns a chain-link fence during a Lapu-Lapu Day memorial in Vancouver on July 9. (Ethan Cairns/CBC)Kai-Ji Adam Lo is accused of driving an SUV through a street crowded with the Lapu-Lapu Day festival patrons on April 26 and faces 11 counts of second-degree murder.Lo’s defence counsel and Crown lawyers concluded their legal arguments last month over the question of whether he is fit to stand trial.A publication ban prevents evidence at the hearing from being reported.A media consortium that includes CBC News and The Canadian Press has challenged the ban, with rulings on both that application and the fitness hearing scheduled for Sept. 10.WATCH | Vancouver mayor says mental health crisis has become ‘public safety crisis’: Mental health crisis has become ‘public safety crisis,’ Vancouver mayor says at Lapu-Lapu Day updateVancouver Mayor Ken Sim, speaking Wednesday at a briefing about the deadly Lapu-Lapu Day festival tragedy, said Vancouver Coastal Health had confirmed the accused in the case was ‘under the care of a mental health care team and on extended leave.’ Sim, who offered no specifics about the accused, again called on upper levels of government to do more around mental health.Days after the attack, the province appointed former B.C. Supreme Court chief justice Christopher Hinkson to conduct a review of safety at public events.Hinkson’s report, released in July, recommended that all public events across the province, regardless of size, should be supported by a risk assessment.It recommends inter-agency co-ordination and calls for the development of a provincial events hub for sharing information and advice.B.C.’s minister of state for community safety, Terry Yung, told media at the time that the province would move as fast as it could to adopt the recommendations.With files from The Canadian Press
Report calls for stronger protections, clearer safety planning after Lapu-Lapu Day tragedy
