Law
Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.
Education taxes not a ‘hot mess’
4 minute read Saturday, Mar. 21, 2026While I mostly agree with Dan Lett’s analysis (Councillors brace for impact when provincial education property tax hikes hit mailboxes, March 19), there are some significant reasons to challenge his statement about education funding being “a hot mess.”
As for the suburban councillors’ despondency, I find it hard to be sympathetic. My experience has been that most homeowners, even if they do not understand fully the purposes of all property taxes, do understand that some of them go to fund city services and some to the school division they live in. This has been made clear repeatedly by the separation of the taxes on the tax notices.
In my view, councillors should be pleased that some citizens might actually consider them an essential part the adequate funding of children’s education. The issue is not, as implied, lack of accountability or ownership — nothing is hidden and trustees are quite willing to take credit for their decisions. The councillors’ complaints seem more self-serving than conscientious leadership.
What is a hot mess is what the current government was left with at the end of the last Conservative era, akin to what they were left with after the previous one — the Conservatives would do well to rethink several aspects of their political strategies. Manitobans have repeatedly let them know that they are less concerned about tax savings than they are about support for public education.
Most vulnerable will pay the most for federal budget cuts
4 minute read Preview Friday, Mar. 20, 2026‘Wake up people’: mom says proposed drunk-driving law falls short
4 minute read Preview Friday, Mar. 20, 2026Family says teen re-victimized by school’s lax response after reporting sexual assault
18 minute read Preview Monday, Mar. 23, 2026Shopping bill is a good pre-emptive strike
4 minute read Preview Friday, Mar. 20, 2026Construction groups miffed by new fee on public-sector projects
4 minute read Preview Thursday, Mar. 19, 2026Residents pigeonhole hobbyist’s backyard aviary as health risk, nuisance
3 minute read Preview Thursday, Mar. 19, 2026Alberta government moves to drastically reduce access to medically assisted dying
5 minute read Preview Thursday, Mar. 19, 2026Protecting Charter rights
4 minute read Tuesday, Mar. 17, 2026The old saying goes that you don’t appreciate what you’ve got until it’s gone. That’s particularly true for things like your health. We take it for granted until we can’t do the things we’re used to doing and lose our freedom and independence.
The same can also be said about our Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
We act as if they always were, are, and always will be there for us. Until they aren’t.
That is the state of our Charter rights across the country, as more and more provinces use the notwithstanding clause to suspend Charter rights. Section 33 of our Charter can be used to suspend sections 2 and 7-15 of our Charter rights, which includes pretty much everything that you’d consider to be our basic human rights.
Twitter shareholder case accusing Musk of driving down stock goes to jury
5 minute read Preview Sunday, Mar. 22, 2026Protesters rally against police brutality
3 minute read Preview Sunday, Mar. 15, 2026Manitoba looks to strengthen whistleblower protections
4 minute read Preview Sunday, Mar. 15, 2026Not a just war
4 minute read Saturday, Mar. 14, 2026Harry Huebner in his letter to the editor (Vanishing limits, March 7) was, in my opinion, bang on in his analysis of where the world now finds itself because of the U.S. Operation Epic Fury attack on Iran. Like him, I am skeptical of the possibility of a just war, generally believing that just wars exist only in theory, never in reality.
This war has already shown no American inclination toward reasonable justification, international legality, judicious destruction and commensurate violence, and anticipation of desirable outcomes — the determinants of just war. As in all wars, the first casualties are truth, reason, morality and humanity.
The language of war is deliberately deceitful, meant to divert our attention from its real agenda and its human consequences.
The pretense that this was a defensive move necessitated because all diplomatic channels had been exhausted simply does not stand up as more details about the preparation for war are revealed. The evidence regarding Iran as a nuclear threat — nuclear buildup and capacity — is unsubstantiated, by now a well-known falsehood. The reluctance to call it war, instead depicting it as a “targeted major combat operation” seems clearly intended to appease MAGA folks incensed with U.S. participation in foreign wars.
Mother of wounded Maya Gebala sues OpenAI over mass shooting in Tumbler Ridge, B.C.
4 minute read Preview Tuesday, Mar. 10, 2026Supreme Court says asylum seekers entitled to subsidized Quebec daycare
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Mar. 7, 2026Federal judge extends order protecting refugees in Minnesota from being arrested and deported
3 minute read Preview Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026First Nations hopeful as Hydro’s first Indigenous chair eyes reversing years of enmity
5 minute read Preview Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2026Town of Virden sues province, engineer firm over aquifer
3 minute read Monday, Feb. 23, 2026The Town of Virden is suing the provincial government and an engineering consulting firm for recommending it switch to a new aquifer, which ran out of drinking water four years later.
Eby says it looks like OpenAI could have prevented ‘horrific’ Tumbler Ridge killings
5 minute read Preview Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2026Manitoba urges court to throw out First Nation’s moose-hunt lawsuit
3 minute read Preview Sunday, Feb. 22, 2026Albertans react to looming referendum during weekend rally, call-in radio show
4 minute read Preview Monday, Feb. 23, 2026Norway House files suit against Hydro, governments over Lake Winnipeg
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Feb. 21, 2026Milei’s overhaul of Argentina labor law advances in Congress as unions strike in protest
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Feb. 21, 2026AI a potent wedge issue in U.S. midterms
4 minute read Friday, Feb. 13, 2026Americans head to the polls again in November with no shortage of issues at stake. The White House’s weaponization of tariffs, immigration crackdown, government purges and foreign adventurism have roiled the nation. But calls to rein in artificial intelligence (AI) may ultimately gain the most traction for candidates.
The Trump administration’s AI Action Plan, released last summer, promises to assert U.S. technological dominance at breakneck speed. The strategy vows Washington will dismantle barriers to data centre construction, eliminate a raft of “woke” safety measures and lean on other nations to buy American tech.
Silicon Valley evangelists have fully bought in. Amazon, Meta, Google and Microsoft alone have announced US$650 billion in AI-related spending for 2026. That eclipses the GDP of countries such as Israel or Norway. It also doesn’t factor in other venture capital investments elsewhere, or outlays from OpenAI, Anthropic or the Elon Musk-owned xAI.
A market strategist told the Wall Street Journal last month that the U.S. could plausibly be in a recession if it weren’t for AI investments. Although this isn’t necessarily a good thing. America’s economic growth “has become so dependent on AI-related investment and wealth,” the paper reported,” that if the boom turns to bust, it could take the broader economy with it.”