Friday, December 5, 2025 at 9:01 AM
By Jay Herrington
The 3rd Annual Wounded Warrior Charity Hockey Game hits the ice tonight at the Comox Valley Sports Centre.
This event pits the Comox Valley Glacier Kings against a group of local first responders from the Comox Valley RCMP, Courtenay, Comox, Oyster River and Cumberland Fire Departments, BC Wildfire Service, and 19 Wing Comox.
Things go from 6 to 8pm with the doors opening at 5pm.
Tickets are $16, or $12 for students & seniors, $8 for kids 5-11yrs & kids under 5 go free.
Advance tickets are available at Happy’s Source for Sports in Courtenay, the Comox Valley RCMP detachment & CANEX in Comox,.
They will also sell tickets at the door
The event has raised more than $42,000 in support of Wounded Warriors Canada, a nationally recognized organization & mental health service provider who is dedicated to serving ill & injured Trauma Exposed Professionals & their families.
This includes Military, Police, Fire Fighters, Paramedics, Corrections Officers & Health Care Workers.
To learn more, visit Wounded Warrior Charity Hockey Game.
Comox Valley RCMP is looking for help in finding a 37-year old man.
The Campbell River and North Island Transition Society is holding a Vigil at Spirit Square this afternoon.
Construction has officially kicked off for the Union Bay Fire Hall.
Comox Road and Comox Avenue will re-open to two-way traffic at 5:00 pm on Friday.
The Campbell River & District Chamber of Commerce Board of Directors has a new Membership Specialist.
The Mountainaire Avian Rescue Society’s (MARS) Winter Raffle fundraiser, ‘Bat to the Future, is on now through December 27th.
This is the 3rd Annual Wounded Warrior Charity Hockey Game. Game is Friday December 5th at 6:00PM (Doors open at 5) Over $42,000 has been raised over the past 2…
The Campbell River Shoebox Project for Women is back for another season on Vancouver Island! 
The word "éy7á7juuthem" means “Language of our People” and is the ancestral tongue of the Homalco, Tla’amin, Klahoose and K’ómoks First Nations, with dialectic differences in each community.
It is pronounced "eye-ya-jooth-hem."
Hockey News