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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.

Workers assemble temporary seating high in the air for the FIFA World Cup at BMO field in Toronto on Thursday March 12, 2026. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Frank Gunn
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Is Canada in a recession? What to know after a volatile week of economic data

Craig Lord, The Canadian Press 7 minute read Preview
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Is Canada in a recession? What to know after a volatile week of economic data

Craig Lord, The Canadian Press 7 minute read Tuesday, Jun. 30, 2026

OTTAWA - There was one word on the lips of many Canadians economists, politicians and journalists this past week: recession.

Recent economic data has painted a mixed picture of Canada's economy, and some interpretations make the argument for a recession.

Here's what you need to know about the state of Canada's economy.

Why are people talking about a recession?

Read
Tuesday, Jun. 30, 2026
THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES
                                Negotiations are underway on legislation to create the Manitoba Crown-Indigenous Corp., which will work with Ottawa’s Major Projects Office and Arctic Gateway Group on the proposed expansion of the Port of Churchill.
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Legislation to create Manitoba-Indigenous Crown corporation pending as some First Nations express concerns

Gabrielle Piché 5 minute read Preview
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Legislation to create Manitoba-Indigenous Crown corporation pending as some First Nations express concerns

Gabrielle Piché 5 minute read Sunday, Jun. 7, 2026

Legislation to create a new Crown corporation is hung up, in part, on First Nations’ concerns the entity would override the government’s duty to consult individual nations before launching projects.

“We’re having challenges, I think, creating an endorsement or support for… the draft legislation,” said Grand Chief Jerry Daniels of the Southern Chiefs’ Organization that represents 33 First Nations.

Negotiations are underway on legislation to create the Manitoba Crown-Indigenous Corp., which will work with Ottawa’s Major Projects Office and Arctic Gateway Group on the proposed expansion of the Port of Churchill.

The southern chiefs group is part of a board that meets regularly with the provincial government; Indigenous Futures Minister Ian Bushie deemed the group the interim Manitoba Crown-Indigenous Corp.

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Sunday, Jun. 7, 2026
Morgan Lehmann, left, stands next to her brother Josh Lehmann in an undated handout photo. Josh died by suicide in October 2023 at the age of 20. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Handout - Morgan Lehmann (Mandatory Credit)
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‘Pick-up man’: Organizations work to address mental health of Canadian farmers

Jeremy Simes, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Preview
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‘Pick-up man’: Organizations work to address mental health of Canadian farmers

Jeremy Simes, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Tuesday, Jun. 30, 2026

Josh Lehmann was a cowboy from Rosthern, a tiny town near where the North and South Saskatchewan rivers meet and the open prairie rolls into the northern boreal forest.

He was a rodeo rider, a good friend, someone who would stop whatever they were doing to help.

Inside he struggled with his mental health, said his sister.

"He was just a cowboy through and through," Morgan Lehmann said in an interview from her family’s ranch northeast of Saskatoon.

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Tuesday, Jun. 30, 2026
An attendee at Denmark's Mullet Championship looks on in Copenhagen, Saturday, June 6, 2026. (AP Photo/James Brooks)
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A raucous Copenhagen crowd cheers Denmark’s 2026 Mullet Championship

James Brooks, The Associated Press 3 minute read Preview
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A raucous Copenhagen crowd cheers Denmark’s 2026 Mullet Championship

James Brooks, The Associated Press 3 minute read Tuesday, Jun. 9, 2026

Denmark’s raucous 2026 Mullet Championship, presented on an outdoor stage in central Copenhagen, attracted 12 well-coiffed competitors and more than a thousand spectators to the evening’s “mane” event.

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Tuesday, Jun. 9, 2026
Britain's King Charles III receives (left to right) Roseanne Archibald, national chief of the Assembly of First Nations; H.E. The Rt Hon, Mary Simon, Governor General of Canada; Cassidy Caron, president of the National Métis Council; and Natan Obed, president of Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, during an audience at Buckingham Palace, London, on Thursday May 4, 2023. (Gareth Fuller/Pool Photo via AP)
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ITK president reflects on Mary Simon’s legacy as first Indigenous Governor General

Alessia Passafiume, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Preview
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ITK president reflects on Mary Simon’s legacy as first Indigenous Governor General

Alessia Passafiume, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Tuesday, Jun. 30, 2026

OTTAWA - Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami president Natan Obed says he's proud of how Gov. Gen. Mary Simon used her time in office to seek a balance between her dual identities as an Inuk woman and the Crown's representative in Canada — roles that some Indigenous people felt were inherently in conflict.

"Self-determination also means that you get to decide whether or not to play any role within this country, and I think Mary was able to balance her indigeneity with her official function as head of state on behalf of the King for Canada," he said.

"All throughout her role as Governor General, she has maintained just this down-to-earth attitude about the way that she interacts with and cares for people."

Simon, who has for years championed Canada’s reconciliation with Indigenous Peoples, has reached the end of her tenure, having served both Queen Elizabeth and her son King Charles. Louise Arbour, a former Supreme Court justice and United Nations high commissioner for human rights, is set to replace her on Monday.

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Tuesday, Jun. 30, 2026

Marketers not trained in marketing?

Tim Kist 4 minute read Saturday, Jun. 6, 2026

A recent IPSOS survey asked marketers 10 questions designed to determine their level of basic marketing knowledge. In Canada, of the 350 respondents, only 31 per cent achieved a passing grade of seven correct answers.

I would suggest many Canadian companies stay in business because their competitors’ marketing capabilities are even worse than their own.

This survey result was alarming because it speaks to the credibility of marketers and the ability to drive profitable revenue growth and customer value. If we don’t understand basic marketing concepts, how can we have the organizational trust from our colleagues that what we propose to spend and where we recommend spending it is actually in the company’s best interest?

My first Free Press article, nearly eight years ago, was titled: “Marketing is more than making it pretty.” While a bit tongue-in-cheek, I made the case marketing is much more than just creating advertisements and hosting parties.

The General Synod Archives, Anglican Church of Canada Christopher Williams became fluent in Inuktitut and later, with colleagues, translated sections of the Old Testament in order to make the text more accessible to people in the North.
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Bishop of the Arctic: Christopher Williams immersed himself in northern culture

Aastha Sethi 6 minute read Preview
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Bishop of the Arctic: Christopher Williams immersed himself in northern culture

Aastha Sethi 6 minute read Saturday, Jun. 6, 2026

Born on May 22, 1936, in Sale, England, John Christopher Richard Williams arrived in Kugluktuk in 1960 at the age of 24.

His journey north began with what his son Drew described as a chance encounter in a student dormitory room, when he came across a handmade ceramic coin bank shaped like an igloo — a fundraising display for the Diocese of the Arctic.

Williams’ decision to ask what the coin bank was, Drew said, “ended up being either the stupidest or most significant question he would ever ask in his life.” That moment led to a deeper conversation about ministry in the North and the need for clergy in isolated communities.

Moving away from plans for a career in advertising, he instead immersed himself in northern culture, becoming fluent in Inuktitut and later working alongside colleagues to translate portions of the Old Testament, helping to make religious texts more accessible in the language.

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Saturday, Jun. 6, 2026
MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS
                                Canadian Museum for Human Rights CEO Isha Khan (left) speaks with Amanda Buhse, Winnipeg Chamber of Commerce board chair, at a chamber luncheon on Friday.

Everyday business is human rights work: CMHR chief executive

Gabrielle Piché 3 minute read Preview

Everyday business is human rights work: CMHR chief executive

Gabrielle Piché 3 minute read Saturday, Jun. 6, 2026

There’s war, disease spread, attacks on minority groups globally.

But when the head of the Canadian Museum for Human Rights addressed Manitoba business leaders, she offered more narrow advice: start by looking inwards.

“Every single person in this room is already doing human rights work,” Isha Khan told Winnipeg Chamber of Commerce members during a Friday luncheon.

Spread among the tables in the Delta Hotels ballroom were slips of paper saying “Imagine,” with blank spaces underneath. The sheets are usually found on the national museum’s seventh floor.

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Saturday, Jun. 6, 2026
Marilyn Monroe (The Associated Press files)
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Marilyn Monroe cursed to be Hot Forever

Jen Zoratti 4 minute read Preview
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Marilyn Monroe cursed to be Hot Forever

Jen Zoratti 4 minute read Saturday, Jun. 6, 2026

Marilyn Monroe would have been 100 years old this week.

She was born Norma Jeane Baker on June 1, 1926, and died Marilyn Monroe on Aug. 4, 1962 at 36 of a barbiturate overdose, her incredible star a supernova.

Obviously, there’s a lot being published this week, looking at her filmography, her legacy and, in turn, our voracious appetite for the actor who, despite being a gifted talent, became who everyone thinks of when they hear the term “blond bombshell.”

We just can’t seem to quit Marilyn Monroe, and we really can’t seem to quit talking about her in a specific way. Why am I reading a Variety headline calling her, in 2026, the “goddess of sex”? The accompanying copy practically leers, describing her smile as “a lipstick bomb of bliss” and noting “the sparkly nightclub splendour of those curves.”

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Saturday, Jun. 6, 2026
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Ethically meeting electrical demand

Jan Simonson 4 minute read Saturday, Jun. 6, 2026

Fifty years ago this June, Manitoba Hydro destroyed one of the province’s finest lakes, its fourth-largest, when it began operating a newly constructed control structure at Missi Falls, the outlet where Southern Indian Lake flows into the lower Churchill River.

This raised the water level of the lake, creating a reservoir and diverting the flow southward via the Rat and Burntwood River systems to increase power output at its hydroelectric generating stations along the Nelson River.

More than 3,500 km of shorelines on the lake alone were permanently inundated, and along with its adjacent waterways, an area of 840 square kilometres was flooded. The entire Indigenous community of South Indian Lake had to be moved to higher ground to avoid the flooding, and the island community of Nelson House was irreparably harmed.

The Churchill River diversion project had a disastrous effect on the natural environment and the Indigenous people whose subsistence and way of life depended on the lake.

Return to office mandate keys: clarity, consistency, consideration
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Return to office mandate keys: clarity, consistency, consideration

Tory McNally 6 minute read Preview
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Return to office mandate keys: clarity, consistency, consideration

Tory McNally 6 minute read Saturday, Jun. 6, 2026

A recent British Columbia Court of Appeal decision is prompting renewed conversation across Canada about remote work, employer authority and what happens when expectations about where work is performed are not clearly set out.

While the case itself is rooted in B.C., the implications are relevant for employers in Manitoba and elsewhere who are continuing to refine their return to office strategies in a post-COVID-19 pandemic world.

At the heart of the discussion is a simple but important question: if an employee was hired during a period when remote work was widely accepted or even standard, can an employer later require that employee to return to the workplace full time?

The court’s message, in essence, reinforces something many employment lawyers have been emphasizing since pandemic restrictions eased: remote work is not automatically a permanent entitlement.

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Saturday, Jun. 6, 2026
Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew speaks at the Assembly of First Nations Annual General Assembly in Winnipeg on Wednesday, Sept. 3, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/John Woods

Saying ‘no’ to AI data centre a huge win for Manitoba — and Kinew

Niigaan Sinclair 5 minute read Preview

Saying ‘no’ to AI data centre a huge win for Manitoba — and Kinew

Niigaan Sinclair 5 minute read Friday, Jun. 5, 2026

It’s a tale of two provinces — and two artificial intelligence data centre mega-projects.

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Friday, Jun. 5, 2026
Ruth Bonneville / Free Press
                                Blue Cross employees Karyl Grasparil and her husband Darryl Grasparil work together during a bed-building event to build and assemble 50 twin-sized beds for local children, Friday.

Sweet dreams in new beds for 50 children

Tiago Resko 3 minute read Preview

Sweet dreams in new beds for 50 children

Tiago Resko 3 minute read Friday, Jun. 5, 2026

Fifty twin-sized beds were hand-built for 50 children by volunteers Friday as part of an annual event put on by Manitoba Blue Cross and Sleep in Heavenly Peace.

“New people are always needing beds, and so there’s always a demand,” said Jim Thiessen, co-president of the charity in Winnipeg.

This is the third year volunteers from both organizations have built beds behind Blue Cross Park since the non-profit announced they’d pay for a five-year lease on a warehouse that has allowed the charity to build beds year-round.

The non-profit organization relies solely on donations to build and deliver beds to families in need across Canada.

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Friday, Jun. 5, 2026
Wonderful time at the spa
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Shakespeare in the Ruins’ As You Like It its most pleasurable production in a while

Randall King 4 minute read Preview
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Shakespeare in the Ruins’ As You Like It its most pleasurable production in a while

Randall King 4 minute read Friday, Jun. 5, 2026

One likes to imagine the title of William Shakespeare’s As You Like It signalled some capitulation on the part of the Bard, to keep the pastoral comedy extra light.

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Friday, Jun. 5, 2026
The Laterrière Rio Tinto aluminum plant in Saguenay, Wednesday, March 5, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jacques Boissinot

Quebec aluminum smelters more resilient than expected despite U.S. tariffs

Frédéric Lacroix-Couture, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Preview

Quebec aluminum smelters more resilient than expected despite U.S. tariffs

Frédéric Lacroix-Couture, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Sunday, Jun. 7, 2026

MONTRÉAL - A major aluminum association in Canada says the impact of U.S. tariffs on the industry has been less dire than expected.

Jean Simard, president and CEO of the Aluminum Association of Canada, says the industry is operating at 95 per cent capacity.

“No slowdown, no layoffs," Simard said in an interview with The Canadian Press on Thursday about the effect of 50 per cent U.S. tariffs on aluminum.

“It’s less painful than we anticipated," Simard said. "The problem, fundamentally, is the lack of visibility into the future. We’re in a world of total uncertainty."

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Sunday, Jun. 7, 2026
Ruth Bonneville Free Press LOCAL - tree maintenance City crews plant trees in Andrew Currie Park Thursday. Story on City crews planting trees at the park for story about the role of tree maintenance in ensuring the city’s newly planted trees reach maturity and deliver the full scope of economic benefits. Story by Julia-Simone Rutgers June 4th,, 2026
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Efforts underway to determine ecological, economic benefits of Winnipeg’s trees

Julia-Simone Rutgers 8 minute read Preview
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Efforts underway to determine ecological, economic benefits of Winnipeg’s trees

Julia-Simone Rutgers 8 minute read Friday, Jun. 5, 2026

How a municipality cares for its trees — especially under increasing climate pressures — is just as critical to forest health as planting.

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Friday, Jun. 5, 2026
A pharmacy employee pulls out all the energy drinks from their refrigerator after receiving a suggestion from the Ordre des Pharmaciens du Quebec, to stop selling them, in connection with the death of Zachary Miron, a young man who died after taking an energy drink, in Lévis, Que. Wednesday, May 6, 2026. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jacques Boissinot
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Quebec health minister tables bill banning energy drink sales to youth under 16

Caroline Plante, The Canadian Press 3 minute read Preview
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Quebec health minister tables bill banning energy drink sales to youth under 16

Caroline Plante, The Canadian Press 3 minute read Monday, Jun. 29, 2026

QUÉBEC - Quebec’s health minister tabled a bill on Friday banning the sale of energy drinks to youth under the age of 16, describing the measure as an "extremely important" step to protect young people's health.

Sonia Bélanger's proposed legislation would also force youth to show a piece of ID proving their age in order to buy a drink having caffeine concentration of 150 milligrams per litre or more and containing other ingredients, such as taurine, vitamins or minerals.

"The risks associated with their consumption are too often trivialized," Bélanger told reporters at the legislature. "Yet, we are facing a real and worrying public health issue."

Calls to ban the sale of energy drinks to those under 16 years old grew after the death of 15-year-old Zachary Miron, who died in 2024 after drinking a can of Red Bull while on ADHD medication.

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Monday, Jun. 29, 2026
FILE - The Kaktovik Lagoon and the Brooks Range mountains of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge are seen in Kaktovik, Alaska, Oct. 15, 2024. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson, File)

Limited interest in latest oil and gas lease sale for Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge

Becky Bohrer, The Associated Press 4 minute read Preview

Limited interest in latest oil and gas lease sale for Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge

Becky Bohrer, The Associated Press 4 minute read Sunday, Jun. 7, 2026

JUNEAU, Alaska (AP) — Two corporations bid on a handful of leases during the latest oil and gas lease sale in Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge on Friday, a showing critics described as tepid but one that further opens the door to possible development in the pristine region.

The Alaska Industrial Development and Export Authority, a state corporation that already has leases in the refuge's coastal plain, had the winning bid on three tracts and Hex Energy LLC on two, the U.S. Bureau of Land Management announced. The tracts cover about 72,000 acres. Nearly 690,000 acres had been offered. Winning bids totaled $3.7 million.

The federal agency's state director, Kevin Pendergast, said a “new era of active leasing and exploration is just beginning to unfold.”

While there is no active drilling underway, the Alaska Industrial Development and Export Authority’s board last month authorized additional spending for efforts including a seismic survey program aimed at locating oil formations, as well as lease purchases in this latest sale. A message seeking comment from Hex Energy was not immediately returned.

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Sunday, Jun. 7, 2026
MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS
                                Coun. Brian Mayes runs with St. James Collegiate students and staff on the existing track after announcing funding to upgrade it on Thursday.

‘Exciting and meaningful’: St. James Collegiate track replacement nears starting line

Zoe Pierce 4 minute read Preview

‘Exciting and meaningful’: St. James Collegiate track replacement nears starting line

Zoe Pierce 4 minute read Friday, Jun. 5, 2026

St. James Collegiate students circled the edge of the school’s 400-metre track on Thursday morning as Couns. Shawn Dobson and Brian Mayes stood nearby, announcing a plan to rebuild the surface beneath their feet.

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Friday, Jun. 5, 2026
MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS
                                Winnipeg Mayor Scott Gillingham
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The logic of saving for a rainy day

Editorial 4 minute read Preview
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The logic of saving for a rainy day

Editorial 4 minute read Friday, Jun. 5, 2026

We get it. It’s hard to be responsible, and it’s hard to pinch pennies when there’s so much pressure on your wallet.

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Friday, Jun. 5, 2026
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