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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Homemade Cooking School: Squash your aversion to veggies

Eva Wasney 5 minute read Preview
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Homemade Cooking School: Squash your aversion to veggies

Eva Wasney 5 minute read Tuesday, Sep. 16, 2025

In this Homemade Cooking School class, Camille Metcalfe shares how to make the most of produce.

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Tuesday, Sep. 16, 2025

Putting people before politics

Marion Willis 4 minute read Tuesday, Sep. 16, 2025

Dividing outreach providers won’t solve homelessness. Collaboration and a managed encampment-to-housing site will. As winter closes in, Winnipeg faces a mounting crisis. More people than ever are living unsheltered, exposed to harsh weather, unsafe conditions and the devastating risks of addiction.

Riverbank encampments and makeshift shelters in public spaces have become dangerous not only for residents but also for outreach workers and emergency responders who must navigate snow- and ice-covered terrain just to provide help. Encampment residents, meanwhile, live without even the basic dignity of an outhouse.

The overdose death rate in Winnipeg is among the highest in the country, and too many of those deaths happen in encampments. This cannot continue.

For too long, the conversation has been stalled by a false narrative: that homelessness is solely the result of a lack of subsidized housing. While the housing shortage is real, it is only part of the story. The deeper truth is that Winnipeg is in the grip of a drug-use epidemic that has become the single largest pipeline into homelessness.

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The big meaning behind micro-relationships, and why we should talk to strangers more

Brieanna Charlebois and Nono Shen, The Canadian Press 8 minute read Preview
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The big meaning behind micro-relationships, and why we should talk to strangers more

Brieanna Charlebois and Nono Shen, The Canadian Press 8 minute read Friday, Oct. 10, 2025

VANCOUVER - Psychology Prof. Gillian Sandstrom was a lonely graduate student in Toronto when she began what she calls "a tiny, tiny micro-relationship."

She and a woman who ran a hotdog stand on her way to university around 2007 would wave hello and smile at each other. Their interactions were so small that Sandstrom uses air quotes to even describe them as a "relationship."

And yet "it really meant something much bigger than it seemed like it should, and it made me feel like I belonged there," said Sandstrom.

"I felt very out of place and she, more than anyone else, is who made me feel OK, which was a bit puzzling."

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Friday, Oct. 10, 2025

The American Right has its martyr — what’s next?

David McLaughlin 6 minute read Preview

The American Right has its martyr — what’s next?

David McLaughlin 6 minute read Tuesday, Sep. 16, 2025

Every revolution needs heroes and martyrs. Heroes to follow and martyrs to look up to. MAGA is no exception.

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Tuesday, Sep. 16, 2025
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Winnipeg Jewish Theatre’s therapy-set two-hander plays with reality

Ben Waldman 5 minute read Preview
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Winnipeg Jewish Theatre’s therapy-set two-hander plays with reality

Ben Waldman 5 minute read Monday, Sep. 15, 2025

The public and private perils of online engagement crash through the screen and into a therapist’s office in Job, a nervy drama that explores the power of posts and the ethical responsibilities inherent to our respective postings.

Written by New York’s Max Wolf Friedlich and directed by Calgary’s Jack Grinhaus, the opening production of the Winnipeg Jewish Theatre’s season heads to the races with the brandishing of a starter’s gun in the warped offices of Bay Area psychotherapist Lloyd (Dov Mickelson).

Lloyd’s description of his typical patient — young people who are “hopeless and beyond help” — isn’t exactly inspirational.

Blundstone-booted Jane (Jada Rifkin) seems to have made the cut, having been placed on paid administrative leave after a viral meltdown by her employer, an unnamed tech giant on whose campus she’s enrolled as an adjudicator.

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Monday, Sep. 15, 2025
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New documentary revisits Lilith Fair, gives it the overdue kudos it deserves

Jen Zoratti 8 minute read Preview
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New documentary revisits Lilith Fair, gives it the overdue kudos it deserves

Jen Zoratti 8 minute read Monday, Sep. 15, 2025

In the opening moments of Lilith Fair: Building a Mystery, a new documentary about the pioneering all-women touring festival co-founded by Canadian icon Sarah McLachlan in the late 1990s, there’s a series of TikTok videos fronted by gen Z women expressing wonder and astonishment that something like that ever even existed.

“There was an all-female music festival from 1997 to 1999 — and I am shook to my core,” one woman says.

Ally Pankiw, the film’s director, is not surprised younger generations have never heard of Lilith Fair.

“It was not celebrated for how massive it was,” says the Canadian film/TV writer and director (Feel Good, Shrill). “It was so commercially successful. It changed so many artists’ trajectories and careers. It raised so much money for charity.

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Monday, Sep. 15, 2025

Kinew’s tolerance for Fontaine’s antics could set dangerous precedent for others in cabinet

Dan Lett 5 minute read Preview

Kinew’s tolerance for Fontaine’s antics could set dangerous precedent for others in cabinet

Dan Lett 5 minute read Monday, Sep. 15, 2025

What exactly does someone have to do to get fired from Premier Wab Kinew’s cabinet?

That question was left hanging in the air following the latest missteps by Families Minister Nahanni Fontaine, who drew a rebuke from Kinew and public criticism for sharing a social media post criticizing far-right activist Charlie Kirk following his assassination in Utah last week.

Kinew said he spoke directly with Fontaine and asked her to apologize. For now, she will remain in cabinet.

“It would be too easy to show her the door,” Kinew said. “It is a much harder task to say we’re going to work through this together and I am going to try to help you understand why we need to bring people together and not divide people at this time.”

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Monday, Sep. 15, 2025

New St. B ER great, but where are all the doctors to staff it?

Tom Brodbeck 5 minute read Preview

New St. B ER great, but where are all the doctors to staff it?

Tom Brodbeck 5 minute read Monday, Sep. 15, 2025

When governments announce a major hospital expansion, it’s usually billed as a silver bullet solution to long wait times and overcrowding.

The latest example is St. Boniface Hospital’s newly expanded and renovated emergency department, expected to open officially on Oct. 2. (It was supposed to open next week, but there’s been a delay).

On paper, it looks impressive: more treatment spaces, updated facilities, a modern design intended to improve patient experience.

Here’s the uncomfortable truth: the facelift won’t do much — if anything — to cut ER wait times. If history is any guide, the experience for patients at St. Boniface will look remarkably similar to what it’s been for years — hours-long waits, gurneys lined up in hallways and admitted patients languishing in the emergency department because there’s no staffed hospital bed to move them into.

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Monday, Sep. 15, 2025
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Bearing witness to what should never have been

Carina Blumgrund 5 minute read Monday, Sep. 15, 2025

In recent days I have been listening again to the voices of adults who shared what they went through in the foster care system, residential schools and the forced adoption practices of the ’60s Scoop.

Qatar and Poland — one is the bigger story

Gwynne Dyer 5 minute read Preview

Qatar and Poland — one is the bigger story

Gwynne Dyer 5 minute read Monday, Sep. 15, 2025

I’ll get to the Russian drones shot down over Poland, but I’ll start with the Israeli air strikes on Qatar, because that’s a much bigger deal.

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Monday, Sep. 15, 2025