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Courtenay/Comox – Comox Valley Echo, Comox Valley Record; Cranbrook – Cranbrook Townsman, East Kootenay Weekly, Kootenay News Advertiser; Creston – Creston Valley Advance; Delta – Delta Optimist, North Delta Reporter; Denman Island/Hornby Island – Hornby-Denman Island Grapevine; Duncan/Cowichan Valley – Cowichan Valley Citizen
Black Press obtained Harbor City Star, Nanaimo Daily News, Cowichan Citizen, Parksville Oceanside Star, Tofino/Ucluelet Westerly News, Comox Valley Echo, Campbell River Courier, Surrey Now and Langley Advance. [27] In August 2014, Black Press acquired Yukon News from owner Stephen Robertson. [28]
Comox Valley Daily: BC: Comox: 2011 2013 Coquitlam Now: BC: Coquitlam: 1984 2016 The Mirror: BC: Dawson Creek: 1930 2023 Northeast News: BC: Dawson Creek: 2004 2016 South Delta Leader: BC: Delta? 2014 Cowichan Leader: BC: Duncan: 1905 2015 Duncan Free Press: BC: Duncan? 2017 Fort Nelson News: BC: Fort Nelson: 1959 2023 Alaska Highway News: BC ...
2020 British Columbia general election: Courtenay-Comox; Party Candidate Votes % ±% Expenditures New Democratic: Ronna-Rae Leonard: 14,663: 50.56 +13.20: $50,103.50 Liberal
Courtenay (/ ˈ k ɔːr t n i / KORT-nee) [1] is a city of about 26,000 on the east coast of Vancouver Island, in the Canadian province of British Columbia.It is the largest community and only city in the area commonly known as the Comox Valley, and the seat of the Comox Valley Regional District, which replaced the Comox-Strathcona Regional District.
The Comox Valley is a region on the east coast of Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada, that includes the city of Courtenay, the town of Comox, the village of Cumberland, and the unincorporated settlements of Royston, Union Bay, Fanny Bay, Black Creek, and Merville.
In 1912, the colliery established a hydroelectric plant on the Puntledge River, which supplied the whole Comox Valley. [8] Total miners killed in a single coal dust explosion at Cumberland were 64 in 1901, 21 in 1903, 18 in 1922, and 33 in 1923. [11] In 1912, management locked out protesting Cumberland miners who took an idle day.
The partition left the new Comox Valley Regional District with only 8.4 percent of the former Comox-Strathcona's land area, but 57.9 percent of its population. The CVRD covers an area of 2,425 square kilometres, of which 1,725 square kilometres is land (the remainder is water), and serves a population of 72,445 according to the 2023 Census. [ 4 ]