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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.

JOE BRYKSA / FREE PRESS FILES
                                A Probe Research survey of 1,000 Manitobans found 71 per cent of the participants believe the rights of people who identify as a member of the LGBTTQ+ community should have the protection of strong rights laws.
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Survey reveals widespread support in province for LGBTTQ+ community’s rights

Malak Abas 4 minute read Preview
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Survey reveals widespread support in province for LGBTTQ+ community’s rights

Malak Abas 4 minute read Thursday, Apr. 9, 2026

More than seven out of 10 Manitobans believe the rights of people in the province’s LGBTTQ+ community should be protected by law, new poll results reveal.

Read
Thursday, Apr. 9, 2026
RUTH BONNEVILLE / FREE PRESS FILES
                                Point Douglas Coun. Vivian Santos says the city should get serious about firework fines.
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Fireworks crackdown might be in Winnipeg’s future

Joyanne Pursaga 4 minute read Preview
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Fireworks crackdown might be in Winnipeg’s future

Joyanne Pursaga 4 minute read Wednesday, Apr. 8, 2026

A plan to crack down on some fireworks displays could be considered next year, amid concerns that many are done illegally.

“There are more fireworks complaints than permits issued for fireworks, leading to an understanding that many fireworks that generate complaints are set off illegally,” writes Lisa Gilmour, Winnipeg Fire Paramedic Service’s assistant chief of community risk reduction, in a new report.

WFPS received 306 calls about fireworks last year, while 144 consumer and professional permits were approved to set them off.

In Winnipeg, people who set off fireworks without a permit can presently be fined up to $500. To legally use fireworks, individuals must obtain the permit, be at least 18 years old and set off the devices at least 100 feet (30 metres) away from all buildings and trees.

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Wednesday, Apr. 8, 2026
MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS FILES
                                ‘We are not feeling safe, to be honest,’ says Fiona Zhao, owner of Unique Bunny retail chain.
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Manitoba small-business owners post second-highest rate of concern about rising crime

Malak Abas 4 minute read Preview
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Manitoba small-business owners post second-highest rate of concern about rising crime

Malak Abas 4 minute read Wednesday, Apr. 8, 2026

When Fiona Zhao thinks about the rising cost of safety when running her business, it’s not just dollars and cents — to her, it’s a societal issue.

Zhao began Unique Bunny in 2014 in Winnipeg, an early adopter of South Korean and Japanese skincare retail in the city, before expanding to 10 locations around the country. But Unique Bunny’s longest-running Winnipeg storefront, on Osborne Street, closed after eight years in 2023, with the company citing crime growing out of control in the area.

Data released by the Canadian Federation of Independent Business on Wednesday found 61 per cent of surveyed business owners in Manitoba believe crime in their respective communities has increased over the past year — the second-highest rate in the country.

The news doesn’t surprise Zhao.

Read
Wednesday, Apr. 8, 2026
TIM SMITH / THE BRANDON SUN FILES
                                Kayakers paddle through the cool water of Clear Lake while a boat passes behind them in Riding Mountain National Park in 2023. A boat ban on Clear Lake is expected to be lifted this summer.
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Motorboats to return to Clear Lake this summer

Connor McDowell 5 minute read Preview
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Motorboats to return to Clear Lake this summer

Connor McDowell 5 minute read Wednesday, Apr. 8, 2026

Motorboats will be allowed to return to Clear Lake this summer, a year after they were banned amid the discovery of invasive species.

Parks Canada officials said Wednesday watercraft inside the Riding Mountain National Park lake would be permitted under a mandatory tagging program and several other conditions.

“We’re pleased, but we also want to see how it will be implemented,” said Trevor Boquist, spokesperson for the Fairness for Clear Lake advocacy group.

“I would say we want to be part of the conversation of how this will be implemented.”

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Wednesday, Apr. 8, 2026
Chief Angela Levasseur of Nisichawayasihk Cree Nation (left) (Ruth Bonneville /Free Press files)
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Desperate Manitoba First Nation chief pleads for help after string of recent suicides in devastated community

Scott Billeck 5 minute read Preview
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Desperate Manitoba First Nation chief pleads for help after string of recent suicides in devastated community

Scott Billeck 5 minute read Wednesday, Apr. 8, 2026

The chief of a northern Manitoba First Nation has declared a state of emergency as the community grapples with a worsening suicide crisis that has claimed five lives in six months, including three in the past two weeks.

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Wednesday, Apr. 8, 2026
Volunteer Marlene Ring spreads a table cloth while preparing a room for a passover meal Monday, March 30, 2026, at the Beth Israel Synagogue in Waterville, Maine. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)
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A project to save rural synagogues grows from Maine to Montana

Patrick Whittle, The Associated Press 4 minute read Preview
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A project to save rural synagogues grows from Maine to Montana

Patrick Whittle, The Associated Press 4 minute read Saturday, May. 23, 2026

WATERVILLE, Maine (AP) — Rabbi Rachel Isaacs spent the days leading up to Passover overseeing the preparation of ceremonial foods at Beth Israel Congregation, a synagogue in central Maine where membership has quadrupled over the last 15 years.

These days, growing congregations is very much on Isaacs' mind, as she's leading a movement to strengthen rural synagogues and Jewish communities around the country. They've reached dozens, and they're hoping for many more.

“Rural Jewish life is important for the Jewish people and it’s important for rural America,” Isaacs said. “Those people deserve to be served and shepherded.”

Isaacs is executive director of the Center for Small Town Jewish Life at Colby College, a liberal arts school in Waterville, Maine. The center began a decade ago with a goal of supporting Jewish congregations that are far from big cities and it has grown to run programs for more than 60 communities in 22 states.

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Saturday, May. 23, 2026
A lone red dress symbolizing the cause of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls hangs from a tree on the Skye River Trail on National Indigenous Peoples Day in We'koqma'q First Nation, N.S. on Friday, June 21, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darren Calabrese
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Indigenous women’s groups call for funding to limit risks to safety, prosperity

Alessia Passafiume, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Preview
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Indigenous women’s groups call for funding to limit risks to safety, prosperity

Alessia Passafiume, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Thursday, Apr. 30, 2026

OTTAWA - Advocates are calling for long-term, stable federal funding to safeguard Indigenous women and girls and warning the federal government's major projects push could place them at higher risk.

Hilda Anderson-Pyrz, president of the National Family and Survivors Circle, said groups like hers still don't know if they'll receive continued funding from Ottawa. She said that uncertainty undermines their efforts to address the crisis of missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls.

"When we're looking at the safety and human security of Indigenous women, girls and two-spirit and gender-diverse people, it's really critical that organizations who are doing this important work — and even through the lens of prevention and economic participation — that they receive long-term, sustainable and equitable funding," she said.

"They're severely underfunded. There's a real power imbalance."

Read
Thursday, Apr. 30, 2026
File
                                A shopping cart with grocery products
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Food is food regardless of where it comes from

Kelly Higginson 4 minute read Preview
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Food is food regardless of where it comes from

Kelly Higginson 4 minute read Wednesday, Apr. 8, 2026

In the recent budget, the government of Manitoba announced it will remove provincial sales tax from prepared meals sold in grocery stores, while continuing to apply it to the very same meals sold in restaurants.

This change is presented as an affordability measure. However, if the goal is to make food more affordable, then tax policy should reflect a simple principle: food is food.

Food is not a luxury, it is a necessity.

With just one per cent of restaurants classified as high-end or luxury dining, the reality is that the vast majority operate in the mid-market — serving as an essential part of Manitobans’ daily routines and busy lives. In fact, low-income Canadians spend a greater proportion of their income on restaurants than those with a higher income, so a tax on restaurant food disproportionately affects them.

Read
Wednesday, Apr. 8, 2026
Evan Vucci / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES
                                White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt speaks during a briefing at the White House.

Karoline Leavitt puts the ‘pro’ in propaganda

Pam Frampton 5 minute read Preview

Karoline Leavitt puts the ‘pro’ in propaganda

Pam Frampton 5 minute read Wednesday, Apr. 8, 2026

It’s not often a press secretary is so rabidly enthusiastic about their mission that they develop their own following, but then Karoline Leavitt is exceptional.

Read
Wednesday, Apr. 8, 2026
Mike Thiessen / Winnipeg Free Press
                                Too many cherry tomatoes? Grown Next Door can help you find people who will take them off your hands.
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Home gardeners have new way to share bumper crops

AV Kitching 5 minute read Preview
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Home gardeners have new way to share bumper crops

AV Kitching 5 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 7, 2026

Planning a prolific pumpkin patch? A new free online resource lets Winnipeggers list vegetables they’re planning to grow this summer that they will either sell, barter or give away in the fall.

Read
Tuesday, Apr. 7, 2026
In this image provided by NASA, Artemis II crew members, from left, Victor Glover Jeremy Hansen, Victor Glover, Reid Wiseman and Christina Koch, pause to turn the camera around for a selfie midway through their lunar observation period of the Moon during a lunar flyby, Monday, April 6, 2026. NASA via AP)
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Artemis II astronauts make long-distance call to the space station as they head home from the moon

Marcia Dunn, The Associated Press 4 minute read Preview
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Artemis II astronauts make long-distance call to the space station as they head home from the moon

Marcia Dunn, The Associated Press 4 minute read Wednesday, Apr. 29, 2026

HOUSTON (AP) — Still aglow from their triumphant lunar flyby, the Artemis II astronauts made more history Tuesday: calling their friends aboard the International Space Station hundreds of thousands of miles away as they headed home from the moon.

It was the first moonship-to-spaceship radio linkup ever. NASA's Apollo crews had no off-the-planet company back in the 1960s and 1970s, the last time humanity set sail for deep space.

"We have been waiting for this like you can’t imagine,” Artemis II commander Reid Wiseman called out.

For Christina Koch on Artemis II and Jessica Meir aboard the space station, it marked a joyous space reunion despite being 230,000 miles (370,000 kilometers) apart. The two teamed up for the world's first all-female spacewalk in 2019 outside the orbiting lab.

Read
Wednesday, Apr. 29, 2026
MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS
                                The affordable housing project at 2675 Portage Ave. is being delivered through a partnership involving the federal government, Manitoba Housing, and the City of Winnipeg.
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Feds, city, province join forces with First Nation to build 150 apartments in St. James

Scott Billeck 5 minute read Preview
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Feds, city, province join forces with First Nation to build 150 apartments in St. James

Scott Billeck 5 minute read Wednesday, Apr. 8, 2026

More than a century after its lake became the source of Winnipeg’s drinking water, Shoal Lake 40 First Nation is leading a major housing development in the city, backed by more than $51 million in government funding.

The federal government announced the combined funding Tuesday to build 150 apartment units at 2675 Portage Ave. in the city’s St. James neighbourhood. The development will include one-, two- and three-bedroom units.

Shoal Lake 40 Chief Herb Greene said the project carries historical significance.

“This development is about three things: history, teamwork, and the future,” Greene said during a sod-turning ceremony Tuesday. He noted for more than 100 years, Winnipeg was in dire need of a reliable source of clean drinking water.

Read
Wednesday, Apr. 8, 2026
The Artemis II crew captured this view of an Earthset on Monday, April 6, 2026, as they flew around the Moon. (NASA / The Associated Press)
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In pictures: Artemis II crew captures eclipse, Earthrise, far side of moon during lunar flyby

Photography by NASA 1 minute read Preview
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In pictures: Artemis II crew captures eclipse, Earthrise, far side of moon during lunar flyby

Photography by NASA 1 minute read Friday, May. 1, 2026

NASA released new photos Tuesday captured by the Artemis II astronauts.

Artemis II’s lunar fly-around and intense observation period lasted seven hours.

A total solar eclipse greeted the three Americans and one Canadian as the moon temporarily blocked the sun from their perspective.

Venturing as close as 4,067 miles (6,545 kilometers) to the gray dusty surface, the astronauts zipped through a list of more than two dozen photo targets, using powerful Nikon cameras as well as their iPhones to zoom in on impact craters and other intriguing lunar features.

Read
Friday, May. 1, 2026
In this image provided by NASA, The Artemis II crew captured this view of an Earthset on Monday, April 6, 2026, as they flew around the Moon. (NASA via AP)

Artemis II astronauts channel Apollo 8 with a striking Earthset photo

Marcia Dunn, The Associated Press 2 minute read Preview

Artemis II astronauts channel Apollo 8 with a striking Earthset photo

Marcia Dunn, The Associated Press 2 minute read Saturday, May. 2, 2026

HOUSTON (AP) — The Artemis II astronauts are now forever intertwined with Apollo 8.

A day after the historic lunar flyaround, NASA on Tuesday released striking new photos taken by the U.S.-Canadian crew.

The four astronauts channeled Apollo 8’s famous Earthrise shot from 1968 with their own: Earthset, showing our planet setting behind the gray, pockmarked moon. Another photo captures the total solar eclipse that occurred when the moon blocked the sun from the crew’s perspective.

The three Americans and one Canadian are now headed home, with a splashdown in the Pacific set for Friday. In the meantime, scientists at Houston's Mission Control are poring over the stream of moon photos beaming down.

Read
Saturday, May. 2, 2026
This image taken from an undated video provided by ZooAmerica shows a ZooAmerica sign in Hershey, Pa. (ZooAmerica via AP)

Parents charged after toddler slips into wolf area and gets hurt at Hersheypark zoo

Mark Scolforo And Kathy Mccormack, The Associated Press 3 minute read Preview

Parents charged after toddler slips into wolf area and gets hurt at Hersheypark zoo

Mark Scolforo And Kathy Mccormack, The Associated Press 3 minute read Wednesday, Apr. 29, 2026

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — The parents of a toddler who suffered a minor injury at a Pennsylvania theme park zoo after squeezing through a fence near a wolf enclosure and making contact with one of the animals have been charged with endangering the welfare of children, police said.

Evidence showed that the parents both walked about 25 to 30 feet (about 8 to 9 meters) away from the child to a seating area with benches and appeared to be paying attention to their cellphones when they noticed what was happening shortly before noon Saturday at ZooAmerica in the Hersheypark theme park, police said in a statement.

The child went through a small opening in a wooden barrier perimeter fence and entered a restricted area near the wolf exhibit, Derry Township Police said. The child reached a chain-link fence enclosure and was hurt after placing a hand through it.

“From the injuries sustained, it appears as though one of the wolves in the enclosure instinctively and naturally grabbed onto the child’s hand with its mouth. Several bystanders intervened and helped pull the child away,” police said in the statement.

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Wednesday, Apr. 29, 2026
A Hydro-Québec employee walks past monofacial solar panels installed on the 5.6 hectares at the Robert-A.-Boyd Solar Power Plant in Varennes, Que., on Monday, July 21, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Christinne Muschi
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Energy-hungry Nova Scotia companies nearly doubled their solar power capacity in 2025

Devin Stevens, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Preview
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Energy-hungry Nova Scotia companies nearly doubled their solar power capacity in 2025

Devin Stevens, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Wednesday, Apr. 29, 2026

HALIFAX - Energy-hungry companies in Nova Scotia are heading toward the light.

New statistics from the province's private power utility show that commercial-scale players — which includes municipalities and First Nations — grew their capacity to generate solar energy by 82 per cent last year.

Energy consultant David Brushett says that’s partly because legislative changes a few years ago have allowed companies to install solar systems 10 times larger than before. The “net-metering” system gives firms a credit on their power bills for the electricity they generate, offsetting their own usage. Even with the new rules, they are not allowed to generate more power than their operations consume.

The program allows solar projects of up to one megawatt for commercial customers. Brushett says that size makes more financial sense. “So that allowed much larger installations,” Brushett said in an interview.

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Wednesday, Apr. 29, 2026
Ruth Bonneville / Free Press
                                Longtime Living Prairie Museum volunteer Gerry Pearson, 70, has been making her way every week this winter to the museum where, in a repurposed classroom, she and fellow volunteers plant native grasses and flowers.
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Caring for native flowers and grasses helps former adult educator find ‘hope and joy in a dark time in the world’

AV Kitching 4 minute read Preview
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Caring for native flowers and grasses helps former adult educator find ‘hope and joy in a dark time in the world’

AV Kitching 4 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 7, 2026

After a career guiding newcomers through the logistics of life in Winnipeg, from registering with a family doctor to figuring out the transit system, Gerry Pearson turned her sights toward helping the city’s native plants settle back into place.

Read
Tuesday, Apr. 7, 2026
MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS
                                Neil Kraemer, a member of the West Broadway Tenant Committee, is a renter who’s seen above-guideline rent increases over the past three years.

Rent control killing jobs: landlords

Gabrielle Piché 5 minute read Preview

Rent control killing jobs: landlords

Gabrielle Piché 5 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 7, 2026

Companies are laying off staff and pausing major investments ahead of changes to Manitoba’s rental market.

One Manitoba company that works primarily on apartment buildings has had four projects put on hold and had to lay off roughly a dozen staff.

“That’s been a common theme with my peers… They’re all having to do the same,” said Con-Restor Technologies owner Stephane Phaneuf.

The Manitoba government plans to change how rental property managers can apply for above-guideline increases this spring. If implemented, landlords won’t recoup renovation costs through rent as quickly.

Read
Tuesday, Apr. 7, 2026
FILE - The U.S. Department of Education building is seen in Washington, Dec. 3, 2024. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana, File)

Trump administration terminates agreements to protect transgender students in several schools

Annie Ma, The Associated Press 4 minute read Preview

Trump administration terminates agreements to protect transgender students in several schools

Annie Ma, The Associated Press 4 minute read Friday, May. 1, 2026

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Education Department said Monday it has terminated agreements with five school districts and a college aimed at upholding protections for transgender students, backing away from requirements negotiated by previous administrations that took a different interpretation of civil rights.

The decision removes the federal obligations for the schools to keep up measures such as faculty training on abiding by a students' preferred name and pronouns and allowing students to use bathrooms that align with their gender identity.

One of the school systems, Delaware Valley School District in rural eastern Pennsylvania, received notice of the change from the Trump administration in February and has since voted to roll back its antidiscrimination protections for transgender students. Another district, Sacramento City Unified, said Monday it "remains committed to the support of our LGBTQ+ students and staff.”

The other affected districts are Cape Henlopen School District in Delaware, Fife School District in Washington, and La Mesa-Spring Valley School District and Taft College in California.

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Friday, May. 1, 2026
The historic Battery in St. John's is shown on Saturday, Jan. 6, 2024, following the first significant snowstorm of the winter. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Paul Daly
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Tale of flight stuck on ‘freezing Canadian island’ gets warm laughs in Newfoundland

Sarah Smellie, The Canadian Press 3 minute read Preview
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Tale of flight stuck on ‘freezing Canadian island’ gets warm laughs in Newfoundland

Sarah Smellie, The Canadian Press 3 minute read Saturday, May. 2, 2026

ST. JOHN'S - Newfoundlanders were having a chuckle on Monday over international media reports saying passengers on a British Airways flight diverted to St. John's last week were stranded on a frozen island somewhere in Canada.

Headlines describing Newfoundland as a "freezing island" had people cracking jokes and sharing weather statistics on social media. A spoof video on Reddit collected upvotes for its David Attenborough-style tale of marooned passengers scrounging for food and Wi-Fi signals in the capital city of more than 200,000 people.

It certainly wasn't easy for many of the 255 passengers who were grounded for two nights in Newfoundland and Labrador's capital city, Heather McKinnon, general manager at the Delta Hotel in St. John's, said Monday. They had no access to their luggage when a storm blew in and some spoke of missing funerals and weddings, she said in an interview.

But McKinnon said she hopes most know that Newfoundland is not a frozen wasteland, as the headlines appeared to suggest.

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Saturday, May. 2, 2026
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