BC NEWS
Fatal Shooting in Burnaby’s Metrotown Leaves One Man Dead
Fatal Shooting in Burnaby’s Metrotown Leaves One Man Dead
The Integrated Homicide Investigation Team has been called to the scene of the incident.
Summary
- A shooting occurred in Burnaby’s Metrotown neighborhood on Wednesday evening.
- One man was pronounced dead at the scene.
- The Integrated Homicide Investigation Team (IHIT) is investigating the incident.
A shooting in Burnaby’s bustling Metrotown neighborhood on Wednesday evening has resulted in the death of one man. Emergency services responded to the scene shortly after the incident was reported, but the victim was pronounced dead upon arrival.
Authorities have confirmed that the Integrated Homicide Investigation Team (IHIT) is now leading the investigation. Details surrounding the circumstances of the shooting remain limited as officials work to gather evidence and witness statements.
The incident has raised concerns in the community, known for its high foot traffic and vibrant atmosphere. Local residents are urged to remain vigilant and report any suspicious activity to law enforcement.
As the investigation unfolds, police have not released any information regarding potential suspects or motives. Further updates are expected as IHIT continues its inquiry into this tragic event.
BC NEWS
Canada’s Strong Start at the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics
Six Medals Fuel Hopes for Team Canada
Early Medal Count
As of Thursday, February 12, 2026, Canada has 6 medals at the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics: 0 gold, 3 silver, 3 bronze.
Team Canada’s Podium Performances
Canada’s medal hunt is underway in Italy, with Team Canada sitting at six podium finishes as the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics roll into Feb. 12. The tally so far: 0 gold, 3 silver and 3 bronze, a solid early foundation as the calendar turns toward some of the Games’ biggest events still to come.
Silver Success Stories
Canada’s most recent rush of results has come in fast, technical events where margins are measured in hundredths — and where Canadian athletes have looked right at home. Snowboard cross star Eliot Grondin continued his run of Olympic consistency with a silver medal in the men’s event, adding another highlight to Canada’s early story.
In moguls, Canadian legend Mikaël Kingsbury delivered another big-moment performance, earning silver and keeping Canada firmly in the hunt for that first gold.
Canada’s lone team podium so far has come in short track, where the mixed relay squad captured silver, a sign that the sport’s next generation is ready for the Olympic stage.
Bronze Medal Achievements
The bronze medals have been just as meaningful, showing Canada’s range across the sport map. In figure skating, Piper Gilles and Paul Poirier climbed onto the podium with a bronze in ice dance, a result that energized the Canadian camp and added a marquee moment for a discipline Canadians watch closely every four years.
On the speed side, Valérie Maltais opened Canada’s medal account with a bronze in the women’s 3,000 metres, while freestyle skier Megan Oldham added another bronze with a strong showing in women’s freeski slopestyle.
Looking Ahead
With the Games running Feb. 6–22, Canada’s opportunity is far from finished.
BC NEWS
Tragedy in the Rockies: Suspect Identified in Devastating Tumbler Ridge Mass Shooting
Authorities identify Jesse Van Rootselaar as the suspect in the Tumbler Ridge shooting that left nine dead, marking one of Canada’s worst mass casualty events.

A Community Shattered
The remote mountain town of Tumbler Ridge, British Columbia, is grappling with an unimaginable tragedy after a mass shooting left nine people dead, including the suspect, in one of the deadliest acts of violence in Canadian history. Authorities have identified the suspect as Jesse Van Rootselaar, a local resident whose history of mental health struggles had previously brought her into contact with law enforcement. The scale of the carnage has stunned the nation and prompted an outpouring of grief from global leaders, including the British monarchy.
Timeline of the Violence
The violence began at a private residence in the small town of 2,400 people on Tuesday. Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) discovered two bodies at the home, later identified as the suspect’s mother and stepbrother. From there, the attack moved to Tumbler Ridge Secondary School, where the suspect opened fire while classes were in session. According to RCMP spokesperson Mr. McDonald, police arrived at the school while the shooter was still active. They eventually recovered a long gun and a modified handgun from the scene. The suspect died of a self-inflicted wound after killing six others at the educational facility.
While initial reports suggested upwards of 25 injuries, police clarified on Wednesday that while 25 people were assessed for injuries, the majority were physically unharmed. Two individuals remain in critical but stable condition after being airlifted to a regional hospital. The incident marks the second mass casualty event in British Columbia in the last year, though such shootings remain exceedingly rare in Canada compared to its southern neighbor.
The Suspect and Known Warning Signs
Investigation into Jesse Van Rootselaar revealed a history of mental health interventions. Mr. McDonald noted that Van Rootselaar, who was biologically male but began transitioning to female six years ago, had been the subject of several police visits. Authorities had last attended her home in the spring to address concerns regarding self-harm. “Police had attended that residence on a number of occasions over the last several years dealing with concerns of mental health,” McDonald said. He further confirmed that on at least one previous occasion, firearms had been seized from the residence, raising questions about how the weapons used in Tuesday’s attack were acquired.
While the motive remains unknown, the suspect’s identity and personal history are now at the center of a massive forensic investigation. Police have committed to identifying the suspect as female, honoring her transition, even as they sift through the wreckage of her final hours to understand what triggered the murder spree.
Voices from the Inside
Inside the school, terror reigned for more than two hours. Mr. Noronha, a shop teacher who moved to Tumbler Ridge from Brazil in 2022, described the frantic moments when he and 15 students barricaded themselves in an auto-mechanic bay. Using metal benches to block doors and keeping watch on a wall clock, the group waited in silence until police arrived to escort them to safety. “We were in the safest part of the school,” Noronha recalled, noting that the hunting culture of the town meant many residents were familiar with firearms, but never expected them to be used in such a manner against children.
A Nation in Mourning
Prime Minister Mark Carney delivered a somber address to Parliament on Wednesday, visibly moved as he spoke of the loss. “This morning, families in Tumbler Ridge woke to a different world,” Carney said, alternating between English and French. “Parents sent their children off to school on Tuesday, and some will never be able to hug their children again.” The Prime Minister suspended a planned diplomatic trip to the Munich Security Conference in Germany to remain in Canada during the crisis.
The tragedy also reached the highest levels of the Commonwealth. King Charles III and Queen Camilla issued a joint statement expressing their “deepest possible sympathy” for the families. Meanwhile, Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre echoed the national sentiment, stating that no parent should ever have to fear their child will not return from school. For the resilient residents of Tumbler Ridge—a town built on the grit of the coal mining industry and a budding outdoor tourism sector—the road to recovery will be long. The local school district has closed all facilities for the remainder of the week as trauma counselors begin the difficult work of supporting a community where, in the words of the Prime Minister, “few people are strangers.”
BC NEWS
The start of 2026 in BC Politics has been nothing but exciting.
B.C. Politics 2026: Four Forces Reshaping the Province’s Agenda
As British Columbia moves deeper into 2026, four storylines are converging into a single political reality: tighter finances, a volatile opposition in transition, rising public-safety anxiety, and a voter mood that looks increasingly unsettled. Each is powerful on its own. Together, they are setting the terms of debate in Victoria, across the Lower Mainland, and in communities where cost-of-living and public safety are top of mind.
Key Takeaways
- The Feb. 17 budget is shaping up as a test of restraint, with the government signalling cuts aimed at administrative costs.
- The B.C. Conservatives’ leadership race runs to May 30, with high fees that reward fundraising strength and organizational discipline.
- Extortion-related violence is driving calls for stronger enforcement and clearer results, particularly in the Lower Mainland.
- Polling shifts suggest a narrowing NDP lead and a “wrong track” sentiment that raises the stakes for every fiscal and safety decision.
The Deep Dive
The most immediate pressure point is the provincial budget, due Tuesday, Feb. 17. Premier David Eby has signalled the province will be reducing spending, emphasizing efforts to cut “administrative costs” and “bureaucracy” while trying to protect frontline services. Those framing matters, because it invites a political argument over definitions: what qualifies as back office, what counts as essential delivery, and where the line is drawn when ministries translate broad direction into specific reductions.
The fiscal context sharpens those questions. With deficit and debt projections looming over the government’s messaging, the budget is expected to become a referendum on priorities: health care capacity, housing delivery, public safety resources, and the administrative systems that keep them running. In a tight public mood, even modest trims can become symbolic flashpoints—especially if communities feel impacts before they see benefits.
B.C. Conservatives: A Leadership Race with High Stakes
At the same time, the B.C. Conservatives are in a leadership contest that could decide whether they convert recent momentum into a durable alternative government. The party has set May 30, 2026, as decision day, and the rules are designed to assess seriousness early. Candidates face a substantial fee spread across multiple deadlines, a structure that tends to narrow the field and reward campaigns that can build donor networks quickly.
That runway also creates opportunity. A leadership race isn’t just about choosing a leader—it’s a long audition in public, where contenders define the party’s tone, sharpen policy priorities, and prove whether they can manage pressure. For Conservatives, it’s a chance to look ready for government. For the governing party, it’s a reminder that scrutiny is rising on multiple fronts.
Public Safety: Extortion as a Political Flashpoint
Public safety is the third pillar shaping the agenda, with extortion-related violence—particularly in parts of the Lower Mainland—becoming a major flashpoint. Multi-agency enforcement has been emphasized, including coordinated investigation and public calls for reporting. Politically, the issue has become a demand for measurable outcomes: fewer incidents, more arrests, and a clear plan to protect businesses and residents who feel exposed.
Polling: A Narrowing Lead and a Restless Electorate
Layered over everything is public opinion. Recent polling suggests the NDP’s lead is narrowing, alongside a majority of respondents saying the province is on the “wrong track.” Housing affordability, health care access, and public safety concerns are prominent drivers of dissatisfaction—exactly the issues that become harder to address in an era of fiscal restraint.
Why It Matters
The next few weeks will assess whether Premier Eby can sell restraint as competent management rather than retreat. It will also test whether the B.C. Conservatives can use their leadership race to look government-ready—organized, disciplined, and focused on everyday issues rather than internal politics.
And if extortion is still in the headlines, it could become a defining ballot-box issue: one that reshapes how voters evaluate competence, urgency, and trust. In the current climate, budgets and policing aren’t separate debates. They are competing claims about what government is for, what it can deliver, and whether it is responding fast enough to what people feel in their daily lives.
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