Coquihalla Highway reopening Dec. 20 thanks to 'remarkable engineering feats,' B.C. officials say
The storm-damaged Coquihalla Highway is now expected to reopen to commercial traffic on Monday, according to the B.C. government.
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The storm-damaged Coquihalla Highway is now expected to reopen to commercial traffic on Monday, according to the B.C. government.
Some provinces are giving residents free rapid COVID-19 test kits – but B.C. is not one of them.
The latest federal travel advisory announced in the middle of the holiday season has created confusion and uncertainty for would-be travellers and the travel industry alike.
The B.C. Human Rights Tribunal has awarded $1,500 to an RCMP veteran who was kicked out of a Vancouver Island bar for rolling a joint in his lap, finding that his rights as a medical cannabis user were violated.
A dangerous driving maneuver caught on camera on a major B.C. highway has resulted in nearly 200 trucks being pulled off B.C. roads.
One year ago in B.C., the first COVID-19 vaccines arrived in the province and health officials were gearing up to administer them to residents.
After a B.C. mayor was charged with public mischief following an investigation prompted by his own complaint, it appears taxpayers in that city could be footing the legal bills.
A protest at the B.C. legislature featuring hanging effigies of provincial politicians went too far, according to critics concerned about escalating behaviour from those opposed to COVID-19 vaccines and public health measures.
With limited highway connections between B.C.'s Lower Mainland and Interior following major damage in recent storms, police are boosting enforcement to crack down on dangerous driving on one particular route.
The B.C. floods are spilling over and affecting homeowners outside the flood areas. One homeowner nearly had his new home purchase fall apart because of it.
Plastic shopping bags will be banned in Vancouver in the New Year and consumers will have to pay extra for paper bags and single use cups.
Canadians and B.C. residents have dug down deep. In less than two weeks, the Red Cross has raised more than $12 million in donations for B.C. flood victims.
The second year of the pandemic isn't slowing down the real estate market. In fact, home sales reached a new annual record in November, and the year's not even over.
A new report is forecasting rents in Vancouver will rise even higher next year with the city continuing to be the most expensive in Canada for renters.
The City of Vancouver has approved a new budget for 2022, which includes a higher-than-proposed property tax increase.
One Saanich elementary student is principal for the day after his school raised thousands for B.C. communities affected by flooding.
Aldo Amenta, a U.S. man who's been paralyzed since a diving accident six years ago, walked on stage to get his master's degree on Dec. 12.
An architect-designer in Finland has returned to a frozen lake with a snow shovel and drew a large animal on the ice for 6th year in a row.
From our archives: Watch this footage from 2003, when George W. Bush addressed the American people after the capture of Saddam Hussein.
The federal government is again advising against non-essential foreign travel as COVID-19 cases rise in Canada and the threat of the Omicron variant of concern mounts.
Multiple Ontario school boards are asking students to take home their personal belongings in the event that learning becomes remote after the winter break, as Nova Scotia plans to start its holiday break early amid rising COVID-19 cases.
The Chicago Blackhawks have settled a lawsuit by a former player who said he was sexually assaulted by an assistant coach during the team's 2010 Stanley Cup title run.
It’s been only three weeks since scientists in South Africa first alerted the world that they had identified a new variant of the novel coronavirus, and officials across Canada have been rushing to announce new restrictions and recommendations. Here's a quick look at why this variant is causing so much fear.
Ontario is expanding eligibility for COVID-19 booster shots to anyone 18 and older starting Monday and is limiting capacity in some indoor spaces as cases of the Omicron variant surge in the province.
Booster shots and third doses of COVID-19 vaccines are now being rolled out for certain populations depending on their province or territory of residence. CTVNews.ca breaks down the eligibility criteria by region.
To watch the multi-levelled goings-on, as the Omicron noose was tightened symbolically by the federal government, and with Ontario going aggressive on boosters, large crowd bans and rapid testing, was to see signs of hope for a common sense evolution in coping with COVID-19 in Canada, writes Don Martin in an exclusive column for CTVNews.ca.
The rise of the Omicron COVID-19 variant has some Canadians searching for ways to ensure their families haven't contracted the virus, yet not every province or territory has made them widely available.
Alberta is making rapid tests more readily available and has opened bookings for booster shots to those age 50 and up and all health-care workers, Premier Jason Kenney announced Wednesday.