• Competition Bureau recommends changing THC limits for edibles, easing pot packaging

    Competition Bureau recommends changing THC limits for edibles, easing pot packaging
    It says the moves would boost consumer choice, foster innovation and further reduce illicit market activity
  • Canadian Forces SAR TECHs assist in technical rescue of Cariboo suspect

    Comox-based Search and Rescue Technicians (SAR TECH) were called in for their technical support after a suspect is said to have fled from an attempted traffic stop in Williams Lake.
    On Dec. 28, local RCMP were responding to multiple complaints of a suspected drunk driver in and around the city.
    When RCMP officers attempted to initiate a traffic stop, police said the suspect vehicle fled.
    They said the man later crashed the vehicle and attempted to flee on foot. In the process of attempting to ev
  • Nanaimo News Bulletin’s most-clicked news stories of 2025

    1. Both Nanaimo sailors who were missing have now been found safe, Aug. 15.
    Nanaimo RCMP reported that both of the sailors who had been reported missing the previous week had been located and both were safe.
    “The Nanaimo RCMP would like to thank the public for the outpouring of tips that assisted in finding both persons in a timely manner,” noted a police press release.
    Police said that numerous tips helped them first locate the 33-year-old woman who had been reported missing, as wel
  • ‘Fellow in yellow’ arrives at Mile 0 in Victoria, heads up Island

    For many, Mile 0 in Victoria is a start, and for some it’s an end.The marker near Dallas Road identifies the western end of more than 8,000 kilometres of Trans-Canada Highway that crosses the nation.For Trevor Redmond – who paused at the Terry Fox statue and dipped a toe in the nearby Salish Sea on Monday (Dec. 29) – it’s a kind of restart.“It’s a different meaning here to me. I think it is everyone else’s mile zero, it isn’t mine,” Redmond t
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  • On a wing and a prayer – release of a rescued hawk at Williams Lake First Nation

    Sandra Johnson became an animal rescuer after she was struck by a person with their truck while on the job flagging along a roadway.
    Looking for something to do with herself after she stopped working due to the injuries, she began volunteering with the organization Orphaned Wildlife Rehabilitation Society, known as OWL, in Delta, helping animals with their recovery journeys.
    The non-profit rescues and rehabilitates injured and orphaned raptors and helps educate the public on the importance of th
  • Teen, 16, found dead in Vancouver after being reported missing: Police

    Vancouver police say a 16-year-old girl is dead a day after she was reported missing.
    Officers were called to a home near East Pender and Renfrew streets shortly after 9 a.m. Tuesday (Dec. 30) where they found the 16-year-old girl dead, police said in a news release the same day.
    The girl had been reported missing Monday, and Vancouver police said her disappearance was the subject of an investigation by North Vancouver RCMP.
    The cause of her death is currently unknown and the Vancouver Police De
  • Langley-Abbotsford MLA likely to run for B.C. Conservative leadership

    Langley-Abbotsford MLA Harman Bhangu said he will likely run for leadership of the B.C. Conservatives in the wake of John Rustad stepping down from the role.
    Bhangu said that over the holidays he has been meeting with friends, family, and people from across the province, and that his family is supportive of him running for leader.
    “I am strongly considering it, and I’m pretty sure I will be,” he said.
    The party has been led by interim leader Trevor Halford since Rustad resigned
  • Fundraiser started for Cowichan senior who lost home in fire

    A GoFundMe has been set up for a senior who lost his home when it was destroyed in a fire on Dec. 23.
    Rob Robinson had been living in a trailer on a hobby farm near the HUB at Cowichan Station.
    At approximately 7:30 a.m. on Dec. 23, just two days before Christmas, Robinson was in the barn feeding the farm’s rescue animals when his trailer was consumed by flames.
    While he was fortunate and escaped injury, he lost his trailer and all his possessions.
    Zach Williams, who lives in a house on th
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  • Nanaimo News Bulletin’s most-read arts and entertainment stories of 2025

    1. Nanaimo country music star breaks through to win two CCMA awards, Sept. 14.
    A rising country music star from Nanaimo made another breakthrough and is the fan’s choice in Canada.
    Cameron Whitcomb was one of the big winners at the Canadian Country Music Association Awards on Sept. 13 at Prospera Place in Kelowna.
    Whitcomb, the singer of Quitter and Gasoline and Matches, won the Fan’s Choice Award at the CCMAs, and also captured Breakthrough Artist of the Year.
    “This weekend ha
  • Vancouver woman dead after ‘mysterious’ Coquihalla Hwy. collision near Hope

    BC Highway Patrol are asking for the public’s help in solving a “mysterious collision” on the Coquihalla Highway near Hope that killed a Vancouver driver.
    According to police, the 21-year-old woman was fatally injured on Dec. 27 when the white Toyota Yaris she was driving, on the southbound lanes between the Sowaqua chain-up area and Othello Road, went down an embankment. The woman was taken to the hospital but succumbed to her injuries two days later.
    “This crash occurre
  • Oliver twist: B.C. baby name battle rooted firmly in Dickensian literary conflict

    The latest round in a “battle” that has been going on since 1837 has seen Noah overtake Oliver as the most popular baby name in B.C.
    Noah was the top name for British Columbia babies in 2022 and 2023, before being overtaken by Oliver in 2024. However, “Noah” staged a comeback in 2025, with 198 more choices than Oliver.
    According to B.C.’s Vital Statistics Agency, the top 10 baby names in the province in 2025 were Noah, Oliver, Theodore, Liam, Olivia, Charlotte, Jack
  • B.C.’s North Coast highway shut down after heavy rainfall, washouts

    Extreme flooding caused by heavy rainfall continues to plague the North Coast.
    A 5.3-kilometre stretch of Highway 16 between Lawnhill Road and Miller Road on Haida Gwaii was shut down on Dec. 29 after a major washout.
    The highway closure was also extended between Prince Rupert and Terrace due to slushy and slippery sections, as well as rain on compact snow, cutting off access between the two cities.
    Assessments and construction are underway in all affected areas and there are no detours availabl
  • James William Thomson

    April 8, 1943 – December 4, 2025
    Jim passed away peacefully on December 4, 2025 at NRGH with family at his side.
    He is survived by wife, Julie, sister Janis, sons Mike (Adrienne) and Chris (Mariko), Grandchildren Scott (Ivana) Lea, Nathan, William and Emily.
    No Scheduled service at this time. Celebration of life and Burial at a later date.
  • Ardell Eva Ramage (née Crack)

    December 13th, 1941 – October 16th, 2025
    Ardell passed away peacefully at home in Nanaimo in the company of family and friends. She is survived by son Robert, daughter Denise, brother Roy, ex-husband William, extended family, and countless friends. She was predeceased by father Thomas and mother Mabel. Ardell grew up in Nelson, Lethbridge, and Nanaimo, graduating from Nanaimo District Secondary School in 1959. Friends and family remember her as highly organized, intelligent, fun-loving, an
  • Donations pour in for Nanaimo pets displaced by motel fire

    Donations for impacted families have been collected following a Boxing Day fire at a motel in Nanaimo, and there’s also been an outpouring of support for their pets.
    Nanaimo Animal Control made a Facebook post on Monday, Dec. 29, requesting donations of supplies to go to pet owners displaced due to a fire the previous week at Value Lodge Motel on Nicol Street.
    “Within two hours I’ve never seen this building get so busy,” said Jordan Briggs, Nanaimo Animal Control pound cl
  • Kittens found on Okanagan porch recovering in BC SPCA foster care

    A pair of five-week-old kittens found huddled together on a blanket on an Osoyoos porch are recovering in a foster home after being brought to the BC SPCA.
    The resident of the Osoyoos home who found the kittens on Dec. 11 took them to the BC SPCA South Okanagan/ Similkameen in Penticton, where they were cleaned up and brought to a vet.
    “The kittens were fearful and very dirty,” said Brittney Vazorka, manager of the BC SPCA South Okanagan/ Similkameen. “They both had upper respi
  • Cowichan Tribes to take full ownership of Chances Cowichan casino

    Cowichan Tribes is set to take full ownership of Chances Cowichan casino in Duncan.
    The First Nation’s Khowutzun Gaming Corporation has entered into an agreement with its partner, the Duncan Dabber Bingo Society, for the acquisition of all of the society’s interests in the operations of the casino, located at 436 Cowichan Way.
    Cowichan Tribes Chief Cindy Daniels, who is also chair of KGC, said she raises her hands to the DDBS for working with KGC to ensure Chances Cowichan has been a
  • Minimum wage increasing by 2.6% for B.C. piece-rate farmworkers

    The minimum piece-rates for farm workers who hand pick crops is increasing.
    Based on last year’s annual inflation rate, the B.C. government is raising the minimum piece rate for hand-harvest crops by 2.6 per cent.
    The changes will apply to 15 agricultural crops that need to be hand-harvested. These include: peaches, apricots, brussels sprouts, daffodils, mushrooms, apples, beans, blueberries, cherries, grapes, pears, peas, prune plums, raspberries and strawberries.
    Rates for each crop vary
  • Ucluelet man missing in Nanaimo after being dropped off on Christmas Eve

    Nanaimo RCMP are asking for the public’s help to find a 56-year-old Ucluelet man who has not been seen nor heard from since Christmas Eve.
    According to police, Darryl Martin was dropped off at Port Place Shopping Centre to do some last-minute holiday shopping on Wednesday, Dec. 24. His disappearance is out of character, and his family is concerned for his safety and well-being.
    He is described as 165 pounds, with black-grey hair and brown eyes.
    Anyone who has information on the missing man
  • Sounds fishy: B.C. biologists use AI to identify and decipher fish sounds

    Biologists from the University of Victoria discovered that even closely related fish species make unique and distinctive sounds, and they determined that it’s possible to differentiate between the sounds of different species.
    Using passive acoustics, researchers identified unique sounds for eight Vancouver Island fish species. They then developed a machine learning model that can predict which sounds belong to which species with 88 per cent accuracy.
    “We knew previously that many fis
  • Nanaimo News Bulletin’s most-read sports stories of 2025

    1. Nanaimo teen first Canadian to win U.S. horsemanship event, Aug. 1.
    A Nanaimo teen made history, becoming the first Canadian to take top spot at a horse-riding competition in California.
    Dane Anson, 15, won the U.S. Hunter Jumper Association Gladstone Cup Equitation Classic West in Del Mar, Calif. on July 25. He is the first Canadian to take the Gladstone trophy, the association told the News Bulletin in an e-mail.
    Anson rode Celestino, his seven-year-old gelding, and was ecstatic about the w
  • Godzilla in the grid: BC Hydro shares wild and wacky outage calls of 2025

    After responding to more than 61,000 calls in 2025, BC Hydro says some were anything but ordinary.
    On Tuesday (Dec. 30), BC Hydro released a list of its most memorable outages of the year, which included a rogue inflatable godzilla, a crow colliding with a transformer, noisy nature and two ospreys dropping fish onto power lines.
    Dubbed “Godzilla in the grid,” BC Hydro says that after three major storms swept across B.C. in late December, the last one sent an inflatable Godzilla fly i
  • Former Vancouver FC coach says he loaned team $500k and they have refused to repay him

    Former Vancouver FC coach Afshin Ghotbi is suing the team owners, Six-Five Sports & Entertainment LP, saying he loaned the Langley-based Canadian Premier League (CPL) team $500,000 and they have not repaid him.
    In a Dec. 4 statement of claim filed in B.C. Supreme Court, Ghotbi says he made the loan in July of 2023 after Rob Friend, described as “one of Six-Five’s directors, the President and CEO of Vancouver FC and a friend of Mr. Ghotbi,” informed him Vancouver FC was &ldq
  • Emergency Island biathlete attracts attention, funding in Olympic talent search

    Gavin Johnston, a biathlete from Campbell River, has been awarded funding and an accelerated path to the Olympics after impressing scouts at the RBC Training Ground national final.
    Johnston was one of more than 2,500 athletes to participate in 10th annual RBC Training Ground this year, a cross-country talent search run in partnership with the Canadian Olympic Committee and regional Canadian Sport Institutes.
    The event sees athletes from a wide range of sports perform core speed, strength, power
  • Sweeping work earns Island author 9 awards in first audiobook attempt

    Comox Valley author, songwriter and playwright James Allan Krause has been recognized for his recently published audiobook, Wetion which is a labour of love that took two decades to come to fruition.
    In December, Krause received nine awards for various categories from Outstanding Creator Book Awards.
    He received first place prize for Historical, second place finishes for Science Fiction and for Education and Reference Books. A third place honour for the Audiobooks category, five honorable mentio
  • Bad haircuts and dirty dishes: B.C. callers dialling 911 redefining ‘emergency’

    Most people understand that calling 911 is for emergency, life-or-death situations.
    But, unfortunately for some of British Columbia’s E-Comm operators, that wasn’t the case in 2025, with some people calling the emergency number to simply complain.
    E-Comm is reminding residents across the province that if a store refuses to return your air fryer, or if an airline fines your oversized carry-on, or your dishwasher breaks, 911 is not the appropriate number to call.
    The provincial dispatc
  • Bad haircuts and dirty dishes: B.C. 911 callers redefining ‘emergency’

    Most people understand that calling 911 is for emergency, life-or-death situations.
    But, unfortunately for some of British Columbia’s E-Comm operators, that wasn’t the case in 2025, with some people calling the emergency number to simply complain.
    E-Comm is reminding residents across the province that if a store refuses to return your air fryer, or if an airline fines your oversized carry-on, or your dishwasher breaks, 911 is not the appropriate number to call.
    The provincial dispatc
  • 2025 winding down with heavy rainfall on B.C.’s North Coast, Haida Gwaii

    After a flood watch was issued for the North Coast and Haida Gwaii last week, a rainfall warning has now been issued.
    On Dec. 27, B.C.’s River Forecast Centre issued the flood warning as heavy rain and rising temperatures were expected over the weekend. Additional rainfall warnings were issued Monday morning (Dec. 29) by Environment Canada for the same areas.
    A long episode of heavy rain is expected, with 160 to 200 millimetres of rain for the North Coast – coastal sections and 70 to
  • ‘Allegiance’ pledged: Lead actor previews 3rd season of B.C.-based CBC police drama

    Starting Wednesday, Jan. 7 on CBC platforms, Season 3 of the Surrey-set police drama Allegiance promises more ripped-from-the-headlines stories involving gangs and informants, hostage situations and a domestic assault case that hits close to home.
    Familiar locations continue to show up on the small screen, too, such as when the body of a blueberry farmer is discovered in Surrey’s Serpentine River. That’s where detective Sabrina Sohal (played by Supinder Wraich) and the Canadian Feder
  • Trail and Rossland gearing up to co-host the 2026 B.C. Winter Games

    With the 2026 B.C. Winter Games less than two months away, Trail and Rossland are entering the final stretch of preparations, and the call for volunteers is only growing louder.
    The Games will bring over 1,200 athletes and coaches to the region from Feb. 25 to March 1, 2026, competing in 15 different sports across multiple venues.
    Organizers say they’ll need close to 1,700 volunteers to help make it all happen.
    Games board president Brian Stefani stressed the scale of what’s ahead.
    &

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