Personal and Social Management

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

Structured approach needed with tech

Jo Ann Unger and Michelle Warren 4 minute read Monday, May. 4, 2026

Families need our help and support. Technology has done many things to better our world; from life-saving medical advances to connecting people across the world to efficiencies in our everyday lives.

Working the family farm set up top NHL draft prospect Carels for hockey success

Mike McIntyre 11 minute read Preview

Working the family farm set up top NHL draft prospect Carels for hockey success

Mike McIntyre 11 minute read Friday, May. 1, 2026

It takes a village to raise a hockey player.

Carson Carels would be the first to tell you his just happens to include hundreds of cows, goats, peacocks, chickens and whatever else might be wandering the 2,000 acres of rolling hills in south-central Manitoba that he and his family call home.

The farm isn’t just where the 17-year-old lives. It’s where he was built.

“It has shaped who I am,” said Carson.

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Friday, May. 1, 2026

Manitoba education minister says social media ban could start in schools

Brittany Hobson, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Preview

Manitoba education minister says social media ban could start in schools

Brittany Hobson, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026

WINNIPEG - Manitoba could turn to classrooms as the first place to ban children from using social media and artificial intelligence chatbots, and one young advocate is urging the province to work with those it's aiming to protect.

Tracy Schmidt, the province's education minister, says Manitobans can expect to see the ban's first phase rolled out in schools, likening it to when the government first banned cellphones in classrooms in 2024.

"This is very early days. A step like this is going to certainly take legislative and regulatory processes," Schmidt said at an unrelated event Monday.

"But I know that something we're talking about right away is how we can roll this out in schools as soon as possible."

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Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026

Advocates praise move to ban social media use among youths

Nicole Buffie 5 minute read Preview

Advocates praise move to ban social media use among youths

Nicole Buffie 5 minute read Sunday, Apr. 26, 2026

Child advocates are praising the Manitoba government for announcing its intention to ban the use of social media and artificial intelligence chatbots for youths.

Premier Wab Kinew told a crowd at a party event Saturday night the NDP government will move to restrict children from using social media accounts and artificial intelligence chatbots. The proposal is intended to protect kids from technology platforms that he says hurt their development.

Details on the plan are scant, like the age limit he is considering or how a ban would be enforced. He did not speak to reporters after his speech and was not available for comment Sunday.

Kinew’s director of communications, Amy Tuckett-McGimpsey, said the premier will likely speak more about the idea in the coming days.

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Sunday, Apr. 26, 2026

Brainstorming session proposes solutions to alarming rate of student absenteeism

Maggie Macintosh 6 minute read Preview

Brainstorming session proposes solutions to alarming rate of student absenteeism

Maggie Macintosh 6 minute read Thursday, Apr. 23, 2026

Dante Taylor spent much of his early high school career ditching class — a routine occurrence outside of football season — to hang out at trap houses in Winnipeg.

“For so long, I just didn’t care,” the 16-year-old told an auditorium packed with 200 people, many of them principals and superintendents, at a summit on student absenteeism.

“It wasn’t something that seemed to be important to me because it didn’t seem to be important to anybody that I was around.”

Dante said his perspective changed recently, after meeting with a guidance counsellor, doing extensive self-reflection and enrolling in a physics course that he finds equally fascinating and challenging.

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Thursday, Apr. 23, 2026

Decorated footy veterans Scott, Gale spearheading push for NSL club

Grace Anne Paizen 6 minute read Preview

Decorated footy veterans Scott, Gale spearheading push for NSL club

Grace Anne Paizen 6 minute read Thursday, Apr. 23, 2026

Three months into her official — and final — retirement, Winnipeg’s own Desiree Scott has a new mission: bringing a Northern Super League team to Winnipeg.

“To continue to grow the game, especially for women and girls, and create those opportunities to inspire them to stick with sports and put Winnipeg on the map,” Scott said in an exclusive interview with the Free Press. “Remind people that we are here, we are the heart of Canada, and we deserve similar opportunities that other provinces are getting.”

The Northern Super League kicks off its second season Friday. The first Canadian women’s pro soccer league marked its inaugural season with off-the-charts success, drawing over 275,000 fans and generating nearly $30 million in league-wide revenue despite its small six-team size. And the league is looking to expand for the first time in 2027.

But while the league itself turns two years old, Scott enlisted veteran footy coach Rob Gale two years prior about the idea of bringing the league to the Keystone province.

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Thursday, Apr. 23, 2026

In praise of the deliberately slower lane

Erna Buffie 5 minute read Preview

In praise of the deliberately slower lane

Erna Buffie 5 minute read Monday, Apr. 20, 2026

Before I begin this story, I should first confess that I once suffered from a serious affliction — that nasty urban disease known as road rage.

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Monday, Apr. 20, 2026

Supervised drug consumption site will be grounded in culture, compassion: facility’s leader

Scott Billeck 7 minute read Preview

Supervised drug consumption site will be grounded in culture, compassion: facility’s leader

Scott Billeck 7 minute read Friday, Apr. 17, 2026

Winnipeg’s first supervised consumption site is being designed as a culturally grounded health space where people struggling with addiction will be met with familiarity, dignity and support from the moment they enter.

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Friday, Apr. 17, 2026

Vancouver police used Pokémon card sting. It was super effective!

Nono Shen, The Canadian Press 2 minute read Preview

Vancouver police used Pokémon card sting. It was super effective!

Nono Shen, The Canadian Press 2 minute read Saturday, Apr. 25, 2026

VANCOUVER - Up until someone started using bear spray on unsuspecting victims trying to sell their Pokémon trading cards online, Vancouver police say they weren't aware of the resurgent collectible trend.

Sgt. Ryan Campbell says thefts occurred on five consecutive days from March 23, with victims saying they were bear-sprayed and robbed after arranging meetings on Facebook Marketplace.

Campbell says officers from the major crime section arranged a sting operation by posting a card for sale online and successfully lured a suspect, before arranging a meeting with the man.

He says the suspect, who is in his 20s and is believed to have acted alone, was taken into custody on March 27 without incident.

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Saturday, Apr. 25, 2026

PWHLPA president Stacey says salary leak ‘a shock’ but may help players push for more

Daniel Rainbird, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Preview

PWHLPA president Stacey says salary leak ‘a shock’ but may help players push for more

Daniel Rainbird, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026

MONTREAL - Laura Stacey was caught off guard when PWHL player salaries leaked last week.

Now she hopes the added transparency helps players seek better contracts moving forward.

Stacey, the president of the Professional Women’s Hockey League Players’ Association, addressed the situation Tuesday after The Hockey News published salaries from the 2024-25 season, despite the union voting last summer to make that information available only to players and agents.

“It is amazing for the players that our salaries are public so that one another can help each other, especially in terms of expansion and signing new contracts and free agency,” the Montreal Victoire forward said after practice at Verdun Auditorium. “With that being said, we voted on it to be public for our eyes and for our agent's eyes only, so I think that was a bit of a shock for us and not something that we necessarily wanted, or the way we wanted it to come out.

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Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026

The hazards of cherry blossom crowds prompt warnings from police in Richmond, B.C.

Nono Shen, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Preview

The hazards of cherry blossom crowds prompt warnings from police in Richmond, B.C.

Nono Shen, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026

RICHMOND - Joanna Yue, dressed in a billowing pink, layer-cake dress, struggled to capture a sense of movement among the clouds of cherry blossoms that have transformed Larry Berg Flight Path Park on the main road to Vancouver International Airport.

Posing for selfies in front of her phone mounted on a tripod, Yue, from Calgary, struck various poses, flouncing in her sparkly dress. But she knew to keep her hands off the blossoms.

"I don't know if you noticed, but as I was swinging, I'm the one moving, not the tree," said Yue, a former Vancouver resident who was in town to visit family.

The park, directly in line with the airport's south runway, is a favourite with plane spotters, but in recent days it has been taken over by crowds of cherry blossom fanciers.

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Tuesday, Apr. 28, 2026

Manitoba Hydro reduces remote work; decision raises fears among employees at other Crown corporations

Chris Kitching 5 minute read Preview

Manitoba Hydro reduces remote work; decision raises fears among employees at other Crown corporations

Chris Kitching 5 minute read Tuesday, Mar. 31, 2026

Manitoba Hydro’s decision to cut remote workdays from two to one per week for eligible employees is causing concern for other public-sector workers who worry hybrid arrangements will be eroded.

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Tuesday, Mar. 31, 2026

Five Manitoba bowlers named to Team Canada, including back-to-back Marinelli champ Naylor-McCall

Ben Little 7 minute read Preview

Five Manitoba bowlers named to Team Canada, including back-to-back Marinelli champ Naylor-McCall

Ben Little 7 minute read Friday, Mar. 27, 2026

In the final frame of her semifinal match, bowler Marissa Naylor-McCall needed to strike and mark to advance and defend her title as Winnipeg’s tenpin champion.

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Friday, Mar. 27, 2026

‘This is people’s lives’: Canadian soccer star Quinn continues trans advocacy

Gemma Karstens-Smith, The Canadian Press 6 minute read Preview

‘This is people’s lives’: Canadian soccer star Quinn continues trans advocacy

Gemma Karstens-Smith, The Canadian Press 6 minute read Thursday, Apr. 30, 2026

VANCOUVER -

A Canadian soccer star is speaking out about the need to make sports safe for trans athletes — and the world safer for trans people — as restrictive laws come into effect across North America.

“This is people's lives," said Quinn, a midfielder for the Vancouver Rise of the Northern Super League. "Like, this isn't something to take lightly."

It's been more than five years since Quinn, 30, publicly came out as nonbinary.

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Thursday, Apr. 30, 2026

Canadian sport system ‘underfunded and unsafe,’ commission urges Ottawa to step up

Donna Spencer, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Preview

Canadian sport system ‘underfunded and unsafe,’ commission urges Ottawa to step up

Donna Spencer, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Wednesday, Mar. 25, 2026

Canadian sport needs an overhaul, and it starts with the federal government.

That was the conclusion of the Future of Sport in Canada Commission's final report released Tuesday.

The Canadian sport system is broken, fragmented and unsustainable, said Lise Maisonneuve, a former chief justice of the Ontario court of justice, who headed the commission.

The report issued 98 calls to action for phased-in change over five years, but starting immediately.

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Wednesday, Mar. 25, 2026

‘Wake up people’: mom says proposed drunk-driving law falls short

Carol Sanders 4 minute read Preview

‘Wake up people’: mom says proposed drunk-driving law falls short

Carol Sanders 4 minute read Friday, Mar. 20, 2026

The mother of a designated driver who was killed by an impaired driver says proposed legislation to prohibit school bus and semi drivers from having booze in their system doesn’t go far enough.

“Wake up people, it should be zero for everybody,” said Karen Reimer, whose daughter Jordyn Reimer, 24, was killed in 2022 after being hit by a pickup travelling at 108 kilometres an hour on a residential street in Transcona.

Under Bill 31 (The Highway Traffic Amendment Act), drivers of class 1 to 4 vehicles — including semi-truck and bus operators — would not be allowed to have any alcohol in their blood.

Reimer told a legislative committee Wednesday laws aren’t moving the needle when it comes to impaired driving deaths and injuries. The province had 13 impaired driving fatalities in 2025, the same number that it had a decade ago. Last year, there were 62 serious injuries, an increase from 60 in 2015, as reported by Manitoba Public Insurance.

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Friday, Mar. 20, 2026

Family says teen re-victimized by school’s lax response after reporting sexual assault

Jeff Hamilton 18 minute read Preview

Family says teen re-victimized by school’s lax response after reporting sexual assault

Jeff Hamilton 18 minute read Monday, Mar. 23, 2026

With its soft lighting and cosy couches, the classroom hangout at the River East-Transcona School Division high school is supposed to be a safe space for students to decompress.

But that changed one Monday in January.

That day, after the supervising teacher had left the room, a teenage girl says she was sitting on the floor with her back against a love seat when a much larger male student sat down on the cushion directly behind her, boxing her in between his knees.

She said he reached over and forced his hands beneath her shirt, grabbing her breasts for several minutes while she froze and did not speak or move.

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Monday, Mar. 23, 2026

Alberta government moves to drastically reduce access to medically assisted dying

Jack Farrell, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Preview

Alberta government moves to drastically reduce access to medically assisted dying

Jack Farrell, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Thursday, Mar. 19, 2026

EDMONTON - Alberta Premier Danielle Smith's government took steps Wednesday to drastically restrict who's eligible for medical assistance in dying.

Smith’s United Conservative Party government introduced a bill that, if passed, would limit medical assistance in dying, better known as MAID, to those likely to die of natural causes within a year.

Those under 18 would still be prohibited regardless of condition, in line with current federal rules.

But Smith said Ottawa's framework is largely missing the mark.

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Thursday, Mar. 19, 2026
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Former volleyball star recalls struggles for gay rights during 1980s

Reviewed by Greg Klassen 4 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

Former volleyball star recalls struggles for gay rights during 1980s

Reviewed by Greg Klassen 4 minute read Saturday, Mar. 14, 2026

In 1981, tennis star Martina Navratilova made international headlines off the court for coming out as a lesbian. Around the same time, a less prominent Canadian athlete named Betty Baxter was beginning a public battle for equality.

Baxter was well-known in the queer community, having played on the national Canadian women’s volleyball team at the 1976 Montreal Olympics. She caused a media frenzy a few years later when she became the first female and youngest ever coach of the same team.

Less well-known was that after only 18 months as coach she was fired, behind closed doors, as rumours swirled that she was a lesbian. Baxter had not come out publicly; she lost her job for not denying she was a lesbian.

She was told by a human rights lawyer that she had no recourse. This was common practice before sexual orientation was enshrined in the Human Rights Act in 1996; contemporary readers may have a difficult time imagining how brave it was to come out publicly in the ‘80s.

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Saturday, Mar. 14, 2026

Spaniards in town for curling documentary, brush up on the game

Taylor Allen 6 minute read Preview

Spaniards in town for curling documentary, brush up on the game

Taylor Allen 6 minute read Friday, Mar. 13, 2026

Joan Baucells looks out onto the ice at the Fort Rouge Curling Club and pauses for a moment, searching for the right words to describe it.

“This is like a cathedral,” he says.

His home country of Spain is world-renowned for its stunning architecture, but none of those buildings have what this one has to offer: pebbled ice, granite rocks and carbon-fiber brooms.

Oh, and don’t forget an in-house restaurant serving fat boy burgers and poutine.

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Friday, Mar. 13, 2026

Senior squeeze: Many older Manitobans are in an increasingly precarious financial situation

Janine LeGal 14 minute read Preview

Senior squeeze: Many older Manitobans are in an increasingly precarious financial situation

Janine LeGal 14 minute read Friday, Mar. 13, 2026

Terisa Taylor is deemed a low-income senior, based on the federal tax bracket classification, but the numbers don’t take a full measure of the person.

At age 73, the St. Boniface resident relies on the three acronyms synonymous with aging — CPP, GIS and OAS — to make ends meet.

Manitoba Rental Assistance helps cover about half her apartment costs, but she gave up her car when it became clear it was no longer affordable.

Despite that, Taylor considers herself one of Manitoba’s more fortunate seniors since she’s able to continue to pursue a meaningful life.

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Friday, Mar. 13, 2026

Lower colorectal cancer screening age to 45 from 50, Canadian Cancer Society urges

Nicole Ireland, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Preview

Lower colorectal cancer screening age to 45 from 50, Canadian Cancer Society urges

Nicole Ireland, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Sunday, Mar. 22, 2026

TORONTO - Michael Groves thought he had appendicitis.

In January 2021, he went to the emergency department with abdominal pains, but after testing, medical staff ruled it out and he went home.

A couple of days later, Groves, who lives in Ottawa, saw blood in his stool, so he told his family doctor.

Both the pain and bleeding stopped, but his doctor decided to schedule the 49-year-old for a colonoscopy for that April to be on the safe side.

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Sunday, Mar. 22, 2026

After training in deep snow and bitter cold, ex-reality show star seeks to win the Iditarod again

Mark Thiessen, The Associated Press 5 minute read Preview

After training in deep snow and bitter cold, ex-reality show star seeks to win the Iditarod again

Mark Thiessen, The Associated Press 5 minute read Wednesday, Mar. 11, 2026

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — Riches and paid appearances haven’t followed Jessie Holmes since he won the world’s most famous sled dog race, the Iditarod, last year.

He doesn't mind.

A carpenter and a former cast member of National Geographic's reality show “Life Below Zero,” Holmes has instead been content to return to his austere, hand-built homestead in the wilderness near the continent's tallest mountain. His life is solitary and frugal. His closest neighbors are 30 miles (50 kilometers) away.

“There’s a lot of things that can happen in your life once you win the Iditarod,” Holmes told The Associated Press in an interview before this year's race. “You could become a real big deal, or you could just go back out in the bush and get right back to work, you know? And that’s what I did.”

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Wednesday, Mar. 11, 2026

Councillors back permanent bike lane for Wellington Crescent next year

Joyanne Pursaga 4 minute read Preview

Councillors back permanent bike lane for Wellington Crescent next year

Joyanne Pursaga 4 minute read Wednesday, Mar. 4, 2026

The city is poised to scrap a long-awaited temporary bike lane pilot project on Wellington Crescent, which was expected this year, and speed up the construction of permanent bike lanes instead.

On Wednesday, council’s public works committee voted to accelerate the plan to construct permanent bike lanes in 2027, pending a final council vote. The city had planned to spend $5.5 million to do so in 2029.

Coun. Janice Lukes, chairwoman of public works, said the switch to pursue permanent protected bike lanes, with curbs to separate cyclists from vehicular traffic, is the best way to ensure lasting safety improvements.

“This is going to be a fundamental change in the way traffic moves, pedestrian cycling and vehicular traffic in this section, and I want to rip the Band-Aid off once… It’s going to be a big change for everyone,” said Lukes (Waverley West).

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Wednesday, Mar. 4, 2026