Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Adds Funds To School Expansion In Surrey, Moving Students Out Of Portables

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Apr, 2019 08:55 PM

    SURREY, B.C. — The provincial government has announced $9.6 million in additional funding for the long-awaited expansion of a Surrey elementary school.


    Premier John Horgan and Education Minister Rob Fleming made the announcement Thursday at Sullivan Heights Elementary in southeastern Surrey.


    The funds are in addition to a $1.5-million contribution from the Surrey School District and $3.9 million that was pledged by the previous Liberal government in 2016 but not spent because construction did not begin.


    Horgan says work on the entire $15-million addition is now underway and is expected to be completed by September 2020.


    The expansion will include a larger gym and library, as well as eight more classrooms to replace existing portables.


    Horgan says his government has committed $1 billion to education since being sworn in and has made education a cornerstone.


    "Right here in Surrey $220 million has already been invested in schools," he told an audience of educators, parents and students, adding the government's plan is to spend $2.7 billion on education infrastructure.


    The funds are for seismic upgrades, the purchase of land for more schools and additions such as the one at Sullivan Heights, he says.


    "This 200-seat addition will move kids out of portables and into classrooms and provide a better environment to give them the learning opportunities they need to succeed."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ontario Police Bust International Drug Ring, Seize 55 Kilos Of Cocaine

    Police in Ontario say they've busted an international cocaine smuggling operation with links to Mexico and the United States after a large drug seizure at the border.

    Ontario Police Bust International Drug Ring, Seize 55 Kilos Of Cocaine

    One Year Later: Survivors In Broncos Crash Continue To Heal From Injuries

    The 13 players who survived the Humboldt Broncos bus crash one year ago are dealing with injuries ranging from paralysis and back pain to brain damage and mental-health issues

    One Year Later: Survivors In Broncos Crash Continue To Heal From Injuries

    Two Dead After Overnight Calgary Shooting Police Say Was Not Random

    Two Dead After Overnight Calgary Shooting Police Say Was Not Random
    Police say one man died at the scene and the second person died in hospital.

    Two Dead After Overnight Calgary Shooting Police Say Was Not Random

    'We Are Hockey' Unveiled At Sikh Heritage Museum In Abbotsford

    This exhibit offers visitors a chance to see the pioneers of minorities in hockey as they follow the timeline to the present day where players of Punjabi descent and other minorities are starting to break through into the professional leagues. 

    'We Are Hockey' Unveiled At Sikh Heritage Museum In Abbotsford

    EDC Investigating Claim It Backed SNC-Lavalin On Corrupt Angola Dam Contract

    EDC Investigating Claim It Backed SNC-Lavalin On Corrupt Angola Dam Contract
    Export Development Canada says it's reviewing support it gave to SNC-Lavalin after learning of an allegation the agency backed the company on a dam project in Angola that it won corruptly.  

    EDC Investigating Claim It Backed SNC-Lavalin On Corrupt Angola Dam Contract

    Freeland Say Lifting U.S. Tariffs Is Part Of Ratification Of The New NAFTA

    OTTAWA — Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland is linking the lifting of "absurd" U.S. tariffs on Canadian and Mexican steel to the ratification of the new North American free-trade deal.

    Freeland Say Lifting U.S. Tariffs Is Part Of Ratification Of The New NAFTA