Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

Former Canadian Press bureau chief dies at 66

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Jun, 2021 03:43 PM
  • Former Canadian Press bureau chief dies at 66

Jill St. Louis, a former Vancouver bureau chief at The Canadian Press who thrived in a fast-breaking news environment and was a friend to anything with four legs, has died after a battle with metastatic lung cancer. She was 66.

St. Louis spent most of her career at The Canadian Press in Vancouver. She was first hired in 1975 as an editorial assistant and worked her way up to bureau chief before she retired in 2009. 

She covered and managed some of the most complex news stories in B.C., including the rise and falls of former premiers Bill Bennett, Bill Vander Zalm, Mike Harcourt, Glen Clark and Gordon Campbell.

Wendy Cox, the Globe and Mail's B.C. bureau chief who worked with St. Louis as news editor, said she has strong memories of St. Louis's skills handling news copy and sense of where stories needed to go, but it was her big heart that came first.

"When I think of my time working with Jill, the first thing that comes to mind should be her quiet competence with an edit; her low-key ability to point out something that didn't make sense; her dry sense of humour, usually on pop-culture things that made zero sense to me; her ease with her colleagues and with the editors of member papers all over the province," said Cox.

"But that's not what I remember first," she said, recalling the day a horse saddle arrived in the newsroom from Italy.

"So when this thing came out of the box, it took my breath away," she said. "It was the creamiest of caramel leather, hand-stitched, and smooth, a thing of beauty. It also was a level of luxury Jill never appeared to be interested in."

The saddle wasn't for St. Louis, it was for her daughter Teresa, said Cox.

"I learned a lot from her journalistically," she said. "I learned a lot from her, though, about family devotion." 

St. Louis, who was born in Vancouver, had known difficult times.

Her husband of almost 40 years, Richard West, died in May.

In January 2006, her 18-year-old daughter, Lisa West, died in a car accident in Richmond, B.C., that also killed two other teens. The accident occurred the night before her daughter was to leave to compete in equestrian competitions in the United States.

Horses, equestrian competitions and anything to do with animals were passions St. Louis held deeply. The family home in Richmond and in recent years in Langley in the Fraser Valley were glorified stables, say friends.

Her obituary published this week in Vancouver newspapers mentions her predeceased family members and survivors, including two grandchildren, but it also names several animals, including horses Eddy and Doc; dogs Ollie, Fanny and Charlie; cats Thunder and Lightning; and donkey Ron.

Donations in St. Louis's memory can be made to the B.C. SPCA or Pacific Riding for Developing Abilities.

Co-workers and colleagues described St. Louis as a fast, calm and thorough news editor who kept copy flowing on pressure-filled deadlines, but also enjoyed cracking jokes and knew the latest comings and goings of the professional wrestling world.

"She was dedicated, hard working and she had a kind, big heart and a wicked sense of humour," said retired Canadian Press photographer Charles (Chuck) Stoody, who worked with St. Louis for more than two decades.

"She loved the news," he said. "She loved the desk and working the desk and the bureau."

Vancouver Sun columnist Daphne Bramham said she recalled St. Louis as unflappable in all situations, including bizarre newsroom incidents that involved strange dogs bounding into the office from the street.

"I also loved the laconic sound of her voice," she said. "She never seemed to be stressed, although heaven had reason to be."

Susan Duncan, a former editor at the Kamloops Daily News, said St. Louis cultivated relationships with newsroom managers throughout the province.

"Whether she was talking to the editor of a large daily or a small city newspaper, Jill was inclusive, fun and respectful," said Duncan. "Regardless of size, all news outlets were important clients to Jill and all the reporters were valuable."

She said their client meetings often went beyond news talk as St. Louis was fascinated with hearing about the many dramas occurring in small-town B.C.

"Some people stay in your heart years after you have lost track of them," Duncan said. "Jill was one of those people."

MORE National ARTICLES

317 COVID cases for Friday

317 COVID cases for Friday
3,106,269 doses of Pfizer-BioNTech, Moderna and AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccines have been administered in B.C., 160,885 of which are second doses.

317 COVID cases for Friday

Canada's First Program in Sikh Studies

Canada's First Program in Sikh Studies
With over 700,000 Sikhs in the country, it is no surprise that the time has come to reflect and represent Sikhism in the education system. Hoping to accomplish just this, the University of Calgary is soon slated to launch the nation’s first-of-its-kind Sikh Studies program, spearheaded by a dynamic duo. 

Canada's First Program in Sikh Studies

DARPAN 10 with Mr Manish: Consul General of India in Vancouver

DARPAN 10 with Mr Manish: Consul General of India in Vancouver
I was very excited at the thought of bringing my contribution to further our relationship between India and the five important provinces in Western Canada, namely British Columbia, Saskatchewan, Alberta, Yukon and Northwest Territories.

DARPAN 10 with Mr Manish: Consul General of India in Vancouver

Canada says U.S. 'unwilling' for new lumber deal

Canada says U.S. 'unwilling' for new lumber deal
Natural Resources Minister Seamus O'Regan says Canada is trying to reach a new deal with the United States over softwood lumber, but it's the Americans who are "not willing to reach an agreement."

Canada says U.S. 'unwilling' for new lumber deal

MPs speed up bill on truth-and-reconciliation day

MPs speed up bill on truth-and-reconciliation day
In a Liberal motion, MPs moved unanimously to wrap debate on Bill C-5 and deem it passed by day's end, sending it to the Senate. The legislation would establish a new statutory holiday to commemorate the victims and survivors of Indigenous residential schools.

MPs speed up bill on truth-and-reconciliation day

Remains show violence of colonialism: B.C. premier

Remains show violence of colonialism: B.C. premier
The National Truth and Reconciliation Commission has records of at least 51 children dying at the school between 1914 and 1963. The commission noted in its 2015 report that officials in 1918 believed children at the school were not being adequately fed, leading to malnutrition.

Remains show violence of colonialism: B.C. premier