ReportWire

Tag: british columbia

  • Bitcoin Heist: Family Members Waterboarded, Sexually Assaulted as Attackers Steal $1.6 Million

    A sentencing decision in the Provincial Court of British Columbia this month revealed the graphic details of a 2024 attack in which the victims were bound, waterboarded, and sexually assaulted—all in an effort to steal the family’s Bitcoin holdings.

    The “wrench attack,” or physical attack in which an assailant attempts to gain access to a victim’s cryptocurrency, took place on April 27-28, 2024. 

    During the home invasion, four men unlawfully entered the victims’ home, first gaining access when two of the men dressed as Canadian Post workers sought a signature for a fake package.

    After entering the home, the men then closed the door behind them, and were later joined by two others. Once inside, the victims—a husband, wife, and daughter—were restrained with zip ties. 

    They were then threatened and beaten as the assailants sought to gain access to the father’s cryptocurrency. As they attempted to access his funds, they forced the daughter to remove her clothes, exposing her genitalia as they recorded multiple videos. She was instructed to say explicit phrases, and was physically assaulted by one of the crew. 

    The men also waterboarded the husband and wife, and threatened to cut off the husband’s genitals if he did not provide them with the access to his funds.

    Thief Posing as Delivery Driver Ties Up Homeowner, Steals $11M in Crypto

    The man had reportedly boasted about his success with crypto investments within the Chinese community of British Columbia leading the crew to initially seek 200 Bitcoin—currently valued at around $17.8 million—during their attack. Later, they lowered their demand to 100 BTC, but ultimately made away with much less, nearly draining the crypto accounts of the victims and making off with around $1.6 million in total.

    After being tied up and wrapped in a blanket, eventually the daughter heard a door close and partially freed herself before fleeing the residence and calling 911. 

    In May of this year, one of the four crew members, Tsz Wing Boaz Chan, pleaded guilty to breaking and entering, unlawfully confining the victims, and sexual assault. This month, Chan was sentenced to seven years in jail for his role in the crime.

    ‘Crypto King’ Kidnapper Pleads Guilty as Co-Defendants’ Trial Delayed

    Wrench attacks are on the rise this year, nearly doubling last year’s mark according to a recorded count by Jameson Lopp, the co-founder and chief security officer at self-custody crypto wallet platform, Casa. 

    Lopp’s database, which extends back to 2014, now counts 60 documented incidents in 2025 alone. 

    This weekend, a man posing as a delivery driver robbed a San Francisco home owner of $11 million worth of crypto. And on Sunday, a Chinese victim had $10,000 stolen after an alleged kidnapping and robbery in Thailand.

    Earlier this year, the high-profile kidnapping and wrench attack of Ledger co-founder David Balland and his wife left the crypto entrepreneur with a severed finger.

    Source link

  • Grizzly attacks schoolchildren and teachers on a walking trail in Canada, injuring 11

    A grizzly bear attacked a group of schoolchildren and teachers on a walking trail in British Columbia, Canada, injuring 11 people, two of them critically.

    The attack happened Thursday afternoon in Bella Coola, 700 kilometers (435 miles) northwest of Vancouver. The Nuxalk Nation said the “aggressive bear” remained on the loose Thursday evening and police and conservation officers were on the scene.

    “Officers are armed. Remain indoors and off the highway,” the First Nation said in a social media post.

    Two people were critically injured and two had serious injuries, Emergency Health Services spokesman Brian Twaites said. The others were treated at the scene.

    Parent Veronica Schooner said a lot of people tried to halt the attack but one male teacher “got the whole brunt of it” and was among the people taken by helicopter from the scene.

    Schooner’s 10-year-old son Alvarez was in the class of fourth- and fifth-graders that was attacked and was so close to the animal “he even felt its fur,” she said.

    “He said that bear ran so close to him, but it was going after somebody else,” Schooner said.

    She added that some children were hit with bear spray as the teachers fought off the bear and Alvarez was limping and his shoes muddy from running for safety. Her son’s thoughts, however, were with his classmates.

    “He keeps crying for his friends, and oh my goodness, right away he started praying for his friends,” she added.

    Acwsalcta School, an independent school run by Nuxalk First Nation in Bella Coola, said in a Facebook post that the school will be closed on Friday and counseling made available.

    “It’s hard to know what to say during this very difficult time. We are so grateful for our team and our students,” the post said.

    Source link

  • Grizzly bear with her cubs attacks hunter using elk call in Canada, officials say

    A hunter was seriously injured in a grizzly bear attack near Fort Steele, Canadian authorities said.

    A hunter was seriously injured in a grizzly bear attack near Fort Steele, Canadian authorities said.

    An elk hunter was seriously injured in a bear attack in British Columbia, according to Canadian authorities.

    The Conservation Officer Service responded Oct. 2 to the Fort Steele area where the hunter was attacked by a grizzly sow with her cubs, according to a Facebook post from the organization.

    Authorities said the hunter was using an elk call which may have attracted the bear. The hunter fired a single shot “in self defense,” but authorities said they were unsure if the bear was hit.

    Despite drone and low level helicopter flights along with ground sweeps of the area, authorities were unable to find any signs of the bears or evidence that they remained in the area, according to the post.

    The hunter was hospitalized with serious injuries, authorities said.

    Many people who shared the Conservation Officer Service’s Facebook post called for the return of grizzly hunting, which was outlawed in British Columbia in 2017 due to the species’ threatened status in the province, and remains a “controversial topic,” according to experts.

    “I know this is a sensitive topic,” Jonathan Gallo said in a Facebook post. “But there are more and more grizzlies in the Columbia valley. The hunt should be brought back in a responsible way.”

    Fort Steele is about a 60-mile drive northwest from the Roosville Border Crossing on the U.S.-Canadian border in Montana.

    Lauren Liebhaber

    mcclatchy-newsroom

    Lauren Liebhaber covers international science news with a focus on taxonomy and archaeology at McClatchy. She holds a bachelor’s degree from St. Lawrence University and a master’s degree from the Newhouse School at Syracuse University. Previously, she worked as a data journalist at Stacker.

    Lauren Liebhaber

    Source link

  • Lawsuits against federal government over Columbia Basin dams to resume

    The possibility of removing four Snake River dams — Ice Harbor Dam, Lower Monumental Dam, Little Goose Dam and Lower Granite Dam — has long been a contentious one that has generally split along party lines. Shown is the Ice Harbor Lock and Dam, the first of four dams constructed as part of the Lower Snake River Project, authorized in the Rivers and Harbors Act of 1945. (Photo by Columbia River System Operations EIS)

    Northwest states, tribes and environmental groups will resume suing the federal government over its hydroelectric dam operations in the Columbia River Basin that have harmed endangered native fish species. 

    The move comes after the Trump administration in June withdrew from a “historic” deal made two years ago, when President Joe Biden was in office. This agreement called for putting long-running legal battles aside and investing in the restoration of endangered Columbia River fish runs. 

    Behind the litigation are 10 environmental groups backed by Oregon, Washington and four Lower Columbia River tribes: The Confederated Tribes and Bands of the Yakama Nation, the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation, the Confederated Tribes of the Warm Springs Reservation of Oregon and the Nez Perce Tribe. 

    Court fights over the dams had gone on for more than three decades before the pause. Now, they are back on, according to Amanda Goodin, an attorney with the environmental law group Earthjustice, which filed a motion Thursday in U.S. District Court in Oregon to end the multi-year pause on a 2021 lawsuit. 

    “The Trump administration’s recent actions leave us with no choice but to return to court,” she said. 

    On Oct. 8, Earthjustice will officially resume its lawsuit, spokesperson Elizabeth Manning said. 

    Earthjustice’s plaintiffs include the National Wildlife Federation, Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen’s Associations, Institute for Fisheries Resources, Sierra Club, Idaho Rivers United, Northwest Sportfishing Industry Association, NW Energy Coalition, Columbia Riverkeeper, Idaho Conservation League and Fly Fishers International, Inc.   

    Oregon’s attorney general, Dan Rayfield, said in a statement that Oregon, too, was ready to resume legal action. 

    “The federal government has put salmon and steelhead on the brink of extinction and once again broken promises to tribal partners. Extinction is not an option. Oregon will return to court to hold the federal government accountable and ensure these iconic fish runs have a future,” he said.

    White House spokespeople did not immediately respond to a request for comment late Thursday. 

    The 2023 Resilient Columbia Basin Agreement involved pausing active Snake River litigation for a minimum of five years while the federal government worked with tribes and states on a plan to advance recovery of native fish populations in the Columbia Basin. 

    At the heart of the issue are four Snake River dams that provide irrigation and emissions-free hydropower for nearby communities, but have also contributed to the near extinction of 13 salmon and steelhead populations that return to the Columbia Basin from the Pacific Ocean to spawn. 

    The fish are important to tribal health and sovereignty and to basin ecosystems, and the declines are hitting southern resident orcas off the coasts of British Columbia, Washington and Oregon that rely on salmon for food and that are federally listed as endangered.

    “These wild native fish are essential to tribal cultures and important to sport, commercial, and tribal fishing communities and economies throughout the Pacific Northwest. We can and must do better,” said Bill Arthur, the director of the Sierra Club’s campaign to protect salmon in the Snake and Columbia rivers. 

    The Columbia Basin Restoration Initiative included a roadmap for salmon and steelhead recovery, as well as steps to replace the energy, transportation, irrigation, and recreation services provided by the four lower Snake River dams so they could potentially be breached. 

    The agreement was a way to increase salmon populations and fishing opportunities while improving public services, cutting taxpayer subsidies and meeting promises made to the tribes, according to Mike Leahy, senior director of wildlife, hunting and fishing policy for the National Wildlife Federation. 

    In June, President Donald Trump signed a memorandum withdrawing the federal government’s support from the agreement, calling it “radical environmentalism” and saying completion of the restoration initiative would “be devastating for the region.” 

    “It’s been disappointing to see the federal government overrule all the progress made in the region in favor of returning to court,” Leahy said. 

    Oregon Gov. Tina Kotek said in a statement that renewing the lawsuit is necessary to protect natural resources, preserve fish runs, and hold the federal government responsible.

    “President Trump walking away from these commitments presents a very real threat at a time when the fish are on the brink of extinction. It also continues our nation’s shameful legacy of broken promises to sovereign tribal nations that this partnership sought to repair,” she said.

    While environmental groups agree that going back to court is an essential next step, they have committed to finding other ways to continue restoring the Columbia Basin while the lawsuits are ongoing. 

    “We will nevertheless keep working with sovereigns and stakeholders across the Northwest to find real solutions to restore healthy, abundant salmon and bring our communities forward together,” said Columbia Riverkeeper Legal Director Miles Johnson.

    Source link

  • Vancouver’s Parq Casino Eyes Expansion with 300 New Slot Machines

    Parq Casino Vancouver is seeking to significantly grow its gambling operations through a new proposal that would increase its number of slot machines by 50 per cent. The downtown casino has submitted an application to add 300 more machines, bringing the total from 600 to 900.

    Parq Casino Vancouver Says Expansion Is Needed to Meet Increased Expectations

    In its application to the City of Vancouver, Parq Casino states that it currently has the lowest slot machine density among casinos in the Lower Mainland, and that its current gaming offerings are insufficient to meet demand. The casino estimates that around two-thirds of gambling revenue from Vancouver residents is spent at casinos outside the city.

    Parq Casino, which replaced the former Edgewater Casino at the Plaza of Nations, retained the same gaming capacity, which was 600 slot machines and 75 table games. Edgewater hadn’t increased its number of slot machines since 2005 or its table games since 2007.

    Meanwhile, demand has grown significantly. Vancouver’s population has increased from approximately 560,000 to 700,000 over the past two decades, with the wider region growing from 2.1 million to more than three million. Rising tourism has further added to the pressure on local gambling facilities.

    No changes to the building’s exterior or structure would be required to accommodate the 300 additional slot machines. If approved by the City, the expansion would be implemented gradually over one to two years. The current casino occupies 72,000 square feet across two floors, with a particularly spacious layout on the second level. The existing floor space designated for gaming is sufficient to support the proposed 50 per cent increase in slot machines.

    The application also notes that, in theory, the space could support up to 1,200 slot machines (double the current number), however, such an expansion is not being considered at this time. Parq’s request for expansion comes just a few months after Vancouver’s council eased casino restrictions, allowing facilities to grow more easily.

    Vancouver Stands to See Increased Tax Revenue from Expansion

    Under provincial policy, municipalities receive 10% of the net gambling revenue generated by casinos within their boundaries each year. In the 2023/2024 fiscal year, the City of Vancouver collected $6 million from Parq Casino’s revenues. With the proposed addition of 300 slot machines, the City is projected to gain an extra $2.7 million to $3.1 million over the first three years.

    Between 1999 and the 2023/2024 fiscal year, Vancouver received a total of $159.1 million in casino revenue. Over the past three fiscal years alone, the city earned $19.3 million in combined gambling revenue from both Parq Casino and Hastings Racecourse and Casino.

    Fiona Simmons

    Source link

  • Facing budget crunches, Chinese tax collectors descend on companies

    Facing budget crunches, Chinese tax collectors descend on companies

    BEIJING (AP) — Chinese authorities are chasing unpaid taxes from companies and individuals dating back decades, as the government moves to plug massive budget shortfalls and address a mounting debt crisis.

    More than a dozen listed Chinese companies say they were slapped with millions of dollars in back taxes in a renewed effort to fix local finances that have been wrecked by a downturn in the property market that hit sales of land leases, a main source of revenues.

    Policies issued after a recent planning meeting of top Communist Party officials called for expanding local tax resources and said localities should expand their “tax management authority and improve their debt management.”

    Local government debt is estimated at up to $11 trillion, including what’s owed by local government financing entities that are “off balance sheet,” or not included in official estimates. More than 300 reforms the party has outlined include promises to better monitor and manage local debt, one of the biggest risks in China’s financial system.

    That will be easier said than done, and experts question how thoroughly the party will follow through on its pledges to improve the tax regime and better balance control of government revenues.

    “They are not grappling with existing local debt problems, nor the constraints on fiscal capacity,” said Logan Wright of the Rhodium Group, an independent research firm. “Changing central and local revenue sharing and expenditure responsibilities is notable but they have promised this before.”

    The scramble to collect long overdue taxes shows the urgency of the problems.

    Chinese food and beverage conglomerate VV Food & Beverage reported in June it was hit with an 85 million yuan ($12 million) bill for taxes dating back as far as 30 years ago. Zangge Mining, based in western China, said it got two bills totaling 668 million RMB ($92 million) for taxes dating to 20 years earlier.

    Local governments have long been squeezed for cash since the central government controls most tax revenue, allotting a limited amount to local governments that pay about 80% of expenditures such as salaries, social services and investments in infrastructure like roads and schools.

    Pressures have been building as the economy slowed and costs piled up from “zero-COVID” policies during the pandemic.

    Economists have long warned the situation is unsustainable, saying China must beef up tax collection to balance budgets in the long run.

    Under leader Xi Jinping, the government has cut personal income, corporate income, and value-added taxes to curry support, boost economic growth and encourage investment — often in ways that favored the rich, tax scholars say. According to most estimates, only about 5% of Chinese pay personal income taxes, far lower than in many other countries. Government statistics show it accounts for just under 9% of total tax revenues, and China has no comprehensive nationwide property tax.

    Finance Minister Li Fo’an told the official Xinhua News Agency that the latest reforms will give local governments more resources and more power over tax collection, adjusting the share of taxes they keep.

    “The central government doesn’t have a lot of responsibility for spending, so it doesn’t feel the pain of cutting taxes,” said Cui Wei, a professor of Chinese and international tax policy at the University of British Columbia.

    The effectiveness of the reforms will depend on how they’re implemented, said Cui, who is skeptical that authorities will carry out a proposal to increase central government spending. That “will require increasing central government staffing, and that’s an ‘organizational’ matter, not a simple spending matter,” he said.

    “I wouldn’t hold my breath,” Cui said.

    Sudden new tax bills have hit some businesses hard, further damaging already shaky business confidence. Ningbo Bohui Chemical Technology, in Zhejiang on China’s eastern coast, suspended most of its production after the local tax bureau demanded 500 million yuan ($69 million) in back taxes on certain chemicals. It is laying off staff and cutting pay to cope.

    Experts say the arbitrary way taxes are collected, with periods of leniency followed by sudden crackdowns, is counterproductive, discouraging companies from investing or hiring precisely when they need to.

    “When business owners are feeling insecure, how can there be more private investment growth in China?” said Chen Zhiwu, a finance professor at the University of Hong Kong’s business school. “An economic slowdown is inevitable.”

    The State Taxation Administration has denied launching a nationwide crackdown, which might imply past enforcement was lax. Tax authorities have “always been strict about preventing and investigating illegal taxation and fee collection,” the administration said in a statement last month.

    As local governments struggle to make ends meet, some are setting up joint operation centers run by local tax offices and police to chase back taxes. The AP found such centers have opened in at least 23 provinces since 2019.

    Both individuals and companies are being targeted. Dozens of singers, actors, and internet celebrities were fined millions of dollars for avoiding taxes in the past few years, according to a review of government notices.

    Internet livestreaming celebrity Huang Wei, better known by her pseudonym, Weiya, was fined 1.3 billion yuan ($210 million) for tax evasion in 2021. She apologized and escaped prosecution by paying up, but her social media accounts were suspended, crippling her business.

    The hunt for revenue isn’t limited to taxes. In the past few years, local authorities have drawn criticism for slapping large fines on drivers and street vendors, similar to how cities like Chicago or San Francisco earn millions from parking tickets. Despite pledges by top leaders to eliminate fines as a form of revenue collection, the practice continues, with city residents complaining that Shanghai police use drones and traffic cameras to catch drivers using their mobile phones at red lights.

    Outside experts and Chinese government advisors agree that structural imbalances between local and central governments must be addressed. But under Xi, China’s most authoritarian leader in decades, decision-making has grown more opaque, keeping businesses and analysts guessing, while vested interests have pushed back against major changes.

    “They have a hermetically sealed process that makes it difficult for people on the outside to know what is going on,” says Martin Chorzempa, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics.

    Beijing has been reluctant to rescue struggling local governments, wary it might leave them dependent on bailouts. So, the central government has stepped in only in dire cases, otherwise leaving local governments to resolve debt issues on their own.

    “In Chinese, we have a saying: You help people in desperate need, but you don’t help the poor,” said Tang Yao, an economist at Peking University. “You don’t want them to rely on soft money.”

    Economists say intervention may be required this time around and that the central government has leeway to take on more debt, with a debt-to-GDP ratio of only around 25%. That’s much lower than many other major economies.

    Accumulated total non-financial debt, meanwhile, is estimated at nearly triple the size of the economy, according to the National Institution for Finance and Development and still growing.

    “This is a huge structural problem that needs a huge structural solution that is not forthcoming,” said Logan Wright of the Rhodium Group, an independent research firm. “There’s really no way around this. And it’s getting worse, not better.”

    ___

    Fu Ting reported from Washington.

    Source link

  • Best places to buy real estate in Metro Vancouver – MoneySense

    Best places to buy real estate in Metro Vancouver – MoneySense

    Between December and January, the benchmark home prices in Port Coquitlam and Coquitlam increased by about 3% and 2%, respectively. In Port Moody, the benchmark home price dipped by about 1%, but home prices will likely climb as the spring market kicks off.

    Return to menu.

    You’re 2 minutes away from getting the best mortgage rates in CanadaAnswer a few quick questions to get a personalized rate quote*You will be leaving MoneySense. Just close the tab to return.

    Burnaby, New Westminster and Richmond, B.C. 

    The city of Vancouver is bordered by Richmond to the south, and by Burnaby and New Westminster to the east. Burnaby and Richmond are B.C.’s third- and fourth-largest cities, respectively, each with a population above 200,000.

    Best places to buy real estate in Burnaby, New Westminster and Richmond 

    In the table below, you’ll find the top neighbourhoods for real estate purchases in Burnaby, New Westminster and Richmond. To view all the data, slide the columns right or left using your fingers or mouse. You can download the data to your device in Excel, CSV and PDF formats.

    Source: Zoocasa

    Top three neighbourhoods in Burnaby, New Westminster and Richmond

    Situated in Richmond, Hamilton is just north of Annacis Island and the Annacis Channel, and west of Queensborough. Hamilton’s 2023 benchmark home price was $947,750 as a result of a consistent and stable increase in property values. The benchmark was 3% higher than in 2022, 37% higher than in 2020, and 22% higher than in 2018. This trend contributes to Hamilton’s impressive value score of 4.6.

    Hamilton is a distinctive neighbourhood with a blend of residential properties, predominantly single-family homes, alongside businesses and recreational facilities. It offers various amenities such as the Hamilton Community Centre, Hamilton Highway Off-Leash Dog Park, and the Bridges Marina. The neighbourhood boasts several parks, including the well-kept and popular Hamilton Community Park. Locals appreciate the trails that lead to the waterfront, a popular spot for dogs to take a swim. Hamilton has the highest percentage of households with children (57%) in this part of Metro Vancouver, by a significant margin. Families can send their kids to Hamilton Elementary School, the Choice School for Gifted Children, or Queen Elizabeth Elementary School. However, Hamilton has the third-worst accessibility score among the three cities, at 0.3.

    View Hamilton real estate listings on Zoocasa.


    In the southwest corner of Richmond lies the historic community of Steveston, where the powerful Fraser River meets the Pacific Ocean. Steveston is bordered by Williams Road to the north, the Fraser River to the south, No 2 Road to the east, and the Strait of Georgia to the west. The neighbourhood’s 2023 benchmark home price was $1,529,183, considerably higher than those of surrounding neighbourhoods. Home prices in Steveston Village have been on a slight upward trajectory. The benchmark home price was 1% lower than in 2022, but 28% higher than in 2020 and 17% higher than in 2018. As a result, Steveston has a modest value score of 2.0. However, it has by far the highest neighbourhood economics score in the region (5.0), which helped push it to the top. 

    So, what brings buyers to this neighbourhood? Following the closure of the fish canneries, significant residential development has transformed the area, with the emergence of new luxurious condominiums and townhomes reshaping the landscape. Residents benefit from outstanding local dining options, unique boutiques, a picturesque boardwalk that is popular among both tourists and locals, beach access, parks, playgrounds and biking trails—all enhancing Steveston’s charm. While primarily residential, Steveston has several parks near schools like Diefenbaker and James McKinney Elementary, along with the expansive Manoah Steves Neighbourhood School Park, which features four sports fields, three ball diamonds and a playground. The neighbourhood has one of the highest concentrations of households with children (49%).

    View Steveston Village real estate listings on Zoocasa.


    Nestled in North Burnaby, the Brentwood Park neighbourhood has traditionally offered a balanced mix of affordable single-family detached homes and condominiums. With The Amazing Brentwood housing spectacular developments, Brentwood Park is poised to become one of the largest urban destinations in North America. In 2023, the neighbourhood’s benchmark home price stood at $881,425. Home prices in Brentwood Park haven’t risen as rapidly as those in other neighbourhoods on our list. The 2023 benchmark price was 1% lower than in 2022, 18% higher than in 2020, and 11% higher than in 2018. This translates to a value score of 3.2. But Brentwood Park has one of the highest neighbourhood economics scores, 3.1, in this part of Metro Vancouver, behind only Steveston. 

    The neighbourhood boasts stunning views of Burnaby Mountain and the North Shore Mountains. Beecher Park offers forested areas, a sports field, a children’s playground and Beecher Creek, a local salmon spawning habitat connecting to Still Creek. Eileen Dailly Leisure Pool & Fitness Centre is well known for its swimming pool, children’s water play area, sauna and steam room, weight room, and more. The area is also home to the McGill Branch of the Burnaby Public Library. Public schools in Brentwood include Brentwood Park Elementary, for kindergarten to grade seven, and Alpha Secondary School, which offers an advanced placement program allowing students to take college-level courses while still in high school.

    View Brentwood Park real estate listings on Zoocasa.


    What happened in the real estate markets of Burnaby, New Westminster and Richmond?

    Real estate activity was stable in all three cities last year, and there was much less fervour compared to previous years. Home prices experienced modest price growth from January to December 2023, though this was due more to tight competition than increased demand. 

    Burnaby East experienced the most price growth, with the benchmark price rising about 7% from January to December. But the area is also the most expensive, with a December benchmark price of $1,157,400. New Westminster had the most affordable homes, with a benchmark home price of $815,600 in December, up about 4% from the beginning of the year. In Richmond, the benchmark home price rose from $1,109,200 in January to $1,153,400 in December—an increase of about 4%. 

    “Interest rates played a pivotal role in shaping affordability [in these areas], and there was a noticeable withdrawal from the market among potential buyers,” says Pershick. For the three cities combined, total home sales across all property types in 2023 came in below 2022 levels.

    What’s next for real estate in Burnaby, New Westminster and Richmond?

    Between December 2023 and February 2024, benchmark home prices in all three cities inched upward, suggesting a stronger start to the year than in 2023. Of the three, Richmond’s benchmark price increased the most, rising about 2% to $1,173,100 in February. Burnaby South has also experienced a decent increase, with the benchmark price rising by about 2% to $1,113,500 over the same period. 

    As of February, year-to-date sales for detached properties in Burnaby and Richmond are up compared to 2023. However, it’s Burnaby condo apartments that have gotten the most attention, with year-to-date sales up by about 19%. 

    Zoocasa

    Source link

  • ‘Deadpool’ star Ryan Reynolds inducted into Order of British Columbia  | Globalnews.ca

    ‘Deadpool’ star Ryan Reynolds inducted into Order of British Columbia | Globalnews.ca

    Ryan Reynolds is the newest member of the Order of British Columbia.

    The Vancouver-born actor and producer received the honour from Premier David Eby and Lt.-Gov. Janet Austin at a private ceremony in Vancouver.


    Click to play video: 'B.C.-born actor Ryan Reynolds honoured with Governor General’s Award'


    B.C.-born actor Ryan Reynolds honoured with Governor General’s Award


    The province’s Intergovernmental Relations Secretariat says a last-minute scheduling conflict means Reynolds won’t be attending a ceremony in Victoria on Thursday where more than a dozen other recipients will be recognized.

    Story continues below advertisement

    The award is considered the province’s highest honour.


    Click to play video: 'Terry Fox Foundation partners with Ryan Reynolds for 43rd Marathon of Hope'


    Terry Fox Foundation partners with Ryan Reynolds for 43rd Marathon of Hope


    Recipients this year include Dr. Penny Ballem, who led B.C.’s COVID-19 vaccination program; nurses Evanna Brennan and Susan Giles, who have worked in the Downtown Eastside for decades; and Chief Harold Leighton, who has served as the chief councillor of the Metlakatla First Nation for more than 35 years.

    The government biography for Reynolds says he is a “homegrown heavyweight” whose kindness and selflessness have benefited countless people in B.C., Canada and beyond.

     

    &copy 2023 The Canadian Press

    Source link

  • Thousands scramble to evacuate capital of Canada’s Northwest Territories as more than 200 ‘unprecedented’ wildfires blanket region | CNN

    Thousands scramble to evacuate capital of Canada’s Northwest Territories as more than 200 ‘unprecedented’ wildfires blanket region | CNN



    CNN
     — 

    Thousands of residents are rushing to evacuate the capital of Canada’s Northwest Territories as more than 200 fires burn, leaving many to face dangerous road conditions or stand in line for hours for desperately needed emergency flights. Evacuations were also under way in British Columbia.

    The Northwest Territories capital Yellowknife – home to about 20,000 – and several other Northwest Territories communities have been ordered to evacuate as crews battle 236 active wildfires, and a massive fire creeps toward the city and a major highway.

    The infernos in the Northwest Territories are among more than 1,000 fires burning across Canada as the country endures its worst fire season on record. Smoke from the fires has drifted into the US, bringing harmful pollution and worsening air quality.

    A little rain was possible but strong northwest and west-northwest winds could push the fire to the outskirts of Yellowknife by the weekend, according to a Facebook post from a government fire-monitoring account.

    At a Friday news briefing, Canadian leaders pledged no one would be left behind during the unprecedented evacuation from Yellowknife and getting residents out safely would continue through the weekend.

    “We’ll continue to focus on helping the most vulnerable and will be there for as long as it takes,” Defense Minister Bill Blair said.

    While most were encouraged to leave via the only road out of the community, as many as 5,000 residents had requested flights out of the city.

    Smoke continues to shroud Yellowknife, as it has for weeks, but an unpredictable wind and a raging fire, now about 10 miles from Yellowknife, forced officials to order a complete evacuation.

    However, federal officials said they were confident they could continue to protect the majority of the community from fire damage and are working on building fire breaks by clearing trees and applying fire retardant.

    In West Kelowna, officials confirmed several structures were lost in the fire, including many homes. However, officials said there were no reports of loss of life despite descriptions of harrowing rescues.

    The Canadian Armed Forces are assisting with firefighting and airlifting efforts in the Northwest Territories. The Royal Canadian Air Force has deployed several planes and helicopters to support regional emergency crews.

    The first CAF aircraft, a CC-130 J Hercules, conducted an evacuation flight Thursday and transported 79 passengers to Edmonton, the CAF said. Additional flights are scheduled for Friday.

    Incoming and outgoing commercial flights at airports in the Northwest Territories have been canceled because of the wildfires. Commercial flights in and out of Yellowknife Airport will stop after the last flight departs on Friday evening, according to an update on the government website.

    Evacuation flights will still be able to operate out of the airport as well as medical evacuations, firefighting and military-related flights, the government site said.

    More than 1,000 people were flown out of Yellowknife on emergency flights Thursday, and close to an additional 2,000 seats were available Friday, territory officials said in an online update. Many hoping to fly out Thursday stood for hours in a winding, slow-moving line only to be told they would need to try again on Friday, CNN partner CBC reports.

    People line up in Yellowknife to register for an evactuation flight on August 17.

    “We understand that this is deeply frustrating for those who have been in line for several hours and who will need to line up again tomorrow,” the territory update said. It added people who are immunocompromised, have mobility issues or have other high-risk conditions were moved up in the line.

    Officials are encouraging people to leave by car, if possible, and carpool to reduce traffic and assist those without vehicles.

    “Evacuation flights should be used as a last resort for those who do not have the option to evacuate by road,” territory officials said.

    But some driving out of the area have faced thick smoke and roadways flanked with flames. Yellowknife resident Ruoy Pineda told CNN he and his family struggled to navigate through the heavy haze after the evacuation order was announced Wednesday.

    “We were not actually fully prepared,” Pineda said. “On the road, we were all scared of what we saw ahead of us, but we keep reminding ourselves it is better to be out than stranded.”

    Pineda described the dangerous road conditions as he and others tried to flee the capital.

    “On the road you could see the fire and we were struggling because of the smoke,” he said. “The visibility on the road was very bad. We couldn’t even see if someone was ahead of us.”

    He and his family were still on the road Thursday morning and were headed to seek shelter in Edmonton, about 900 miles to the south.

    “We are very exhausted right now. We’ve barely slept and are very worried about our house in Yellowknife and if we’ll still have a home,” Pineda said.

    People line up outside a school to be evacuated in Yellowknife.

    Fires in Canada have burned more than six times more land this year when compared to the 10-year annual average, according to data from the Canadian Wildland Fire Information System.

    There have been more fires in Canada this year than compared to the 10-year average, with a 128% difference. Yet the fires appear to be spreading much wider than before, and so far this year, more than 13 million hectares have been burned – an area larger than Pennsylvania.

    The data, current as of August 9, show the 10-year average of area burned to date sits at just over 2 million hectares.

    British Columbia evacuates thousands

    Approximately 4,500 people are under evacuation orders in British Columbia due to threats from wildfires, Canadian officials said in a press conference Friday.

    “People who choose to ignore evacuation orders put themselves and emergency personnel at risk,” said Bowinn Ma, the province’s Minister of Emergency Management and Climate Readiness.

    Another 23,500 people in British Columbia are under evacuation alerts, which means they must be prepared to evacuate immediately if an order is issued, Ma said.

    Some fires have reached over 400 feet tall and are moving “faster than we can effectively put firefighting resources on them,” said Cliff Chapman, director of provincial operations for BC Wildfire Service.

    “There is very little that response tactics can do with these winds and that type of fire behavior,” Chapman said.

    The McDougall Creek fire near West Kelowna has experienced “significant growth” in the past 12 hours and currently spans more than 6,000 hectares, he said.

    Kelowna International Airport closed to commercial flights to allow space for fire fighting activity to take place, according to a news release from the airport.

    British Columbia has more than 360 active fires – more than any other Canadian province, according to the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre. The forecast winds and lightning may cause fires to move and grow quickly, officials have warned. Chapman said that lightning has been the primary cause of new fires.

    Nearly 60 evacuation orders were in effect across the province Thursday, the British Columbia Wildfire Service said.

    Among the displaced are residents of at least 4,800 properties who were ordered to evacuate in the province’s West Kelowna area on Wednesday and Thursday as the McDougall Creek fire advanced, local emergency officials announced.

    A state of emergency has been declared in Kelowna, as crews are combating spot fires coming from across the Central Okanagan Lake, stemming from the McDougall Creek fire, according to a news release Friday.

    Video taken by resident Todd Ramsay shows a lake rimmed by large hills engulfed in a wall of fire.

    “Absolutely devastating,” Ramsay said of the devastation in a Facebook post. “The fire jumped the lake and was right behind our house.”

    Ramsay said he was eventually able to evacuate to safety.

    Source link

  • Smoke from hundreds of Canadian wildfires blankets northern US cities with air pollution | CNN

    Smoke from hundreds of Canadian wildfires blankets northern US cities with air pollution | CNN



    CNN
     — 

    Smoke from more than 1,000 wildfires burning across Canada has wafted over the northern US, bringing poor air quality and pollution that threaten residents’ health to northern US cities including Chicago, Illinois, and Minneapolis, Minnesota.

    Chicago, Minneapolis and Detroit, Michigan, are now among at least three major US cities that are ranked in the top 20 most polluted cities in the world, according to global pollution tracker IQAir.

    The smoke has drifted over the Great Lakes region, in particular, as about 1,090 active fires blaze throughout Canada, more than 670 of which are considered “out of control,” according to the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre. That’s up from more than 880 fires there last week.

    The bulk of the country’s wildfires are burning in British Columbia, where more than 460 fires are ongoing, the agency reports.

    In the US, the National Weather Service (NWS) has issued air quality alerts for millions of people across Michigan and parts of Minnesota, Wisconsin, Illinois and Indiana.

    The blanket of hazy skies follows a belt of Canadian wildfire smoke which stretched across the US last week, triggering air quality alerts for more than a dozen states from Montana to Vermont, with some smoke reaching as far South as Alabama.

    The smoke is expected to shift eastward through the Great Lakes region through Tuesday and disperse by Wednesday – just as the upper Midwest is forecast to see some of its hottest temperatures so far this year. Minneapolis could reach 100° and Chicago will be in the upper 90s.

    The EPA in Illinois has declared an “Air Pollution Action Day” through Tuesday due to the “persistent” wildfire smoke causing elevated air pollution in the region. Similar advisories have been declares in Michigan and Wisconsin.

    The city is recommending that those with chronic respiratory issues limit their activities outdoors and is advising against strenuous activity for children, teens, seniors, people with heart or lung disease, and pregnant people.

    “All Chicagoans may also consider wearing masks, limiting their outdoor exposure, moving activities indoors, running air purifiers, and closing windows,” the city said in a release Monday.

    Wildfire smoke is packed with tiny pollutants – known as particulate matter – that can infiltrate the lungs and blood stream if inhaled. Particulate matter can commonly cause difficulty breathing and eye and throat irritation, but has also been linked to more serious long-term health issues such as lung cancer, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    The US is likely to see the downwind effects of Canada’s prolonged wildfires as the country continues to experience its worst fire season on record.

    Almost 29 million acres of Canadian land have been scorched so far this year, according to the national fire center. Smoke from the blazes this summer have so far touched the American South and traveled across the Atlantic and into Europe.

    The crisis has elicited a flood of international support, as fire and emergency response personnel have deployed to the country from nations including the US, Australia and Brazil. At least two Canadian firefighters have died while battling the flames.

    Hard-hit British Columbia will receive federal assistance from the Canadian Armed Forces, Public Safety Canada announced last week.

    Hundreds of British Columbia’s fires have been ignited by lightning strikes from thunderstorms, according to the British Columbia Wildfire Service. Some of those thunderstorms were “dry,” producing insufficient amounts of rain to help quench any fires – a dangerous prospect in a province experiencing severe drought.

    As the human-driven climate crisis intensifies, scientists expect wildfire seasons will increase in severity, especially as droughts and heat become more common and more severe across the world.

    Source link

  • The Marijuana-Legalization Conundrum – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    The Marijuana-Legalization Conundrum – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    … for their views about marijuana legalization.
    Laurie laments the … lack of regulation for marijuana advertising. Despite the multiple … that clearly show that marijuana adversely affects the developing … of alcohol, what makes marijuana different?
    Russell has been …

    Original Author Link click here to read complete story..

    MMP News Author

    Source link

  • 4 dead, 36 hurt in bus crash on icy road in British Columbia

    4 dead, 36 hurt in bus crash on icy road in British Columbia

    TORONTO — A bus rolled over on an icy highway in British Columbia on Christmas Eve, killing four people and injuring three dozen, Canadian authorities said Sunday.

    A statement from the Royal Canadian Mounted Police said the bus crashed on Highway 97C east of Merritt. It said the accident was still under investigation but it was believed that extremely icy road conditions caused the rollover.

    Interior Health, the regional health authority, said 36 people were treated for injuries ranging from minor to serious. It said eight remained hospitalized Sunday morning, including two in serious condition and two with non-life-threatening injuries.

    Source link

  • Vancouver’s air quality affected as several wildfires rage | CNN

    Vancouver’s air quality affected as several wildfires rage | CNN



    CNN
     — 

    Wildfires burning in British Columbia and Washington state have triggered an air quality advisory for metro Vancouver, according to a Metro Vancouver district press release.

    The smoke is contributing to high concentrations of fine particulate matter in the area, which pose the greatest risk to health, according to the US Environmental Protection Agency.

    Local Canadian officials have urged residents to “postpone or reduce outdoor physical activity while PM 2.5 concentrations are high, especially if breathing feels uncomfortable.”

    United States Environmental Protection Agency

    Fine particulate matter, also known as PM 2.5, refers to airborne solid or liquid droplets with a diameter of 2.5 micrometers or less, the press release explained. That’s 30 times smaller than the diameter of a human hair, according to the US EPA. PM 2.5 can easily penetrate indoors because of its small size, according to the press release.

    Stagnant weather conditions are forecast to persist for at least the next few days, according to Vancouver officials, meaning the air quality is also not likely to change.

    “Smoke concentrations may vary widely across the region as winds and temperatures change, and as wildfire behaviour changes,” the Metro Vancouver press release said.

    There are currently nine active wildfires in Washington, according to a Friday update from Northwest Interagency Coordination Center. This includes the Cedar Creek Fire, which is 40% contained. It has burned 122,794 acres since it began on August 1, according to the Incident Information System.

    There is also smoke from a wildfire on Cypress Mountain, a popular ski area in West Vancouver, “contributing to hazy conditions already being experienced in Metro Vancouver,” said the press release.

    Due to unseasonably warm and dry conditions, Metro Vancouver officials have also extended lawn watering restrictions from Saturday until October 31 in order to better conserve the region’s drinking water,” according to a Metro Vancouver water conservation advisory.

    Source link

  • Island Librarians Take Home Big Awards

    Island Librarians Take Home Big Awards

    Librarian-led Correctional Facility Book Club and A Librarians on the Radio Podcast Take Home Two International Awards by American Library Association

    Press Release


    May 13, 2016

    ​​On May 4th, 2016, two librarians from Nanaimo, B.C., received notification from the American Library Association (ALA) that programs under their direction are recipients of the 2016 American Library Association (ALA) Presidential Citation for Innovative International Library Projects.

    The international award heralds from the largest Library Association in North America, which recognizes innovative contributions to international librarianship. The American Library Association awarded five projects in total. Two of those projects awarded belonged to librarians at the Nanaimo Harbourfront branch of Vancouver Island Regional Library.

    “This recognition is a testament to the creative and out-of-the-box staff at Vancouver Island Regional Library who are busy doing incredible work in our communities. I am truly proud.”

    Rosemary Bonanno, Executive Director, Vancouver Island Regional Library

    The programs, Vancouver Island Regional Library’s Nanaimo Correctional Centre initiative, under the direction of Jennifer Seper, and the Vancouver Island Regional Library “Librarians on the Radio” co-hosted by Justin Unrau, Emily Orr and Patrick Siebold, received individual awards.

    The 2016 American Library Association (ALA) Presidential Citation for Innovative International Library Projects recognizes innovative contributions to international librarianship and is presented by the ALA President at the ALA Annual Conference in June, 2016 in Orlando Florida.

    “This recognition is a testament to the creative and out-of-the-box staff at Vancouver Island Regional Library who are busy doing incredible work in our communities.” Says Rosemary Bonanno, Executive Director of Vancouver Island Regional Library. “I am truly proud.”

     

    About the Two Programs

    The Vancouver Island Regional Library Correctional Centre program started in April of 2015, with a partnership between VIRL and the Nanaimo Correctional Centre. The project, initiated by Jennifer Seper, began with a simple plan to improve the existing library at the centre but then grew to include a book club and a pending agreement that will allow inmates to request specific materials directly from the library.

    The Nanaimo Correctional Centre (NCC) is a medium security prison that houses offenders from across the province. Under direction by Jennifer Seper, VIRL approached the centre with a partnership as a means of increasing access to materials and in effort to increase literacy levels in an otherwise marginalized area of the community. Statistics show that the vast majority of the incarcerated struggle with literacy and that those that increase their literacy rates while incarcerated have a lower recidivism rate, making literacyfocused programs essential

    Book club discussion are a good match with the therapeutic values of the inmate program as it gives inmates the opportunity to learn how to discuss their feelings and opinions and to accept differing opinions from others in a no-confrontational way. Titles read so far include The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian, The Golden Spruce: A True Story of Myth, Madness and Greed (which all 9 members loved), and The Ocean at the End of the Lane which was universally loathed by all, but the facilitator. Feedback from the group and the prison wardens has been very positive. One inmate told Jennifer that “I asked my mom to guess what I was doing while I am away. She guessed a bunch of things and when I finally told her I was in a book club, she just could not believe it. She was so happy.”

    Librarians on the Radio is an ongoing radio show and podcast hosted by Justin Unrau, Emily Orr, and Patrick Siebold, which partners Vancouver Island Regional Library with long running CHLY 101.7 radio show, Changes: The Show on Sustainability. The purpose of Librarians on the Radio is to discuss library and information issues in the wider Vancouver Island community. The show connects listeners to more than just their local branches: It showcases librarians with passions and interests and connects both library users and non-library users to the larger library world. Non-library users learn about issues librarians care about in their communities and hopefully find some connections and break some stereotypes. Library users learn about programs, events and tools some of which they never knew the library offered.

    Librarians on the Radio goes beyond VIRL’s local service area to interview authors and librarians in the library world like Scott Bonner, the director of the Ferguson Public Library in Missouri; BC Civil Liberties Association expert Micheal Vonn on the 2015 Canadian federal election; and a Freedom to Read Week 2015 special with author Irvine Welsh. Making past episodes available as podcasts has increased the reach of the program beyond the community radio listener base.

    The idea for the show was conceived by VIRL librarian Jason Kuffler in 2012 and was started with librarians Anthony Martin and Lara Wright in January of 2013. The show started out as a 15 minute segment but later moved to an hour once a month. In 2014, the current producer Justin Unrau joined the show and brought his radio journalism training in to modify the show’s approach. The biggest enhancement has been the creation of regular segments Beeps and Boops with co-host Emily Orr talking about information technology issues, and literary (/pulpy scifi) Bookfighting with Patrick Siebold. The team also offers Librarians Off the Radio which includes supplemental podcast content to the live radio show.

    Tune into Librarians on the Radio at CHLY 101.7 FM or online at virl.bc.ca. Past episodes are available at http://virl.bc.ca/news/radio/archive.

    About the Award

    The ALA Presidential Citation for Innovative International Library Projects began as an ALA Presidential initiative of Dr. Loriene Roy, ALA President in 2007-2008. Recipients are selected by a committee of the International Relations Round Table (IRRT) through a nomination process.  For more information, please visit the IRRT web site.  IRRT is a Round Table of ALA with a mission to develop the interests of librarians in activities and problems in the field of international library relations.

    For a list of past award recipients, please click here.

    For more information, including photographs, contact Natasha Bartlett (nbartlett@virl.bc.ca) or 250-327-3114.

    Source: Vancouver Island Regional Library

    Source link