• Robert Bateman’s Caleb Mills cracks CFC Top 100 high school football prospects list

    Robert Bateman’s Caleb Mills cracks CFC Top 100 high school football prospects list
    Robert Bateman Timberwolves star cornerback Caleb Mills has cracked the first edition of the 2027 Canada Football Chat top 100 high school prospect list.
    The 6-3, 180-pound Grade 11 student ranked as the ninth-best defensive back prospect and sat 81st overall in the top-100. He’s one of eight players from B.C. on the list.Congratulations to @caleb_mills_14 for cracking the top 100 in !
    He comes in at the #9 DB in the country, #81 overall . @BCHSFB @BenLypka https://t.co/2Y5vfM5XOP
  • Stop-work order in effect for property connected to Surrey city councillor

    Stop-work order in effect for property connected to Surrey city councillor
    A property connected to Surrey Coun. Mandeep Nagra has had a stop-work order issued on it since November of last year.
    Nagra, who is the sole director of a numbered company that owns the agricultural property in South Surrey — at 3826 152 St., alongside the Nicomekl River — has not returned Peace Arch News’ calls or emails requesting an interview.
    The two-term Surrey councillor, who is running with mayoral candidate Doug McCallum and Coun. Doug Elford in the upcoming municipal
  • LIVE: Canada trails Bosnia-Herzegovina 1-0 in 1st home game of World Cup

    LIVE: Canada trails Bosnia-Herzegovina 1-0 in 1st home game of World Cup
    Team Canada has some work to do.
    The Canadians currently trail Bosnia-Herzegovina 1-0 at halftime, in the first men’s World Cup match to be played in this country at Toronto Stadium.
    Striker Jovo Lukic opened the scoring for Bosnia-Herzegovina on 21 minutes after a flick from Sead Kolasinac from an Esmir Bajraktarevic corner.
    Canada carried the play in the opening half, controlling two-thirds of possession time and winning 10 corner kicks but only managed one shot on goal in eight attempts
  • Canucks sign defenceman Jack Thompson to one-year, two-way deal

    Canucks sign defenceman Jack Thompson to one-year, two-way deal
    One of Ryan Johnson’s last additions as general manager of the Abbotsford Canucks is remaining with the organization.
    The club announced on Friday (June 12) that defenceman Jack Thompson has signed a one-year, two-way deal.
    The 24-year-old was acquired by the Canucks in a trade with the San Jose Barracuda for defenceman Jett Woo on Jan. 5 and produced 13 points in 14 games for Abbotsford. He also put up 12 points in 42 games for the Barracuda.Thompson scored 10 points in 31 games for the S
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  • 119 people died from toxic drugs in B.C. in April: B.C. Coroners Service

    119 people died from toxic drugs in B.C. in April: B.C. Coroners Service
    The B.C. Coroners Service says there were 119 deaths in B.C. related to unregulated toxic drugs in April.
    That’s an average of about four deaths per day, the latest data from the B.C. Coroners Service released on Thursday (June 11) shows.
    It’s a slight decrease from March when there were 134 deaths, equating to an average of 4.4 deaths per day.
    In total, there have been 522 fatal overdoses in the first four months of 2026. That’s compared to 617 deaths during the same period in
  • Abbotsford hosting open houses for new Sumas River flood mitigation plan

    Abbotsford hosting open houses for new Sumas River flood mitigation plan
    The Sumas River Watershed Flood Mitigation Planning Initiative is ready to hear what the public thinks of its new plan and will be collecting feedback at several upcoming open houses in Abbotsford.
    This partnership between Sumas First Nation, Leq’á:mel First Nation, the City of Abbotsford, the City of Chilliwack, and the provincial government was formed to tackle the issue of flooding in the Sumas Prairie, which is a problem that has cost the region millions of dollars in damages in
  • Cop stop nets pets: 2 dogs, 3 cats reunited with family after Island arrest

    Cop stop nets pets: 2 dogs, 3 cats reunited with family after Island arrest
    Five pets are happily reunited with their rightful owners and home in Saskatchewan after an adventure that included being stopped and taken into custody by BC Highway Patrol.An officer spotted a driver they felt was giving strange looks while patrolling the Malahat portion of Highway 1, and decided to check the Ontario licence plates on May 24, just after 2 p.m., according to a patrol news release.The officer stopped the blue sedan near Goldstream Park after learning the driver was wanted for a
  • BC SPCA opened 607 files related to animals in hot vehicles in 2025

    BC SPCA opened 607 files related to animals in hot vehicles in 2025
    The BC SPCA is reminding pet owners about the serious risks of leaving pets in hot vehicles as the organization has already opened 143 files so far this year.
    With summer and hotter temperatures approaching, the BC SPCA says the “best and safest solution” is always to leave your pet at home.
    “People underestimate how quickly a vehicle can heat up to dangerous levels, putting animals at risk of potentially fatal consequences,” said BC SPCA senior officer protection Eileen
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  • Meet Cuatro, a B.C. emu born with four legs and adopted by ducklings

    Meet Cuatro, a B.C. emu born with four legs and adopted by ducklings
    Cuatro has a couple of extra legs, but that doesn’t dampen the outgoing personality of the small emu, who remains eager to meet people and snuggle with his adopted duckling siblings.
    Born south of Nanaimo on Saturday, June 6, to Celina Knuff, who breeds emus at Back To Nature Acres farm, Knuff said she first thought an extra limb sticking out of the freshly hatched chick was an umbilical cord.
    Soon it became clear he had two extra non-functioning back legs. One hangs out to the side, point
  • Meet Cuatro, a B.C. emu born with 4 legs and adopted by ducklings

    Meet Cuatro, a B.C. emu born with 4 legs and adopted by ducklings
    Cuatro has a couple of extra legs, but that doesn’t dampen the outgoing personality of the small emu, who remains eager to meet people and snuggle with his adopted duckling siblings.
    Born south of Nanaimo on Saturday, June 6, to Celina Knuff, who breeds emus at Back To Nature Acres farm, Knuff said she first thought an extra limb sticking out of the freshly hatched chick was an umbilical cord.
    Soon it became clear he had two extra non-functioning back legs. One hangs out to the side, point
  • Woman rescued after falling from trail in Golden Ears Provincial Park

    Woman rescued after falling from trail in Golden Ears Provincial Park
    A person who was thought to have two broken ankles was rescued from Golden Ears Provincial Park over the weekend.
    Ridge Meadows Search and Rescue and Coquitlam Search and Rescue were called just before 2 p.m. on Sunday, June 7, to respond to a person who tumbled off a trail on Mount Nutt.
    Brent Boulet, team leader with the Ridge Meadows team, said a pair of hikers had reached the lookout and were on their return when the female hiker looked back as they were talking to their male hiking partner
  • UPDATE: Early-morning crash in Delta turns fatal

    UPDATE: Early-morning crash in Delta turns fatal
    One person has died after a crash in Delta early Friday morning (June 12).
    Emergency services responded to a report of a pick-up truck had crashed into a water-filled ditch in the 5200-block of 88th Street, just north of Burns Drive, at around 5:30 a.m.
    A Black Press freelancer at the scene said firefighters were able to extricate the victim from the truck, but despite life-saving measures, the driver died at the scene.
    In a press release issued around 10 a.m., Delta police confirmed the sole oc
  • Early-morning crash in Delta turns fatal

    Early-morning crash in Delta turns fatal
    One person has died after a crash in Delta early Friday morning (June 12).
    Emergency services responded to the call of a vehicle crashing into a ditch in the 8800-block of Burns Drive around 5 a.m.
    A Black Press freelancer at the scene said firefighters were able to extricate the victim from the truck, but despite life-saving measures, they died at the scene.
    Delta Police have closed a portion of 88th Street while they investigate.
    More to comeAbout the Author: Anna Burns
    I cover breaking news,
  • WORLD CUP DAILY, June 12: Canada to play historic first game at noon today

    WORLD CUP DAILY, June 12: Canada to play historic first game at noon today
    Daily soccer match updates and news about the 2026 FIFA World Cup, which continues until July 19.
    All eyes are on Toronto today for Canada’s historic first match of the World Cup, noon start vs. Bosnia and Herzegovina on the TSN network.
    This will be the co-host nation’s first World Cup action on home soil, in the opener for Group B.
    For coach Jesse Marsch’s team, the match is a huge opportunity to establish rhythm early in the 104-game tournament, which opened Thursday with a
  • City of Kelowna venue booking for One B.C. town hall draws criticism

    City of Kelowna venue booking for One B.C. town hall draws criticism
    Vancouver-Quilchena MLA Dallas Brodie and her One B.C. party will hold a town hall at Kelowna’s Parkinson Recreation Centre on June 14, prompting criticism from the Kelowna Pride Society over the use of a municipal venue.
    According to the One B.C. website, discussion topics include the party’s platform, the implementation of UNDRIP and the defence of private and Crown property.
    The town hall is scheduled for the same day as the final day of the 4th Annual Komasket Powwow, held by the
  • Abbotsford Canucks name Richard Seeley as new general manager

    Abbotsford Canucks name Richard Seeley as new general manager
    The Abbotsford Canucks have looked to a division rival for a new general manager.
    The club announced the hiring of longtime Ontario Reign general manager Richard Seeley as the both the Abbotsford general manager and an assistant manager for the Vancouver Canucks.
    The team shared the news on Thursday (June 11) late-afternoon and Seeley becomes the second general manager in team history.
    The 47-year-old Powell River product has spent the last eight season as the Reign’s general manager and t
  • TROZZO: What a doctor on Canada’s bench in ’86 bench taught me about the World Cup

    TROZZO: What a doctor on Canada’s bench in ’86 bench taught me about the World Cup
    Four days before Canada kicked off its 2022 FIFA World Cup campaign in Qatar, my Uncle Ed passed away.
    He only got to see Canada at the World Cup once. The difference is, he wasn’t watching from the stands or a couch, he was on the bench.
    Dr. Ed Johnson, known simply as ‘Uncle Ed’ to my brother Luigi and me, was one of the biggest soccer purists I have ever known. Born in England and devoted to Newcastle United, he settled in Canada, spending 38 years as a doctor.
    He also becam
  • B.C. says social media bill falls short, expert calls it ambitious

    B.C. says social media bill falls short, expert calls it ambitious
    With much still left to be determined in the federal government’s newly proposed social media restrictions, experts and officials are parsing the details to figure out how the legislation might work, where the roadblocks could be, and what’s missing.
    B.C. Attorney General Niki Sharma says the province wants more, including rules that her government had proposed forcing artificial intelligence companies to report activity to police when someone is threatening themselves or the communi
  • Abbotsford continues sharp decline in rental prices

    Abbotsford continues sharp decline in rental prices
    In both Abbotsford and the province as a whole, rental prices have continued to get cheaper, with May marking the lowest prices in more than a year.
    Locally, the average asking price dropped to $1,739, which is two per cent less than the previous month and 10 per cent less than the same time last year.
    Having such a drastic annual decline in prices gives Abbotsford the second-biggest reduction in the province, only being surpassed by Burnaby, and the eighth-biggest in the entire country.
    The pro
  • Surrey senior charged with manslaughter in Newton traffic crash loses bid to dodge in-custody psych assessment

    Surrey senior charged with manslaughter in Newton traffic crash loses bid to dodge in-custody psych assessment
    A Surrey man charged with manslaughter and 14 other charges related to a traffic crash in Newton on March 22, 2017 has lost his application to quash a 2025 assessment order from the British Columbia Review Board requiring him to submit to a 60-day in-custody assessment at the Forensic Psychiatric Hospital.
    Iqbal Singh Sidhu, 69, was charged with impaired driving causing death, criminal negligence causing death, operating a vehicle with over 80 mgs of alcohol causing death, three counts of impair
  • Surrey man arrested, charged with fraud after scamming 88-year-old Chilliwack woman

    Surrey man arrested, charged with fraud after scamming 88-year-old Chilliwack woman
    A 21-year-old Surrey man has been charged with fraud after scamming an 88-year old Chilliwack woman out of money last year.
    Mandeep Singh was arrested and charged with one count of fraud over $5,000 on May 29.
    The investigation began on Oct. 11, 2025 when Chilliwack RCMP responded to a report of an elderly woman being defrauded of a significant sum of money in what is commonly known as a “grandparent scam,” police stated in a June 11 press release.
    The senior victim received a phone
  • Bailey’s Law, on intimate partner violence, moves forward in Senate

    Bailey’s Law, on intimate partner violence, moves forward in Senate
    Another step forward to amending the Criminal Code surrounding intimate partner violence was made on June 9.
    Bailey’s Law passed its second reading in the Senate.
    The act, Bill C-225, was first presented to the House of Commons by B.C. member of parliament for Kamloops-Thompson-Nicola, Frank Caputo, after a Kelowna woman, Bailey McCourt, was attacked in broad daylight outside her workplace on July 4, 2025. McCourt’s estranged ex-husband, James Plover, has been charged with first-degr
  • B.C. rideshare service brings mountain shuttle back for Parks Canada

    B.C. rideshare service brings mountain shuttle back for Parks Canada
    Revelstoke’s popular new rideshare service is taking passengers to new heights this month by getting the green light from Parks Canada to reinstate shuttle service up Mount Revelstoke National Park.
    Revy Rides, which launched its three-van shuttle fleet last November, has been expanding its rider reach well beyond town with new routes to Martha Creek Provincial Park and the Skunk Cabbage and Giant Cedars boardwalk.
    On May 27, the company announced that it would also kick off service up the
  • B.C. metal plant, Metro seek judicial review of air-quality decision

    Metro Vancouver and the owners of a South Surrey galvanizing plant are seeking a judicial review of a March 27, 2026 decision by the Environmental Appeal Board regarding an air-emissions permit issued to the plant nearly a decade ago, as well as a pair of subsequent amendments.
    The step is the latest in a process involving a group of area residents, non-profit societies, an association and two companies that brought 19 appeals of the permit – which authorized the annual discharge of 3.7 to
  • Missing Vancouver man last seen by family in Chilliwack

    Missing Vancouver man last seen by family in Chilliwack
    Chilliwack RCMP is asking the public to keep an eye out for a missing Vancouver man who was last seen in Chilliwack.
    Taetm Moon, a 28-year-old Indigenous man, was last seen on May 26.
    “Taetm does not frequent the Chilliwack area but was here visiting family. He is known to stay in the Vancouver area but was last seen by family in Chilliwack on May 26,” said Cpl. Carmen Kiener, media relations officer for the Upper Fraser Valley Regional Detachment.
    RCMP describe him as five-foot-11-i
  • Sentencing set for former B.C. massage therapist with ties to Surrey, Penticton

    Sentencing set for former B.C. massage therapist with ties to Surrey, Penticton
    The sentencing hearing for a former Surrey massage therapist convicted on multiple counts of sexual assault is to take place this fall in B.C. Supreme Court in New Westminster.
    B.C. Prosecution Service officials confirmed the proceedings for Leonard Krekic – who also has ties to both White Rock and Penticton – have been scheduled for Oct. 15-16, 2026, in front of Justice Lance Bernard.
    Krekic was found guilty in May of 12 counts of sexual assault; a decision that followed a 35-day tr
  • Fraser Valley Regional District pilot program to recycle car seats diverts 10 tons from landfills

    Fraser Valley Regional District pilot program to recycle car seats diverts 10 tons from landfills
    A Fraser Valley Regional District pilot program to help divert child car seats from BC landfills quickly surpassed its initial target and has been expanded to recycle 4,000 more car seats over the next year.
    The FVRD partnered with Burnaby’s Reclaim Plastics for the program, which launched in July 2025 and was set for two years. However, the initial program target was achieved after just six months which led to the decision to expand.
    The original program budget anticipated a collection of
  • Wildfire documentary born in Kelowna nominated for 4 film awards

    Wildfire documentary born in Kelowna nominated for 4 film awards
    A Kelowna-made documentary looking into the growing challenge of wildfires across the province has been nominated for multiple film and televsion awards.
    BC is Burning has been nominated in four short documentary categories in the 2026 Leo Awards.
    The 47-minute film has been nominated in the categories of Best Short Documentary, Best Direction, Best Picture Editing, and Best Sound.
    “We are very honoured by this recognition from the B.C. film community,” said producer and director Mur
  • UPDATE: Mexico wins first match of FIFA World Cup

    UPDATE: Mexico wins first match of FIFA World Cup
    Mexico has won the first match of the FIFA World Cup, defeating South Africa 2-0 at home on Thursday (June 11) in Mexico City.
    Julian Quinones opened up the scoring in the ninth minute for Mexico and scored the first goal of the tournament.
    South Africa’s Teboho Mokoena was issued a yellow card in the 17th minute, followed by Mexico’s Brian Gutierrez in the 23rd minute.
    The referee has added 4 minutes of stoppage time to the first half.
    Mexico held possession for 57 per cent in the f
  • LIVE: FIFA World Cup kicks off with Mexico vs. South Africa

    LIVE: FIFA World Cup kicks off with Mexico vs. South Africa
    The FIFA World Cup has officially started, with Mexico and South Africa kicking off the tournament on Thursday (June 11) in Mexico City.
    Julian Quinones opened up the scoring in the ninth minute for Mexico and scored the first goal of the tournament.
    This tournoment opener is a repeat of the first match at the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, where the host country faced off against Mexico and drew 1-1.
    FIFA president Gianni Infantino said during a June 10 press conference that “the opening

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