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Prairies/BC

Landslide mitigation to protect salmon habitat begins at B.C. First Nation

UCLUELET — A First Nation in British Columbia has partnered with an environmental group to try to mitigate the harms of a massive landslide — known locally as "Big Bertha" — on salmon-bearing streams in the area. The Redd Fish Restoration Society says in a statement that it is partnering

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Spring snow dump brings 30cm of accumulation on B.C.’s Coquihalla Highway

COQUIHALLA — A low-pressure system dumped significant spring snow on a number of major British Columbia highways, hampering travel through the Interior, including on the Coquihalla where 30 centimetres was recorded. Environment Canada says the overnight snowfall on the route linking Metro Vancouver to the Interior was the largest accumulation

B.C. home sales face major headwinds in March as transactions, prices both slide

VANCOUVER — British Columbia's home sales trended down across the board in March in price, transactions and dollar volume in what realtors are calling a "very challenging economic environment." The B.C. Real Estate Association says 5,766 homes in the province were sold on the Multiple Listing Service system last month

No ongoing public safety threat after grizzly bear attacks man in Vanderhoof, B.C.

VANDERHOOF — A man who encountered a grizzly while walking on his own property in central B.C. escaped with a leg injury after scrambling under a barbed-wire fence. The provincial Conservation Officer Service says they responded to the attack on the rural property in Vanderhoof, then determined there is no

Labour complaint filed by union representing workers at B.C. Interior ferry service

BURNABY — The union representing workers at the Kootenay Lake Ferry in B.C.'s Interior has filed an unfair labour practice complaint against the operator of the service. The BC General Employees' Union says in a news release that Western Pacific Marine has not given retroactive pay owed to workers since

B.C.’s growth minister says Iran war tightens fertilizer, fuel and pharma supplies

VICTORIA — The American war with Iran isn't just a problem at the gas pump — B.C.'s minister of economic growth says fertilizer and pharmaceutical ingredients could also be in short supply. Ravi Kahlon says the federal government's move to suspend some taxes on fuel will likely be swallowed up

Gender-based violence costs B.C. $1.12 billion annually, YWCA report says

VANCOUVER — Gender-based violence is costing British Columbia an estimated $1.12 billion each year, says a new report commissioned by the provincial YWCA. The report, titled The Cost of Inaction: Measuring the Economic Impact of Gender-Based Violence in B.C., argues that investing in upstream services to prevent such violence will

B.C. police chase sees pickup truck lose couch, crash into two RCMP cruisers

SALMON ARM — Mounties in B.C.'s southern interior say a wild chase ended with two police cruisers being hit and a couch flying from the back of a pickup truck. RCMP say officers were called two weeks ago about a silver Dodge Dakota speeding and swerving all over the road.

Pause of Indigenous rights act won’t be confidence vote, B.C. election prospect fades

VICTORIA — British Columbia Premier David Eby said he may extend the current legislative session to find support among individual First Nations over his plans to suspend parts of the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act. "Even now, we are engaging with chiefs to try to find a

B.C. First Nation asks UN body to count cultural losses in spill compensation formula

VICTORIA — An international group that sets the compensation formula for maritime oil spills doesn’t factor in the devastating cultural losses to First Nations, says an Indigenous leader whose Coastal B.C. nation has experienced a disastrous fuel spill. Marilyn Slett, the elected chief of the Heiltsuk Nation on British Columbia's

B.C. Conservative member’s bill on firefighter health passes in rare feat

VICTORIA — A bill by an Opposition Conservative in B.C.'s legislature about the health care of firefighters has passed through the legislature, an extremely rare occurrence for a private member's bill. The Firefighters’ Health Act, was brought forward by Langley-Walnut Grove MLA Misty Van Popta for first reading in May

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