‘This Is Not Over’: Mother of Jared Lowndes Vows to Keep Fighting
Prosecutors’ decision to not charge officers met with disbelief and disappointment.
How to Foster Local Food Businesses? Create a Stir
This Kamloops non-profit is feeding the dreams of local chefs passionate about community food systems.
What’s Next for the Historic Haida Agreement?
BC United and the Conservative party plan tough scrutiny in the legislature.
This Weekend, Celebrate Your Favourite Indie Bookshop
Love reading and shopping local? Join other readers and writers this Saturday in coming together for Canadian Independent Bookstore Day.
Alberta’s Secret Pandemic Study Is Led by COVID Restrictions’ Critic
Danielle Smith wanted a doctor with ‘a little bit of a contrarian perspective.’
How a Japanese Earthquake Shook BC’s Forest Future
And what needs to change to protect the environment and jobs.
A Pilgrimage to the Place We Lost Snowboard Pioneer Craig Kelly
An excerpt from ‘The Darkest White,’ about a legendary snowboarder and the avalanche that took him.
The Fight to Block a ‘Just Transition’ for Oil and Gas Workers
Fossil fuel companies are building on right-wing protests to stop change and cut salaries.
BC Pans New Federal Disability Benefit
The small amount and limited eligibility leave people in poverty, says minister.
Shared Medical Records Can Transform Care, But Big Barriers Remain
Despite billions in spending and years of work, systems are still fragmented.
The Haida Get Their Land Back
By affirming Indigenous land ownership, BC and the Haida Nation are signalling a new era for Indigenous relations.
Calgary Has Big Housing Plans. Residents Would Like a Word
When cities stifle citizen engagement, it’s not just bad for democracy. It can backfire.
Not Just Fat Jokes. Weight Stigma Is in Every Part of Life
And it needs to stop. We all have a role in changing our culture of fat shaming.
The Avalanche That Claimed a Snowboarding Legend
‘Darkest White’ author Eric Blehm on his ‘healing’ telling of the life and death of Craig Kelly. A Tyee Q&A.
Please Advise! Tim Hortons’ New Pizza. Toss It?
Why risk war with Italy? Did we learn nothing from McSpaghetti?
What My Dad Taught Me about Grief, Art and What Makes a Life
He died of an accidental drug overdose. It changed how I perceive the world.
Youth Are Calling for Free Public Transit Across BC
This Earth Day, Transit for Teens are pushing provincial leaders to extend the Get on Board program to age 18.
Can Highrises Be Neighbourly? It’s Complicated
As Vancouver changes, so do the ways people can choose, or reject, community.
A Heady Glimpse into the Soul of BC
Why The Tyee’s new book, ‘Points of Interest,’ is an ideal travel companion this season. A Q&A with the editors.
How the BC Conservatives Fell. And Are Rising Again
A look at their policies ahead of this year’s provincial election shows history repeating itself.
Editor's Pick
This story is making waves.
Danielle Smith’s Big Pierre Poilievre Problem
A Conservative federal government would create political headaches for the UCP.
Tyee Insider
What we're up to. How to be involved.
Thank You for 20 years!
That’s right, The Tyee turned 20 years old in 2023. That’s two decades of showing up every weekday with fresh, original journalism that you won’t read anywhere else.
From a very small crew of two people, our non-profit news organization has grown to a staff of 24 people. And along the way, our journalism has won plenty of awards, sparked international movements and changed laws.
We only exist and continue to grow because we have the support of Tyee Builders who chip in to our editorial budget. If you value independent journalism and want to help us grow, join us.
Become a Tyee Builder today.
And check this out...
Follow Indigenous Tattoo Artists in Accessing Ancestral Knowledge Through Design
At the Museum of Vancouver, ‘True Tribal’ explores the visual language of mark making from around the world.
Reclaiming Wet’suwet’en Storytelling in ‘Yintah’
At this year’s DOXA, catch a new wave of Indigenous-led docs. A Q&A with Freda Huson and director-journalist Michael Toledano.
Watch This Play about How a Fox Helped a Family Grieve
In ‘This Is How We Got Here,’ a mystical creature leads a family struck by trauma to again interact with humour and love.
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.
Would You Choose Wood Tiles over Ceramic Ones? This Startup Bets Yes
Timber Tiles on Vancouver Island offers a climate-friendly alternative to an ancient craft that today relies on fossil fuels.
Vancouver Island Made a Big Change in How It Defines Tourism Success
For social enterprise 4VI, it’s about visitors and their dollars leaving the place in better shape than they found it.
How a BC Biologist Is Changing the Craft Beer Scene
Ji Yang is working to create a climate-resilient beer brewed with locally grown hops.
Crab Shells Have a Wonder Ingredient. So This Company Got Cracking
From husks that would go to waste, Tidal Vision extracts a polymer with many green uses.
Editor's Pick
This story is making waves.
The Worst Windstorm in BC Hydro’s History
An excerpt from The Tyee’s new book full of BC stories, ‘Points of Interest.’
Most Popular
What’s Next for the Historic Haida Agreement?
Alberta’s Secret Pandemic Study Is Led by COVID Restrictions’ Critic
How a Japanese Earthquake Shook BC’s Forest Future
Editor's Pick
This story is making waves.
The Earthquake Shaking BC Politics
The surging BC Conservatives could doom BC United and raise challenges for the NDP.
Reported Elsewhere
Today's links curated for you.
Cost of developing new drugs may be far lower than industry claims, trial reveals
(via the Guardian)
McKinsey reportedly under US criminal investigation over opioid industry work
(via the Guardian)
Wildfire prompts ‘tactical evacuation’ southwest of Chetwynd, BC
(via Global News)
Federal Green Party deputy leader gets jail time for Fairy Creek protests
(via CBC)
Poilievre visits convoy camp, claims Trudeau is lying about ‘everything’
(via CBC)
Two men swapped at birth — one Indigenous, one white — finally get apology
(via the Guardian)
Montreal police pursue criminal charges against journalist for covering Gaza protest
(via Ricochet)
As youth arrests triple in Saanich, support for resuming controversial police liaison program grows
(via the Globe and Mail)
Man acquitted in Tina Fontaine murder found dead, says her aunt
(via Global News)
BCU Leader Kevin Falcon talks purpose, persona and his politics-free oasis
(via Northern Beat)
Culture
A Pilgrimage to the Place We Lost Snowboard Pioneer Craig Kelly
An excerpt from ‘The Darkest White,’ about a legendary snowboarder and the avalanche that took him.
The Avalanche That Claimed a Snowboarding Legend
‘Darkest White’ author Eric Blehm on his ‘healing’ telling of the life and death of Craig Kelly. A Tyee Q&A.
What My Dad Taught Me about Grief, Art and What Makes a Life
He died of an accidental drug overdose. It changed how I perceive the world.
A Heady Glimpse into the Soul of BC
Why The Tyee’s new book, ‘Points of Interest,’ is an ideal travel companion this season. A Q&A with the editors.
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.
Shifting Profit Away from Pollution
(read the related story)
Why enable a traditional economics which commodifies people, labour, money, land, housing, food and health care?
As we pollute our way to profit, driven by an economics which makes pollution the "only affordable option," we surely discover, if we pay attention, that an economics that makes pollution profitable is an economics we cannot afford to continue.