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.
Making the most of Winnipeg’s biggest opportunity
6 minute read Preview Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026Canada should work to recruit bilingual health workers, Senate report says
5 minute read Preview Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026‘Nuisance’ protest bylaw stalled after hundreds object
5 minute read Preview Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2026Maintenance isn’t enough — we have to build
5 minute read Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2026For the third year in a row, the atmosphere in Manitoba’s staffrooms during the provincial school funding announcement has been one of cautious relief rather than the dread we came to expect for a decade.
As a high school teacher-librarian and a parent with a child in the public system, I want to begin by acknowledging the progress made.
After the lean, adversarial years of the Brian Pallister and Heather Stefanson governments, years defined by the looming threat of Bill 64 and funding increases that didn’t even cover the cost of a box of pencils, the current NDP government has chosen a different path.
This $79.8-million injection for the 2026-27 school year, building on the $104-million and $67-million investments of the previous two years, represents nearly a quarter-billion-dollar shift in how we value our children’s future. For the nutrition programs, the salary harmonization, and the simple act of treating educators as partners rather than enemies: thank you.
City’s proposed ‘nuisance’ protest ban doesn’t pass Charter test
4 minute read Saturday, Feb. 14, 2026If the City of Winnipeg wants to protect public safety when it comes to protests, it should enforce laws that are already on the books.
What it should not do is pass a sweeping, constitutionally dubious bylaw that tramples on fundamental freedoms in the name of sparing people from being offended.
Yet that’s precisely what council is poised to do when it votes Feb. 26 on a proposed ban on so-called “nuisance” protests within 100 metres of a long list of “vulnerable social” locations — schools, hospitals, places of worship, post-secondary institutions, libraries, community centres, cemeteries and more.
On paper, the objective sounds noble: protect access, reduce intimidation, promote safety. In practice, the bylaw is far too broad, far too vague and far too discretionary to meet the Charter standard of a “reasonable limit.”
Protest bylaw goes too far
4 minute read Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2026From Minneapolis, to Tehran, to Bangladesh, people are taking to the streets to protest against perceived injustices.
Peaceful protest is a critically important line of defence against the unjust actions of governments.
Incredibly, here in Winnipeg, some members of our city council want to put strict limits on that essential right.
The proposed safe access to vulnerable infrastructure bylaw, if passed, would be the most draconian law of its kind in Canada.