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Free Press Head Start for Jan. 14, 2026

Good morning.

A Fort Richmond school is warning parents to check their children’s clothing and backpacks as it battles a cockroach infestation. Maggie Macintosh reports.

The city will soon install taller barriers on the upper floors of the Millennium Library to prevent further tragedies, several months after a shocking suicide. Joyanne Pursaga has the story.

— David Fuller

 

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Your forecast

Sunny. Wind from the north at 20 km/h gusting to 40 becoming light early this morning. Wind becoming south 20 this afternoon. High -14 C, wind chill -33 this morning and -22 this afternoon. Risk of frostbite. UV index 1 or low.


This past year was the third warmest on record and stood on the cusp of surpassing a major climate threshold globally, according to new data from the European climate agency.

The Copernicus data indicates 2025 was about 1.47 degrees warmer than pre-industrial levels, following the previous year’s record-setting 1.6 degrees. When 2023 is added to the mix, it’s the first three-year period on record to exceed 1.5 degrees, the data suggests. The Canadian Press has more here.

An aerial crew works on an out-of-control wildfire just north of Squamish, B.C., in June 2025. (Tijana Martin / The Canadian Press files)

An aerial crew works on an out-of-control wildfire just north of Squamish, B.C., in June 2025. (Tijana Martin / The Canadian Press files)

What’s happening today

🎭 Murder on the Orient Express opens tonight at Royal Manitoba Theatre Centre, 174 Market Ave.; showtimes and tickets available online. Ben Waldman has a preview here.

Murder on the Orient Express director Kelly Thornton and set designer Brian Perchaluk. (Ruth Bonneville / Free Press)

Murder on the Orient Express director Kelly Thornton and set designer Brian Perchaluk. (Ruth Bonneville / Free Press)

🍁 Prime Minister Mark Carney is in Beijing for a short but consequential visit, as China and Canada try to move past years of diplomatic tensions and Ottawa pushes to double non-U.S. trade by 2035. The Canadian Press reports.

Today’s must-read

Former Winnipeg Police Service constable Elston Bostock trafficked drugs, interfered with crime scenes, fixed traffic tickets for friends and other officers and shared confidential information that put the public in harm’s way during an eight-year run of criminality.

But in May 2021, when Bostock shared a cellphone photo he took of a partially naked woman who had died from a drug overdose, he earned “the unenviable distinction of being the only other officer (in Canada) to ever defile his badge in such a way,” Crown attorney Ari Millo told King’s Bench Justice Ken Champagne at a daylong sentencing hearing Tuesday.

That crime, Millo said, “represents a complete abdication of the professional duties of compassion (and) humanity expected of a police officer at a moment of profound human loss.” Dean Pritchard has the story.

(Mikaela MacKenzie / Free Press files)

(Mikaela MacKenzie / Free Press files)

On the bright side

One of the best-preserved ancient Roman homes on the Palatine Hill is opening to the public for the first time, albeit via a livestreamed tour of its hard-to-reach underground frescoes and mosaics.

The House of the Griffins was first discovered during the excavations in the early 20th century of the Palatine Hill, the verdant hill that rises up from the Roman Forum and dominates views of central Rome today with its striking red brick ruins.

The hill, located just off the Colosseum, was known for temples and homes of leading citizens during Rome’s Republican era, which is traditionally dated from 509 B.C. to 27 B.C. It became the aristocratic quarter during the Roman Empire that followed, when new palaces were built on top of the older homes. The Associated Press has more here.

Colosseum Archeological Park guide Valentina uses a head-mounted device to livestream a guided tour of the newly-restored underground House of Griffins. (Andrew Medichini / The Associated Press)

Colosseum Archeological Park guide Valentina uses a head-mounted device to livestream a guided tour of the newly-restored underground House of Griffins. (Andrew Medichini / The Associated Press)

On this date

On Jan. 14, 1935: The Winnipeg Free Press reported aviator Amelia Earhart completed the first solo flight from Hawaii to California, landing at Oakland. A plebiscite in the Saar region over whether it would rejoin Germany, become part of France, or remain under the jurisdiction of the League of Nations, showed voters overwhelmingly opt to rejoin Germany, despite vocal opposition from an anti-Nazi organization. Winnipeg saw its first set of triplets born in several years, two girls and a boy. 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:

‘Got to stick together’: Kinew implores Ford to keep Crown Royal on Ontario shelves

Manitoba premier proposes meeting at upcoming Jets game to settle dispute Read More

 

Scott Billeck:

Man charged in hate-graffiti spree arrested again after Crescentwood break-in

Winnipeg’s mayor says public safety must come first in decisions about releasing accused individuals, but stresses that protecting the public doesn’t mean ignoring mental-health issues or simply locking people away. Read More

 

Gabrielle Piché:

Province’s poverty reduction strategy doesn’t go far enough, critics say

The provincial government's new poverty reduction strategy plan targets three demographics to provide supports and resources — youth leaving the child welfare system, seniors, and children under five. Read More

 

Erik Pindera:

Too many drivers ignore impaired-driving warnings, Checkstop numbers show: police

Winnipeg Police Service officers found more than 100 drivers impaired behind the wheel after pulling over nearly 3,000 vehicles during their annual holiday checkstop campaign. Read More

 
 
 

New in Sports

Mike McIntyre:

Jets make it three in a row

Struggling squad suddenly making some noise Read More

 

Taylor Allen:

‘It was crazy that it was that close’

Team Lawes makes Scotties Tournament of Hearts final spot on points Read More

 

Ken Wiebe:

Bones is back

Former Jets bench boss Bowness returns to NHL as Blue Jackets head coach Read More

 

Joshua Frey-Sam:

‘It’s just been ridiculous’

Bisons volleyball squad has scrambling skills tested in injury-filled season Read More

 
 

New in Arts and Entertainment

AV Kitching:

Children’s Hospital to spruce up ward with local art

Local artists are being invited to create child-friendly nature-themed original artworks for the walls of CK5, the childhood cancer, blood disorders and transplants ward at the Health Sciences Centre Children’s Hospital. Read More

 

Musical acts announced for Festival du Voyageur

Dozens of local and national musicians are set to take the stage at Festival du Voyageur this year. Read More

 

Mark Kennedy, The Associated Press:

Scott Adams, whose comic strip ‘Dilbert’ ridiculed white-collar office life, dies at 68

Scott Adams, whose popular comic strip “Dilbert” captured the frustration of beleaguered, white-collar cubicle workers and satirized the ridiculousness of modern office culture until he was abruptly d... Read More

 
 

New in Business

Malak Abas:

City council committee votes in favour of airport-area development

A City of Winnipeg council committee has voted in favour of allowing the development of land along the airport’s edge, but what will go there remains up in the air. Multiple sources told the Free P... Read More

 

Catherine Morrison, The Canadian Press:

Statistics Canada to cut 850 jobs, 12 per cent of executive team

OTTAWA - Statistics Canada says it will be cutting around 850 of its staff along with 12 per cent of its executive team. Carter Mann, spokesperson for the national statistical agency,... Read More

 
 

Fresh opinions

Tom Brodbeck:

Measles can kill, and the message is far from loud and clear

By the time you read this, the province will probably have issued another measles update. If not today, maybe tomorrow. That’s how fast the disease is now spreading. Read More

 

Editorial:

Importing an idea from the state of Utah

Yes, we know there are very good reasons not to import things from the United States. Read More

 

Pam Frampton:

Telephone etiquette, then and now

Given the ubiquity of cellphones, how they have insinuated themselves into our lives and embedded themselves there, it’s no surprise that the lack of etiquette surrounding their use is a common pet peeve. Read More

 
 

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