Art. Life. Ideas.
In the Hall of the Triscuit King
In his forthcoming book on living frugally, Tyee contributing editor Steve Burgess walks us through a day in his life. First in a series.
To Make More Space for Indigenous Worldviews, Start Here
It begins with undoing the ‘hegemonologue,’ says a leading political scientist.
Emily Carr University Calls on the Next Generation of Creative Thinkers
Teens are invited to enter an art contest for a chance to win a scholarship to ECU’s summer teen programs.
Recent Stories
The Fraser Valley Is Flooding Again. Are We Ready?
UPDATED: As the Nooksack spills north, some lessons learned, and ignored, since the 2021 disaster.
VPD Officer Was Quietly Investigated over an Abusive Relationship with Teen
A police watchdog report does not reveal the former officer’s name or the school where he met the teenage girl.
A Rare Guilty Verdict in a Worker Fatality Case
Jeff Caron was crushed to death on the job. His employer has been convicted of criminal negligence.
The Fascinating History Ignored by Critics of a Bridge’s New Name
In 1808, a Kwantlen man saved the life of Simon Fraser. The Pattullo Bridge’s replacement will stand as testament.
Neighbours Sought Help for a Bear Spray Victim. Police Saw a Violent Threat
Chris Amyotte died after police shot him seven times with beanbags. His family rejects findings that cleared officers of wrongdoing.
Why Carney’s Pipeline Deal Risks Canada’s Future
The MOU tears at the federation by giving Alberta aggrieved nation status while sidelining BC.
How the Carney-Smith Pact Could Bring More Tankers to Burrard Inlet
BC hoped expanding Trans Mountain would be an alternative to a new pipeline. Instead both are possible.
Inside Trump’s New National Security Strategy
It’s Orwellian. And it includes us.
Industries Pay Much Less for Water in BC, Report Finds
Charging rates that match Quebec would raise millions for key watershed projects, advocates say.
Nenshi Grills Smith in Legislature over Jordan Peterson’s School
Alberta’s premier defended her quiet efforts to accredit the psychologist’s for-profit online ‘academy.’
Study Shows Wide Wage Gap for Trans and Non-Binary Workers
A StatCan report examines gender-diverse workers’ economic outcomes for the first time.
Calgary’s City Council Is Very Male. Why?
Out of 82 contenders, only two women were elected. The loser is democracy, say some.
Jordan Peterson’s School Isn’t Accredited. Smith Offered Alberta’s Help
The premier met with the controversial psychologist and tried to help his business, finds a Tyee investigation.
CONTEST: Win Tickets to Recirquel’s ‘Paradisum’
DanceHouse and The Cultch will bring this otherworldly work of dance to Vancouver from Jan. 21 to 24.
Vancouver Backs Down on Cutting Advisory Committees
City staff had recommended ending the volunteer groups that provide a voice for marginalized people.
A Conservative BC MP Faces Pipeline Questions
Ellis Ross previously opposed a bitumen pipeline through the northwest as Haisla Nation chief councillor.
Please Advise! Should I Worry about John Rustad?
Dr. Steve says getting fired should be a blessing for the BC Conservative leader.
Editor's Pick
This story is making waves.
Burnaby Public Library Wrestles with the Costs of DEI
Inclusivity staff groups are being cancelled over budget concerns, but more action is promised.
Tyee Insider
What we're up to. How to be involved.
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And check this out...
CONTEST: Win Tickets to Recirquel’s ‘Paradisum’
DanceHouse and The Cultch will bring this otherworldly work of dance to Vancouver from Jan. 21 to 24.
It Takes a Crowd to Build The Tyee. Hear Why Some Joined
Our supporters each have their own reasons for supporting independent journalism. What’s yours?
CONTEST: Win Tickets to See Beverly Glenn-Copeland Live
One lucky Tyee reader will receive up to four tickets to his Jan. 16 performance at the Chan Centre.
Editor's Pick
This story is making waves.
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.
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 Pandemic Left Her Reeling. So She Turned to Growing Flowers
See how a frontline medical worker found new life in farming and selling pesticide-free blossoms.
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.
Editor's Pick
This story is making waves.
How the Abundance Movement Is Dividing the Left
Calls for fewer rules and faster building have found a progressive audience, including in the BC government.
Reported Elsewhere
Today's links curated for you.
The messy politics behind the battle for a Filipino Cultural Centre in Vancouver
(via CBC)
2025 was about finding solace in the human-made slop
(via Xtra)
Nuxalk Nation upset local Tory MP meeting with hunting club after grizzly attack
(via CBC)
ABC Vancouver rejects ‘social housing initiative’ that called for 20-storey towers
(via Business in Vancouver)
Interim BC Conservative leader moves to repair party ties with Poilievre
(via Business in Vancouver)
Man connected to BC ostrich protest charged with assault, mischief: Police
(via CHEK)
Another MP leaves Conservatives, crosses floor to Liberals
(via CBC)
No, the CRA will ‘never’ answer 100 per cent of your calls, administrator says
(via CTV News)
Ontario government report on intimate partner violence partly AI-generated, NDP says
(via the Globe and Mail)
Meta shuts down global accounts linked to abortion advice and queer content
(via the Guardian)
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 Stickhandling
(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.”