
Art. Life. Ideas.


Citizen Science Is the Bee’s Knees
BC is abuzz with curiosity. Meet the volunteers contributing valuable scientific knowledge about local bees.

Why I Give Blood
I’ve donated blood over 100 times. Here’s why you should start.

Do You Remember Your First Day of School?
Years later, the emotions remain close to the surface. An excerpt from ‘Bloom: Letters on Girlhood.’
Recent Stories

Government Workers Could Walk Off the Job as Early as Tuesday
The BCGEU has issued strike notice, while a health union has claimed bargaining progress.

BC Government Quietly Kills $20-Million School Affordability Fund
‘Transformative’ program had allowed schools to cut fees and provide supplies to vulnerable students.

Has Alberta’s NDP Veered Too Far from Its Labour Roots?
Wait and see, urges Nenshi. But the AFL’s McGowan says the power of pivoting to a worker agenda is clear.

The Untold Story of the RCMP’s Probe of Residential School Abuses
In the 1990s, police in BC launched the only provincewide investigation of survivors’ reports of sexual assault and violence.

The Case Against Human Outposts on the Moon
A new space race needs a new stunt. Better to invest in future-proofing life on Earth.

A Second Life for Pacific-Clogging Plastics
Ocean Legacy recycles ‘ghost gear’ and other trash into deck chairs, picnic tables and more.

VPD Officers Weren’t Fully Prepared for Drug Decriminalization
Data released 16 months after an FOI request shows one-third hadn’t finished the available training by the launch of the pilot project.

Alberta Revives Its Nuclear Energy Dreams
And a cabinet minister gets a free trip for ‘Canada-UK Nuclear Day’ in London.

Please Advise! Where Are Carney’s Elbows Today?
Up? Down? Catawumpus? Who knows what will sway America’s Caligula?

Outrage as Plug Pulled on Coal Mine Public Hearing
The CEO of Alberta’s energy regulator pleased a foreign mining firm with an unprecedented order.

‘When Am I Going to Be Taken Away?’
An excerpt from ‘Children Like Us: A Métis Woman’s Memoir of Family, Identity and Walking Herself Home.’

That New Train Smell: What the Mark V Means for Vancouver Transit
As new train cars roll into the station, advocates are excited about what they signal for the state of transit in the region.

How Parents Can Reduce Back-to-School Health Risks
BC is strongly encouraging vaccination as measles and whooping cough cases rise.

Aim High? Poilievre Bites Down
Half of Canadians would be ‘ashamed to call him PM,’ one poll says. But can he spark without snark?

How the World’s Longest Marine Heat Wave Upended Ocean Life
‘The Blob’ closed fisheries, killed whales and helped spread a deadly starfish disease. We need to prepare for the next one.

Risk. Reward. Too Many Fish? Unpacking BC’s Salmon Squabble
This year’s huge Fraser sockeye return is lifting spirits. And raising questions about how DFO sets catch limits.
Deep Dive
Get to the bottom of something big.
The Evolving World of Work
Labour laws, rights and organizing have changed significantly in the last half century, and even more so since the height of the COVID-19 pandemic and the increased intrusion of AI into our lives and work.
Led by Local Journalism Initiative labour reporter Isaac Phan Nay, The Tyee’s coverage of this rapidly transforming world of work has included airline workers, miners, library workers, Amazon warehouse employees, BC Ferries workers, university custodial staff, forestry workers, posties, lab workers, seafarers and gig workers. It’s all a reminder of how much labour undergirds and relates to every facet of our lives.
On this Labour Day, read some of our stories from this year on the emerging struggles and questions for labour across B.C. This reporting is supported by our Builder members. You can join them here.

A Three-Year Rise in BC’s Deadly Workplace Accident Rate
And more findings on worker injuries and fatalities. A Tyee Q&A with researcher Sean Tucker.

Why Employers’ Back-to-Office Mandates May Backfire
Research suggests workers won’t be happy. Or more efficient.

I Worked the ER During BC’s Worst Heat Wave. One Shift Haunts Me
‘That night could break people,’ recalls a health professional. A first-person account.

The Backlash Against ‘Tip-flation’
Electronic prompts to pay set amounts irk some customers. But why make workers dependent on gratuities?
Editor's Pick
This story is making waves.

A Buried Sin, a Hometown Reckoning
Retracing your roots this summer? Beware of stumbling into the teen self you tried to forget.
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...

How One Movement Builder Found Clarity on a Remote Island
Hollyhock Leadership Institute’s Activate gathering changed Shelby Cole’s life. ‘It expanded the way I think about movement work.’

Step Outside of Reality at the Vancouver Fringe
This year’s festival offers something for everyone.

Eight Great BC Books to Read This Summer
Support local by picking up one of these BC-published books from an indie bookstore.
Deep Dive
Get to the bottom of something big.
Yuriy’s Notebook
Yuriy Umansky was one of more than 200,000 Ukrainians who arrived in Canada under a special visa offering safe harbour until danger back home passed. But as Umansky wrote in The Tyee, "Safe in Canada, challenges lay ahead."
From the loneliness of renting in a quiet Surrey suburb, to struggling to find work despite years of professional experience in Crimea, to wondering whether a ceasefire will send you home after you've fallen in love with Canada — finding refuge can be a lifesaver, but that doesn’t make it comfortable, or permanent.
In this five-part series, Umansky shares notes on culture shock, the search for shelter and work and — in his final dispatch — whether he wants to stay in Canada at all.
This series is supported by funding from the Hummingbird Foundation.

Yuriy’s Notebook: Canada Through Fresh Eyes
Like thousands of Ukrainians since 2022, I tried a new life in BC. How’s that working out? First in a series.

Yuriy’s Notebook: Finding Work in Dark Alleys
I arrived from Ukraine proud of my skills. I had to add humility to my resume. Third in a series.

Yuriy’s Notebook: A Crazy Hunt for Housing
Ukrainians desperate to rent enter a shadow world of competition and deception. Fourth in a series.

Yuriy’s Notebook: Am I Free to Imagine My Future?
I took a break from Canada to test how strongly I felt its pull. Here’s what I’ve decided. Last in a series.
Editor's Pick
This story is making waves.

Alberta’s Perverse New Barriers to COVID Vaccines
The virus hits the old and poor hardest. The province is erecting hurdles to granting them protection.
Most Popular
BC Government Quietly Kills $20-Million School Affordability Fund
Look Out, Vancouver! I’m Dressing for Joy
The Untold Story of the RCMP’s Probe of Residential School Abuses
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.

A Second Life for Pacific-Clogging Plastics
Ocean Legacy recycles ‘ghost gear’ and other trash into deck chairs, picnic tables and more.

Science World Is Now One Big Climate Experiment. Have a Look
See how the Vancouver landmark is getting a dramatic retrofit to cut emissions. A Tyee short video.

A Brilliant Community Farm Rises from Brambles
Sechelt imports almost all its food. This Indigenous-led effort wants to show a better approach can take root.

Subscriptions to the Sea
How Skipper Otto and other community-supported fisheries are increasing transparency and providing quality seafood to members.
Editor's Pick
This story is making waves.

The Canadian Company Staffing ‘Alligator Alcatraz’
Carney’s government awarded GardaWorld millions in contracts and isn’t ruling out more.
Reported Elsewhere
Today's links curated for you.
Collapse of critical Atlantic current is no longer low-likelihood, study finds
(via the Guardian)
Public libraries aren’t just a place to borrow books — and BC’s are at a ‘breaking point’
(via Vancouver Sun)
MAGA puts Wikipedia in its crosshairs
(via Gizmodo)
All the art Trump wants banned
(via Daily Mail)
Lorde’s ‘Man of the Year’ and the permission to want
(via Xtra)
Two bodies were missed at BC death scene. Was treatment of coroners to blame?
(via Vancouver Sun)
My job as a parent is to make my kids’ lives a little harder
(via the Walrus)
Federal agents arrest firefighters working on Washington wildfire
(via Seattle Times)
The happiest place on Earth
(via Slate)
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.
To Be or NATO Be
(read related story)
“This is the first time I have to disagree with an article in The Tyee! We have not kept up with our defense spending over the last 25 years. If we cannot defend it we will lose it. China, Russia and now the U.S. would like to acquire our resources.
We have to be more selective in our spending to support the defense of our country and not just from without. There are new growing factions inside our borders that plan, in the future, to own this country. Our lives and culture, as we know them, would be lost as we will not be welcome to stay unless we join them. You need to get a wider perspective on this defence issue.”