Liam Britten

Digital journalist

Liam Britten is an award-winning journalist for CBC Vancouver. You can contact him at liam.britten@cbc.ca or follow him on Twitter: @liam_britten.

Latest from Liam Britten

B.C. premier's new cabinet brings an end to stand-alone mental health and addictions ministry

Premier David Eby unveiled his cabinet Monday with fresh faces aplenty, new titles for some, and a prominent portfolio that no longer has a stand-alone ministry. No minister for mental health and addictions was named, with the health ministry now taking the lead on those issues.

Vancouver businesses hope 2024 Grey Cup will kick off big earnings

B.C.'s tourism ministry says it expects Grey Cup festivities to bring in 30,000 out-of-province fans and drive an economic boost of $125 million.

Vancouver cenotaph watches over Remembrance Day for 100th year

For the 100th year, Vancouver events honouring soldiers who fought for Canada are being held under the shadow of the Victory Square Cenotaph.

Wanted man reported missing after 2009 airport fire ruled dead, $9M in life insurance to be paid out

Almost fifteen years after flames tore through a northern B.C. airport hangar on a frigid winter day, the mystery of what happened to a man missing ever since — a man who held 16 life insurance policies worth millions and later faced sex assault charges in another province — has taken a possible final turn.

Judge doesn't swallow B.C. cow-share advocate's raw milk argument

A man's latest attempt to challenge B.C.'s rules on unpasteurized milk — also known as "raw milk" — was dismissed in the province's Supreme Court.

1,600-home housing project in Vancouver facing delays

The developer spearheading an over 1,600-home housing project in Vancouver's Oakridge neighbourhood — including 175 units of social housing — says it can't meet the timelines set by city council.

Vancouver Park Board wants to preserve Strathcona green space

Commissioners voted unanimously to declare their intention to preserve the space, at the corner of Gore Avenue and Union Street, under the park board's care and custody, then eventually turn it into a permanent park.

Cost of new Vancouver Art Gallery rises 50% to $600M

The price of building the new Vancouver Art Gallery has risen 50 per cent — from $400 million to $600 million — and the gallery’s CEO says multiple aspects of the project could be scaled back.

Chilliwack crash victims were 'giving, loving, fun,' father says

The deaths of Layna Brown and her son have sparked an outpouring of support from their community and donations of tens of thousands of dollars through an online fundraiser.

Residents demand changes to Chilliwack pond where girl drowned

Parent Jessica MacGillivray says the pond is too hidden by foliage for parents to adequately monitor very young children, who might be running around playing in a nearby waterpark.