WEATHER ALERT

Role of news media

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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Someone call the PM: next governor general doesn’t speak a single Indigenous language

Niigaan Sinclair 5 minute read Preview
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Someone call the PM: next governor general doesn’t speak a single Indigenous language

Niigaan Sinclair 5 minute read Friday, May. 8, 2026

This week, Prime Minister Mark Carney selected former Supreme Court justice Louise Arbour as the country’s 31st governor general.

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Friday, May. 8, 2026
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Nature is a big part of the Canadian economy — but how big? We crunched the numbers.

Julia-Simone Rutgers 8 minute read Preview
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Nature is a big part of the Canadian economy — but how big? We crunched the numbers.

Julia-Simone Rutgers 8 minute read Friday, May. 8, 2026

Canada’s vast landscape, which boasts 20 per cent of the world’s freshwater, a quarter of global wetlands and 28 per cent of its boreal forests, is critical to its economy. Natural resource industries — forests, farms, fisheries, mining and oil and gas — together make up approximately seven per cent of Canada’s gross domestic product.

Tension exists between expanding these industrialized sectors and protecting the ecosystems on which they depend.

In Manitoba, some worry protecting the Seal River Watershed, which spans more than 50,000 square kilometres in the province’s north, will hinder opportunities in mineral resources and hydro; to the east, critical mineral mining ambitions in Ontario’s Ring of Fire clash with the protection of the Hudson and James Bay Lowlands, the second-largest carbon sink on earth; and in B.C., Coastal First Nations have protested that lifting the large tanker ban through their waters will endanger the protected Great Bear Rainforest.

These tensions make it easy to frame nature as the antithesis of economic activity, if it’s always put in opposition to projects that are described as growing Canada’s wealth, sovereignty and security.

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Friday, May. 8, 2026
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Parade of ghostly icebergs brings joy and wonder to Newfoundland and Labrador

Sarah Smellie, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Preview
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Parade of ghostly icebergs brings joy and wonder to Newfoundland and Labrador

Sarah Smellie, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Saturday, May. 30, 2026

ST. JOHN'S -

At the top of Signal Hill in St. John's, N.L., on Tuesday afternoon, a steady stream of people walked around a rocky cliff and gasped.

Some cheered, some took out their phones to capture the moment — a rush of awe as an iceberg floated in the ocean below, cleaved off from a Greenland glacier and delivered by the Labrador current on a cloudless spring day.

It's a banner year for icebergs in Newfoundland and Labrador, where tourists and residents alike are gathering on shores across the province to welcome the ancient visitors.

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Saturday, May. 30, 2026
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Bear hunting and conservation questions

Jessica Scott-Reid 4 minute read Friday, May. 8, 2026

You don’t have to be an animal rights activist to oppose black bear hunting in Manitoba. You also don’t have to trade in your ethics in order to understand biology. Most animal and nature-loving Canadians can do it all: understand science and care about animal suffering. Well, unless your paycheque requires otherwise.

Such is the case for the author of a recent article for the Free Press (Why claims of sentience can’t guide black bear policy, Think Tank, April 16), Mark Hall, who conservation-washes the killing of black bears in our province. The B.C.-based hunting advocate also conveniently failed to mention his vested interest in the issue, including that the organization he works for is funded by companies in the trophy hunting business. He also failed to follow the actual science.

The fact is, framing Manitoba’s spring black bear hunt as a conservation measure grounded in biology just doesn’t hold up. Especially since it is also marketed by local companies as trophy hunting. “During your bear hunt you will be placed over an active bear bait site (and) with a little patience and some determination you will be able to harvest a trophy of a lifetime,” states one company’s website.

Lesley Fox, executive director of Canadian wildlife protection charity The Fur Bearers, says “heralding the spring bear hunt as conservation is a public relations tactic that supports special interests, not wildlife.”

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Agape Table expansion underscores surging food demand

Nicole Buffie 4 minute read Preview
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Agape Table expansion underscores surging food demand

Nicole Buffie 4 minute read Thursday, May. 7, 2026

Food banks and non-profit organizations across Manitoba are expanding their spaces to meet record demand for food.

Agape Table showed off its new 10,500-square foot home at 350 Furby St. Thursday, where it has planted permanent roots for the first time in its 45-year history.

It is located next to the Wave Church, where it had been operating out of the basement for eight years.

The executive director of the food-distribution charity said a bigger space has been needed for years.

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Thursday, May. 7, 2026
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Manitoba declares public health emergency over HIV rising rates

Gabrielle Piché 5 minute read Preview
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Manitoba declares public health emergency over HIV rising rates

Gabrielle Piché 5 minute read Thursday, May. 7, 2026

The Manitoba government declared HIV spread a public health emergency Thursday as case counts continue to escalate.

Dr. Brent Roussin, chief provincial public health officer, made the declaration at a news conference, noting cases have steadily increased over the past six years.

“In 2024, we reported a rate of 19.5 cases per 100,000 (people), which is roughly 3½ times that of Canada’s rate of 5.5,” Roussin said.

Manitoba had 328 new cases of human immunodeficiency virus in 2025, a sharp increase from the 90 tracked in 2019.

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Thursday, May. 7, 2026

Relocation of program for young moms earns poor marks

Maggie Macintosh 5 minute read Thursday, May. 7, 2026

The Winnipeg School Division is facing backlash over plans to relocate its holistic education program for pregnant teenagers and young moms.

Starting in September, the Adolescent Parent Centre — an off-campus program that’s been housed at 136 Cecil St. since 1989 — will operate inside a North End high school.

“One of the big reasons I wanted to go is because I knew I’d be in a school surrounded by a bunch of people who were in the exact same situation as me,” said Billie Pryor, a 2023 graduate who enrolled when she, then 14, was pregnant with the first of her three children.

Pryor, 20, said the student population, free on-site daycare rooms and distance from traditional high schools, where gossip is commonplace and physical fights break out, were part of its appeal.

U of M fundraising $30K for dedicated breastfeeding space

Nicole Buffie 4 minute read Preview

U of M fundraising $30K for dedicated breastfeeding space

Nicole Buffie 4 minute read Thursday, May. 7, 2026

The University of Manitoba is fundraising $30,000 for a lactation pod in an effort to address gaps in academia which have led to a “leaky pipeline.”

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Thursday, May. 7, 2026
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‘It’s more than just a baseball team here’

Mike McIntyre 4 minute read Preview
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‘It’s more than just a baseball team here’

Mike McIntyre 4 minute read Wednesday, May. 6, 2026

Max Murphy is officially one of us now.

Want proof? The veteran Winnipeg Goldeyes outfielder, who was born and raised in Minnesota, has now experienced one of the great local traditions — the wedding social.

“It went really well. A really good time,” Murphy told the Free Press on Wednesday with a laugh. “I had never really heard about them. Then I got here and people were like, ‘This is a thing here.’ Went to a few and they were pretty fun. Figured, ‘Why not have my own?’”

The party was held two weekends ago for Murphy and his Winnipeg fiancée, Maddie, and included plenty of Goldeyes teammates and staff, along with family, friends and even some fans. It was a vivid reminder to Murphy of why he loves playing here so much.

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Wednesday, May. 6, 2026
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Manitoba Construction Career Expo draws students from across province with goal of ‘AI-resilient’ career options

Malak Abas 4 minute read Preview
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Manitoba Construction Career Expo draws students from across province with goal of ‘AI-resilient’ career options

Malak Abas 4 minute read Wednesday, May. 6, 2026

More than 1,200 students from across Manitoba hammered nails, operated miniature machinery and even tried their hand at masonry at a hands-on career fair organizers called a pitch for the “AI-resilient” jobs of the future.

The Manitoba Construction Career Expo has been organized by the Winnipeg Construction Association for more than 15 years. As Canada’s career landscape has changed for youth, there’s been an increasing interest in logging out of the virtual world and finding a more tactile profession, said Darryl Harrison, the association’s director of stakeholder engagement and advocacy.

“There’s a lot of opportunities in construction, whether you pursue an apprenticeship or take another path toward the industry, but it generally leads to well-paying jobs and it leads to a career that we’re now calling AI-resilient,” Harrison said at the event at Red River Exhibition Place on Wednesday.

“There’s a lot of careers where it’s questionable what the impact of AI will be, and we will always need hands-on work sites to build the buildings that we need.”

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Wednesday, May. 6, 2026