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Free Press Head Start for March 14

Good morning.

A private consultant’s report on Arlington Bridge that was expected last month, after a year of study, to help city councillors decide whether to repair or replace the old and decaying bridge, has been delayed until the fall, the city confirmed Wednesday. Kevin Rollason reports.

The owner of the Manwin Hotel has fired back at its neighbour, the Main Street Project, after it filed a lawsuit alleging poor upkeep of the old hotel. Erik Pindera has the story.

— David Fuller

 

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Your forecast

Mainly cloudy, with 30 per cent chance of flurries this morning and early this afternoon. Wind up to 15 km/h. High 1 C, wind chill -5 this morning.

What’s happening today

At McNally Robinson Booksellers’ Grant Park location at 7 p.m., Free Press investigative reporter Katrina Clarke will play host to Trent University’s Mandi Gray, who will launch Suing for Silence: Sexual Violence and Defamation Law (UBC Press). The book explores how defamation suits have been used to silence those who disclose sexual violence. For more information, click here.

Today’s must-read

An alliance of community organizations wants Winnipeg to follow other North American cities and put non-emergent and non-violent mental health calls into the hands of crisis workers, rather than police.

The Police Accountability Coalition said a community-led crisis response should be the default instead of a “police-first” approach, believing it will help to prevent deaths or other negative outcomes.

“It doesn’t need to end in death,” coalition member Kate Kehler said at a news conference Wednesday. “That’s what the worst-case scenario is, but the ongoing harm of somebody who needs help just getting the same response over and over again, feeling completely demoralized and dehumanized by an authoritative approach, is a problem.” Chris Kitching has the story.

(Daniel Crump / Free Press files)

(Daniel Crump / Free Press files)

On the bright side

A new strategy to fight an extremely aggressive type of brain tumour showed promise in a pair of experiments with a handful of patients.

Scientists took patients’ own immune cells and turned them into “living drugs” able to recognize and attack glioblastoma. In the first-step tests, those cells shrank tumours at least temporarily, researchers reported Wednesday. The Associated Press reports.

This combination of MRI scan images shows the progress of a glioblastoma patient who received CAR-T therapy. (New England Journal of Medicine)

This combination of MRI scan images shows the progress of a glioblastoma patient who received CAR-T therapy. (New England Journal of Medicine)

On this date

On March 14, 1963: The Winnipeg Free Press reported legislation to be introduced in Manitoba would allow courts to decide in specific cases whether a child could be adopted by a family of another religion. Following an opening round of NATO talks in Paris, Britain was reportedly not planning to stymie a U.S. proposal for a seaborne NATO nuclear force. In Montreal, the chairman of the Human Rights Committee of the Canadian Labour Congress blasted two musical groups, in Ottawa and Winnipeg, for barring Black singers from participating. 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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Top news

Carol Sanders:

Manitoba to change school attendance law

Manitoba children will be required to attend school by age six, under legislation introduced Wednesday. The compulsory school age will be lowered from seven as of the 2025-26 school year, under Bil... Read More

 

Joyanne Pursaga:

Pool closure plan outcry puts pressure on looming budget vote

Mayor Scott Gillingham won’t rule out altering the City of Winnipeg budget to keep open one or more of the three pools it proposes to close — but stopped short of making any promises. Read More

 

Danielle Da Silva:

No changes to Filipino health-care worker recruitment program: NDP

The NDP government says no immediate changes are being considered to make it easier for Filipino health-care workers offered jobs in Manitoba hospitals and care homes to join the bedside. Read More

 

Julia-Simone Rutgers:

Concerns raised over mining exploration in caribou habitat

Manitoba’s efforts to champion its critical mineral sector may be putting one of the province’s most iconic species — the boreal woodland caribou — at risk. During the Prospectors and Developers As... Read More

 
 
 

New in Sports

Mike McIntyre:

Predators prey on lacklustre Jets

Late goals nothing but window-dressing as hosts outworked by motivated Nashville Read More

 

Taylor Allen:

Paddler feels for Harris

Canadian Olympic canoeist was exonerated after banned-substance Ligandrol found in her system Read More

 

Mike Sawatzky:

Lancers make quick work of Maroons

Garden City all that stands between two-time provincial AAAA varsity girls basketball champs and three-peat Read More

 
 

New in Arts and Entertainment

Alan Small:

State of mind

Artist’s emotional evolution revealed in latest works Read More

 

AV Kitching:

Winnipeg martial artist gets Dune actors into fighting shape

Winnipeg’s Alvin Catacutan has just seen the fruits of his labour come to life on the big screen after the recent release of Dune: Part Two. Now based in Los Angeles, the Filipino Martial Arts trai... Read More

 

Alan Small:

Winnipeg director went on to lead Royal Swedish Opera

Michael Cavanagh, who rose from Manitoba Opera’s children’s chorus to artistic director of one of Europe’s grandest opera companies, died Wednesday morning in London, Ont. Cavanagh, 62, had leptome... Read More

 

AV Kitching and Ben Sigurdson and Alan Small and Eva Wasney and Ben Waldman:

What’s up: Beyond the Beat, Hearts of Freedom, St. Patrick’s Day

Free Press staff recommends things to do this week Read More

 
 

New in Business

Martin Cash:

Wawanesa opens new headquarters

Expected to entice 1,300 people to become downtown regulars Read More

 

Didi Tang, The Associated Press:

How Chinese is TikTok? US lawmakers see it as China’s tool, even as it distances itself from Beijing

WASHINGTON (AP) — If some U.S. lawmakers have their way, the United States and China could end up with something in common: TikTok might not be available in either country. ... Read More

 
 

Fresh opinions

Editorial:

Premiers should keep thumb off scales of justice

Justice is supposed to be blind. That’s why statues of Lady Justice show her wearing a blindfold — because justice is supposed to be unbiased, and unaffected by the status, politics or appearance of those who stand accused before her. Read More

 

Dan Lett:

New MPI leadership stands in long shadow of old

Satvir Jatana is walking a very fine line. The newly appointed chief executive officer of Manitoba Public Insurance has been asked to clean up the mess left by predecessor Eric Herbelin by eliminat... Read More

 

Dr. Douglas Eyolfson:

Pharmacare: misconceptions and facts

Currently over one million Canadians do not have drug coverage that meets their needs. I see the direct consequences of this problem during almost every shift I work in the emergency department, where patients have become ill because they could not afford the medications they need in the community. Although the drugs with which patients are treated in hospitals are already covered, this is not necessarily the case outside of hospitals. Read More

 
 

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