Winnipeg Free Press | Newsletter
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Free Press Head Start for June 7
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Good morning.
Northbound and southbound lanes on Main Street are closed to all traffic this morning between Kilbride and Hartford avenues, according to the Winnipeg Police Service.
The City of Winnipeg says it is not responsible for conducting a workplace investigation into the death of an international student who was hit by a contract snowplow operator hired last December, but says it is the responsibility of the independent contractor. Erik Pindera reports.
Three people facing charges of first-degree murder in the killing of in Trevor Dorion have, in a plea bargain with prosecutors, agreed to admit to manslaughter and were sentenced to 12 years, 14 years and eight years in prison, respectively. Dean Pritchard has the story.
And a spike in work-related injury and illness claims among City of Winnipeg staff comes amid concerns over some relatively new dangers on the job, according to the head of its largest union. Joyanne Pursaga reports.
— David Fuller
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Your forecast
A mix of sun and cloud with a 30 per cent chance of showers this morning, and a risk of a thunderstorm this afternoon. Expected high is 29 C, low 18, with a humidex of 33 and UV index of 9 or very high.
What’s happening today
The Bank of Canada is set to announce its interest rate decision this morning as speculation about another rate hike heats up. The Canadian Press reports.

(Sean Kilpatrick / The Canadian Press files)
Today’s must-read
Autopac customers paid $19,000 for the chief information and technology officer of Manitoba Public Insurance — who has since quit — to commute to Winnipeg from his home in Ontario over the past eight months. Danielle Da Silva has the story.

Chief information and technology officer Siddhartha Parti resigned from Manitoba Public Insurance Friday. (Mikaela MacKenzie / Winnipeg Free Press files)
On this date
On June 7, 1951: The Winnipeg Free Press reported a bomb threat to the Playhouse theatre forced police intervention at a public meeting held by city alderman Jacob Penner and sent 600 people rushing to the exits; Penner had just returned from a five-week visit to the Soviet Union and various European countries and was speaking on his experiences. No bomb was found on the premises. Two British foreign office officials, mysteriously missing from their posts in London since May 25, were the subject of an international police search in western European capitals; the pair were rumoured to be heading for Moscow. Read the rest of this day’s paper here. Search our archives for more here.

Today’s front page
Get the full story: Read today’s e-edition of the Free Press.

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Fresh opinions
Editorial:
A complicated election in Turkey
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who won re-election on May 28 for a new five-year term, is a useful but difficult ally for Canada and the other western democracies. His nation of 85 million is a military and industrial great power in the Middle East region but he is not much interested in the secular ideals and liberal values that propelled Turkey’s modernization in the 20th century.
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Erna Buffie:
Trees fall, while bylaws fail
I was relieved when the city applied for and received money from the federal Two Billion Tree Fund to catch up on our 80 per cent tree replacement backlog. I was over the moon when I read that replanting public trees on a two-to-one ratio and pruning them on a seven-year cycle were part of the city’s new strategic priorities.
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