WEATHER ALERT

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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Sauna, cold plunge business Saunic expands to second Winnipeg location in early 2026

Aaron Epp 5 minute read Preview
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Sauna, cold plunge business Saunic expands to second Winnipeg location in early 2026

Aaron Epp 5 minute read Tuesday, Dec. 30, 2025

Sauna, cold plunge and community. That’s what an entrepreneurial Winnipeg couple says their business offers. Saunic co-founders Kyle Silva and Dani Boily say they were inspired by their travels through Finland, Sweden and Denmark.

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Tuesday, Dec. 30, 2025

Derailment shows rail study on track: Axworthy

Chris Kitching 5 minute read Preview

Derailment shows rail study on track: Axworthy

Chris Kitching 5 minute read Monday, Dec. 29, 2025

A train derailment involving tank cars near homes and businesses shows why a review of Winnipeg’s urban rail system is needed, former federal transport minister Lloyd Axworthy told the Free Press Monday.

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Monday, Dec. 29, 2025
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It’s not personal, AI… and that’s the problem

Jen Zoratti 4 minute read Preview
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It’s not personal, AI… and that’s the problem

Jen Zoratti 4 minute read Saturday, Dec. 13, 2025

I have a photo album on my phone called Smile File.

In it are screen shots of all kinds of correspondence from my friends and family, a hall of fame of sorts. Like the text my dad sent me after he dropped me off at the airport to see Chappell Roan in Nashville: “3 songs in H-O-T-T-O-G-O.” Or the funny messages from friends that make me feel like they really know me. Or thoughtful emails from readers letting me know my writing has affected them in some way.

Among my most prized keepers: two notes from two different dear friends, asking me if I would be Auntie Jen to their kids.

I look at my Smile File on the days when my brain is tricking me into thinking nobody likes me or when I worry that I’ve run out of words and maybe I’m actually secretly illiterate.

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Saturday, Dec. 13, 2025

Corb Lund must re-apply to launch anti-coal petition drive in Alberta

The Canadian Press 3 minute read Preview

Corb Lund must re-apply to launch anti-coal petition drive in Alberta

The Canadian Press 3 minute read Saturday, Dec. 13, 2025

LETHBRIDGE - Amendments to Alberta's legislation on citizen-initiated referendums mean Corb Lund's recently approved application for a petition drive to stop new coal mining on the eastern slopes of the Rocky Mountains is cancelled and the singer has to re-apply.

Elections Alberta had posted the official OK on its website Monday for Lund to soon start collecting signatures for his petition.

But the agency says in a Friday news release that amendments to electoral legislation that took effect this week mean petition applications made before Thursday, for which an initiative petition has not been issued, are "deemed to have never been made."

The release says it applies to Lund's No New Coal Mining in Alberta’s Rockies application because even though it was approved, a petition was not issued.

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Saturday, Dec. 13, 2025
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Tools we use to determine what to trust

Calvin Brown 5 minute read Thursday, Dec. 11, 2025

I rarely use Facebook, but I recently took a brief look. I was reminded how annoying it is when I was presented with numerous posts, photos and videos from people I don’t know. One caught my attention. It was a video of three adult male moose, all with huge antlers, attacking a colourfully decorated bus. Could the video possibly be real?

Curiously, it reminded me of a sentence in the memorandum of understanding between Prime Minister Mark Carney and Alberta Premier Danielle Smith. It says, “Canada and Alberta remain committed to achieving net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050.” Is that a true statement?

How can I know if either is true? For the moose video, I could try examining it carefully for oddities. For the politicians’ assertion, I could delve into their past statements about climate change. But that’s rather impractical. Given the deluge of information I encounter every day, I couldn’t possibly research every statement to check its veracity. What should I do?

I could use a common tactic. I could rely on shortcuts.

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The inconvenient truth: Thomas King’s admission he isn’t Cherokee hits hard

Niigaan Sinclair 5 minute read Preview
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The inconvenient truth: Thomas King’s admission he isn’t Cherokee hits hard

Niigaan Sinclair 5 minute read Monday, Nov. 24, 2025

Intentionally or not, the real-life consequences of King’s story is that his inability to find out the truth of his own identity, which apparently wasn’t hard for others, meant Canadians were duped, Indigenous peoples were marginalized, and all of us are left to ask a lot of questions.

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Monday, Nov. 24, 2025
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New podcast seeks to end polarization between Jews, Muslims

Sharon Chisvin 4 minute read Preview
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New podcast seeks to end polarization between Jews, Muslims

Sharon Chisvin 4 minute read Saturday, Nov. 15, 2025

In the last two years, anecdotal evidence, surveys, police reports, rallies and counter- rallies have all indicated that the acrimony and distrust between the Canadian Jewish and Canadian Muslim communities has reached an all-time high.

In spite of this, a number of organizations and individuals across the country have been attempting to bridge the deep political divide between the two communities by encouraging respectful dialogue, compassionate listening and a search for common ground.

Yafa Sakkejha and Avi Finegold are two of those individuals.

Last month, Sakkejha, a Muslim Torontonian entrepreneur of Palestinian heritage, and Finegold, a Jewish Montrealer and rabbi, launched a new limited series podcast. Appropriately entitled In Good Faith, the podcast features interviews and discussions with representatives of the Muslim and Jewish communities about Israel, Palestine, the war in Gaza, and the challenges and concerns of their respective minority communities here in Canada.

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Saturday, Nov. 15, 2025
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Artificial art a threat to human creativity

Jen Zoratti 5 minute read Preview
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Artificial art a threat to human creativity

Jen Zoratti 5 minute read Sunday, Nov. 9, 2025

Thinking of Drew Struzan’s art — magic, really — in hand-drawn film posters, it’s hard not to think that this particular form will be another casualty of artificial intelligence, another art form reduced to cheap slop.

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Sunday, Nov. 9, 2025
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Winnipeg students develop critical aptitude essential for navigating media landscape

Melissa Martin 14 minute read Preview
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Winnipeg students develop critical aptitude essential for navigating media landscape

Melissa Martin 14 minute read Friday, Oct. 31, 2025

One day in the fall of 2024, two of Lily Godinez Goodman’s Grade 5 students came to her with a question: Why didn’t their Earl Grey School have a newspaper, they wondered — and if they started one, would she serve as editor-in-chief?

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Friday, Oct. 31, 2025

Setting the record straight on Reading Recovery

Billy Molasso 4 minute read Preview

Setting the record straight on Reading Recovery

Billy Molasso 4 minute read Wednesday, Sep. 24, 2025

When I read the op-ed Empire of illiteracy in a recent Winnipeg Free Press (Think Tank, Sept. 9), I wasn’t just frustrated, I was deeply disappointed.

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Wednesday, Sep. 24, 2025