Search Results
Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.
Province’s security enhancement fund allocated to targeted cultural centres, places of worship, justice minister says
5 minute read Preview Thursday, Jun. 25, 2026Researchers put hail under microscope, take stock of June 9 storm
6 minute read Preview Friday, Jun. 26, 2026Growing number of Manitoba youths are addicted to vaping
11 minute read Preview Thursday, Jun. 25, 2026City’s greenhouse emissions rise, councillor says net-zero still within reach
3 minute read Preview Thursday, Jun. 25, 2026One Extraordinary Photo: Mexico goalkeeper Guillermo Ochoa’s special moment
2 minute read Preview Thursday, Jun. 25, 2026Montana DEQ works toward impairment designation for Big Hole River
6 minute read Preview Thursday, Jun. 25, 2026What to know about earthquake early warning systems
6 minute read Preview Thursday, Jun. 25, 2026Mayor calls Portage and Main reopening a success
5 minute read Preview Thursday, Jun. 25, 2026DEA asks watchdog to investigate claims that agents permitted fentanyl to hit the streets
3 minute read Preview Thursday, Jun. 25, 2026Judge rules against effort to create majority-Black DeSoto County districts
3 minute read Preview Thursday, Jun. 25, 2026Data centres top Ottawa’s big power requests, placing pressure on local utility
2 minute read Preview Thursday, Jun. 25, 2026Evacuations in B.C. amid risk of ‘outburst’ from glacier lake
3 minute read Preview Thursday, Jun. 25, 2026B.C. government marks 5 years since heat dome killed hundreds
5 minute read Preview Thursday, Jun. 25, 2026$17 Million In Court Settlements Is Coming To Red Hill Families
4 minute read Thursday, Jun. 25, 2026Nearly 630 of the plaintiffs affected by Navy water contamination in Central Oʻahu will receive a combined payment of $17 million in the latest batch of Red Hill court settlements announced by the U.S. Department of Justice on Wednesday.
DOJ leaders touted the move as a good-faith step toward resolving the matter, in which scores of military personnel, their families and civilian workers were sickened by tens of thousands of gallons of jet fuel spilled in 2021. Some victims, however, called the deals “a slap in the face” that don’t go nearly far enough to compensate all the damage done.
The settlements apply to family members who were sickened — not the service members themselves — and they stem from two lawsuits brought against the Navy in recent years over Red Hill contamination under the Federal Tort Claims Act, or FTCA.
Together, those suits — Feindt v. United States and Hughes v. United States — represent more than 6,500 claims.
Public support is strong for two per cent inflation target, Bank of Canada says
3 minute read Preview Thursday, Jun. 25, 2026The 2 earthquakes that struck Venezuela are known as a ‘doublet.’ Here’s how they happen
4 minute read Preview Thursday, Jun. 25, 2026Time for city to get handle on e-bike, e-scooter regulations
4 minute read Thursday, Jun. 25, 2026Ever been out for a walk, a jog or a casual bike ride only to be startled by an e-bike, battery-powered scooter or some other personal electric vehicle flying past you at high speed? If so, you probably know how urgent it is for lawmakers to bring in regulations to respond to this growing phenomenon.
Winnipeg is facing a transportation challenge that barely existed a few years ago. Battery-powered bikes, scooters, electric unicycles and other similar vehicles have become common sights on city streets, cycling routes and multi-use pathways.
Their popularity is growing faster than the rules governing them. And that should be a concern for city hall.
There’s no question personal electric vehicles offer people significant advantages. They’re cheaper to operate than cars, produce no direct emissions, reduce traffic congestion and provide people with another option for getting around the city.