• Dean Dewan Shahi

    In Loving Memory ~
    April 25, 1975 – March 22, 2024Two years have passed and your presence is so missed. Not a single day goes by without thinking of you.
    Your love lives in our thoughts, our memories and our prayers.
    You will be forever in our hearts,
    We miss you so much, Deano.
    Love – Mom, Dad and Shawn
  • PARCEL TAX ROLL AVAILABLE FOR INSPECTION

    Public notice is hereby given that the following parcel tax roll is available at the Service and Resource Centre, 411 Dunsmuir Street, Nanaimo, during regular business hours (8:00 am – 4:30 pm; Monday to Friday; excluding statutory holidays):
    Morningside Drive Sanitary Sewer Local Area Service Written correction requests must be received by the review panel by 4:30 pm on Friday, April 17, 2026. Please email requests to [email protected].
  • Hometown hero Jenn Gardiner joins Surrey fitness class for workout

    The vibes were high and the music was pumping as three dozen people worked out alongside Canadian Olympian Jenn Gardiner on Thursday (March 20).
    Orangetheory Fitness’s South Surrey location (15355 24 Ave.) hosted a Sweat & Social with the Olympic silver medallist.
    Gardiner, who grew up in Cloverdale, plays for the Vancouver Goldeneyes in the Professional Women’s Hockey League (PWHL) and recently represented Canada on the women’s hockey team in the 2026 Milano Cortina Winter
  • Layoffs hit University of the Fraser Valley amid $20 million deficit

    Universities across B.C. have been feeling the squeeze following the federal government’s cap on international students, with layoffs hitting dozens of these institutions, including the University of the Fraser Valley.
    A total of 45 faculty and staff members were recently laid off in an attempt to bridge the $20 million deficit impacting UFV in the 2026/27 fiscal year.
    UFV has campuses in Abbotsford, Chilliwack, Mission, and Hope.
    The school’s Faculty and Staff Association (FSA), whi
  • Advertisement

  • Evicted Island mobile home seniors awarded $28K from forgotten city fund

    A sense of closure for displaced tenants of a Langford seniors mobile home park has come from a ‘forgotten’ source.
    Members of the Tri-Way Park Residents Association have been awarded a $28,000 grant by the city to cover legal costs incurred during a long-running dispute with Starlight Investments, which purchased the park for redevelopment.
    The grant has been made possible by the city’s manufactured home park redevelopment policy, which was amended in 2007 to include a reserve
  • Stabbing incident investigation closes road in south Nanaimo

    Old Victoria Road between Milton and Selby streets was closed Friday morning, March 20, while Nanaimo RCMP investigated the scene of a stabbing.
    According to an RCMP press release, the incident happened at about 10 a.m. at the intersection of Prideaux Street and Old Victoria Road. The intersection and surrounding streets were closed to vehicle and pedestrian traffic while officers assessed the scene and gathered evidence.
    One adult man was treated for injuries in front of a business 156 Old Vict
  • Reginald Leroy Miller

    August 21, 1950 – March 1, 2026
    In Loving Memory ~
    It is with great sadness and heavy hearts that the family of Reginald (Reg) Miller, announces his passing, on March 1, 2026. He is deeply loved and will be dearly missed by his wife, Jan, and his sons, Ryan and Darren. Predeceased by his mother Alwynne (1988) and father Leroy (2018). Reg is also survived by sisters, Nancy (Lorne); Suzanne and several nieces and nephews. His quiet strength, steadfast and solid manner touched all who knew hi
  • Norman (Norm) Ivor Edward Hygh

    With heavy hearts we announce Norman (Norm) Ivor Edward Hygh of Nanaimo BC passed away peacefully on March 6, 2026, surrounded by his loved ones.
    Norm was born in Nanaimo on July 15, 1936, to William (Bill) and Violet Hygh. Norm lived his whole life in Nanaimo. Norm’s early career started at Tanneck’s Metal Fabrication. He then worked for Canada Post for 5 years before being hired at Harmac pulp mill in 1968, starting in production. Later, he became an apprentice pipefitter receiving
  • Advertisement

  • North Island MLA slams U.S. healthcare worker hires, saying ‘system failure’ is the issue

    The BC Conservative health critic is taking aim at Premier David Eby’s recruitment of more than 400 U.S.-based healthcare workers, criticizing the move as failing to address the system’s growing structural failures.
    “They are not bringing in enough providers, and they are not increasing patient attachment,” said North Island MLA Anna Kindy in a statement on March 17. “British Columbians still can’t find a family doctor.”
    The B.C. NDP party announced Tues
  • World-renowned pianist performing in Nanaimo

    World-renowned pianist Carter Johnson will be performing in Nanaimo, courtesy Nanaimo Conservatory of Music.
    Johnson will play a concert on Friday, March 20 at 7 p.m. at St. Andrews United Church.
    “Musically speaking, they can expect a good bit of variety,” he told the News Bulletin. “I’m going to be talking about the music also, I think they can expect maybe to be drawn into this music … more emotionally and personally than maybe at a lot of other concerts.”
  • City of Nelson pushes for federal ‘duty of care’ law for digital platforms

    Is it a municipal government’s job to confront online companies such as Open AI, X, and Roblox about the online harms they cause?
    Nelson city councillor Keith Page thinks it is.
    He says society expects a car manufacturer or a food producer to be held accountable for the quality of their products and to face consequences if that product proves to be harmful. Online platforms, he says, should be held to the same duty of care.
    At council’s Feb. 3 meeting, Page proposed that Nelson counc
  • New Zach Galifianakis show filmed on Vancouver Island

    A new Netflix series was filmed partially in the Comox Valley, and the trailer shows a few familiar faces.
    The show is called “This is a Gardening Show” and is starring comedian Zach Galifianakis. Eagle-eyed viewers of the trailer will see scenes from Mount Washington, Comox’s Brooklyn Elementary School and more. In one clip, lasting only a second or two, Galifianakis is shown scratching his back with a gardening tool standing next to local farmer Arzeena Hamir.
    “If I wer
  • 3 B.C. Interior cities break temperature records on last day of winter

    The warm weather on the last day of winter broke more temperature records across the Okanagan.
    On Thursday, Mar. 19, three temperatures records were broken in B.C., all in the Interior region.
    Kamloops was the warmest place in the province on Thursday, topping out at 21.2 C. This broke a 79-year record as it was 21.1 C on Mar. 19, 1947.
    Summerland broke a 98-year record for Mar. 19 as temperatures reached 19.5 C on Thursday. This broke the record of 18.3 C, set in 1928.
    And Vernon broke a two-ye
  • University of Victoria students rope in climbers for rising business venture

    Faced with gruelling class schedules and potential for mounting debt, a pair of UVic students opted for the flexibility of creating their own business.
    Kathryn Meers and Dylan Gyr embarked on a dog brand – but it didn’t sit right.
    “It was kind of lame, we weren’t proud of what we were doing,” said Meers, an environmental studies student. “It didn’t make me feel very happy creating something that would end up in the landfill.”
    Then Gyr saw a video o
  • Crimson Coast Dance Society hosts hip hop-Indigenous culture workshop in Nanaimo

    Crimson Coast Dance Society is inviting youths to take part in a week-long workshop, culminating with a performance at the OV Arts Centre next weekend.
    The society is inviting people aged 12 to 19 years to the 20th Body Talk HiP HoP PoW Wow spring break workshop beginning Monday, March 23 and running till Sunday, March 29, when the OV theatre performance takes place. According to a press release, it “offers an inter-generational youth experience where participants support each other while
  • QUIZ: A celebration of spring

    It is time to welcome spring, the season of rejuvenation and renewal.
    In 2026, the first day of spring is March 20.
    There are plenty of spring-themed traditions and celebrations, as well as historical events that occurred during past springs.
    And there are also places and objects with the word “spring” in their names.
    If you are ready to spring into spring, put your trivia knowledge to the test with these 10 questions.
    Good luck.READ MORE: QUIZ: Exploring visions of the future
    READ M
  • Pain turns into anger: Family still mourns 16 years after Langford teen’s murder

    Warning: This story contains details of violence and sexual assault.
    It was 16 years ago that a Langford murder changed a community forever.
    On March 18, 2010, 18-year-old Kimberly Proctor was lured into a home by 17-year-old Cameron Moffat and 16-year-old Kruse Wellwood, where the two men sexually assaulted and brutalized her over a period of several hours. Proctor was strangled and suffocated there until she died. The following day, Moffat and Wellwood carried her remains in a duffel bag on a
  • Princeton mill celebrates approval of tenure transfer to Gorman Group’s Similkameen Forest Products

    Princeton’s mill celebrated not just new owners but a new name as well with the handover of forestry tenures from Weyerhaeuser to West Kelowna-based Gorman Bros on March 19.
    The provincial government’s approval of tenure transfer was the last step in a process that began with Gorman’s purchase of the mill and tenures in 2025, which will now operate as Similkameen Forest Products.
    The transfer of the timber tenures has happened quickly since being announced in September 2025, as
  • Kelowna MP Fuhr details $339M plan to modernize Armed Forces

    Canada is launching two multimillion-dollar procurement projects to strengthen the Canadian Armed Forces.
    Secretary of State and Kelowna MP Stephen Fuhr made the announcements at separate events on Wednesday and Thursday, March 18 and 19, outlining plans to support the country’s space surveillance and bring modern equipment to the military.
    The investments, which combined total $339 million, are part of a larger plan to revitalize the CAF.
    Fuhr’s Defence Investment Agency (DIA) facil
  • Nanaimo RCMP searching for woman for allegedly beating robbery victim with metal pipe

    Police in Nanaimo hope the public can help them find Fallan Fowler, a 43-year-old woman wanted for robbery and assault with a weapon.
    According to police, on the evening of Nov. 14 Fowler was involved in an altercation with another woman. During the altercation, Fowler allegedly struck the woman with a metal pipe and then stole her purse. The victim required medical attention for injuries sustained during the incident.
    Officers located Fowler a short distance away and arrested her. The 43-year-o
  • Time travel: B.C. councillor says time switch puts students at risk

    While folks across B.C. look forward to longer summer days ahead, Langford Coun. Kimberley Guiry already has winter on her mind.
    With the jump now made to permanent daylight saving time, Guiry has flagged concerns about longer dark fall and winter mornings and the impact on children’s safety.
    From early November until the end of February, she warns that kids who begin their commute around 8 a.m. will be walking to school in the dark.
    Of particular concern for Guiry are the older Langford n
  • B.C.’s credit rating downgrade blamed on ‘deterioration’ of fiscal management

    Moody’s credit rating agency has downgraded B.C. a notch, blaming “entrenched deficits” and a “deterioration in long-term fiscal management.”
    The Thursday (March 19) decision is the agency’s second downgrade for the province in two years, lowering B.C. to Aa2, or two notches below the top Aaa status. These credit rating decisions signal to investors that the province is a riskier place to lend money to, which, in turn, may cause B.C.’s borrowing costs to
  • B.C.’s credit rating downgrade blamed on ’deterioration’ of fiscal management

    Moody’s credit rating agency has downgraded B.C. a notch, blaming “entrenched deficits” and a “deterioration in long-term fiscal management.”
    The Thursday (March 19) decision is the agency’s second downgrade for the province in two years, lowering B.C. to Aa2, or two notches below the top Aaa status. These credit rating decisions signal to investors that the province is a riskier place to lend money to, which, in turn, may cause B.C.’s borrowing costs to
  • Spill containment and cleanup underway after train derailment near Prince Rupert

    A mudslide triggered by heavy rain derailed a freight train near Prince Rupert earlier this week, disrupting service along the key northern corridor to the city’s port—and later revealing a significant diesel spill.
    On March 16, 27 CN Rail cars derailed approximately 20 kilometres south of Prince Rupert, near Mile 80 on Highway 16.
    Initial reports indicated that no spills had occurred, but subsequent assessments confirmed that at least one car was leaking, according to the Ministry o
  • Finance minister visits Nanaimo, looks to B.C.’s economic future

    Economic opportunities for British Columbia that can lead to economic growth is a focus of the message delivered by Brenda Bailey, Minister of Finance and MLA for Vancouver-South Granville.
    Bailey, who grew up on Protection Island and in Wellington, spoke at an International Women’s Day-inspired Greater Nanaimo Chamber of Commerce luncheon Wednesday, March 18.
    At the luncheon Bailey spoke about her background and her “leadership journey,” before turning to the B.C. economy and
  • Cowichan Bay triathlete Ridenour defends Oceania Cup title

    There was only one Canadian racer on the start list of the Oceania Triathlon Cup and Sprint Championships in Napier, New Zealand, on March 1, and there could only be one winner.
    Competing in her first triathlon of the 2026 season, Cowichan Bay’s Desirae Ridenour filled both roles.
    For the second year in a row, Ridenour won the event.
    Upon crossing the finish line, Ridenour fell to the ground, to catch her breath and consider her accomplishment.
    “[It was] mostly relief,” she adm
  • Sexism or playful parody? B.C. car commercial sparks debate

    Some people aren’t happy with a Vernon Kia parody car commercial that pokes fun at female stereotypes.
    And while the car dealership’s commercial has sparked a degree of online backlash, one of the saleswomen that stars in the video suggests some people are missing the point.
    “You can absolutely trust us to sell you a car, maybe just don’t let us drive it,” says saleswoman Nicole Zbitnoff in the video titled Vernon Kia Girls Parody Commercial next to her female sales
  • B.C. partnering with Whitecaps, viaSport to build mini soccer pitches

    To celebrate the 2026 FIFA World Cup and ensure the tournament leaves a lasting provincial impact, the B.C. government is partnering with the Vancouver Whitecaps FC and sports improvement organization viaSport to fund 20 mini soccer pitches to be built in all regions of the province.
    “We want to make sure that British Columbians from all over British Columbia are able to benefit from this legacy project,” said Anne Kang, tourism, art, culture and sport minister, in a Thursday announc
  • South Cariboo woman helps document the 2025 Canadian 1,052 UFO sightings

    For decades, a team of Canadians has documented reports of unidentified flying objects, commonly known as UFOs.
    Every year since 1989, Ufology Research has released the Canadian UFO Survey, a summary of all major sightings of UFOs reported in Canada. For the last two years, South Cariboo’s Leanne Sallenback has been helping write the report as Ufology Research’s communications specialist.
    “It’s a fascinating time, because there is a renewed interest in this topic, especia
  • South Cariboo woman helps document 2025’s 1,052 Canadian UFO sightings

    For decades, a team of Canadians has documented reports of unidentified flying objects, commonly known as UFOs.
    Every year since 1989, Ufology Research has released the Canadian UFO Survey, a summary of all major sightings of UFOs reported in Canada. For the last two years, South Cariboo’s Leanne Sallenback has been helping write the report as Ufology Research’s communications specialist.
    “It’s a fascinating time, because there is a renewed interest in this topic, especia

Follow @news_nanaimo on Twitter!