Head Start
Winnipeg Free Press Logo
 

Free Press Head Start for Aug. 31

Good morning.

After a four-month struggle to evict a tenant, Kerri Stephens believes she will have no choice but to sell her house once she spends thousands to repair the damage, including getting rid of cockroaches, animal feces and garbage.

The first-time landlord is warning others about her experience, after feeling powerless while navigating official channels to regain lawful possession of the property near St. Malo, about 60 kilometres south of Winnipeg. Chris Kitching has the story.

— David Fuller

 

Advertisement

 

Your forecast

A mix of sun and cloud with a 30 per cent chance of showers this morning and this afternoon; risk of a thunderstorm. Expected high is 28 C, humidex 30 and UV index 6 or high. Wind south 40 km/h gusting to 60 becoming southwest 20 gusting to 40 late this afternoon.

What’s happening today

Singer-songwriter Taylor Janzen will play a farewell concert with Boniface at the WECC tonight at 8 p.m., before heading to Nashville with her partner Ben and their border collie Lewis in September. For ticket information, click here.

Taylor Janzen  (Lindsay Blane photo)

Taylor Janzen (Lindsay Blane photo)

Today’s must-read

Some high school students could be on the road legally without passing a driving test, as Manitoba Public Insurance scrambles to restore priority services while its employees are on strike. Students who have already completed MPI’s driver education program will be issued a Class 5 licence without having to pass a road test in an attempt to prevent a backlog in testing.

Meanwhile, Lek Kinnarath, the owner of Maple Leaf Driving School, said the Driver Z program alone isn’t sufficient to get them road-ready. “It’s definitely unsafe for them to just get their licence without having a proper test…. I’m strongly opposed to that,” he said.

Malak Abas has the story here.

(Mike Thiessen / Winnipeg Free Press)

(Mike Thiessen / Winnipeg Free Press)

On the bright side

A nearly 200-year-old West Point time capsule that appeared to yield little more than dust when it was opened during a disappointing livestream contained hidden treasure after all, the U.S. Military Academy said Wednesday. It was just more hidden than expected.

The lead box believed to have been placed by cadets in the base of a monument actually contained six silver American coins dating from 1795 to 1828 and a commemorative medal. The Associated Press reports.

West Point archeologist Paul Hudson displays an 1800 Draped Bust Dollar. (U.S. Military Academy at West Point via The Associated Press)

West Point archeologist Paul Hudson displays an 1800 Draped Bust Dollar. (U.S. Military Academy at West Point via The Associated Press)

On this date

On Aug. 31, 1965: The Winnipeg Free Press reported in Santo Domingo, the military junta government of the Dominican Republic resigned. Ninety-nine people were feared dead after an avalanche near Mattmark, Switzerland. In Ottawa, a study concluded a nationwide medical care plan for Canada could be carried out with an administrative cost one-third that of private carriers. Prime minister Lester Pearson appeared on the brink of calling a fall election, but no official word had been given. In Winnipeg, 250 employees at the Fort Garry Hotel could go on strike if the Canadian National Railway refused to pay the Canada Labour Code minimum wage of $1.25 an hour. 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.

 
 

Advertisement

 

Top news

Katie May:

Charity sues to collect deceased Manitoban’s promised but allegedly stolen donation

A national charity has launched a legal battle after a Manitoban’s promised posthumous gift never arrived. The Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada is going after nearly $400,000 it says was stole... Read More

 

Joyanne Pursaga:

Province preventing city-ordered post-fire rubble cleanup, frustrated Main Street property owner says

Unsightly rubble left by a fire that destroyed three Main Street businesses last February is finally being cleaned up at two of the properties. The owner of the third, however, claims a dispute wit... Read More

 

Maggie Macintosh:

LRSD moves trustee meeting online to ‘de-escalate tension’

The Louis Riel School Division is moving its inaugural board meeting of 2023-24 online in anticipation of conflict between two protests — one of which will demand trustees “stop promoting sexual orientation and gender ideology.” Read More

 
 
 

New in Sports

Jeff Hamilton:

Containing Riders QB a tall order

Bombers league-leading defence faces green giant Dolegala in Labour Day Classic Read More

 

Jeff Hamilton:

Castillo pursues perfection

Bombers kicker puts disappointing performance against Als in past Read More

 

Joshua Frey-Sam:

‘The biggest win of my life’

Winnipeg teen takes gold at international high diving meet Read More

 
 

New in Arts and Entertainment

Ben Sigurdson, Alan Small, Eva Wasney, Jen Zoratti:

What’s up: Concert at Good Will, tasty staycation and sunset yoga

Fold Paper to rock the Good Will with pals Friday, Sept. 1, doors at 8 p.m. Good Will Social Club, 625 Portage Ave. Tickets $10 plus in advance online, $15 at the door On Friday, local post-punk... Read More

 

Skyler Trepel:

Rapper brings whole lotta hope to town

Vulnerable NF opens up about mental health during emotional set Read More

 

Jake Coyle, The Associated Press:

Movie Review: Denzel Washington’s vigilante battles the Italian mafia in ‘Equalizer 3’

There's an awful lot of talk about the end of movie stars considering Denzel Washington is right over here, walking around. Antoine Fuqua's “Equalizer 3," a taut and textu... Read More

 
 

New in Business

Martin Cash:

Net benefit to the community

Entrepreneurs pitch their companies to North Forge Angel Network Read More

 

Amanda Stephenson, The Canadian Press:

Air Canada slashing routes out of Calgary

CALGARY - Air Canada is slashing six major routes out of Calgary this winter, in part due to an industry-wide pilot shortage that the carrier says threatens its "overall operational stability." The... Read More

 

Mia Rabson, The Canadian Press:

Federally funded EV chargers slow to launch: data

OTTAWA - Two different federal infrastructure programs have provided funding for more than 43,000 electric vehicle chargers since 2016, but fewer than one in five of them are actually o... Read More

 
 

Fresh opinions

Editorial:

Anti-vax for Spot and Rover

It’s the kind of misinformation that eventually kills, and it’s mind-boggling in its stupidity. Read More

 

Dan Lett:

Parties can’t suddenly save Manitoba’s ailing health-care system

Who will save us from the saviours of health care? Every major political party in this election — including the incumbent Progressive Conservatives — have either said, or are likely to say, they ha... Read More

 

Charles Adler:

Affordable housing — or else

Let’s begin with a fact of life that most Canadians are unaware of — about 800,000 foreign students are now living in Canada. Read More

 
 

Share:

     
 

Download our News Break app