Champagne, cheese and a commendation for Vancouver bus driver who single-handedly doused fire
A bus driver who pulled over to put out a building on fire in downtown Vancouver has been honoured for his quick thinking.
Brian Donovan was presented with the chief’s commendation by Vancouver Fire Rescue Services during an informal ceremony at Firehall No.1 on Tuesday.
“We thank you for stepping up and making a difference in our community,” said Chief Karen Fry, as she handed the framed certificate to Donovan.
On July 23, as the Coast Mountain Bus Company driver was nearing the end of his shift around 2 a.m., he noticed a cheese shop on fire.
He pulled over the bus he was driving – on the 20 Victoria route – and sprang into action.
“I got out, used the fire extinguisher that we have at our disposal, and didn't think much of it,” said Donovan, recalling the moment he doused the flames.
But the owner of Les Amis du Fromage on East Hastings Street, believes the transit driver’s quick-thinking prevented “a terrible situation.”
“Inside, that room is full of paper packaging,” said shop owner Joe Chaput.
“It just would have ignited, it would have been a bad scene,” he said.
To show his appreciation, Chaput gave the driver a big box of cheese, charcuterie and champagne.
“I don't feel like earned it at all, but I appreciate it from everybody,” Donovan said humbly.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
BREAKING Air Canada, pilots reach tentative deal, averting work stoppage
Passengers with plans to fly on Canada's largest airline can breathe a sigh of relief after Air Canada said Sunday it has reached a tentative agreement with the union representing more than 5,200 of its pilots.
Liberals will let Conservatives hold non-confidence vote 'fairly soon', no intention of proroguing Parliament
The Liberals have no intention of using procedural tactics to delay the Conservatives' promised non-confidence motion, and they have no plans to prorogue Parliament to hold onto power, according to Government House Leader Karina Gould.
They came from Jamaica for work, now they're homeless and out thousands of dollars in lost wages
Abuse of Canada’s temporary foreign worker program has left a group of carpenters from Jamaica 'destitute' after an Ottawa company refused to pay them for nearly half a year of work.
Beef with your neighbour? Here are your rights in Canada, according to a lawyer
If you have beef with your neighbour and you feel it's gone too far, what should you do? A personal injury lawyer has some advice.
Andrew Scheer avoids answering if Conservatives will cancel dental care program
Conservative House Leader Andrew Scheer won't say whether his party will scale back or fully scrap Canada's federal dental care program, despite new data showing nearly 650,000 Canadians have used the plan.
opinion Prince Harry turns 40: Reflecting on his milestones and challenges
As Prince Harry turns 40 on Sunday, royal commentator Afua Hagan charts the prince's path which has been defined by significant milestones and challenges from his time at Kensington Palace to his current life in his California mansion.
As plant-based milk becomes more popular, brands look for new ways to compete
When it comes to plant-based alternatives, Canadians have never had so many options — and nowhere is that choice more abundantly clear than in the milk section of the dairy aisle.
Tech billionaire returns to Earth after first private spacewalk
A billionaire spacewalker returned to Earth with his crew on Sunday, ending a five-day trip that lifted them higher than anyone has traveled since NASA's moonwalkers.
4 years ago, a 'Trump Train' convoy surrounded a Biden-Harris bus. Was it political violence?
Texas jury will soon decide whether a convoy of supporters of then-U.S. president Donald Trump violently intimidated former Democratic lawmaker Wendy Davis and two others on a Biden-Harris campaign bus when a so-called 'Trump Train' boxed them in for more than an hour on a Texas highway days before the 2020 election.