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Editorials Archive

Editorial: Traffic issues require regional outlook

We live on the pointy end of an island, literally caught between a rock and a hard place (and various fingers of the ocean), so traffic will always be a problem.

Editorial: Weekend storms a good warning

Saturday night鈥檚 storm didn鈥檛 live up to the predictions of high winds and heavy rain, but Environment Canada did the right thing to issue severe-weather warnings.

Editorial: October Crisis is still a warning

Today is the anniversary of perhaps the most dramatic moment in our country鈥檚 recent history. On Oct. 16, 1970, prime minister Pierre Trudeau invoked the War Measures Act to put down a terrorist movement in Quebec that threatened civil war.

Editorial: Gambling take has a high cost

As the B.C. Lottery Corp. ponders where to put a casino in Victoria, it should also ponder a new Angus Reid poll that suggests 91原创s are not particularly enthusiastic about governments expanding their involvement in gambling.

Editorial: Oak Bay sewage plan slow but steady

Oak Bay has approved a 30-year plan to solve the problem of effluent contaminating beaches when heavy rains overtax its sewage system. That might seem like a long time, but the problem is more than a century old.

Editorial: ICF needs more transparency

The Island Corridor Foundation says it has complete confidence in CEO Graham Bruce, but if the public is to have confidence in the ICF, the foundation needs to be more transparent, including making public a solid business plan for restoring rail serv

Editorial: Exotic-animal regulations necessary

Owning exotic pets is a growing problem, posing dangers to humans, to the environment and to the animals themselves. But the issue is poorly regulated, with laws varying from one level of government to another, and from province to province.

Editorial: Province should clean up mine sites

When it takes a tireless volunteer and a law student to do the government鈥檚 work, something is wrong.

Editorial: UBCM looks out of touch

The Union of B.C. Municipalities seems determined to prove its critics right. The organization鈥檚 convention, which closed last weekend in Victoria, was a bonfire of the vanities.

Editorial: Senate reform up to senators

Given that the Supreme Court has ruled the federal government cannot make fundamental changes to the Senate without constitutional reform and the co-operation of the provinces, the prospects for abolition or major reform are microscopic.