Social Studies Grade 10: Geographic Issues of the 21st Century
Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.
Solar ranch in Tennessee aims to prove grazing cattle under the panels is a farmland win-win
5 minute read Preview Updated: 8:17 AM CDTCanada is getting a sovereign wealth fund. What does that mean and how do they work?
5 minute read Preview Tuesday, May. 19, 2026Shortage of housing for Indigenous seniors in city raising concerns ahead of northern flood, fire evacuations
4 minute read Preview Thursday, Apr. 23, 2026Family donates 636 acres of peatlands near Elma to nature conservancy
3 minute read Preview Thursday, Apr. 23, 2026Small towns and temporary foreign workers
4 minute read Monday, Apr. 20, 2026On any given day in a small town, restaurants should be busy. Orders coming in. People being served. The steady rhythm of a place that’s part of the community.
Instead, more and more locations are running below capacity; not because customers aren’t there, but because there aren’t enough staff.
This is the reality in many rural and tourism communities across Canada.
Recently, Ottawa took a small but important step to begin to address it.
Former minister Catherine McKenna blasts the heads of Canadian oil companies
5 minute read Preview Monday, May. 11, 2026Phasing out of door-to-door mail delivery sinks in for Winnipeggers
5 minute read Preview Friday, Apr. 17, 2026AI-driven app like a grain market ‘analyst in your pocket’
4 minute read Preview Thursday, Apr. 16, 2026First Nations chiefs call for inquiry into RCMP after CBC report on surveillance
5 minute read Preview Saturday, May. 9, 2026U.S. leads spike in applications for Canadian citizenship by descent
4 minute read Preview Saturday, May. 9, 2026Why claims of sentience can’t guide black bear policy
5 minute read Preview Thursday, Apr. 16, 2026Jury finds that Ticketmaster and Live Nation had an anticompetitive monopoly over big concert venues
5 minute read Preview Thursday, May. 7, 2026EPA may ease regulation of chemical plastic recycling, and environmentalists worry
7 minute read Preview Saturday, May. 9, 2026Couple fights city to retain 11-foot-plus fence
4 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 14, 2026A 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.
From chants on trams to a parliament rave, young Hungarians provided a soundtrack for Orbán’s defeat
4 minute read Preview Wednesday, May. 6, 2026Crop-enhancement firm eyes potato prosperity
5 minute read Preview Tuesday, Apr. 14, 2026‘Just staggering’: city’s homelessness crisis worsening, new data reveals
6 minute read Preview Tuesday, Apr. 14, 2026Few food innovations as polarizing as genetic modification
4 minute read Saturday, Apr. 11, 2026Most of us have been eating foods derived from genetically modified crops for a generation or so, and so far, none of the ills attributed to modern food systems have been traced back to their use.
Except, perhaps our propensity towards overeating.
Since their introduction in the mid-1990s, genetically modified crops have taken over nearly half of the global area sown to soybeans, canola and corn.
The foods from these varieties, which are most often genetically modified to allow farmers to use herbicides that kill weeds but not the crop, are the same as traditional varieties in every measurable way.
Not consulted on Clear Lake motorboating: Chief
5 minute read Preview Saturday, Apr. 11, 2026City weighs giving green light to private park land purchases
4 minute read Friday, Apr. 10, 2026The City of Winnipeg will soon consider devoting millions of dollars to buy more park space.
While the city’s main development plan, OurWinnipeg 2045, set a goal to acquire 1,000 acres of new parks, waterways and natural areas in 2021, very little has been added since.
A new report suggests the city take steps to ensure some of the “few remaining” privately owned high-quality natural habitats and forests in Winnipeg can be strategically bought up by creating a new reserve fund and a dedicated capital budget for acquiring park land.
“The City of Winnipeg does not have a reliable funding source to purchase park land without significant changes to its policies and a dedicated capital budget,” wrote Dave Domke, the city’s manager of parks and open space.
Manitoba delegation to pitch Churchill at Arctic Encounter Summit
3 minute read Thursday, Apr. 9, 2026A Manitoba delegation is taking its promotion of the Port of Churchill to the home of a growing Arctic port — one that Manitoba’s U.S. trade representative deems a threat.