Monday, June 8, 2026
ADVT 
National

Students in Tumbler Ridge, B.C., begin returning to class following mass shooting

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Feb, 2026 11:54 AM
  • Students in Tumbler Ridge, B.C., begin returning to class following mass shooting

Some students are heading back to classes in Tumbler Ridge, B.C., just over two weeks after an 18-year-old shooter killed eight people, including six at the local secondary school, before turning the gun on herself.

A message to parents posted on the Peace River South school district website says elementary students are returning to classes with shortened days today and tomorrow, with their regular schedules set to resume on Monday.

The district says portables set up on the elementary school grounds will open for secondary students and their families to visit today, and those students may attend class for one course on Friday. 

It says the "tentative plan" for next week will be for secondary students to go to school from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., but "this may change based on needs."

The district says a security company has been contracted to maintain a perimeter around the Tumbler Ridge Elementary campus, while RCMP have conducted a security review of the area and a camera system is to be installed.

The message says the two doors on each portable will be locked at all times and the elementary school doors will also be locked throughout the day.

Two "safer school liaison" staff will be at the site until the spring break, along with a district counselling team, says the message posted online on Wednesday.

Jesse Van Rootselaar shot and killed her mother and half-brother at their home in Tumbler Ridge on Feb. 10, before going to the secondary school and killing five students and an educational assistant, then taking her own life.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Christinne Muschi

MORE National ARTICLES

Miller named new culture minister as Carney fills gaps left by Guilbeault

Miller named new culture minister as Carney fills gaps left by Guilbeault
Prime Minister Mark Carney named Montreal MP Marc Miller as the new minister of Canadian identity and culture on Monday in a small cabinet shuffle to fill holes created when Steven Guilbeault resigned from cabinet last week.

Miller named new culture minister as Carney fills gaps left by Guilbeault

Liberal minister backs Bloc call to eliminate religious exemption for hate speech

Liberal minister backs Bloc call to eliminate religious exemption for hate speech
Culture Minister Marc Miller is expressing support for the removal of a religious exemption for hate speech in the Criminal Code.

Liberal minister backs Bloc call to eliminate religious exemption for hate speech

Carney to address Assembly of First Nations

Carney to address Assembly of First Nations
Prime Minister Mark Carney will address hundreds of First Nations chiefs gathered in Ottawa today for the December meeting of the Assembly of First Nations.

Carney to address Assembly of First Nations

Kane Carter guilty of murdering gangster and bystander in Vancouver shooting

Kane Carter guilty of murdering gangster and bystander in Vancouver shooting
The man accused of killing an innocent teenager and a gang member in a 2018 shootout on a busy Vancouver road has been convicted of two counts of second-degree murder.

Kane Carter guilty of murdering gangster and bystander in Vancouver shooting

Budget office sees modest boost in housing supply from Build Canada Homes

Budget office sees modest boost in housing supply from Build Canada Homes
The parliamentary budget office projects in a new analysis that Ottawa's new housing agency will fill only a small gap in the housing market.

Budget office sees modest boost in housing supply from Build Canada Homes

Chiefs vote to reject changes to B.C. coastal oil tanker ban

Chiefs vote to reject changes to B.C. coastal oil tanker ban
First Nations chiefs voted unanimously today to press the government to uphold the oil tanker ban off the northern British Columbia coast.

Chiefs vote to reject changes to B.C. coastal oil tanker ban