Camille Bains
Reporter with The Canadian Press
About Camille Bains
Clean bill of health from Japanese nuclear disaster on west coast of North America: B.C. oceanographer
Radioactive contamination from a nuclear power-plant disaster in Japan never reached unsafe levels in the north Pacific Ocean for either marine life or human health, scientist says.
PM says no to decriminalizing drugs while B.C. addictions minister open to idea
Trudeau said decriminalization is not the approach Canada will take to deal with deadly overdoses often involving the opioid fentanyl.
Drug users say methadone formula switch contributed to B.C.'s opioid crisis
Drug users trying to quit heroin are gathered for a meeting in Vancouver with one mission in mind: to support each other through the struggles of a reformulated treatment drug.
Ex neo-Nazi has message for parents
Ex neo-Nazi urges parents to talk to kids about their take on Charlottesville
8,450 square kilometres burned as B.C. nears worst wildfire season
British Columbia is poised to face its worst wildfire season as flames scorch thousands of hectares of land and costs rise to deal with the devastation.
Small businesses affected by B.C. wildfires get emergency grants
Small businesses affected by devastating wildfires in British Columbia will be getting emergency grants from the provincial government as dry weather extends the fire risk.
No B.C. charges in Mount Polley dam collapse as federal investigations continue
There will be no provincial charges for a tailings dam collapse in B.C. but the province’s new environment minister says a mining company may still be held responsible through federal laws.
Indigenous advocate wants Trudeau to write Rolling Stone to express 'regret'
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he "regrets" comments he made about Sen. Patrick Brazeau in a recent interview with Rolling Stone magazine.
'I am done with public life' says former B.C. premier Christy Clark
"I’m not planning on going back, that’s for sure. Politics isn’t a happy job. It’s not a fun job. It’s a fulfilling job," said former B.C. premier Christy Clark on Monday.
'Welcome home,' B.C. mayor says to thousands of returning wildfire evacuees
Thousands of people who rushed out of their homes as a wildfire neared Williams Lake are being allowed to return to the Interior B.C. city, but with a warning that they could be forced to leave again