Shape and Space

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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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.

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

Donna Spencer, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Preview
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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.

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Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2025

Canada's Mackenzie Boyd-Clowes soars through the air during the Men's Ski Jumping Individual HS 138 event at the Nordic World Championships in Planica, Slovenia, Friday, March 3, 2023. (AP Photo/Darko Bandic)

Canada's Mackenzie Boyd-Clowes soars through the air during the Men's Ski Jumping Individual HS 138 event at the Nordic World Championships in Planica, Slovenia, Friday, March 3, 2023. (AP Photo/Darko Bandic)
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Robot umpires are coming to MLB. Here’s how they work

Ronald Blum, The Associated Press 5 minute read Preview
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Robot umpires are coming to MLB. Here’s how they work

Ronald Blum, The Associated Press 5 minute read Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2025

NEW YORK (AP) — Robot umpires are coming to the big leagues in 2026 after Major League Baseball’s 11-man competition committee on Tuesday approved use of the Automated Ball/Strike System.

ABS 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 this year and at this summer's All-Star Game in Atlanta.

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

How does the Automated Ball-Strike System work?

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Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2025

FILE - A Trackman device used for the Automated Ball-Strike System is posted on the balcony behind home plate before a spring training baseball game between the Kansas City Royals and the Los Angeles Dodgers, Saturday, Feb. 22, 2025, in Phoenix. (AP Photo/Ashley Landis, file)

FILE - A Trackman device used for the Automated Ball-Strike System is posted on the balcony behind home plate before a spring training baseball game between the Kansas City Royals and the Los Angeles Dodgers, Saturday, Feb. 22, 2025, in Phoenix. (AP Photo/Ashley Landis, file)
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Another subdivision, another city problem

Erna Buffie 5 minute read Preview
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Another subdivision, another city problem

Erna Buffie 5 minute read Tuesday, Sep. 23, 2025

So, here we go again folks. We just get the protection of the Lemay Forest done and dusted and bingo, there’s another proposed subdivision for 23 homes on two-acre flood plain lots right across the Red River from the Lemay on the old Daman Farm site.

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Tuesday, Sep. 23, 2025

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS

Piles of trees were found cut down in the Lemay Forest before the Manitoba government announced it would expropriate the land for a provincial park.

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS
                                Piles of trees were found cut down in the Lemay Forest before the Manitoba government announced it would expropriate the land for a provincial park.
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Rogers wins gold, sets Canadian record in hammer throw at world championships

The Canadian Press 4 minute read Preview
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Rogers wins gold, sets Canadian record in hammer throw at world championships

The Canadian Press 4 minute read Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2025

TOKYO - Camryn Rogers set the tone early in the women's hammer throw at the world athletics championships Monday with an impressive opening toss of 78.09 metres.

Good enough for a world title. Not good enough for Rogers.

The 26-year-old from Richmond, B.C., put the competition out of reach with her second throw of 80.51 metres to claim her second straight world championship gold medal in dominant fashion.

Rogers's winning throw broke her own Canadian record and is the second longest ever behind the world record of 82.98 set by Poland's Anita Wlodarczyk in 2016. Rogers's previous personal best was 78.88 metres.

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Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2025

Canada's Camryn Rogers reacts after an attempt in the women's hammer throw final at the World Athletics Championships in Tokyo, Monday, Sept. 15, 2025. (AP Photo/Matthias Schrader)

Canada's Camryn Rogers reacts after an attempt in the women's hammer throw final at the World Athletics Championships in Tokyo, Monday, Sept. 15, 2025. (AP Photo/Matthias Schrader)
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‘As we grow, our roots only grow deeper’: Red River Mutual insurance company celebrates 150 years

Aaron Epp 6 minute read Preview
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‘As we grow, our roots only grow deeper’: Red River Mutual insurance company celebrates 150 years

Aaron Epp 6 minute read Monday, Sep. 15, 2025

If Red River Mutual was an ice cream flavour, it would be rhubarb.

Scratch that. Red River Mutual has an ice cream flavour — and it is rhubarb.

Earlier this year, the mutual insurance company — which is headquartered in Altona and has a regional office in Winnipeg — partnered with Chaeban Ice Cream to create a special, limited edition flavour. Red River Mutual Rhubarb includes fresh pieces of the titular vegetable along with crisp clusters made using rolled oats, flour, brown sugar, butter and almonds.

The collaboration is part of Red River Mutual’s ongoing 150th anniversary celebrations, and the rhubarb is a nod to the company’s roots in southern Manitoba’s Pembina Valley.

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Monday, Sep. 15, 2025

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS

Red River Mutual president/CEO Brenda Gibson in their Winnipeg offices on Tuesday, Sept. 9, 2025. For Aaron story. Free Press 2025

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS
                                Red River Mutual president/CEO Brenda Gibson in their Winnipeg offices on Tuesday, Sept. 9, 2025. For Aaron story. Free Press 2025
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Running down Terry Fox’s dream

2 minute read Preview
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Running down Terry Fox’s dream

2 minute read Friday, Sep. 12, 2025

In an era when today’s endurance feats seemingly defy human limits, his accomplishments still marvel.

In 1980, a curly-haired young man dipped a prosthetic right leg in the Atlantic Ocean in St. John’s, Nlfd., before embarking on a cross-country journey to raise money and awareness for cancer research.

With his signature hop-step running gait, Terry Fox, often only wearing grey shorts, a white cotton T-shirt with the words Marathon of Hope stencilled on the front, and blue adidas shoes, ran an average of 42 kilometres, or the equivalent of a full marathon, for 143 days. In total, he tallied 5,373 kilometres spanning six provinces.

His physical journey ended Sept. 1 of that year just shy of Thunder Bay when the cancer that had claimed his leg at age 18 had returned in his lungs. He died 10 months later, shortly before his 23rd birthday. However, his dream of raising millions of dollars for cancer research never faded.

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Friday, Sep. 12, 2025

Ruth Bonneville / Free Press LOCAL - Terry Fox Walk Two grade 4 students hold sign as they walk with their classmates, grades K - 5 from Riverbend Community School as they take part in the Terry Fox Foundation Walk Friday. (No Names provided) Sept 12th, 2025

Ruth Bonneville / Free Press LOCAL - Terry Fox Walk Two grade 4 students hold sign as they walk with their classmates, grades K - 5 from Riverbend Community School as they take part in the Terry Fox Foundation Walk Friday. (No Names provided) Sept 12th, 2025
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Africa: The cartographic (and demographic) truth

Gwynne Dyer 5 minute read Tuesday, Aug. 26, 2025

Two Africa-based advocacy groups, Africa No Filter and Speak Up Africa, launched a “Change the Map” campaign in April.

“When whole generations, in Africa and elsewhere, learn from a distorted map, they develop a biased view of Africa’s role in the world,” said Speak Up founder Fara Ndiaye — but hardly anybody outside Africa noticed.

That may be changing, because earlier this month the 55-member African Union endorsed the campaign, making it a diplomatic issue as well. The claim is that the traditional Mercator map of the world shows the African continent as hardly any bigger than Europe, whereas in reality it is at least four times as big.

That’s all very well, and it’s true that Mercator’s map projection dates from the 16th century, when European ocean-going ships were expanding and transforming everybody’s view of the world. But it’s also true that all flat maps distort the surface of a sphere (like the Earth) one way or another. Choose your poison, but you can’t have it all.

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Winnipeg’s transit system has changed. Here’s your survival guide.

Free Press staff 4 minute read Preview
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Winnipeg’s transit system has changed. Here’s your survival guide.

Free Press staff 4 minute read Monday, Jun. 30, 2025

Winnipeg Transit's bus network is undergoing a complete transformation on June 29. The Free Press has created a survival guide to help you navigate the new system.

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Monday, Jun. 30, 2025

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESs fileS

A new bus stop sign on Notre Dame Avenue near Ellen Street. The overhaul of the Winnipeg Transit system focuses on frequency to make bus travel more attractive to riders.

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESs fileS
                                A new bus stop sign on Notre Dame Avenue near Ellen Street. The overhaul of the Winnipeg Transit system focuses on frequency to make bus travel more attractive to riders.
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‘I hope that we don’t lose the town’: Snow Lake residents get mandatory evacuation order

Chris Kitching 7 minute read Preview
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‘I hope that we don’t lose the town’: Snow Lake residents get mandatory evacuation order

Chris Kitching 7 minute read Friday, Jun. 6, 2025

Another wildfire-threatened town in northern Manitoba began a mandatory evacuation Friday, while a 140-kilometre-long blaze threatened multiple communities in two provinces and put evacuees on tenterhooks.

Snow Lake, home to about 1,100 people, ordered residents to get out before noon Saturday and head to an evacuation reception centre in Winnipeg if they need a place to stay.

“I put the sprinkler on my home, and locked the door and left,” resident Caroline Denby told the Free Press during her roughly seven-hour drive to Winnipeg. “I hope that we don’t lose the town. Everybody getting out is the main thing. I really trust our (fire) crew, and believe they’re really wonderful at what they do.”

Town officials started planning for a potential evacuation as early as about two weeks ago. A voluntary evacuation began Tuesday. Denby was ready to go when it became mandatory.

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Friday, Jun. 6, 2025

PROVINCE OF MANITOBA

Fire crews in Flin Flon on Thursday.

PROVINCE OF MANITOBA
                                Fire crews in Flin Flon on Thursday.
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‘Pray for rain’: wildfire races toward Flin Flon

Carol Sanders and Nicole Buffie 8 minute read Preview
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‘Pray for rain’: wildfire races toward Flin Flon

Carol Sanders and Nicole Buffie 8 minute read Friday, May. 30, 2025

Premier Wab Kinew urged Manitobans to remain calm Friday, a pivotal day in the war on wildfires in which shifting winds sent flames bearing down on Flin Flon, more people had to be evacuated from more communities and desperately needed resources were promised by the United States.

“Keep calm and carry on,” Kinew told an afternoon news conference at the legislature.

He said the threat to Flin Flon, about 830 kilometres northwest of Winnipeg, had become so severe that the mayor, council and the few others who remained after a citywide evacuation order issued Wednesday afternoon had no choice but to leave Friday.

“We had our health-care workers leave this morning… the only folks remaining on the ground are the firefighters and folks in the office of the fire commissioner and RCMP who are there to battle the blaze,” Kinew said.

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Friday, May. 30, 2025

NICHOLAS ZAHARI / CANADIAN ARMED FORCES FILES

In Norway House, military members help to evacuate residents from Mathias Colomb First Nation, who had escaped a wildfire near their community at the end of May.

NICHOLAS ZAHARI / CANADIAN ARMED FORCES FILES
In Norway House, military members help to evacuate residents from Mathias Colomb First Nation, who had escaped a wildfire near their community at the end of May.

Cougar makes rare appearance in Manitoba

Kevin Rollason 3 minute read Preview

Cougar makes rare appearance in Manitoba

Kevin Rollason 3 minute read Friday, Nov. 14, 2025

A cougar made a rare appearance on a trail camera in the Whiteshell Provincial Park.

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Friday, Nov. 14, 2025

Dannyboy_Wildlife

A cougar — caught by a trail camera — prowls in the Whiteshell Provincial Park on Oct 28 at 4:50 a.m.

Dannyboy_Wildlife
                                A cougar — caught by a trail camera — prowls in the Whiteshell Provincial Park on Oct 28 at 4:50 a.m.

Better protection needed for urban trees

Editorial 4 minute read Preview

Better protection needed for urban trees

Editorial 4 minute read Wednesday, Sep. 17, 2025

While you might have stopped and thought about the poetry of the trees that are a constant in the city of Winnipeg — big and small, sometimes healthy and other times failing, you probably haven’t thought about the value of a tree.

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Wednesday, Sep. 17, 2025

Russell Wangersky/Free Press

A civic tree protection notice in Saskatoon.

Russell Wangersky/Free Press
                                A civic tree protection notice in Saskatoon.

Manitobans raise more than $81,000 for cancer research at Terry Fox Run

Malak Abas 3 minute read Preview

Manitobans raise more than $81,000 for cancer research at Terry Fox Run

Malak Abas 3 minute read Sunday, Sep. 14, 2025

Hundreds of runners, walkers and cyclists flooded Assiniboine Park Sunday to remember Terry Fox’s legacy and honour their own loved ones affected by cancer.

The 45th annual Terry Fox Run kicked off by the park pavilion at 10 a.m. Sunday. Manitoba donors raised more than $81,000 for cancer research this year.

Families old and young took to the 2.5-kilometre route all morning, some with shirts bearing Fox’s iconic visage, others carrying signs and mementos of the people they were running for.

Some came in recognition of someone currently battling cancer, like Jason Wells, who ran for his father.

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Sunday, Sep. 14, 2025

JOHN WOODS / FREE PRESS

People take part in the 45th annual Terry Fox Run at Assiniboine Park Sunday.

JOHN WOODS / FREE PRESS
                                People take part in the 45th annual Terry Fox Run at Assiniboine Park Sunday.

Day of free services, entertainment offers heartwarming helping hand to city’s homeless

Malak Abas 4 minute read Preview

Day of free services, entertainment offers heartwarming helping hand to city’s homeless

Malak Abas 4 minute read Friday, Sep. 12, 2025

After three years of homelessness and endless hours walking Winnipeg’s streets, Vineet got a rare chance to put his feet up Friday.

The 49-year-old immigrant from India was one of hundreds of people without homes who received free, hands-on care from volunteers at the Gizhe Waa Ti‑Sii‑Win Service Delivery Expo.

A nurse was checking, cleaning and treating blisters, calluses and toenail issues — small irritants that can quickly become big problems if they get infected, a worry for people exposed to the elements who don’t have regular access to medical care.

“This is something good for me… we walk all day,” said Vineet, who offered only his first name.

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Friday, Sep. 12, 2025

RUTH BONNEVILLE / FREE PRESS

A nurse checks, cleans and treats blisters, calluses and toenail issues at Salvation Army Weetamah Centre Friday — small irritants that can quickly become big problems if they get infected.

RUTH BONNEVILLE / FREE PRESS
                                A nurse checks, cleans and treats blisters, calluses and toenail issues at Salvation Army Weetamah Centre Friday — small irritants that can quickly become big problems if they get infected.

Steinbach, nearby communities flooded in massive overnight deluge

Chris Kitching 5 minute read Preview

Steinbach, nearby communities flooded in massive overnight deluge

Chris Kitching 5 minute read Friday, Sep. 12, 2025

Some residents of Steinbach were mopping up and assessing damage Friday after the southeastern Manitoba city was swamped by two months’ worth of rain in about four hours.

An animal rescue charity was hit by catastrophe again when basements and streets flooded almost a year to the day a deluge inundated buildings.

“Last year, they told us it was a one-in-1oo-year event, and here we are 11 months later with the same event,” said Graham Pollock, vice-president of Steinbach and Area Animal Rescue.

He said the organization moved almost two dozen cats and kittens to foster homes after nearly 2.1 metres (seven feet) of floodwater filled the shelter’s basement overnight Thursday.

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Friday, Sep. 12, 2025

SUPPLIED

A Steinbach animal rescue charity was hit by a second catastrophe in a year as basements and streets flooded while some communities were inundated by two months’ worth of rain overnight Thursday.
Photos taken Friday morning, September 12, 2025

SUPPLIED

A Steinbach animal rescue charity was hit by a second catastrophe in a year as basements and streets flooded while some communities were inundated by two months’ worth of rain overnight Thursday.
Photos taken Friday morning, September 12, 2025

Commuter traffic stops for whales on Australia’s humpback highway

Charlotte Graham-mclay And Mark Baker, The Associated Press 4 minute read Preview

Commuter traffic stops for whales on Australia’s humpback highway

Charlotte Graham-mclay And Mark Baker, The Associated Press 4 minute read Friday, Oct. 3, 2025

PORT STEPHENS, Australia (AP) — The ferry was late, but not because of the usual traffic. Sydney commuters watched from an idling boat this month as humpback whales the size of buses surfaced nearby, halting the vessel’s passage across the harbor. The curious mammals seemed to be watching them back.

In June and July, it’s not uncommon for whales to stop water traffic in Sydney. Winter heralds the opening of the so-called humpback highway, a migratory corridor along Australia's east coast used by about 40,000 of the massive creatures as they travel from feeding grounds in freezing Antarctica to tropical breeding areas off Queensland state.

“It’s blubber to blubber,” said Dr. Vanessa Pirotta, a wildlife scientist at Macquarie University in Sydney and author of the book “Humpback Highway.” During peak traffic periods the bustling coastal city of 5.5 million people becomes one of the world’s few urban centers where you might see a breaching whale on your morning walk, while buying a coffee, or waiting at a bus stop – anyplace you can see the ocean.

Whales cruise close to shore

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Friday, Oct. 3, 2025

FILE - A humpback whale breaches off the coast of Port Stephens, north of Sydney, Australia, on June 18, 2025. (AP Photo/Mark Baker, File)

FILE - A humpback whale breaches off the coast of Port Stephens, north of Sydney, Australia, on June 18, 2025. (AP Photo/Mark Baker, File)

Long-awaited Winnipeg Transit network overhaul goes live Sunday

Joyanne Pursaga 5 minute read Preview

Long-awaited Winnipeg Transit network overhaul goes live Sunday

Joyanne Pursaga 5 minute read Tuesday, Jun. 24, 2025

Winnipeg’s bus network will undergo a massive one-day transformation on Sunday that alters virtually every route.

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Tuesday, Jun. 24, 2025

Ruth Bonneville / Free Press

Student Winner Nnah at the bus stop on Portage Ave. at Polo Park Tuesday. Winnipeg’s bus network will undergo a massive one-day transformation on Sunday that alters virtually every route.

Ruth Bonneville / Free Press
                                Student Winner Ninah at the bus stop on Portage Ave. at Polo Park Tuesday. Winnipeg’s bus network will undergo a massive one-day transformation on Sunday that alters virtually every route.

Flin Flon’s school year comes to disappointing end for graduating evacuees

Maggie Macintosh 5 minute read Preview

Flin Flon’s school year comes to disappointing end for graduating evacuees

Maggie Macintosh 5 minute read Monday, Jun. 16, 2025

Homesick evacuees from the Flin Flon area were dealt another blow Monday when they learned an out-of-control forest fire had cancelled the rest of the school year in northwestern Manitoba.

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Monday, Jun. 16, 2025

SUPPLIED

Cassidy Alexander had photos taken recently wearing her graduation gown, but her high school in Flin Flon just announced the remainder of the school year, including graduation ceremonies, will be cancelled due to wildfires that forced the town’s evacuation.

SUPPLIED
                                Cassidy Alexander had photos taken recently wearing her graduation gown, but her high school in Flin Flon just announced the remainder of the school year, including graduation ceremonies, will be cancelled due to wildfires that forced the town’s evacuation.

Saskatchewan lays charges in wildfires while 1,000 more flee in Manitoba

Aaron Sousa, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Preview

Saskatchewan lays charges in wildfires while 1,000 more flee in Manitoba

Aaron Sousa, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Sunday, Sep. 21, 2025

Prairie wildfires developed on two fronts Friday, as 1,000 more Manitoba residents were forced to flee their homes and Saskatchewan RCMP charged two people with starting blazes.

Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe told a news conference that one charge relates to starting a fire near La Ronge, which has forced 7,000 people from the area.

“The RCMP have informed us that they have now charged a couple of individuals,” Moe said.

An 18-year-old woman from Montreal Lake Cree Nation and a 36-year-old man from Pelican Narrows each face one count of arson, said RCMP.

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Sunday, Sep. 21, 2025

A reception centre for evacuees of the wildfires in northern Manitoba is being staffed by provincial Emergency Social Services, and the Canadian Red Cross at the Billy Mosienko Arena in Winnipeg, Thursday, May 29, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/David Lipnowski

A reception centre for evacuees of the wildfires in northern Manitoba is being staffed by provincial Emergency Social Services, and the Canadian Red Cross at the Billy Mosienko Arena in Winnipeg, Thursday, May 29, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/David Lipnowski

Floods kill at least 111 as northern Nigeria battles climate change, dry spells and heavy rainfall

Taiwo Adebayo, The Associated Press 2 minute read Preview

Floods kill at least 111 as northern Nigeria battles climate change, dry spells and heavy rainfall

Taiwo Adebayo, The Associated Press 2 minute read Saturday, Sep. 20, 2025

ABUJA, Nigeria (AP) — Torrents of predawn rain unleashed flooding that killed at least 111 people in a market town where northern Nigerian farmers sell their wares to traders from the south, officials said Friday, predicting the death toll would grow.

The Nigerian Hydrological Services Agency did not immediately say how much rain fell after midnight Thursday in the town of Mokwa in the state of Niger more than 180 miles (300 kilometers) west of Abuja, the capital of Africa's most populous nation.

Communities in northern Nigeria have been experiencing prolonged dry spells worsened by climate change and excessive rainfall that leads to severe flooding during the brief wet season.

In videos and photos on social media, floodwaters covered neighborhoods and homes were submerged, with their roofs barely visible above the brown colored waters. Waist-deep in water, residents tried to salvage what they could, or rescue others.

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Saturday, Sep. 20, 2025

The map above locates Mokwa, Nigeria, where floods have submerged the town and caused at least 100 deaths. (AP Graphic)

The map above locates Mokwa, Nigeria, where floods have submerged the town and caused at least 100 deaths. (AP Graphic)

Demonstrators demand overpass at dangerous Carberry intersection

Alex Lambert 4 minute read Preview

Demonstrators demand overpass at dangerous Carberry intersection

Alex Lambert 4 minute read Friday, May. 23, 2025

CARBERRY — More than 150 people stood near the Trans-Canada Highway and Highway 5 to denounce the preferred option for a redesign of the intersection in response to a collision two years ago that killed 17 people.

They carried signs that read “safety not shortcuts,” and “how many more accidents before they listen.” The group opposes a U-turn option, which is called an RCUT.

Jordan Dickson, 31, one of the organizers, said the RCUT model isn’t safe for the farmers and truckers who live in the area.

“There’s hundreds, if not thousands of trucks … plus all the other everyday passenger traffic coming through here,” she said.

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Friday, May. 23, 2025

More than 150 people gathered to protest proposed changes for the Trans-Canada Highway and Highway 5, where 17 people died in a crash in June 2023.

More than 150 people gathered to protest proposed changes for the Trans-Canada Highway and Highway 5, where 17 people died in a crash in June 2023.
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Réal explorateur

By William Sineux / De La Liberté pour le Winnipeg Free Press 4 minute read Preview
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Réal explorateur

By William Sineux / De La Liberté pour le Winnipeg Free Press 4 minute read Saturday, Apr. 14, 2012

RÉAL Bérard est l’un des rares explorateurs des temps modernes à partir à l’assaut des rivières capricieuses armé de son canoë, de papier et d’un crayon.

Réal Bérard est en effet le premier à avoir entrepris de cartographier pour le gouvernement puis par passion l’ensemble des rivières manitobaines.

Depuis 1961 le cartographe parcourt ainsi des kilomètres de rivières et des jours durant, pour les dessiner et les décrire dans les moindres détails afin de créer des cartes uniques en leur genre.

“Après avoir fait les Beaux-arts de Montréal j’ai travaillé pour le ministère des ressources naturelles et je patrouillais sur les rivières jusqu’au jour où j’ai voulu intégrer mon art à mon travail de tous les jours en dessinant et peignant ce que je voyais.”

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Saturday, Apr. 14, 2012

WILLIAM SINEUX / LA LIBERTÉ
Réal Bérard fait des cartes uniques et très précises des rivières manitobaines, agrémentées de croquis et descriptifs de tout ce qui fait l’identité des rivières qu’il explore.

WILLIAM SINEUX / LA LIBERTÉ
Réal Bérard fait des cartes uniques et très précises des rivières manitobaines, agrémentées de croquis et descriptifs de tout ce qui fait l’identité des rivières qu’il explore.