DEVELOPING | Multi-car crash blocks major street in Surrey; no estimated time of reopening

The federal and British Columbia governments are each committing $15 million in support of the 2025 Invictus Games in Vancouver and Whistler.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Premier John Horgan made the announcement at Rogers Arena in Vancouver.
Trudeau said that as the first Invictus Games to feature adaptive winter sports, the event will be “uniquely Canadian.” An additional $1 million in federal funds will be provided to the Soldier On program to support the participation of Canadian veterans in the games.
“For the first time ever, and classically Canadian, these games will include winter sports,” he told a cheering audience at the announcement Tuesday.
“We all know that when it comes to winter sports, our Canadian competitors will show them how it's done.”
The games will feature alpine skiing, Nordic skiing, skeleton and wheelchair curling as well as swimming, indoor rowing, sitting volleyball, wheelchair rugby and wheelchair basketball.
Prince Harry, the Duke of Sussex, announced in April that Vancouver and Whistler won the bid to host the eight-day international sports competition for wounded and ill military veterans in February 2025.
Over 500 athletes from more than 20 nations are expected to compete in 2025.
Horgan called the announcement the “best possible news” for British Columbia.
“We will have, as the prime minister said, in a quintessentially Canadian way, the first hybrid and the first winter games, including sliding events, skiing events at Whistler,” he said. “World-class events are going to be taking place here.”
Nick Booth, chief executive officer of True Patriot Love, said the games are named after Victorian era British poet William Ernest Henley who wrote the poem, Invictus. True Patriot Love is a charity that supports Canadian Armed Forces members, veterans, and their families.
A senior British general who knew the poem decided to call the games Invictus because they spoke to the mission of using sport for recovery, he said. The poem was written in 1875.
“The lyrics behind the poem are that sort of dark journey that people go on, and come out the other end still being the person that you were before injury,” Booth said.
Trudeau said he talked with former athletes before the announcement about how sports help with recovery and healing, and the “profound impact” the games had on helping the former service members get better.
The games help injured veterans learn that while they are not the same as they were before, it doesn't mean they “can't be a world-class competitor,” he said.
“You can have every bit of that drive and that push and that quest to give all you are to your teammates, to your service, to your country,” he said.
“That's what Invictus allows. Not just competitors but the comrades, the families and all of us to live, to experience, to celebrate.”
Natacha Dupuis, a retired master corporal who co-captained Team Canada during the 2017 Invictus Games in Toronto, became emotional as she spoke about how sports helped her get her life back.
She was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder after her second tour of Afghanistan where two of her comrades were killed and three others were injured, she said.
While therapy helped her a bit, she said it was training as a sprinter for the games that helped her get control of her life.
“The Invictus Games are not about medals or about winning,” she said.
“They're about progressing in your recovery as part of a community who understands and supports you. They are also about building lifelong friendships and support systems amongst peers. I hope the city is ready to be inspired and touched by the incredible spirit and resiliency of the Invictus Games athletes. I promise that you won't be disappointed. It will blow your mind.”
This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 24, 2022.
Newly disqualified Conservative Party leadership candidate Patrick Brown is alleging political corruption for his ousting from the race over allegations his campaign broke election financing rules.
Air Canada and Toronto's Pearson airport again claimed the top spots for flight delays on Tuesday, marking at least four days in a row where the country's biggest airline has placed No. 1 of any large carrier worldwide.
Video has emerged showing a worker dangling in the air above a Toronto construction site after accidently getting entangled in a tagline attached to a crane.
Canada's immigration department is restarting all Express Entry draws for immigration applications Wednesday, after pausing the program 18 months ago during the pandemic.
A high school friend of B.C. teen Amanda Todd has testified he took action when he saw what he described as a 'pornographic' picture of her on Facebook in November 2011.
As pandemic restrictions subside throughout Canada, medical professionals reflect on how the international health crisis has revealed the need to carry out discussions about dying.
U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson is facing his biggest crisis yet, after two senior Cabinet ministers resigned on Tuesday. Here's what you need to know.
Kevin McCarthy, 37, and Irina McCarthy, 35, the parents of a two-year-old boy, were among seven people killed in the Chicago-area mass shooting on July 4.
Families of victims of the Nova Scotia mass shooting are pondering whether to continue participating in the public inquiry into the tragedy because key witnesses are being shielded from cross-examination.