The Peterborough Examiner

Broncos families surprised to see obituaries selling services

- ROB DRINKWATER The Canadian Press

Some families of Humboldt Broncos bus crash victims are surprised to learn that error-riddled obituaries of their loved ones have been posted on a website that’s selling flowers, as well as online memorial candles, and that the site isn’t donating the money.

Eleven of the 16 people who died when the Saskatchew­an Junior Hockey League team’s bus and a semi collided April 6 are listed on the Everhere website, which calls itself one of North America’s largest databases for obituaries.

But Russell Herold, whose 16-year-old son, Adam, died in the tragedy, says his family never agreed to post the informatio­n, which incorrectl­y lists his son’s place of death as Wolseley, Sask., east of Regina.

That’s about 300 kilometres south of where the crash occurred.

“We never gave them permission. It’s obvious when the birthplace and place of death are wrong,” Herold said in an email.

The site’s obituary for Dayna Brons, the team’s athletic therapist, states the 24-year-old died in Lake Lenore, Sask., which was where she went to school, not where she died.

“It makes me a little uncomforta­ble that they’re profiting off it without permission of the families,” Eric Brons, Dayna’s brother, says.

Everhere did not respond when contacted by The Canadian Press on the weekend.

On its website, the company states it “serves to inform the public of obituaries that are already on the internet by categorizi­ng them by city.”

It says families can share the obituaries online to invite people to the funerals, which it says saves time for grieving families during a difficult time.

“There is no obligation for anyone to purchase anything from our website. It is just there so people have the option and to make things simpler for those who wish to send flowers, as flower orders are automatica­lly sent to the closest local florist of the recipient,” the website states.

“The candles are a religious intention. We offer the service if someone would like to light a candle as an act of love towards that family,” the site says, noting that fees for lighting a candle go “towards the developmen­t of our company, since our company provides our online services for free.”

The site says errors can be corrected, or obituaries removed, by contacting the company.

A lawyer in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, Erin Best, said earlier this year that she was attempting to certify a class-action lawsuit before the Federal Court of Canada against an obituary website, Afterlife Network Inc.

A statement of claim, which has not been tested in court, alleges the site contains hundreds of thousands of obituaries and photograph­s copied without permission from the websites of Canadian funeral homes and newspapers, and that it generates revenues by advertisin­g and permitting users to “light virtual candles and send flowers.”

The Jan. 11 document says the reproducti­ons infringe copyright, and that Afterlife hasn’t sought permission from the copyright holders.

The website for Afterlife now redirects to Everhere.

Dan Pollack, a copyright lawyer in Toronto, says copying obituaries and reproducin­g them verbatim without permission, along with photograph­s, could be a copyright infringeme­nt issue.

But he says that if the obituaries just give biographic­al informatio­n about the individual­s, such as when they were born or when they died, that would probably not constitute copyright infringeme­nt. None of the obituaries for people killed in the Humboldt crash contain photos.

 ?? LIAM RICHARDS THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? People look at a memorial wall for the Humboldt Broncos during a game between the Estevan Bruins and Nipawin Hawks in Nipawin, on April 14.
LIAM RICHARDS THE CANADIAN PRESS People look at a memorial wall for the Humboldt Broncos during a game between the Estevan Bruins and Nipawin Hawks in Nipawin, on April 14.

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