Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

TransLink to expand Metro Vancouver bus service with newly approved investment plan

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 May, 2025 11:03 AM
  • TransLink to expand Metro Vancouver bus service with newly approved investment plan

Metro Vancouver's transportation authority says a plan is in place to fund the largest increase in bus service in the region since 2018, in addition to expansions and improvements approved last year.

A statement from TransLink says its board of directors and the Mayors' Council on Regional Transportation approved the plan on Wednesday.

It says the 2025 investment plan will see TransLink improve or add 40 new routes, including the creation of routes in eight areas that are currently without transit and enhancement of routes in six other under-served areas.

The statement says new routes will reach industrial areas including Campbell Heights in Surrey, Gloucester in Langley and Tilbury in Delta, and TransLink will provide "enhanced access" to Stanley Park in Vancouver, Terra Nova Park in Richmond and Golden Ears Provincial Park in Maple Ridge.

The transit authority says the plan will be funded through several measures, including a $20 increase in property taxes for median households next year and a fare increase of 14 cents for the average trip starting in July 2026.

The B.C. government is also making a one-time contribution of $312 million over three years, an investment announced earlier this month.

TransLink had been facing a deficit of more than $600 million annually, with Wednesday's statement saying the shortfall was caused primarily by declining fuel tax revenue, increasing costs, and the capping of fare increases under the rate of inflation between 2020 and 2024.

The newly approved plan will fully fund TransLink operations until the end of 2027 "and will cut the structural deficit by almost half thereafter," it says.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jonathan Hayward

MORE National ARTICLES

Quebec caps international students but is hazy on numbers

Quebec caps international students but is hazy on numbers
Quebec is taking steps to cut the number of international students in the province, but can't say by how many. The government will issue a maximum of around 124,000 acceptance certificates to foreign students this year, down from more than 156,000 last year. The measure targets private colleges that the government has said are using education as a business model to sell citizenship. 

Quebec caps international students but is hazy on numbers

Polls suggest a close race as federal election approaches

Polls suggest a close race as federal election approaches
Multiple polls now suggest the next federal election — which could begin in a matter of weeks — will be a tight race. At least one major pollster has the Liberals in the lead and ahead of the Conservatives for the first time in nearly four years.

Polls suggest a close race as federal election approaches

Canada, Germany working on diversifying trade in face of U.S. threats

Canada, Germany working on diversifying trade in face of U.S. threats
Canadian companies and diplomats are working with their European colleagues to find ways to diversify trade as the U.S. threatens to impose steep tariffs. Germany's Ambassador to Canada Tjorven Bellmann says European ambassadors in Ottawa have been in touch with corporations on both sides of the Atlantic to discuss how they can boost trade.

Canada, Germany working on diversifying trade in face of U.S. threats

Supreme Court of Canada moving away from social media platform X

Supreme Court of Canada moving away from social media platform X
The Supreme Court of Canada says it's moving away from the social media platform X. In an apparent farewell post to its more than 45,000 subscribers, the top court says it will focus its communication efforts on other platforms.

Supreme Court of Canada moving away from social media platform X

The Tories say Carney is being 'sneaky' about his assets. What do the rules say?

The Tories say Carney is being 'sneaky' about his assets. What do the rules say?
In a series of press conferences in recent weeks, the federal Conservatives have demanded that Liberal leadership candidate Mark Carney comply with the conflict of interest rules that apply to members of Parliament and cabinet ministers. Carney, who is neither an MP nor a member of cabinet, has said he will comply with the rules when they apply to him.

The Tories say Carney is being 'sneaky' about his assets. What do the rules say?

Liberals advance voting begins, Mark Carney still frontrunner

Liberals advance voting begins, Mark Carney still frontrunner
With the debates now done, Liberal party members can start casting advance ballots today to select their next leader a little under two weeks from now. They can cast their ranked ballot choices by mail or in some instances by phone, and each electoral district counts for 100 points in the race.

Liberals advance voting begins, Mark Carney still frontrunner