Memo warned PM of public anxiety about mental health, firearms after B.C. shootings
OTTAWA — Three days after the February mass shooting in Tumbler Ridge, B.C., government officials warned Prime Minister Mark Carney that online sentiment was shifting from collective grief toward “emerging accountability narratives” — including questions about mental health intervention, firearms access and whether warning signs were missed.
The memo to Carney from the Privy Council Office said the overall public reaction was dominated by a sense of shock and national mourning, with strong expressions of solidarity and support for victims, families and the devastated northeastern British Columbia community.
It also advised that confidence in first responders remained intact after the violence that claimed nine lives and left more than two dozen injured, “but scrutiny of broader systems is likely to increase as investigations progress.”
The Canadian Press used the Access to Information Act to obtain a copy of the memo. Several passages were redacted from the document before its release.











