Urban places
Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.
Winnipeg can buy local
4 minute read Monday, Jun. 1, 2026There is no such thing as a free lunch, but one closer to home probably feels better. For years, local favourite Salisbury House has been the chosen vendor for Winnipeg-owned golf courses. In late April, news emerged that the City of Winnipeg had gone against local tastes and chosen Aramark, an American-owned company, for the job.
When our public entities buy local, they create jobs, provide economic stability and improve responsiveness to the public. In this uncertain global climate, “buying local” is not a gimmick but a necessity. Until recently, this philosophy was persuasive.
Mayor Scott Gillingham has, however, reversed course on a buy-local policy. Following staff feedback, the mayor claims the policy would violate trade obligations. He is both right and wrong.
While there are limits in Canadian trade deals to buying local, they are not determinative. Not only can Winnipeg establish a buy-local policy, the city would be at a disadvantage if it does not.
City taking steps to reduce speeding in 30 km/h school zones
4 minute read Preview Sunday, May. 31, 2026North End puts its best foot forward with Culture Fest
3 minute read Preview Saturday, May. 30, 2026After years of living in encampments, Lawrence is slowly adjusting to life with a roof, instead of a tarp, over his head
7 minute read Preview Friday, May. 29, 2026Fairmont Hotel in Winnipeg to donate beds, chairs, tables, lamps ahead of renovations
3 minute read Preview Friday, May. 29, 2026Unintended consequences of bike-safety policy
5 minute read Preview Friday, May. 29, 2026Vacant property owners overwhelmingly ignoring city fines imposed after fires
5 minute read Preview Tuesday, May. 26, 2026Two more 7-Eleven locations bite the dust
5 minute read Preview Monday, May. 25, 2026Winnipeg families deserve real solutions for drug crisis
5 minute read Monday, May. 25, 2026The recent community gathering regarding Winnipeg’s proposed safe consumption site sparked strong emotions and important conversations.
Many residents expressed concerns about neighbourhood safety, public disorder and what this site could mean for families and businesses in the surrounding community.
Those concerns matter and they deserve to be acknowledged respectfully.
It is also important to recognize that the people who attended the community gathering and voiced concerns are not blind to the drug poisoning crisis affecting Winnipeg and communities across Manitoba.
Linking Hope creates nonprofit connections to build a better future
4 minute read Preview Saturday, May. 23, 2026Firewood, the emerald ash borer and you
4 minute read Preview Friday, May. 22, 2026Designated encampments are a poor solution
5 minute read Wednesday, May. 20, 2026The overall shrinking of public space and degradation of the policy environment on use of public space is contributing to people experiencing homelessness being less safe — and contributing to interest in ideas like designated encampments. Unfortunately, this direction fails to centre the interests of people living unhoused. Further, we forget too easily that any consideration of land use on Treaty 1 land needs to start with historic claims and ancestral rights.
Among people experiencing homelessness, Indigenous people are overrepresented. Many people are living unsheltered on their own ancestral territories. Having endured intergenerational theft that started with land (transferred to settlers whose descendants now enjoy generational wealth), and continued with limits on movement, ability to make money, access to education and more, they are now actively surviving homelessness. Yet, the limits on their person continue.
Recent years have seen the closure and limits on use of public space throughout the downtown and broader city. These include Portage Place mall, the Millennium Library and Winnipeg Transit, and previously through the closure of downtown single-room occupancy hotels and their barrooms.
For some time, the city has been telegraphing an intention to limit access to outdoor public space according to housing status. At every opportunity, those cautioning against this move have raised the problem of limiting those with ancestral rights, and further limiting free movement of citizens on public land. The latter has been decided through B.C. legal process, and suggests the City of Winnipeg’s exposure to risk as it moves forward.
Retail crime claims another 7-Eleven in city; shoplifters target stretch of St. Anne’s Road ‘almost daily’
4 minute read Preview Tuesday, May. 19, 2026Coming up roses: City gardeners put ‘petal’ to the metal every spring to help Winnipeg blossom
4 minute read Preview Monday, May. 18, 2026A critical project in waiting
4 minute read Saturday, May. 16, 2026Like most Manitobans I live in the city. I live in a home built about a century ago, in a well-treed neighbourhood. A 27-year-old gas furnace heats my home — one that needs replacing soon. I’d love to quit burning gas and electrify.
The options aren’t great. Electric heat costs more than double what gas does. Air source heat pumps work much of the winter, but fail during our worst cold snaps, leaving us dependent on expensive electric heat or gas backup — plus a noisy outdoor unit that ruins the patio.
If I had more land, like those with larger rural properties, I could bury horizontal coils in the ground for a fraction of the cost of drilling. But on my small city lot the only option is drilling 400- to 500-foot boreholes in the front yard. Expensive, even with Efficiency Manitoba incentives.
So: keep burning gas, or put up with a noisy compressor and still need a backup heat source. Those are my choices. But they don’t have to be.