Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
National

Two B.C. schools make closure decision: ministry

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Jan, 2022 05:44 PM
  • Two B.C. schools make closure decision: ministry

VICTORIA - Two schools have stopped in-person classes in British Columbia, less than two days after most students returned to classrooms following an extended holiday break due to the surging COVID-19 Omicron variant.

The Education Ministry says schools in Hazelton and Surrey recently made the decision.

Ginger Fuller, secretary treasurer of the Coast Mountain School District, says officials will meet Wednesday to decide when to reopen Hazelton Secondary School to regular classes after it was closed because of a staff shortage, which was the result of "illness."

The ministry said the independent Bibleway Christian Academy in Surrey has also suspended in-person classes.

No one from the school was immediately available to comment.

Education Minister Jennifer Whiteside says local school administration officials, including principals, make decisions about closing in-person classes and moving to temporary online teaching.

MORE National ARTICLES

Toddler bitten by coyote in Stanley Park

Toddler bitten by coyote in Stanley Park
A two-year-old girl is recovering from bite wounds after she was attacked by a coyote while walking through Stanley Park, in Vancouver.

Toddler bitten by coyote in Stanley Park

Full steam ahead for expanded Richmond Hospital

Full steam ahead for expanded Richmond Hospital
The cost is approximately $860.8 million and will be shared by the provincial government through Vancouver Coastal Health and the Richmond Hospital Foundation.

Full steam ahead for expanded Richmond Hospital

Makeshift COVID hospital to close in Vancouver

Makeshift COVID hospital to close in Vancouver
The makeshift hospital at the Vancouver Convention Centre, which was repurposed with COVID-19 overflow beds, is being shut down without ever taking patients.

Makeshift COVID hospital to close in Vancouver

Burrard Skytrain station in Downtown Vancouver to remain closed for 2 years as of early 2022

Burrard Skytrain station in Downtown Vancouver to remain closed for 2 years as of early 2022
TransLink today announced that it will be proceeding with a major upgrade to Burrard SkyTrain Station beginning in early 2022. The project will take approximately two years to complete and will require the closure of the station to allow the work to be done safely and more efficiently than were it to remain partially open during construction.

Burrard Skytrain station in Downtown Vancouver to remain closed for 2 years as of early 2022

33 COVID19 cases for Tuesday

33 COVID19 cases for Tuesday
In addition, 80.2% (3,470,198) of all eligible adults in B.C. have received their first dose and 49.1% (2,125,179) have received their second dose.

33 COVID19 cases for Tuesday

Documents detail BoC's bond buying on federal debt

Documents detail BoC's bond buying on federal debt
The briefing note from late last year appears to gloss over the bond-buying program despite the extraordinary effect it was having on debt yields.

Documents detail BoC's bond buying on federal debt