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Free Press Head Start for Aug. 6

Good morning.

Winnipeg’s new water bus service embarked on its maiden voyage Sunday, marking the first time the Red and Assiniboine rivers have been used for transit in six years.

Will Belford, co-owner of Winnipeg Waterways, estimated as many as 300 passengers tested out his company’s transportation service throughout the day. Tyler Searle reports.

— David Fuller

 

 

 

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Your forecast

Sunny, with increasing cloudiness this afternoon then 60 per cent chance of showers late this afternoon, with a risk of a thunderstorm. High 25 C, Humidex 27, UV index 7 or high.

What’s happening today

• Billy Idol performs at the Canada Life Centre at 8 p.m. Tickets are available on Ticketmaster.

• It’s the last day to check out Politically Drawn by Chris Chuckry at The Cre8ery, 125 Adelaide St. Reporter Ben Waldman previewed the gallery last week.

• Folklorama kicked off Sunday and continues until Aug. 10.

Artist Chris Chuckry turned his focus to political cartoons during the pandemic. (Mike Deal / Free Press files)

Artist Chris Chuckry turned his focus to political cartoons during the pandemic. (Mike Deal / Free Press files)

Today’s must-read

A former coach who sued Manitoba’s minor hockey authority has abandoned his lawsuit, saying expensive and challenging litigation forced him to accept an out-of-court settlement last month.

Plaintiff David Brown filed a motion to stop his case against Hockey Manitoba on July 24, court records show, ending his pursuit for a judicial review of the administrative body that governs minor hockey within the province.

Brown wanted a provincial judge to examine the organization to ensure its appeal processes are fair, reasonable and lawful. He claimed Hockey Manitoba unfairly upheld a St. Vital Minor Hockey Association decision to permanently ban him from coaching after a post-game dispute with a referee last year. Tyler Searle has the story.

David Brown has abandoned his lawsuit against Hockey Manitoba. (John Woods / Free Press)

David Brown has abandoned his lawsuit against Hockey Manitoba. (John Woods / Free Press)

On the bright side

The Karens are companions who were once co-presidents.

Karen Irvine and Karen Jack became friends through their volunteer work with the St. Vital Agricultural Society, which is holding its flagship event — the St. Vital Agricultural Fair — this weekend.

The retirees, who have volunteered with the society for 15 and 25 years, respectively, even served as co-presidents for a time. Both grew up on mixed farms — Irvine in Dauphin and Jack near Teulon — and both sought out the society and its annual fair when they moved to St. Vital decades ago. Aaron Epp has more here.

Karen Jack, left, and Karen Irvine are longtime volunteers with The St. Vital Agricultural Society. (Ruth Bonneville / Free Press)

Karen Jack, left, and Karen Irvine are longtime volunteers with The St. Vital Agricultural Society. (Ruth Bonneville / Free Press)

On this date

On Aug. 6, 1923: The Manitoba Free Press reported former Winnipeg mayor R.D. Waugh had been appointed chairman of the Manitoba Liquor Control Commission. In Sydney, N.S., two people took a wrong turn in a road and drove over a 75-foot cliff into the Atlantic Ocean before being rescued at daybreak. In Marion, Ohio, close friends of recently deceased U.S. president Warren Harding estimated the value of his estate around US$700,000. 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

Tyler Searle:

Folklorama prepares for planned Israel pavilion protest

A group of pro-Palestine protesters is planning to demonstrate outside the Israel Folklorama pavilion this week as war wages on in the Middle Eastern states. Supporters of Palestine have protested ... Read More

 

Jura McIlraith:

National organ-donation program improves transplant odds for hardest-to-match patients

A national organ-sharing program has turned bleak odds to brighter days for 52 Manitobans who’ve received desperately needed kidneys over the past 11 years. The Canadian Blood Services’ Highly Sens... Read More

 

Aaron Sousa, The Canadian Press:

Trudeau meets officials, evacuees following Jasper wildfire

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau visited Hinton, Alta., to get a briefing on the status of the Jasper wildfire, as well as meet with the province’s premier and evacuees who fled the blaze that destroyed a third of the town. Read More

 

Colleen Long, Zeke Miller, Steve Karnowski, Will Weissert And Seung Min Kim, The Associated Press:

Harris introduces new running mate Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz as the ‘vice president America deserves’

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Kamala Harris introduced Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz to the nation at a raucous rally Tuesday in battleground Pennsylvania that was aimed at building momentum for the ne... Read More

 
 
 

New in Sports

Danielle Da Silva:

Two-time Olympian Winnipegger Kelsey Wog content with achievements, plans to retire

PARIS — Kelsey Wog isn’t one to boast, but the two-time Olympian has good reason to be proud. On Monday, the 25-year-old Winnipeg swimmer marked her official retirement from international competiti... Read More

 

Zoe Pierce:

Fish fight back to earn series split

The Winnipeg Goldeyes were determined not to drop the series against the division-leading Sioux Falls Canaries in the hunt for the top spot in the West — and thanks to a five-run sixth inning, the Fish earned the series-split in a 9-3 comeback victory Monday night. Read More

 

Morgan Lowrie, The Canadian Press:

Canadian Olympic Committee pulls accreditation from De Grasse coach Rana Reider

PARIS - The Canadian Olympic Committee said Tuesday it has revoked accreditation from the coach of six-time Olympic medal-winning sprinter Andre De Grasse, citing "new information" that... Read More

 

Mike Sawatzky:

Sisters Sara and Kate Manness aim for national U18 hockey team in Kitchener

It’s early August and sisters Sara and Kate Manness, Manitoba’s top NCAA prospects for 2025-26, are never far from the rink. The fraternal twins from La Salle, who turn 17 on Sept. 26, leave Sunday... Read More

 
 

New in Arts and Entertainment

Thandi Vera:

Rolling circus

Festival brings together active transportation and environmental performance art Read More

 

Deborah Schnitzer:

Hard of hearing, hard of listening aided by acceptance

Hearing aids. I did not want to get them. I looked at the increasing number of medications redefining what had been my junk drawer, the health-care appointments spreading through my daybook, felt the fatigue that is part of conversations with third-act friends facing the not-so-delicate disintegration of various internal systems. Read More

 

The Canadian Press:

Thousands storm fences at free weekend Billy Talent concert in Port Colborne, Ont.

PORT COLBORNE, Ont. – Niagara Regional Police say several thousand people pushed through the fences at a free Billy Talent concert in Port Colborne, Ont., on Saturday. Municipal officials say the venue at H. H. Knoll Park had reached capacity just before 9:30 p.m., at which point police decided to close the surrounding fences. Police say in a statement today that a crowd of about 4,000 to 5,000 people outside the fences then pushed through the perimeter, challenging officers and security guards and leaving one officer with minor injuries. Billy Talent performs at the Danforth Music Hall, in Toronto on […] Read More

 
 

New in Business

Ian Bickis, The Canadian Press:

Potential China EV tariffs welcomed by GM Canada as BYD looks to enter market

The potential of tariffs on Chinese electric vehicle imports is being welcomed by the Canadian head of General Motors as major producer BYD looks to enter the market. “We'... Read More

 

Elaine Kurtenbach, The Associated Press:

What are carry trades and how did they contribute to this week’s global market mayhem?

BANGKOK (AP) — The mayhem that swept across world markets this week was partly caused by a market strategy known as the “carry trade.” Japan’s benchmark Nikkei 225 plunge... Read More

 
 

Fresh opinions

Dan Lett:

End of honeymoon for NDP government fast approaching

Welcome to the unofficial, unscientific beginning of the end of the honeymoon for Premier Wab Kinew and his NDP government. Read More

 

Rochelle Squires:

Changing the approach to family violence

Nearly half of the women in this country have experienced intimate partner violence at some point in their lives. The number is even higher for Indigenous women — more than 60 per cent — and women living in rural areas are almost twice as likely to face domestic violence than those living in urban areas. Read More

 

Editorial:

Legal assistance should be required

There are two sides to every story. Sometimes three. Sometimes, more. And when you’re doing something as important as holding an inquest into a fatal shooting by police — making recommendations to try to prevent similar deaths in the future — it’s necessary to ensure all of those sides are heard. Read More

 
 

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