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Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.
The path to end park logging
4 minute read Saturday, Dec. 23, 2023LOGGING in Duck Mountain Provincial Park is a thorny embarrassment new Premier Wab Kinew inherited from successive governments. But he must finish what the previous NDP governments started and permanently end commercial logging in Manitoba parks.
There’s only one proper pathway to solve this shameful chapter in our province and it involves reconciliation, decolonizing parks and acting on our global commitment to end the biodiversity crisis. Solving several issues at once is the leadership we need.
The current Louisiana-Pacific licence to log Duck Mountain Provincial Park expires on Dec. 31, 2023. The new government will absolutely renew it given it’s been mere weeks since the election. While this may not have been enough time to resolve this colossally contentious catastrophe, the clock is now ticking and we demand a solution.
The Progressive Conservatives caused this problem in the 1990s by using an overestimate of wood in the Duck Mountain region as justification to give Louisiana-Pacific reign over Duck Mountain Provincial Park. Manitoba’s Clean Environment Commission had just recommended that “commercial forestry activity in all provincial parks should be phased out,” but this was ignored. The NDP fixed most of the problems in 2009 when they banned logging in 12 of 13 parks, yet left Duck Mountain to the logging companies.
Time to replace your car? How to tell when repair bills are no longer worth it
4 minute read Preview Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2025Canada reports fastest population growth in history in third quarter of 2023
4 minute read Preview Wednesday, Oct. 15, 202536 jours en mer : récit des naufragés qui ont survécu aux hallucinations, à la soif et au désespoir
23 minute read Preview Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025Rise of FLQ in 1960s documented in Montreal cartoonist’s graphic novel
4 minute read Preview Friday, Nov. 3, 2023Esports competitions motivating force for First Nations students, educators say
4 minute read Preview Monday, Oct. 30, 2023Manitoba auto repair shops in high gear amid lengthy MPI strike
4 minute read Preview Thursday, Oct. 19, 2023Independent thought challenges the echo chamber
5 minute read Preview Saturday, Oct. 7, 2023Flour & Flower plants roots with Waterloo Street location as demand for unique cakes, cookies decorated with edible flowers grows
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Sep. 30, 2023Michaels collaborates with AI in timely, tender new novel about art, poetry and life
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Sep. 16, 2023Crave introduces ad tiers, including $9.99 plan
2 minute read Preview Saturday, Sep. 20, 2025Going underground, large-scale
4 minute read Thursday, Jul. 13, 2023It is never easy to change. Natural gas has been connected to most homes in Winnipeg since the 1950’s and ‘60s and produces almost 3.7 million tonnes of CO2 annually. Some gas lines have been in the ground for more than 60 years. Their life expectancy is about 75-85 years. Gas companies in Canada spend close to $3 billion annually to renew and expand the pipelines.
This is the problem. The cost of building gas lines is amortized over the expected life of the pipeline. Basically, the infrastructure is paid with a very long-term mortgage. That has kept the price of delivering gas to our buildings low. If gas lines are being renewed and extended, the term of the mortgage is 80 years. If we want to move away from gas to heat our homes, how is the utility going to pay the mortgage when no one is buying gas?
The alternative? Electricity. We can use electricity directly (think toaster elements), use it to extract heat from the air outside, or use it to extract heat from the earth.
Electric heat is more efficient than gas, but at today’s electric and gas rates, it’s about three times as expensive to heat your home with electric heat.