Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadian Pacific Rail Begins Bulldozing Gardens In Dispute With Vancouver Over Land Purchase

The Canadian Press , 14 Aug, 2014 03:28 PM
    VANCOUVER - A bulldozer is mowing down mature trees and tearing up gardens along a stretch of abandoned Canadian Pacific Rail (TSX:CP) line that runs through the middle of Vancouver.
     
    The once-abandoned 11-kilometre-long Arbutus Corridor has been used for many years by local residents as a greenway, where vegetables and flowers are abundant.
     
    The bulldozer and accompanying dump truck is the culmination of a growing dispute between the rail company and the City of Vancouver over the value of the land.
     
    CP warned residents back in May that it would been taking over the land and assessing the current track condition for the possibility of running trains again.
     
    Sarah Myambo has been gardening on the land for 25 years and watched as the heavy equipment rolled into the area.
     
    She says she only expected this type of thing to happen in Third-World countries.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Christian Paradis says Canada bears no blame in mass jailbreak from Haitian prison

    Christian Paradis says Canada bears no blame in mass jailbreak from Haitian prison
    MONTREAL - International Development Minister Christian Paradis is rejecting any finger-pointing at Ottawa over a mass breakout at a Haitian maximum-security prison that was built by Canada.

    Christian Paradis says Canada bears no blame in mass jailbreak from Haitian prison

    B.C.: Leaders of polygamous sect charged five years after failed prosecutions

    B.C.: Leaders of polygamous sect charged five years after failed prosecutions
    CRANBROOK, B.C. - Two leaders of an isolated religious commune in British Columbia have been charged for the second time with practising polygamy, more than two decades after allegations of multiple marriage, sexual abuse and cross-border child trafficking first attracted the attention of the outside world.

    B.C.: Leaders of polygamous sect charged five years after failed prosecutions

    Experts, not politicians, to decide who gets donated Ebola vaccine: Canada

    Experts, not politicians, to decide who gets donated Ebola vaccine: Canada
    TORONTO - Canadian Heritage Minister Shelly Glover says politics has no place in the decisions on how best to use the 800 to 1,000 doses Canada has promised to donate.

    Experts, not politicians, to decide who gets donated Ebola vaccine: Canada

    Tekmira in talks about using experimental Ebola drug in infected patients

    Tekmira in talks about using experimental Ebola drug in infected patients
    VANCOUVER - Tekmira Pharmaceuticals Corp. (TSX:TKM) is in discussions about making its experimental Ebola drug available to infected patients, but says there is no guarantee the treatment can be used to help quell the outbreak in West Africa.

    Tekmira in talks about using experimental Ebola drug in infected patients

    Vancouver police officer used too much force during traffic stop: watchdog

    Vancouver police officer used too much force during traffic stop: watchdog
    A Vancouver police officer used excessive and unnecessary force when he punched a driver three times during a traffic stop in 2012, said a ruling by B.C.'s police watchdog.

    Vancouver police officer used too much force during traffic stop: watchdog

    Fleet of six new Bitcoin ATMs arrive in shopping centres across Toronto

    Fleet of six new Bitcoin ATMs arrive in shopping centres across Toronto
    A Calgary company is looking to boost the profile of the world's newest, and most controversial, currency with the launch of six more teller machines in Toronto that deal in the virtual currency Bitcoin.

    Fleet of six new Bitcoin ATMs arrive in shopping centres across Toronto