November 2025

Job protection means status quo for B.C.’s private forestland: Parmar

Local governments are frustrated after finally receiving a long-awaited answer to when legislative changes are coming to the law governing how some forest lands are managed in B.C. The answer: with the trade war targeting B.C. lumber, the priority is protecting forestry jobs. In short, after years of fighting, change is not coming. The 2003

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Bagpipes add solemnity to Remembrance Day assembly at Pitt Meadows school

When students at Edith McDermott Elementary head to their school assembly for Remembrance Day today (Friday, Nov. 7), the haunting sounds of the bagpipes will be reverberating down the hallways. Tori Killoran, a learning support teacher at the school, who plays with the Simon Fraser University Pipe Band, will be playing for the students, bringing

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PHOTOS: For $32M you can lounge in B.C.’s luxurious Labyrinth any time you want

Living in a White Rock home with ocean views for days may seem a dream for many. But for the right price, that dream could become a reality, with one home in the seaside city recently listed for sale at $32.5 million — a home that was designed by renowned architect Russell Hollingsworth, the same

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B.C.’s Shalaya Valenzuela named Canada’s top Indigenous female athlete

Shalaya Valenzuela’s athletic career already includes an Olympic medal for play on Team Canada’s women’s rugby sevens squad that captured a silver in competition at last year’s Paris Olympics. Now the 26-year-old member of Tseshaht First Nation on Vancouver Island in British Columbia has added an impressive individual accolade to her list of accomplishments. Valenzuela

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