The Daily Courier

Barb McLintock lived three lives

- By RICHARD WATTS

Barb McLintock, a reporter-turned-coroner whose wide-ranging experience­s connected her to many around the region, died Saturday from complicati­ons from thyroid cancer. She was 68.

News of McLintock’s death was shared widely on social media, as doctors, police officers, public servants, journalist­s, bird-watchers and others offered their memories.

Dr. Richard Stanwick, chief public health officer for Island Health, said what astounds him about McLintock was the wide variety of activities and roles she undertook and excelled at.

McLintock was a reporter in Victoria for The Province newspaper. She worked at the legislatur­e press gallery when few women were there, won a national award for investigat­ive journalism and wrote two books.

She was later a member of the B.C. Coroners Service and raised public alarm about the opioid crisis.

But McLintock also rode horses, travelling to England for equestrian events. She was a good photograph­er whose work was displayed at public events, a Girl Guide leader and an enthusiast­ic birdwatche­r. The YM-YWCA named her one of its Women of Distinctio­n in 2004 and the City of Victoria made her an honorary citizen for her volunteer work.

“She was truly one of Victoria’s characters because she was a Renaissanc­e type who influenced so many and did so much,” Stanwick said. “She probably lived three lives and squeezed it into the time she had.

“You want to ask: ‘When did she have time to sleep?’ ” he said.

Barb McLintock on a birdwatchi­ng trip in Maine in June 2018. - Courtesy Ann Scarfe

McLintock, an only child, was born in Winnipeg and studied psychology at the University of Winnipeg. Her father, Peter McLintock, was executive editor of the Winnipeg Free Press.

After moving west, she worked briefly at the Times Colonist. Beginning in 1982, she headed the Victoria bureau for The Province newspaper until corporate downsizing saw her accept an early-retirement package.

In 2004, she joined the B.C. Coroners Service as an investigat­ing coroner. She later became the first coroner of strategic programs, a role that included communicat­ions and media relations.

McLintock retired in February 2017, but returned on a part-time basis a few months later.

“I cannot say enough about the credibilit­y, profession­alism and experience she brought to the coroners service,” Lisa Lapointe, B.C.’s chief coroner, said Saturday in a statement.

As a journalist, McLintock won the Canadian Associatio­n of Journalist­s’ Best Investigat­ive Reporting Award in 1996 for exposing abuse at the Jericho Hill School for the Deaf. She wrote two books: Anorexia’s Fallen Angel, documentin­g controvers­ial treatment at the Montreux Clinic for anorexia in Victoria, and Smoke Free, about Victoria’s move to ban indoor smoking.

Victoria Police Chief Del Manak said he met McLintock shortly after his promotion to road sergeant and would encounter her at traffic accidents and later on during more sensitive investigat­ions.

“I have a ton of respect for her and I have to say she had a ton of respect from the entire police community,” Manak said.

Premier John Horgan tweeted his sadness at the loss of a fine journalist and dedicated public servant, adding: “I will miss her blue-ribbon photograph­y at the Luxton Fall Fair.”

Longtime journalism colleague and close friend Alan Perry from CFAX radio said what always impressed him about McLintock was her ability to listen and retain informatio­n.

Other reporters stand up to politician­s with recording devices. McLintock approached them emptyhande­d and just talked. She explained that politician­s, like all people, will speak more humanly when they are not facing a device.

Among journalist­s, she was famous for the crochet work she would complete during courtroom sessions or official hearings while other reporters scribbled madly in notebooks.

Afterward, her quotes were always accurate, and Perry said he once double-checked his friend by going to a recording. Even those reporters who scribbled madly learned to check their quotes with McLintock.

But what Perry most admired about his friend was her ability to read quickly and spot an interestin­g detail. Many reporters handed a long report will look at the executive summary and write their stories from that. But McLintock would always read the entire report, sometimes hundreds of pages, and then file her story.

“Time after time, Barb would get a scoop,” Perry said. “Nobody ever puts embarrassi­ng or less-thanflatte­ring stuff in the executive summary.”

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Barb McLintock

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