Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

COVID-19 Will Not Be How The Cookie Crumbles For B.C.'s Girl Guides

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Mar, 2020 07:40 PM

    VANCOUVER - The motto of Canada's Girl Guides is "Be Prepared," so it's understandable that they aren't letting COVID-19 derail their annual springtime cookie sale.

     

    British Columbia council provincial commissioner Diamond Isinger says 800,000 boxes of Girl Guide cookies arrived at the B.C. branch at almost the same time as schools shut down and social distancing was imposed.

     

    Isinger posted an online plea for help on Sunday and says the response since then has been "phenomenal."

     

    She says franchise operators with Canadian Tire are selling cookies in their stores and London Drugs will do the same.

     

    Isinger says the public has also enthusiastically adopted the idea of donating boxes to front-line health care workers, supporting the council's delivery of "a lot of cookies" to the Provincial Health Services Authority.

     

    Proceeds from the cookie sales support 18,000 Sparks, Brownies, Guides and Rangers in B.C. and Isinger says the council relies on those funds to "be present in the lives of girls."

     

    "It's not feasible right now for girls to be going door to door," she said in a telephone interview, adding the council has halted all face-to-face sales in order to keep members and the community safe.

     

    That's why it's vital to work with supportive organizations to sell large volumes of cookies and the council is trying to figure out how to work safely with retail partners, Isinger said.

     

    "We are hoping in the coming weeks and months we can sell all our inventory as safely as possible so we can keep doing all the amazing things we do."

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Financial Assistance Available For Victims Of B.C. Flooding

    Financial Assistance Available For Victims Of B.C. Flooding
    Disaster Financial Assistance (DFA) is now available for eligible British Columbians who may have been affected by overland flooding from heavy rains that began on Jan. 31, 2020, in the following regions:

    Financial Assistance Available For Victims Of B.C. Flooding

    New Online Application For Property Tax Deferment Will Save Time

    New Online Application For Property Tax Deferment Will Save Time
    The online application process is designed to lead to quicker application reviews and, for the first time, allow for automatic renewals.

    New Online Application For Property Tax Deferment Will Save Time

    Second Person Who Tested Positive For Coronavirus In BC Is Woman In Her 50s From Vancouver Coastal Health Region

    Adrian Dix, Minister of Health, and Dr. Bonnie Henry, B.C.’s provincial health officer, have issued the following joint statement regarding updates on the novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) in British Columbia:  

    Second Person Who Tested Positive For Coronavirus In BC Is Woman In Her 50s From Vancouver Coastal Health Region

    Do You Know This Fraud Couple? Abbotsford Police Say They Are Wanted For Store Fraud

    On January 25, 2020 at 9:37 pm, the two pictured suspects entered the Superstore located at 2855 Gladwin Road.    

    Do You Know This Fraud Couple? Abbotsford Police Say They Are Wanted For Store Fraud

    Taxi Companies Ask B.C. Court To Stay Ride-Hailing Approval Pending Judicial Review

    VANCOUVER - A lawyer for the Vancouver Taxi Association says an uneven playing field was used by an independent board in British Columbia to allow the operation of ride-hailing companies.    

    Taxi Companies Ask B.C. Court To Stay Ride-Hailing Approval Pending Judicial Review

    Advocate Wants More Oversight Of Publicly Funded Long-term Care Homes In B.C.

    Advocate Wants More Oversight Of Publicly Funded Long-term Care Homes In B.C.
    VICTORIA - The first provincial review of British Columbia's publicly funded long-term care sector shows for-profit operators made 12 times more money than their not-for-profit counterparts but paid their employees much lower wages.    

    Advocate Wants More Oversight Of Publicly Funded Long-term Care Homes In B.C.