Economics and Resources
Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.
City council threatens rights without delivering safety
5 minute read Wednesday, Sep. 17, 2025As the City of Winnipeg appears poised to implement new rules that target people who live in encampments, questions should be raised about who — if anyone — will be safer as a result.
Winnipeg city council’s community services committee recently unanimously approved a motion, introduced and amended by Coun. Cindy Gilroy and seconded by Coun. Sherri Rollins, to prohibit encampments in and around a wide range of spaces, including playgrounds, pools, schools, daycares, transit stops, bridges and rail lines. It also directs the city to expand enforcement across all other city spaces during daylight hours, which could mean issuing bylaw tickets. The motion will go to council’s executive policy committee before a final vote by council.
While some, including Mayor Scott Gillingham, have described these new rules as a “balanced approach” to deal with encampments, we have seen this type of approach before and it does not work.
The motion is framed around safety, especially for children and families. That concern should not be dismissed — no one disputes that unsafe materials have been found in public spaces, but tying those concerns directly to encampments offers a misleading choice. It suggests that the safety of families must come at the expense of people experiencing homelessness. And with Winnipeg’s child poverty rate the highest in the nation, many of the children and families this ban claims to protect are also among those it targets.
Putting people before politics
4 minute read Tuesday, Sep. 16, 2025Dividing outreach providers won’t solve homelessness. Collaboration and a managed encampment-to-housing site will. As winter closes in, Winnipeg faces a mounting crisis. More people than ever are living unsheltered, exposed to harsh weather, unsafe conditions and the devastating risks of addiction.
Riverbank encampments and makeshift shelters in public spaces have become dangerous not only for residents but also for outreach workers and emergency responders who must navigate snow- and ice-covered terrain just to provide help. Encampment residents, meanwhile, live without even the basic dignity of an outhouse.
The overdose death rate in Winnipeg is among the highest in the country, and too many of those deaths happen in encampments. This cannot continue.
For too long, the conversation has been stalled by a false narrative: that homelessness is solely the result of a lack of subsidized housing. While the housing shortage is real, it is only part of the story. The deeper truth is that Winnipeg is in the grip of a drug-use epidemic that has become the single largest pipeline into homelessness.
Bus overhaul leaves gaps in service to Grace Hospital, Assiniboine clinic
5 minute read Preview Tuesday, Sep. 16, 2025Liberals, Conservatives talk co-operation but trade jabs as Parliament returns
5 minute read Preview Monday, Sep. 15, 2025Premier, chiefs question lack of Manitoba First Nation voice on major project council
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Sep. 13, 2025Neighbours complain of crime, drugs, trash near supportive housing units
5 minute read Preview Friday, Sep. 12, 2025Ottawa earmarks $29M for energy retrofits for Manitoba households
3 minute read Friday, Sep. 12, 2025Manitoba homeowners and renters will be the first to benefit from a new federal program to reduce — and for some, eliminate — the cost of energy retrofits.
Federal environment and natural resources ministers Julie Dabrusin and Tim Hodgson joined provincial officials in Winnipeg’s Chalmers neighbourhood Friday to announce $29 million for Efficiency Manitoba under the greener homes affordability program.
“The way we heat, cool and power our homes impacts our environment, our wallets and the comfort of our daily lives,” Hodgson said, adding that 7,000 modest-income households in Manitoba would have access to no-cost energy retrofits.
“That will make their energy bills hundreds of dollars cheaper, their homes more comfortable and their carbon footprint smaller,” he said.
Grey Cup week could feature game-changing economic score for Churchill, political triumph for Kinew
5 minute read Preview Friday, Sep. 12, 2025Steinbach, nearby communities flooded in massive overnight deluge
5 minute read Preview Friday, Sep. 12, 2025Telus drops the gloves with Rogers over alleged ad blocking on its media platforms
5 minute read Preview Wednesday, Sep. 17, 2025Why Winnipeg needs low-fare transit
5 minute read Preview Thursday, Sep. 11, 2025AI could help manufacturers offset tariff costs, depending on implementation: experts
4 minute read Preview Monday, Sep. 22, 2025Impact of cyberattack on Nova Scotia Power could be bigger than first thought
3 minute read Preview Saturday, Sep. 20, 2025Bell launches Bell Cyber, building on AI and tech services umbrella
4 minute read Preview Wednesday, Sep. 17, 2025Number of private agency nurses rises
5 minute read Preview Monday, Sep. 8, 2025Province gives businesses loan guarantees amid tariffs
4 minute read Preview Monday, Sep. 8, 2025Great potential in Churchill port project — but…
4 minute read Preview Monday, Sep. 8, 2025Caring for our communities with even small gestures
6 minute read Monday, Sep. 8, 2025There’s something that keeps returning to my thoughts as I move through my daily routines, something that sits quietly in the spaces between errands and conversations. It’s about the small things we often don’t notice, the everyday necessities that most of us take for granted.
‘We’re here for you’, agriculture minister tells farmers
3 minute read Preview Sunday, Sep. 7, 2025Building trust key as companies pivot to chatbots for customer service: experts
7 minute read Preview Saturday, Sep. 20, 2025CP NewsAlert: Ostrich farm wins interim stay of order to cull birds over bird flu
2 minute read Preview Monday, Sep. 15, 2025Farmers face steep harvest climb to profitability
4 minute read Saturday, Sep. 6, 2025The rural scene on Labour Day weekend was quintessentially Manitoba, as farmers chewed away at harvest while the campers rolled by towards one last summer retreat.
Transit analysis shows poorest riders hurt most
3 minute read Preview Saturday, Sep. 6, 2025Churchill and LNG would mix like oil and water
5 minute read Tuesday, Sep. 9, 2025Churchill has always been a place of connection and of change. However, last week’s remarks from Prime Minister Mark Carney that Churchill could become a year-round export terminal for liquefied natural gas (LNG) suggest a risky vision for the future that could imperil the balance and diversity that has allowed this unusual community on Hudson Bay to endure.
At its founding, Churchill connected Inuit, Dene and Cree communities with the Hudson Bay Company’s vast trading network. In the waning days of the fur trade, Churchill re-emerged as an important cold war base, housing thousands of troops.
When North America’s defence needs changed, Churchill again reinvented itself as a research hub for aerospace and a broad array of scientific enquiry. Through the second half of the 20th century, Churchill also became a critical social service centre for much of Hudson Bay and the central Arctic. Now it has emerged as one of Canada’s great ecotourism destinations. Few places better capture the adaptability and resilience of the North.
The prime minister and Premier Wab Kinew have both described Churchill LNG exports as a “nation-building” project. Investment in the transportation corridor that connects the Arctic to southern Canada through the port and railroad is indeed overdue. The Port of Churchill is a national asset with enormous potential and diverse strengths.