Inside Tumbler Ridge: A Local Journalist on the Worst School Shooting in Canadian History
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On February 10, 2026, the peaceful mountain town of Tumbler Ridge, British Columbia faced the worst school shooting in Canadian history. In minutes, eight lives were taken at the community’s only secondary school and at the shooter's home, two more were critically injured, and the town was thrust into a nightmare no one could have imagined.
In this episode of the Wildfires, Floods and Chaos Communications Podcast, host Tim Conrad speaks with Trent Ernst, publisher of The Tumbler RidgeLines and a long‑time resident who found himself reporting on an unimaginable tragedy in the community he calls home.
Support Trent and the Tumbler RidgeLines: https://www.communicationspodcast.com/help/
Trent shares:
- The moment he realized something was terribly wrong
- What it was like to be the only local journalist on scene
- How national and international media descended on the town
- The tension between respectful reporting and harmful intrusion
- The emotional toll on a tight‑knit community of 2,500 people
- How Tumbler Ridge’s identity, history, and resilience shaped its response
- The importance of community connection in the days that followed
This episode is not about the shooter. It is about community, loss, responsibility, and the people who remain.
What You’ll Learn
- How small communities experience and process mass‑casualty events
- The role and limits of local journalism during crisis
- Why ethical communication matters when trauma is fresh
- How responders, media, and outsiders can support or harm a grieving town
- The deep emotional impact on those who both report on and live through tragedy
Content Warning
This episode discusses a school shooting, loss of life, and trauma. Listener discretion is advised.
CHAPTERS
Time | Chapter
| 00:00 | Opening: The tragedy of February 10, 2026
| 00:27 | The victims and the first hours of confusion
| 01:18 | The peaceful identity of Tumbler Ridge
| 01:43 | Introducing guest - journalist and community member Trent Ernst
| 02:10 | “Something’s up at the school” - The first alert
| 02:33 | Arriving on scene and realizing the severity
| 03:18 | The emergency alert and early uncertainty
| 03:45 | Observing police response and waiting for clarity
| 04:37 | Leaving to recharge and regroup
| 05:06 | The moment the deaths were confirmed
| 05:28 | “The bottom fell out” - Emotional shock in a peaceful town
| 06:03 | Why community stories matter more than sensational headlines
| 07:12 | What Tumbler Ridge is really like: history, identity, and resilience
| 08:15 | The mining town that refused to disappear
| 09:11 | How the town became a true community
| 10:23 | Falling in love with the land and the people
| 12:27 | The two types of residents and what binds them
| 13:38 | Life in a remote, slow‑paced northern town
| 15:17 | Trails, nature, and the quiet beauty of the region
| 16:06 | The dinosaur tracks story
| 17:36 | Why Tumbler Ridge is a hidden Canadian treasure
| 18:24 | The influx of media after the shooting
| 19:45 | Doing interviews while trying to stay connected to the community
| 20:35 | The community centre becomes a healing hub
| 21:27 | Ethical vs. unethical media behaviour
| 22:45 | The backlash against intrusive reporters
| 23:39 | How tragedy reshaped Trent’s sense of connection
| 24:41 | Remembering that community matters most
| 26:03 | How locals treated Trent differently from outside media
| 27:01 | Respecting boundaries and letting people choose to speak
| 28:02 | The weight of knowing everyone in a small town
| 29:01 | Being both a reporter and a neighbour
| 29:20 | The conversations that now always lead back to “What happened?”
Visit www.communicationspodcast.com for more detailed show info including photos and videos.