Tuesday, July 8, 2025

When News Is Locked Away, Corruption Thrives — Why We Need a REAL Watchdog

 When News Is Locked Away, Corruption Thrives — Why We Need a REAL Watchdog

It’s no coincidence that the same communities hurt most by rising TransLink fares, delayed trains, and unchecked public-sector corruption are also the ones locked out of the news.

The Vancouver building inspector scandal — where a city official approved permits for his own construction company — is exactly the kind of story everyone should know. But many can’t read about it because of paywalls, endless ads, and confusing news sites.


The Problem

  • Major outlets put crucial investigative reports behind paywalls so only subscribers get the truth.
  • Ads and clutter make free news painful to read, especially for people without fast internet or expensive phones.
  • Most vulnerable people — the unhoused, low-income transit riders, and workers — can’t access the facts that affect their lives.

Why This Matters

  • When news is locked away, corruption thrives in silence.
  • The TransLink CEO can raise fares while earning $500K+, and the public won’t hear complaints because of limited coverage.
  • The building inspector can line his pockets without anyone watching.
  • No real watchdog means no real accountability.

What We Need

  • A true, independent watchdog empowered to investigate and expose public-sector abuses.
  • Transparent, open-access news that everyone can read, free of paywalls and ads.
  • A public informed enough to demand justice and fairness — from transit fares to city permits.

Call to Action

If you believe everyone deserves access to truth — regardless of income or internet speed — join us in pushing for:

  • Better public oversight and watchdog powers in BC.
  • Support for independent, accessible journalism.
  • Transparency from agencies like TransLink and city hall.

Because when the news is hidden, the powerful get away with lining their pockets — and the rest of us pay the price.


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