• First Nations question looms over pipeline

    First Nations question looms over pipeline
    As court challenge overshadows Kinder Morgan project, Indigenous communities remain dividedThe post First Nations question looms over pipeline appeared first on Abbotsford News.
  • PHOTOS: Vancouver Canucks draftees get first taste of action at Abbotsford camp

    PHOTOS: Vancouver Canucks draftees get first taste of action at Abbotsford camp
    The public got its first look at the new class of Vancouver Canucks in action on Thursday (July 2) as the team held a three-on-three scrimmage at Rogers Forum.
    The mini tournament capped off a development camp in Abbotsford, which included 25 players hoping to skate for the Canucks in the upcoming season.
    Included among the group was the third overall pick of the 2026 NHL Draft, Caleb Malhotra, who is also the son of new Canucks head coach Manny Malhotra.
    In addition to running various shooting,
  • Campbell Riverite goes from local mascot to Trooper drummer

    Campbell Riverite goes from local mascot to Trooper drummer
    “I’ve never played a Trooper song in my life and I’d rather keep it that way.”
    That’s what Clayton Hill told a bandmate during a 2006 fill-in gig in Quesnel, moments before floundering his way through the classic rock staple We’re Here for a Good Time (Not a Long Time). Less than a day later, he got a phone call on his Nokia that would change his life, an invitation to audition as the new drummer for Trooper, one of Canada’s most enduring rock bands.
    Hil
  • Recording project an act of kindness for Communitas in Abbotsford

    Recording project an act of kindness for Communitas in Abbotsford
    Communitas Supportive Care Society in Abbotsford is celebrating its annual theme of Kindness Connects through an original song written by one of its staff.
    Communications manager Angelika Dawson said the agency was looking for creative ways to celebrate the theme and came up with the idea of commissioning an original song.
    Dawson knew that the organization’s IT manager, Ray Klassen, is a songwriter, writing under the name Ornery Pilgrim. She also knows musician and recording artist Scott C
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  • Man dead after Cranbrook arrest, police watchdog investigating

    Man dead after Cranbrook arrest, police watchdog investigating
    B.C.’s police watchdog agency is investigating after a man died at East Kootenay Regional Hospital after being taken into custody following a police incident on June 27.
    According to the Independent Investigations Office, preliminary information provided by RCMP states that around 9:15 p.m. on June 27, 2026, officers responded to a call about a man on the roof of a building near the intersection of Briar Avenue and 5th Street.
    Police arrived and located the man, who was in possession of we
  • Surrey judge sets 4-year sentence for driving ‘rampage’ that led to 13 crashes, 9 victims injured

    Surrey judge sets 4-year sentence for driving ‘rampage’ that led to 13 crashes, 9 victims injured
    A Surrey provincial court judge has sentenced Harinder Singh Sihota to four years in prison after he pleaded guilty to impaired driving causing bodily harm to two people, dangerous driving and failing to remain at the scene of a crash that occurred late at night on Sept. 16, 2023.
    With credit for time served, Sihota has 874 days left to serve.
    Judge Reginald Harris also ordered Sihota, a 41-year-old heavy duty mechanic, to pay to victims Stacey Johnson $26,845.98 and Krystle Zimmer $12,543.07 in
  • Coastal First Nations alliance praises new deal to uphold North Coast tanker ban

    Coastal First Nations alliance praises new deal to uphold North Coast tanker ban
    The Coastal First Nations alliance is applauding the new agreement struck between the B.C. and federal governments to uphold the ban on heavy oil tankers docking in the region, regardless of whether a new pipeline gets built.
    “Today is a good day,” said Chief Marilyn Slett of the Heiltsuk Nation, one of six in the alliance. “As our coastal communities, we are very pleased to hear that the North Coast will remain protected from the threat of an oil spill.”
    Earlier in the d
  • B.C. Civil Forfeiture seeks to seize vehicle linked to Surrey extortion shooting

    B.C. Civil Forfeiture seeks to seize vehicle linked to Surrey extortion shooting
    B.C.’s director of civil forfeiture has filed a claim to seize a Honda Civic that is suspected to have been involved in a January extortion-related shooting in Surrey.
    The notice of claim was filed in B.C. Supreme Court in Vancouver on June 19 against the owner of the 2004 Honda Civic, Damanveer Singh.
    On Jan. 20, Surrey Police responded to a call of a shooting in the 7200-block of King George Boulevard around 4:30 a.m. Police found that a business and several vehicles had been damaged by
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  • Search continues for boat that capsized of coast of Richmond, leaving 6 dead

    Search continues for boat that capsized of coast of Richmond, leaving 6 dead
    The search is continuing for a fishing charter boat that capsized off the coast of Richmond four days ago.
    Richmond RCMP say the search efforts are continuing Thursday (July 2) with the RCMP’s Underwater Recovery Team and West Coast Marine Services to locate the vessel that sank near Roberts Bank on June 28.
    Police say crews are using SONAR technology to search underwater
    However, conditions in the water have been “challenging, making the search slower and more difficult.”
    A sl
  • B.C. attorney general announces chronic property offenders program

    B.C. attorney general announces chronic property offenders program
    A new province-wide program aims to tackle chronic property crime and public disorder.
    Deputy Premier and Attorney General of British Columbia Niki Sharma made the announcement during a visit to Smithers this morning (June 23).
    She said the new initiative is a response to a lot of municipalities and small businesses that have been saying that chronic property offenders are a problem.
    Dubbed the Chronic Property Offending Intervention Initiative (CPOII), Sharma said the program aims to target chr
  • North Vancouver volleyball coach charged with multiple sexual offences

    North Vancouver volleyball coach charged with multiple sexual offences
    A North Vancouver volleyball coach is charged with multiple counts of sexual offences from alleged assaults dating back to 2016, with some involving youth.
    Iraj Mozaffari is facing 10 counts, including three counts of sexual interference of a person under 16, two counts of touching a young person for sexual purpose and five counts of sexual assault, North Vancouver RCMP announced Thursday (July 2).
    The offences are alleged to have occurred between January 2016 and December 2024.
    North Vancouver
  • Mission’s Teresa Kleindienst to be inducted into Canada Basketball’s Hall of Fame

    Mission’s Teresa Kleindienst to be inducted into Canada Basketball’s Hall of Fame
    Mission’s Teresa (Gabriele) Kleindienst will be inducted into the Canada Basketball Hall of Fame this summer.
    Canada Basketball announced the 2026 class on Thursday (July 2) in a news release. Kleindienst will be recognized alongside nine others at a live induction ceremony in New Brunswick in August.
    The Heritage Park Secondary alumna boasts a long list of accomplishments from her basketball career.
    “Through her sustained excellence, international achievements, and unwavering commit
  • B.C. nurses begin job action following 72-hour strike notice

    B.C. nurses begin job action following 72-hour strike notice
    B.C. Nurses’ Union members have officially begun job action.
    The union issued the 72-hour strike notice to the employer – the provincial government – on Monday, noting that job action would begin Thursday, July 2 at 12:01 p.m.
    The union says its now beginning targeted job action at worksites across the province.
    That means beginning Thursday nurses will no longer perform non-nursing duties, which the union says will allows nurses to “focus on the work they were trained to
  • Two inmates assaulted in Agassiz-area prison

    Two inmates assaulted in Agassiz-area prison
    Two inmates at maximum-security Kent Institution were hospitalized following two separate incidents on June 28 and 29.
    Correctional Service Canada (CSC) said that the assailants have been identified and appropriate action as been taken. No CSC staff members or other inmates were injured during either incident.The Agassiz RCMP are investigating the incidents.“The safety and security of institutions, their staff, and the public remains the highest priority in the operations of the federal co
  • VIDEO: Chilliwack motorcyclist crashes in Vancouver after passing RCMP on shoulder

    VIDEO: Chilliwack motorcyclist crashes in Vancouver after passing RCMP on shoulder
    RCMP have released a video showing a Chilliwack motorcyclist crashing his bike, and police are reminding drivers it’s illegal and dangerous to pass on the shoulder following an incident in Vancouver.
    The collision happened in heavy traffic westbound on Highway 1 near East 1st Avenue in Vancouver on June 18 at 9:22 a.m.
    A BC Highway Patrol officer was passed by a black Harley-Davidson motorcycle on the right shoulder. When the police officer activated his lights and siren, a blue pickup tru
  • Surrey Mayor Brenda Locke denies ‘bailing out’ developer on arena deal

    Surrey Mayor Brenda Locke denies ‘bailing out’ developer on arena deal
    Surrey mayoral candidate Doug McCallum is accusing Mayor Brenda Locke of “bailing out” a land developer in a celebrated land swap that was publicly revealed on June 30 where land owned by the City of Surrey was traded for what’s to be the site of a 10,000-seat arena in Whalley, to be built where a Safeway grocery store was on 104 Avenue and King George Boulevard.
    McCallum, the former mayor leading the Safe Surrey Coalition into the October 17 civic election, says city hall has
  • B.C., feds agree to keep North Coast tanker ban, but still clear way for new pipeline

    B.C., feds agree to keep North Coast tanker ban, but still clear way for new pipeline
    The federal government will provide billions of dollars in support for B.C. projects and guarantee that the North Coast tanker restrictions will remain in place in exchange for a commitment not to oppose a new pipeline from Alberta to the coast.
    “We will not be going to court to fight a pipeline project,” B.C. Premier David Eby said in Vancouver on Thursday, July 2. “Instead, we will ensure we fulfill our constitutional obligations in good faith.”
    “Pipelines are fed
  • PHOTOS: Memorial butterfly release held in Abbotsford

    PHOTOS: Memorial butterfly release held in Abbotsford
    The rain held off as more than 100 people gathered to honour and remember their loved ones at the annual memorial butterfly release on Saturday (June 27).
    The event was held by the Abbotsford Hospice and Grief Support Society (AHGSS) at Tuscan Farm Garden.
    The gentle music of a harpist welcomed guests to the site.
    Mayor Ross Siemens was among those in attendance, joining community members in recognizing the importance of remembering those who have touched their lives.
    Each participant released a
  • Lighter shaped like grenade leads to police search at New Westminster park

    Lighter shaped like grenade leads to police search at New Westminster park
    New Westminster police say lighters shaped like grenades are foolish after having to conduct a search at a park on Canada Day.
    New Westminster Police Department received a report from someone who described seeing what appeared to be a grenade at Ryall Park inside the dog park area around 10 a.m. on July 1, police said in a news release Thursday (July 2).
    Officers used a drone and searched the area. The suspicious object was found and determined to be a butane lighter in the shape of a grenade.
    &
  • British Columbians reminded to use life jackets amid recent drowning deaths

    British Columbians reminded to use life jackets amid recent drowning deaths
    There have been more than 20 fatal drownings so far this year, and a society that advocates for water safety warns it could be a record-breaking year for deaths.
    Lifesaving Society’s B.C. and Yukon branch says – by its count – there have been 27 drowning deaths so far in the province in 2026.
    Lenea Grace, executive director of the society, said there has been a recent spike in drownings in B.C., pointing to a recent reported drowning on Okanagan Lake on June 29 and the presumed
  • Gardens can solve food and health crisis

    Gardens can solve food and health crisis
    Over the weekend I watched the movie Farmacy of Light from Rob Herring, executive producer, which makes the case that the crises in our food system and in human health aren’t separate problems.
    They are one problem.
    The fresh produce sitting in your grocery store is measurably less nutritious today than the same vegetables grown just a few decades ago. This isn’t speculation. Researchers analyzing historical agricultural data have documented significant declines in essential vitamins
  • PHOTOS: Abbotsford celebrates Canada Day

    PHOTOS: Abbotsford celebrates Canada Day
    Abbotsford celebrated Canada Day on Wednesday with its annual parade along South Fraser Way and a family festival at Exhibition Park.
    Attractions throughout the festival included include hayrides, the Sports Zone, STEM Zone, Go Play Outside, the new RAD Torque Play Zone, and Unitech Slides.
    Other activities include three Dogwood Pacesetters Agility dog shows, inflatables, face painting, and airbrush tattoos.
    There was also a diverse selection of food and beverage options from the Greater Vancouv
  • WORLD CUP DAILY, July 2: England, USA and Belgium all advance to the Round of 16

    WORLD CUP DAILY, July 2: England, USA and Belgium all advance to the Round of 16
    Daily FIFA World Cup soccer match updates and news for Black Press Media publications.
    Three matches were played Monday, including USA vs Bosnia and Herzegovina, as England face off against the Democratic Republic of Congo.The United States, England and Belgium have all made it through to the next round.Portugal will play against Croatia at Toronto Stadium at 7 p.m. ET. Tickets for this match are $1,996, according to ticketdata.com on Thursday morning (July 2).Thursday, July 2:
    Spain vs. Austria
  • WORLD CUP DAILY, July 2: England, USA and Belgium advance to the Round of 16

    WORLD CUP DAILY, July 2: England, USA and Belgium advance to the Round of 16
    Daily FIFA World Cup soccer match updates and news for Black Press Media publications.
    Three matches were played Monday, including USA vs Bosnia and Herzegovina, as England face off against the Democratic Republic of Congo.
    The United States, England and Belgium have all made it through to the next round.
    Portugal will play against Croatia at Toronto Stadium at 7 p.m. ET. Tickets for this match are $1,996, according to ticketdata.com on Thursday morning (July 2).
    The second-to-last match at BC P
  • What to expect (and do) in the first 4 weeks with a puppy

    What to expect (and do) in the first 4 weeks with a puppy
    Bringing a new puppy home is exciting, but it can also be overwhelming — for both the puppy and their new guardians.
    The first month is a period of adjustment, learning, and building trust. Understanding what your puppy needs during this time can help set the foundation for a confident, well-adjusted adult dog.
    Week one: Settling in
    Your puppy has just left everything they know, their littermates, familiar smells, and daily routine. It’s normal for puppies to feel uncertain, tired, o
  • Three-year-old battling cancer makes memories at Aldergrove zoo

    Three-year-old battling cancer makes memories at Aldergrove zoo
    A special day at the Greater Vancouver Zoo in Aldergrove was more than just a meet-and-greet with animals for three-year-old Mavrik.
    The visit gave Mavrik and his family a chance to spend time together, create new memories, and enjoy an outing made possible through the support of Canuck Place Children’s Hospice and zoo staff.
    Mavrik has always been a kid full of energy, according to his dad, Derek Turnbull.
    The toddler especially loves hockey and, more recently, dinosaurs, which was the ma
  • Hands Across the Border: B.C. resident co-writes song honouring Canada-U.S. bond

    Hands Across the Border: B.C. resident co-writes song honouring Canada-U.S. bond
    A song written by two Canadians – including one from Surrey – is celebrating the longstanding bond between Canada and the United States.
    As Canadians prepare for Canada Day on July 1, and Americans get ready for Independence Day on July 4, a new song by South Surrey’s Marc Burchell and Halifax singer-songwriter Terry Kelly highlights the friendship between the two countries.
    Kelly is an Order of Canada recipient, award-winning singer-songwriter, motivational speaker and accompl
  • Former Kelowna Rocket back for 3rd stint with Vancouver Canucks

    Former Kelowna Rocket back for 3rd stint with Vancouver Canucks
    Third time’s the charm.
    On Wednesday, July 1, the Vancouver Canucks announced the signing of defenceman Luke Schenn to a one-year, $2.25 million contract.
    For the former Kelowna Rocket, this is his third stint with the Canucks. During the 2018-19 season, the Saskatoon product played in 18 games, tallying two assists. He was also with the Canucks for two seasons, from 2021-23, where he played 121 games, scoring eight goals and adding 30 assists.
    The 2026-27 campaign will be his 19th NHL sea
  • UPDATE: Highway 1 westbound between Chilliwack, Hope down to 1 lane after crash

    UPDATE: Highway 1 westbound between Chilliwack, Hope down to 1 lane after crash
    UPDATE 11:29 a.m.
    Westbound traffic is moving again, but the left lane remains blocked due to the multi-vehicle crash.
    Delays are expected in the area due to traffic congestion.
    Original
    A crash involving a U-Haul truck has closed Highway 1 westbound in the Popkum area, just outside Chilliwack.
    The incident occurred around 10:30 a.m. on Wednesday, July 1, near Exit 146, involving at least two vehicles.
    The U-Haul truck is blocking the majority of the westbound lanes, forcing the closure.
    It&rsqu
  • Crash involving moving truck closes Highway 1 westbound between Chilliwack, Hope

    Crash involving moving truck closes Highway 1 westbound between Chilliwack, Hope
    A crash involving a U-Haul truck has closed Highway 1 westbound in the Popkum area, just outside Chilliwack.
    The incident occurred around 10:30 a.m. on Wednesday, July 1, near Exit 146, involving at least two vehicles.
    The U-Haul truck is blocking the majority of the westbound lanes, forcing the closure.
    It’s unknown at this time if anyone is injured.
    Emergency crews are on scene.
    Travellers can use Highway 7 as an alternative route.

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