Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Regional districts came into being via an order of government in 1965 with the enactment of amendments to the Municipal Act. [1] Until the creation of regional districts, the only local form of government in British Columbia were incorporated municipalities, and services in areas outside municipal boundaries had to be sought from the province or through improvement districts.
Add {{British Columbia regional districts map|map=Census divisions BC.png}} in articles pertaining Regional districts of British Columbia. The map parameter is optional, it can be changed with equal map images, the default is Census divisions BC.png. A regional district map with linked labels will be rendered.
This is a list of land districts of British Columbia, Canada.Land districts are the cadastral system underlying land titles in the province, and used by the provincial gazetteer in descriptions of landforms, administrative areas, and other information.
1.5 District 4 - Delaware, District of Columbia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia 1.6 District 5 - Colorado, New Mexico, Utah, Wyoming 1.7 District 6 - Arkansas, Oklahoma, Texas
The Ministry of Tourism also has a system of tourism regions, and the Ministry of Industry, Trade and Small Business Development divides the province into development regions, with BC Stats using a different regionalization system than that of Statistics Canada, which uses regional district boundaries to organize its data.
This is a list of the 93 provincial electoral districts (also informally known as ridings in Canadian English) of British Columbia, Canada, as defined by the 2021 electoral redistribution.
The BC Supreme Court sits in eight judicial districts. The judicial districts of the British Columbia Supreme Court have the same boundaries of the counties of the former county court. That is the only use of county in the British Columbian government, which is a reference only to such court districts and has no similarity to the meaning in the ...
The British Columbia projectionists' union refused to teach her, as projection was considered to be a man's profession. [1] Across the border in Washington state, she again faced an all-male union that refused to teach her. Instead, Watkis convinced a friend who worked at a local theatre to explain the techniques for projecting films without ...