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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.

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The necessity of the arts

Katarina Kupca 4 minute read Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025

It’s easy to take arts and culture for granted. Not because they don’t matter, but because they’re woven so deeply into our daily lives.

They’re in the stories we tell, the music in our earbuds, the festivals that bring neighbours into the streets and the murals that brighten our downtowns.

Arts and culture are part of who we are as Manitobans.

But the arts aren’t just “nice to have.” They’re essential. Especially right now.

Minister of Indigenous Services Mandy Gull-Masty speaks during a press conference in Ottawa, on Wednesday, Oct. 29, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Spencer Colby
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Decades-long fight to repeal discriminatory second-generation cut-off rekindled on Parliament Hill

Marsha McLeod 9 minute read Preview
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Decades-long fight to repeal discriminatory second-generation cut-off rekindled on Parliament Hill

Marsha McLeod 9 minute read Friday, Oct. 31, 2025

First Nations women who’ve spent a lifetime fighting for the right to belong in their own communities have been again travelling to Parliament Hill this fall, repeating their calls for change and their wish: for their children and grandchildren not to be excluded as they were.

Read
Friday, Oct. 31, 2025
Isabel Felices-Costello photo
                                Maggie Macintosh: media coach

Coming of age in the era of ‘fake news’

Maggie Macintosh 5 minute read Preview

Coming of age in the era of ‘fake news’

Maggie Macintosh 5 minute read Friday, Oct. 31, 2025

‘Let’s get media lit(erate)!” The punny slogan was my attempt to get students excited about fact-checking, current events and finding alternative sources to Wikipedia — a crowd-sourced platform anyone can edit.

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Friday, Oct. 31, 2025
Adrian Wyld / The Canadian Press files
                                Manitoba New Democrat MP Leah Gazan
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Winnipeg MP’s private member’s bill would make residential school denialism a crime

Free Press staff 2 minute read Preview
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Winnipeg MP’s private member’s bill would make residential school denialism a crime

Free Press staff 2 minute read Friday, Oct. 31, 2025

Manitoba New Democrat MP Leah Gazan reintroduced a private member’s bill Friday that would criminalize residential school denialism, saying “real action” is needed to combat rising anti-Indigenous hate.

Bill C-254, if passed, would amend the Criminal Code to include the promotion of hatred against Indigenous Peoples by “condoning, denying, downplaying or justifying the Indian residential school system.”

“We cannot ignore the obvious, that residential school denialism is simply an act of inciting hate against Indigenous people,” Gazan, the MP for Winnipeg Centre, said in a news release.

“Members of Parliament must act immediately to uphold their safety, and I urge all my parliamentary colleagues to protect survivors and families by supporting this bill.”

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Friday, Oct. 31, 2025
Innovation and New Technology Minister Mike Moroz (Mike Deal / Free Press files)

Province releases inaugural innovation report

Gabrielle Piché 5 minute read Preview

Province releases inaugural innovation report

Gabrielle Piché 5 minute read Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025

Promises to keep data in Manitoba and bolster the economy through innovation highlight the province’s first innovation and prosperity report.

“AI, tech, it’s gonna be in your industry,” Premier Wab Kinew said Friday after the report’s release. “We have to get in the game.”

Proponents of the 39-page document expressed hope for Manitoba’s future; critics deemed the strategy lacking.

A majority of Manitoba’s data storage and cloud computing infrastructure is run by United States firms such as Microsoft. The report calls on the province to build its own infrastructure with federal and provincial funds.

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Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025
The emergency department at the Health Sciences Centre (Mikaela MacKenzie / Free Press files)

The ‘fix’ is a fantasy as dysfunctional health-care system fails Manitobans on multiple fronts

Tom Brodbeck 5 minute read Preview

The ‘fix’ is a fantasy as dysfunctional health-care system fails Manitobans on multiple fronts

Tom Brodbeck 5 minute read Friday, Oct. 31, 2025

If you’ve been stuck in a Winnipeg emergency room wondering why you’re waiting longer than ever to see a doctor, you’re not imagining it.

New numbers are in, and they paint a grim picture of a health-care system still in crisis.

According to the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority’s 2024-25 annual report released this week, emergency room and urgent care wait times have jumped 36 per cent over the past three years.

The 90th percentile wait time — meaning nine out of 10 patients are seen faster and one in 10 waits longer — has ballooned from 7.6 hours in 2022-23 to 10.3 hours in 2024-25.

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Friday, Oct. 31, 2025
MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS
                                Earl Grey Press reporters Sebastian (from left), Isabel, Willow and James are on the beat at their school.
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Winnipeg students develop critical aptitude essential for navigating media landscape

Melissa Martin 14 minute read Preview
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Winnipeg students develop critical aptitude essential for navigating media landscape

Melissa Martin 14 minute read Friday, Oct. 31, 2025

One day in the fall of 2024, two of Lily Godinez Goodman’s Grade 5 students came to her with a question: Why didn’t their Earl Grey School have a newspaper, they wondered — and if they started one, would she serve as editor-in-chief?

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Friday, Oct. 31, 2025
Billie Eilish attends the WSJ. Magazine Innovator Awards at The Museum of Modern Art on Wednesday, Oct. 29, 2025, in New York. (Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP)

Billie Eilish to billionaires: ‘No hate, but give your money away, shorties’

Thalia Beaty, The Associated Press 5 minute read Preview

Billie Eilish to billionaires: ‘No hate, but give your money away, shorties’

Thalia Beaty, The Associated Press 5 minute read Monday, Nov. 3, 2025

Billie Eilish wants billionaires to donate more.

As the Grammy and Oscar winner accepted the music award at this year’s WSJ. Magazine Innovator Awards on Wednesday night, she urged the ultra-wealthy to address more of the world’s issues.

“We’re in a time right now where the world is really, really bad and really dark and people need empathy and help more than, kind of, ever, especially in our country,” Eilish said to an audience that included Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg and his wife Priscilla Chan, as well as “Star Wars” creator George Lucas. “I’d say if you have money, it would be great to use it for good things, maybe give it to some people that need it.”

Late night host Stephen Colbert introduced Eilish on stage at New York’s Museum of Modern Art by announcing that she would donate $11.5 million of the proceeds from her Hit Me Hard and Soft tour to causes dedicated to food equity, climate justice and reducing carbon pollution.

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Monday, Nov. 3, 2025
BROOK JONES/FREE PRESS
                                Ryan Palmquist was motivated to mount a 2022 campaign for Ward 3 trustee in the Louis Riel School Division after tragic crosswalk deaths.
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Trustees want say in school zone redesign

Maggie Macintosh 5 minute read Preview
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Trustees want say in school zone redesign

Maggie Macintosh 5 minute read Friday, Oct. 31, 2025

Trustees are calling on Winnipeg City Council to redesign 30 km/h school zones to better protect everyone who lives, learns and works in their wards — and they want a say in an infrastructure makeover.

For Ryan Palmquist, an active cyclist, dad and first-term trustee, road safety is both a passion and frequent source of frustration.

His son’s trek to École Varennes serves as a daily reminder of why he remains committed to the cause.

“My oldest son crosses a crosswalk — every single day, twice a day, to go to school — where a kid died,” the father of three said.

Read
Friday, Oct. 31, 2025
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First Nations accuse Hydro, province, feds of profiting from land

Erik Pindera 2 minute read Thursday, Oct. 30, 2025

Two First Nations are suing Manitoba Hydro and the provincial and federal governments, claiming the institutions have made billions of dollars through hydroelectric operations on land the communities never agreed to cede.

In a statement of claim filed last week in the Court of King’s Bench, Canupawakpa Dakota Nation and Dakota Tipi First Nation in southern Manitoba are seeking damages for alleged infringement on their rights.

The court filing accuses the public utility, the province and the federal government of breaching duties owed to the Dakota nations and of unjustly enriching themselves at the expense of the communities, without consultation.

“The yearly revenue Manitoba Hydro produces from the land and particularly, the activities, is substantial,” reads the lawsuit.

This Dictionary.com page shows the newest word of the year
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Dictionary.com’s word of the year is ‘6-7.’ But is it even a word and what does it mean?

John Seewer, The Associated Press 3 minute read Preview
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Dictionary.com’s word of the year is ‘6-7.’ But is it even a word and what does it mean?

John Seewer, The Associated Press 3 minute read Friday, Oct. 31, 2025

Go ahead and roll your eyes. Shrug your shoulders. Or maybe just juggle your hands in the air.

Dictionary.com's word of the year isn't even really a word. It's the viral term “6-7” that kids and teenagers can't stop repeating and laughing about and parents and teachers can't make any sense of.

The word — if you can call it that — exploded in popularity over the summer. It's more of an inside joke with an unclear meaning, driven by social media.

Dictionary.com says its annual selection is a linguistic time capsule reflecting social trends and events. But the site admitted it too is a bit confused by “6-7.”

Read
Friday, Oct. 31, 2025
SHELDON BIRNIE / COMMUNITY REVIEW
                                Eugene Hyworon, co-chair of St. Mary the Protectress Ukrainian Orthodox Cathedral’s centennial celebration, says the church was surrounded by ‘wilderness’ when it was on the outskirts past city limits.
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A century later, Ukrainian church still helping new Ukrainians

John Longhurst 3 minute read Preview
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A century later, Ukrainian church still helping new Ukrainians

John Longhurst 3 minute read Thursday, Oct. 30, 2025

When it was founded in 1925, St. Mary the Protectress Ukrainian Orthodox Cathedral in the North End was a welcoming and helpful place for immigrants seeking new lives in Canada.

As the church celebrates its centennial, it is still welcoming and helping Ukrainians fleeing war in their homeland.

“Helping each other never stops,” Eugene Hyworon, co-chair of the cathedral’s centennial committee, said.

A centennial gala will be held Saturday.

Read
Thursday, Oct. 30, 2025
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Advocacy in the age of Wi-Fi

Bella Luna Zuniga 5 minute read Thursday, Oct. 30, 2025

When the internet first arrived in the mid-1990s, it screeched. Literally.

It screamed its way into our homes through the telephone lines, a metallic cry that sounded like the future forcing its way through. We waited through the static, convinced that life was about to get easier. People said it would save us time, let us work from home and give us more hours with our families.

No one mentioned that it would also move into our bedrooms, our pockets and our dreams. No one could have imagined that it would change how we fight, how we march, how we plead for justice. That the fight for justice itself would become a digital labyrinth where truth moves slowly and attention moves fast.

Back then, when a heroine from a popular early-2000s television show was dumped with nothing but a handwritten note, it became a cultural tragedy. There was nothing noble about writing your cowardice on a Post-it. A few years later, a company fired hundreds by email and it made national news. Today, we “quietly quit” through apps without blinking, edit our grief into reels, add the music the app suggests and call it closure.

Stephen Borys
                                The Forum Art Centre — an anchor in St. Boniface’s Norwood Grove.
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Forum Art Centre and the art of neighbourhood life

Stephen Borys 5 minute read Preview
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Forum Art Centre and the art of neighbourhood life

Stephen Borys 5 minute read Thursday, Oct. 30, 2025

Most mornings when I step outside my door at Philips Square, I look across the street and see something that makes me quietly grateful to live where I do. It isn’t just the park or skyline view — it’s the steady rhythm of people coming and going through the doors of the Forum Art Centre at the corner of Eugenie Street and Taché Avenue.

Read
Thursday, Oct. 30, 2025
MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS FILES
                                Manitoba Advocate for Children and Youth, Sherry Gott: “When they talk about Bill 48 with respect to detaining intoxicated people for 72 hours or so, there is no youth-specific need addressed in that bill.”

Youth need addiction, mental health strategies: advocate

Carol Sanders 4 minute read Preview

Youth need addiction, mental health strategies: advocate

Carol Sanders 4 minute read Thursday, Oct. 30, 2025

As politicians debate proposed legislation to detain adults in the throes of a meth psychosis for up to 72 hours, Manitoba’s children’s advocate wants to know how minors will be treated.

“When they talk about Bill 48 with respect to detaining intoxicated people for 72 hours or so, there is no youth-specific need addressed in that bill,” Sherry Gott said Wednesday.

The Protective Detention and Care of Intoxicated Persons Act would replace the Intoxicated Persons Detention Act, which allows for the 24-hour involuntary detention of people intoxicated by alcohol. It proposes 20 spaces for people to detox from the effects of drugs under medical supervision, but doesn’t say anything about youth.

The Manitoba Foster Parents Association echoed the advocate’s concern.

Read
Thursday, Oct. 30, 2025
SUPPLIED
                                The 2025 display of Festival du Voyageur memorabilia was the start of L’shed à Léo.
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Counting on fans for countdown to 60th Festival du Voyageur

Eva Wasney 2 minute read Preview
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Counting on fans for countdown to 60th Festival du Voyageur

Eva Wasney 2 minute read Thursday, Oct. 30, 2025

Festival du Voyageur is seeking memories and memorabilia to help celebrate an upcoming milestone anniversary.

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Thursday, Oct. 30, 2025
JOHN WOODS / FREE PRESS FILES
                                Fewer Canadians are driving across the border into the U.S.
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The road not taken: lowest number of Manitobans in three decades cross border at Pembina in July, August

Chris Kitching 5 minute read Preview
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The road not taken: lowest number of Manitobans in three decades cross border at Pembina in July, August

Chris Kitching 5 minute read Wednesday, Oct. 29, 2025

Many Manitobans appeared to skip U.S. road trips over the summer as the number of southbound travellers hit at least a 30-year low — excluding COVID-19 pandemic years — at a major border crossing south of Winnipeg.

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Wednesday, Oct. 29, 2025
Ruth Bonneville / Free Press
                                Earl Grey School Students in Grades 4 and 5 in the literacy program look at photos inside the June 2025 edition of the Earl Grey Press Wednesday.
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Students write next chapter in Free Press media literacy project

Melissa Martin 3 minute read Preview
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Students write next chapter in Free Press media literacy project

Melissa Martin 3 minute read Wednesday, Oct. 29, 2025

Manitoba educators and students have a new toolkit to help prepare youth to navigate the tumultuous media world.

Read
Wednesday, Oct. 29, 2025
MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS FILES
                                Fort Gibraltar denies legal responsibility for a catering company’s lost income following a 2023 accident on site.

Festival du Voyageur denies responsibility for caterer’s losses after Fort Gibraltar platform collapse

Erik Pindera 4 minute read Preview

Festival du Voyageur denies responsibility for caterer’s losses after Fort Gibraltar platform collapse

Erik Pindera 4 minute read Wednesday, Oct. 29, 2025

Festival du Voyageur has denied it can be held legally responsible for the losses of a catering company, after the collapse of a platform at Fort Gibraltar temporarily shuttered the firm’s business.

Gibraltar Dining Corp. alleged in a lawsuit filed in Court of King’s Bench that the city and festival are responsible for its lost revenue because it was unable to host events in the space it leases in the fort for months after the collapse on May 31, 2023.

The catering company operates in a space within the replica fort leased from Festival du Voyageur.

Festival du Voyageur, which operates the fort on land leased from the city, argues its not responsible for Gibraltar Dining’s losses.

Read
Wednesday, Oct. 29, 2025
San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance
                                New research shows at least 11 species feast on the prey left behind by polar bears suggesting they play a key role in supporting their subarctic and Arctic ecosystems.

U of M research underscores importance of polar bears to future of Arctic

Katie May 5 minute read Preview

U of M research underscores importance of polar bears to future of Arctic

Katie May 5 minute read Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025

Polar bears are generous hunters whose leftovers feed many other animals, new research shows, casting the protected species as a major provider, not just a vulnerable predator in a province that attracts thousands of polar bear watchers every fall.

Arctic foxes, wolverines, eagles, hawks, gulls and even younger bears are among at least 11 species who feast on the prey left behind by polar bears. The latest study calculates the leftovers: 7.6 million kilograms per year in picked-over seal carcasses left on sea ice.

That’s a conservative estimate, said biologist and University of Manitoba PhD candidate Holly Gamblin, lead author of the study published Tuesday in the journal Oikos from the Nordic Ecological Society.

“A bunch of my co-authors are in that polar bear research world and have been thinking about investigating (this issue), knowing that it’s this really under-represented and under-studied component of the story, when we think about polar bears as apex predators,” said Gamblin, who has studied Arctic foxes. “They had had this idea for a while and I was just sort of in the right place at the right time.”

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Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025
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