Sunday, January 18, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. Supreme Court expands to Port Coquitlam

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Apr, 2021 06:54 PM
  • B.C. Supreme Court expands to Port Coquitlam

Some services of the B.C. Supreme Court will be offered in the Port Coquitlam area as the Ministry of Attorney General recognizes the rapid growth of the Lower Mainland's Tri-Cities area.

A statement from the ministry says the B.C. Supreme Court will begin sitting for civil and family matters in the Port Coquitlam courthouse starting Monday.

Three courtrooms not being used by the provincial court will be assigned to hear higher court cases involving divorce, disputes over $35,000 or other civil disputes.

Criminal jury trials will continue to be held at the New Westminster Law Courts and the Supreme Court registry will also stay in New Westminster.

The ministry says before the expansion, Tri-Cities residents had to travel to New Westminster, Abbotsford or Vancouver for Supreme Court services, making access to justice difficult, and the COVID-19 pandemic added to the strain.

The Tri-Cities is formed by the cities of Coquitlam, Port Coquitlam and Port Moody.

MORE National ARTICLES

10 COVID19 deaths for Thursday

10 COVID19 deaths for Thursday
Dr. Bonnie Henry says she understands the desire from B.C. residents to see restrictions lifted, such as the limit on social gatherings, but it can't happen yet.

10 COVID19 deaths for Thursday

Businessman dinged for illegal campaign donation

Businessman dinged for illegal campaign donation
Elections commissioner Yves Côté says Robert Gibbs, co-owner of Romar Communications, provided free website development services to Julian's campaign.

Businessman dinged for illegal campaign donation

Appeal Court gives reasons in Surrey Six ruling

Appeal Court gives reasons in Surrey Six ruling
The ruling last month quashed the convictions of Cody Haevischer and Matthew Johnston in the so-called "Surrey Six" case but stopped short of ordering a new trial.

Appeal Court gives reasons in Surrey Six ruling

Highlights of the auditor general's 2021 reports

Highlights of the auditor general's 2021 reports
The $24-billion in child-benefit payments sent out by the federal government in 2019-2020 overall went to the right people and in the right amounts, an audit found.

Highlights of the auditor general's 2021 reports

Loblaw ready to help COVID-19 vaccine rollout

Loblaw ready to help COVID-19 vaccine rollout
Loblaw president Sarah Davis says the grocery and pharmacy retailer's supply chain is able to deliver vaccines and begin administering the shots the day it receives them.

Loblaw ready to help COVID-19 vaccine rollout

COVID cases tripled among health-care workers

COVID cases tripled among health-care workers
Data shows 44,078 COVID cases reported among Canada's health-care workers from July 23, 2020 to Jan. 15, 2021, bringing the total number to 65,920 since the pandemic began.

COVID cases tripled among health-care workers