Whose story is being told? How perspectives shape our understanding

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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‘Massive operation’: Canadian driller, shipper enlisted to help tap Greenland oil

Lauren Krugel, The Canadian Press 7 minute read Preview
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‘Massive operation’: Canadian driller, shipper enlisted to help tap Greenland oil

Lauren Krugel, The Canadian Press 7 minute read Friday, May. 1, 2026

CALGARY -

The promotional video shows a small creek trickling through a mossy patch in an otherwise brown, barren landscape, icebergs looming just offshore.

A petroleum engineer dips a hand into the stream, then takes a sniff.

"It smells like crude oil," he says, grinning at the camera.

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Friday, May. 1, 2026
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‘Neighbours hating each other’: Proposed Saskatchewan wind farm divides community

Jeremy Simes, The Canadian Press 6 minute read Preview
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‘Neighbours hating each other’: Proposed Saskatchewan wind farm divides community

Jeremy Simes, The Canadian Press 6 minute read Friday, May. 1, 2026

Don Bourassa says a proposed wind farm near his home in southeast Saskatchewan has ruined relationships in his community — to the point where he feels he has been bullied.

A resident of the Rural Municipality of Weyburn, Bourassa said one of his neighbours approached him about buying his property to keep him quiet on Enbridge's Seven Stars Energy Project.

"He wants me out of there, to shut up," Bourassa said in an interview. "That's bullying and I'm not falling for that.

“It’s neighbours hating each other."

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Friday, May. 1, 2026
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C’est l’amitié qui a gagné

Chelsea Howgate 5 minute read Preview
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C’est l’amitié qui a gagné

Chelsea Howgate 5 minute read Saturday, Mar. 28, 2026

Lors de la finale de la 30e saison de la Ligue d’improvisation secondaire tellement époustouflante (LISTE), un moment historique s’est joué: les Grenouilles grotesques et les Extra-terrestres rocambolesques, deux équipes du Collège Louis-Riel, ont remporté ensemble la victoire, partageant le trophée.

La soirée du 17 mars, une quinzaine de jeunes joueurs d’improvisation de la Division scolaire franco-manitobaine (DSFM) se sont rencontrés pour la finale de la trentième saison de la LISTE. Accueillies par une foule passionnée d’environ cinquante personnes, les deux équipes finalistes se sont rencontrées dans la Salle Pauline-Boutal du Centre culturel franco-manitobain (CCFM).

D’une part, en chemises vertes et représentés par des cartes de vote vertes, on retrouvait les Grenouilles grotesques, du Collège Louis-Riel (CLR). L’équipe s’est ralliée sous la houlette de leur capitaine Gabrielle Pagé, élève de 12e année.

De l’autre, en chemises noires et représentés par des cartes de vote jaunes, il y avait les Extra-terrestres rocambolesques, également du CLR. Cette équipe était dirigée par Nathan Perkins, lui aussi en 12e année.

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Saturday, Mar. 28, 2026

Brandon plane museum needs to land cash for major overhaul

Connor McDowell 3 minute read Preview

Brandon plane museum needs to land cash for major overhaul

Connor McDowell 3 minute read Saturday, Mar. 28, 2026

BRANDON — Brandon’s warplane museum is planning a roughly $15-million “major redevelopment” to stabilize the hangar and potentially build a new half-hangar on site.

The Commonwealth Air Training Plan Museum issued a negotiated request for proposals in February and is receiving regular on-site visits from interested parties, director Zoe McQuinn told the Brandon Sun on Friday.

Museum officials are searching for the best way to repair the hangar’s concrete floor, which is affecting the historic wooden structure on top of it.

“You can see (the effects) all throughout the hangar in different ways,” McQuinn said Friday, while stepping over cracks. “We need a way to stop the heaving in the floor and the twisting in the frame.”

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Saturday, Mar. 28, 2026
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Racing pigeons, airports and compassion

Editorial 4 minute read Preview
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Racing pigeons, airports and compassion

Editorial 4 minute read Saturday, Mar. 28, 2026

It may be there is such a thing as too much precaution.

A family in Winnipeg’s West End was left disappointed this week when they were informed they have to take down their backyard aviary, which is home to 12 racing pigeons. The pigeons are beloved companions of one of the children in the family who is autistic and non-verbal, and for whom the pigeons provide important emotional support.

It is a bit of a saga. The coop was constructed about one year ago by Ronald Lobo, who was not aware he needed a permit for the birds. After being visited by a bylaw officer following up on complaints, the family sought and obtained approval for the structure.

Neighbours appealed the decision, citing sanitary and other concerns, but the decision not to allow the family to keep the coop came partly as a result of concerns raised by the Winnipeg Airport Authority as well. The family’s home falls within the bounds of the WAA’s airport vicinity protection area, and the airport was concerned the birds’ flights to and from the property could pose a risk.

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Saturday, Mar. 28, 2026

Five Manitoba bowlers named to Team Canada, including back-to-back Marinelli champ Naylor-McCall

Ben Little 7 minute read Preview

Five Manitoba bowlers named to Team Canada, including back-to-back Marinelli champ Naylor-McCall

Ben Little 7 minute read Friday, Mar. 27, 2026

In the final frame of her semifinal match, bowler Marissa Naylor-McCall needed to strike and mark to advance and defend her title as Winnipeg’s tenpin champion.

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Friday, Mar. 27, 2026

Spying on Indigenous peoples fuels mistrust, threatens Canada’s economy and society

Niigaan Sinclair 5 minute read Preview

Spying on Indigenous peoples fuels mistrust, threatens Canada’s economy and society

Niigaan Sinclair 5 minute read Saturday, Mar. 28, 2026

The British Columbia Civil Liberties Association published thousands of pages in 2019 that it had fought for years to be released by the Canadian Security Intelligence Service.

The heavily redacted documents, the association said, show Canada’s spy agency spent years illegally conducting surveillance and documenting peaceful Indigenous protesters and community environmental organizations that opposed the Enbridge Northern Gateway pipeline project. They include the Dogwood Initiative, ForestEthics (now Stand.earth), Sierra Club BC, Leadnow.ca, and the #IdleNoMore movement.

This discovery followed a report by two researchers in 2016, who found that from 2014 to 2015, the RCMP operated project SITKA, which involved a list of more than 300 political activists in the country — most of whom were Indigenous — with 89 marked as “threats” to national security.

If this wasn’t enough, access to information requests by activists found that from 2009 to 2011, Gitxsan professor and child advocate Cindy Blackstock was monitored by officials at Indigenous and Northern Affairs Canada and the justice department – an act that Canada’s privacy commissioner later called a violation of her privacy rights.

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Saturday, Mar. 28, 2026

U of M tuition poised to climb four per cent

Kevin Rollason 4 minute read Preview

U of M tuition poised to climb four per cent

Kevin Rollason 4 minute read Friday, Mar. 27, 2026

University of Manitoba students are facing the highest tuition hike in years.

Prabhnoor Singh, president of the University of Manitoba Students’ Union, said the province’s decision to allow post-secondary institutions to increase tuition by as much as four per cent will put a huge burden on students who already struggle to make ends meet.

“Why is this being allowed?” Singh said on Friday.

“It’s crazy for an NDP government to do something like this. Students are already having to make sacrifices. They are deciding between putting food on their table or buying textbooks, paying for tuition.”

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Friday, Mar. 27, 2026

Councillors vote for city staff to handle organic waste collection

Joyanne Pursaga 4 minute read Preview

Councillors vote for city staff to handle organic waste collection

Joyanne Pursaga 4 minute read Friday, Mar. 27, 2026

City employees are expected to collect the waste when Winnipeg’s curbside compost program begins in 2030.

On Thursday, city council cast a nine to seven vote to have organic waste picked up by “in-house” staff.

The successful addition to the next round of waste collection contracts was raised by Coun. Brian Mayes, who has long pushed for some public waste collection.

Currently, the entire service is contracted out to private companies.

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Friday, Mar. 27, 2026
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Quebec man charged with fraud in local ‘grandparent scam’

Scott Billeck 4 minute read Preview
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Quebec man charged with fraud in local ‘grandparent scam’

Scott Billeck 4 minute read Friday, Mar. 27, 2026

Winnipeg police have arrested a 24-year-old Quebec man in a so-called grandparent scam carried out last month.

Police said Friday that a person in their 80s was contacted by someone posing as a justice official. The caller claimed a relative had been arrested and that money was needed to keep them out of jail.

After the victim agreed to pay the amount, an unknown man arrived at their home to collect the money.

The victim later learned from family members that the story was false, and reported the incident to police.

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Friday, Mar. 27, 2026