• Rick Hansen Foundation gets $5M-boost from B.C.

    Rick Hansen Foundation gets $5M-boost from B.C.
    2 Indigenous communities, 5 more municipalities will be selected to improve accessibilityThe post Rick Hansen Foundation gets $5M-boost from B.C. appeared first on Abbotsford News.
  • Hearing to reopen Cowichan Tribes case delayed, first to find ‘who knew what, when’

    The court hearing to debate an application by Montrose Properties to reopen the Cowichan Tribes land title case is being delayed.
    David Rosenberg, the lawyer representing the Cowichan Tribes, first wants to ascertain how much the company knew of the case before it was decided last August.
    Montrose argues it knew little and was unaware of the potential impacts to its land, so it deserves a chance to be added as a defendant and have a say in court.
    In an attempt to prove otherwise, Rosenberg is fi
  • B.C. Prosperity Project tries to rally support to join Alberta in exit from Canada

    A group offering promises of economic prosperity if British Columbia organized with Alberta and Saskatchewan to separate from Canada and form a new country held an event in Willow Point on Monday night (Jan. 2).
    Called the B.C. Prosperity Project, it is a group inspired by the Alberta Prosperity Project, which was recently in the spotlight after reports that members met with representatives of U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration seeking help in their goal of separating from Canada
  • Abbotsford golfer named top 5 PGA of BC rookie member

    Caleb Voth is being hailed as one of the top members of the PGA of BC’s Professional Development Program for 2025, with the Ledgeview Golf Club instructor being named the fifth-highest-scoring rookie member of the year.
    This annual list tracks the top-ranking golf professionals within the PGA of BC and includes a breakdown of the top 100 members, along with the top 10 assistant professionals and the top five rookies.
    Points are earned through contributions to the association, local communi
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  • Kamloops Mayor has one of two defamation suits against councillor tossed

    One of three defamation suits filed by Kamloops Mayor Reid Hamer-Jackson — and one of two against a fellow city councillor — was tossed by the B.C. Supreme Court on Jan. 30.
    The decision by Justice J. Hughes was published on Feb. 2, and in short found that Kamloops Coun. Katie Neustaeter’s statements made during council business fell under the Protection of Public Participation Act, and there was no evidence that the statements caused any actual harm.
    The lawsuit stemmed from H
  • Vancouver doctor charged with sex assault against teens, dating back to 2015

    Vancouver police believe there could be additional victims after a doctor was charged in a sex assault investigation involving teen victims dating back to 2015.
    Police announced charges against 65-year-old Herman Man Hau Lee Tuesday (Feb. 3) from two separate incidents. He faces one count of sexual assault and one count of sexual interference for offences that allegedly occurred in Burnaby in December 2014, as well as one count each of sexual assault, sexual interference and sexual exploitation
  • Premier says goal is to deliver ‘what local policing is meant to be’

    Premier David Eby put the Surrey Police Service and police board under a microscope Tuesday during a meeting with Surrey business leaders related to the ongoing extortion crisis plaguing South Asian businesses and residents in this city.
    Eby expressed concern about “inconsistent communications” between the extortion task force and the Surrey Police Service to the community. “These inconsistent communications result in the community feeling that everybody is not on the same page
  • B.C. premier says goal is to deliver ‘what local policing is meant to be’

    Premier David Eby put the Surrey Police Service and police board under a microscope Tuesday during a meeting with Surrey business leaders related to the ongoing extortion crisis plaguing South Asian businesses and residents in this city.
    Eby expressed concern about “inconsistent communications” between the extortion task force and the Surrey Police Service to the community. “These inconsistent communications result in the community feeling that everybody is not on the same page
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  • New community advisory group will work with B.C. extortion task force

    A community advisory group is being created to help “close gaps” between the community and the B.C. extortion task force amidst the ongoing extortion-related violence in Surrey and other B.C. communities.
    The chair of the committee will be announced tomorrow, Premier David Eby said Tuesday (Feb. 3) after meeting with Surrey business leaders in Vancouver.
    The group will be made up of community members who will be working alongside the task force and ensuring they understand “the
  • VIDEO: ‘Nothing to lose’ as Vancouver FC prepares to meet Cruz Azul

    Vancouver FC team captain Callum Irving and head coach Martin Nash said the Langley-based pro soccer team has ‘nothing to lose’ in Wednesday’s match against Mexican powerhouse Cruz Azul as the 2026 Concacaf Champions Cup gets underway.
    In a question-and-answer session with reporters before the game at Willoughby stadium, Nash described it as a great opportunity for VFC.
    ”We say we’ve got nothing to lose, but we’ll give everything we have,” Nash said.
    &rd
  • B.C. Premier David Eby warns of cuts in upcoming budget

    B.C.’s next budget is set to be revealed on Tuesday, Feb. 17.
    Premier David Eby said to expect cuts.
    “Absolutely, we’ll be reducing spending in the next budget,” he said in an unrelated news conference on Tuesday, Feb. 3. “But the reductions will be focused on administrative cost, bureaucracy, while we’re preserving frontline services for British Columbians.”
    The latest quarterly financial update from the province projects the 2025/26 deficit at nearly $
  • Inquest hears B.C. man suffered a mental health crisis days before his family was found dead

    The second morning of a coroner’s inquest into the deaths of a Prince Rupert family in 2023 has heard that the father, Christopher Duong, may have suffered a mental health crisis just days before the family of four was found dead.
    Former RCMP Const. Matt Jones testified that he apprehended Duong under the Mental Health Act during a traffic stop in the early morning of June. 10, 2023. Duong had been driving around with his wife, Janet Nguyen, and their two children, Alexander and Harlan Duo
  • Salmon Arm woman holding top spot in Maxim Cover Girl contest

    Jessi Day isn’t just in the running to be Maxim Magazine’s next Cover Girl, she’s currently one of the leading contestants.
    As of Monday afternoon, Feb. 2, three days remained to round one in the U.S. publication’s Cover Girl 2026 competition, and the 31-year-old Salmon Arm woman was in first place in her cohort, with 25 cohorts of up to 100 people in each in the running.
    “I’ve been in first place for the last couple days now and it just absolutely blew my min
  • FVRD floats options to address flood management in Hatzic watershed

    Three options have been proposed to address flooding in the Hatzic watershed, each with different financial implications for both residents of the Fraser Valley Regional District (FVRD) and the City of Mission.
    The FVRD is seeking feedback on flood management options at an open house on Thursday (Feb. 5) at Dewdney Elementary from 6 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. An online option to leave comments is also open on FVRD’s Have Your Say platform through Friday (Feb. 6).
    The three options for flood governa
  • If I had $3M dollars: White Rock resident wins VGH+ Millionaire Lottery

    A White Rock resident is the lucky winner of the VGH+ Millionaire Lottery.
    The grand prize draws happened Monday, Feb. 2, and E. Fedewich of White Rock bought the winning ticket — 9119227 — and now gets to choose one of 10 grand prize options.
    Those options include homes in South Surrey, Vancouver, Burnaby, Langley, Courtenay, Sooke, Colwood or Kelowna (two homes), or $3 million cash.
    “And we have a winner! From White Rock, B.C. … we might even be able to see you from ov
  • Kelowna cat claws its way into America’s Favourite Pet competition

    Currently ranked at number three, Askhim the cat is relying on community support to win America’s Favourite Pet competition.
    In 2018, Askhim was caught in an arson fire with his sister, CleoKatra. His owner, Blaine Busslinger, came home to the wreckage the next day and was confronted by his landlord, who, at the time, did not allow pets in his building.
    “The manager said ‘he had met my roommate’, meaning Askhim, my cat. I replied ‘both?’
    He said that I could k
  • Clean sweep of B.C. baseball awards for Vernon team

    Three strikes, goes the ol’ baseball adage, and you’re out.
    But three awards recognizes a pretty good year.
    The Vernon Canadians swept the three awards in the 18U Division at the B.C. Minor Baseball Association’s Coaches Conference Luncheon in Langley Saturday, Jan. 31.
    The Canadians, who captured the B.C. and Western Canadian 18U AA Championships in 2025, were named Team of the Year. Pitcher Koen Holmes was named Player of the Year. And manager Dan Braddick was selected Coach
  • B.C. rugby star highlights Rugby Canada’s financial plight on Dragons’ Den

    Sophie de Goede is used to pressure moments. Stepping into the Dragons’ Den was just another kind of tunnel.
    The Oak Bay product was front and centre on the Jan. 29 episode of CBC’s Dragons’ Den.
    She appeared alongside members of Canada’s women’s and men’s national rugby teams to pitch a $250,000 premium, one-year sponsorship on behalf of Rugby Canada ahead of the 2025 Women’s Rugby World Cup.
    “This honestly feels like we are going into a game. It
  • Chilliwack cat welfare non-profit undergoing ‘transition’ says revamped board

    Major changes have been taking place at a beloved cat welfare organization in Chilliwack, causing speculation and concern from its supporters.
    On Jan. 28, the Chilliwack Animal Safe Haven Society issued a statement announcing three new directors for their board, along with an “experienced organizational consultant,” Eyal Lichtmann.
    That statement was met with numerous comments on the non-profit’s Facebook page, all of which have since been deleted.
    On Tuesday (Feb. 3), the soci
  • Invermere woman sentenced to two years jail for crash that killed three

    An Invermere woman has been sentenced to two years in jail for being impaired and behind the wheel during a truck crash that killed three people nearly two years ago.
    Gavin Murray, Brady Tardif and Jackson Freeman were killed when a truck driven by Haley Watson, whose blood alcohol content was more than twice the legal limit, went off the road in a rural area near Invermere on July 9, 2024.
    Watson, who previously pled guilty, was sentenced in Cranbrook Supreme Court on Jan. 30 by Justice Lindsay
  • Abbotsford’s Zoe Tessier signs with UFV Cascades women’s soccer team

    Abbotsford’s Zoe Tessier has signed with the University of the Fraser Valley Cascades women’s soccer program.
    The Cascades announced the signing of the Grade 12 W.J. Mouat Secondary student on a social media post on Jan. 21.
    The 5-8 defender played club soccer for the Surrey-based Coastal FC and also played high school soccer for the Hawks.
    Tessier was part of a history-making senior girls Hawks team in 2024 that saw the club go undefeated in both the regular season and playoffs to c
  • Abbotsford artist brings digital art into the physical realm with new piece

    Two worlds collide in the latest piece from Abbotsford Renaissance man Avery Lake, with this new artwork scheduled to be unveiled on Saturday, Feb. 7.
    The Swiss-Canadian artist has been exploring the relationship that humans have with technology and how it has changed in the last few years, which is reflected in his new artwork called I, Human.
    This hand-drawn QR code is displayed on glass to provide a reflective screen that shows the viewer themselves, just like a phone screen, which is an effe
  • Abbotsford mayor and First Nation chief head to Ottawa for flood-funding talks

    Abbotsford Mayor Ross Siemens and Sumas First Nation Chief Dalton Silver will be in Ottawa on Wednesday and Thursday (Feb. 4 and 5) for meetings on flood-infrastructure funding.
    The pair will accompany B.C. emergency management minister Kelly Greene to meet with senior members of the federal cabinet.
    A press release states that the group will discuss “crucial flood-reduction infrastructure projects and emergency preparedness” in B.C.
    Sumas Prairie has experienced two flooding events
  • Castlegar woman glad to be alive after CO poisoning

    Janice Johnson thought her time on Earth was coming to an end.
    Over the course of fall 2025, the 77-year-old’s health steadily declined. She was experiencing a deep fatigue and lethargy that she just couldn’t shake. She stopped walking her dog and going to social events, and had difficulty completing routine tasks.
    Multiple visits to doctors and a myriad of tests couldn’t find a reason for the decline.
    Johnson decided her heart must be failing.
    “I was concerned, and thoug
  • Yukon judge releases detailed reasons in Jack Hulland school settlement case

    The Yukon Supreme Court has approved a settlement for former students of Jack Hulland Elementary School, clearing the way for a compensation process for children who were subjected to holds, restraints, and seclusion over a 15-year period.
    The decision was delivered orally in November 2025, but the court’s written reasons, released Jan. 28, 2026, outline how eligible former students can claim between $10,000 and $1 million through a three‑tier compensation process, depending on the t
  • ‘Criminalizing homelessness’: The flip-side of Victoria’s encampment cleanups

    Nahil Mustafa sat quietly in a small folding chair, hands clenched together, feet turned inward. Her head was down and her expression sombre. Wrapped in a heavy blanket, she has all her life’s possessions neatly stacked behind her.
    Just outside Victoria’s Our Place Society, on the south side of the 900-block of Pandora Avenue, she waited for what’s commonly known as a street sweep – or what local governments prefer to call an encampment cleanup.Nihal Mustafa sits quietly
  • Landlord at Langley casino sues City over losing 40 parking stalls to SkyTrain

    The landlord of Langley’s casino is suing the City, claiming they were underpaid when the City expropriated part of the casino parking lot for SkyTrain station-related work.
    Cascades Casino Langley, in the 20300 block of Fraser Highway, is directly across a lane and cul-de-sac from the future site of the Langley City SkyTrain station, where construction has been ongoing for most of the last year.
    According to a statement of claim filed Jan. 20 in B.C. Supreme Court, in February 2025, the C
  • ‘My life is great’: Island lung transplant recipient thanks B.C. donors

    Kathy Green could hardly breathe when it came time for a long-awaited trip to Vancouver.
    In 2013, the then 63-year-old View Royal resident travelled to Vancouver General Hospital for an operation that would change her life forever.
    When Green woke up from the anesthesia that had kept her unconscious for hours, she could breathe again – all thanks to the new set of lungs inflating and deflating in her chest.
    “All of a sudden, it’s like a miracle – it’s better,”
  • VIDEO: Netflix, Hollywood star’s surprise visit to B.C. Fire Department

    The glitz and glamour of Hollywood made an unexpected appearance at Victoria Fire Department’s headquarters.
    Rubbing shoulders with Victoria’s firefighters was American film and TV actor Holt McCallany, who stopped by to catch up with old friends and explore the Johnson Street building.
    McCallany is known for his role in the critically-acclaimed Netflix psychological crime thriller Mindhunter, plus a plethora of movies including Fight Club, The Iron Claw, Alien 3 and Mission: Impossi
  • 6th maternity diversion in White Rock, B.C. health minister won’t say if it’s a crisis

    Yet another maternity ward diversion is scheduled at Peace Arch Hospital in White Rock.
    The diversion, set to take place from Feb. 5 at 8 a.m. to Tuesday, Feb. 10 at 8 a.m., is the sixth since December, in what Fraser Health is calling temporary maternity diversions, which are also occurring at Ridge Meadows Hospital in Maple Ridge due to a shortage of obstetrician-gynecologists at both facilities.
    Provincial Health Minister Josie Osborne, who was in Surrey last week to announce a new urgent and

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