John Rustad’s long-sought resignation Thursday as BC Conservative leader marks the end of one of the strangest chapters in modern British Columbia politics, defined less by coherent conservative renewal than by the chaotic narrowing of a party’s purpose ... Rustad, you will remember, was booted from the BC United Party three years ago and inherited a fringe vehicle—the largely idled BC Conservatives—that suddenly found itself with oxygen, polling strength and real strategic opportunity ... ... he leaves behind a movement that squandered its opening, exhausted its relevance and cost the province something it has not had in more than a decade: a credible, modern, centre-right alternative capable of challenging government on the issues that matter most ... CLICK HERE for the full story
Reducing what’s been referred to as administrative bloat in health authorities to better focus on front-line resources was an election promise of Premier David Eby. Island Health says it has eliminated or not posted 91 non-contract job postings and reduced its non-contract workforce by 174 employees as a result of a province-wide review of administrative roles in health authorities. Health Minister Josie Osborne says the 10-month review has resulted in 1,100 positions being eliminated, closed or left vacant across the province, and there is now a plan to consolidate some services across all six health authorities. Starting in 2026-27, the job cuts are expected to save more than $60 million annually ... CLICK HERE for the full story