• Wind warning in effect for Fraser Valley

    Wind warning in effect for Fraser Valley
    Strong winds that may cause damage are expected
  • Affordability, respite shortfall, making life difficult for B.C. seniors: advocate

    The lack of respite beds — particular in one of B.C. oldest communities — is a major concern for seniors and caregivers, says B.C. Seniors Advocate Dan Levitt.
    “They’re desperate for respite care — some relief to take the pressure off so they can recharge, fill their bucket up and then be able to be present and care for their loved one,” said Levitt, who spoke at The Gardens in the Vancouver Island community of Qualicum Beach on Jan. 12.
    Respite beds allow car
  • Anything but ordinary: B.C. blueliner following unconventional path to the NHL

    Timofei Runtso says it simply, almost casually, but the road that brought the 18-year-old defenceman to the Victoria Royals has been anything but ordinary.
    In his first season in the Western Hockey League, Runtso has not only adjusted to major junior hockey, he has taken control of it.
    Through 37 games, the 6’2”, 187-pound rookie is pacing the Royals’ blue-line with 31 points – 7 goals and 24 assists – tying him for ninth among all WHL defencemen and ninth among roo
  • South Cariboo resident finds joy in sharing doodles

    A 108 Mile Ranch resident has turned a lifelong love of doodling into a series of colouring books.
    Sally Bartsch is the mind and pen behind Mojo Doodles and Designs, a company that’s begun making its mark with a series of abstract colouring books for all ages. Bartsch said she has never really considered herself an artist but has always loved to doodle.
    “My books are a bit of a different style. There are no rules to it. Some people might say I don’t know where to start, and it&
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  • Abbotsford Canucks season-long win streak ends at 3 following 1-0 loss to Gulls

    The Abbotsford Canucks season-long win streak of three games was snapped after falling 1-0 to the San Diego Gulls on Friday (Jan. 16).
    The loss marks the sixth time this season that Abbotsford has been blanked and the third time San Diego had held them without a goal. It’s also the first-ever 1-0 win in the history of the Gulls franchise.
    A scoreless first period saw Abbotsford goalie Jiri Patera again come up big with 11 saves, while the Canucks fired just six shots on San Diego goalie Ca
  • VIDEO: Aviation enthusiasts treated to Mosquito engine run in Kelowna

    The public was invited to hear the engine run of a great piece of Canadian history on Jan. 16.
    At the KF Centre for Excellence in Kelowna, a Mosquito bomber plane has been restored and her engines turned on to wow aviation enthusiasts in attendance.
    The plane is one of more than 7,000 built to fight in the Second World War, but is one of an estiamted five worldwide that is still airworthy.@kf_aerospace Centre for Excellence held a live engine run of a Mosquito plane on Jan. 16. The plane is just
  • Court says feds’ use of Emergencies Act ‘unreasonable’ as Ottawa loses appeal

    The Federal Court of Appeal says former prime minister Justin Trudeau’s government “did not have reasonable grounds to believe that a national emergency existed” when it invoked the Emergencies Act during the 2022 Freedom Convoy.
    The decision upholds a 2024 ruling by the federal courts in which Justice Richard Mosley found that the reasons provided to declare a public order emergency did not satisfy the requirements of the Emergencies Act, and that some temporary measures infri
  • Experts point to climate change as root cause of Victoria’s January blossoms

    Its early blooming season has long been something Victoria has long liked to flaunt before its neighbours in less mild climates across the province and the country.
    But avid walkers in and around B.C.’s capital region have noticed spring blossoms showing up this year in volumes that are considered untimely even below the 49th parallel.
    And the pictures of early flowers that have been circulating on social media since late December might not be something people should necessarily be boastin
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  • B.C.’s sport fishing industry balks at salmon re-allocation that could put it last

    B.C.’s recreational and sportfishing community is up in arms over a potential change to how the province allocates Pacific salmon stock, which proposes eliminating the principle that salmon are a public resource.
    British Columbia’s salmon allocation policy (SAP) was created in 1999 to guide the allocation and priority of allowable Pacific salmon harvest among First Nations, as well as commercial and recreational harvest groups.
    However, in 2018, the B.C. Supreme Court determined that
  • Political commentator Caroline Elliott enters B.C. Conservative leadership contest

    Caroline Elliott, a conservative commentator and former vice-president of the B.C. United Party, officially declared her candidacy for B.C. Conservative leadership in a social media video on Friday (Jan. 16).
    She criticized the current government’s “radical reconciliation” agenda and attacked “race-based hiring policies.”
    “For years, I’ve stood up for our natural resources, called out the denigration of our history, and pushed back against ideology in ou
  • Rio Tinto fined nearly $800K for manganese dust incident at Kitimat smelter

    A workplace incident involving combustible dust at Rio Tinto’s Kitimat smelter has resulted in a fine of nearly $800,000 – the third major penalty levied against the company for safety violations at the same site in less than two years.
    The latest penalty, issued Nov. 20, 2025, stems from an incident in which a worker was operating an alloy system, and a flame inside a manganese hopper caused pressure to dislodge a lid onto a nearby platform.
    WorkSafeBC found the station had not been
  • 300,000 records being auctioned off from iconic B.C. store in vinyl free-for-all

    Record collectors came to Langley for a chance to buy some of the approximately 300,000 records from the closed Krazy Bob’s Emporium record store.
    Bob consigned the stock from his Langley City store for sale with Able Auctions which held an auction at its Murrayville location on Tuesday, Jan. 13.
    “We had people that spent all day in here looking at all the records, because there were so many,” said Able manager Sam Garandza.
    The auction wasn’t for the sale of individual r
  • MP Brad Vis to hold townhall on Bill C-9

    Brad Vis, MP for Mission—Matsqui—Abbotsford, along with MPs Sukhman Gill and Andrew Lawton, will be hosting a public townhall on Bill C‐9 (An Act to amend the Criminal Code — hate propaganda, hate crime, and access to religious or cultural places) on Thursday, Jan. 22 in Abbotsford.
    According to a statement released by Brad Vis’ office, “there has been overwhelming public interest regarding Bill C‐9 and its implications for religious freedom and freedom
  • Surrey Union of Drug Users slams B.C. government’s decision to end decriminalization

    The Surrey Union of Drug Users (SUDU) is “disappointed but not surprised” by Wednesday’s announcement from the B.C. Ministry of Health to end the decriminalization pilot.
    “We shame the government for choosing to further isolate drug users and increase the likelihood of drug poisoning in the community,” SUDU said in a press release Friday (Jan. 16).
    Decriminalization began in January of 2023, allowing people to possess small amounts of illicit drugs in certain places
  • ‘Policy kills’: Drug users advocacy group slams B.C. government reversal

    The Surrey Union of Drug Users (SUDU) is “disappointed but not surprised” by Wednesday’s announcement from the B.C. Ministry of Health to end the decriminalization pilot.
    “We shame the government for choosing to further isolate drug users and increase the likelihood of drug poisoning in the community,” SUDU said in a press release Friday (Jan. 16).
    Decriminalization began in January of 2023, allowing people to possess small amounts of illicit drugs in certain places
  • Charges laid in Abbotsford hotel homicide

    Charges have been laid and a man is in custody in relation to a homicide that took place Thursday night (Jan. 15) in Abbotsford.
    Court records indicate that Sondeep Singh Gill, 26, has been charged with murder and interference with a dead body.
    The Integrated Homicide Investigation Team is now leading the investigation and has not yet released details, including the victim’s name.
    Gill does not have any prior criminal charges in B.C., according to the provincial court database.
    The Abbotsf
  • Abbotsford keeps title of B.C.’s cheapest city to rent in

    Abbotsford finished 2025 in the same way it started – being the cheapest city to rent an apartment in all of B.C.
    The latest report from Rentals.ca determined that the average asking price in Abbotsford was $1,847 in December, remaining almost identical to the number reported in November.
    This was enough to keep the title of the most affordable city in the province, which is an accolade Abbotsford successfully held for the entirety of 2025.
    However, unlike the increasingly dropping housing
  • Maple Ridge teen dies in fall from chairlift

    A teen from Maple Ridge died after falling from a chairlift while skiing.
    West Vancouver Police report they “saddened to confirm that a fatality occurred on Cypress Mountain Resort yesterday evening.”
    Emergency Services were called at approximately 7:27 p.m. on Thursday, Jan. 15, after reports of someone in medical distress after a fall from a chairlift. The 18-year-old man from Maple Ridge was pronounced dead at the scene.
    “All available evidence points to this being a tragic
  • Maple Ridge teen dead after fall from chairlift on B.C. ski hill

    A teen from Maple Ridge died after falling from a chairlift while skiing.
    West Vancouver Police report they “saddened to confirm that a fatality occurred on Cypress Mountain Resort yesterday evening.”
    Emergency Services were called at approximately 7:27 p.m. on Thursday, Jan. 15, after reports of someone in medical distress after a fall from a chairlift. The 18-year-old man from Maple Ridge was pronounced dead at the scene.
    “All available evidence points to this being a tragic
  • ‘Overwhelming, Heartbreaking’: Okanagan Humane Society overburdened by dog surrenders

    The Okanagan Humane Society (OHS) is facing an ‘unprecedented crisis’ two weeks into the new year, stretching its resources very thin.
    Just 15 days into the new year, OHS has taken in 42 dogs and puppies so far on top of their steady intake of kittens and cats.
    “We’ve started the year off with a bang,” said OHS executive director Romany Runnalls. “The need is immediate, overwhelming, and heartbreaking.”
    OHS has seen some of the most distressing cases in
  • Kamloops Centre MLA Peter Milobar makes bid for B.C. Conservative leadership

    Peter Milobar, the former Kamloops mayor and current MLA for Kamloops Centre, is entering the race to be the next leader of the B.C. Conservative Party.
    Milobar wants to bring “full accountability” to government in B.C., he told media during his announcement in Victoria on Friday (Jan. 16).
    He said he wants to lead a Conservative party that is working to be an “effective opposition,” as well as to have the party taken seriously and “clearly demonstrate we are a gove
  • Mayor pleads for federal extension of EI program for displaced Crofton mill workers

    North Cowichan’s mayor wants the federal government to extend its temporary Employment Insurance program to include workers at the Crofton pulp mill who will be working until mid-April.
    In letters to Minister of Jobs and Families Patty Hajdu and Jeff Kibble, MP for Cowichan-Malahat-Langford, Rob Douglas said the temporary EI measures that Ottawa introduced last summer in response to major economic conditions across the country, including mill closures, are set to expire on April 11.
    That&r
  • Vancouver’s Sarah Nurse returns from injury ahead of game against former team

    Star forward Sarah Nurse of the Vancouver Goldeneyes is back after suffering an upper-body injury during the first game of the season.Nurse had been on long-term injured reserve since suffering an upper-body injury during the first game of the season on Nov. 21. The announcement was made Thursday (Jan. 16) ahead of Saturday’s game, where Vancouver will take on Nurse’s former team, the Toronto Sceptres.
    Vancouver is scheduled to play Toronto at 12 p.m. PT/ 3 p.m. ET at the Scotiabank
  • Now 4 Bruno Mars concerts at BC Place Stadium, setting venue record

    Taylor Swift-level ticket demand means Bruno Mars will now be playing four concerts at B.C.’s largest stadium this fall, setting a record for most shows at BC Place on a single tour.
    His lengthy tour of North America and Europe was set to end Oct. 15 at BC Place Stadium in Vancouver, Live Nation Entertainment announced Jan. 8.
    But strong ticket demand during an “artist presale” Wednesday led to the announcement of a second concert for Mars at the 54,000-seat stadium, quickly fo
  • Now 4 Bruno Mars at BC Place Stadium, setting venue record

    Taylor Swift-level ticket demand means Bruno Mars will now be playing four concerts at B.C.’s largest stadium this fall, setting a record for most shows at BC Place on a single tour.
    His lengthy tour of North America and Europe was set to end Oct. 15 at BC Place Stadium in Vancouver, Live Nation Entertainment announced Jan. 8.
    But strong ticket demand during an “artist presale” Wednesday led to the announcement of a second concert for Mars at the 54,000-seat stadium, quickly fo
  • Police investigate homicide at Abbotsford hotel

    A man was arrested after a homicide at a hotel in Abbotsford on Thursday (Jan. 15).
    Abbotsford Police Department officers responded to a “suspicious circumstance” at a hotel in the 32100 block of Marshall Road at approximately 11:42 a.m.
    “Upon arrival, officers secured the scene and confirmed the incident was contained to a room within the hotel. Further evidence was quickly obtained, confirming the incident as a homicide,” the department said in a news release.
    The man a
  • VIDEO: Street crime, disorder prompts watchful eye over downtown Kelowna

    Downtown Kelowna streets are growing quieter as businesses face a surge in crime that owners say is driving customers away and putting staff at risk.
    Diners, shoe stores, book shops and even chocolate makers are just some of the downtown businesses that have been affected by crime and disorder, as people are becoming “more and more brazen,” according to one area representative.
    Todd Daniels, owner of Gallery Streetwear on Bernard Avenue, had his storefront broken into Jan. 2, and som
  • Canucks dumped 4-1 by Blue Jackets as losing skid reaches 9 games

    The skid continues for the Vancouver Canucks.
    The Canucks dropped their ninth straight game, falling 4-1 to the host Columbus Blue Jackets in NHL action Thursday at Nationwide Arena.
    Charlie Coyle, Kirill Marchenko, Zach Werenski and Kent Johnson scored for the Blue Jackets (21-19-7). Elvis Merzlikins earned the win in goal, stopping 30 shots.
    Brock Boeser scored the lone goal for Vancouver (16-25-5), his first marker since Nov. 28. Kevin Lankinen took the loss in net, making 32 saves.
    Coyle got
  • $10K fine upheld against Edgewood ostrich farm

    After losing all of their animals, Universal Ostrich Farm must also pay a $10,000 fine.
    The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) issued the fine and violation to the Edgewood farm after it failed to report an outbreak in the approximately 400 bird herd in December of 2024.
    The entire flock was ultimately killed due to the outbreak, but the farm contested the violation notice and attached fine with the Canada Agricultural Review Tribunal.
    Tribunal chairperson Emily Crocco upheld the decision in

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