• Djokovic edges Federer in 5 sets for 5th Wimbledon trophy

    Djokovic edges Federer in 5 sets for 5th Wimbledon trophy
    This triumph also earned Djokovic his 16th Grand Slam trophy
  • Fast and furious B.C. motorcyclist wins appeal in dangerous driving sentence

    Fast and furious B.C. motorcyclist wins appeal in dangerous driving sentence
    A Kelowna man with a need for speed successfully appealed his 10-month prison sentence for obstructing a peace officer and dangerous driving in May 2022.
    Christopher Blair Muir pleaded guilty to the charges, but despite a joint submission from defence and Crown lawyers of three months less time served, the Justice imposed a longer sentence on April 7.
    Filing in B.C. Court of Appeal, the guilty party claimed the Justice erred in imposing a 10-month sentence less time served by failing to consider
  • Erma K. Braun

    Erma K. Braun
    In the Loving Memory ~
    Erma passed away peacefully into glory June 16, 2026 at the age of 96. She did so with the certainty she would be joining Jesus in heaven and be reunited with her son Darrell. One would describe Erma as loving, endearing, witty, and classy but mostly as a God-fearing woman who cherished her family. Erma is survived by her daughter Janice Sentell (Cary), son Garth Braun (Katrin), grandchildren Peter, Zac, Aaron, Jarrod, Alexis, Aysha, Kalen and six great-grandchildren. Her
  • FortisBC volunteers make upgrades to Abbotsford’s Cyrus Centre

    FortisBC volunteers make upgrades to Abbotsford’s Cyrus Centre
    Employees from FortisBC were involved last Thursday (June 25) in a volunteer project to complete upgrades to Cyrus Centre in Abbotsford.
    The project was done as part of FortisBC’s Community Giving Day, and brought together volunteers from FortisBC and Cyrus Centre.
    Throughout the day, volunteers completed a range of projects, including exterior painting, landscaping, power washing and window cleaning as well as cleaning and organizing shared interior spaces.
    FortisBC also provided $30,000
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  • Joseph “Joe” Emery Tompkins

    Joseph “Joe” Emery Tompkins
    July 18, 1953 – May 1, 2026
    Joseph “Joe” Emery Tompkins passed away on May 1, 2026, in New Westminster, BC, following injuries sustained in a pedestrian-vehicle accident in Abbotsford.
    Born in Oshawa, Ontario, to Phil and Helen Tompkins, Joe graduated from Vernier High School in 1971 and attended Durham College. After moving to BC in the 1970s, he worked nearly 20 years as a press operator before becoming a long-haul truck driver in 2001, retiring in 2022.
    Joe met his wife, Lor
  • Fraser Valley Canada Day cycling tour trims back

    Fraser Valley Canada Day cycling tour trims back
    Every year, the Lower Mainland Maple Leaf Populaire bike ride gets a little longer, adding one kilomtre for every year of the Canadian dream.
    On Canada Day, July 1, 100 cyclists will mark Canada’s 159th birthday by riding the same number of kilometres on a route that begins and ends in Langley’s Walnut Grove.
    It will be a scaled-down, members only version of the annual event, organized by volunteers from the B.C. Randonneurs Cycling Club.
    Randonneurs Cycling Club secretary Anna Bonga
  • Crown delivers closing submissions in B.C. double-murder trial

    Crown delivers closing submissions in B.C. double-murder trial
    The trial of a man accused in a double murder in Saanich over the fatal stabbing of two homeless people more than three years ago is coming to an end after the Crown delivered its closing submissions.
    Christopher Cathcart, a tall man in his late 30s, appeared in Victoria court on June 29 to face allegations in the killings of William “Billy” Bradshaw and Stephanie Jade Elk. Both were killed on the morning of Oct. 19, 2022.
    Cathcart has pleaded not guilty to both charges.
    Bradshaw was
  • Abbotsford school increases student capacity by 50%

    Abbotsford school increases student capacity by 50%
    As the Abbotsford population continues to grow, so too do the schools in order to keep up with the increasing demand from local students.
    That’s why Infrastructure Minister Bowinn Ma recently announced that Dormick Park Elementary would receive 145 new seats.
    This marks a massive expansion for the elementary school, which had a student population of 276 in the 2025/26 school year.
    The number of students enrolled at Dormick Park Elementary has remained fairly steady since 2020, but this add
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  • Family raising funds to rebuild Bridal Falls Centre in Chilliwack

    Family raising funds to rebuild Bridal Falls Centre in Chilliwack
    One year after a devastating fire, the Bridal Falls Centre remains closed as a family looks to rebuild.
    Jess and Janet Jeon, whose parents own Rancher’s Restaurant, a Shell gas station and an RV campground, have started a GoFundMe to rebuild the family-owned businesses.
    Last June, an RV caught fire at the Bridal Falls Shell station. When firefighters arrived, the gas bar was fully engulfed and the fire had spread to the store adjacent to the pumps. A total of 33 firefighters fought the bla
  • Habs high on former Vernon Vipers defenceman

    Habs high on former Vernon Vipers defenceman
    The Montreal Canadiens have added a former member of the Vernon Vipers to its National Hockey League roster.
    The Habs drafted defenceman Cooper Cleaves, 20, a native of Riverside, CT, from Dartmouth College in the third round of the 2026 National Hockey League Entry Draft Saturday, June 27, in Buffalo.
    Cleaves was selected 93rd overall.
    He played 10 games in the B.C. Hockey League with the Snakes in 23-24 alongside older brother Hank, who is a junior at Dartmouth. He scored one goal.
    In 2024-25,
  • Fireworks display returns at Langley Township Canada Day event

    Fireworks display returns at Langley Township Canada Day event
    LANGLEY ADVANCE TIMES – Langley Township’s annual free family Canada Day event this year will see the return of fireworks, after two years of lighted drone displays.
    The festivities take place at McLeod Athletic Park at 5678 216 St., running from noon to 10:30 p.m. on Wednesday, July 1.
    The event will be fairly similar to last year’s, with a few tweaks, said Kevin Muirhead, manager of parks services and events for the Township.
    One of the biggest differences people will notice
  • VIDEO: More modular classrooms planned for schools in Langley and around B.C.

    VIDEO: More modular classrooms planned for schools in Langley and around B.C.
    LANGLEY ADVANCE TIMES – Modular classrooms will expand two of Langley’s newest elementary schools, including one that opened last September, B.C.’s Minister of Infrastructure announced on Tuesday.
    Bowinn Ma was in Langley on June 30 to announce 33 new classrooms, including one school upgrade and five new modular additions, to be built in communities around the province.
    Two of those will be in Langley. Donna Gabriel Robins Elementary, which opened in 2021, will get a modular ad
  • B.C. prisoner escape sparks safety questions from community

    B.C. prisoner escape sparks safety questions from community
    It was a sleepless night for Metchosin residents following the news that a “dangerous” prisoner had escaped from the William Head Institution.
    Inmate Ernest Egon Jensen, who was serving an indeterminate life sentence for second-degree murder for over three decades, was discovered missing during the noon count on Sunday (June 28).
    The missing prisoner was reported to West Shore RCMP shortly before 1 p.m., who immediately dispatched patrols to the area of the institution, including air
  • First robotic-assisted surgery a success at Surrey Memorial Hospital

    First robotic-assisted surgery a success at Surrey Memorial Hospital
    Staff at Surrey Memorial Hospital have conducted the first robotic-assisted procedure at the facility.
    On Tuesday (June 23), surgical teams successfully performed the hospital’s first robotic-assisted procedure using the da Vinci Xi system, marking an important milestone for patients, families, and care teams, a Fraser Health release said, noting the technology means people in Surrey and beyond now have greater access to advanced, minimally invasive surgical care.
    “The launch of Fras
  • White Rock stabbing accused elects for trial by judge, jury in Supreme Court

    White Rock stabbing accused elects for trial by judge, jury in Supreme Court
    The Surrey man charged in connection with the April 2024 stabbing death of 26-year-old Kulwinder Singh Sohi in White Rock has elected to be tried in New Westminster Supreme Court by a judge and jury.
    Dimitri Nelson Hyacinth was charged with second-degree murder on May 3, 2024, after Sohi was stabbed on White Rock’s waterfront promenade on the night of April 23, 2024 — the second of two stabbings in the city that week.
    Hyacinth is also facing aggravated assault charges in connection w
  • B.C. rock band revives 2000s hits with 25th-anniversary show in Abbotsford

    B.C. rock band revives 2000s hits with 25th-anniversary show in Abbotsford
    It’s been a long time since Default has put out a new album, but the popular B.C. band is preparing to give Canadian audiences another taste of the hits they’ve already pumped out since first forming in 1999.
    The group’s debut album, The Fallout, was released nearly 25 years ago and included some of the band’s biggest hits.
    To celebrate this milestone, the band has announced a 25th-anniversary tour, which includes a stop in Abbotsford later this year.
    View this post on In
  • WORLD CUP DAILY, June 30: Canada to face #6-ranked Morocco in Round of 16 match Saturday

    WORLD CUP DAILY, June 30: Canada to face #6-ranked Morocco in Round of 16 match Saturday
    Daily FIFA World Cup soccer match updates and news for Black Press Media publications.
    Three matches were played Monday including Netherlands vs. Morocco, the battle of most interest to soccer-mad Canadians.
    Morocco won in Monterrey to earn a Round of 16 clash with our Canadian men this Saturday morning (July 4) in Houston, 10 a.m. start Pacific time.
    Ranked sixth in the world, Morocco are soccer giants compared to 30th-ranked Canada, who’ll be underdogs in Texas.
    In other Round of 32 acti
  • Sunken vehicle surfaces surprise for rafters in B.C. Interior river

    Sunken vehicle surfaces surprise for rafters in B.C. Interior river
    Guides with Revelstoke-based Apex Rafting were cruising a routine run down the Illecillewaet River rapids on June 7 when one of them noticed an unusual shape below the surface.
    The guide claimed to have glimpsed an automobile underwater, however, fellow rafters reportedly refused to believe it.
    But the truth quickly surfaced that someone had driven a vehicle off the Trans-Canada Highway into the river.
    “We were never notified about the vehicle,” Apex owner-operator Ralph Koerber reco
  • ‘Bring the noise’ this summer in Penticton with True Rhythm Festival

    ‘Bring the noise’ this summer in Penticton with True Rhythm Festival
    2026, the number of another summer, sound of a funky drummer.
    That beat will be dropped by Public Enemy on the beaches of Penticton this August.
    The New York hip-hop group formed in 1985 by Chuck D and Flavor Flav are preforming as part of the True Rhythm Festival.
    Also featured in the festival’s lineup are G-Eazy, Collie Buddz, Honestav, Snotty Nose Rez Kids, Bedouin Soundclash and Kelowna’s DJ Invisible.
    True Rhythm is a celebration of culture, connection, and creativity, “br
  • Kelowna riding coach’s fate left to jury for alleged sex crimes, child luring

    Kelowna riding coach’s fate left to jury for alleged sex crimes, child luring
    The fate of a Kelowna equestrian coach is in the hands of a jury as submissions in the trial for sexual touching, sexual assault, and child luring came to a close on June 29.
    Sebastien Devrainne, originally from France, has spent the past week sitting in a Kelowna, B.C. Supreme Court for alleged crimes against a former student dating back more than a decade.
    Defence lawyers argued that there has been no evidence to prove that a sexual relationship of any kind took place between Devrainne and the
  • Wildfire south of Lillooet burns in dangerous terrain, being monitored: BCWS

    Wildfire south of Lillooet burns in dangerous terrain, being monitored: BCWS
    The Riley Creek wildfire south of Lillooet is seeing a modified response due to it burning in unsafe and inaccessible terrain.
    The BC Wildfire Service (BCWS) provided an update about the wildfire on Monday, June 29, at 4:19 p.m.
    The fire (number K70659), was discovered on June 24 and remains out of control and sized at 50 hectares. The suspected cause of the fire is lightning.
    BCWS provided a detailed response update on June 29.
    They say the wildfire is about nine kilometres south of Lillooet an
  • B.C. attorney general joins Williams Lake mother’s call for child online safety

    B.C. attorney general joins Williams Lake mother’s call for child online safety
    WARNING: This article contains content that might be distressing for some readers. If you feel like you are in crisis or are considering suicide, please call the Crisis Centre BC suicide hotline at 1-800-784-2433. Other resources include: Canada Suicide Prevention Service at Toll free: 1-833-456-4566, the Crisis Line at 310-6789 or 1-800-SUICIDE (1-800-784-2433): For suicide prevention and intervention.You can also text 45645 or visit the online chat service at crisisservicescanada.ca
    Maddy Cros
  • PROGRESS 2026: Coulson Aviation’s night vision firefighting helped battle summer fires on Vancouver Island

    PROGRESS 2026: Coulson Aviation’s night vision firefighting helped battle summer fires on Vancouver Island
    In a historically bad year for wildfires across Canada, B.C. had 1,350 fires with an estimated 886,360 hectares of land burned across the province. When it came to fighting two of the worst fires in Vancouver Island’s history, BC Wildfire Service took advantage of Coulson Aviation’s successful night vision aerial firefighting program.
    Almost 15 years to the day after testing how effective a helicopter could be dropping water on hot spots at night, the Wesley Ridge fire broke out betw
  • Escaped inmate from B.C. prison found dead

    Escaped inmate from B.C. prison found dead
    The Correctional Service of Canada (CSC) has confirmed that escaped inmate Ernest Egon Jensen, 69, has been found dead.
    In a statement released just after 2 p.m. today (June 29), CSC said Jensen was found “in the ocean off the coast of Metchosin.”
    West Shore RCMP said Jensen’s body was recovered near the shoreline along William Head Institution by the RCMP West Coast Marine Services alongside Metchosin Fire Department.
    “Yesterday, CSC followed escape protocols and issued
  • Truck incident kills Lumby youth

    Truck incident kills Lumby youth
    A summer celebration turned tragic in Lumby over the weekend.
    Two pedestrians were hit by a truck on a rural property Saturday shortly before 12 p.m.
    Despite immediate first aid provided by youth witnesses and efforts of paramedics when they arrived, a 15-year-old Lumby youth died.
    A second youth, who was also struck by the pick-up, was transported to hospital by ambulance with non-life-threatening injuries.
    The driver of the pick-up truck fled the scene but was later located by police.
    “T
  • The heat is on: Harrison Festival of the Arts launches next week

    The heat is on: Harrison Festival of the Arts launches next week
    One of Harrison Hot Springs’ most time-honored and beloved events is right around the corner.
    The Harrison Festival of the Arts begins on Friday, July 10. Now in its 47th year, the festival is a nine-day multimedia celebration of all things art, from performance to visual to – most prominently – music from all over Canada and the world.
    The festival kicks off at noon with a welcoming ceremony, which will include the Sasquatch Dancers of the Sts’ailes First Nation. Harriso
  • 6 presumed dead, 2 still in hospital after charter boat sinks off Richmond: RCMP

    6 presumed dead, 2 still in hospital after charter boat sinks off Richmond: RCMP
    Police say the six people missing after a charter boat sank off the coast of Richmond are now presumed dead.
    Four men and two women remain unaccounted for Monday afternoon, more than a day after the vessel sank near Roberts Bank on Sunday (June 28). Police say they are presumed to have drowned.
    Richmond RCMP now say the search has been suspended and search efforts have now shifted to recovery.
    It’s believed the boat sank in very deep waters, police say.
    The RCMP’s underwater recovery
  • Court declines to reopen Cowichan Tribes case to add private landowner Montrose

    Court declines to reopen Cowichan Tribes case to add private landowner Montrose
    B.C. Supreme Court Justice Barbara Young will not allow the Cowichan Tribes Aboriginal title case to be reopened for the private landowner Montrose Properties to be added as a defendant.
    Permitting the case to be relitigated in this way would be an “abuse of process,” the judge found.
    “Although Montrose did not have formal notice of the proceeding, it had knowledge of the proceedings, and chose not to apply to be added as [a] party until long after the conclusion of the trial,&
  • Agassiz prison locked down for exceptional search

    Agassiz prison locked down for exceptional search
    Correctional Service B.C. (CSC) has reported a lockdown at medium-security Mountain Institution in Agassiz.
    The lockdown has been in effect since June 26 to enable staff members to conduct an exceptional search.
    “The search was ordered to ensure the safety and security of the institution, its staff, and inmates,” the CSC stated.
    As of press time, visits are suspended unitl the search is completed. Normal operations will resume as soon as the CSC deems it safe to do so.
  • B.C. Nurses’ Union files 72-hour strike notice to labour relations board

    B.C. Nurses’ Union files 72-hour strike notice to labour relations board
    The B.C. Nurses’ Union has filed a 72-hour strike notice to the B.C. Labour Relations Board and the Health Employers Association of B.C.
    Union president Adriane Gear announced the job action notice Monday in Burnaby.She said on Thursday, July 2 and 12:01 p.m., the nurses in the province will be in a legal position to begin job action.This comes after 67 per cent of B.C. nurses voted to reject the recently negotiated tentative collective agreement.
    The tentative deal was negotiated between

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