Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Jul, 2024 04:14 PM
British Columbia's government has appointed two new Provincial Court judges to support consistent and timely access to justice.
Parveen Nijjar and Paul Pearson have both been appointed and are set to start on July 25th.
Nijjar has more than 15 years of experience in law and in 2018 became the director's counsel in the Legal Services Branch at the Ministry of the Attorney General.
Pearson has been a criminal lawyer for around 25 years and has been teaching criminal procedure and ethics at the University of Victoria for four years.
Several federal cabinet ministers say they are all ears to what disgruntled voters are saying in the aftermath of a Toronto byelection defeat in what was considered a safe Liberal riding. Although the ministers expressed openness to hearing out Canadians turned off by the Liberals and Justin Trudeau, none could say how their team plans to address those concerns.
Police in Vancouver have released video showing a man who is believed to have set fire to the front entrance of a synagogue last month in the hope that someone may recognize the suspect. The security video shows a man wearing a dark jacket, light ball cap and a medical face mask approaching the front steps of the Schara Tzedeck synagogue on Vancouver's Oak Street on May 30 with a time stamp of 9:41 p.m.
New statistics from the B-C Coroners Service say 101 people accidentally drowned in the province last year, many of them in the summer months. Acting chief coroner John McNamee says their report looked at a decade of drownings, and May through August were the most fatal months.
Mounties in Surrey say the search of a home in Maple Ridge turned up stolen merchandise with a total estimated value topping 43-thousand dollars. Police say they arrested a woman who was using Facebook Marketplace to advertise and sell the stolen goods, ranging from designer clothing and accessories to sportswear by popular brands.
One of the two Green Party members in British Columbia's Legislature has announced he will not seek re-election in this fall's provincial vote. Adam Olsen, who represents Saanich North and the Islands, says in a statement that he is stepping down because "it's the responsible and ethical thing" to do when he cannot "commit fully to the job for the next four years."
Calgary's weeks-long water crisis, which has prompted civic officials to ask residents to cut back on showers and other activities, may end a little sooner than expected. Underground repairs to a water main that broke June 5 are now complete, Mayor Jyoti Gondek said Tuesday, and service could be restored earlier than the July 5 target date if things go well over the coming days.