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  "description": "Douglas Recreation reopens with 75 new childcare spaces, Community Day returns to Douglas Park Saturday, and a Tyee report tracks the far-right 'remigration' movement. Plus seniors infrastructure, rental rankings, ICBC online tests, and the Bank of Canada rate call.",
  "path": "/langley-roundup-news-for-june-10th-2026/",
  "publishedAt": "2026-06-10T17:44:24.000Z",
  "site": "https://www.langleyunion.ca",
  "tags": [
    "Read More",
    "Learn More",
    "Jakub Żerdzicki",
    "Unsplash",
    "Take the Survey"
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  "textContent": "💚\n\n****Support Local News—Spread the Word****\nThe best way to help __The Langley Union__ grow is simple: share this newsletter. Forward it to a friend, mention it to your family, or post it on social media and encourage others to subscribe.\n\nHappy Wednesday, Langley! It is a partly sunny start with 15°C now and a high of 19°C, plus a 25 percent chance of rain to keep things interesting.\n\nThe weekend is looking gorgeous, with Saturday warming up to 28°C and Sunday hitting 31°C, which is excellent timing for Community Day at Douglas Park and Langley Meals on Wheels' Sips of Kindness fundraiser.\n\nToday's roundup leads with a major Langley City infrastructure win: the Douglas Recreation and Childcare Centre has reopened with 75 new childcare spaces.\n\nWe also cover a Tyee investigation into the far-right \"remigration\" movement and its local footprint, the Senior Resources Society's letter on Willoughby, slipping Langley rental rankings, online ICBC learner tests, and the Bank of Canada's rate decision this morning.\n\n### Douglas Recreation and Childcare Centre Reopens with 75 New Childcare Spaces\n\nLangley City's Douglas Recreation and Childcare Centre has officially reopened after a renovation that created 75 new childcare spaces, including early years and before- and after-school care operated by YMCA BC.\n\nThe $4.3 million project, funded jointly by the provincial and federal governments through the ChildCareBC New Spaces Fund with an additional $600,000 from Langley City, converted a disused upper-floor caretaker suite into childcare space and expanded the existing main-floor program area.\n\nThe City also used the renovation to add new community spaces for arts, camps, and recreational programming for all ages.\n\nAccessible, affordable childcare is essential public infrastructure, and this investment is a concrete example of what becomes possible when senior governments fund the services families actually need.\n\nThe reopening is part of a broader $24 million investment in Downtown Langley City as the community prepares for SkyTrain's arrival, following last fall's $19 million rebuild of the Fraser Highway Oneway.\n\nRead More\n\n### Seniors society backs Willoughby centre commitment\n\nLangley Senior Resources Society leaders are praising the Township's plan for a seniors' centre at the new Willoughby Recreation Centre.\n\nIn a letter to the editor, the society's board thanked Mayor Eric Woodward and council for the commitment, made at the recent State of the Township address.\n\nThe group says Willoughby's growing senior population is currently underserved, and notes that programs at their new North Langley location filled up right away after launching in October 2025.\n\nThey argue seniors' programming should be treated as core community infrastructure, as essential as ice rinks and sports fields.\n\nRead More\n\n### THIS SATURDAY: Langley City's Community Day returns to Douglas Park\n\nLangley City hosts its annual Community Day festival at Douglas Park on Saturday, June 13, from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.\n\nThe free outdoor event features live music, food trucks, a vendor marketplace, and community information booths.\n\nFamilies can try inflatable obstacle courses, bounce houses, mini golf, crafts, and a zip line, with a sensory-friendly space available for those who need a quieter setting.\n\nFree bike valet parking will be on site for attendees who pedal in.\n\nLearn More\n\n### Langley Meals on Wheels hosts inaugural Sips of Kindness\n\nLangley Meals on Wheels hosts its inaugural Sips of Kindness fundraiser at the Zoo Event Space in Aldergrove on Sunday, June 14.\n\nThe afternoon event runs from 2 to 6 p.m. and features wine, food, desserts, and live music.\n\nGuests are encouraged to wear shades of pink and white, with stylish hats welcome.\n\nTickets are sold out, but the charity is still looking for volunteers to help with the event, which supports its meal delivery program.\n\nIf you are interested in volunteering, please email angiew@lmow.ca.\n\n### Langley Rental Prices Drop in National Rankings, But Affordability Remains Elusive\n\nPhoto by Jakub Żerdzicki / Unsplash\n\nLangley has slipped in Rentals.ca's most-expensive rental rankings and is now cheaper than Halifax, according to the latest national report.\n\nWhile any downward movement might sound like good news for renters, it is worth asking what is actually driving the shift: meaningful new supply, slowing demand, or simply other cities getting worse faster?\n\nFor the many Langley renters spending well over 30 percent of their income on housing, a change in relative ranking does little to ease month-to-month pressure.\n\nRental affordability in the Fraser Valley remains a systemic issue shaped by decades of policy choices that have favoured property investors and developers over the people who need a place to live.\n\nRead More\n\n### Far-right 'remigration' push has Langley footprint\n\nCittyNews report from July 2024\n\nA new Tyee investigation tracks how a far-right Canadian group is pushing \"remigration,\" a policy that would deport millions of immigrants and revoke birthright citizenship.\n\nDominion Society leader Daniel Tyrie attended last month's Canada Strong and Free Network conference, where Pierre Poilievre spoke, and recently joined European white nationalist Martin Sellner at a summit in Portugal.\n\nThe local picture is sobering: Second Sons stickers have turned up in Brookswood, and in July 2024 the Township-owned West Langley Hall in Walnut Grove hosted a Diagolon event led by Jeremy MacKenzie, who later founded Second Sons Canada.\n\nResearchers say the \"remigration\" label is designed to make ethnic cleansing sound reasonable to mainstream conservatives.\n\nAs an editorial aside, if you hear someone use the word \"remigration,\" please name it for what it is.\n\nThe term is a sanitized label for racist, white supremacist policy: the forced mass deportation of people based on race and ancestry, which researchers describe as a call for ethnic cleansing.\n\nIts power depends on sounding reasonable around dinner tables, in group chats, and over backyard fences.\n\nThat is exactly why the most important place to push back is where it feels hardest: with a friend, a family member, a coworker, a neighbour.\n\nSilence in those rooms is how this ideology spreads.\n\nThe frontline of the fight against fascism is not a rally or a hashtag. It is the small, uncomfortable conversation you have today with someone you know.\n\nRead More\n\n### B.C. Learner Licence Tests Move Online, No More ICBC Office Trips\n\nBritish Columbians can now take their learner licence knowledge test from home, as the province rolls out an online option that eliminates the need to visit an ICBC office.\n\nFor anyone who has spent a morning in an ICBC queue, this is a genuinely welcome quality-of-life improvement.\n\nThe change should be especially helpful for residents in parts of the Fraser Valley where ICBC locations are not exactly around the corner, and for people whose work schedules make weekday office visits difficult.\n\nIt is a small but meaningful step toward making a public service more accessible.\n\nRead More\n\n### Bank of Canada Set to Announce Interest Rate Decision Amid Economic Uncertainty\n\nThe Bank of Canada is making its latest interest rate announcement this morning after a turbulent stretch of economic data that has left households and economists alike guessing.\n\nFor Fraser Valley renters and mortgage holders already stretched thin, the decision carries real, immediate consequences for monthly budgets.\n\nRate policy is often presented as a neutral, technical exercise, but every hike or hold reflects choices about who bears the burden of inflation: working people paying more on their debt, or corporations sitting on record profits.\n\nWhatever the announcement, it is worth watching whose interests the Bank prioritizes in its rationale.\n\nRead More\n\n* * *\n\n###  What did you think?\n\nHelp us improve! Take a quick 60-second survey to share your thoughts on this article.\n\n Take the Survey ",
  "title": "Langley Roundup: News for June 10th, 2026",
  "updatedAt": "2026-06-10T17:44:25.780Z"
}