Articles

  • 1 day ago | thediscourse.ca | Mick Sweetman

    U.S. health-care workers are flocking to Nanaimo, and at least one told The Discourse their move is a direct spin-off from the Nanaimo Infusion event that welcomed hundreds of American visitors to the city this spring. Brandy Frye is a registered nurse from Califorina who was in Nanaimo this week with her 13-year-old son Bruce to meet her new boss at the Nanaimo Regional General Hospital — where she’ll be working in the emergency department.

  • 2 weeks ago | thediscourse.ca | Mick Sweetman

    Thousands of people wearing rainbow clothes and carrying a variety of Pride flags filled downtown Nanaimo with the sound of celebration and resistance at the annual Pride Parade and Festival on Sunday, June 8, 2025. “This year, our theme is louder and prouder, because we will not be silenced. We will not be pushed aside. We are here and we are rising together!” shouted Nanaimo Pride Society president Lauren Semple into a microphone to a crowd of Pride festival goers in Maffeo Sutton Park.

  • 3 weeks ago | thediscourse.ca | Mick Sweetman

    Vancouver Island University — one of Nanaimo’s largest employers — passed a new budget this week in an effort to get on the path to financial stability as it continues to face a multifactor fiscal crisis. On Tuesday, Vancouver Island University’s board of governors approved a slate of program cancellations as well as a budget that falls short of the $18 million in expense reductions mandated by the province, and has a projected $500,000 deficit.

  • 4 weeks ago | thediscourse.ca | Mick Sweetman

    On Monday, Nanaimo city council voted to indefinitely postpone the decision to build a new $10.8 million boathouse and community centre in Long Lake’s Loudon Park after activists rallied to save 29 trees in the park that would have had to come down for its construction.

  • 1 month ago | thediscourse.ca | Mick Sweetman

    A tense senate meeting at Vancouver Island University (VIU) on Wednesday led to the approval of program cancellations at the school, but the withdrawal of a suite of program suspensions means the university won’t reach its financial target this year. “By not moving those suspensions forward right now, academics will not be able to meet the deficit mitigation target in 2025-2026.