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"description": "Fourteen Langley lives lost to toxic drugs in four months, Bailey's Law clears the Senate, the 264 Street bridge closes until further notice, and Township council reshuffles road funds. Plus: the Bandits fall to Scarborough and the Giants stockpile draft picks.",
"path": "/langley-roundup-news-for-june-17th-2026/",
"publishedAt": "2026-06-17T22:39:29.000Z",
"site": "https://www.langleyunion.ca",
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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\nGood afternoon, Langley! Today's roundup carries some heavy news. The BC Coroners Service reports that 14 people in Langley died from toxic drug poisoning in the first four months of this year, a devastating toll that reflects years of underinvestment in safe supply, treatment, and housing.\n\nThere's progress to report, too. Bailey's Law cleared the Senate, strengthening Canada's legal response to intimate partner violence.\n\nCloser to home, the 264 Street bridge at 64 Avenue is closed until further notice, and Township council is redirecting road funds after the 216th Street project stalled.\n\nOn the sports desk, the Bandits fell just short against Scarborough, and the Langley-based Giants made a trade that could leave them loaded with first-round picks. We've also got the fallout from the B.C. forests minister's caribou remarks. Read on.\n\n### Drug Toxicity Deaths Continue to Climb in Langley\n\nPhoto by camilo jimenez / Unsplash\n\nFourteen people in Langley died from toxic drug poisoning in the first four months of the year, according to the BC Coroners Service, a grim reminder that the poisoned drug supply crisis continues to devastate this community.\n\nThese deaths are not inevitable. They are the predictable result of a toxic, unregulated supply and years of inadequate investment in harm reduction, treatment, and housing supports.\n\nEach number represents a person with family, friends, and a life in this community. Behind the statistics are systemic failures: insufficient safe supply programs, a lack of accessible services, and ongoing stigma that keeps people from seeking help.\n\nResidents who use substances or know someone who does can access naloxone kits and overdose prevention resources through Fraser Health.\n\nRead More\n\n### 264 Street Bridge at 64 Avenue Closed Until Further Notice\n\nThe bridge at 264 Street and 64 Avenue, which crosses the Southern Railway tracks, is closed to all traffic effective immediately. The Township of Langley says the closure will remain in place until further notice.\n\nA detour route is available for drivers, cyclists, and pedestrians needing to navigate around the closure.\n\nResidents in the area should plan for extra travel time and check the Township's website for updates on when the bridge may reopen.\n\nRead More\n\n### Township Council Shifts Road Funds as 216th Street Project Stalls\n\nLangley Township council is redirecting infrastructure dollars toward upgrading 80th Avenue after a project on 216th Street hit delays.\n\nThe decision reflects a practical pivot: rather than let funds sit idle, council will move them to a project that can be completed sooner. For residents dealing with congestion and road conditions on 80th Avenue, the news may come as a relief.\n\nDetails on what caused the slowdown on the 216th Street project, and when it might resume, remain to be seen.\n\nRoad infrastructure in the Township has struggled to keep pace with the rapid development approvals that have reshaped communities like Willoughby and Brookswood in recent years.\n\nRead More\n\n### Bailey's Law on Intimate Partner Violence Passes Senate\n\nSenate of Canada | Kelvin Chan, CC BY-SA 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0, via Wikimedia Commons\n\nBill C-225, known as Bailey's Law, has passed third reading in the Senate and is set to receive Royal Assent, marking a significant step forward in Canada's legal response to intimate partner violence.\n\nThe legislation addresses gaps in the system that have left survivors and their families without adequate protection. Its passage is the result of years of advocacy from survivors and organizations demanding that the justice system treat intimate partner violence with the seriousness it demands.\n\nIntimate partner violence remains one of the most pervasive and underreported forms of harm in Canadian communities, and the new law signals a commitment to structural change over symbolic gestures.\n\nRead More\n\n### BC Forests minister's caribou comments spark outrage\n\nPhoto by 223 223 / Unsplash\n\nB.C. Forests Minister Ravi Parmar is facing backlash for calling caribou \"not the smartest animal.\"\n\nHe made the comment during a June 9 visit to Revelstoke, where he toured local mills and spoke about old-growth forests and wildfires.\n\nParmar suggested the animals are foolish for fleeing when logging disturbs them, and he blamed wildfires as the main cause of their habitat loss.\n\nA Black Press Media fact-check found his claims were inaccurate. Provincial data shows logging, not fire, is the biggest threat to southern B.C. herds, and that caribou spent thousands of years adapting to survive in old-growth forests.\n\nEnvironmental groups like the Wilderness Committee and Wildsight have condemned the remarks, pointing out that eight of the province's 18 southern mountain caribou herds are already gone.\n\nRead More\n\n### Creek shines but Bandits fall to Scarborough 108-105\n\nThe Vancouver Bandits came up just short in a 108-105 loss to the Scarborough Shooting Stars on Monday night.\n\nMitchell Creek lit up the court in his season debut, scoring 29 points with seven rebounds and four assists.\n\nThe Bandits fell behind by as many as 17 points in the third quarter, but Creek helped spark a comeback that pulled them within a single point.\n\nThe rally ran out of steam in the final moments, and Scarborough held on for the win. Vancouver played without two key starters, Tyrese Samuel and Dre Davis.\n\nThe Bandits, now 7-3, hit the road to face the Winnipeg Sea Bears on Thursday before returning home to play the Brampton Honey Badgers on Saturday.\n\nRead More\n\n### Giants Land Conditional First-Round Pick in Trade with Winterhawks\n\nThe Vancouver Giants have traded the playing rights to 2007-born forward Mason West to the Portland Winterhawks in exchange for a conditional first-round pick in 2028 and a seventh-round pick in 2030.\n\nWest, from Edina, Minnesota, played last season with the Fargo Force in the USHL and is committed to Michigan State University. He was added to the Giants' protected list during the 2024-25 season.\n\nThe deal gives the Langley-based Giants potentially four first-round picks in 2028: their own, plus selections from Kelowna, Seattle, and Portland. That is a serious stockpile for a franchise building toward the future.\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 17th, 2026",
"updatedAt": "2026-06-17T22:39:29.977Z"
}