Wednesday, January 14, 2026
ADVT 
National

Carney meets with Coastal First Nations today to talk major projects, oceans

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Jan, 2026 10:11 AM
  • Carney meets with Coastal First Nations today to talk major projects, oceans

Prime Minister Mark Carney will meet today with Coastal First Nations in Prince Rupert, B.C., to discuss his government's major projects agenda and marine conservation.

He'll be joined by a handful of ministers, including Natural Resources Minister Tim Hodgson and Housing and Infrastructure Minister Gregor Robertson.

Coastal First Nations, which represents nine First Nations, works to protect the B.C. coastline and the Great Bear Rainforest, and to ensure First Nations have a say in how resources and waters are managed.

Tensions between the federal government and Coastal First Nations heated up in 2025 when federal officials failed to meet with the group before signing an agreement with Alberta opening the door to a pipeline to B.C.'s coast.

Hodgson was forced to apologize after quipping in a television interview that he could have met with alliance members through Zoom.

Coastal First Nations president Marilyn Slett has said there is no support among the group's members for a pipeline or the suspension of the oil tanker moratorium.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld

MORE National ARTICLES

Three UBC neuroscience experts among Order of Canada appointees

Three UBC neuroscience experts among Order of Canada appointees
Three neurological scientists and researchers, all at the University of British Columbia, are among the appointees to the Order of Canada announced on Wednesday.

Three UBC neuroscience experts among Order of Canada appointees

Wrong patient sent to Surrey, B.C., home after hospital discharge

Wrong patient sent to Surrey, B.C., home after hospital discharge
A resident of Surrey, B.C., who was shocked when a hospital transfer service delivered a confused stranger to his home, instead of his father, says he doesn't want other seniors to experience the same trauma. 

Wrong patient sent to Surrey, B.C., home after hospital discharge

'Canada is not for sale' hat makers want to share domestic manufacturing tips

'Canada is not for sale' hat makers want to share domestic manufacturing tips
The people behind the viral "Canada is not for sale" hat say they want to share their lessons on making and selling products at home to other companies who want to get on board the made-in-Canada train.

'Canada is not for sale' hat makers want to share domestic manufacturing tips

Charges laid after SUV crashes hotel lobby, hits 4 people, pins 6 more in elevator

Charges laid after SUV crashes hotel lobby, hits 4 people, pins 6 more in elevator
A woman is facing impaired driving charges after a Christmas Eve crash in Yellowknife that saw an SUV smash though a hotel lobby and into an elevator.

Charges laid after SUV crashes hotel lobby, hits 4 people, pins 6 more in elevator

Torrential rain shuts and washes out highways in B.C.'s north coast

Torrential rain shuts and washes out highways in B.C.'s north coast
Torrential rain of more than 200 millimetres in places along British Columbia's north coast has shuttered highways and cut off the main road access to Prince Rupert.

Torrential rain shuts and washes out highways in B.C.'s north coast

B.C. wildfire season scorched more than 8,800 square kilometres

B.C. wildfire season scorched more than 8,800 square kilometres
British Columbia's 2025 wildfire season was about a third as destructive as the record-setting season two years earlier.

B.C. wildfire season scorched more than 8,800 square kilometres