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.
Construction groups miffed by new fee on public-sector projects
5 minute read Preview Thursday, Mar. 19, 2026Manitoba Opera season features reimagined Scott Joplin work and Puccini classic
5 minute read Preview Thursday, Mar. 19, 2026Residents pigeonhole hobbyist’s backyard aviary as health risk, nuisance
4 minute read Preview Thursday, Mar. 19, 2026Meteorite hunters scour Ohio for fragments of 7-ton space rock that crashed into Earth
4 minute read Preview Friday, Apr. 24, 2026Local TV stations ask regulator to force Meta to pay for posting some news content
4 minute read Preview Friday, Apr. 24, 2026‘Microshifting’ puts a new spin on 9-to-5 schedules
7 minute read Preview Tuesday, Mar. 24, 2026Poilievre pitches Canadian kindness on ‘The Joe Rogan Experience’ podcast
6 minute read Preview Friday, Mar. 20, 2026Hydro built our past. What’s the future of energy?
4 minute read Thursday, Mar. 19, 2026Manitoba has long told itself a comforting story about abundant clean electricity. For generations, hydroelectric power flowing through northern rivers has powered homes, farms and industry while giving the province one of the cleanest electricity systems in North America.
It remains a remarkable achievement. But climate change, rising electricity demand and growing affordability pressures are quietly rewriting that story.
Across Canada, provinces are beginning to rethink their electricity futures. Ontario is moving ahead with construction of what is expected to be the first grid-scale small modular reactor in the G7. Saskatchewan is preparing for potential deployment in the early 2030s. Meanwhile, proposals like StarCore’s concept near Pinawa are beginning to push the nuclear conversation into our public debate.
Manitoba itself has not made nuclear part of its near-term energy plan. Manitoba Hydro’s 2025 Integrated Resource Plan suggests the province could require new electricity supply by around 2030 as demand grows and existing capacity tightens.