AlbertaSep 15, 2025
Alberta adds citizenship status to ID cards to streamline service, protect elections
Alberta Premier Danielle Smith says her government is adding proof of citizenship markers to driver's licences and other forms of identification to streamline services and prevent election fraud.
She says this will make it easier for students and the disabled to get funding given they have to prove their citizenship to do so.
She says the goal is also to protect democracy to make sure that only citizens vote.
Smith says non-citizens like permanent residents who can get a driver's licences will not have any notation on their IDs.
Alberta Health Care numbers will also be added to
BCSep 15, 2025
Vancouver Police investigates fatal collision
Vancouver Police are investigating a single-vehicle collision that resulted in the death of a 58-year-old driver.
VPD officers responded at 10:50 p.m. on Sunday, after a blue 2020 Kia Rio collided with a concrete barrier at the south end of Main Street, near East Kent Avenue. The lone occupant suffered grave injuries and later died.
The cause of the collision is under investigation. Witnesses, or anyone with dash-cam video from the area around the time of the collision, are asked to contact the VPD Collision Investigation Unit at 604-717-3012.
BCSep 15, 2025
Loss of carbon tax boosts B.C. deficit as economic growth set to slide
British Columbia's forecasted deficit has hit a record high of almost $11.6 billion for the first quarter of the 2025-2026 fiscal year, largely due to the elimination of the carbon tax and amid ``global trade uncertainty.''
Finance Minister Brenda Bailey is also projecting higher deficits than she previously forecasted through to 2028 as growth slides, while the province's debt is predicted to spike by almost $60 billion over the next two fiscal years.
Bailey's fiscal update revises gross domestic product growth down to 1.5 per cent from 1.8 per cent in 2025, and to 1.3 per cent fro
BCSep 15, 2025
Surrey, B.C., issues extortion rewards, citing dozens of threats
The City of Surrey is providing its police service with what it says is one of the largest rewards in Canadian policing history in response to dozens of extortion attempts in the community.
It says the $250,000 fund comes as the Surrey Police Service actively investigates 44 extortion cases, including 27 that involved shootings.
Mayor Brenda Locke says at a briefing that the extortions are a threat to the city's way of life and many people are living in fear.
She says the extortionists are ``thugs and criminals'' who ``do not belong'' in Surrey. Chief Const. Norm Lipinski says a
AlbertaSep 15, 2025
Jason Kenney warns of ‘deeply divisive’ impact of a sovereignty referendum in Alberta
Former Alberta premier Jason Kenney is painting a bleak picture of what will happen if Albertans are forced to vote on a referendum on separation, calling it a deeply divisive, non-violent version of a civil war.
Kenney, Alberta's premier from 2019 to 2022, says a small minority of angry people should not be able to push a separatist agenda that impacts everyone in the province.
He says it's deeply divisive and would divide families, friends and communities if it goes forward.
Premier Danielle Smith's United Conservative government is officially lowering the required threshold for