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  "description": "Today's Langley Roundup: rainy skies, new modular classrooms for two Langley schools, a push to expand low-income transit passes, a court win for Cowichan title rights, warming rivers threaten young salmon, and the Vancouver Giants' move to Surrey by 2030.",
  "path": "/langley-roundup-news-for-july-2nd-2026/",
  "publishedAt": "2026-07-02T22:24:01.000Z",
  "site": "https://www.langleyunion.ca",
  "tags": [
    "Become a member",
    "Leave a tip",
    "Read More",
    "Mitchell Johnson",
    "Unsplash",
    "Elizabeth George",
    "Take the Survey"
  ],
  "textContent": "Reader-supported journalism\n\n### Help keep daily local news in Langley.\n\nThe Langley Union publishes original local reporting every day. No ads, no sponsored content, no paywalls, because community journalism should be available to everyone who lives here, not just those who can afford an online subscription.\n\nThat model only works when readers who can pitch in, do. If you find real value in this work and want to help keep it going, becoming a paying member or leaving a tip makes the next article possible. If you're just here to read, that's welcome too. No pressure.\n\nBecome a member Leave a tip\n\nThursday's a soggy one in Langley, with light to moderate rain, a high near 15 C, and a 99 per cent chance of more falling before the day is out. Keep the rain jacket handy; sunnier, warmer days are on the way by the weekend, with highs pushing past 20 C come Sunday and Monday.\n\nOn the growth front, B.C.'s Minister of Infrastructure announced modular classroom additions for Donna Gabriel Robins and Josette Dandurand elementary schools, both barely five years old and already over capacity, a reminder that school planning keeps lagging behind how fast Langley is filling in. Langley City council, meanwhile, voted to press the province to expand the low-income transit pass to residents of all ages, not just seniors and people on disability assistance, framing transit access as essential infrastructure rather than a fare-box product.\n\nElsewhere, Metro Vancouver bus drivers rejected their tentative contract with Coast Mountain Bus Company, sending both sides back to the table as ridership hits record highs. A court fight over the landmark Cowichan Aboriginal title decision came up short for the landowner trying to reopen it, leaving the ruling intact. New UBC research also found young B.C. salmon are more vulnerable to warming water than scientists previously thought, with implications for Indigenous food security and Fraser Valley streams. Closer to home, volunteers spent the day pulling invasive Himalayan blackberry, and hauling out plenty of trash along the way, at a local arboretum.\n\nOn the sports side, the Vancouver Giants confirmed their move to a new Surrey arena starting in 2030, ending their run at the Langley Events Centre. Langley-based Giants forwards Joe Iginla and Mathis Preston both heard their names called at the NHL entry draft.\n\n### Modular classrooms coming to two new Langley elementary schools\n\nTwo Langley elementary schools will get new modular classrooms to handle fast student growth.\n\nB.C.'s Minister of Infrastructure, Bowinn Ma, announced the additions in Langley on June 30.\n\nDonna Gabriel Robins Elementary will add 200 new seats, and Josette Dandurand Elementary will add 100 seats.\n\nBoth schools opened within the last five years, but they are already running out of room.\n\nMa pointed to Langley's rapid population growth as the main reason for the expansion.\n\nThe province is spending close to $49.5 million on this round of modular additions across B.C.\n\nRead More\n\n### Vancouver Giants heading to Surrey in 2030, leaving Langley Events Centre behind\n\nLangley Events Centre | Image credit Wikimedia Commons\n\nThe Vancouver Giants have confirmed they will decamp for a new 10,000-seat City Centre Arena in Surrey starting with the 2030-31 WHL season, ending a long run at the Langley Events Centre.\n\nGiants majority owner Ron Toigo called the move \"transformational,\" citing the potential to bid on marquee events like the World Juniors and Memorial Cup.\n\nThe Township of Langley extended congratulations to the club, noting the Giants have at least three more seasons at the LEC before the move.\n\nThe new Surrey arena will anchor a downtown entertainment district that also includes a hotel, retail, and office space, with public dollars underwriting a significant chunk of the private-sector spectacle.\n\nRead More\n\n### Langley City pushes province to expand low-income transit pass to all ages\n\nPhoto by Mitchell Johnson / Unsplash\n\nLangley City Council has unanimously voted to press the province to expand the BC Bus Pass Program, currently restricted to low-income seniors and people on disability assistance, to include low-income households of all ages in Metro Vancouver.\n\nCouncillor Nathan Pachal notes that Metro Vancouver is one of the few major Canadian regions without a low-income transit pass available to everyone. Halifax, Toronto, Ottawa, Winnipeg, Edmonton, and Calgary all offer one.\n\nFor most households, transportation costs rival housing costs, and many people who qualify for BC Housing rentals are still shut out of transit affordability programs.\n\nThe motion directs the mayor to write directly to the Minister of Transportation and Transit. Framing transit as rights infrastructure rather than a fare-box commodity is the whole point.\n\nRead More\n\n### Volunteers tackle invasive blackberries at Langley arboretum\n\nPhoto by Elizabeth George / Unsplash\n\nA crew of local volunteers spent the day pulling invasive Himalayan blackberry at a Langley arboretum, part of ongoing efforts to restore habitat for native plants.\n\nAlong the way, the group hauled out a considerable amount of trash that had accumulated on the site.\n\nInvasive blackberry, introduced through colonial-era horticulture, continues to crowd out native species across the Fraser Valley.\n\nVolunteer-led restoration work like this often carries the weight of ecological repair that neither municipal nor provincial budgets fully cover.\n\nRead More\n\n### UBC study finds young B.C. salmon more vulnerable to heat than previously known\n\nNew research out of UBC finds that young B.C. salmon are significantly more vulnerable to warming waters than earlier measurements suggested.\n\nThe findings raise fresh questions about how salmon populations will fare as rivers continue to heat up, with knock-on effects for Indigenous food security, coastal ecosystems, and commercial fisheries.\n\nWarming rivers are not a weather story. They are the downstream cost of decades of fossil fuel extraction and industrial water use that regulators have been slow to confront.\n\nFraser Valley waterways, including salmon-bearing streams around Langley, sit squarely in the affected zone.\n\nRead More\n\n### Metro Vancouver bus drivers reject tentative deal with Coast Mountain\n\nMetro Vancouver transit operators have voted down the tentative deal their union reached with Coast Mountain Bus Company, sending negotiations back to the table.\n\nThe rejection reflects deep frustration among drivers over wages, working conditions, and the pressures of running a system that carries record ridership, including during the FIFA World Cup surge.\n\nRiders across the Fraser Valley depend on reliable bus service, and drivers who keep that system running deserve a contract that reflects the essential nature of the work.\n\nCoast Mountain and its parent TransLink now face renewed pressure to come back with an offer members can actually accept.\n\nRead More\n\n### B.C. landowner loses bid to reopen landmark Cowichan Aboriginal title decision\n\nA B.C. Supreme Court judge has ruled against a company that tried to reopen the landmark Cowichan Aboriginal title decision after the original ruling recognized Cowichan Tribes' title over lands in Richmond.\n\nThe decision affirms the strength of the original judgment and pushes back against attempts by private landholders to unwind hard-won Indigenous title victories through the courts.\n\nCowichan Tribes' win has significant implications for how Crown and private land claims intersect with unceded territory across the province.\n\nExpect further legal manoeuvring from parties uncomfortable with the reality that title cases can, and do, succeed.\n\nRead More\n\n### Langley Giants forwards Iginla and Preston selected in NHL entry draft\n\nVancouver Giants forwards Joe Iginla and Mathis Preston have both been picked by NHL teams in the entry draft, marking another milestone for the Langley-based WHL club.\n\nIginla, son of Hall of Famer Jarome Iginla, has drawn attention throughout the season for his playmaking and physical presence.\n\nPreston's selection caps a breakout year in the Giants lineup.\n\nBoth players are expected to return to Langley for further development before turning pro.\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 July 2nd, 2026",
  "updatedAt": "2026-07-02T22:24:02.381Z"
}