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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.
Foraging revival: How wild food enthusiasts are reconnecting with nature
4 minute read Preview Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2025Whether you prefer niblets or nu metal, we’ve got you covered in the kitchen
3 minute read Preview Wednesday, Sep. 24, 2025Funding Transit a necessity
4 minute read Wednesday, Sep. 24, 2025While the new Winnipeg Transit network launched in June 2025 has achieved many of its objectives, it’s important to assess what is and isn’t working in order to see Winnipeg Transit reach its full potential.
Overall, the system change gives transit a chance to increase ridership while ensuring Winnipeggers have frequent, reliable access to destinations across the city. This redesign isn’t a final product, but a new frame to give city council many options to improve service across the city, should they choose to turn up the dial.
Previously, our “spaghetti route” system had numerous congestion points — such as Graham Avenue — where buses stacked up.
Adding more buses to a system like this is meaningless as buses inevitably get stuck behind each other. The spaghetti routes also created confusion, especially to those new to the city or trying to reach an area they don’t know well. Telling someone to “hop on the 16” but not that 16, lest they end up in a completely different neighbourhood, didn’t inspire confidence.
Message to the U.S. ambassador: we’re disappointed, too
4 minute read Preview Wednesday, Sep. 24, 2025Indigenous stories given wings by peers, playwrights
8 minute read Preview Thursday, Sep. 25, 2025Charges upgraded to attempted murder in summer sword attack
2 minute read Preview Wednesday, Sep. 24, 2025Setting the record straight on Reading Recovery
4 minute read Preview Wednesday, Sep. 24, 2025Only moratorium can save moose population: MWF
4 minute read Preview Wednesday, Sep. 24, 2025Minister says law on sign language services in works
4 minute read Preview Tuesday, Sep. 23, 2025Speed-limit cut proposed for street in Wolseley
3 minute read Preview Tuesday, Sep. 23, 2025Owner tears down squatter-damaged buildings on property next to Assiniboine Park
2 minute read Preview Tuesday, Sep. 23, 2025Robot umpires are coming to MLB. Here’s how they work
5 minute read Preview Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2025Manitoba Crown attorneys take important step toward meaningful bail reform
5 minute read Tuesday, Sep. 23, 2025For years, politicians have been locked in an endless cycle of sloganeering about bail reform. You’ve probably heard it, especially from the federal Conservatives: “jail, not bail.”
The idea is that Canada’s bail laws are too weak, too “soft on crime,” too quick to release dangerous offenders back onto the street. It’s an easy line to deliver, and it taps into public anger over violent crime. But like most easy lines, it’s not grounded in reality.
We’re now beginning to learn, at least in Manitoba, why some repeat offenders charged with serious crimes may be released on bail when they shouldn’t be. And it has nothing to do with the law itself. It has everything to do with how bail court is actually run day-to-day — the nuts and bolts of how cases are handled.
On Monday, the Manitoba Association of Crown Attorneys pulled back the curtain on a system that is in disarray. They released a discussion paper and held a news conference to tell Manitobans what really goes on in bail court. Their message was clear: prosecutors often don’t have enough time, information or resources to properly argue bail cases.
Police investigating fires, vandalism at NDP cabinet ministers’ North End constituency offices
4 minute read Preview Tuesday, Sep. 23, 2025Motion to rename park withdrawn after MMF complaint
3 minute read Preview Tuesday, Sep. 23, 2025Foster parents charged, accused of assaulting children in their care
6 minute read Preview Tuesday, Sep. 23, 2025Psychiatric patient sues over alleged negligence at HSC that enabled suicide attempt, caused severe injuries
3 minute read Preview Tuesday, Sep. 23, 2025Wildfires like this aren’t normal. Stop trying to normalize them.
“Bring a pair of pants and a sweater to Clear Lake — it’s unseasonably cool because of the wildfires.” That was just one of those meteorological idiosyncrasies, attempting to reach back deep into long-forgotten geography lessons, that may seem obvious to those on the Prairies. But for the outsider, a visitor from Toronto, and indeed a relative newcomer to Canada, it was certainly a shock, and a stark reminder that I would be flying into a province still under a state of emergency, which had until recently been decimated by wildfires. It was also an introduction into what may be considered ‘normal’.
Visiting Manitoba this August was extraordinary — the people most certainly lived up to the “friendly” billing that adorns the licence plates, and the scenery of Riding Mountain National Park was worth the trip alone. However, there were a number of topics of conversation that made me question what I had come to know as accepted wisdom.
Talk about fishing restrictions, Indigenous rights, oil and gas permeated discussions, with healthy, good spirited debates. But for me, the most vexing issue was wildfires. More specifically, the extent of their aftermath, effects, and associated restrictions, have become normalized.