Friday, July 3, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. to boost minimum wage to $16.75 an hour

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Apr, 2023 03:16 PM
  • B.C. to boost minimum wage to $16.75 an hour

VICTORIA - British Columbia's minimum wage will increase to $16.75 an hour, a boost that the government says fulfils a promise to tie the benchmark pay level to inflation.

The new minimum wage kicks in on June 1 and represents a 6.9 per cent increase from the current $15.65 an hour.

Labour Minister Harry Bains says the measure is a key step to preventing the province's lowest-paid workers from falling behind.

He says the same percentage increase will apply for residential caretakers, live-in home-support workers and camp leaders.

A ministry statement says the wage increase matches B.C.'s 2022 average inflation rate and will benefit about 150,000 workers, most of them food service staff, grocery store workers, retail workers and others who were essential workers during the pandemic.

The $1.10 increase is much greater than the 45-cent boost in 2022, which matched the previous year's 2.8 per cent inflation rate.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Officer struck in the face multiple times and spat on: New Westminster Police

Officer struck in the face multiple times and spat on: New Westminster Police
While the officer attempted to detain the driver, the driver resisted causing the two to fall into an embankment. As the officer took the driver into custody he was struck in the face multiple times and was spat on.    

Officer struck in the face multiple times and spat on: New Westminster Police

Gun reform not meant to target farmers: minister

Gun reform not meant to target farmers: minister
Marco Mendicino met with community leaders in Regina on Thursday at the annual conference of big-city mayors. He said it is important that the federal government develop gun policies that reflect the varying experiences of Canadians.

Gun reform not meant to target farmers: minister

Canada's Joly concerned by actions of Chinese jets

Canada's Joly concerned by actions of Chinese jets
Canada deployed a CP-140 Aurora maritime patrol aircraft from April 26 to May 26 to Japan, as part of Operation NEON, a multinational effort to support the implementation of UN Security Council sanctions on North Korea. 

Canada's Joly concerned by actions of Chinese jets

B.C.'s threshold based on police input: Bennett

B.C.'s threshold based on police input: Bennett
The threshold falls short of the 4.5 grams requested by the province and has been criticized as too low by some advocates who say entrenched drug users typically carry more.    

B.C.'s threshold based on police input: Bennett

Metro Vancouver home sales 'more typical': REBGV

Metro Vancouver home sales 'more typical': REBGV
A statement from the board reports 2,918 sales across Metro Vancouver in May, nearly 32 per cent below those recorded in May 2021 and 9.7 per cent below the number of residential properties that changed hands last month.

Metro Vancouver home sales 'more typical': REBGV

Lululemon starts fiscal year strongly

Lululemon starts fiscal year strongly
The Vancouver-based athletic clothing company, which reports in U.S. dollars, says it earned US$1.48 per diluted share in the first quarter, up from US$1.11 per share or US$145 million a year earlier.    

Lululemon starts fiscal year strongly