Close X
Saturday, October 12, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Liquor Store Fundraiser Pumps $102,000 Into Wildfire Relief

The Canadian Press, 11 Sep, 2015 12:11 PM
    VANCOUVER — Customers and employees of B.C. liquor stores have raised $102,000 to support victims of this summer's wildfires in the province.
     
    The money will be donated to Red Cross relief efforts on behalf of those who lost their homes, businesses, livestock and other property when flames broke out near the communities of Rock Creek and Oliver.
     
    Thirty homes were destroyed and hundreds of southern B.C. residents were evacuated last month by the Rock Creek blaze, east of Osoyoos and the Testalinden fire, south of Oliver.
     
    The Red Cross says some of the money has paid for immediate necessities such as blankets, food and water.
     
    It will also support victim's longer-term needs, including the replacement of equipment and assistance with rent.
     
    The B.C. Wildfire Service says the Testalinden blaze covers 50 square kilometres and is 80 per cent contained, while the Rock Creek fire is fully contained but scorched 45-square kilometres before it was brought under control.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Alleged B.C. Terrorists Considered Changing Day Of Planned Attack

    Alleged B.C. Terrorists Considered Changing Day Of Planned Attack
    John Nuttall and Amanda Korody had spent months in the spring of 2013 talking through the details of their plot with an undercover RCMP officer who they believed was a sympathetic Arab businessmen.

    Alleged B.C. Terrorists Considered Changing Day Of Planned Attack

    NDP's Chicken Cracklings Raise Fowl Tone In B.C. Over Liberal Lobbyists

    NDP's Chicken Cracklings Raise Fowl Tone In B.C. Over Liberal Lobbyists
    Advanced Education Minister Andrew Wilkinson apologized for his fowl tone after he made chicken clucking noises during question period.

    NDP's Chicken Cracklings Raise Fowl Tone In B.C. Over Liberal Lobbyists

    Ontario's premier defends revised sex-ed curriculum amid criticism, protest

    Ontario's premier defends revised sex-ed curriculum amid criticism, protest
    TORONTO — Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne strongly defended the province's revised sex-education curriculum Tuesday as she faced Opposition criticism that was branded as "homophobic."

    Ontario's premier defends revised sex-ed curriculum amid criticism, protest

    Police say Ontario woman among victims in fatal Texas shooting involving soldier

    Police say Ontario woman among victims in fatal Texas shooting involving soldier
    KILLEEN, Texas — A Canadian woman was among three people killed in Texas by a soldier, who shot himself in what appears to have been a domestic dispute, police said Tuesday.

    Police say Ontario woman among victims in fatal Texas shooting involving soldier

    Mentally ill soldiers with Afghan-related experience more often declared unfit

    Mentally ill soldiers with Afghan-related experience more often declared unfit
    OTTAWA — New research by National Defence shows that soldiers with mental health conditions, especially those with Afghan war illnesses, are far more likely to be declared unfit for military service and almost 70 per cent of them can expect to be mustered out within 10 years of deployment.

    Mentally ill soldiers with Afghan-related experience more often declared unfit

    Four Mounties On Vancouver Island Face Assault Charges After 2 Investigations

    Four Mounties On Vancouver Island Face Assault Charges After 2 Investigations
    VICTORIA — Four Mounties on Vancouver Island face assault-related charges in connection with alleged jail-cell incidents at two RCMP detachments.

    Four Mounties On Vancouver Island Face Assault Charges After 2 Investigations