A group of activists say they have no intention of ending their anti-logging blockades on Vancouver Island, despite a court injunction and opposition from the political leadership of the Pacheedaht First Nation.
A group of activists say they have no intention of ending their anti-logging blockades on Vancouver Island, despite a court injunction and opposition from the political leadership of the Pacheedaht First Nation.
The Canadian Alliance of Physiotherapy Regulators has cancelled all of its clinical exams scheduled for 2021. It’s the fourth time exams have been cancelled since March 2020, leaving new graduates in B.C. and across Canada unable to become fully registered physiotherapists.
The Alberta government is delaying plans to vaccinate workers at Cargill’s meatpacking plant in High River — a move doctors say is likely to erode the already shaky trust with a workforce devastated by the pandemic.
Alexa Forbes, 25, warns people to continue to follow public health advice after she got COVID-19 last month and delivered her son six weeks early. The illness is associated with a higher risk of preterm or stillbirth, experts say.
Warren Montgomery died Tuesday morning after contracting coronavirus variant.
An influential Canadian doctor and top adviser to the World Health Organization has come under fire for controversial comments downplaying the risk of airborne spread of the coronavirus and claiming N95 masks can cause “harms” — including acne.
Ontario hospitals are transferring an unprecedented number of patients within the province as the COVID-19 pandemic puts intense pressure on the health-care system.
The union that represents 15,000 Canadian marine workers is demanding the government come up with a plan to vaccinate seafarers after the most recent COVID-19 outbreak on the Atlantic Huron, a Canada Steamship Lines bulk carrier.
The Quebec Superior Court has struck down some sections of the province’s secularism law but also ruled that its most controversial provisions are constitutional. The government plans to appeal the decision, saying the exemption for anglophones will create a more divided province.
Prince George once bought ads on Vancouver’s SkyTrain promising affordable housing. Now it’s dealing with its own real estate bubble, and locals fear they will be priced out of the market.