Shape and Space

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

No Subscription Required

Census data does much more than determine population

Kevin Rollason 8 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

Census data does much more than determine population

Kevin Rollason 8 minute read Friday, May. 1, 2026

The children of families who live in public housing in Tuxedo are more likely to graduate from high school, go to college or university, and less likely to need income assistance when they become adults than their counterparts who live just off Main Street in the North End.

How do we know this? The national census.

Officially known as the Census of Population, in the next few weeks, an estimated 41 million Canadians will receive this year’s census to fill in the boxes that reflect their lives. Most will receive the short form, which census officials say should take only five to 10 minutes to fill out. But 25 per cent of Canadians will receive the lengthier long-form census, which includes more demographic questions, and takes about a half-hour or so to complete, depending on the size of the household.

It’s only when the numbers are tallied that we will know exactly how many people there are in the country.

Read
Friday, May. 1, 2026
No Subscription Required

Solar ranch in Tennessee aims to prove grazing cattle under the panels is a farmland win-win

Tammy Webber And Joshua A. Bickel, The Associated Press 5 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

Solar ranch in Tennessee aims to prove grazing cattle under the panels is a farmland win-win

Tammy Webber And Joshua A. Bickel, The Associated Press 5 minute read Friday, May. 22, 2026

CHRISTIANA, Tenn. (AP) — From a distance, the small solar farm in central Tennessee looks like others that now dot rural America, with row upon row of black panels absorbing the sun's rays to generate electricity.

But beneath these panels is lush pasture instead of gravel, enjoyed by a small herd of cattle that spends its days munching grass and resting in the shade.

Silicon Ranch, which owns the 40-acre farm in Christiana, outside of Nashville, believes cattle-grazing is the next frontier in so-called agrivoltaics, which mostly has involved growing crops or grazing sheep beneath the panels.

The solar company debuted the project this week and will spend the next year working to demonstrate to farmers that much larger cattle also can thrive at solar sites. If successful, advocates say, that could jump-start new projects to meet the soaring electricity demand driven by rapidly expanding data centers — without contributing climate-warming carbon emissions — and help cattle producers hold onto their land and livelihoods.

Read
Friday, May. 22, 2026
No Subscription Required

Family donates 636 acres of peatlands near Elma to nature conservancy

Tyler Searle 3 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

Family donates 636 acres of peatlands near Elma to nature conservancy

Tyler Searle 3 minute read Thursday, Apr. 23, 2026

A Manitoba family is doing their part to support the ecosystem by making a deal with the Nature Conservancy of Canada to protect 636 acres of peatlands in perpetuity.

Read
Thursday, Apr. 23, 2026
No Subscription Required

Couple fights city to retain 11-foot-plus fence

Nicole Buffie 4 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 14, 2026

A notable Winnipeg couple are fighting a city order to reduce the size of their more than 11-foot fence — which is much higher than allowed under city regulations.

Lynne Skromeda and Jason Smith built a fence in 2023 as part of renovations to their McMillan neighbourhood backyard. A neighbour filed a complaint and city bylaw inspectors ruled the fence was too high. The city later approved a variance application to allow for a seven-foot, five-inch fence.

“In 2023, the applicant worked with urban planning to arrive at a compromised height of 7.5 feet and the applicant advised they would reduce the fence height accordingly. Further inspections at the site reveal that the applicant did not complete the necessary reduction to the fence height to meet the supported and approved height of 7.5 feet,” says a report prepared for an April 20 appeal hearing.

The city’s limit on fence height is six-feet, six inches for rear and side yards, and four feet in front yards. The fence in dispute is more than 11 feet high along a portion of the west side yard and more than eight feet along the rear yard.

No Subscription Required

Artemis II astronauts make long-distance call to the space station as they head home from the moon

Marcia Dunn, The Associated Press 4 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

Artemis II astronauts make long-distance call to the space station as they head home from the moon

Marcia Dunn, The Associated Press 4 minute read Wednesday, Apr. 29, 2026

HOUSTON (AP) — Still aglow from their triumphant lunar flyby, the Artemis II astronauts made more history Tuesday: calling their friends aboard the International Space Station hundreds of thousands of miles away as they headed home from the moon.

It was the first moonship-to-spaceship radio linkup ever. NASA's Apollo crews had no off-the-planet company back in the 1960s and 1970s, the last time humanity set sail for deep space.

"We have been waiting for this like you can’t imagine,” Artemis II commander Reid Wiseman called out.

For Christina Koch on Artemis II and Jessica Meir aboard the space station, it marked a joyous space reunion despite being 230,000 miles (370,000 kilometers) apart. The two teamed up for the world's first all-female spacewalk in 2019 outside the orbiting lab.

Read
Wednesday, Apr. 29, 2026
No Subscription Required

The Latest: Artemis II astronauts reach orbit on historic mission to the moon and back

The Associated Press 22 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

The Latest: Artemis II astronauts reach orbit on historic mission to the moon and back

The Associated Press 22 minute read Saturday, Apr. 25, 2026

Four astronauts embarked on a high-stakes flight around the moon Wednesday, humanity’s first lunar voyage in more than half a century and the thrilling leadoff in NASA’s push toward a landing in two years.

NASA's launch team loaded more than 700,000 gallons of fuel into the 32-story Space Launch System rocket early Wednesday, setting the stage for blast off in the evening at Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

Artemis astronauts Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch and Jeremy Hansen are on board. They’ll hurtle several thousand miles beyond the moon, hang a U-turn and then come straight back. No circling around the moon, no stopping for a moonwalk — just a quick out-and-back lasting less than 10 days. NASA promises more boot prints in the gray lunar dust, but not before a couple practice missions.

Unlike the Apollo missions that sent astronauts to the moon from 1968 through 1972, Artemis’ debut crew includes a woman, a person of color and a Canadian citizen.

Read
Saturday, Apr. 25, 2026
No Subscription Required

Robot umpires are coming to MLB. Here’s how they work

Ronald Blum, The Associated Press 5 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

Robot umpires are coming to MLB. Here’s how they work

Ronald Blum, The Associated Press 5 minute read Friday, Apr. 24, 2026

NEW YORK (AP) — Robot umpires are coming to the big leagues this year.

The Automated Ball/Strike System will be introduced in the form of a challenge system in which the human umpire makes each call, which can be appealed to the computer. Robot umpires have been tested in the minor leagues since 2019, with recent testing done at Triple-A since 2022, MLB spring training last year and at the 2025 All-Star Game in Atlanta.

Here's what to know about MLB's robot umps.

How does the Automated Ball-Strike System work?

Read
Friday, Apr. 24, 2026
No Subscription Required

‘Fly WestJet, see a UFO’

Kevin Rollason 2 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

‘Fly WestJet, see a UFO’

Kevin Rollason 2 minute read Saturday, Mar. 21, 2026

The truth is out there — or at least it could be outside the cockpit of a WestJet flight.

In an incident reported by NAV Canada to Transport Canada on Friday, WestJet pilots had reported they had flown by “a basketball-sized object at 13,000 feet” during a flight from Winnipeg to Calgary on Jan. 19.

The pilots, of flight WJA485, were flying just northwest of Canmore at the time and descending to land in Calgary when the incident occurred.

NAV Canada has classified the incident, under occurrence event information, as a “weather balloon, meteor, rocket, CIRVIS/UFO.” CIRVIS stands for Communications Instructions for Reporting Vital Intelligence Sightings.

Read
Saturday, Mar. 21, 2026
No Subscription Required

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.

No Subscription Required

NASA clears its Artemis moon rocket for an April launch with four astronauts following repairs

Marcia Dunn, The Associated Press 3 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

NASA clears its Artemis moon rocket for an April launch with four astronauts following repairs

Marcia Dunn, The Associated Press 3 minute read Friday, Apr. 24, 2026

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — NASA cleared its moon rocket on Thursday for an April launch with four astronauts after completing the latest round of repairs.

The 322-foot (98-meter) rocket will roll out of the hangar and back to the pad next week at Florida's Kennedy Space Center, leading to a launch attempt as early as April 1. It will mark humanity's first trip to the moon in more than 50 years.

The Artemis II crew should have blasted off on a lunar flyaround earlier this year, but fuel leaks and other problems with the Space Launch System rocket interfered.

Although NASA managed to plug the hydrogen fuel leaks at the pad in February, a helium-flow issue forced the space agency to return the rocket to the Vehicle Assembly Building for repairs, bumping the mission to April.

Read
Friday, Apr. 24, 2026
No Subscription Required

Transfer program adds to Manitoba First Nation’s bison population

Crystal Greene Local Journalism Initiative Reporter 4 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

Transfer program adds to Manitoba First Nation’s bison population

Crystal Greene Local Journalism Initiative Reporter 4 minute read Monday, Mar. 9, 2026

The herd of bison that calls Chitek Lake Anishinaabe Provincial Park in Manitoba home just grew a little larger.

Read
Monday, Mar. 9, 2026
No Subscription Required

What to know: Downtown Anchorage braces for a canine takeover as the Iditarod’s 54th run begins

Mark Thiessen, The Associated Press 5 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

What to know: Downtown Anchorage braces for a canine takeover as the Iditarod’s 54th run begins

Mark Thiessen, The Associated Press 5 minute read Friday, Apr. 24, 2026

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — Hundreds of barking dogs took over downtown Anchorage as the ceremonial start of the world’s most famous sled dog race got underway Saturday. As snow fell, fans lined up near the starting line in frigid, 19 degree F (minus 7.2 degree C) weather to see and cheer their favorite mushers. The competitive start to the race begins Sunday.

Here’s what to know about the 54th running of the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race, which features a new amateur category and financial support from a Norwegian billionaire.

What is the Iditarod?

The Iditarod was conceived by co-founders Dorothy Page and Joe Redington Sr. as a long-distance sled dog race to honor both Alaska’s mushing tradition and the Iditarod Trail. That was a 938-mile (1,510-kilometer) freight and mail route that ran from Seward on Alaska’s southern coast to Nome, on the Bering Sea on Alaska’s western coast.

Read
Friday, Apr. 24, 2026
No Subscription Required

Spacecraft’s impact changed asteroid’s orbit around the sun in a save-the-Earth test, study finds

Marcia Dunn, The Associated Press 3 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

Spacecraft’s impact changed asteroid’s orbit around the sun in a save-the-Earth test, study finds

Marcia Dunn, The Associated Press 3 minute read Friday, Apr. 24, 2026

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — An asteroid that NASA used for target practice a few years ago was nudged into a slightly different route around the sun, findings that could help divert a future incoming killer space rock, scientists reported Friday.

It’s the first time that a celestial body’s orbit around the sun was deliberately changed. The asteroid that NASA's Dart spacecraft slammed into was never a threat to Earth.

“This study marks a notable step forward in our ability to prevent future asteroid impacts on Earth,” the international research team wrote in Science Advances.

The changes were slight — reductions of just one-tenth of a second and one-half of a mile (720 meters) to a solar lap spanning two years and hundreds of millions of miles (kilometers), according to the scientists.

Read
Friday, Apr. 24, 2026
No Subscription Required

High-tech snowplows and AI help cities clean up from big storms

Jeff Mcmurray, The Associated Press 5 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

High-tech snowplows and AI help cities clean up from big storms

Jeff Mcmurray, The Associated Press 5 minute read Friday, Apr. 24, 2026

Residents of Syracuse, New York — America’s snowiest city — once barraged a service hotline with street neglect complaints during blizzards, even if plows had passed two hours earlier but the work was hidden by fresh snow.

Now public trust seems to be rising as Syracuse and other cities across the U.S. integrate upgrades such as video monitoring, GPS mapping and artificial intelligence into snow operations that once relied almost entirely on manual planning.

Syracuse was one of the first to revamp the way it deploys its snowplows, and complaint calls have dropped by 30% under the new system, said Conor Muldoon, the city’s chief innovation officer.

“People will look out their window and say, ‘Hey, you guys are doing a terrible job,’” Muldoon said. “And we can point to a public map and say, ‘Here’s all the breadcrumbs for when that plow was there.’”

Read
Friday, Apr. 24, 2026
No Subscription Required

Infrequent lunar eclipse performs Copper Side of the Moon early Tuesday morning

Nicole Buffie 2 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

Infrequent lunar eclipse performs Copper Side of the Moon early Tuesday morning

Nicole Buffie 2 minute read Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026

Stargazers in Manitoba have the chance Tuesday to watch the last total lunar eclipse on this side of the world until 2029.

Read
Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026
No Subscription Required

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

Joyanne Pursaga 4 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

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.

Read
Friday, Feb. 27, 2026
No Subscription Required

Data centres and Manitoba: a cautionary tale

Joel Trenaman 5 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

Data centres and Manitoba: a cautionary tale

Joel Trenaman 5 minute read Friday, Feb. 27, 2026

Alongside the rapidly expanding use of AI in everyday life, there’s a growing awareness that the technology also comes with extreme, big-picture threats to the things we need more: fresh water, affordable clean energy and a healthy information ecosystem.

Read
Friday, Feb. 27, 2026
No Subscription Required

Co-founder of Winnipeg's NIBI Enviro Tech says 'opportunities are endless' for recycling shipping containers into custom pods

Aaron Epp 4 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

Co-founder of Winnipeg's NIBI Enviro Tech says 'opportunities are endless' for recycling shipping containers into custom pods

Aaron Epp 4 minute read Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026

When Robin Richards looks at a shipping container, he sees possibilities. It could be a freezer, backyard cabin or small storefront.

“The opportunities are endless,” Richards said.

The 40-year-old entrepreneur is the co-founder of NIBI Environmental Technologies Ltd., a Winnipeg business that recycles shipping containers and turns them into custom modular pods. The turnkey pods are designed to be mobile and durable.

Richards started the company in 2022 with business partner Kelsey Friesen. Last year, the company set up its headquarters in an industrial park in the Transcona neighbourhood of Winnipeg and began manufacturing pods.

Read
Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026
No Subscription Required

Manitoba roots go deep for Swiss sensation

Mike McIntyre 8 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

Manitoba roots go deep for Swiss sensation

Mike McIntyre 8 minute read Friday, Feb. 6, 2026

MILAN — Her birth certificate may say Switzerland, but make no mistake: Olympic speed skater Kaitlyn McGregor’s roots are firmly planted in Manitoba.

For starters, there’s the strong family connection. Her parents, Mark and Faye, hail from MacGregor, a small farming community about 130 kilometres west of Winnipeg. Aunts, uncles, cousins and grandparents are there as well. Yes, the McGregors have heard the jokes. No, the town isn’t named after them.

But secondly — and arguably more importantly — McGregor’s inspiration to reach this grand sporting stage can be traced directly to Winnipegger Cindy Klassen.

Remember the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, when Klassen set a Canadian Olympic record by winning five medals? McGregor certainly does, albeit from after the fact. She was 12 at the time, and it was that epic performance — brought to her attention by her grandmother through Free Press newspaper articles — that ultimately lit the fire.

Read
Friday, Feb. 6, 2026
No Subscription Required

An American skier is fighting to open up the last Winter Olympic sport off limits to women

Derek Gatopoulos, The Associated Press 4 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

An American skier is fighting to open up the last Winter Olympic sport off limits to women

Derek Gatopoulos, The Associated Press 4 minute read Friday, Feb. 27, 2026

MILAN, Italy (AP) — Annika Malacinski remembers the moment the door to the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics was slammed shut.

On a flight from Munich to Denver, she bought airplane Wi-Fi to join a conference call with the International Olympic Committee, certain that Nordic combined competition would at last be opened up to female athletes.

“Then the decision came: ‘no.’ No explanation, no discussion. Just ‘no,’ and then they moved on to the next topic,” she told The Associated Press from her training base in Norway. “I cried for eight hours straight on that flight. When I arrived in Denver, my eyes were swollen shut. It felt like my world had crashed.”

That was in June, 2022. And despite an ongoing campaign led by Malacinski, an athlete from Colorado now aged 24, her sport remains the last to exclude women – even as Milan Cortina is showcasing the highest level of female participation in Winter Games history at 47%.

Read
Friday, Feb. 27, 2026
No Subscription Required

First Nation’s power-outage misery ‘frozen like a rock’

Kevin Rollason 3 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

First Nation’s power-outage misery ‘frozen like a rock’

Kevin Rollason 3 minute read Wednesday, Jan. 14, 2026

An army of plumbers, engineers and members of the Canadian Armed Forces are continuing to assess damages after a lengthy power outage at Pimicikamak Cree Nation froze water and sewage pipes.

Chief David Monias said it is going to take months to repair damage to homes and years to install new water and sewage treatment plants and systems.

“They have frozen pipes — the sewage plant is completely frozen,” Monias said Wednesday. “The raw sewage has frozen like rock, it is as hard as rock. There is enough (methane) gas in there that we can’t even enter the building. So they are trying to figure out a way how to air out that building so that they can assess the sewage problem.”

Monias said the experts are going to try to get the water and sewage systems up and running while the community works with government on a longer term solution. He said the plants will eventually need to be decommissioned.

Read
Wednesday, Jan. 14, 2026
No Subscription Required

Clear Lake a snow-go zone with new pavilion

Connor McDowell 3 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

Clear Lake a snow-go zone with new pavilion

Connor McDowell 3 minute read Tuesday, Dec. 30, 2025

Wagasaming reels in the tourists in summer, but these days, its winter offerings are on the agenda. A large snow structure is being erected in the town site to enhance the recreational area in the cold season and host events such as a fashion show.

Read
Tuesday, Dec. 30, 2025
No Subscription Required

Charleswood residents weigh in on 55-plus development

Joyanne Pursaga 4 minute read Thursday, Nov. 20, 2025

A multi-family complex proposed for Charleswood has triggered a mixed response, with some residents concerned it would bring unwanted traffic and clash with the surrounding community.

The proposed development, which has 132 housing units on Roblin Boulevard, must be approved by city council.

The 4.7-acre (1.9-hectare) site contains three properties, including the Charleswood United Church at 4820 Roblin Blvd., as well as 4724 and 4814 Roblin, which each contain a single-family home. The development would maintain the church and add a six-storey residential building with a height of 69.5 feet (21.2 metres), with units geared toward the 55-plus age group.

Some community members are trying to stop the project, however, because they argue it’s a poor fit for the neighbourhood.

No Subscription Required

Ski jumper Mackenzie Boyd-Clowes takes to the air again for Canada

Donna Spencer, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

Ski jumper Mackenzie Boyd-Clowes takes to the air again for Canada

Donna Spencer, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2025

CALGARY - Mackenzie Boyd-Clowes has returned to ski jumping after a hiatus of two and a half years.

Boyd-Clowes laid down Canada's final jump of the mixed team event at the 2022 Winter Games for bronze and the country's first ever Olympic medal in the sport.

The four-time Olympian is back in the air again. Boyd-Clowes competed in a pair of September competitions and provisionally qualified for the 2026 Winter Games in Milan and Cortina, Italy.

"It's new and fresh and exciting. I took a long break and wasn't sure whether I would jump again and now I'm doing it," Boyd-Clowes said.

Read
Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2025