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Free Press Head Start for March 5

Good morning.

The 2023 provincial election saw some big-spending winners and losers, with one candidate raking in more than $100,000 in contributions and others succeeding with zero donations, Elections Manitoba disclosures show. Carol Sanders reports.

A new report recommends Manitoba set up a long-term capital fund to create 1,000 additional social housing units every year for at least a decade. Katie May has the story.

— David Fuller

 

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Your forecast

Sunny, with a mix of sun and cloud this afternoon and wind up to 15 km/h. High -9 C, wind chill -27 this morning and -12 this afternoon.

Icy road conditions are resulting in bus service to schools in some divisions being cancelled. See this map, then click on the relevant school division to see announcements of school closures in that area.

What’s happening today

In the U.S., it’s Super Tuesday, when voters in 16 different states and one territory will be choosing who they want to run for president. Some states are also choosing who should run for governor or senator for their state, and some district attorneys, too. Donald Trump won the North Dakota Republican presidential caucuses on Monday, adding to his string of victories heading into Super Tuesday.

From left: U.S. President Joe Biden, former president Donald Trump and Republican presidential candidate  Nikki Haley (The Associated Press files)

From left: U.S. President Joe Biden, former president Donald Trump and Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley (The Associated Press files)

The Winnipeg Jets host the Seattle Kraken at Canada Life Centre, starting at 7 p.m.

Today’s must-read

The Manitoba government spent nearly 19 times more money to make proof-of-immunization cards during the COVID-19 pandemic than it does on paper health cards. It cost $1.67 to produce each plastic credential. The price tag of making a permanent health card is less than 10 cents.

New data shows the rollout of temporary passports equipped with QR codes — an incentive to get two vaccine doses — cost approximately $6.2 million. Maggie Macintosh has the story.

The Manitoba Immunization Card (Kevin King / Pool)

The Manitoba Immunization Card (Kevin King / Pool)

On the bright side

Scientists have created miniorgans from cells floating in the fluid that surrounds a fetus in the womb – an advance they believe could open up new areas of prenatal medicine.

Miniorgans, or “organoids,” are tiny simplified structures that can be used to test new medical treatments or study how the real organs they mimic work, whether they are healthy or diseased. The Associated Press reports.

This microscope image shows an intestinal organoid with its distinctive 'bud' structure, created from cells collected from amniotic fluid. (Giuseppe Calà, Paolo De Coppi, Mattia Gerli via The Associated Press)

This microscope image shows an intestinal organoid with its distinctive ‘bud’ structure, created from cells collected from amniotic fluid. (Giuseppe Calà, Paolo De Coppi, Mattia Gerli via The Associated Press)

On this date

On March 5, 1932: The Winnpeg Free Press reported the former chauffeur of famed aviator Charles Lindbergh was arrested in connection with the kidnapping of Lindbergh’s infant son. The Manitoba legislature passed legislation aimed at helping farmers, by making feed grain for livestock and sowing seed for 1932 crops availabe through loans guaranteed by the province. 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

Dean Pritchard:

Judge, lawyer argument leads to rare contempt of court

A lawyer for a city doctor suing the Women’s Health Clinic was taken into custody last week after a heated exchange with a judge in an “extremely rare” case of contempt of court. The courtroom set-... Read More

 

Joyanne Pursaga:

Expected $7-M city deficit nearly disappears in December to remember

Winnipeg’s financial status greatly improved at the end of last year, though considerable work remains to boost its pandemic-depleted rainy-day fund. The city ended 2023 with a shortfall just shy o... Read More

 

Erik Pindera:

City sues owner of long-vacant south Osborne apartment block, historic downtown house

The city is taking the owner of a controversial long-vacant south Osborne Street building to court. The property at 270 Morley Ave., known as the Rubin Block, is a three-storey, 21-suite apartment ... Read More

 
 
 

New in Sports

Taylor Allen:

Perfect start for Carruthers

Manitoba champion rising to the challenge at the Brier Read More

 

Joshua Frey-Sam:

Winnipeg filmmaker follows his heart to award-winning series

Outdoor hockey stories earn international recognition Read More

 

Ken Wiebe:

Perfetti’s reality check

Being scratched, ‘One of the worst feelings I’ve ever felt,’ says Jets forward Read More

 

Mike Sawatzky:

Whirlwind Holod No. 1 with a bullet

Stonewall forwardtops annual Free Press varsity boys top 10 coaches’ poll Read More

 
 

New in Arts and Entertainment

Alan Small:

At home on the road

Former Great Big Sea frontman happy to be out touring again with new solo record Read More

 

Alan Small:

Nostalgia acts take crowd on journey back to the 1980s

There’s plenty of truth in the phrase “soundtrack to our lives,” which rock acts use as a justification to keep touring decades after their songs topped the charts. Bands such as Journey and Toto s... Read More

 

Jen Zoratti:

Obituary: Architect Antoine Predock was a key contributor to Winnipeg's skyline

Antoine Predock, the design architect of the Canadian Museum for Human Rights and a major contributor to the modern Winnipeg skyline, has died. He was 87. The American architect’s winning design for the CMHR — which he described as “carved into the earth and dissolving into the sky” — was selected in a juried architectural competition, one of Canada’s largest, launched by Friends of the CMHR in 2003. The museum opened to the public in 2014. “My life in architecture has been an extraordinary adventure, culminating in the privilege of being selected to design the Canadian Museum for Human Rights. […] Read More

 
 

New in Business

Gabrielle Piché:

No website, generations of neighbourhood service

Corydon Hardware to shutter after more than seven decades in business Read More

 

Martin Cash:

Price Industries casts eyes on four-year, AI-enabled partnership

The low-hanging fruit for manufacturers benefiting from automation and robotics is in mass-produced products. However, for companies with many different products sold in smaller volumes, advanced manufacturing solutions are harder to attain. Read More

 
 

Fresh opinions

Dan Lett:

Lessons from Manitoba on Poilievre’s parental rights gamble

It is certain now that Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre will officially carry the anti-LGBTTQ+ parental rights banner into the next federal election. Is this a strategic decision that will further... Read More

 

Editorial:

A politician from a different age

By now, most Canadians who follow the news will have read the legion of obituaries for Brian Mulroney, Canada’s prime minister from 1984 to 1993. Read More

 

Rochelle Squires:

Commit to protecting kids online

The sexual exploitation of children and youth is deemed an international crisis and the subject of movies set in far-off places like Colombia and Thailand, but one only needs to look in our own backyard to find evidence of this heinous crime. Read More

 
 

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