Curated Video
It's not ‘just’ a bit of discomfort: How pelvic pain affects people's lives
The pelvic floor — a group of muscles, blood vessels and connective tissue that fills the hole at the bottom of the pelvis and supports the lower abdominal organs — is an area of the body most people don't think about, until it's not...
Curated Video
It's not ‘just’ PMS: How hormones can affect people's health
Hormones within a person's body can have a big impact on their health, especially if they're unbalanced. This video explores how premenstrual syndrome (PMS), premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD), and polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)...
Curated Video
$110 ICBC rebate is 'fine,' but BC Today callers say crash victims need better care
BC Today host Michelle Eliot hears callers' concerns about the care they've received after collisions, and comparisons with other jurisdictions.
Curated Video
Mayor, councillors in popular, small B.C. community caught in quagmire of disagreement
Since 2022, Harrison Hot Springs' mayor and four councillors have struggled to work together to govern the village, now some residents are considering moving away because of the dysfunction.
Curated Video
It's not 'just' a period: How people experience menstruation differently
Once a month, some people have a period — the shedding of the lining of the uterus. But depending on a few factors, periods can be very tough for some.
Curated Video
School overcrowding persists amid construction lag
Overcrowding amid lags in the construction of new schools is a problem multiple school boards across the country are now grappling with — or projecting they will be soon.Read more: https://www.cbc.ca/1.7188351
Curated Video
Some B.C. doctors want to put an end to sick notes
Some B.C. doctors want the province to limit how often employers can require sick notes from employees, saying it puts an unnecessary burden on both physicians and patients.
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Researchers race to track freed baby orca, reunite her with her pod
Days after a trapped baby orca known as Brave Little Hunter freed itself from a B.C. lagoon, researchers are hoping AI technology can help them track her movements and reunite her with her family pod.
Curated Video
#TheMoment two bovine best friends went up for adoption together
Meet Dusk the cow and Dawn the water buffalo — the two unlikely best friends who were rescued together and are now up for adoption as a pair.
Curated Video
Researchers use AI tool to try and locate family of freed orca
Days after a trapped baby orca known as Brave Little Hunter freed itself from a B.C. lagoon, researchers are hoping AI technology can help them track her movements and reunite her with her family pod.
Curated Video
B.C. recriminalizes drug use in public spaces
British Columbia Premier David Eby has announced that drug use in public spaces will be recriminalized over public safety concerns following a wave of troubling accounts of street drugs being taken in hospitals, parks and transit stops.
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Baby orca swims free after weeks trapped in B.C. lagoon
After weeks of rescue attempts, the Ehattesaht First Nation says the orca calf known as Brave Little Hunter has finally freed herself from a remote Vancouver Island tidal lagoon and is now in open water.
Curated Video
Did B.C.'s drug decriminalization project fail?
Adrian Dix, British Columbia's minister of health, discusses the province's decision to recriminalize drug use in public spaces like parks, public transit and hospitals.
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Police make arrests in killing of B.C. Sikh activist Hardeep Singh Nijjar
Canadian police have arrested members of an alleged hit squad investigators say they believe was tasked by the government of India with killing prominent Sikh separatist Hardeep Singh Nijjar in Surrey, B.C., last June, CBC News has learned.
Curated Video
Toronto medical officer sees drug decimalization as 'health issue,' despite Ford's opposition
CBC chief political correspondent Rosemary Barton speaks with Toronto's medical officer of health, Dr. Eileen de Villa, about the city's application to decriminalize drugs for personal use, which the Ontario government has refused to...
Curated Video
Toronto medical officer sees drug decriminalization as 'health issue,' despite Ford's opposition
CBC chief political correspondent Rosemary Barton speaks with Toronto's medical officer of health, Dr. Eileen de Villa, about the city's application to decriminalize drugs for personal use, which the Ontario government has refused to...
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B.C.'s debate over drug decriminalization | Canada Tonight
One year into a three-year drug decriminalization pilot, B.C. Premier David Eby says he shares public safety concerns that have been raised by police and city councillors from multiple municipalities. Jess Lamb, co-founder of the East...
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B.C. government investing $30M for dyslexia screening
The provincial NDP is investing $30 million to provide universal screening for children from kindergarten to Grade 3. The Early Edition’s Stephen Quinn got reaction to the announcement from Dyslexia Canada executive director Alicia...
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Podcaster Justin McElroy meets the CBC's Justin McElroy
Justin McElroy, co-host of the popular weekly comedy advice podcast My Brother, My Brother and Me, is in Vancouver as part of the McElroy brothers' tour. The CBC's Justin McElroy, our municipal affairs reporter currently on leave, has an...
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What sparring between B.C. United and Conservatives means for voters: Political Panel
The Early Edition’s political panel weighs in on cybersecurity and the rejection of a deal between B.C. United and the B.C. Conservatives to avoid vote-splitting in the fall provincial election.
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Can Surrey RCMP officers work under the command of a municipal police service?
Trevor Dinwoodie of the National Police Federation clarifies comments made by B.C. Public Safety Minister Mike Farnworth suggesting Surrey RCMP members will work under the Surrey Police Service with the stroke of a pen. Dinwoodie says...
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MPs debate concerns over national disability benefit
Disability advocates in B.C. were left disappointed by the federal announcement allocating $6.1 billion to the national disability benefit over six years. The Early Edition host Stephen Quinn spoke with the NDP's critic for disability...
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Haida Nation, B.C. sign landmark agreement affirming Haida title throughout Haida Gwaii
Two decades after the Haida Nation sued B.C. seeking title to the archipelago of Haida Gwaii, the province and nation have reached an agreement recognizing the nation's inherent right to steward the territory. As Betsy Trumpener reports,...
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One of B.C.'s first Filipino immigrants honoured by community
An early Filipino settler is finally getting a gravestone after new research revealed he was one the first documented Filipino immigrants in B.C. As Sohrab Sandhu found out, Benson Flores came to the province in 1861 — six years before...