Saturday, January 17, 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

Jobless data shows strong B.C. economy: NDP

Jobless data shows strong B.C. economy: NDP
A statement from the Jobs, Economic Recovery and Innovation Ministry says employment has been created in B.C. in each of the last 10 months and the province has one of the strongest economies in Canada.

Jobless data shows strong B.C. economy: NDP

No known link for AstraZeneca vaccine and clots

No known link for AstraZeneca vaccine and clots
Dr. Supriya Sharma says Health Canada has a "really low threshold" for adverse events that could trigger a pause on the use of a vaccine and wouldn't hesitate to do so if something warranted it.

No known link for AstraZeneca vaccine and clots

Trudeau warns vaccine passport use could be unfair

Trudeau warns vaccine passport use could be unfair
"These are things that we have to take into account so that yes, we're looking to try and encourage everyone to get vaccinated as quickly as possible, but we're not discriminating and bringing in unfairness in the process at the same time," Trudeau said Friday at a press conference alongside health officials.

Trudeau warns vaccine passport use could be unfair

Economy surges in February, adds 259K jobs

Economy surges in February, adds 259K jobs
One year into the pandemic, Canada's job market is 599,100 jobs short of where it was in February of last year, or 3.1 per cent below pre-pandemic levels.

Economy surges in February, adds 259K jobs

Canada applies to be negligible risk for BSE

Canada applies to be negligible risk for BSE
Canada has been a controlled-risk country for bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or BSE, since 2007. One of the criteria for the change is for Canada to show that infected domestic animals were born more than 11 years prior.

Canada applies to be negligible risk for BSE

'Trust has been broken,' says defence minister

'Trust has been broken,' says defence minister

OTTAWA - Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan says that "trust has been broken" in the Canadian military f...

'Trust has been broken,' says defence minister