Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
National

Help for farmers being announced after B.C. floods

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Feb, 2022 10:59 AM
  • Help for farmers being announced after B.C. floods

VANCOUVER - A recovery package is expected to be announced today for British Columbia's agriculture industry after devastating floods last November.

The B.C. and federal agriculture ministers were scheduled to make an announcement, billing it as the largest recovery program for the sector in the province's history.

Record rains combined with overflowing rivers in mid-November swamped farmland in several areas of southern B.C. and Vancouver Island.

In the Sumas Prairie, a prime agricultural area in Abbotsford, water flooded barns, fields and homes.

Thousands of animals were killed, most of them chickens and hogs, whose owners couldn't rescue them before the water moved in.

The Insurance Bureau of Canada has said the storms were the most costly severe weather event in B.C.'s history with an insured value loss of about $450 million, although that doesn't factor in the damage to several highways and other infrastructure, or the cost to those who were uninsured.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Delta moves goalposts on COVID-19 herd immunity

Delta moves goalposts on COVID-19 herd immunity
Tam has previously said she would like to see all age groups at least 80 per cent fully vaccinated as soon as possible to fight the surge in COVID-19 cases.

Delta moves goalposts on COVID-19 herd immunity

Users 'misinformed' about green choices: BC Hydro

Users 'misinformed' about green choices: BC Hydro
The BC Hydro report says 40 per cent of those who responded to a survey said they would cut carbon dioxide or other emissions by installing solar panels rather than buying an electric vehicle or a heat pump for their home.    

Users 'misinformed' about green choices: BC Hydro

Mask mandate announced for all B.C. students

Mask mandate announced for all B.C. students
School districts in Vancouver, Surrey and Burnaby had already announced that a provincial mask mandate for students in Grade 4 and up would be extended to younger kids, leaving 57 other school districts to either introduce policies independently or wait for Henry to impose a provincewide measure.

Mask mandate announced for all B.C. students

B.C. subsidizes drilling on caribou habitat: study

B.C. subsidizes drilling on caribou habitat: study
The team then used government and industry data to determine which of those wells had benefited from a government subsidy. Those subsidies include programs such as the Deep Well Royalty Program, which covers part of the drilling and completion costs for these wells up to $2.8 million per well and can be used to reduce royalties by half.

B.C. subsidizes drilling on caribou habitat: study

Economy shrank 0.1 per cent in July

Economy shrank 0.1 per cent in July
The July figure was better than the agency's initial estimate of a contraction of 0.4 per cent, as warmer weather, easing of public health restrictions and lower COVID-19 case counts packed patios and saw Canadians travelling.

Economy shrank 0.1 per cent in July

B.C. to boost health and safety plan for schools

B.C. to boost health and safety plan for schools
B.C. currently requires masks for students in Grades 4 to 12 and Henry has resisted calls from parents and teachers to make face coverings mandatory in kindergarten to Grade 3.

B.C. to boost health and safety plan for schools