Monday, December 29, 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

Indigenous tourism faces tough pandemic recovery

Indigenous tourism faces tough pandemic recovery
A report from the association and the Conference Board of Canada shows modest recovery over the last year, but it still projects an overall 54 per cent decline since the pandemic hit last March.

Indigenous tourism faces tough pandemic recovery

VPD searches for witness to frightening Yaletown collision

VPD searches for witness to frightening Yaletown collision
Investigators believe the collision was caused by an impaired driver who went the wrong way down Richards Street, before striking a tree and crashing through a construction fence near Richards and Pacific around 11 a.m.

VPD searches for witness to frightening Yaletown collision

Killed a family: Mass murderer seeking parole

Killed a family: Mass murderer seeking parole
David Shearing, who now goes by the name David Ennis, shot and killed George and Edith Bentley; their daughter, Jackie; and her husband, Bob Johnson, while the family was on a camping trip in the Clearwater Valley near Wells Gray Provincial Park, about 120 kilometres north of Kamloops, B.C., in 1982.    

Killed a family: Mass murderer seeking parole

Leaders talk affordability in push for votes

Leaders talk affordability in push for votes
The country's headline inflation figure registered an annual increase of 4.1 per cent in August, fuelled by rising demand as more parts of the economy reopened amid supply-chain constraints for many goods.

Leaders talk affordability in push for votes

Providence's mRNA vaccine to be made in Winnipeg

Providence's mRNA vaccine to be made in Winnipeg
The company says it has signed a $90-million, five-year contract with Emergent Biosolutions to make part of the drug substance, and also to fill and finish the vaccine, at its Winnipeg manufacturing plant.

Providence's mRNA vaccine to be made in Winnipeg

More research needed on long COVID symptoms

More research needed on long COVID symptoms
The Ontario COVID-19 Science Advisory Table, a group that provides guidance to the province on the pandemic, said the post-COVID-19 symptoms affect about 10 per cent of those infected and can last from weeks to months.

More research needed on long COVID symptoms