Tuesday, February 10, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. giving $4.5 million to upgrade children's hospice facility

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Jun, 2023 03:11 PM
  • B.C. giving $4.5 million to upgrade children's hospice facility

VANCOUVER — The British Columbia government has announced $4.5 million in new funding for Canuck Place to renovate and upgrade the Vancouver children's hospice.

Health Minister Adrian Dix says the funding will go toward structural repairs, enhancing patient care rooms, improving ventilation and making it more accessible.

It will also fund the construction of a new administrative building.

Canuck Place was the first children's hospice in North America, and Dix says the changes will make a "real and tangible difference" for children, families and health workers.

The minister says construction is expected to be complete by 2025.

Denise Praill, CEO of Canuck Place, says the funding will allow for "much needed" repairs to the facility, which hasn't been upgraded since it first opened in 1995.

"This investment will improve quality, safety and efficiency in care for over 870 children with life-threatening illnesses and their families from across B.C. and the Yukon," she said Friday.

MORE National ARTICLES

Woman dead after being swept by Okanagan Lake

Woman dead after being swept by Okanagan Lake
Police say the 68-year-old was taking photos on a rock in Glen Canyon Regional Park when she slipped and fell into a creek. A friend who was with her called police.

Woman dead after being swept by Okanagan Lake

NDP leaves spring sitting at legislature facing turmoil in public housing management

NDP leaves spring sitting at legislature facing turmoil in public housing management
Housing Minister Ravi Kahlon says the government will continue to provide housing to people who need it most, but for now has halted new funding to Atira and will launch another audit.

NDP leaves spring sitting at legislature facing turmoil in public housing management

Housing in Abbotsford for women fleeing domestic violence

Housing in Abbotsford for women fleeing domestic violence
The head of a local non-profit organization that helps women and kids in the city says this will make a small dent as more than 180 women were on the wait-list for safe homes at the end of 2022. Michelle Puffer, with SARA for women, says this means that 12 women and their children will find a safe haven and can begin working on a new future.

Housing in Abbotsford for women fleeing domestic violence

B.C. sets record, delivers 350,000 surgeries last fiscal year, health minister says

B.C. sets record, delivers 350,000 surgeries last fiscal year, health minister says
The ministry says 99.9 per cent of the nearly 15,000 patients whose scheduled surgeries were postponed in the first wave of the pandemic in 2020 have had procedures if they still wanted them.

B.C. sets record, delivers 350,000 surgeries last fiscal year, health minister says

Coyote killed after attack on two-year-old child in Port Coquitlam, B.C., park

Coyote killed after attack on two-year-old child in Port Coquitlam, B.C., park
 The B.C. Conservation Officer Service says on Twitter that the attack happened Wednesday after 8 p.m. at Lions Park near the town centre. The service says the public should not feed dangerous wildlife under any circumstances, and violators will incur "enforcement action as warranted." 

Coyote killed after attack on two-year-old child in Port Coquitlam, B.C., park

Former NDP minister joins BC United

Former NDP minister joins BC United
Harry Lali, who was a transportation and highways minister in the late 1990s for the New Democrats, says the N-D-P is now an urban interest party with little focus on issues and challenges facing rural communities.

Former NDP minister joins BC United