Ports, pipelines and public infrastructure
Roberts Bank port expansion is now part of the B.C.–Ottawa energy-corridor debate
CBC British Columbia reports that Ottawa’s commitment to the Roberts Bank Terminal 2 container-port expansion is being discussed alongside Alberta’s proposed route to B.C.’s South Coast. The headline fight may be about pipelines, but the practical B.C. story also includes port capacity, goods movement, coastal risk, First Nations consultation, climate commitments and how a large federal-provincial package is explained to the public.
Why it matters: Major infrastructure agreements can lock in billions of dollars, years of permitting and lasting land-and-water impacts. B.C. readers need to know whether port, road, rail and energy decisions are being debated together or bundled before communities see the details.
Source: CBC British Columbia — Why expansion of Delta container port is going hand-in-hand with Alberta pipeline proposal
Housing, affordability and public spending
Premier compares unsold-condo purchase plan to a “liquidation” opportunity
Global BC and CHEK News report Premier David Eby’s defence of a plan to convert unsold condominiums into affordable housing, with Eby comparing the purchase opportunity to buying below construction cost. The public-interest question is not only whether discounted units could add homes quickly, but who owns the inventory, how prices are set, and what safeguards stop public money from simply rescuing bad private bets.
Why it matters: Housing affordability is a real crisis, but public buying programs require transparent numbers. Taxpayers should be able to see the unit costs, developer terms, location choices and affordability rules before “deal” language replaces scrutiny.
Source: Global BC — B.C.’s Eby compares condo plan to ‘liquidation’ at below construction costs / CHEK News — Eby compares condo-purchase plan to “liquidation” at below construction costs
Transit safety and emergency response
RCMP search after woman reportedly goes missing on a BC Ferries vessel
CityNews Vancouver reports that Sunshine Coast RCMP are investigating after a 51-year-old woman went missing on a BC Ferries vessel on Thursday. At this stage, the responsible way to frame the story is as an active missing-person investigation based on police reporting, not as a conclusion about what happened.
Why it matters: Ferry travel is everyday public infrastructure for coastal B.C. Missing-person cases on transit systems raise immediate questions about search timelines, passenger information, surveillance, crew procedures and support for families while official facts are still developing.
Source: CityNews Vancouver — RCMP searching for woman who went missing on a BC Ferries vessel
Search and rescue capacity
Two Vancouver Island SAR teams certified for night hoist rescue
CHEK News reports that two Vancouver Island search-and-rescue teams have become the first on the Island certified to conduct night hoist rescue operations. That is a technical milestone with very practical consequences for remote trails, steep terrain, marine-edge communities and winter-dark emergency calls.
Why it matters: B.C. relies heavily on volunteer and regional search-and-rescue capacity. Night hoist certification can expand rescue options, but it also highlights the need for training funds, aircraft availability, dispatch coordination and prevention messaging for hikers and boaters.
Source: CHEK News — Two SAR teams first on Vancouver Island to be certified for night hoist rescue
Local emergency infrastructure and borrowing
Kamloops-area residents approve financing path for search-and-rescue and fire-hall facility
CBC British Columbia reports that the Thompson-Nicola Regional District obtained approval through an alternative approval process to borrow for a new search-and-rescue hall and training facility. The story is local, but the theme is province-wide: emergency infrastructure is becoming a core budget file as communities face wildfire, highway, medical and backcountry calls.
Why it matters: Alternative approval processes can authorize major borrowing without a full referendum if opposition thresholds are not met. Residents should track project cost, debt servicing, regional benefits and whether the new facility improves actual response capacity.
Source: CBC British Columbia — Residents approve financials for new search and rescue and fire hall facility in Kamloops
Climate risk and flood preparedness
Glacial lake near Pemberton drains slower than expected, easing immediate flood fears but not the risk file
CBC British Columbia reports that a glacial lake northeast of Pemberton began draining more slowly than some earlier fears suggested, with officials and experts watching downstream conditions. Slower drainage may reduce immediate pressure, but it does not erase the need for clear warning systems and plain-language risk updates.
Why it matters: Glacial-lake outburst and flood-risk stories connect climate change, mountain hazards, emergency alerts and local trust. Communities need to know what is confirmed, what remains uncertain and how quickly evacuation or road information will be shared if conditions change.
Source: CBC British Columbia — Glacial lake near Pemberton draining slower than expected, experts and officials say
Consumer protection and major-event accountability
CBC finds “ghost tickets” listed for major events before real tickets were issued
CBC reports that StubHub says it does not allow speculative ticket listings, but CBC found World Cup “ghost tickets” for sale months before tickets were issued and was able to list non-existent tickets for the 2028 Olympics. For Vancouver readers, the story lands close to home because World Cup matches are already putting intense pressure on travel, hotels and event spending.
Why it matters: When fans spend hundreds or thousands of dollars around scarce event tickets, weak marketplace controls can create real financial harm. Regulators, platforms and event organizers should be pressed on verification, refunds and enforcement before buyers are left carrying the risk.
Source: CBC British Columbia — StubHub sold ‘ghost tickets’ for World Cup months before real ones were issued, CBC finds