Wednesday, May 27, 2026
ADVT 
National

Record warmth in B.C. over weekend as high winds arrive along southern coast

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Apr, 2026 11:22 AM
  • Record warmth in B.C. over weekend as high winds arrive along southern coast

Spring weather in British Columbia brought record-high daily temperatures to several communities, while an arriving cold front is expected to bring strong winds to south western parts of the province. 

Environment Canada says four communities broke or matched their daily highs on Sunday for April 5, with the City of Trail reaching 23 degrees, breaking the old mark of 21.7 C set in 1966.

The temperature also reached a new high in Squamish at 24 degrees, while Bella Bella and Creston matched previous records at 15.9 degrees and 20 degrees respectively.

Environment Canada has also issued a special weather statement for Metro Vancouver, southeastern Vancouver Island from Greater Victoria to Nanaimo and the southern Gulf Islands, with strong winds starting Monday afternoon through to Tuesday morning. 

Winds are expected to gust up to 70 kilometres an hour, and the weather agency warns residents to be prepared for possible power outages and travel disruptions. 

Snowfall warnings have also been posted for the North and South Peace Regions, with 10 to 20 centimeters expected to fall Monday night into Tuesday morning. 

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. mulls plan to weaken DRIPA, in secret document shared with First Nations leaders

B.C. mulls plan to weaken DRIPA, in secret document shared with First Nations leaders
British Columbia Premier David Eby is considering amendments that would weaken the province's Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act, after two recent court decisions siding with First Nations under the law's current wording.

B.C. mulls plan to weaken DRIPA, in secret document shared with First Nations leaders

Canada is losing more air traffic controllers than it's hiring: aviation expert

Canada is losing more air traffic controllers than it's hiring: aviation expert
An aviation expert says Canada is losing more air traffic controllers to retirement than it is hiring, despite efforts to ramp up recruitment.

Canada is losing more air traffic controllers than it's hiring: aviation expert

Canada is not planning to reopen embassy in Syria

Canada is not planning to reopen embassy in Syria
The federal government says it has no plans to reopen its embassy in Syria.

Canada is not planning to reopen embassy in Syria

Global Affairs laying off its most skilled diplomats, union says

Global Affairs laying off its most skilled diplomats, union says
The union representing staff at Global Affairs Canada says the foreign service is laying off dozens of its most skilled diplomats, while asking other envoys moving across continents to wait months for their personal items.

Global Affairs laying off its most skilled diplomats, union says

Air Canada crash probe being done in 'full co-operation' with U.S.: Carney

Air Canada crash probe being done in 'full co-operation' with U.S.: Carney
Prime Minister Mark Carney says Ottawa is working in "full co-operation" with officials in the United States to probe the crash of an Air Canada jet at New York's LaGuardia Airport that killed two pilots Sunday night.

Air Canada crash probe being done in 'full co-operation' with U.S.: Carney

Carney says Air Canada CEO's English-only condolences lacked compassion

Carney says Air Canada CEO's English-only condolences lacked compassion
Prime Minister Mark Carney says the Air Canada CEO's English-only message of condolence after Sunday's deadly crash in New York lacked compassion.

Carney says Air Canada CEO's English-only condolences lacked compassion