• VIDEO: Diesel spill cleaned up following crash

    VIDEO: Diesel spill cleaned up following crash
    Abbotsford firefighters contained the fuelThe post VIDEO: Diesel spill cleaned up following crash appeared first on Abbotsford News.
  • FBI assists RCMP on threat directed at Salmon Arm school: School District 83

    FBI assists RCMP on threat directed at Salmon Arm school: School District 83
    An individual was arrested after the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation assisted RCMP in identifying a threat directed towards a Salmon Arm school.
    That individual remains under house arrest and is being closely monitored by the RCMP, said School District 83 Supt. Donna Kriger in a June 18 letter received by parents of J.L. Jackson Secondary students.
    Kriger said police were made aware of the threat “made towards a Salmon Arm school” over the winter break when school was not in ses
  • Experienced general manager Richard Seeley ready to put his stamp on Abbotsford Canucks

    Experienced general manager Richard Seeley ready to put his stamp on Abbotsford Canucks
    At a press conference earlier this month, Vancouver Canucks general manager Ryan Johnson spoke of a book he keeps filled with names of other team’s staff who are interesting or have a presence to them.
    It’s a good bet that new Abbotsford Canucks general manager Richard Seeley found his way somewhere in that prestigious tome.
    Seeley was announced as Abbotsford’s general manager and an assistant general manager for Vancouver on June 11 and he told The News on Wednesday (June 18)
  • More jail time for Quesnel man who killed his mother’s goats

    More jail time for Quesnel man who killed his mother’s goats
    A 35-year-old man was sentenced in Quesnel Provincial Court on May 19 to an additional 57 days in jail for killing his mother’s pet goats.
    Jessie James Falkenham pleaded guilty to the April 25 offence in Kersley. He will also spend 18 months on probation and is banned from owning, residing with, or having custody or control of any animal or bird for five years.
    An April 26 charge of wilfully resisting or obstructing a peace officer was stayed.
    “I am left bewildered by what has happen
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  • Fans march to BC Place ahead of Canada-Qatar World Cup match

    Fans march to BC Place ahead of Canada-Qatar World Cup match
    With a Canadian flag flying proudly on a hockey stick at the front of the crowd, thousands of fans have made their way through downtown Vancouver towards Canada’s first FIFA World Cup match at BC Place.
    Chants of ole ole ole ole mix with the singing of O Canada and the strains of When the Reds Go Marching In as Canadian fans show their support for the home team. The first marchers have now arrived at BC Place after a half-hour trail through downtown.
    Canada faces Qatar at 3 p.m. Pacific in
  • Fans join march to BC Place ahead of Canada-Qatar World Cup match

    Fans join march to BC Place ahead of Canada-Qatar World Cup match
    With a Canadian flag flying proudly on a hockey stick at the front of the crowd, thousands of fans have made their way through downtown Vancouver towards Canada’s first FIFA World Cup match at BC Place.
    Chants of ole ole ole ole mix with the singing of O Canada and the strains of When the Reds Go Marching In as Canadian fans show their support for the home team. The first marchers have now arrived at BC Place after a half-hour trail through downtown.
    Canada faces Qatar at 3 p.m. Pacific in
  • Fans begin march to BC Place ahead of Canada-Qatar World Cup match

    Fans begin march to BC Place ahead of Canada-Qatar World Cup match
    With a Canadian flag flying proudly on a hockey stick at the front of the crowd, thousands of fans are making their way through downtown Vancouver towards Canada’s first match at BC Place.
    Thousands of Canadian fans are marching to cheer Canada on in its FIFA World Cup match against Qatar on Thursday, June 18.
    Fans began gathering near Fionn MacCool’s near by Science World around 12:30 p.m. on Thursday, with the march beginning at 1 p.m.
    Throngs of fans in red and white and bearing t
  • Federal government kicks in $5 billion for B.C. housing, infrastructure

    Federal government kicks in $5 billion for B.C. housing, infrastructure
    B.C. has struck a deal with the federal government for Ottawa to provide more than $5 billion for housing and infrastructure in B.C. over the next 10 years.
    Funding will include $2.5 billion for transit, such as SkyTrain development, $1.6 billion to lower development cost charges, $600 million for health-care infrastructure, a $284-million one-time payment to reduce barriers to new construction, $100 million for a new Tumbler Ridge secondary school and $50 million for infrastructure in coastal c
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  • Maple Ridge RCMP called to rural property for ‘shots fired’ call

    Maple Ridge RCMP called to rural property for ‘shots fired’ call
    Numerous police cruisers descended on a property in rural Maple Ridge on Wednesday afternoon, June 17, for a shots fired call.
    The incident happened at approximately 3 p.m, at a property in the 13200 block of Neaves Road, at the corner of Old Dewdney Trunk Road.
    Frontline Maple Ridge RCMP officers learned there had been an altercation between two occupants on the property. One of the occupants was transported to hospital for treatment for injuries that were not considered life threatening.
    Polic
  • City of Abbotsford to reduce newspaper advertising in 2027

    City of Abbotsford to reduce newspaper advertising in 2027
    The City of Abbotsford plans to cease much of its newspaper advertising in 2027 and instead use its website and an email subscription service for its public notices.
    Council on Tuesday (June 16) approved amendments to the city’s public notice bylaw that a staff report says will “generate financial savings.”
    Under provincial legislation, local governments are required to inform the public of certain activities and council considerations.
    These include bylaw amendments, elections
  • B.C. post-secondary system facing worst funding crisis in its history, report finds

    B.C. post-secondary system facing worst funding crisis in its history, report finds
    British Columbia’s public post-secondary system is facing the worst funding crisis in its history, according to a new report that found 19 of the province’s 25 public institutions are projected to operate at a loss, with an estimated $300 million shortfall province-wide.
    The report, Rebuilding post-secondary education as public infrastructure in B.C. from B.C.Policy Solutions shows that since 2024, institutions have cut or suspended more than 180 programs. With these program cuts cam
  • Vancouver Island woman fights cougar to save pet goat

    Vancouver Island woman fights cougar to save pet goat
    A Nanaimo woman’s close encounter with a cougar resulted in the wild cat being given a literal kick off her property.
    On June 6, Gina Moore went out to her barn to lock up for the night. When she got there she saw one of her goats, Donnie, clasped in a small cougar’s mouth.
    “Adrenaline just took over, and I did what I needed to do to save him,” Moore recalled.
    The rest was a blur, as she rushed over, kicking the cougar in the ribs. The wild cat let go of the animal in its
  • No injuries reported after crane tips at Bruhn Bridge worksite in Sicamous

    No injuries reported after crane tips at Bruhn Bridge worksite in Sicamous
    A crane may need a crane after tipping over at the Bruhn Bridge construction site in Sicamous.
    On Wednesday, June 17, numerous posts on social media showed the crane sitting at a 45 degree angle with the boom extended, indicating an overreach, though the cause of the incident hasn’t been confirmed.
    The contractor contacted District of Sicamous chief administrative officer Dean Strachan to advise of the situation, reporting there was “no impact or disruption to highway or district inf
  • 12 guns seized from illegal shooters on Mission forest service road

    12 guns seized from illegal shooters on Mission forest service road
    Mission RCMP conducted an illegal-shooting enforcement blitz along the Lost Creek forest service road on June 13 and 14, resulting in the seizure of 12 guns from residents of Abbotsford, Surrey, Delta and Nova Scotia.
    Cpl. Harrison Mohr said the first incident was on Saturday (June 13) at about 6:45 p.m., when a citizen reported that a group of men were shooting at around the 7.5-kilometre marker of the road.
    An officer who attended found five men from Abbotsford, who had arrived in a GMC Sierra
  • Abbotsford’s Hailey MacLeod selected by Montreal at PWHL Draft

    Abbotsford’s Hailey MacLeod selected by Montreal at PWHL Draft
    Abbotsford’s Hailey MacLeod was introduced into the professional hockey by Canadian hockey royalty at the PWHL Draft in Detroit on Wednesday (June 17).
    Three-time Olympic gold medallist and 2026 Walter Cup champion Laura Stacey announced MacLeod as the Montreal Victoire’s fourth round pick, 48th overall and also welcomed the former Yale Secondary student as her new teammate on the defending champion team.MacLeod become the first-ever Abbotsford hockey product to be chosen in the PWHL
  • Surrey Police Board slammed for ‘gag’ order on what chief can say to media

    Surrey Police Board slammed for ‘gag’ order on what chief can say to media
    The embattled Surrey Police Board is facing heavy criticism after its members voted in favour June 17 of a governance committee recommendation to rope in what the Surrey Police Service chief constable and other senior executives can say to news media and “stakeholders” related to matters of police governance, oversight, board direction, organizational priorities and decisions involving the provincial government and city hall.
    The governance committee recommendation, contained in a re
  • Victoria newcomer youth score ‘opportunity of a lifetime’ at FIFA World Cup

    Victoria newcomer youth score ‘opportunity of a lifetime’ at FIFA World Cup
    Returning from vacation is usually met with a daunting mountain of emails, but for Tricia Khan, opening her inbox this week revealed the ultimate golden ticket.
    Ten of them, to be exact.
    The Inter-Cultural Association of Greater Victoria (ICA) was selected to receive 10 free tickets to the upcoming FIFA World Cup match between New Zealand and Egypt at Vancouver’s BC Place on Sunday, June 21.
    The donation comes courtesy of the BC Place Community Benefit Program, a joint initiative between t
  • ‘Electrical non-compliances’ at Cultus Lake Waterpark have to be corrected before gates reopen

    ‘Electrical non-compliances’ at Cultus Lake Waterpark have to be corrected before gates reopen
    Technical Safety BC has found “electrical non-compliances” in its preliminary investigation into the June 15 electrical incident at the now-closed Cultus Lake Waterpark.
    Officials with the safety regulator said the waterpark will not re-open until electrical issues or hazards that put them in non-compliance are addressed.
    “We understand that the closure of a popular summer attraction is disappointing for visitors and families looking forward to their summer activities,” s
  • Engineering company envisions Prince Rupert to Vancouver coastal highway

    Engineering company envisions Prince Rupert to Vancouver coastal highway
    A Prince Rupert company has taken it upon itself to map a potential route for a Prince Rupert to Vancouver coastal highway with the hope it will spark a conversation on better access to the Lower Mainland for North Coast residents.
    Pedersen-Gruppen Enterprises (PGE) has dubbed the project the Pacific Fjords Connector as it would ultimately connect to the Sea to Sky Highway (Highway 99), which connects Vancouver to Pemberton via Squamish and Whistler.
    The concept is not an approved government pro
  • TODAY: Big game for Canada vs. Qatar in Vancouver on World Cup Day 8

    TODAY: Big game for Canada vs. Qatar in Vancouver on World Cup Day 8
    Game 2 for Canada at the FIFA World Cup is a big one against Qatar, with both squads level in Group B standings.
    Switzerland and Bosnia and Herzegovina both have a single point, too, after all four teams tied their tournament-opening games last week.Today in Vancouver, BC Place Stadium hosts Canada-Qatar at 3 p.m. local time (Thursday, June 18), in the second World Cup match played there in less than a week, the first involving Canada.
    The game might be the biggest in the history of the Canadian
  • Abbotsford hot dog vendor to revive weekly flea market

    Abbotsford hot dog vendor to revive weekly flea market
    Hot dog vendor Skully White is reviving a popular Abbotsford event that ran weekly for 50 years (except during the COVID-19 pandemic) until its closure in 2024.
    White is introducing his version of the Abbotsford Flea Market starting either this Sunday (June 21) or the following one (June 28). (As of press deadline, he’s still finalizing details.)
    Lullys Flea Market will run every Sunday from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. until the end of September in the parking lot of the Canadian Tire at the corner o
  • WORLD CUP DAILY, June 18: Kane scores 2 in England win over Croatia

    WORLD CUP DAILY, June 18: Kane scores 2 in England win over Croatia
    Daily FIFA World Cup updates and news for Black Press Media publications.
    Today in Canada, the focus is on Vancouver for the Canada-Qatar match that starts at 3 p.m. Pacific, in the second Group B game for both teams.
    Thursday’s three other matches (June 18) feature Czechia vs. South Africa in Atlanta (9 a.m. start Pacific time), Switzerland vs. Bosnia and Herzagovina in Los Angeles for another Group B battle (noon) and Mexico vs. Korea in Guadalajara (6 p.m.), all shown live on TSN.
    An En
  • Case study: Olive’s path to a new confident life

    Case study: Olive’s path to a new confident life
    When Michael and Jennifer first brought Olive home, they weren’t sure what to expect. They knew she was a rescue, knew she had come from an abusive past and understood she would need time to adjust. What they didn’t realize was just how deeply fear had shaped her world.
    “From the moment she arrived, she seemed terrified of everything,” Jennifer recalls. “She didn’t bark, play, or seek attention. Most of the time, she just hid.”
    Olive, a young Golden Retr
  • White Rock hockey star Grace Elliott drafted to PWHL’s Seattle Torrent

    White Rock hockey star Grace Elliott drafted to PWHL’s Seattle Torrent
    White Rock’s own Grace Elliot is headed to Seattle as the next step in her hockey career.
    The 38th overall fourth-round pick for PWHL team Seattle Torrent in the Professional Women’s Hockey League (PWHL) Draft Wednesday (June 17), Elliot had an outstanding university sports career as a University of B.C. Thunderbird as well as reigning Canada West and U Sports Player of the year.
    Elliot also finished the regular season as the top scorer in her conference — and in the entire cou
  • B.C.’s medical specialist waitlists up 10%, and doctors say pressure is mounting

    B.C.’s medical specialist waitlists up 10%, and doctors say pressure is mounting
    Nearly one-quarter of British Columbians are currently on waitlists to see medical specialists, and according to a new survey of B.C.’s doctors, that number is growing by 10 per cent each year with little relief in sight.
    Meanwhile, because the province does not track specialist wait times province-wide, officials may understand a problem exists but lack data to fully measure it.
    “People might think that the province has a sense of how long people are waiting for what service where,
  • Surrey Police Board meeting implodes

    Surrey Police Board meeting implodes
    Acting Surrey Police Board chairman Rob Stutt – a Surrey Connect councillor – called a recess to its Wednesday, June 17 meeting after it collapsed in chaos during a public question-and-answer session.
    The meeting, fraught with audio cutting in and out, saw directors walk out amid scathing criticism in the wake of former chief constable Norm Lipinski’s ouster followed by the resignations of two directors.
    Surrey Police Union president and sergeant Ryan Buhrig told the board poli
  • Nominations now open for the 30th annual Abbotsford Business Excellence Awards

    Nominations now open for the 30th annual Abbotsford Business Excellence Awards
    Nominations are now open for the 30th annual Abbotsford Business Excellence Awards.
    The community is encouraged to nominate businesses and they will be accepted until Monday, Sept. 7 at 4:30 p.m.
    The submissions will then be reviewed by a panel of community leaders and the gala presentation event is set for the Clarion Hotel and Conference Centre on Thursday, Nov. 12.
    View this post on InstagramA post shared by Abbotsford Chamber of Commerce (@abbotsfordchamber)The Pearl Anniversary for the ABA&
  • B.C.’s Jim Hiller lands Toronto Maple Leafs head coaching job

    B.C.’s Jim Hiller lands Toronto Maple Leafs head coaching job
    Nearly 10 per cent of all NHL head coaches now hail from Vancouver Island.
    That number jumped on Wednesday (June 17) when the Toronto Maple Leafs tapped Port Alberni’s Jim Hiller to take over their bench. Hiller was named the 41st head coach in the franchise’s history.
    He joins Victoria’s Spencer Carbery of the Washington Capitals and Campbell River’s Rod Brind’Amour of the Carolina Hurricanes on the list of NHL bench bosses from the Island.
    View this post on Instag
  • A cut above the rest: Kelowna barber shop helps senior after wheelchair breaks

    A cut above the rest: Kelowna barber shop helps senior after wheelchair breaks
    A Kelowna barbershop put down their scissors to help a man in need on Wednesday, June 17.
    ​Raman Sharma was sitting at HighFade Barbershop in Rutland for a haircut when he noticed a number of barbers immediately stop what they were doing to help a man in a wheelchair whose tire had fallen off outside the store.
    ​Sharma tells Black Press Media the interaction between strangers was a friendly reminder that there are still good people in the world who do good things for others.
    ​&
  • ‘Unidentified substance’ poured on to Port Coquitlam Terry Fox statue: RCMP

    ‘Unidentified substance’ poured on to Port Coquitlam Terry Fox statue: RCMP
    An “unidentified substance” has been poured on the Terry Fox statue in Port Coquitlam and police are now investigating.
    Coquitlam RCMP received a report on Wednesday (June 17) of alleged mischief to the statue, which is located in the 2100-block of Wilson Avenue in Port Coquitlam, according to a news release from police on the same day.
    Police said that between midnight on June 12 and 7 a.m. on June 13, the “unidentified substance” appears to have been poured onto the sta

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