Tuesday, December 30, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. working to ensure transit safety: premier

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Apr, 2023 12:17 PM
  • B.C. working to ensure transit safety: premier

VANCOUVER - British Columbia's premier says Mounties and Metro Vancouver Transit Police have increased their presence and stepped up patrols on bus and train lines so passengers can feel safe when travelling.

David Eby says the stabbing death of a 17-year-old male on a Surrey bus on Tuesday is every parent's nightmare.

The premier says Public Safety Minister Mike Farnworth is reaching out to transit authorities and police to see if more resources are needed to ensure transit safety.

The teen’s death is among a series of attacks on commuters across Canada that includes a shooting on a Calgary bus on Wednesday and numerous violent incidents on transit in Edmonton and Toronto.

It is the second serious stabbing in two weeks aboard a transit bus in Surrey, although the first victim, whose throat was slashed on April 1, is now recovering at home.

The suspect in the attack on the teenager has not yet been arrested and Eby is encouraging anyone with information or dashcam footage to come forward.

"This is a profoundly concerning incident," he said.

"It is absolutely vital that people be able to get to work, school and to do fun things around the community on transit and not have concerns about their safety when doing so. That's a goal that we have and that's something that all British Columbians deserve."

Eby made the remarks at a Vancouver elementary school during a separate announcement that 60 schools in the province will be seismically upgraded.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. bird flu outbreak 'concerning,' minister says

B.C. bird flu outbreak 'concerning,' minister says
Lana Popham says normally avian flu aligns with bird migration seasons, but the latest infections in farms of the H5N1 virus have been consistent all year. She says the situation isn't as bad as it was in 2004, when 17 million farm birds were destroyed.

B.C. bird flu outbreak 'concerning,' minister says

Vancouver Police seize guns, machetes from a 17 year old male

Vancouver Police seize guns, machetes from a 17 year old male
The teen was immediately arrested by Vancouver Police, who discovered five additional guns, including a loaded 357 Magnum and two loaded revolvers. Officers also seized body armour, machetes, ammunition, fake guns, and a variety of controlled drugs.  

Vancouver Police seize guns, machetes from a 17 year old male

Tourism spending may recover sooner than expected

Tourism spending may recover sooner than expected
The government organization says that Canada's domestic travel market spending is recovering at an even faster pace and is expected to reach 92 per cent of 2019 levels in 2022 and fully recover in 2023.

Tourism spending may recover sooner than expected

Late night shooting in Burnaby lands man in hospital

Late night shooting in Burnaby lands man in hospital
RCMP is still investigating the circumstances, however there are early indications the shooting was targeted and may have involved several suspects who fled the area. Investigators are still gathering details from witnesses who were at the home at the time of the shooting.

Late night shooting in Burnaby lands man in hospital

Pilot project signals progress in Nexus impasse

Pilot project signals progress in Nexus impasse
The Canada Border Services Agency says the two countries are exploring "shorter-term measures" to shrink a backlog of applications. At the Thousand Islands crossing between Ontario and New York, in-person Nexus interviews are being conducted separately by U.S. and Canadian agents on opposite sides of the border.

Pilot project signals progress in Nexus impasse

Vancouver council votes on promised police, nurses

Vancouver council votes on promised police, nurses
The idea, which is expected to cost a total of $20 million a year, has already received significant criticism from more than two dozen people speaking against the motion at an earlier meeting.

Vancouver council votes on promised police, nurses