Close Menu
timesmoguls.com
  • News
  • Entertainment
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Lifestyle
  • Health
  • Science
  • Sports
Featured

Lost for over a century, Heiltsuk Nation celebrates the return of Bentwood Box

20 dogs saved from the meat farm in South Korea now safe in Canada – Montreal

Fatherly Feud At Ontario School Leads to Headbutt and Bloody Nose

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news from timesmoguls.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Home
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy policy
  • Terms and services
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
timesmoguls.com
Contact us
HOT TOPICS
  • News
  • Entertainment
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Lifestyle
  • Health
  • Science
  • Sports
timesmoguls.com
You are at:Home»Global News»Meetings, rewards and resilience: British Columbia’s good news for 2024
Global News

Meetings, rewards and resilience: British Columbia’s good news for 2024

December 25, 2024007 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Web Foal.jpg
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Sometimes the news cycle can be quite negative and depressing. But there are stories that warm our hearts, reaffirm our faith in humanity and make us smile.

Here are just 10 of the good news stories happening in British Columbia in 2024.

It was a decades of reunions in the making and the kickoff of the new year the Quill family will never forget.

Sisters Nita and Brandy Quill met for the first time at a Vancouver SkyTrain station last week, more than 30 years after being separated during a period of colonial violence against Native families known as the ’60s Scoop. The two found each other on Facebook in the years after their mother’s death.

“It’s surreal. Nothing like this has ever happened in our lives before,” Brandy said as she hugged her long-lost sister at the downtown Burrard Station.

Story continues below advertisement

“It’s a miracle for me. I’m just trying to absorb it. It will probably take a long time to process it. It’s a dream come true.


Click to play video: “Emotional encounter for British Columbia sisters separated by the 'Sixties Scoop'

2:15 p.m.
Emotional reunion for British Columbia sisters separated by the ‘Sixties Scoop’


A Vancouver-based visual effects company celebrated a major award earlier this year for his participation in one of the biggest shows of 2023even if it’s for work that you probably haven’t noticed.

When most people think of visual effects (VFX), monsters, spaceships, or explosions may be the first thing that comes to mind.

Story continues below advertisement

This is not the case for Distillery FX, which shared a Emmy “Outstanding Special Visual Effects in a Season or Film” award for their efforts to seamlessly create the post-apocalyptic world in two episodes of the HBO series The last of us.

About 50 people at Distillery spent nearly a year working on the critically acclaimed Episode 3, Very very longand episode 7, Left behind.

Filming for The last of usseason two, moved from Alberta to Vancouver in 2024.


Click to play video: “Vancouver visual effects company honored at Emmys for work on Last of Us”

1:35
Vancouver VFX company honored at Emmys for its work on Last of Us


Also in January, the actions of a Vancouver Island woman confirmed the old adage “one good deed is its own reward.

Talia Ball was heading home from Thrifty Foods in Courtenay when she came across an envelope filled with species frozen in the snow.

Story continues below advertisement

“I just saw a $100 bill in the snow, so I thought maybe someone had just dropped one – and it was like a big pile of money,” he said. -she declared to Global News.

“It had the word ‘children’ written on it, that’s when I knew it was someone’s family’s money.”

Through the power of social media, Ball was able to track down the rightful owner, who was overwhelmed with gratitude.


Click to play video: “Good Samaritan finds and returns envelope filled with cash to Courtenay”

0:53
Good Samaritan finds and returns envelope full of cash in Courtenay


In February, a British Columbia teacher received some love from his students on his birthday and the moment went viral on TikTok.

Get the day's top news, politics, business and current affairs headlines delivered to your inbox once a day.

Receive national news daily

Get the day’s top news, politics, business and current affairs headlines delivered to your inbox once a day.

Joshua Filiatrault, called Mr. Fili by his students, teaches physical education and English at Johnston Heights Secondary School in Surrey, British Columbia.

What started as an alarming sight – two students pretending to fight – quickly turned into a birthday surprise for Filiatrault as he was covered in confetti and the seniors serenaded him with “Happy Birthday “.

Story continues below advertisement

Filiatrault went viral on TikTok in a video posted by PRLS (@prlsgrad2024) and has more than 10 million views.


Click to play video: “Surrey students fake fight to surprise teacher on their birthday”

0:46
Surrey students fake fight to surprise teacher on their birthday


In early March, passengers board a flight from Vancouver to London, England were not injured or shaken when their plane was struck by lightning.

Video shared with Global News captured as a Air Canada the plane was struck by lightning.

The large blue flash is visible at the rear of the plane at the moment of contact.

Air Canada confirmed to Global News that the Boeing 777 plane made it to its destination and landed safely.


Click to play video: “Lightning strikes plane leaving YVR”

1:00 p.m.
Lightning strikes plane leaving YVR


In April we met Six-year-old Aanakh Bhullar who got to experience a dream come true.

Story continues below advertisement

He loves to dance like his idol Diljit Dosanjh.

The Punjabi superstar performed at BC Place in April and Aanakh was elated when he learned that his father had purchased tickets.

When the Bhullar family got ground tickets, Aanakh moved closer to his dream of dancing on stage, but his parents were skeptical.

“We wanted to prepare him for this not to happen,” said his mother Seema. “I just didn’t want to give him hope.”

But suddenly it happened.


Click to play video: “Surrey boy has the ‘thrill of his life’ on stage with superstar Diljit Dosanjh”

2:07
Surrey boy experiences ‘thrill of his life’ on stage with superstar Diljit Dosanjh


In May, a British Columbia couple visited Egypt told their story of how they took action to help two young men in an auto-rickshaw.

Bassem Ghabrous and his wife moved to Canada seven years ago so she could complete her doctorate at the University of British Columbia.

Current trend

  • Here are the best Boxing Day deals in Canada

  • Hollywood stars support Blake Lively despite complaints against Justin Baldoni

Story continues below advertisement

However, they have recently returned to Egypt visit Ghabrous’ family and mother.

Last weekend, the couple was in Cairo returning home around 11 p.m. when they turned the corner and saw a rickshaw coming up the ramp.

That’s when Ghabrous said he noticed a fire in the back of the vehicle.

“It was on fire, and they couldn’t, they were just going fast and it probably just started,” Ghabrous said.

Ghabrous sprang into action, running toward the small vehicle with a fire extinguisher pulled out from its trunk.


Click to play video: “Vancouver man helps save rickshaw drivers from fire”

1:46
Vancouver man helps save rickshaw drivers from fire


In June, a 70-year-old woman in British Columbia met her two siblings for the first time, solving a decades-old mystery.

Lorraine Williams discovered she had an older sister and brother when she took a genealogy test on MyHeritage.com.

Story continues below advertisement

More than 70 years after their birth, the trio only discovered their existence last year.

Williams, from Chilliwack, and Josephine Morey, from the United Kingdom, both submitted their DNA to MyHeritage and got a match.

“My stomach turned,” Williams said. “And I was so, so excited. I can’t put it into words. Simply great.


Click to play video: “BC elder meets siblings for first time through genealogy test”

2:07
British Columbia senior meets siblings for the first time through genealogy test


In August, a tragic story occurred in Fort St. John, British Columbia, involving a neglected pregnant mare becomes a story of resilience.

Spirit was brought to the BC SPCA after being found on the side of a logging road. The pregnant mare had lesions all over her body and was covered in hives and welts.

The BC SPCA searched and found Spirit’s owner, who decided to surrender her to the BC SPCA.

Story continues below advertisement

Several weeks after being rescued, Spirit gave birth to a healthy foal on July 28.

The filly was named Journey in honor of the difficult path Spirit traveled carrying her.


Click to play video: “Pregnant mare found on logging road near Fort St. John gets a new start”

0:39
Pregnant mare found on logging road near Fort St. John gets a new start


Two British Columbia athletes captured the pride and hearts of the province when they won gold at the Paris Olympics.

British Columbia native Ethan Katzberg won the men’s hammer throw title at the Stade de France.

His first throw of 84.12 meters held up throughout the six-round competition – he won by a distance of 4.15 meters. This margin represents the largest margin of victory in the Olympic men’s hammer throw competition since 1920.

Katzberg is the first Canadian in Olympic history to win the men’s hammer throw title. The Nanaimo, British Columbia, native adds the Olympic crown to the world championship he won last summer in Eugene, Oregon.

Story continues below advertisement

Two days later, Richmond, BC, native Camryn Rogers won gold while also becoming the country’s first ever medalist in the women’s event.

Rogers was considered one of the favorites going into the event and threw 76.97 meters, her furthest, on her fourth attempt. No one else has surpassed that number and won gold.

Rogers is the highest-ranked hammer thrower in the world and entered the Games after winning silver at the 2022 world championships and gold at last year’s world championships. She is the first and only Canadian to win a world championship medal in the hammer throw.


Click to play video: “BC athletes win big at Paralympics”

1:52
BC athletes win big at Paralympics


Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleLowe’s CareersTechnologyStart (or restart) your career. Get into tech with our Lowe’s Launchpad program. This hands-on learning opportunity is ideal for people who….2 days ago
Next Article WHO looks back at 2024

Related Posts

Lost for over a century, Heiltsuk Nation celebrates the return of Bentwood Box

June 7, 2025

20 dogs saved from the meat farm in South Korea now safe in Canada – Montreal

June 7, 2025

Fatherly Feud At Ontario School Leads to Headbutt and Bloody Nose

June 7, 2025
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

We Are Social
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
News
  • Business (1,769)
  • Entertainment (1,791)
  • Global News (1,919)
  • Health (1,718)
  • Lifestyle (1,694)
  • Politics (1,581)
  • Science (1,697)
  • Sports (1,738)
  • Technology (1,718)
Latest

Lost for over a century, Heiltsuk Nation celebrates the return of Bentwood Box

GE accelerates spare technology | Aviation week network

Two new entertainment places to open in Bell Works in Hoffman Estates

Featured

Lost for over a century, Heiltsuk Nation celebrates the return of Bentwood Box

GE accelerates spare technology | Aviation week network

Two new entertainment places to open in Bell Works in Hoffman Estates

We Are Social
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
News
  • Business (1,769)
  • Entertainment (1,791)
  • Global News (1,919)
  • Health (1,718)
  • Lifestyle (1,694)
  • Politics (1,581)
  • Science (1,697)
  • Sports (1,738)
  • Technology (1,718)
© 2025 Designed by timesmoguls
  • Home
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy policy
  • Terms and services

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.