Bias in media

Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.

Manitoba Construction Career Expo draws students from across province with goal of ‘AI-resilient’ career options

Malak Abas 4 minute read Preview

Manitoba Construction Career Expo draws students from across province with goal of ‘AI-resilient’ career options

Malak Abas 4 minute read Wednesday, May. 6, 2026

More than 1,200 students from across Manitoba hammered nails, operated miniature machinery and even tried their hand at masonry at a hands-on career fair organizers called a pitch for the “AI-resilient” jobs of the future.

The Manitoba Construction Career Expo has been organized by the Winnipeg Construction Association for more than 15 years. As Canada’s career landscape has changed for youth, there’s been an increasing interest in logging out of the virtual world and finding a more tactile profession, said Darryl Harrison, the association’s director of stakeholder engagement and advocacy.

“There’s a lot of opportunities in construction, whether you pursue an apprenticeship or take another path toward the industry, but it generally leads to well-paying jobs and it leads to a career that we’re now calling AI-resilient,” Harrison said at the event at Red River Exhibition Place on Wednesday.

“There’s a lot of careers where it’s questionable what the impact of AI will be, and we will always need hands-on work sites to build the buildings that we need.”

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Wednesday, May. 6, 2026

Foreign actors producing more false content about Alberta separatism: report

Fakiha Baig, The Canadian Press 3 minute read Preview

Foreign actors producing more false content about Alberta separatism: report

Fakiha Baig, The Canadian Press 3 minute read Thursday, May. 7, 2026

EDMONTON - Foreign actors are increasingly generating articles, podcasts and social media posts riddled with disinformation about Alberta's separatist movement, says a new report.

The report from a team of researchers, published Wednesday by the Canadian monitoring platform DisinfoWatch, says the campaigns are coming out of Russia and the United States.

It says social media influencers with millions of followers are generating the disinformation in the United States.

"This matters because influencers increasingly command more attention than traditional institutions and can move fringe narratives into mainstream political debate," the report says.

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Thursday, May. 7, 2026

City missing opportunity to help the homeless, save significant amount of money

Dan Lett 5 minute read Preview

City missing opportunity to help the homeless, save significant amount of money

Dan Lett 5 minute read Wednesday, May. 6, 2026

By all accounts, Winnipeg could face a tsunami of homelessness this summer. And, by many of those same accounts, Winnipeg is woefully unprepared.

Last month, End Homelessness Winnipeg released a new audit of the number of people living on Winnipeg streets and found that it had risen exponentially over the last year. The best, current estimate is that more than 8,200 Winnipeggers were living without adequate housing, and over half that number meeting the definition of chronic homelessness.

Agencies that support the homeless population have warned the city and province that warmer weather usually expands the number of people living rough on the streets. They have pleaded for more immediate help to deal with this impending crisis.

Government is responding, albeit rather unevenly.

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Wednesday, May. 6, 2026

Winnipeg: the crumbling city

Editorial 4 minute read Preview

Winnipeg: the crumbling city

Editorial 4 minute read Wednesday, May. 6, 2026

At least Christine Keilback had a sense of humour about it. The 58-year-old fell into a buried, uncapped catchbasin on Lipton Street and ended up having to be pulled from the shoulder-deep hole by firefighters.

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Wednesday, May. 6, 2026

Conservation shouldn’t come at the cost of access

Carly Deacon 5 minute read Preview

Conservation shouldn’t come at the cost of access

Carly Deacon 5 minute read Tuesday, May. 5, 2026

The Seal River Watershed in northern Manitoba is one of the last great intact ecosystems in North America.

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Tuesday, May. 5, 2026

Delaying access to social media

Lianna McDonald 4 minute read Tuesday, May. 5, 2026

An 11-year-old boy is threatened with the distribution of nude images unless he pays an international extortionist who found him on TikTok. A 12-year-old girl is relentlessly pressured by someone she believed was a friend to expose herself on camera. A 14-year-old boy is unravelling — failing classes, withdrawing from life — because his friend is being exploited on Roblox and he feels powerless to help.

These are not outliers. In 2025 alone, Cybertip.ca processed more than 28,000 reports. These are just three.

Canada’s children are not stumbling into harm by accident. They are being systematically exposed to it — on platforms engineered to capture their attention, monetize their vulnerability and retain their engagement at all costs. The scale and severity of harm now demand more than incremental reform. They demand intervention.

For over 25 years, the Canadian Centre for Child Protection has documented a steep and accelerating rise in online harms against children. This trajectory is not coincidental. It reflects a digital environment that is fundamentally misaligned with the developmental realities of childhood.

An important step for provincial child care

Molly McCracken 5 minute read Preview

An important step for provincial child care

Molly McCracken 5 minute read Monday, May. 4, 2026

In the recent provincial budget, Manitoba took an important step toward reducing child poverty and strengthening our early learning and child-care system.

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Monday, May. 4, 2026

Structured approach needed with tech

Jo Ann Unger and Michelle Warren 4 minute read Monday, May. 4, 2026

Families need our help and support. Technology has done many things to better our world; from life-saving medical advances to connecting people across the world to efficiencies in our everyday lives.

Hopes rise for reuse of heritage buildings

Aaron Epp 5 minute read Preview

Hopes rise for reuse of heritage buildings

Aaron Epp 5 minute read Sunday, May. 3, 2026

The chairperson of a committee that advises city council on climate change issues is excited about a new report that outlines potential options for Winnipeg to reuse heritage buildings.

The city’s standing policy committee on property and development is scheduled to discuss the Promoting Adaptive Reuse and Preservation of Heritage report on Wednesday.

The 25-page document explores bylaws and rules Winnipeg could implement to promote the “adaptive reuse” of buildings — a recycling strategy that focuses on maintaining the structure or basic fabric of a building and repurposing its function.

Adaptive reuse would help the city reduce waste, protect historic places and add more housing options, according to the report.

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Sunday, May. 3, 2026

RRC Polytech program cuts take bite out of hospitality, tourism sector

Maggie Macintosh 4 minute read Preview

RRC Polytech program cuts take bite out of hospitality, tourism sector

Maggie Macintosh 4 minute read Saturday, May. 2, 2026

Manitoba’s tourism industry is bracing for the disappearance of hospitality training programs — once-popular courses among international students.

Citing budgetary challenges related to a shift in federal immigration policy, Red River College Polytechnic is scrapping 11 programs and scaling back three others in 2026-27. Its hospitality business management diploma is one of seven permanent casualties.

The announcement, while unsurprising, is but the latest blow to a sector trying to “build back the workforce” in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, said Michael Juce, president of the Manitoba Hotel Association.

“Are people going to go outside of Manitoba for training? And if they leave, are they going to come back?” Juce said, adding that rural hotels in particular are already grappling with staffing shortages.

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Saturday, May. 2, 2026