Friday, April 3, 2026
ADVT 
National

Record cold temperatures reported across several B.C. communities

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 Mar, 2026 09:02 AM
  • Record cold temperatures reported across several B.C. communities

The recent stretch of sunny and clear weather in British Columbia has also brought unseasonably cold temperatures to several communities, breaking several records.

Environment Canada says eight B.C. communities stretching from Vancouver Island to the south coast and the Interior broke or matched their daily low temperature marks on Monday.

The lowest was in the northeastern municipality of Chetwynd, which reached just short of -20 C, shattering the old mark of -15.4 C set in 2020.

Burns Lake in the northwest Interior reached -19.5 C, breaking a record set in 2008.

Along the south coast, Squamish reported -3.4 C, surpassing a record of -2.8 C set in 1968, while Sechelt dipped to -2.2 C to set a new local mark for March 30.

Records also fell on Vancouver Island, where Tofino's -3.2 C broke a 1905 record by one full degree, while Port Hardy reported -3.1 C, surpassing the old mark of -2.8 set in 1954.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck

MORE National ARTICLES

Eby calls reported meeting between Alberta separatists and U.S. officials 'treason'

Eby calls reported meeting between Alberta separatists and U.S. officials 'treason'
A reported meeting between individuals in the Alberta separatist movement and White House officials amounts to "treason," British Columbia Premier David Eby said Thursday in Ottawa.

Eby calls reported meeting between Alberta separatists and U.S. officials 'treason'

Carney, premiers say they're 'united' ahead of upcoming CUSMA review

Carney, premiers say they're 'united' ahead of upcoming CUSMA review
Prime Minister Mark Carney and the premiers said Thursday they're maintaining a united front under the long shadow of the upcoming negotiations for the review of North America's key free trade agreement.

Carney, premiers say they're 'united' ahead of upcoming CUSMA review

B.C.-based Pattison says it did not know warehouse was to become ICE facility

B.C.-based Pattison says it did not know warehouse was to become ICE facility
A gigantic warehouse across the street from an outdoor equipment store has become a flashpoint in Virginia as the U.S. grapples with the Trump administration's immigration crackdown — and a British Columbia company has been pulled into the fray.

B.C.-based Pattison says it did not know warehouse was to become ICE facility

Canadian companies criticized over ties to U.S. immigration enforcement

Canadian companies criticized over ties to U.S. immigration enforcement
Canadian companies are coming under fire over their ties to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement as U.S. President Donald Trump pursues a mass deportation campaign to expel vast numbers of immigrants.

Canadian companies criticized over ties to U.S. immigration enforcement

Feds select former B.C. chief electoral officer to oversee foreign influence registry

Feds select former B.C. chief electoral officer to oversee foreign influence registry
The Liberal government has chosen Anton Boegman, a former chief electoral officer of British Columbia, to administer the planned federal foreign influence transparency registry.

Feds select former B.C. chief electoral officer to oversee foreign influence registry

Inuit call for a larger role in Canada's Arctic defence surge

Inuit call for a larger role in Canada's Arctic defence surge
The leader of the national organization representing Inuit says the federal government must bring them to the table when it makes its plans for defence spending in the Arctic.

Inuit call for a larger role in Canada's Arctic defence surge