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Free Press Head Start for Oct. 23

Good morning.

A Winnipeg man who has waited nearly six years for back surgery has decided he can wait no longer and plans to have it done in Germany. Kevin Rollason reports.

A one-time co-accused will be the key to identifying “the man behind the mask” who shot and killed a 19-year-old beer-vendor clerk, a judge was told this week. Dean Pritchard has the story.

Dan Lett takes a look at a civil trial that started this week, which pits a numbered company controlled by John Pearson, president of ICI Properties, against Shindico Realty Inc. “Although none of the allegations has been proven in court, documents filed to date, and the opening days of testimony, have the potential to damage Shindico, one of the city’s most powerful real estate developers,” he writes. Read more here.

— David Fuller

 

 

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Your forecast

Mainly cloudy, clearing late this morning, with wind becoming southwest at 20 km/h. High 11 C, wind chill -7 this morning. UV index 2 or low.

What’s happening today

Chilly Iceland is a hotbed of literary talent across a range of genres, and one of the Nordic country’s brightest stars visits Winnipeg tonight to launch his latest sweeping, epic novel. Jón Kalman Stefánsson will launch Your Absence Is Darkness, published in Canada in March by Biblioasis, at 7 p.m. at McNally Robinson Booksellers’ Grant Park location at an event co-presented by the Consulate General of Iceland in Winnipeg, the Icelandic Canadian Frón and Lögberg-Heimskringla.

Jón Kalman Stefánsson (Einar Falur Ingólfsson photo)

Jón Kalman Stefánsson (Einar Falur Ingólfsson photo)

Today’s must-read

Leaders in the city’s cannabis sector say retailers are increasingly suffering from smash-and-grab style break-ins, resulting in tens of thousands in stolen goods, damages and increased costs to consumers.

The issue was highlighted this week after police arrested two teens accused of targeting a pair of businesses in northeast Winnipeg.

“It is concerning how frequently these things are happening,” said Dawn Le Sage, inventory manager at Star Buds Cannabis. “It’s a massive loss.” Tyler Searle has the story.

Dawn Le Sage said Star Buds is exploring ways to increase security measures at its stores, but there are some barriers. (John Woods / Free Press)

Dawn Le Sage said Star Buds is exploring ways to increase security measures at its stores, but there are some barriers. (John Woods / Free Press)

On the bright side

A new report outlines six opportunities Manitoba has to become a global leader in the green economy.

Published by the Manitoba Chambers of Commerce, the 25-page document aims to provide an objective and research-based assessment of high-potential industry opportunities and to guide discussions with stakeholders to agree on and prioritize the best opportunities for the keystone province.

“Manitoba has a once-in-a-generation opportunity to position itself as a green economy powerhouse,” the report states. “Building upon our proud history of clean power, strong work ethic and business innovation, Manitoba brings many advantages to businesses looking to lower emissions and develop green solutions.” Aaron Epp has the story.

From left: Jack Winram (executive director of Manitoba Environmental Industries Association), Colleen Kuruluk (CEO at Efficiency Manitoba) and Fred Meier (president of RRC Polytech) participate in a panel discussion Tuesday moderated by Nick Gamble (Manitoba Chambers of Commerce). (Aaron Epp / Free Press)

From left: Jack Winram (executive director of Manitoba Environmental Industries Association), Colleen Kuruluk (CEO at Efficiency Manitoba) and Fred Meier (president of RRC Polytech) participate in a panel discussion Tuesday moderated by Nick Gamble (Manitoba Chambers of Commerce). (Aaron Epp / Free Press)

On this date

On Oct. 23, 1954: The Winnipeg Free Press reported in Paris, France and Germany agreed on a solution regarding the Saar region, clearing the way for the signing of treaties bringing an armed West Germany into the Atlantic alliance. Canadian consumers could be hit with millions of dollars in price increases depending on the conculsions of the tarrifs board in Ottawa, set to hold a hearing in November. Voters in St. Boniface overwhelmingly chose Joseph G. Van Belleghem for mayor. 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

Joyanne Pursaga:

Winnipeg to consider study to phase out natural gas

The city could soon study how to phase out natural gas heat at all Winnipeg buildings and swap in greener alternatives. A new motion seeks a city staff report to spell out tools and methods to ulti... Read More

 

Nicole Buffie:

MPI unveils recovery plan to regulator after years of financial strife

Manitoba Public Insurance has reorganized its management structure to improve its “internal alignment” in response to a government-ordered review that found its operations were top-heavy and highly dy... Read More

 

Erik Pindera:

‘Very unusual case’: Man loses suit but is awarded $100K after city acted ‘shabbily’

Despite dismissing a man’s lawsuit against the City of Winnipeg, a Manitoba judge has awarded him costs after finding municipal officials provoked and prolonged the litigation — then backed out of a p... Read More

 

Laura Osman, Rosa Saba and David Baxter, The Canadian Press:

Liberals attempt show of unity after tense caucus meeting with Trudeau

OTTAWA - Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told his MPs Wednesday that he would reflect on what they had to say in a three-hour caucus meeting where some Liberals confronted him about his l... Read More

 
 
 

New in Sports

Ken Wiebe:

Perfetti makes sure Jets remain perfect with three assists

ST. LOUIS - Another day, another way. The Winnipeg Jets once again overcame a deficit, though this one didn’t require any late-game heroics, but rather a three-goal outburst in the second period th... Read More

 

Jeff Hamilton:

Demski does things right

Veteran Bombers receiver makes teammates better through hard work and dedication to game Read More

 

Ken Wiebe:

Jets defence a work in progress

Steen off to a smooth start in Blues’ manager training program Read More

 
 

New in Arts and Entertainment

Eva Wasney:

Community’s kitchen

West End Somali-inspired restaurant cooks global, thinks local Read More

 

Jen Zoratti:

Dance company honours past, leaps to future

Something Old, something new. And lots of celebration, too. Winnipeg’s Contemporary Dancers’ 60th season, which begins Thursday, will offer a look at the past, present and future of Canada’s oldest and longest-running modern dance company, founded by Rachel Browne in 1964. Read More

 

The Associated Press:

ABBA, Radiohead and The Cure musicians sign AI protest letter against ‘unlicensed use’ of works

LONDON (AP) — Musicians from ABBA, Radiohead and The Cure have joined actors and authors in signing a protest letter against the mining of their artistry to build artificial intelligence tools. Thousands of artists signed the letter released Tuesday — the latest public warning about AI tools that can spit out synthetic images, music and writings after being trained on huge troves of human-made works. “The unlicensed use of creative works for training generative AI is a major, unjust threat to the livelihoods of the people behind those works, and must not be permitted,” says the petition. Winnipeg Free Press […] Read More

 
 

New in Business

Gabrielle Piché:

Ratio change draws divided reaction

One-to-one balance for Manitoba trades apprentices, journeypersons takes effect next week Read More

 

Martin Cash:

Civic forum seeks brighter spotlight for economic development

Chris Lorenc, longtime president of the Manitoba Heavy Construction Association and a former Winnipeg city councillor, has long held the belief growing the economy should be “job one” for every leader of government. Read More

 
 

Fresh opinions

Peter Denton:

Accepting diversity — far from a new concept

As we approach the end of hurricane season, another storm is brewing south of the border. It is an irony of history that the next U.S. presidential election is on Guy Fawkes Day. Read More

 

Tom Brodbeck:

Federal government unable to live within its means

So much for the federal government’s “fiscal guardrails.” The Trudeau government promised Canadians a year ago that it would cap its deficit at $40 billion and reduce it over time. However, just li... Read More

 

Editorial:

A penetrating insight into the obvious

There is, believe it or not, an arm of the federal government that’s making informed “blue-sky” predictions of what might be coming next. Well, more to the point, maybe their prognostication should be called “black-skying,” because what they’re actually trying to figure out is what sort of disasters are looming in Canada’s future. Read More

 
 

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