Monday, January 26, 2026
ADVT 
National

Four British Columbia communities get 26 new addiction treatment beds

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Jan, 2025 05:25 PM
  • Four British Columbia communities get 26 new addiction treatment beds

British Columbia's minister of health says the province has opened 26 new treatment beds for people with addictions in four communities over the last several months.

Minister Josie Osborne says the beds in Nanaimo, Kelowna, Prince Rupert and Vancouver's Downtown Eastside are part of 248 treatment beds that are being funded through the Canadian Mental Health Association.

The ministry says the 26 new spots, which are available at no cost to patients, will help up to 250 people, and more beds will be open by spring.

The latest additions include six beds at the Karis Support Society in Kelowna that opened for pregnant women and women with children, and another six spots at Island Crisis Care in Nanaimo for women who have completed treatment to get longer-term support.

A dozen beds have opened at the Harbour Light Centre in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside, which the government says are for women, including transgender and two-spirited people, and two more beds for Prince Rupert's 333 Recovery Program, which offers Indigenous men culturally focused programs.

Osborne says the expansion is aimed at breaking down barriers in rural communities and for underserved groups, so that no one is left behind. 

"When someone reaches out for help with their substance use, they should receive compassionate and effective care," Osborne says in a news release. "We are expanding services across B.C. so more people have the supports they need to stabilize their lives and begin their healing journey."

MORE National ARTICLES

Sea sponges' sneeze like people

Sea sponges' sneeze like people
Researchers have discovered sea sponges' ability to sneeze like people after a study off the B-C coast. University of Alberta professor Sally Leys says a study into the behaviour of a sea sponge nicknamed Belinda over four years found the animal doing slow-motion sneeze-like contractions lasting about a day.

Sea sponges' sneeze like people

Thousands at Fort McMurray picket lines

Thousands at Fort McMurray picket lines
The Canadian Union of Public Employees says the main sticking point is wages and that its members haven't seen a pay increase in well over a decade. School support workers encompass staffers from custodians and administration workers to tradespeople and education assistants.

Thousands at Fort McMurray picket lines

Health officials report a death in a Winnipeg hospital emergency department

Health officials report a death in a Winnipeg hospital emergency department
Health officials are investigating a death at a Winnipeg hospital. Officials at the Health Sciences Centre say a middle-aged man arrived shortly after midnight Tuesday morning at the hospital's emergency department, was triaged as a lower-acuity case and directed to the waiting room.

Health officials report a death in a Winnipeg hospital emergency department

Passenger of semi-truck taken to hospital after crash involving train near Edmonton

Passenger of semi-truck taken to hospital after crash involving train near Edmonton
Alberta RCMP say one person has been airlifted to hospital after a collision involving a CN train and a semi-truck north of Edmonton. Mounties say officers were called to the scene between Highway 44 and Township Road 570 when the train slammed into the side of the truck.

Passenger of semi-truck taken to hospital after crash involving train near Edmonton

Special prosecutor appointed in case involving relative of B.C. provincial judge

Special prosecutor appointed in case involving relative of B.C. provincial judge
The BC Prosecution Service says it has appointed a special prosecutor in a case involving a person related to a provincial court judge. It says senior lawyer Chris Johnson was chosen in order to "avoid any potential for real or perceived improper influence in the administration of justice."

Special prosecutor appointed in case involving relative of B.C. provincial judge

Police incident ends in New Westminster after court and college evacuated

Police incident ends in New Westminster after court and college evacuated
Police say an incident that triggered the evacuation of the court complex at New Westminster, B.C., and the nearby campus of Douglas College has ended. New Westminster Police say the courthouse and surrounding area have been cleared and are open again to the public, around three hours after the evacuation was announced on Tuesday. 

Police incident ends in New Westminster after court and college evacuated