Poll

Dec

Young Voices Need Local Support

Demand for the Columbia Basin Environmental Education Network’s (CBEEN) Wild Voices for Kids program is growing and is looking for local support before this spring’s busy field trip season. Since CBEEN began offering the program in 2009, it has made it possible for over 40,000 students from across the Columbia Basin to receive...

Be Part of the Canadian Avalanche Centre’s Observer Network!

The Canadian Avalanche Centre (CAC) is releasing their new Observer Network today, which will allow backcountry users to submit and share observations from the field. The Observer Network is an upgrade to CAC Mobile, the CAC’s smartphone app. Through the Observer Network, photos and comments can be uploaded and shared with other backcountry users and […]

Selkirk College Launches New Employer Brand

Selkirk College has joined six other post-secondary schools across the province in an initiative that aims to recruit the best and brightest employees. The Regional Colleges of BC has launched a new website to let future employees know that if you’re interested in working in a rewarding career alongside great people in a...

Emergency crews respond to cylinder leak near Hume Hotel

Emergency crews rushed to the scene of a spill late Wednesday morning on Ward Street near the Hume Hotel’s Beer Mike’s Place Pub. The call came into Nelson Fire Department at 11:32 a.m. that an unknown substance was leaking in the alley behind the Hume Hotel.  All on duty members responded immediately with one engine […]

LETTER: Jimenez death in CBSA Vancouver - Oh Canada - a land of Prisons and pipelines

Dear editor, I am appalled by the jailing and the subsequent death in custody of CBSA in Vancouver, of Lucia Vega Jimenez - a 42 year old Mexican woman working to save money to care for her ailing mother. Days before Christmas, she was jailed for not having bus-fare and not having immigration papers!!  While alone in CBSA...

Flood of 1948 kick starts Columbia River Treaty

Since 2005, Eileen Delehanty Pearkes has researched and explored the natural and human history of the rivers of the upper Columbia River Basin.  She speaks frequently at conferences and symposia throughout the Basin on the history of the Columbia River Treaty and its effects on Basin residents.  She has recently completed a manuscript titled A […]

Cocaine nets Trail man criminal charges

A Trail man is facing possession for the purpose after trafficking charges after intelligence resources led police to arrest the man outside a local pub during the wee hours of Saturday morning. “On Feb. 1, at 12:49 a.m., members of the Trail Crime Reduction Unit arrested a 31-year-old male for Possession of Cocaine for the...

January — not much precipitation says Castlegar Weather Office

Skiers had to deal with spring conditions instead of the usual champagne powder the region is known for in January as a high-pressure system centered over the province resulted in the region receiving only 60 percent of normal month precipitation said Jesse Ellis of the Southeast Fire Center Weather office. “The weather pattern was dominated […]

The Duke of Edinburgh’s Award info-night on February 20, 2014

The Duke of Edinburgh’s Award encourages anyone between the ages 14 and 24 to participate in an international award. It gives you the opportunity to get more involved in your community, to make new friends, to get physically fit and to discover an activity that excites and inspires you as well as participate in an adventurous...

Orcas and dolphins stun Nanaimo ferry riders

Ferry riders in Nanaimo got an unexpected show yesterday when a pod of Bigg's killer whales (Orcas) cornered a pod of dolphins in Departure Bay.  The dolphins were Pacific white-sided dolphins and CTV News reported that the whales eventually killed and ate two of them.  Bigg's whales are a type of transient orca that feeds ...

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