LIVE @ 10 A.M. | B.C. officials to detail program for decriminalizing people who use drugs

Three Metro Vancouver men have been banned from participating in financial markets and ordered to pay more than $1.5 million in penalties to the B.C. Securities Commission.
A hearing panel of the commission found earlier this year that West Vancouver residents John Sand and Jolyon Charles Christopher Gulston, as well as North Vancouver resident Karol Achs, had defrauded investors of $600,000.
The two investors who provided the funds believed their money would be used to build a facility to produce zinc-air fuel cell batteries. The trio had falsely told the investors that there were already purchase orders for the batteries from around the world, according to the BCSC.
Instead, Sand, Gulston and Achs spent at least $360,000 of the money on personal expenses. These included a payment to a company controlled by Gulston; repayment of an investment by Sand's girlfriend; payment of credit card debt owed by Achs and a relative of his; and "various amounts for expenses which had no apparent connection to the intended investment purpose," according to the panel's decision on discipline for the three men, which was published online Tuesday.
"Fraud does immeasurable harm to the reputation and integrity of the capital markets and public confidence in those markets," the decision reads. "As such, its impact extends beyond the investors in this matter to the investing public as a whole."
Citing the seriousness of the offences, the panel ordered each man to pay an administrative penalty of $380,000. It also ordered them to pay back the amounts they obtained through their wrongdoing: $180,000 for Achs, $120,000 for Sand and $100,000 for Gulston. Those amounts total just $400,000 because the panel found that the men had already repaid $200,000 to investors.
Any portion of this money that the BCSC collects "could be distributed to victims," the commission said in a news release.
The panel also deemed Sand, Gulston and Achs "unfit to act as a registrant, director, officer, or advisor," issuing each man a lifetime ban from holding such positions, as well as from trading or purchasing securities or derivatives and other investment activities.
"The level of seriousness of the fraud here was significant," the panel wrote in its decision.
"The dishonesty was intentional and planned and included the creation of false documents and a failure to keep the types of records which would allow the flow of funds to be accurately tracked."
Advocates and business owners in the beverage industry say new guidance for drinking alcohol could speed up changing consumer drinking habits as younger generations drink less and non-alcoholic beverages become more popular.
A six-year-old girl died in hospital Sunday night after being involved in an incident at the Val-Saint-Côme ski resort in Lanaudiere. Quebec police are investigating, though details into the event are not yet known. Officers indicated that it involved a T-bar lift, but they were not able to say more.
The coronavirus remains a global health emergency, the World Health Organization chief said Monday, after a key advisory panel found the pandemic may be nearing an 'inflection point' where higher levels of immunity can lower virus-related deaths.
Quebec's minister responsible for secularism, Jean-Francois Roberge, has called on Canada’s new special anti-Islamophobia advisor Amira Elghawaby to apologize and step down.
Members of Parliament return to Ottawa to resume sitting for the first time in 2023 on Monday, with the state of Canada's health-care system, the health of the Canadian economy, and rates of violent crime in this country all top of mind.
Hockey Hall of Famer Bobby Hull has died at the age of 84. He played for the NHL's Chicago Blackhawks and Hartford Whalers as well as the World Hockey Association's Winnipeg Jets over a 23-year pro career.
With Russia's invasion of Ukraine displacing millions of people, many refugees have begun to lay their roots in Canada. If you or someone you know has fled the war-torn country and settled in Canada, we want to hear from you.
Federal New Democrat Leader Jagmeet Singh says he will call on the House of Commons to hold an emergency debate on the privatization of health care.
Marc Ouellet, the Quebec cardinal who oversaw the Vatican's powerful bishops' office and has been recently accused of sexual misconduct, is retiring.