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Hope at the End of a Hard Year
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This year, I am giving my grandchildren an IOU.


I owe them days at the playground, days at the water park, days sitting on a bench and eating ice cream, days at the bookshops and toy shops, and at the library.


Days when they can hang around here and make cookies and lemonade, and veg out on the bed in the spare room.


Days when we will set up the blow up pool in the backyard and mum and dad will come over for dinner and we will all have a good time.


This is a time for reflection. Here is to hoping things will get better next year.

nancyjt, in response to The Tyee article “Tyee Writers on Their Best Presents Ever”

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Congratulations, Andrew Nikiforuk!

The Tyee’s resident pandemic expert, Andrew Nikiforuk, took home Commentator of the Year at this year’s Websters, B.C.’s top journalism awards.

Author of two books about pandemics, Nikiforuk is well situated to analyze the COVID-19 crisis. Since the pandemic began, he’s been rolling out hit after hit after hit. He also won an award for Science, Technology and Environment journalism for a co-written piece in Hakai magazine.

Read more about these awards and the other Tyee work that received nominations at this year’s Websters.


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Deep Dive

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Harm Reduction Through Overdose Prevention

B.C.'s overdose crisis is taking many more lives than the COVID-19 pandemic.

Three years after the provincial NDP government created a ministry to focus on mental health and addictions, we probed how it was working.

In recent years, The Tyee has covered solutions, including prescription street drugs and opioid-assisted treatment. And we’ve said how Vancouver’s mayor could help end the opioid crisis.

In September, Dr. Bonnie Henry issued a public health order for nurses to prescribe controlled substances. Last month Vancouver city council approved the first permanent OPS outside the Downtown Eastside,

and now is moving to decriminalize drugs in the city.

Much more can be done. Dive deep to understand how.