OneBC Leader’s Comments Drive Indigenous Delegation from Legislature
Dallas Brodie called reports of residential school graves the ‘worst lie in Canadian history.’
Please Advise! Will the Epstein Files Finish Trump?
Of course not, says Dr. Steve. Just another sleazy moment.
A Sprawling BC Community Is Set to Lose Millions Owed by Oil Firm
Bankrupt Erikson National Energy leaves Northern Rockies Regional Municipality deep in the hole for tax revenues.
10 Perfect BC Books for Everyone on Your Holiday List
Find some locally minded gifting inspiration for this festive season.
They Want to Be Progressive Conservatives. No Way, Says Danielle Smith
The UCP is in court trying to stop two Alberta MLAs from using the former party’s name.
Insiders Detail Ways Alberta’s For-Profit Surgery Push Is Failing
The shift strong-arms doctors but hasn’t saved money or shortened waits for critical operations, sources say. A Tyee investigation.
BC’s Flood Prevention Promises Remain Unfulfilled
After the 2021 atmospheric river, governments preached averting over recovery. Locals remember. Do politicians?
Vancouver Police Finally Reveal Names of School Liaison Officers
After telling The Tyee publishing this information would harm police, names and school assignments are out.
Eby Sails Through Leadership Review, but NDP Divisions Remain
The BCGEU strike was among unions’ concerns, while others worried about climate inaction.
The Wondrous Lives of Hardcore Birders
A new generation is taking birding, and ‘listing,’ to great heights.
In the Bowels of the Pulp Mill
Jane Byer’s job as an ergonomics consultant puts her in the hot seat. An excerpt from ‘Coming Home from the Candy Factory.’
Inside the Labour Struggle at Massy Books
Nearly a year after unionizing, the beloved bookstore has few staff and no contract.
‘The Librarians’ Traces the Battle of a Lifetime
As rightward forces campaign to pull books from library shelves, a gripping new documentary exposes what’s at stake.
The ‘People’s Filibuster’ Comes to Vancouver City Hall
Over 600 people signed up to speak to Mayor Ken Sim’s tax-freeze budget. Most were opposed.
Ksi Lisims LNG Makes Federal List of ‘Nation-Building’ Projects
The prime minister sidestepped questions about US ownership and First Nations opposition at a northern BC presser.
How to Speed Up Wheelchair Repairs
Systemic changes are needed from government and industry, experts say. In the meantime, users are turning to DIY.
‘We Are Going to Fight to Save the Herring’
The DFO proposes to expand the fishery. Environmental groups and the W̱SÁNEĆ fear disaster.
The Alluring Mysteries of BC’s Humpback Whales
As their numbers grow, so do deadly human encounters. Researchers are fascinated by their songs, sexuality and collective creativity.
How BC Killed the ‘Last Hope’ for the Deaf Community
A Tyee Q&A with Deaf advocate Sarah-Anne Hrycenko after an NDP retreat on a plan for change.
Party Discipline Is Undermining Canadian Democracy
Alberta’s bill ordering teachers back to work is a prime example, say authors of a new book.
Every week from Friday to Sunday night, you've likely noticed The Tyee with a new look and feel. It's our new culture section, the Weekender. Because we're now devoting weekends to showcasing creative ingenuity in Vancouver and across the region.
The Tyee has long run culture stories, but having a place to showcase them puts a new emphasis on the importance of these pieces in our lives, building a meeting place for a diverse and intergenerational audience.
Our hope is that the Weekender will act as a new space for readers to connect with the creative community, and for creatives to connect with our readers.
You can expect to see an exciting range of work by Tyee staff writers as well as new voices taking the Weekender stage. If you'd like to be a part of it, reach out to us with a pitch.
The Wondrous Lives of Hardcore Birders
A new generation is taking birding, and ‘listing,’ to great heights.
‘The Librarians’ Traces the Battle of a Lifetime
As rightward forces campaign to pull books from library shelves, a gripping new documentary exposes what’s at stake.
Inside the Labour Struggle at Massy Books
Nearly a year after unionizing, the beloved bookstore has few staff and no contract.
In the Bowels of the Pulp Mill
Jane Byer’s job as an ergonomics consultant puts her in the hot seat. An excerpt from ‘Coming Home from the Candy Factory.’
Deep Dive
Get to the bottom of something big.
Keeping Up with the BC Legislature
The fall session of British Columbia’s legislature is now upon us. What have B.C.’s political parties been up to lately?
Governing New Democrats contended with an escalating strike of government workers. Conservative John Rustad is weathering a leadership crisis, leaks and the fallout of the public firing of a controversial staffer. BC Greens will now test their freshly picked green leader. Conservative defectors formed a new party and kicked off a war on the right wing. And attempts to stitch back together a “Liberal” brand after the collapse of BC United have so far been unsuccessful.
Catch up on our coverage of B.C.’s wild politics. This reporting is supported by our Builder members. You can join them here.
BC’s Government Employee Strike Is Over. Here’s What Comes Next
The tentative deal clears the way for other public sector unions to fight for better wages.
Rustad Defends His Push to Search MLAs’ Phones
The effort to identify the source of leaks from the divided Conservative party failed.
New Green Leader Emily Lowan Vows to Challenge NDP
Climate activist says her campaign reached people ‘disillusioned with politics.’
Flop or Force? BC’s New Right-Wing Party
Formed by two BC Conservative defectors, OneBC takes aim at unions and ‘globalists’ and vows private health care.
Editor's Pick
This story is making waves.
This Physicist Says We Don’t Take COVID Seriously Enough
We downplay the virus at our peril, warns Yaneer Bar-Yam. And children are more at risk than we thought.
Tyee Insider
What we're up to. How to be involved.
Support Award-Winning Journalism
For the third year in a row, The Tyee’s northern B.C. reporter, Amanda Follett Hosgood, has won a Canadian Association of Journalists award.
On May 31, Follett Hosgood won the silver award for her piece, “BC Illegally Collected Personal Info Tied to the Wet’suwet’en Conflict,” in the Freedom of Information Journalism category.
Follett Hosgood uncovered a B.C. government privacy breach that occurred leading up to the last big police enforcement on Wet’suwet’en territory during the conflict over the Coastal GasLink pipeline. In her associated piece, “BC’s Secretive Plan to Tighten Protest Response,” she dove into the province’s subsequent attempt to overhaul and beef up police responses related to land disputes through a secretive Civil Disobedience Work Plan.
Our in-depth, award-winning journalism is made possible by Tyee Builders. Join us here.
And check this out...
10 Perfect BC Books for Everyone on Your Holiday List
Find some locally minded gifting inspiration for this festive season.
CONTEST: Win Tickets to Hung Dance’s ‘Birdy’
This much-anticipated performance marks the first time DanceHouse will present a Taiwanese work.
The Serious Joy of Meditation: A Conversation with Jeff Warren
The bestselling author and meditation teacher returns to the Hollyhock Leadership Centre next spring.
Editor's Pick
This story is making waves.
How Many Times Can a Landlord Try to Evict a Renter in BC?
Janet Fraser fought her eviction at BC Supreme Court, and won. That doesn’t mean her ordeal is over.
Most Popular
Insiders Detail Ways Alberta’s For-Profit Surgery Push Is Failing
OneBC Leader’s Comments Drive Indigenous Delegation from Legislature
They Want to Be Progressive Conservatives. No Way, Says Danielle Smith
The Next Economy
From Alaska to California, people are pouring their smarts and hearts into successful enterprises that are low carbon and locally rooted. They’re employing and training, producing and sustaining.
So The Tyee created a whole new section to tell their stories and share best practices for a healthy bioregion. We call it What Works. It’s where you’ll find regular reports on the business of creating what works for a better future.
Interested in this project? Read more about What Works or contact us to be involved.
The Grocery Store the Earth Needs
How package-free markets like Portland’s Realm Refillery change how we shop and reduce plastic waste.
She Learned to Make Wine Without Cutting Down Trees
White oaks once ruled the now vineyard-blanketed Willamette Valley. Maggie Harrison shows they don’t have to be sacrificed to grapes.
Want to Save Trees? Put Some Sugar in Your Printer
Social Print’s founder wanted to protect forests. So his British Columbia company makes paper from sugar cane.
She Changes Diapers. Into Climate-Friendly Biochar
Billions of disposable diapers end up in North American landfills yearly. Carrie Pollak’s firm is trying better ways.
Editor's Pick
This story is making waves.
‘Pure Chaos’: Warnings of an Alberta Health-Care Crisis
Experts say AHS data obtained by The Tyee further indicate the system faces being overwhelmed.
Reported Elsewhere
Today's links curated for you.
AI firms must be clear on risks or repeat tobacco’s mistakes, says Anthropic chief
(via the Guardian)
Burnaby apologizes for decades of discrimination against people of Chinese descent
(via Global News)
Fast cars and easy money: Insurance agents penalized for role in luxury car 'grey market'
(via CBC)
Town of Smithers, B.C., says it is dealing with misinformation about temporary winter shelter
(via CBC)
UVic research reveals drift logs are less harmless than they seem
(via Victoria News)
Alberta county divided over proposed nuclear plant
(via Global News)
Church challenges Sidney mayor to spend night outdoors after shelter plans nixed
(via Times Colonist)
What does the Cowichan win really mean for Richmond residents?
(via APTN News)
Man, 35, arrested for serious assault of middle school student in Langford
(via CHEK)
The deepening ties between CSIS and resource companies
(via the Narwhal)
Make great journalism happen
The Tyee is a reader-supported publication. If you value what we do, help us make it.


Comment Noted
We hear you.
High-stakes stick handling
(read related story)
“Elbows up is not the best option in dealing with Trump on tariffs. Sounds good but is not effective when dealing with the elephant in the room. Evidence of that is Trump’s current rant and the 10 per cent threat.
“To ‘stick’ with the hockey metaphor, I think Carney is playing it smart. Stick handling rather than elbows up is a better approach in dealing with the Trump dynasty that will, as time goes by, lose the game of public opinion in the U.S. As has been stated before, ‘No deal is better than a bad deal.’ Human instinct to deal abruptly with discomfort will at times fail to produce the desired outcome.”