Saturday, July 4, 2026
ADVT 
National

Low-grade tornado hit UBC, weather office confirms

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Nov, 2021 05:40 PM
  • Low-grade tornado hit UBC, weather office confirms

VANCOUVER - Environment Canada says a tornado with wind speeds up to 110 kilometres per hour passed over the University of British Columbia in Vancouver on Saturday.

The weather office confirmation comes after a survey of the damage, which found broken and uprooted trees, debris, downed power lines and a damaged vehicle.

An update posted Monday afternoon says the preliminary rating of EF0, which is the lowest on the Fujita tornado scale, could change if more information becomes available.

Environment Canada had previously reported a tornado over the Strait of Georgia just west of the Vancouver International Airport at about 5 p.m. on Nov. 6.

The weather office says the storm then swept over a section of the University of B.C. campus, where buses, pedestrians and cyclists were diverted from a main access road that was still being cleared of fallen trees and branches on Monday.

No one was hurt and the Environment Canada tornado watch was quickly lifted.

British Columbia has been hit by a series of unusual weather events, ranging from a heat dome in late June that created the hottest-ever temperatures recorded in Canada, to two so-called bomb cyclones that hammered the south coast last month.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Leaders ask voters to cast ballots on Sept. 20

Leaders ask voters to cast ballots on Sept. 20
Speaking in the border city of Windsor, Ont., Trudeau says the policy debates Canadians have had over the past five weeks will underpin the next government's agenda.

Leaders ask voters to cast ballots on Sept. 20

BC Hydro warns more outages possible this fall

BC Hydro warns more outages possible this fall
The latest report from the Crown utility says record-breaking heat between June and August in many parts of the province killed trees or weakened their root systems.    

BC Hydro warns more outages possible this fall

U.S. cruise bill would hurt B.C. economy: official

U.S. cruise bill would hurt B.C. economy: official
Under the proposed legislation, foreign cruise ships carrying more than 1,000 passengers can bypass Canadian ports if they wish. Ian Robertson, the CEO of the Greater Victoria Harbour Authority, said the bill would hurt Victoria and British Columbia's economy.

U.S. cruise bill would hurt B.C. economy: official

Party leaders' offices charge pennies for copies

Party leaders' offices charge pennies for copies
The office Trudeau runs as MP for Papineau in Montreal — not prime minister — submitted the charge on his office expenses in March. It submitted another eight-cent “copy charge” last September.

Party leaders' offices charge pennies for copies

B.C. reports 4 deaths, 706 new COVID-19 cases

B.C. reports 4 deaths, 706 new COVID-19 cases
About 30 per cent of active cases are located in the Fraser Health region, followed by nearly 26 per cent in Interior Health, 18 per cent in Vancouver Coastal Health, close to 15 per cent in the North and 11 per cent in Island Health. There are 23 active outbreaks in health-care settings, including three hospitals.

B.C. reports 4 deaths, 706 new COVID-19 cases

64 year old in custody after alleged shooting in Richmond

64 year old in custody after alleged shooting in Richmond
The suspect, a 64-year old man from Richmond, was located and arrested a short time later. Investigators are now looking for dash-cam video that may have recorded the suspect’s vehicle in various locations as the events transpired. 

64 year old in custody after alleged shooting in Richmond