Fire destroyed the gymnasium and A-Wing in November 2024. More than 17 months later, the Province has not approved a Treasury Board submission, has not disclosed a project cost, and has not set an occupancy date. Approximately 922 students continue to be impacted by the loss of these spaces.
“Confirm Treasury Board approval of the Carihi Secondary gymnasium rebuild in the 2026–27 capital cycle, and approve hybrid prefab construction methodology to compress the construction timeline, as was done for Hazel Trembath Elementary.”
One ask. Same words. Every letter, every speech, every media quote, until it’s answered.
On November 21, 2024, a fire destroyed the A-Wing at Carihi Secondary School, including the gymnasium, drama room, teaching kitchen, multi-purpose room, and adjacent spaces. The cause was accidental and confirmed by investigation in December 2024.
Seventeen months later, the Province has acknowledged the rebuild but has not released a Treasury Board funding commitment, a confirmed project budget, or a target occupancy date. The District has submitted its Project Request and the Ministry has acknowledged it. The decision now sits at Treasury Board.
Fire crews responded to 350 Dogwood Street the night of November 21, 2024. The blaze destroyed the A-Wing: the main competition gym, PE teaching space, weight room, change rooms, drama, teaching kitchen, and adjacent classrooms.
The investigation, completed in December 2024, found the cause to be accidental: spontaneous combustion involving cooking oils on fabrics, residual heat after laundering, and inadequate ventilation. There was no criminal cause and no negligence finding.
Framing note: the fire was an accident, so there is no one to blame. That removes a common political excuse for delay. The only remaining question is how quickly the Province chooses to act.
Carihi is not stuck because anyone opposes the rebuild. It is stuck for structural reasons in BC's capital planning system:
No disaster-recovery lane. The provincial capital process runs on five-year planning cycles and has no separate emergency-rebuild stream. A gym destroyed by fire enters the same queue as a seismic upgrade planned years in advance.
Treasury Board is the bottleneck. The Ministry of Education can support the project all it wants. Funding authority rests with Treasury Board, which balances Carihi against hospitals, highways, and housing competing for the same capital pool. Without sustained public pressure, the political cost of delay is near zero.
A four-year high school window is short and formative. At the current pace, students will graduate having spent their entire high school career without a functioning gymnasium, drama space, or central assembly room. They will also miss the extracurricular opportunities that are meant to define adolescence.
Lost time in physical education, performing arts, and community gathering cannot be recovered. Every additional month of delay compounds the harm to students already in school today.
Port Coquitlam · School District 43
Campbell River · School District 72
Capital decisions track sustained, organised public pressure. Every signature, letter, and meeting raises the political cost of inaction, until the decision is made.
Add your name on Change.org. Signatures are forwarded to the Minister of Infrastructure, the Minister of Finance (Treasury Board Chair), the MLA for North Island, and the SD72 board.
Sign on Change.org ↗A personalised letter that names a child, a club, or a specific impact counts as a unique constituent contact. Form letters get counted as one signature; personal letters get a response.
SD72 public board meetings are open to anyone in the community. Showing up, and bringing neighbours, coaches, and parents, keeps Carihi on the agenda.