Math
Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.
The autism strategy gap is already here
5 minute read Preview Monday, Mar. 23, 2026Black people in Canada less likely to fill medication prescriptions due to cost, study says
4 minute read Preview Wednesday, Mar. 25, 2026‘Fly WestJet, see a UFO’
3 minute read Preview Saturday, Mar. 21, 2026Education taxes not a ‘hot mess’
5 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.
Fraud Awareness Month resonates more than ever as AI further blurs what’s real
6 minute read Preview Saturday, Mar. 21, 2026Most vulnerable will pay the most for federal budget cuts
5 minute read Preview Friday, Mar. 20, 2026‘A life-or-death program’: non-profit’s successful at-risk youth training awaits Ottawa funding decision
4 minute read Preview Friday, Mar. 20, 2026Finance minister’s budget preview focuses on little feet
4 minute read Preview Monday, Mar. 23, 2026‘Give ourselves the means to achieve our ambitions’: province gets feedback on French plan
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, 2026More than 20 per cent of Manitobans think the U.S. could invade Canada in the next two years, poll conducted for the Free Press reveals
6 minute read Preview Friday, Mar. 20, 2026Gas pains: soaring prices due to Mideast conflict could lead to energy turning point in Canada
9 minute read Preview Friday, Mar. 20, 2026Minister promises $14M more for corrections after union complains about overcrowding
5 minute read Preview Sunday, Mar. 22, 2026For vintage sewing-machine aficionado, it’s all about seeing them stitch again
8 minute read Preview Friday, Mar. 20, 2026Records shattered as summer heat hits Southwest in March; ‘This is what climate change looks like’
6 minute read Preview Saturday, Mar. 21, 2026Tough budget situation makes for difficult choices
5 minute read Friday, Mar. 20, 2026As Manitoba approaches its 2026 budget, we need to recognize the profound political and economic changes that have occurred since the NDP were elected in 2023, primarily tied to the Trump administration in the U.S.