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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Black History Manitoba's block party opportunity for chefs to share their passion

Melissa Martin 6 minute read Preview
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Black History Manitoba's block party opportunity for chefs to share their passion

Melissa Martin 6 minute read Monday, Aug. 23, 2021

As a little girl growing up in Jamaica, Patrice Gilman dreamed that one day, she would cook just like Gladys, her grandmother. Everyone around downtown Kingston knew Gladys, and the little restaurant she owned in the area called Southside. Her dish of tripe and beans was famous, and fed famous athletes and hungry kids alike.

Gilman was fascinated by watching her grandmother manage the little kitchen, cooking all on her own, darting between pots of goat or chicken or fish bubbling on any of a dozen wood-fired stoves. Every morning, Gladys rose before the sun to start making lunch, and every day she was sold out of food not long after noon.

Still, she always had a little something for the kids who hung around, the ones who didn’t have enough.

“She was a one-woman show,” Gilman says. “She would feed the whole community. She had nine children, and raised many more children that weren’t her own. She passed away about 13 years ago, but her spirit lives on so strongly in our family’s heart.”

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Monday, Aug. 23, 2021

Deidré Coleman (left) and Patrice Gilman are taking part in this month's Black History Manitoba block party, dishing up Caribbean food from their West End restaurant. (Mikaela MacKenzie / Winnipeg Free Press)

Deidré Coleman (left) and Patrice Gilman are taking part in this month's Black History Manitoba block party, dishing up Caribbean food from their West End restaurant. (Mikaela MacKenzie / Winnipeg Free Press)
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Boulevard, greenway could be renamed by end of year

Maggie Macintosh 3 minute read Preview
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Boulevard, greenway could be renamed by end of year

Maggie Macintosh 3 minute read Sunday, Aug. 22, 2021

Bishop Grandin Boulevard and the greenway that runs parallel to it — both of which are named after an architect of the residential school system — could have new titles before the end of the year.

The volunteer board that oversees the greenway’s operations issued a notice this week to inform community members of its ongoing support for the City of Winnipeg’s efforts to explore cutting ties with Bishop Vital-Justin Grandin (1829-1902) as a namesake for local landmarks.

The board indicated renaming consultations are underway and it anticipates a report with a recommendation on the subject will be brought forward to city council this fall.

“I don’t want people to think we’re sitting on our hands and letting this fall by the wayside,” said Derick Young, president of Bishop Grandin Greenway Inc.

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Sunday, Aug. 22, 2021

New titles for the Bishop Grandin Boulevard and the greenway are expected in the coming weeks. (Ruth Bonneville / Winnipeg Free Press files)

New titles for the Bishop Grandin Boulevard and the greenway are expected in the coming weeks. (Ruth Bonneville / Winnipeg Free Press files)
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Neptune Bay resident harbours only known survivor of the Orbit invasion

David Sanderson 10 minute read Preview
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Neptune Bay resident harbours only known survivor of the Orbit invasion

David Sanderson 10 minute read Thursday, Aug. 19, 2021

‘Here comes another car now, slowing down to take a look.”

Ever since an aged, Orbit garbage receptacle landed in Broose Tulloch’s front yard in June 2019, the 52-year-old public works employee has grown used to drivers, cyclists, pedestrians... even the odd pizza delivery guy stopping in their tracks as they go past his yellow-and-white split-level. Curious types, some familiar with the large, white, fibreglass sphere, others not so much, pause to study the bin, a holdover from an era when dozens more dotted Manitoba highways, deposited there by the provincial government to discourage motorists from littering.

That Tulloch resides in a neck of the woods unofficially known as “the Planets” — he’s on Neptune Bay; neighbouring tracks, all intersected by Planet Street, are Mercury, Mars, Saturn and Jupiter (sorry, no Uranus) — only seems to add to the astronomical amount of attention his depository, just over a metre tall, receives on a regular basis.

Standing on his front steps, near where the Orbit is being shaded by a crabapple tree, Tulloch recalls the morning he glanced out his living room window and noticed a hydro crew assembled by the curb. Thinking the worst, that they had arrived to dig up his lawn, he ventured outside in his PJs to ask what was going on.

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Thursday, Aug. 19, 2021

RUTH BONNEVILLE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Broose, an insect control worker & host of a radio program on CJUM - resting on Broose’s front yard, visible to everybody driving by on Planet Street (how appropriate) is an Orbit garbage receptacle, the sort that was commonplace along Mb highways in the ‘60s, ‘70s and ‘80s

RUTH BONNEVILLE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Broose, an insect control worker & host of a radio program on CJUM - resting on Broose’s front yard, visible to everybody driving by on Planet Street (how appropriate) is an Orbit garbage receptacle, the sort that was commonplace along Mb highways in the ‘60s, ‘70s and ‘80s
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Manitoba youth concerned about mental health: survey

Malak Abas 3 minute read Preview
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Manitoba youth concerned about mental health: survey

Malak Abas 3 minute read Thursday, Aug. 19, 2021

Young people surveyed by Manitoba's children's advocate say they need better mental health and addiction services, as well as anti-poverty programs.

The advocate, an independent office of the Manitoba legislature, consulted with almost 300 young people who live in various regions of the province. A report based on their feedback, “The Right to Be Heard”, was published Thursday.

Generally, youth in the north were more likely to say they are concerned about poverty and substance abuse, while those living in Winnipeg were more likely to select racism and mental health issues.

“A report like this allows us a really incredible opportunity to sit down internally and think about how the projects that we have underway, how the projects that we’re maybe considering embarking on, align with what youth want us to be focused on,” said acting children's advocate Ainsley Krone said.

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Thursday, Aug. 19, 2021

MIKE DEAL / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS Ainsley Krone, acting advocate, Manitoba Advocate for Children and Youth, speaks during an announcement with Families Minister Rochelle Squires at the Manitoba Legislative building Tuesday morning.

MIKE DEAL / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS Ainsley Krone, acting advocate, Manitoba Advocate for Children and Youth, speaks during an announcement with Families Minister Rochelle Squires at the Manitoba Legislative building Tuesday morning.
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City considering new name for park near former residential school to honour Indigenous leader

Joyanne Pursaga 5 minute read Preview
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City considering new name for park near former residential school to honour Indigenous leader

Joyanne Pursaga 5 minute read Thursday, Aug. 19, 2021

AS a residential high school student, the site now known as Wellington Park offered him rare moments of joy.

As an adult survivor of that system, it helped trigger both positive memories and quiet, disturbing flashbacks.

Theodore Fontaine, who died in May, found more than a chance to play hockey and baseball at the Assiniboia Indian Residential School, according to his wife Morgan Fontaine.

“These fields, this was just for him a time of that little taste of freedom that he longed for.… It was just before his seventh birthday (that) he lost his freedom,” she said.

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Thursday, Aug. 19, 2021

CAROL SANDERS / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Morgan Fontaine (nee Sizeland), left, grew up blocks from the rez school in River Heights and first met Ted Fontaine, right, when he was one of the "Indian" boys who came to shovel the walk at her house on Renfrew Street. They met again 20 years later and got married.

CAROL SANDERS / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Morgan Fontaine (nee Sizeland), left, grew up blocks from the rez school in River Heights and first met Ted Fontaine, right, when he was one of the
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Chef wants to keep on trucking while she puts down permanent restaurant roots

Eva Wasney 4 minute read Preview
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Chef wants to keep on trucking while she puts down permanent restaurant roots

Eva Wasney 4 minute read Monday, Aug. 9, 2021

Tara Hall is just getting started.

The 40-year-old chef is the owner of Winnipeg’s Aboriginal Fusion food truck and she has her sights set on opening a restaurant — sans wheels — focused on the foods she grew up eating.

The elevator pitch is “traditional Aboriginal foods with a fine-dining twist,” Hall says. “We don’t have enough of that here.”

She was born in Vancouver and grew up with her great-grandparents and grandpa on Pinaymootang First Nation in the Interlake. Hall watched her elders and aunties closely in the kitchen and learned to make staples, such as bannock, fried pickerel and saskatoon berry jam, at a young age.

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Monday, Aug. 9, 2021

MIKE SUDOMA / Winnipeg Free Press
Chef Tara Hall has included traditional foods from her youth, such as bannock and pickerel, into her food truck's menu.

MIKE SUDOMA / Winnipeg Free Press 
Chef Tara Hall has included traditional foods from her youth, such as bannock and pickerel, into her food truck's menu.
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Charleswood residents fume over destroyed trees

Joyanne Pursaga 5 minute read Preview
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Charleswood residents fume over destroyed trees

Joyanne Pursaga 5 minute read Monday, Aug. 9, 2021

Frustrated residents are calling on the city and province to get to the root of the problem that led to the destruction of nearly two dozen mature trees in Charleswood on the weekend.

Early Saturday morning, a building moving company began to move a display home near the corner of Roblin Boulevard and Scotswood Drive. The home was too wide to clear mature trees along Roblin’s median.

When Winnipeg Police Service officers arrived to provide a previously scheduled escort for the movers at about 7 a.m. they discovered 17 trees had been cut down, allegedly by the driver of the vehicle hauling the house, police spokesman Const. Rob Carver said.

“Immediately, upon determining that the trees had been cut and linking it to this move, the move was halted and, ultimately, the driver (was) arrested,” said Carver.

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Monday, Aug. 9, 2021

Daniel Crump / Winnipeg Free Press. Felled trees line the median on Roblin Blvd from Scotswood Drive almost all the way to perimeter highway. The destruction is the aftermath of a house that was being moved from the Roblin Grove development in Charleswood on Saturday morning. August 7, 2021.

Daniel Crump / Winnipeg Free Press. Felled trees line the median on Roblin Blvd from Scotswood Drive almost all the way to perimeter highway. The destruction is the aftermath of a house that was being moved from the Roblin Grove development in Charleswood on Saturday morning. August 7, 2021.
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Muslim Canadians’ Eid celebrations reflect diversity

Michelle Gazze 5 minute read Preview
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Muslim Canadians’ Eid celebrations reflect diversity

Michelle Gazze 5 minute read Friday, May. 14, 2021

My earliest Eid memory is of my grandma cooking fresh, hot Sirnee — a soft, sweet, spiced, cooked dough made of flour and butter. That divine smell alone would make anyone excited to celebrate Eid.

Eid-al-Fitr (also called the “Festival of Breaking Fast” or just Eid) marks the end of Ramadan, the holy month in which Muslims fast daily from dawn until sundown. It is an opportunity to foster gratitude, discipline and deepen our connection with God, so we can live from a place of higher consciousness. Not for a single month, but for our entire lives.

Coming from a Guyanese family, I grew up with Hindu and Muslim family members. It wasn’t until my paternal grandparents immigrated to Winnipeg we started to celebrate Eid. After Ramadan, we would gather at their house to feast and enjoy West Indian sweets. We also spent more time in the community donating food hampers and strengthening our faith through acts of charity.

As Eid quickly approaches this week, most Muslims celebrate in the same religious sense, but cultural traditions differ from one country to another. A common assumption is being of Muslim faith is synonymous with Middle Eastern countries, but my Muslim friends and I represent the diversity in Islam.

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Friday, May. 14, 2021

Shafdar Gazze and Malina donate food hampers as a form of Zakat — almsgiving at the end of Ramadan.

Shafdar Gazze and Malina donate food hampers as a form of Zakat — almsgiving at the end of Ramadan.
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Chasser, pour avoir la conscience tranquille

Daniel Bahuaud de La Liberté pour le Winnipeg Free Press 4 minute read Preview
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Chasser, pour avoir la conscience tranquille

Daniel Bahuaud de La Liberté pour le Winnipeg Free Press 4 minute read Saturday, Dec. 2, 2017

Vanessa Ahing a été végétarienne pendant plus de quatre années. Par refus de l’industrie de la viande qui, à son avis, est cruelle et nuit à l’environnement. Pourtant, un bon steak lui manquait. Pour réconcilier conscience et palais, un choix nouveau s’imposait...

Un soir de septembre, 2013, Vanessa Ahing rentrait de la campagne, où elle avait abattu son premier chevreuil. Souvenir de l’enseignante de 31ans: “J’étais toute seule. J’avais suivi une formation de chasse pour femmes, organisée par la Manitoba Wildlife Foundation. Mon chevreuil, coupé en quarts, était dans un sac de hockey dans le coffre de ma Honda Civic. C’était mon premier animal. Je voulais vivre l’expérience complète de la chasse. Donc pas question pour moi d’aller chez un boucher. D’ailleurs, j’étais étudiante. Je n’avais pas le fric pour me payer un tel service.

“Je me demandais comment j’allais faire pour préparer cette viande. Je n’ai pas été élevée dans une famille de chasseurs, ou même de jardiniers. Mes parents n’étaient pas prêts à avoir un chevreuil chez eux. Et moi, je vivais dans un petit appartement pour célibataires au centre-ville de Winnipeg.

“Il était tard. Trop tard pour dépecer l’animal tout de suite. Alors, j’ai ouvert les fenêtres de mon appartement. Je me suis endormie dans mon sac de couchage. Le lendemain, j’ai tapé ‘Comment couper de la viande de chevreuil’ sur YouTube. Et je me suis mise à l’œuvre.”

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Saturday, Dec. 2, 2017

Daniel Bahuaud photo
Vanessa Ahing: ‘Je mange du chevreuil, de la bernache et du canard. C’est la viande la plus naturelle qui soit.’

Daniel Bahuaud photo
Vanessa Ahing: ‘Je mange du chevreuil, de la bernache et du canard. C’est la viande la plus naturelle qui soit.’
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‘Cette terre n’a fait aucun mal’

Gavin Boutroy de La Liberté pour le Winnipeg Free Press 5 minute read Preview
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‘Cette terre n’a fait aucun mal’

Gavin Boutroy de La Liberté pour le Winnipeg Free Press 5 minute read Saturday, May. 13, 2017

Le 3 mai, une caravane d’étudiants en architecture paysagiste de l’Université du Manitoba a été accueillie devant le bâtiment d’autogouvernement de la Nation Dakota de Sioux Valley. Ils ont présenté à un comité du conseil de bande leurs plans pour l’aménagement d’un centre de guérison sur les lieux de l’École industrielle indienne de Brandon.

L’École industrielle indienne de Brandon était un pensionnat autochtone où, de 1895 à 1972, des enfants autochtones étaient éduqués par divers ordres religieux selon la politique d’assimilation du gouvernement canadien. Le chef de la Nation Dakota de Sioux Valley, Vincent Tacan, indique qu’il y a grand nombre de survivants de l’ancien pensionnat dans sa Nation.

“Nous avons besoin de guérir. Nous sentons les effets intergénérationnels des pensionnats autochtones. Essayer d’aller de l’avant avant de guérir serait inutile.”

Le Sud-ouest du Manitoba n’a aucun centre de guérison avec un environnement approprié aux cultures autochtones. Le chef Tacan note que les membres de sa Nation en besoin de traitement doivent se rendre à Regina, ou encore en Alberta.

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Saturday, May. 13, 2017

Gavin Boutroy Photo
Della Mansoff, le chef Vincent Tacan, Leona Noel et Toni Pashe examinent la maquette de Gabriel Stacey-Chartrand.

Gavin Boutroy Photo
Della Mansoff, le chef Vincent Tacan, Leona Noel et Toni Pashe examinent la maquette de Gabriel Stacey-Chartrand.

Debt levels a worry for Prairie residents

Aaron Epp 4 minute read Yesterday at 2:00 AM CST

Nearly half of Manitobans have debt on their mind.

New data compiled by Ipsos on behalf of MNP Ltd. shows that 46 per cent of Manitoba and Saskatchewan residents say they are concerned about their current level of debt, a figure that went up six points between 2020 and 2025. More than two in five (44 per cent) regret the amount of debt they have taken on over their lifetime.

MNP, the largest insolvency practice in Canada, released the data Monday as it promotes Debt Literacy Month throughout March.

A debt literacy gap persists, the organization said in a news release. Borrowing has become more common amid cost-of-living pressures, and many Manitoba and Saskatchewan residents are unclear on how interest works in practice or how rate changes affect their own financial position.

Last spring forward for B.C. as it moves to permanent daylight time

Wolfgang Depner, The Canadian Press 6 minute read Preview

Last spring forward for B.C. as it moves to permanent daylight time

Wolfgang Depner, The Canadian Press 6 minute read Updated: Yesterday at 9:14 AM CST

VICTORIA - British Columbia's southern population centres will be facing winter sunrises around 9 a.m. — and around 9:30 a.m. in the north — after the decision to adopt year-round daylight time, springing forward by one hour this Sunday for the last time.

Premier David Eby said Monday the decision is about making life easier for families, reducing disruptions for businesses and supporting a stable, thriving economy.

"British Columbians have been clear that seasonal time changes do not work for them,” Eby said.

He announced the change inside the legislature's Hall of Honour, surrounded by about 40 local elementary schoolchildren, and he addressed them first.

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Updated: Yesterday at 9:14 AM CST

People walk by the steam clock in Gastown in downtown Vancouver, on Tuesday, Dec. 31, 2019. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jonathan Hayward

People walk by the steam clock in Gastown in downtown Vancouver, on Tuesday, Dec. 31, 2019. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jonathan Hayward

Retired nurse doesn’t mind doing laundry to help raise money for Children’s Hospital Foundation

AV Kitching 9 minute read Preview

Retired nurse doesn’t mind doing laundry to help raise money for Children’s Hospital Foundation

AV Kitching 9 minute read Monday, Mar. 2, 2026

Donna Askew has been doing other people’s laundry for more than 20 years, but she doesn’t mind. It’s all for a good cause.

It’s fair to say Askew has washed, dried, mended and hung up thousands of shirts, blouses, dresses, T-shirts and trousers during her tenure as volunteer laundress at the Nearly New Shop at 961 Portage Ave.

“You name it, I’ve washed it… underwear and socks and lots of bedding and tablecloths and runners… if you’ve washed it at home in your washer, I’ve washed it in mine,” she says, laughing.

The shop attracts more than 50 customers daily, many who have come to rely on it.

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Monday, Mar. 2, 2026

RUTH BONNEVILLE / FREE PRESS

ENT - Volunteer Washer Donna Askew Story: A new series on older Manitobans who have interesting jobs, or hobbies etc This specific story looks at Donna Askew’s volunteer work at the Nearly New Shop. Askew has been washing all the donated clothes for 20+ years. The former Children’s Hospital nurse took on this role more than 20 years ago and does between four to six loads of laundry a week. She picks up the dirty laundry on Tuesdays, when she also drops off last week’s load. Photos of her picking up the donated clothes from the Nearly New Shop and sorting and washing them in her laundry room in her basement. Story by AV Kitching Feb 11th, 2026

RUTH BONNEVILLE / FREE PRESS
                                ENT - Volunteer Washer Donna Askew Story: A new series on older Manitobans who have interesting jobs, or hobbies etc This specific story looks at Donna Askew’s volunteer work at the Nearly New Shop. Askew has been washing all the donated clothes for 20+ years. The former Children’s Hospital nurse took on this role more than 20 years ago and does between four to six loads of laundry a week. She picks up the dirty laundry on Tuesdays, when she also drops off last week’s load. Photos of her picking up the donated clothes from the Nearly New Shop and sorting and washing them in her laundry room in her basement. Story by AV Kitching Feb 11th, 2026

Grandparents and grandchildren can grow together

Deborah Schnitzer 5 minute read Monday, Mar. 2, 2026

When my now five-year-old grandson was younger, we enjoyed an easygoing relationship, the kind often represented as idyllic in popular media culture — harmonious, reciprocal, restorative.

We would walk the woods together, gather berries, cavort. He ran towards me when I appeared at his door, asked me to sit beside him at meals. We shared bowls of purple grapes while we built garages out of magnet tiles, “assisted” one another in the garden, drew pictures, consulted about the weather and planned possible treats.

Over the last several months, however, our relationship has changed as his personality and behaviour develop. He is less favourably inclined towards me and more unforgiving if I misstep or mistake boundaries that are important to him.

I had picked him up for years from his daycare, for example, but when he moved to a new school this fall, he became increasingly upset if I, rather than his mother or father, came to get him.

Three determined church members join forces to build thriving social community for seniors in the West End

Janine LeGal 5 minute read Preview

Three determined church members join forces to build thriving social community for seniors in the West End

Janine LeGal 5 minute read Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026

In an increasingly chaotic and complex world, loneliness and isolation have become all too common in many communities. For many seniors, it can be particularly challenging to find a place to comfortably and easily belong.

The solution need not be complicated. In fact, a few caring volunteers can make all the difference in the world. Three women have stepped up to help a community experiencing isolation.

Denise MacRae from St. Paul’s Anglican Church, along with Cathy Campbell and Pat Stewart, both from St. Matthews Anglican Church, were well acquainted with the needs of community members. They consulted with drop-in participants from previous groups and met with Anglican partners to see how they could move forward with a space at West End Commons, in an area they all know and love.

“It was decided that we focus on seniors. Their wish was to have a place to meet and visit and see each other. And so it began,” MacRae explained, about the group that meets for a few hours at the Commons on McGee Street every Monday afternoon.

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Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026

RUTH BONNEVILLE / FREE PRESS

Seniors play games during their time together at the weekly gathering.

RUTH BONNEVILLE / FREE PRESS
                                Seniors play games during their time together at the weekly gathering.

Chief says more funding needed to repair homes after power outage, flooding

Chris Kitching 4 minute read Preview

Chief says more funding needed to repair homes after power outage, flooding

Chris Kitching 4 minute read Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026

A northern First Nation hit by a days-long power outage and subsequent water crisis is seeking additional government funds to cover the cost of mould and asbestos removal in homes.

Pimicikamak Cree Nation Chief David Monias said Friday there is a shortage of funding to remediate the hazards and bring homes with damage up to code so they are habitable.

“We can’t have (residents) return to a situation where there might be some bacteria or moulding issues that will affect their safety, that affect their health, and possibly cause medical issues that will be made worse because they already have existing health issues,” he said during a virtual call.

Pimicikamak’s leaders said an estimated 1,300 homes were damaged after pipes froze and burst two months ago. Water leaked into basements and crawl spaces. The community’s water and sewage plants were also affected.

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Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026

Chief David Monias (left) says there is a shortage of funding to remediate the hazards in an estimated 1,300 Pimicikamak Cree Nation homes that were damaged after pipes froze and burst due to a days-long power outage two months ago. (John Woods/Winnipeg Free Press files)

Chief David Monias (left) says there is a shortage of funding to remediate the hazards in an estimated 1,300 Pimicikamak Cree Nation homes that were damaged after pipes froze and burst due to a days-long power outage two months ago. (John Woods/Winnipeg Free Press files)

The number of impoverished children is growing

Editorial 4 minute read Preview

The number of impoverished children is growing

Editorial 4 minute read Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026

Canada is, unfortunately, beginning to look like the land of poor prospects for its children.

The country saw an increase in child poverty for the third straight year in 2023 — the most recent available public data — according to an annual child poverty report card recently released by Campaign 2000, a non-partisan coalition dedicated to ending child poverty in Canada.

It doesn’t matter which measuring stick you use: according to the official Market Basket Measure, child poverty has more than doubled since 2020, to 10.7 per cent — or 802,000 children. Meanwhile, the Census Family Low Income Measure, After Tax — which Campaign 2000 uses and claims is a better indicator — put the number at 18.3 per cent, or 1.4 million children.

According to 2023 data, Manitoba was the second-highest in child poverty rates based on the CFLIM-AT measure, at 26.9 per cent (Saskatchewan had the highest, at 27.1 per cent). Winnipeg was sixth-highest among large urban centres for the same year, at a rate of 22 per cent.

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Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026

MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS

Manitoba Families Minister Nahanni Fontaine (left) along with Housing, Addictions and Homelessness Minister Bernadette Smith, at the renewal of the province’s five-year poverty reduction strategy.

MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS
                                Manitoba Families Minister Nahanni Fontaine (left) along with Housing, Addictions and Homelessness Minister Bernadette Smith, at the renewal of the province’s five-year poverty reduction strategy.

Drone application big step in crop protection

Laura Rance 4 minute read Preview

Drone application big step in crop protection

Laura Rance 4 minute read Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026

It’s been a long time coming, but Health Canada is finally moving forward with a plan that would allow farmers to spray weeds using drones.

The department that oversees Canada’s Pest Management Regulatory Agency has launched a 30-day public consultation process on a proposal to regulate drone applications of pesticides similarly to manned aircraft applications.

The change, if approved, would allow manufacturers whose products are already approved for application by manned aircraft to add application by drones to their product labels without going through the costly and time-consuming process of applying for a label change.

Currently, there are no agricultural pesticide products registered for drone application largely because the current regulations require every product to go through a separate registration process providing supporting data.

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Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026

TIM SMITH / BRANDON SUN FILES

An agricultural drone on display at Manitoba Ag Days 2026 in Brandon in January.

TIM SMITH / BRANDON SUN FILES 
                                An agricultural drone on display at Manitoba Ag Days 2026 in Brandon in January.
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Purim treats shared with others

Sharon Chisvin 5 minute read Preview
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Purim treats shared with others

Sharon Chisvin 5 minute read Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026

Volunteers with the grassroots, non-profit organization Urban Wagons have been walking the downtown streets of Winnipeg every Monday evening for the last three years offering seasonal clothing, self-care products, bottled water, hot soup, plastic wrapped sandwiches, granola bars and fruit to any unsheltered and vulnerable individuals that they encounter.

This week their food offerings will include a new item: triangular shaped fruit or poppyseed filled pastries called hamantashen. Hamantashen are the traditional food associated with the Jewish holiday of Purim.

Purim is a widely celebrated, joyous festival commemorating events that occurred in the fourth century BCE after Haman, an adviser to the Persian King Ahasuerus, plotted, with the king’s assent, to murder the regime’s Jewish population. Haman’s plan was foiled when the king’s wife, Queen Esther, a secret Jew, risked her life by revealing her true identity to her husband and entreated him not to annihilate her people. Thanks to her courage, the Jewish population of Persia was saved and Haman was punished for his malevolent machinations.

The story of Purim is recounted in the Old Testament Book of Esther, or Megillah Esther, which is read aloud in synagogue on the eve of and during the day of the holiday. Listening to the reading of the Megillah is one of the main mitzvot, or commandments, associated with Purim, which begins this year on the evening of March 2.

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Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026

Mindaugas Kulbis / The Associated Press files

A girl attends a Jewish festival of Purim celebration at a synagogue in Vilnius, Lithuania, in March 2022.

Mindaugas Kulbis / The Associated Press files
                                A girl attends a Jewish festival of Purim celebration at a synagogue in Vilnius, Lithuania, in March 2022.

Mayor encouraged after downtown housing unit approvals reach 15-year high

Joyanne Pursaga 5 minute read Preview

Mayor encouraged after downtown housing unit approvals reach 15-year high

Joyanne Pursaga 5 minute read Friday, Feb. 27, 2026

The city approved more than 1,000 new downtown housing units last year, marking a 15-year high, while work continues to help entice people to move to the area.

Building permits were issued for 1,040 new downtown dwelling units in 2025, nearly double the 596 issued in 2018 and greatly improved from the 141 granted during the post-pandemic slowdown in 2022, city data show.

Mayor Scott Gillingham said the permit data reflects renewed interest in developing downtown.

“Before the pandemic, Winnipeg’s downtown had a lot of momentum and now we really see that momentum is really strong again,” he said.

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Friday, Feb. 27, 2026

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS FILES

Winnipeg approved more than 1,000 new downtown housing units last year – marking a 15-year high – but the city now needs to assure people the area is safe and convenient enough to call home.

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS FILES
                                Winnipeg approved more than 1,000 new downtown housing units last year – marking a 15-year high – but the city now needs to assure people the area is safe and convenient enough to call home.

Bread Box bake shop brings tastes of Fort Garry Hotel to general public

Aaron Epp 5 minute read Preview

Bread Box bake shop brings tastes of Fort Garry Hotel to general public

Aaron Epp 5 minute read Friday, Feb. 27, 2026

Ida Albo is on a roll.

After opening a yoga studio and then a skincare clinic at 280 Fort St., the Winnipeg entrepreneur has added a bake shop to the building. The Bread Box had a soft opening on Wednesday and celebrated its grand opening on Thursday.

The menu features items served in the Fort Garry Hotel, located one kilometre south of the shop, where Albo is an owner and the managing partner. The menu includes the hotel’s organic sourdough bâtard and country loaf, made using a 13-year-old wild Manitoba grape starter.

Guests have booked stays at the hotel specifically to stock up on the bâtard (an oval or oblong loaf), Albo said, adding she’s excited to finally share the Fort Garry’s food beyond the hotel’s walls.

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Friday, Feb. 27, 2026

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS

Retail bake shop The Bread Box opened this week, and was started by the people behind the Fort Garry Hotel featuring items that are typically baked for hotel guests.

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS
                                Retail bake shop The Bread Box opened this week, and was started by the people behind the Fort Garry Hotel featuring items that are typically baked for hotel guests.
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Exhibit connects traditional and contemporary Métis beadwork artists

Jen Zoratti 7 minute read Preview
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Exhibit connects traditional and contemporary Métis beadwork artists

Jen Zoratti 7 minute read Friday, Feb. 27, 2026

Suspended from the ceiling in Gallery 1C03 at the University of Winnipeg is an octopus bag, created by Métis visual artist Claire Johnston.

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Friday, Feb. 27, 2026

RUTH BONNEVILLE / FREE PRESS

Métis visual artist Claire Johnston’s beaded octopus bag includes messages protesting the use of AI.

RUTH BONNEVILLE / FREE PRESS
                                Métis visual artist Claire Johnston’s beaded octopus bag includes messages protesting the use of AI.

Airport land development expected to draw massive investment, create jobs in aerospace, aviation

Tyler Searle 4 minute read Preview

Airport land development expected to draw massive investment, create jobs in aerospace, aviation

Tyler Searle 4 minute read Friday, Feb. 27, 2026

Government and industry leaders are banking on a $32-million airport land development to cement Winnipeg as a national leader in economic growth and trade.

In a joint announcement Friday, the federal and provincial governments, alongside the Winnipeg Airports Authority and the City of Winnipeg, outlined a plan to develop 127 acres of land west of the airport into direct-access runways.

“You can think of this as beachfront property. This is very valuable for businesses in key sectors such as aerospace, aviation, trade enabling and logistics that need that direct proximity to air side operations,” said Nick Hays, the WAA’s president and CEO.

“It is very unusual to have an airport… with that scale of land right next to the runway that has not been developed. Today’s announcement is about putting in the investment that services that land to unlock that opportunity.”

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Friday, Feb. 27, 2026

MIKE APORIUS/WINNIPEG FREE PRESS - Northwest Airlines plane takes off from the James Richardson Airport Thursday - see Kirbyson story January 31/2008

MIKE APORIUS/WINNIPEG FREE PRESS - Northwest Airlines plane takes off from the James Richardson Airport Thursday - see Kirbyson story January 31/2008

Almost 12% of city parks, open spaces in poor condition: report

Joyanne Pursaga 4 minute read Preview

Almost 12% of city parks, open spaces in poor condition: report

Joyanne Pursaga 4 minute read Friday, Feb. 27, 2026

Nearly 12 per cent of the city’s parks and open-space assets are in poor or very poor condition and it would cost $108.5 million to replace them, a new city report says.

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Friday, Feb. 27, 2026

JOHN WOODS / FREE PRESS FILES

Garbage strewn along Waterfront Drive at Fort Douglas Park in Winnipeg. A new city report says nearly 12 per cent of the city’s parks and open-space assets are in poor or very poor condition.

JOHN WOODS / FREE PRESS FILES
                                Garbage strewn along Waterfront Drive at Fort Douglas Park in Winnipeg. A new city report says nearly 12 per cent of the city’s parks and open-space assets are in poor or very poor condition.