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B.C. man gets 15 years in prison Metro Vancouver shooting death in 2024

MAPLE RIDGE — A Metro Vancouver man has been sentenced to 15 years in prison for the killing of another man in Maple Ridge almost two years ago. Homicide investigators say 27-year-old Alexander Delair pleaded guilty to manslaughter with a firearm last November after initially being charged with second-degree murder.

Former commercial pilot Shaheer Cassim admits guilt in B.C. plane hijacking

RICHMOND — Federal prosecutors say a British Columbia man has pleaded guilty to two terrorism offences after he stole a small plane on Vancouver Island last July, triggering a security incident at Vancouver airport that spurred Norad to scramble fighter jets. The Public Prosecution Services of Canada says Shaheer Cassim

Fisheries expands mass marking of hatchery chinook in southern B.C.

VANCOUVER — The Fisheries Department is expanding its program that marks chinook from hatcheries in southern British Columbia, distinguishing them from wild salmon. A statement from the department says the marking by removal of the adipose fin — a small dorsal near the tail — does not affect the health

B.C. woman detained by ICE for three weeks in Texas calls experience ‘traumatizing’

KINGSVILLE, TEXAS, UNITED STATES — The Canadian woman who spent three weeks detained by immigration officers in the United States along with her seven-year-old daughter says it was "the most stressful, traumatizing ordeal" she has ever been through. Tania Warner won't elaborate on the details of her nearly three weeks

Photo gallery: A decade of death — B.C. counts drug emergency’s cost

Next week marks the 10th anniversary of the declaration of a public health emergency in response to British Columbia's drug overdose crisis, which has since claimed more than 18,000 lives. Grieving friends and families, former policy makers, medical workers and those who use drugs are reflecting on the disastrous decade

A timeline of British Columbia’s 10-year overdose health emergency

VANCOUVER — The 10 years of British Columbia's public health emergency due to drug overdoses has been marked by a catastrophic death toll, which now stands at more than 18,000. Here are some key dates in the crisis. April 14, 2016 British Columbia declares a public health emergency over a

Land Back Task Force in Squamish, B.C., sparks interest after landmark court ruling

Recent court rulings involving Aboriginal title have raised interest in a new committee that is exploring how public lands in Squamish, B.C., can be returned or co-managed with the Squamish First Nation, the district mayor said Tuesday. Armand Hurford said the Land Back Task Force was created last July as

Former B.C. cabinet minister George Abbott to serve as chief treaty commissioner

VICTORIA — A former provincial cabinet minister is being promoted to the role of chief commissioner of the British Columbia Treaty Commission, the independent body responsible for facilitating negotiations between First Nations, B.C. and Ottawa. A joint statement from B.C.'s Ministry of Indigenous Relations, the First Nations Summit and Crown-Indigenous

Federal government wants court to toss out human rights decision against RCMP

The federal government says the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal wrongfully awarded compensation to both complainants and witnesses who claimed discrimination by the RCMP in an investigation of historical sexual abuse allegations against a school teacher in Burns Lake, B.C. The tribunal issued a decision last month directing the RCMP to

B.C. orders West Vancouver to implement plan to build more homes and meet its target

VICTORIA — The British Columbia government is stepping into local politics over its housing policies, forcing the District of West Vancouver to approve a plan that would allow for more homes to be built. The Housing Ministry issued a statement Tuesday saying West Vancouver has only delivered 58 of the

Federal government puts out $412.9 million to renew the Pacific Salmon Initiative

The federal government is spending $412.9 million over five years to renew the Pacific Salmon Strategy in a plan to protect and rebuild wild populations. Fisheries Minister Joanne Thompson made the announcement in North Vancouver Tuesday, saying in a statement that the first five years of the initiative has shown

Wolf warning after dog lured to its death, B.C. conservation service says

VANCOUVER — British Columbia's Conservation Officer Service is cautioning residents near Ucluelet after wolves lured away an off-leash dog on a walking trail and killed it. The service says the dog's death on Tuesday highlights the immediate risk to pets, and potential public safety concerns. The service says in a

Could this be the end of green building standards in Ontario — again?

TORONTO — Premier Doug Ford's government is taking another swipe at green standards while nixing a requirement for municipalities to build climate change goals into their official plans. The new changes would roll back municipal enhanced development standards that require developers to improve park access, add tree canopy, install electric

Man charged in Surrey, B.C., shooting that injured driver, setting off crash

SURREY — A man has been charged in a shooting in Metro Vancouver that injured a vehicle driver, setting off a crash. Surrey police say officers responded to the crash March 24 on University Drive. Police say arriving officers found a person had been hit by a bullet while driving

Vancouver Island man sentenced to nine-plus years in child-exploitation case

PORT ALBERNI — A Vancouver Island man has been sentenced to more than nine years in prison for several sex offences involving minors he met online. Port Alberni RCMP say Loki Tchir was sentenced in the city on March 28 on charges including possession of child sexual abuse material and

Good Samaritan who stopped to help another driver is killed in B.C. highway crash

SMITHERS — Two Good Samaritans who stopped on the side of a British Columbia highway to help another driver have been struck by a truck, killing one man and seriously injuring the other, as well as the driver of the truck. The BC Highway Patrol says the crash happened last

Record warmth in B.C. over weekend as high winds arrive along southern coast

VANCOUVER — Spring weather in British Columbia brought record-high daily temperatures to several communities, while an arriving cold front is expected to bring strong winds to southwestern parts of the province. Environment Canada says four communities broke or matched their daily highs on Sunday for April 5, with the City

BC Ferries sailings hampered by forecasted high winds and vessel problems

VICTORIA — British Columbia's ferry operator has been plagued by a combination of vessel troubles and expected winds that have led to cancelled sailings on some routes. BC Ferries has issued a notice alerting passengers to several confirmed and potential cancellations on the Tsawwassen to Swartz Bay run late Monday

B.C.’s latest credit downgrade signals ‘something wrong’ with finances: economist

VICTORIA — An economist says the latest downgrade for British Columbia's credit rating will discourage companies from investing in the province. Standard & Poor's global ratings lowered its rating this month for B.C. to A from A-plus after Moody's lowered its rating to double-A-one from double-A-two a few weeks after

Fighting bald eagles freed from power line in Surrey, B.C.

SURREY — A pair of bald eagles found themselves in a tangle in Surrey, B.C., before power and fire crews helped a local bird rehabilitation group untie the knot. Orphaned Wildlife Rehabilitation Society, based in neighbouring Delta, B.C., says in a social media post that the eagles were fighting when

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