BC NEWS

Conservatives narrow the leadership field to nine — and the real contest is about discipline

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Opinion Newsroom Chad Dashly

VANCOUVER — The Conservative Party of B.C.’s Leadership Election Organizing Committee (LEOC) has closed its application window and approved nine contestants to move to the next phase of the leadership race: Bruce Banman, Harman Bhangu, Iain Black, Caroline Elliott, Kerry-Lynne Findlay, Yuri Fulmer, Warren Hamm, Darrell Jones, and Peter Milobar.

On paper, it’s just a list. In practice, it’s a stress test for a party that grew quickly, became the Official Opposition, then watched its leader resign after internal turmoil — and now has to prove it can behave like a government-in-waiting, not a protest movement with a bigger microphone.

A nine-person field usually signals energy. Here, it also signals a problem to solve.

Leadership races are supposed to be about ideas and direction. This one is also about whether the B.C. Conservatives can enforce basic internal standards without triggering another civil war.

The application requirements reported publicly — including a $5,000 entry fee and at least 250 member signatures from across the province — were designed to separate serious contenders from momentary internet fame. That’s not glamorous. It is, however, what grown-up parties do when they’ve learned that “anyone can run” eventually turns into “everyone can embarrass us.”

Two previously declared MLA candidates — Sheldon Clare and Steve Kooner — withdrew in the days leading up to the LEOC announcement, underscoring how much procedural gatekeeping and campaign organization now matter in a party that is trying to professionalize at speed.

Three lanes are emerging — and each comes with a risk

The approved slate naturally breaks into three broad lanes.

  • The caucus lane: Banman, Bhangu, and Milobar bring elected credibility and day-to-day experience as the Official Opposition. The upside is obvious: they can plausibly argue they know what it takes to hold government to account and present as a premier-in-waiting. The downside is equally obvious: caucus politics can look like inside baseball to members who joined because they wanted something that didn’t feel like Victoria-as-usual.
  • The established political lane: Iain Black and Kerry-Lynne Findlay bring recognizable résumés from past political eras. That can reassure donors and institutional conservatives who want competence over chaos. But it also invites the party’s internal critique that it could become “a rebrand” of an older coalition — the very charge some activists have levelled at conservative projects in B.C. for decades.
  • The outsider lane: Elliott, Fulmer, Hamm, and Jones (from the public descriptions available so far) will likely frame themselves as builders, not lifers — and as the antidote to a political class that many voters distrust. Outsiders can win leadership races. They can also struggle to pivot from slogans to systems when they inherit a caucus, a budget, and a news cycle that punishes improvisation.

None of these lanes is “wrong.” The larger question is whether the party’s membership wants movement energy or governing readiness — and whether it can find a leader who credibly offers both.

The John Rustad hangover is real — and it will shape every ballot

It’s impossible to read this candidate list without the recent history hovering over it. Former leader John Rustad resigned on Dec. 4, 2025, after divisions over policy and personnel roiled the party, according to reporting at the time.

That matters because leadership elections aren’t held in a vacuum. They are a referendum on what members think went wrong — and a pre-emptive argument about what must never happen again.

If the membership believes Rustad’s departure was driven by a lack of internal discipline and process, they will lean toward candidates promising tighter message control, better candidate vetting, and fewer self-inflicted crises. If they believe the party’s internal fights were about “true conservatism” versus “electability,” the race becomes an ideological sorting exercise — one that could reward sharper rhetoric over steadier management.

May 30 is not the finish line — it’s the credibility deadline

The party says it will announce its new leader on May 30, 2026, at a leadership convention. Between now and then, the campaign will revolve around membership rules, voter eligibility, and organizational capacity — the unsexy mechanics that decide races long before convention day.

There’s also a strategic reality: as the Official Opposition, the B.C. Conservatives don’t have the luxury of treating this like an internal club election. The leader-in-waiting has to perform in public, under daily scrutiny, with a caucus that needs coherence and a province that expects seriousness.

Voters who don’t follow party mechanics will judge the outcome in simpler terms: does the new leader look like someone who could run a cabinet, manage a crisis, and keep a team together?

What should British Columbians watch for next?

Here are three tells that will matter more than bumper-sticker ideology:

  • Who can unify without erasing differences: A leader who “wins” by humiliating other factions may inherit a party that never stops relitigating the race.
  • Who can talk about B.C. problems with B.C. answers: Housing, cost of living, health care access, and public safety are where elections are won or lost — not on imported culture-war scripts.
  • Who can pass the competence test: Policy depth, staffing judgment, and a willingness to say “no” to bad ideas are not optional for an opposition trying to look ready to govern.

The LEOC has done its part: close the application process, publish a clear slate, move the party forward. Now comes the harder work — proving that a fast-growing political operation can mature quickly enough to hold together, and credible enough to convince British Columbians it deserves the keys to government.

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BC NEWS

Arctic ‘Rust’ Crisis: Thawing Permafrost Turns Pristine Canadian Rivers into Toxic Orange Acid

Thawing permafrost in Canada’s Yukon is turning pristine rivers into toxic, orange acid pools, threatening biodiversity and Indigenous water sources.

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A Looming Environmental Disaster in the Subarctic

In a chilling sign of rapid climate acceleration, once-pristine headwaters across Canada’s North are undergoing a terrifying transformation. New research published in the journal Science reveals that disappearing permafrost is exposing ancient, sulphide-rich bedrock to the elements for the first time in millennia. This process is triggering a chemical reaction that leaches heavy metals and acid into local waterways, turning clear streams into turbid, orange-hued flows that researchers describe as resembling ‘butter chicken.’

The Chemistry of Collapse

The phenomenon, often called ‘rusting rivers,’ occurs when thawing ground allows oxygen and water to interact with previously frozen minerals. This results in the release of high concentrations of iron and sulphuric acid. In the Yukon and Mackenzie river basins, some streams have seen an abrupt transition from high-quality water to levels of acidity and metal contamination comparable to industrial mining tailings ponds. Lead author Elliott Skierszkan of Carleton University noted that satellite imagery has identified at least 146 impacted streams, suggesting a landscape-scale shift across the North American northwest.

Deadly Consequences for Biodiversity

The ecological impact is already being felt. In parts of Alaska, scientists have documented the total disappearance of fish species like the Dolly Varden and Arctic grayling following these acidification events. The water in some Canadian headwaters now contains levels of aluminum and cadmium hundreds of times higher than what is considered safe for human or animal consumption. While larger downstream rivers currently possess enough volume to dilute these toxins, the long-term stability of the region’s water security remains a major concern for Indigenous communities and conservationists alike.

A Feedback Loop of Warming

This environmental crisis is a direct result of the North warming nearly three times faster than the global average. As temperatures rise, the melting ice-rich ground not only poisons the water but also releases stored methane—a potent greenhouse gas—creating a feedback loop that further accelerates the thaw. With infrastructure like roads and runways already slumping into the softening earth, the acidification of the water supply marks a grim new chapter in the subarctic’s struggle against human-caused climate change.

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BC NEWS

Spring Snow Alert: Calgary and Alberta Foothills Brace for 20 cm Blanket This Long Weekend

Environment Canada warns of up to 20 cm of snow for Calgary and Alberta foothills this May long weekend. Expect travel delays and winter-like conditions.

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Winter Returns for May Long Weekend

Calgarians planning to kick off the spring season with outdoor activities this Victoria Day long weekend may need to swap their hiking boots for winter parkas. Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) issued a special weather statement late Thursday, warning that a significant late-season snowfall is targeting Calgary and the Alberta foothills, potentially disrupting travel plans for thousands of residents.

Heavy Accumulations Expected in High Terrain

The weather system is expected to move into the mountain parks and foothills starting Friday night. While the city of Calgary is bracing for a mix of rain and wet snow beginning Saturday morning, those traveling west on the Trans-Canada Highway face much harsher conditions. Forecasters indicate that higher terrain could see accumulations of up to 20 centimetres, creating treacherous driving conditions for those heading toward Banff and beyond.

According to the ECCC, the heaviest snowfall is slated for Saturday. While the precipitation may transition back and forth between rain and snow in lower elevations, the mountains will likely see a persistent whiteout for much of the weekend. This uncertainty in exact totals is common with spring storms, as ground temperatures play a critical role in how much snow actually sticks.

Impact on Travel and Safety

The timing of this storm is particularly impactful given the high volume of traffic expected on Alberta highways during the holiday weekend. Officials are advising motorists to prepare for winter-like conditions, suggesting that summer tires may not be sufficient for those crossing mountain passes. Travelers are encouraged to check the latest ECCC watches and warnings before departing and to carry emergency kits.

For Calgary specifically, the seven-day forecast indicates that flurries could persist through Sunday, May 17. While this “May-long” snow is often a punchline for Albertans accustomed to unpredictable weather, the potential for heavy, wet accumulation poses a risk to budding gardens and tree branches that have already begun to leaf out for the season.

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Animal Welfare

B.C. Pet Owners Face Crisis as SPCA Food Banks Struggle to Meet Record Demand

The BC SPCA Pet Food Bank reports a surge in demand and a decline in donations, threatening the welfare of over 17,000 pets across British Columbia this year.

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Escalating Costs Leave B.C. Pets and Owners in Vulnerable Positions

As the cost of living continues to climb across British Columbia, the BC SPCA is raising the alarm regarding a critical shortage in its pet food bank supplies. Despite supporting a record number of animals this year, the organization reports a significant decline in donations, creating a precarious situation for thousands of families struggling to keep their beloved companions at home.

Record Demand Amidst Economic Pressure

Since January 2026, the BC SPCA Pet Food Bank has provided essential nutrition to more than 17,000 pets provincewide. This program serves as a vital safety net, designed to prevent pet surrenders by ensuring that financial hardship does not force families to part with their animals. However, the surge in demand is currently outpacing the community contributions that the program relies upon to function.

The impact of this program is best illustrated through individual cases like Susie, a 10-year-old dog living on Vancouver Island. Following the death of her original guardian, Susie was welcomed into the home of a family friend. When unexpected financial difficulties hit, the local pet food bank provided the necessary support to ensure Susie remained in a stable, loving environment during a transition that might have otherwise led to her being surrendered to a shelter.

Strategic Partnerships and Rural Outreach

Recognizing the growing need beyond urban centers, the BC SPCA expanded its network last year to include more than 168 partner organizations. These collaborations are essential for reaching remote and indigenous communities where traditional animal centers may not exist. Diane Waters, a community services specialist with the BC SPCA, emphasized that these partnerships, such as the one with the Society of Saint Vincent de Paul, are the backbone of their outreach efforts.

This network currently facilitates deliveries to isolated areas on North Vancouver Island, including Tahsis, Zeballos, Kyuquot, Ehattesaht, and Oclucje. Without these local connections, many pet owners in rural B.C. would have no access to emergency food supplies.

The Growing Gap in Funding

Data from the Agri-Food Analytics Lab confirms the reality facing many pet owners: pet food prices have skyrocketed due to increased production, packaging, and logistics costs. Elevated prices have persisted across the province, leaving many households unable to keep up with the inflation of basic pet care. Unlike many social services, the BC SPCA’s pet food bank programs receive no government funding. The program remains entirely dependent on the generosity of private donors and the strength of community partnerships to sustain its mission of keeping families and pets together.

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