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Farmers in B.C. flood zone frustrated that politicians failed to learn from last disaster

12 décembre 2025 à 15:47
Floodwaters surround a house in Abbostford, B.C., on Friday, where 450 properties remain under evacuation order and another 1,700 are on evacuation alert.

Flood waters began to recede from the Fraser Valley on Friday, leaving residents and farmers to assess damage and demand answers as to why more hasn’t been done to heed lessons from the devastating B.C. floods of four years ago.

Poultry farmer Corry Spitters said this year’s flooding rose to within an inch of one of his chicken barns.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • New Brunswick appeal court rules Indigenous group can’t seek Aboriginal title over private land
    New Brunswick’s Court of Appeal has ruled that an Indigenous group cannot seek a declaration of Aboriginal title over private property, saying the harm to private property rights would undermine Canada’s efforts at reconciliation with First Nations.The decision Thursday overturns a lower-court ruling that would have allowed the Wolastoqey Nation to lay claim to privately owned industrial lands as part of their broader Aboriginal title case. It is in strong contrast with a recent B.C. Supreme Cou
     

New Brunswick appeal court rules Indigenous group can’t seek Aboriginal title over private land

11 décembre 2025 à 21:31
Large private-sector firms including J.D. Irving Ltd., Acadian Timber GP Inc. and H.J. Crabbe & Sons Ltd. led the appeal after being put on notice that the Wolastoqey Nation may want privately owned industrial lands returned.

New Brunswick’s Court of Appeal has ruled that an Indigenous group cannot seek a declaration of Aboriginal title over private property, saying the harm to private property rights would undermine Canada’s efforts at reconciliation with First Nations.

The decision Thursday overturns a lower-court ruling that would have allowed the Wolastoqey Nation to lay claim to privately owned industrial lands as part of their broader Aboriginal title case. It is in strong contrast with a recent B.C. Supreme Court ruling that has cast private property rights into question.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Eby accuses courts of jeopardizing B.C. economy, resource projects
    British Columbia Premier David Eby lashed out at the judiciary on Wednesday, saying two recent decisions on Indigenous rights and title jeopardize the provincial economy and threaten progress on reconciliation that has paved the way for $100-billion worth of resource projects.Speaking at a business luncheon with the B.C. Chamber of Commerce, Mr. Eby took aim at a provincial Supreme Court decision that awarded Aboriginal title in a developed part of Metro Vancouver that includes private lands, as
     

Eby accuses courts of jeopardizing B.C. economy, resource projects

10 décembre 2025 à 20:58
B.C. Premier David Eby termed two recent court decisions on Indigenous rights and title 'unhelpful,' adding that 'British Columbians, not judges, have to decide our path forward.'

British Columbia Premier David Eby lashed out at the judiciary on Wednesday, saying two recent decisions on Indigenous rights and title jeopardize the provincial economy and threaten progress on reconciliation that has paved the way for $100-billion worth of resource projects.

Speaking at a business luncheon with the B.C. Chamber of Commerce, Mr. Eby took aim at a provincial Supreme Court decision that awarded Aboriginal title in a developed part of Metro Vancouver that includes private lands, as well as last Friday’s B.C. Court of Appeal decision that set a binding obligation on government to abide by the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) in existing legislation.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • B.C. to amend Indigenous rights act after court ruling on mineral claims
    British Columbia’s NDP government will amend its landmark reconciliation law, the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act, in response to a BC Court of Appeal decision that found the province’s mineral claims regime is “inconsistent” with the requirements of DRIPA.The court’s judgment on Friday establishes a new benchmark for the implementation of the declaration, which was passed unanimously by the B.C. legislature in 2019, creating a binding obligation on government to abide by the
     

B.C. to amend Indigenous rights act after court ruling on mineral claims

8 décembre 2025 à 21:09
The B.C. Court of Appeal decision on the province’s mineral claims regime threatens to undermine David Eby's economic development plans.

British Columbia’s NDP government will amend its landmark reconciliation law, the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act, in response to a BC Court of Appeal decision that found the province’s mineral claims regime is “inconsistent” with the requirements of DRIPA.

The court’s judgment on Friday establishes a new benchmark for the implementation of the declaration, which was passed unanimously by the B.C. legislature in 2019, creating a binding obligation on government to abide by the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, or UNDRIP.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • John Rustad resigns as leader of BC Conservatives after caucus revolt
    Hours after John Rustad resigned as leader of the BC Conservative Party Thursday, his former caucus members gathered outside the provincial legislature’s marble-clad library to rally around an interim leader, promising unity after an extended period of internal warfare.Mr. Rustad had faced months of pressure to step down over his failure to contain the fractured caucus.
     

John Rustad resigns as leader of BC Conservatives after caucus revolt

4 décembre 2025 à 12:44
John Rustad leaves the B.C. legislative house in Victoria on Wednesday.

Hours after John Rustad resigned as leader of the BC Conservative Party Thursday, his former caucus members gathered outside the provincial legislature’s marble-clad library to rally around an interim leader, promising unity after an extended period of internal warfare.

Mr. Rustad had faced months of pressure to step down over his failure to contain the fractured caucus.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • BC Conservatives say they’ve ousted their leader, but he refuses to go
    The B.C. legislature was in turmoil Wednesday after BC Conservatives attempted to oust their leader, John Rustad, by declaring him unfit for the job. A lawyer’s letter released by the Conservative Party said 20 members of the Official Opposition caucus – a bare majority – had lost confidence in Mr. Rustad. The party’s board declared a new interim leader, MLA Trevor Halford, to serve while it begins the preparations for a leadership contest.
     

BC Conservatives say they’ve ousted their leader, but he refuses to go

3 décembre 2025 à 22:14
BC Conservative Leader John Rustad leaves the House following question period at the B.C. Legislature in Victoria, on Wednesday.

The B.C. legislature was in turmoil Wednesday after BC Conservatives attempted to oust their leader, John Rustad, by declaring him unfit for the job.

A lawyer’s letter released by the Conservative Party said 20 members of the Official Opposition caucus – a bare majority – had lost confidence in Mr. Rustad. The party’s board declared a new interim leader, MLA Trevor Halford, to serve while it begins the preparations for a leadership contest.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • B.C. Premier calls Alberta’s pipeline proposal a distraction from real projects
    B.C. Premier David Eby says a pledge for an oil pipeline in a new energy accord between the federal government and Alberta is a distraction from real projects, as he called on Prime Minister Mark Carney to immediately meet with the Coastal First Nations in his province to discuss the plan.Other premiers, however, expressed support for the pipeline proposal, and said they are also in discussions with Ottawa on agreements for their own provinces.
     

B.C. Premier calls Alberta’s pipeline proposal a distraction from real projects

27 novembre 2025 à 19:20
B.C. Premier David Eby called on Prime Minister Mark Carney to meet with the Coastal First Nations, who are vehemently opposed to a pipeline and oil tankers in the area.

B.C. Premier David Eby says a pledge for an oil pipeline in a new energy accord between the federal government and Alberta is a distraction from real projects, as he called on Prime Minister Mark Carney to immediately meet with the Coastal First Nations in his province to discuss the plan.

Other premiers, however, expressed support for the pipeline proposal, and said they are also in discussions with Ottawa on agreements for their own provinces.

Grizzly attack shatters Indigenous community where bears hold spiritual significance

27 novembre 2025 à 14:53

In a corner of carver Richard Pollard’s workshop in the back of his Bella Coola home is a small replica of the wood-hewn memorial he is making for his brother. It is a grizzly bear holding a copper shield, a symbol of high honour.

“I wanted to make something worthy of my brother,” he said.

© Chad Hipolito

Suncwmay Rich Pollard a multigenerational carver living in Bella Coola, holds a wood carving of a grizzly bear that he plans to carve into a larger version in honour of his deceased brother while in his workshop at his father's home on Monday, November 24, 2025. Chad Hipolito/The Globe and Mail

B.C. officials unsure if grizzlies captured near Bella Coola involved in school group attack

24 novembre 2025 à 20:52
B.C. Conservation officers drive out of a wooded area pulling a live bear trap in Bella Coola on Monday.

B.C. conservation officers captured two grizzlies near Bella Coola on Monday, but could not confirm yet whether either bear was responsible for a horrific recent attack on a school group.

The tense search near the Nuxalk First Nation community continues, but Chief Samuel Schooner said in an interview he is confident the bear or bears involved in the Nov. 20 attack will be captured.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Community unsettled after coastal B.C. grizzly attack injures 11
    Members of the Nuxalk First Nation remained in virtual lockdown this weekend, urged to stay in their homes as authorities searched for a mother grizzly bear and two cubs believed to be involved in the recent attack on a large group of elementary-school students.In the remote Nuxalk community of 4 Mile, adjacent to Bella Coola on the central coast, residents who are comfortable being outdoors have been told to leave the search to others.
     

Community unsettled after coastal B.C. grizzly attack injures 11

23 novembre 2025 à 22:06
Bella Coola Mountain Lodge owner Shannon Lansdowne shows a large male grizzly bear caught on surveillance camera near the end of October roaming around the lodge property in Hagensborg, B.C., just down the highway from Bella Coola.

Members of the Nuxalk First Nation remained in virtual lockdown this weekend, urged to stay in their homes as authorities searched for a mother grizzly bear and two cubs believed to be involved in the recent attack on a large group of elementary-school students.

In the remote Nuxalk community of 4 Mile, adjacent to Bella Coola on the central coast, residents who are comfortable being outdoors have been told to leave the search to others.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Search continues for three grizzly bears after students, teachers attacked in B.C.
    The search for a Grizzly bear – and possibly her two cubs – believed to be responsible for a shocking attack on a school group in this central coast community expanded on Saturday, with a predator attack response team on the ground and an RCMP helicopter searching for heat signatures in the dense forest.Four people – a teacher and three young students – were airlifted to hospital Thursday after the attack. They were among a school group of Grades 4 and 5 students. In all, 11 were injured. Bear b
     

Search continues for three grizzly bears after students, teachers attacked in B.C.

22 novembre 2025 à 20:22
Chief Councillor Samuel Schooner speaks to media with B.C. Conservation officer Sgt. Jeff Tyre on Saturday. Conservation officers say they are collecting forensic evidence after Thursday's grizzly attack.

The search for a Grizzly bear – and possibly her two cubs – believed to be responsible for a shocking attack on a school group in this central coast community expanded on Saturday, with a predator attack response team on the ground and an RCMP helicopter searching for heat signatures in the dense forest.

Four people – a teacher and three young students – were airlifted to hospital Thursday after the attack. They were among a school group of Grades 4 and 5 students. In all, 11 were injured. Bear behavourists say the attack on such a large group is exceptionally rare.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Grizzly bear attacks schoolchildren and teachers in B.C., two in critical condition
    Educators used bear spray, bear bangers and anything they could to fend off a grizzly bear that attacked their Grade 4 and 5 students on a field trip into the woods on B.C.’s central coast.Four people – one adult and three children – were badly mauled Thursday in the coastal community of Bella Coola and were airlifted to hospital in Vancouver, with two in critical condition, BC Emergency Health Services said. Seven others were treated for mild injuries and nine students from the Acwsalcta School
     

Grizzly bear attacks schoolchildren and teachers in B.C., two in critical condition

21 novembre 2025 à 15:43
A grizzly bear is seen fishing along a river in Tweedsmuir Provincial Park near Bella Coola, B.C., in 2010.

Educators used bear spray, bear bangers and anything they could to fend off a grizzly bear that attacked their Grade 4 and 5 students on a field trip into the woods on B.C.’s central coast.

Four people – one adult and three children – were badly mauled Thursday in the coastal community of Bella Coola and were airlifted to hospital in Vancouver, with two in critical condition, BC Emergency Health Services said. Seven others were treated for mild injuries and nine students from the Acwsalcta School unscathed, authorities said.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Eby says Alberta, Saskatchewan ‘secret’ pipeline talks jeopardize economic development
    British Columbia Premier David Eby said Thursday that his counterparts in Alberta and Saskatchewan are jeopardizing major economic development by engaging in what he called “secret” talks with Ottawa on oil pipelines through his province.The pipeline fight escalated earlier in the day after Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe revealed he is involved in Alberta’s negotiations with Ottawa about a potential oil pipeline across northern B.C., which would mean allowing oil tankers to ply the waters off B.
     

Eby says Alberta, Saskatchewan ‘secret’ pipeline talks jeopardize economic development

20 novembre 2025 à 22:21

British Columbia Premier David Eby said Thursday that his counterparts in Alberta and Saskatchewan are jeopardizing major economic development by engaging in what he called “secret” talks with Ottawa on oil pipelines through his province.

The pipeline fight escalated earlier in the day after Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe revealed he is involved in Alberta’s negotiations with Ottawa about a potential oil pipeline across northern B.C., which would mean allowing oil tankers to ply the waters off B.C.’s north coast, where they are currently banned.

The B.C. government has not been a party to those talks, and Mr. Eby said he learned about them through media reports.

© Jennifer Gauthier

A crude oil tanker is seen in Burrard inlet, heading to the Westridge Marine Terminal in Burnaby, B.C., on November 19, 2025. (Jennifer Gauthier/The Globe and Mail)
  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • Alberta, Saskatchewan ‘secret’ pipeline talks with Ottawa jeopardize economic development, Eby says
    British Columbia Premier David Eby said Thursday that his counterparts in Alberta and Saskatchewan are jeopardizing major economic development by engaging in what he called “secret” talks with Ottawa on oil pipelines through his province.The pipeline fight escalated earlier in the day after Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe revealed he is involved in Alberta’s negotiations with Ottawa about a potential oil pipeline across northern B.C., which would mean allowing oil tankers to ply the waters off B.
     

Alberta, Saskatchewan ‘secret’ pipeline talks with Ottawa jeopardize economic development, Eby says

20 novembre 2025 à 16:59
A crude oil tanker is seen in Burrard inlet, heading to the Westridge Marine Terminal in Burnaby, B.C., on Wednesday.

British Columbia Premier David Eby said Thursday that his counterparts in Alberta and Saskatchewan are jeopardizing major economic development by engaging in what he called “secret” talks with Ottawa on oil pipelines through his province.

The pipeline fight escalated earlier in the day after Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe revealed he is involved in Alberta’s negotiations with Ottawa about a potential oil pipeline across northern B.C., which would mean allowing oil tankers to ply the waters off B.C.’s north coast, where they are currently banned.

© DARRYL DYCK

Crude oil tankers are seen docked at the Trans Mountain Westridge Marine Terminal in Burnaby, B.C., on Monday, June 10, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck
  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • B.C. backs proposal to increase capacity for Trans Mountain pipeline
    The British Columbia government is backing a proposal to move more Alberta crude oil to the West Coast. The plan aims to increase the capacity of the Trans Mountain pipeline system by roughly 40 per cent, with results as early as 2026.It is a sharp reversal from a government that once fiercely opposed the initial Trans Mountain expansion, arguing when it was proposed that increased shipping traffic would put B.C.’s marine environment at risk.
     

B.C. backs proposal to increase capacity for Trans Mountain pipeline

20 novembre 2025 à 04:10
A tugboat guides a crude oil tanker to the Westridge Marine Terminal in Burnaby, B.C. The province says it would be a mistake to build a new pipeline from Alberta to the northwest coast of British Columbia.

The British Columbia government is backing a proposal to move more Alberta crude oil to the West Coast. The plan aims to increase the capacity of the Trans Mountain pipeline system by roughly 40 per cent, with results as early as 2026.

It is a sharp reversal from a government that once fiercely opposed the initial Trans Mountain expansion, arguing when it was proposed that increased shipping traffic would put B.C.’s marine environment at risk.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • B.C. plans to lower EV sales mandate to achievable levels, minister says
    British Columbia will introduce changes to water down its legislated electric vehicle sales mandate next spring. The changes are part of a broader policy repositioning in a province that was once a global leader in climate action.Adrian Dix, B.C.’s Minister of Energy and Climate Solutions, said Tuesday the province’s current targets, which require 90 per cent EV sales by 2030, and 100 per cent by 2035, are no longer realistic.
     

B.C. plans to lower EV sales mandate to achievable levels, minister says

19 novembre 2025 à 05:00
Adrian Dix, B.C.’s Minister of Energy and Climate Solutions, said despite leading the country in electric-vehicle sales, the province still isn’t meeting its targets.

British Columbia will introduce changes to water down its legislated electric vehicle sales mandate next spring. The changes are part of a broader policy repositioning in a province that was once a global leader in climate action.

Adrian Dix, B.C.’s Minister of Energy and Climate Solutions, said Tuesday the province’s current targets, which require 90 per cent EV sales by 2030, and 100 per cent by 2035, are no longer realistic.

  • ✇The Globe and Mail
  • B.C. transmission line, Quebec graphite project expected to be added to fast-track list
    Prime Minister Mark Carney is expected to add the North Coast Transmission Line in British Columbia and the Nouveau Monde Graphite NOU-T battery project in Quebec to his government’s list of nation-building projects, a source told The Globe and Mail.Mr. Carney is expected to announce the two additions to the list in northern British Columbia on Thursday, as part of the second group of developments to be fast-tracked by his government through Ottawa’s Major Projects Office. An initial group of fi
     

B.C. transmission line, Quebec graphite project expected to be added to fast-track list

12 novembre 2025 à 13:55
Graphite extraction at Nouveau Monde Graphite’s mining site in Quebec’s Matawinie region.

Prime Minister Mark Carney is expected to add the North Coast Transmission Line in British Columbia and the Nouveau Monde Graphite NOU-T battery project in Quebec to his government’s list of nation-building projects, a source told The Globe and Mail.

Mr. Carney is expected to announce the two additions to the list in northern British Columbia on Thursday, as part of the second group of developments to be fast-tracked by his government through Ottawa’s Major Projects Office. An initial group of five projects was announced in September.

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