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July 18, 2026

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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.

RUTH BONNEVILLE / FREE PRESS
                                ENT - Volunteer Washer Donna Askew Story: A new series on older Manitobans who have interesting jobs, or hobbies etc This specific story looks at Donna Askew’s volunteer work at the Nearly New Shop. Askew has been washing all the donated clothes for 20+ years. The former Children’s Hospital nurse took on this role more than 20 years ago and does between four to six loads of laundry a week. She picks up the dirty laundry on Tuesdays, when she also drops off last week’s load. Photos of her picking up the donated clothes from the Nearly New Shop and sorting and washing them in her laundry room in her basement. Story by AV Kitching Feb 11th, 2026
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Retired nurse doesn’t mind doing laundry to help raise money for Children’s Hospital Foundation

AV Kitching 9 minute read Preview
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Retired nurse doesn’t mind doing laundry to help raise money for Children’s Hospital Foundation

AV Kitching 9 minute read Monday, Mar. 2, 2026

Donna Askew has been doing other people’s laundry for more than 20 years, but she doesn’t mind. It’s all for a good cause.

It’s fair to say Askew has washed, dried, mended and hung up thousands of shirts, blouses, dresses, T-shirts and trousers during her tenure as volunteer laundress at the Nearly New Shop at 961 Portage Ave.

“You name it, I’ve washed it… underwear and socks and lots of bedding and tablecloths and runners… if you’ve washed it at home in your washer, I’ve washed it in mine,” she says, laughing.

The shop attracts more than 50 customers daily, many who have come to rely on it.

Read
Monday, Mar. 2, 2026
MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS
                                Students take part in an after-school tabla program at A.E. Wright School on Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2026. The drumming program, which is one of few in the country, launched several years ago to connect Punjabi students with a traditional instrument. For Maggie story. Free Press 2026
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Drumming program connects Southeast Asian students with traditional instrument, heritage

Maggie Macintosh 5 minute read Preview
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Drumming program connects Southeast Asian students with traditional instrument, heritage

Maggie Macintosh 5 minute read Monday, Mar. 2, 2026

For many young musicians at Arthur E. Wright School, tabla class begins with a bow and tapping their music teacher’s toes.

Amjad Sabir isn’t all that fussy about formalities, but he recognizes his students’ families have taught them these gestures are important to show respect towards their Indo-Canadian elders.

“I just want to spread this art,” said Sabir, who is affectionately known as “guruji” — meaning esteemed teacher in Hindi and Punjabi — inside the kindergarten-to-Grade 8 building in the Maples.

The art in question? A pair of hand drums, known as tabla, that create a wide range of tones.

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Monday, Mar. 2, 2026
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Grandparents and grandchildren can grow together

Deborah Schnitzer 4 minute read Monday, Mar. 2, 2026

When my now five-year-old grandson was younger, we enjoyed an easygoing relationship, the kind often represented as idyllic in popular media culture — harmonious, reciprocal, restorative.

We would walk the woods together, gather berries, cavort. He ran towards me when I appeared at his door, asked me to sit beside him at meals. We shared bowls of purple grapes while we built garages out of magnet tiles, “assisted” one another in the garden, drew pictures, consulted about the weather and planned possible treats.

Over the last several months, however, our relationship has changed as his personality and behaviour develop. He is less favourably inclined towards me and more unforgiving if I misstep or mistake boundaries that are important to him.

I had picked him up for years from his daycare, for example, but when he moved to a new school this fall, he became increasingly upset if I, rather than his mother or father, came to get him.

This image provided by U.S. Central Command shows a F/A-18E Super Hornet landing on the USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78) in support of Operation Epic Fury, on Sunday, March 1, 2026. (U.S. Navy via AP)

Where things stand after the US and Israeli strikes on Iran

Cara Anna, The Associated Press 5 minute read Preview

Where things stand after the US and Israeli strikes on Iran

Cara Anna, The Associated Press 5 minute read Monday, Mar. 2, 2026

The United States and Israel targeted Iran in coordinated attacks over the weekend that killed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and dozens of other senior figures and kicked off a furious Iranian response that was expanding into a wider regional war.

U.S. President Donald Trump said the campaign could take several weeks. Allies of the U.S. pledged to help stop Iran’s missile and drone strikes. The Lebanese militant group Hezbollah claimed strikes on Israel for the first time in more than a year, and Israel fired back.

The first U.S. military deaths have been reported. Other deaths have been confirmed in Israel and Gulf nations, while Iran has said several hundred people have been killed there.

With Khamenei’s death, the Islamic Republic must now choose a supreme leader for the first time since 1989. Trump has urged Iranians to seize the moment and overthrow the theocracy that cracked down on nationwide protests earlier this year. There was no sign that was happening.

Read
Monday, Mar. 2, 2026

Time for unity, not party politics

Paul Moist 5 minute read Monday, Mar. 2, 2026

Like many of you, I watched the Olympics with a focus on both our women’s and men’s hockey teams, both of whom fell just short of gold medals, in losses to the U.S.

In the normal course of sports and national pride, this would always be a bit of a disappointment. I think it was heightened this year, given the insults and economic pain which the U.S. has inflicted upon us, their largest trading partner, over the past year.

To put it bluntly, we are a long way from the words of former president John F. Kennedy, who spoke of our relationship in a 1961 address to the Canada’s Parliament, saying, “Geography has made us neighbours. History has made us friends. Economics has made us partners. And necessity has made us allies.”

While we will remain neighbours to the U.S. and will always have a large trading relationship with them, the depth of our relations, as either a friend or an ally, will never be what it was.

AP Photo/Petr David Josek
                                United States’ Connor Hellebuyck (37) celebrates after the United States defeated Canada in a men’s ice hockey gold medal game between Canada and the United States at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Milan, Italy.
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Hockey games and missed opportunities

Jonathan Van Elslander 5 minute read Preview
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Hockey games and missed opportunities

Jonathan Van Elslander 5 minute read Monday, Mar. 2, 2026

When I was 16, I quit hockey. I was a closeted teenager, and I was sick to death of the bullying, the violence, and the culture. Hockey made me ashamed. For a decade, I found it easier to come out of the closet than to tell people I had once loved hockey.

Read
Monday, Mar. 2, 2026
FILE- In this picture released by the official website of the office of the Iranian supreme leader, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei listens to the then commander of the Revolutionary Guard Mohammad Ali Jafari during a graduation ceremony of a group of the guard's officers in Tehran, Iran, May 20, 2015. (Office of the Iranian Supreme Leader via AP, File)
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What to know about Iran’s Revolutionary Guard, a powerful force within the country’s theocracy

Jon Gambrell, The Associated Press 5 minute read Preview
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What to know about Iran’s Revolutionary Guard, a powerful force within the country’s theocracy

Jon Gambrell, The Associated Press 5 minute read Monday, Mar. 2, 2026

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Iran's paramilitary Revolutionary Guard has grown into a powerful force within the country's theocracy, answering only to its supreme leader and overseeing its ballistic missile arsenal and launching attacks overseas.

The force is again in the spotlight as Iran widens its attacks across the Middle East following the start of a U.S.-Israeli airstrike campaign that's already killed the country's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Here's what to know about the Guard.

Born out of a revolution

Read
Monday, Mar. 2, 2026
JOHN WOODS / FREE PRESS
                                Winnipeg left-wing groups gather to support the current Iranian regime outside the US Consulate on Portage Avenue Sunday, March 1, 2026. reporter: chris

Duelling protests in Winnipeg condemn, celebrate strikes on Iran

Chris Kitching 5 minute read Preview

Duelling protests in Winnipeg condemn, celebrate strikes on Iran

Chris Kitching 5 minute read Sunday, Mar. 1, 2026

The courtyard outside the U.S. consulate in downtown Winnipeg hosted contrasting demonstrations Sunday as Manitobans reacted to U.S.-Israeli military strikes against Iran’s regime and the latter’s retaliatory attacks.

Peace Alliance Winnipeg condemned the joint strikes, with supporters holding signs reading “No war on Iran” and “Ceasefire,” shortly before members of Winnipeg’s Iranian diaspora danced and waved flags while celebrating the death of Iran’s supreme leader and expressing hopes of “liberation.”

“All of us hope that soon the Islamic Republic of Iran will be overthrown, and we hope for the return of Pahlavi monarchy to Iran,” said Iranian Monarchists of Manitoba manager Shahla Shojaei, who moved to Canada from Iran in 2017.

“The reason that I came here (to Canada) was because there is no freedom in Iran. Human rights were suppressed.”

Read
Sunday, Mar. 1, 2026
FILE - In this photo released by the official website of the office of the Iranian supreme leader, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei leads an Eid al-Fitr prayer marking the end of the Muslim holy fasting month of Ramadan at the Imam Khomeini Grand Mosque in Tehran, Iran, Monday, March 31, 2025. (Office of the Iranian Supreme Leader via AP, File)
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How succession works in Iran and who could be the country’s next supreme leader

Jon Gambrell, The Associated Press 3 minute read Preview
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How succession works in Iran and who could be the country’s next supreme leader

Jon Gambrell, The Associated Press 3 minute read Monday, Mar. 2, 2026

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — The death of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei after almost 37 years in power raises paramount questions about Iran's future.

The contours of a complex succession process began to take shape the morning after Khamenei's killing in an airstrike campaign by the United States and Israel.

Here is what to know:

Temporary leadership council

Read
Monday, Mar. 2, 2026
TREVOR HAGAN / FREE PRESS FILES
                                A total lunar eclipse will take place Tuesday.
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Infrequent lunar eclipse performs Copper Side of the Moon early Tuesday morning

Nicole Buffie 2 minute read Preview
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Infrequent lunar eclipse performs Copper Side of the Moon early Tuesday morning

Nicole Buffie 2 minute read Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026

Stargazers in Manitoba have the chance Tuesday to watch the last total lunar eclipse on this side of the world until 2029.

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Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026
SUPPLIED
                                Brush Theatre’s third local performance of Doodle POP in five years is well worth the repetition.
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Imaginative production delivers excellent encore performances

Ben Waldman 4 minute read Preview
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Imaginative production delivers excellent encore performances

Ben Waldman 4 minute read Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026

When Brush Theatre first brought its flagship production, Doodle POP, to Winnipeg in 2022, the South Korean company was an unknown entity locally.

Not anymore: with its third visit to the Manitoba Theatre for Young People in five years underway, the highly imaginative troupe has scribbled its way into the memories of a generation of theatregoers.

While adult audiences might not appreciate a professional theatre company programming similar shows with such frequency, MTYP hasn’t hesitated to extend return invitations to Brush, which blends miming, clowning, drawing and dazzling projections into unique and approachable stage concoctions, driven by participation from a rapt, ever-changing audience.

A kid only gets one chance to see their first theatre performance, and Doodle POP is just about as fun and engaging an introductory experience one can dream up.

Read
Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026
RUTH BONNEVILLE / FREE PRESS
                                Seniors play games during their time together at the weekly gathering.

Three determined church members join forces to build thriving social community for seniors in the West End

Janine LeGal 5 minute read Preview

Three determined church members join forces to build thriving social community for seniors in the West End

Janine LeGal 5 minute read Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026

In an increasingly chaotic and complex world, loneliness and isolation have become all too common in many communities. For many seniors, it can be particularly challenging to find a place to comfortably and easily belong.

The solution need not be complicated. In fact, a few caring volunteers can make all the difference in the world. Three women have stepped up to help a community experiencing isolation.

Denise MacRae from St. Paul’s Anglican Church, along with Cathy Campbell and Pat Stewart, both from St. Matthews Anglican Church, were well acquainted with the needs of community members. They consulted with drop-in participants from previous groups and met with Anglican partners to see how they could move forward with a space at West End Commons, in an area they all know and love.

“It was decided that we focus on seniors. Their wish was to have a place to meet and visit and see each other. And so it began,” MacRae explained, about the group that meets for a few hours at the Commons on McGee Street every Monday afternoon.

Read
Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026
Chief David Monias (left) says there is a shortage of funding to remediate the hazards in an estimated 1,300 Pimicikamak Cree Nation homes that were damaged after pipes froze and burst due to a days-long power outage two months ago. (John Woods/Winnipeg Free Press files)
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Chief says more funding needed to repair homes after power outage, flooding

Chris Kitching 4 minute read Preview
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Chief says more funding needed to repair homes after power outage, flooding

Chris Kitching 4 minute read Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026

A northern First Nation hit by a days-long power outage and subsequent water crisis is seeking additional government funds to cover the cost of mould and asbestos removal in homes.

Pimicikamak Cree Nation Chief David Monias said Friday there is a shortage of funding to remediate the hazards and bring homes with damage up to code so they are habitable.

“We can’t have (residents) return to a situation where there might be some bacteria or moulding issues that will affect their safety, that affect their health, and possibly cause medical issues that will be made worse because they already have existing health issues,” he said during a virtual call.

Pimicikamak’s leaders said an estimated 1,300 homes were damaged after pipes froze and burst two months ago. Water leaked into basements and crawl spaces. The community’s water and sewage plants were also affected.

Read
Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026
MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS
                                Manitoba Families Minister Nahanni Fontaine (left) along with Housing, Addictions and Homelessness Minister Bernadette Smith, at the renewal of the province’s five-year poverty reduction strategy.

The number of impoverished children is growing

Editorial 3 minute read Preview

The number of impoverished children is growing

Editorial 3 minute read Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026

Canada is, unfortunately, beginning to look like the land of poor prospects for its children.

The country saw an increase in child poverty for the third straight year in 2023 — the most recent available public data — according to an annual child poverty report card recently released by Campaign 2000, a non-partisan coalition dedicated to ending child poverty in Canada.

It doesn’t matter which measuring stick you use: according to the official Market Basket Measure, child poverty has more than doubled since 2020, to 10.7 per cent — or 802,000 children. Meanwhile, the Census Family Low Income Measure, After Tax — which Campaign 2000 uses and claims is a better indicator — put the number at 18.3 per cent, or 1.4 million children.

According to 2023 data, Manitoba was the second-highest in child poverty rates based on the CFLIM-AT measure, at 26.9 per cent (Saskatchewan had the highest, at 27.1 per cent). Winnipeg was sixth-highest among large urban centres for the same year, at a rate of 22 per cent.

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Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026
TIM SMITH / BRANDON SUN FILES 
                                An agricultural drone on display at Manitoba Ag Days 2026 in Brandon in January.

Drone application big step in crop protection

Laura Rance 4 minute read Preview

Drone application big step in crop protection

Laura Rance 4 minute read Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026

It’s been a long time coming, but Health Canada is finally moving forward with a plan that would allow farmers to spray weeds using drones.

The department that oversees Canada’s Pest Management Regulatory Agency has launched a 30-day public consultation process on a proposal to regulate drone applications of pesticides similarly to manned aircraft applications.

The change, if approved, would allow manufacturers whose products are already approved for application by manned aircraft to add application by drones to their product labels without going through the costly and time-consuming process of applying for a label change.

Currently, there are no agricultural pesticide products registered for drone application largely because the current regulations require every product to go through a separate registration process providing supporting data.

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Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026
Patrick Doyle / The Canadian Press
                                Prime Minister Mark Carney and Heated Rivalry star Hudson Williams deliver a viral moment at gala celebrating Canada’s film and television industry.
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Canadian sovereignty is not just about borders, but culture too

Conrad Sweatman 16 minute read Preview
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Canadian sovereignty is not just about borders, but culture too

Conrad Sweatman 16 minute read Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026

It was “elbows up” in Davos — then came “leg up” in Ottawa.

The bawdy moment between Prime Minister Mark Carney and actor Hudson Williams happened in late January when both were at a gala celebrating the country’s film and TV successes.

“Do the leg thing,” Carney instructed Williams, one star of Heated Rivalry, the Canadian-made gay love story about hockey rivals and overnight international smash hit. Williams swung one leg up onto the prime minister while photographers captured the viral moment tossed into their lap.

Whether or not Carney has seen Heated Rivalry, it’s hard to imagine a sleeker image for elbows-up nationalism: loudly Canadian but still cosmopolitan, pro-hockey but not exactly hoser-ish — and eager for international markets.

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Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026
Marta Guerrero photo
                                Le photographe animalier Jean-Pierre Parenty expose à l’Hôtel Fort Garry 46 clichés pris à Churchill.
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Churchill s’expose à l’Hôtel Fort Garry

Virginie Frère 5 minute read Preview
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Churchill s’expose à l’Hôtel Fort Garry

Virginie Frère 5 minute read Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026

À peine franchi le seuil de la passerelle arrière de l’emblématique Hôtel Fort Garry, le visiteur est happé par un regard. Immense. Blanc. Perçant. Celui d’un ours polaire saisi à Churchill par le photographe manitobain Jean-Pierre Parenty. Depuis quelques jours à peine, 46 de ses clichés transforment le couloir vitré de l’hôtel en une véritable immersion arctique.

Photographe animalier, Jean-Pierre Parenty s’est spécialisé depuis une dizaine d’années dans la faune canadienne. “Je suis Canadien et j’aime chercher, photographier et représenter la faune canadienne,” confie-t-il.

Né et élevé au Manitoba dans une ferme, Jean-Pierre Parenty nourrit depuis l’enfance une passion pour les animaux et la photographie. “La partie qui m’intéresse et que j’adore, c’est être en nature, chercher des animaux, les trouver et puis essayer de les capturer dans mon appareil photo,” dit-il. S’il a longtemps parcouru le monde, c’est désormais vers le Nord qu’il tourne son objectif, et plus particulièrement vers Churchill, cette localité de la baie d’Hudson capitale mondiale de l’ours polaire.

L’idée de l’exposition est née d’un appel de l’hôtel, il y a environ un an. “L’Hôtel Fort Garry m’a appelé pour créer une galerie dans la passerelle arrière de l’hôtel. Et ils ont demandé que ce soient des photos d’animaux de Churchill,” explique-t-il. Une demande sur mesure pour celui qui fréquente régulièrement la région. “Je vais à Churchill très souvent, donc j’ai beaucoup de photos que j’ai prises là-bas,” souligne le photographe.

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Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026
Mindaugas Kulbis / The Associated Press files
                                A girl attends a Jewish festival of Purim celebration at a synagogue in Vilnius, Lithuania, in March 2022.
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Purim treats shared with others

Sharon Chisvin 4 minute read Preview
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Purim treats shared with others

Sharon Chisvin 4 minute read Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026

Volunteers with the grassroots, non-profit organization Urban Wagons have been walking the downtown streets of Winnipeg every Monday evening for the last three years offering seasonal clothing, self-care products, bottled water, hot soup, plastic wrapped sandwiches, granola bars and fruit to any unsheltered and vulnerable individuals that they encounter.

This week their food offerings will include a new item: triangular shaped fruit or poppyseed filled pastries called hamantashen. Hamantashen are the traditional food associated with the Jewish holiday of Purim.

Purim is a widely celebrated, joyous festival commemorating events that occurred in the fourth century BCE after Haman, an adviser to the Persian King Ahasuerus, plotted, with the king’s assent, to murder the regime’s Jewish population. Haman’s plan was foiled when the king’s wife, Queen Esther, a secret Jew, risked her life by revealing her true identity to her husband and entreated him not to annihilate her people. Thanks to her courage, the Jewish population of Persia was saved and Haman was punished for his malevolent machinations.

The story of Purim is recounted in the Old Testament Book of Esther, or Megillah Esther, which is read aloud in synagogue on the eve of and during the day of the holiday. Listening to the reading of the Megillah is one of the main mitzvot, or commandments, associated with Purim, which begins this year on the evening of March 2.

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Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026
MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS FILES
                                Winnipeg approved more than 1,000 new downtown housing units last year – marking a 15-year high – but the city now needs to assure people the area is safe and convenient enough to call home.

Mayor encouraged after downtown housing unit approvals reach 15-year high

Joyanne Pursaga 5 minute read Preview

Mayor encouraged after downtown housing unit approvals reach 15-year high

Joyanne Pursaga 5 minute read Friday, Feb. 27, 2026

The city approved more than 1,000 new downtown housing units last year, marking a 15-year high, while work continues to help entice people to move to the area.

Building permits were issued for 1,040 new downtown dwelling units in 2025, nearly double the 596 issued in 2018 and greatly improved from the 141 granted during the post-pandemic slowdown in 2022, city data show.

Mayor Scott Gillingham said the permit data reflects renewed interest in developing downtown.

“Before the pandemic, Winnipeg’s downtown had a lot of momentum and now we really see that momentum is really strong again,” he said.

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Friday, Feb. 27, 2026
MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS FILES
                                Sonia Prevost-Derbecker

Siloam Mission staffers demand CEO be removed one week into the job

Scott Billeck 5 minute read Preview

Siloam Mission staffers demand CEO be removed one week into the job

Scott Billeck 5 minute read Friday, Feb. 27, 2026

Siloam Mission staff members are calling for the removal of the inner-city shelter’s new CEO and its board chair, as well as an independent review of its executive leadership and board oversight.

They allege CEO Sonia Prevost-Derbecker, who was formally introduced in the role Feb. 20, has made derogatory and demeaning remarks about Indigenous people, individuals struggling with substance use, and the neighbourhood around the 300 Princess St. building. They said they were also concerned she had asked about her personal spending authority.

“Our position remains firm: meaningful governance change is required,” said a recent email from staff to the shelter’s board of directors.

“We believe this includes the removal of (chair Tracey Silagy) from the board and the replacement of Sonia as CEO. Without these steps, confidence cannot be restored.”

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Friday, Feb. 27, 2026
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