Meagan Deuling

Journalist

Meagan Deuling is a reporter based in Revelstoke, B.C. She previously reported for CBC in Whitehorse, Hamilton and Iqaluit. Contact her at meagan.deuling@cbc.ca.

Latest from Meagan Deuling

Beekeepers concerned over B.C. city's proposed hive restrictions

Revelstoke's hobby beekeepers are concerned proposed new zoning bylaws could eliminate most backyard honeybee hives, but the city says they'll continue discussions this fall.

Ol' Frontier Restaurant in Revelstoke, B.C., destroyed by fire

The ‘Ol Frontier Restaurant in Revelstoke, B.C., burned to the ground early Saturday morning. The Western saloon-themed restaurant hadn’t been open since 2017, but rooms in the attached motel were nearly at capacity the night of the fire.

B.C. wildfire fighters remember Devyn Gale 1 year after her death

Devyn Gale, who was in her third season with the B.C. Wildfire Service when she died on July 13, 2023, is being remembered.

Proposed Revelstoke rental complex is first to use B.C. program

The Downie Street housing complex in Revelstoke is the first development to take place under B.C.'s redevelopment program, a strategy to use provincially owned assets — like vacant lots or under-used buildings — to develop more housing units.

Iqaluit to Sanikiluaq flight to take off as soon as COVID-19 dies down

The regular flight is a six-month pilot project meant to break Sanikiluaq's isolation.

Texas storm slows Iqaluit's sewer expansion

City needs more sewage capacity but it's too expensive and risky to expand it now.

Police surrounded Iqaluit residence to catch wanted man: RCMP

RCMP vehicles blocked the road in two places at the entrance to Tundra Valley, a residential neighbourhood in Iqaluit, early Wednesday afternoon.

'We want it back': Grise Fiord wants to run its own co-op

The government of Nunavut stepped in to manage the store in June, because there wasn't food on the shelves.

Addiction treatment centre opens in Ottawa for Ontario Inuit only

The government of Nunavut is working to create a contract so Inuit from Nunavut can access services at Mamisarvik, the only Inuit-specific addiction treatment centre in Canada.

New fee for Nunavut tourists intended to benefit Inuit

Half the money from a new fee will go to administer the fee program, half will go to local communities.