Human Ecology

Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.

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‘Extreme’ workouts drive spike in ‘rhabdo’ cases among young N.L. women, says doctor

The Canadian Press 3 minute read Preview
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‘Extreme’ workouts drive spike in ‘rhabdo’ cases among young N.L. women, says doctor

The Canadian Press 3 minute read Friday, Apr. 24, 2026

ST. JOHN'S - Intense workouts and social media pressure are driving a spike in rhabdomyolysis cases in young women in Newfoundland and Labrador, a physician with the province's health authority said Thursday.

Newfoundland and Labrador Health Services said it confirmed about 20 cases in the eastern part of the province in the past six months. Doctors typically expect to see a few cases a year, said Dr. Richard Barter, the clinical chief of emergency medicine in the authority's eastern urban zone.

"The cases that we've seen have been exclusively exertional rhabdomyolysis, and this is when a person takes their physical workouts to an extreme level," Barter said in an interview.

Rhabdomyolysis, or "rhabdo," occurs when muscle tissue is severely damaged and breaks down, leaking enzymes and other substances into the blood. The painful condition can cause urine to turn the colour of black tea and it can lead to kidney damage, Barter said.

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Friday, Apr. 24, 2026
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Consumers favouring combustion engine cars as interest in EVs wanes: report

Ritika Dubey, The Canadian Press 3 minute read Preview
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Consumers favouring combustion engine cars as interest in EVs wanes: report

Ritika Dubey, The Canadian Press 3 minute read Friday, Apr. 24, 2026

TORONTO - A new report shows consumers are increasingly favouring internal combustion engine cars for their next car purchase rather than an electric vehicle.

The latest EY mobility consumer index for 2025 shows only seven per cent of those planning to buy a car in the next 24 months intended to buy an EV, down from 15 per cent in the previous report from 2024.

Meanwhile, 58 per cent said they preferred an internal combustion engine vehicle, up from 44 per cent in 2024.

The report, published on Thursday, found 30 per cent of Canadians hoping to buy a car soon are delaying or reconsidering an EV purchase in light of recent geopolitical issues.

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Friday, Apr. 24, 2026
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Canada drops down to 25th place in world happiness rankings: report

Nicole Thompson, The Canadian Press 3 minute read Preview
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Canada drops down to 25th place in world happiness rankings: report

Nicole Thompson, The Canadian Press 3 minute read Friday, Apr. 24, 2026

TORONTO - Canada's happiness ranking slipped again last year, continuing a decade-long trend that's seen the country plummet from the 5th happiest in the world in 2014 to 25th in 2026.

The annual World Happiness Report from the Wellbeing Research Centre at the University of Oxford looked at how social media use might be affecting happiness on a population level, and found in some cases it was having an impact.

"There's probably no simple explanation as to why Canadians' view of happiness has been dropping. What this report suggests is that social media could be one part of this puzzle, but it doesn't seem like it's the full picture," said Felix Cheung, a happiness researcher at the University of Toronto, who reviewed two chapters in the report but did not write it.

Between 2023 and 2025, the timeframe the researchers used for this report, Canadians' life evaluations averaged at 6.741 out of 10. In Finland, the happiest country in the world for nine years running, the average was 7.764.

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Friday, Apr. 24, 2026
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Proactive planning for a future with more seniors

Editorial 4 minute read Preview
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Proactive planning for a future with more seniors

Editorial 4 minute read Thursday, Mar. 19, 2026

They’re supposed to be “the golden years.” But for many Manitobans in the ever-expanding 65-plus age bracket, life is anything but a warm and gentle journey toward a tranquil, glowing sunset.

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Thursday, Mar. 19, 2026
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Most Canadians want to ban or regulate algorithmic pricing, poll shows

Anja Karadeglija, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Preview
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Most Canadians want to ban or regulate algorithmic pricing, poll shows

Anja Karadeglija, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Friday, Apr. 24, 2026

OTTAWA - Most Canadians want the government to ban or regulate the use of algorithms to set prices, a new poll suggests — with half of respondents saying the practice is unfair because it can result in people paying different prices for the same product.

The Abacus Data poll, which was conducted online and can't be assigned a margin of error, surveyed 1,931 Canadians on algorithmic pricing.

The poll defined algorithmic pricing as the adjustment of prices in real time based on such factors as who is buying, the time of day and browsing behaviour.

Algorithmic pricing is already established in sectors like travel but has been expanding into other markets, such as retail and rental housing. It could, for example, lead to a retailer charging different prices for diapers online, depending on what it can glean about a shopper's habits.

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Friday, Apr. 24, 2026
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Ottawa contributes $91M to 10-storey Naawi-Oodena apartment block

Tyler Searle 4 minute read Preview
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Ottawa contributes $91M to 10-storey Naawi-Oodena apartment block

Tyler Searle 4 minute read Wednesday, Mar. 18, 2026

The federal government has announced $91 million to support the development of a 10-storey apartment building that’s under construction at the former Kapyong Barracks site.

“This is an exciting day, but it really marks the doors opening for future with a lot more affordable homes for people who need them the most,” said federal Housing Minister Gregor Robertson.

The project — named Endayaan Omaa, meaning “home is here” in the Anishinaabemowin language — will create 260 housing units in southwest Winnipeg; 109 units will offer affordable rents below median market value.

It is part of the larger plan to transform the former military site into Canada’s largest urban reserve. The overall project, led by a consortium of seven Treaty One Nations and dubbed Naawi-Oodena, is expected to provide about 5,000 homes.

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Wednesday, Mar. 18, 2026
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Government votes down autism strategy bill proposed by Liberal MLA

Gabrielle Piché 3 minute read Preview
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Government votes down autism strategy bill proposed by Liberal MLA

Gabrielle Piché 3 minute read Tuesday, Mar. 17, 2026

Mark Jackson paused as he questioned when his daughter got her autism diagnosis — maybe one year, maybe two, from the first doctor referral.

“The wait times are not great,” he said.

He joined about two dozen people at the legislature Tuesday to show support for an autism strategy, as proposed by Liberal Cindy Lamoureux in a private member’s bill that was introduced Monday.

The strategy would make wait times for diagnosis and supports for autistic people and their families as top priorities.

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Tuesday, Mar. 17, 2026
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Proposed legislation targets predatory grocery pricing

Gabrielle Piché 3 minute read Preview
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Proposed legislation targets predatory grocery pricing

Gabrielle Piché 3 minute read Tuesday, Mar. 17, 2026

The Manitoba government is taking action to ensure grocery pricing based on customer data doesn’t rear its predatory head in the province.

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Tuesday, Mar. 17, 2026
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Endometriosis painful, lack of research shameful

Jen Zoratti 7 minute read Preview
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Endometriosis painful, lack of research shameful

Jen Zoratti 7 minute read Tuesday, Mar. 17, 2026

Endometriosis is a chronic inflammatory disease that causes debilitating pain, heavy bleeding, extreme fatigue, brain fog and other symptoms. It affects one in 10 women. I am one of them.

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Tuesday, Mar. 17, 2026
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Churchill port could further stunt polar bear growth: U of M researcher

Jesse Brogan 3 minute read Preview
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Churchill port could further stunt polar bear growth: U of M researcher

Jesse Brogan 3 minute read Monday, Mar. 16, 2026

Manitoba’s bold plan to transform the Port of Churchill into a shipping powerhouse could have a negative effect on the area’s treasured polar bear population, which fuels its tourism trade, new research shows.

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Monday, Mar. 16, 2026
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Indigenous partnerships key to wildfire preparation

Niigaan Sinclair 5 minute read Preview
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Indigenous partnerships key to wildfire preparation

Niigaan Sinclair 5 minute read Monday, Mar. 16, 2026

More than 5.3 million acres in Manitoba burned — second only to Saskatchewan — as wildfires raged across Western Canada last summer, and 32,000-plus residents, most of whom were Indigenous, were evacuated from their communities.

In Winnipeg, air quality due to the smoke was so terrible that by August, the year’s poor conditions had broken a 65-year record.

In northern places such as Thompson, the smoke was life-threatening. For most of the summer the city was engulfed in smoke, causing wide-scale lung irritation. Anyone with respiratory conditions like asthma and heart disease was forced to stay indoors.

The fires began after the May 10-11 weekend, when temperatures rose above 35 C, drying the underbrush and creating dangerous conditions.

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Monday, Mar. 16, 2026
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After 43-year career at the zoo, Janice Martin returns to lend a hand

AV Kitching 9 minute read Preview
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After 43-year career at the zoo, Janice Martin returns to lend a hand

AV Kitching 9 minute read Monday, Mar. 16, 2026

Armed with a zoology degree from the University of Manitoba, Janice Martin started work at Assiniboine Park Zoo in 1980 and never looked back.

She spent 43 years in various roles at the zoo until she retired in 2023. Retirement, however, was just a long lunch break for Martin. After four months away, she was back as a dedicated volunteer.

“I first started in Aunt Sally’s Farm in the summer of 1976 before going into university in the fall. Right after I graduated, there was an opening at the zoo. It was the perfect opportunity and I grabbed it. I worked my way through different areas over the years, first as a zookeeper, then a supervisor and finally as a curator for 10 years before I retired,” Martin, 68, says.

She volunteers approximately three times a week. For two of those days, she supports the zoo’s enrichment program by creating items to engage and stimulate natural animal behaviour.

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Monday, Mar. 16, 2026
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Speed limits and safety — follow the science

Brent Bellamy 6 minute read Preview
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Speed limits and safety — follow the science

Brent Bellamy 6 minute read Monday, Mar. 16, 2026

The premier of Manitoba recently appeared hesitant about collaborating with Winnipeg City Council on a public works proposal to lower the city’s default residential speed limit from 50 km/h to 40 km/h. Without a provincial amendment to the Highway Traffic Act, the city says implementing the change would require installing signs on hundreds of streets, at a cost of up to $10 million to taxpayers.

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Monday, Mar. 16, 2026
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Maple 2.0: Quebec syrup-makers turn to automation and expansion as demand grows

Morgan Lowrie, The Canadian Press 6 minute read Preview
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Maple 2.0: Quebec syrup-makers turn to automation and expansion as demand grows

Morgan Lowrie, The Canadian Press 6 minute read Friday, Apr. 24, 2026

ROXTON POND -

Visitors to the main building of the Côté et fils maple farm in Quebec's Eastern Townships region will be greeted by a wall of screens with the views from dozens of security cameras, showing an array of tubes and troughs filling up with clear, foamy sap.

Through a door, inside the production area, noise-cancelling headphones are needed for the deafening hum of the gleaming machines transforming thousands of litres of maple sap into syrup each day.

Mikael Ruest acknowledges that the process is far removed from the folksy images of buckets and horse-drawn sleighs that still grace the company's syrup cans.

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Friday, Apr. 24, 2026
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Ukrainian Guide to Winnipeg directory puts focus on area businesses, services run by Ukrainians

Scott Billeck 5 minute read Preview
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Ukrainian Guide to Winnipeg directory puts focus on area businesses, services run by Ukrainians

Scott Billeck 5 minute read Saturday, Mar. 14, 2026

A new online directory brings together Ukrainian-owned businesses and service providers in Winnipeg.

The brainchild of Mila Shykota, a provincial government worker who immigrated to Winnipeg in 2022 after Russia invaded her native Ukraine, the directory features 138 businesses — a number she says she adds to every day.

“I came up with the idea a year ago, when I initiated a project at work celebrating our diversity, since our team is very multicultural,” Shykota said on Friday.

She invited co-workers to represent their own country in some way, be it cuisine, culture or heritage. She said when she was preparing her own presentation, she decided to collect data on all of the Ukrainian restaurants and souvenir boutiques in Winnipeg so her colleagues could experience her culture.

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Saturday, Mar. 14, 2026
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Supporting oversized contributions of bite-sized farms

Laura Rance 4 minute read Saturday, Mar. 14, 2026

Small-scale food producers in Manitoba may be oceans away from their counterparts in Africa, but they share a common need for extension services relevant to their size.

Extension has historically been pivotal to helping farmers keep abreast of the ever-changing dynamics of agricultural production.

Yet when it comes to getting information on how to produce food better, whether they are in it to feed themselves or their neighbours, small farmers fall through the cracks. Industry and government extension services are heavily tilted towards helping large farmers to improve productivity.

Of the world’s roughly 570 million farms, 0.1 per cent exceeding 1,000 hectares (2,471 acres) manage half of all the world’s agricultural land to produce 16 per cent of the globe’s food energy. Farms of 124 acres or more grow 55 per cent of the world’s cereals, pulses, sugar and oilseed crops, the UN-FAO reports.

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Canada, Manitoba lagging behind promise to meet 2030 target of protecting more land and water

Julia-Simone Rutgers 7 minute read Preview
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Canada, Manitoba lagging behind promise to meet 2030 target of protecting more land and water

Julia-Simone Rutgers 7 minute read Friday, Mar. 13, 2026

There are just four years left on the clock for Manitoba — and the rest of the country — to meet a promise to conserve 30 per cent of land and water by 2030.

But halfway through the timeline adopted at the United Nations Convention on Biodiversity in 2022, Canada has made little progress, adding less than one percentage point to its protected land tally and three points to its protected waters.

The country needs to double its protected areas to meet its target, known as 30-by-30. But conservation groups, including the Wilderness Committee and the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society, warn progress could stall even further as federal funding for conservation initiatives is set to run out at the end of the month — and there’s no indication it will be renewed.

“We have a conservation economy that we can build on, that gives local jobs, that helps honour our Indigenous reconciliation commitments,” Sandra Schwartz, national executive director of the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society, said.

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Friday, Mar. 13, 2026
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NDP bill aims to strengthen renters’ protection

Gabrielle Piché 3 minute read Preview
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NDP bill aims to strengthen renters’ protection

Gabrielle Piché 3 minute read Friday, Mar. 13, 2026

The Manitoba government says it will carry out the largest expansion of rent control in decades.

Public Service Delivery Minister Mintu Sandhu called the measure “historical action” that will affect thousands of units in the province.

Under the proposed legislation, which was introduced by the NDP Thursday, suites that rent for at least $2,000 a month won’t be subject to rent control. Currently the threshold is $1,670 a month.

The proposed law leaves intact the exemption for complexes that are less than 20 years old.

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Friday, Mar. 13, 2026
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Non-profit to operate home for young moms in River Heights

Nicole Buffie 3 minute read Preview
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Non-profit to operate home for young moms in River Heights

Nicole Buffie 3 minute read Thursday, Mar. 12, 2026

A home in River Heights will soon be filled with Indigenous mothers and mothers-to-be receiving care and wraparound supports.

Come this summer, a six-bedroom home on Lindsay Street will provide three to six months of pre- and post-natal care and programs.

Hillary Thompson, an 18-year-old who is in her third trimester, has already picked her bedroom.

The spacious room on the main floor has plenty of space for her and a crib, and she can decorate it the way she wants. It’s a far cry from the homes she grew up in as a foster child, she said.

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Thursday, Mar. 12, 2026
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Some B.C. appraisers adding land-claims clause after Aboriginal title court case

Ashley Joannou, The Canadian Press 3 minute read Preview
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Some B.C. appraisers adding land-claims clause after Aboriginal title court case

Ashley Joannou, The Canadian Press 3 minute read Friday, Apr. 24, 2026

VICTORIA - An organization representing about 1,200 appraisers in British Columbia says some of its members are adding clauses to their reports noting that current, past, and potential future land claims have not been considered in their valuations.

Allan Beatty, president of the B.C. branch of the Appraisal Institute of Canada, says in a statement that the recent Cowichan Aboriginal title court ruling in B.C. is contributing to speculation that private property rights could be affected.

Beatty says the organization is preparing advice for its members on the appropriate limitation clauses, but discourages the use of "unsubstantiated adjustments that do not reflect the most relevant market data."

In an August 2025 ruling, a B.C. Supreme Court judge confirmed the Cowichan Tribes hold Aboriginal title over about 300 hectares of land on the Fraser River in Richmond, B.C.

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Friday, Apr. 24, 2026
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15,000-plus students regularly skip school across Manitoba, leaked documents show

Maggie Macintosh 4 minute read Preview
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15,000-plus students regularly skip school across Manitoba, leaked documents show

Maggie Macintosh 4 minute read Thursday, Mar. 12, 2026

Leaked government documents expose a troubling state of truancy in elementary and high schools across the province.

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Thursday, Mar. 12, 2026
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Two-thirds of Manitobans using AI, but a lot aren’t happy about it, survey reveals

Conrad Sweatman 4 minute read Preview
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Two-thirds of Manitobans using AI, but a lot aren’t happy about it, survey reveals

Conrad Sweatman 4 minute read Tuesday, Mar. 10, 2026

Manitobans admit they rely on artificial intelligence for daily activities, but are troubled by the emerging technology’s impact on the environment, job security and beyond.

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Tuesday, Mar. 10, 2026
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TikTok to continue operating in Canada, subject to safety conditions

Catherine Morrison, The Canadian Press 1 minute read Preview
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TikTok to continue operating in Canada, subject to safety conditions

Catherine Morrison, The Canadian Press 1 minute read Friday, Apr. 24, 2026

OTTAWA - TikTok is being allowed to continue its operations in Canada after the government wrapped up a national security review.

Industry Minister Mélanie Joly says the decision hinges on key conditions, including for TikTok to bring in stronger protections for minors and the personal information of all Canadians.

The minister says the decision will also save jobs by ensuring TikTok Canada has a physical presence in the country.

The move reverses a 2024 order for TikTok to close its offices in Canada due to national security concerns.

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Friday, Apr. 24, 2026
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Volunteering at aviation museum sparks love of learning, sharing knowledge for former Air Force pilot

AV Kitching 9 minute read Preview
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Volunteering at aviation museum sparks love of learning, sharing knowledge for former Air Force pilot

AV Kitching 9 minute read Monday, Mar. 9, 2026

Gary Hook was a fighter pilot, commanding officer and senior flight instructor during his 43-year career in the Royal Canadian Air Force.

Hook, 72, piloted more than 15 types of aircraft across Canada and Europe.

These days, the aviation buff volunteers as a tour guide and gallery interpreter at the Royal Aviation Museum of Western Canada, at 2088 Wellington Ave.

“There’s no shortage of good stories to tell about the aircraft, the people and the eras of aviation they flew in,” Hook says.

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Monday, Mar. 9, 2026