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A Burnaby grandmother, 78-year-old Lilia Avoutova, is in an induced coma in Kunming after a March 6 stroke; family faces up to $400,000 for air ambulance and have raised ~$16,000 on GoFundMe.
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The Heppell potato farm in Surrey (220 acres) may lose its federal-leased land after 50 years as the site is eyed for terminals, warehousing or housing — a petition has 86,000+ signatures.
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A court application to evict about two dozen people from the Fairview homeless encampment in Penticton was adjourned; residents get more time but local businesses remain frustrated over fires and safety.
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B.C. is quietly consulting on proposed changes to DRIPA after recent court rulings on Indigenous title and mining; First Nations leaders and homeowners are watching closely as feedback is gathered.
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A new WildfireScore app rates wildfire risk for Canadian properties (1–5) and offers a $20, 30-year probability report geared to mortgage horizons — useful if you own a cabin or home in fire-prone areas.
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Surrey police are investigating a violent home invasion that left a 65-year-old woman seriously injured on 32B Avenue; anyone with info should call SPS and quote file 26-28314.
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Vancouver’s Vaisakhi Parade (April 11, 11 a.m.) route is changed off Marine Drive to Ross Street and a new Fraser–Maine section for improved vehicle mitigation and security after last year’s Lapu-Lapu tragedy.
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The family of four victims of the 1982 Bentley murders say they may be barred from speaking in person at David Ennis’s upcoming parole review after he waived an in-person hearing.
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Another fire struck the Whatcom Road Park and Ride encampment in Abbotsford amid an IHIT homicide probe after a 69-year-old man was shot and killed there March 23; officials call for provincial action.
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BC Hydro will repurpose about 85% of the Site C worker camp (21 dorms) to support the North Coast Transmission Line project, helping speed construction that should be operational by 2034.
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With Trans Mountain near capacity, talk of another Alberta-to-coast oil pipeline has renewed interest; B.C. government and Coastal First Nations remain skeptical while industry watches market signals.
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Gob, a Vancouver Island marmot released on Mount Washington, returned to the recovery centre and was re-trapped; the species’ population is rebounding but remains ~400 animals.
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A long-running West Vancouver mansion dispute resumed: a judge ordered the owner to stop unpermitted work and not live on the property without final occupancy approval.
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RCMP and CBSA intercepted 115 kg of meth hidden in pickle jars destined for Melbourne; three arrests followed in Australia and one in Kelowna as part of an international probe.
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Updates on Tumbler Ridge: 12-year-old survivor Maya Gebala had surgery to remove an abscess and may leave ICU soon; communities continue supporting victims of the Feb. 10 school shooting.
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A Vernon man, Seth Christian, is charged with bestiality after surveillance allegedly showed a sexual assault on a horse; the owner has installed more cameras and wants full prosecution.
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Richmond Centre MLA Hon Chan was removed from the BC Conservative caucus after being charged with assault, assault by choking and uttering threats related to alleged January 12, 2024 incidents.
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Spring snow closed the Coquihalla Highway between Hope and Merritt briefly; Environment Canada warned of ~15 cm and tricky mountain driving — check DriveBC before travel.
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Pilots and NAV Canada say controller staffing is short (about 200 controllers) and some tower positions get combined; pilots call for robust staffing and consistent protocol use.
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U.S. jury rulings against Meta about youth harms could affect a proposed class action in B.C., say Canadian lawyers pursuing similar claims over social-platform addiction and child safety.
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As Vancouver prepares for the 2026 FIFA World Cup, city and province face questions about where unhoused people will go inside the two-kilometre beautification zone around BC Place.
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Nurse practitioners in B.C. say they’re struggling to find jobs despite a shortage of primary care: 700,000 people lack a family doctor and officials recruited U.S. NPs while local graduates face hiring delays.
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After 126 weeks of weekly pro‑Palestinian rallies, Victoria police will stop providing traffic control for the street portion as of April 4, citing officer wellness and resource strain.
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Peace Arch Hospital’s maternity unit is on diversion March 25–31 (the ninth diversion in four months) because of ob-gyn shortages; Fraser Health advises calling ahead if you’re in labour.
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Federal security agencies are reviewing a Vancouver company recently sanctioned by the U.S. over alleged ties to a Hezbollah finance network; Ottawa says RCMP and CSIS are looking into it.
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Four people died in separate avalanches in northern B.C. over the weekend — three heli-ski guests near Mount Knauss and a remote slide near the Klehini River; the BC Coroners Service is investigating.
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BC Ferries found coliform and E. coli in potable water samples on the Queen of Alberni and the Salish Orca; public health guided operations and no illnesses were reported while systems were flushed.
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West Kelowna father Shane Braniff and other patients report long waits for neurosurgery amid neurologist shortages at Kelowna General Hospital, raising concerns about access to urgent care.
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A Kelowna man was fined $5,000 for flying a drone near the 2023 McDougall Creek wildfire after interfering with a helicopter; officials warn drones can endanger firefighting crews.
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Kelowna removed dozens of trees for the $9.1M Mill Creek flood-protection works tied to Parkinson Rec Centre; the city will replant 800 trees and 6,000 shrubs but neighbours are upset.