Business
West End BIZ highlights innovative spirit in work to improve neighbourhood
5 minute read Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2025Joe Kornelsen was alarmed, until he realized he was witnessing employee innovation.
The West End Business Improvement Zone executive director expected to be the first one at the office when he arrived at 5:15 a.m. one day in July, only to find the non-profit’s truck running outside. Concerned, he entered the building cautiously and found Jose, the staff member in charge of the organization’s street cleaning team, already at work.
Unbeknownst to Kornelsen, Jose had implemented a 5 a.m. planter-watering shift to avoid daytime traffic — a move that on some days allowed Jose and his team to water 300 planters and 55 hanging baskets in half the time.
Kornelsen relayed the story to a crowd at the BIZ’s annual general meeting on Wednesday to illustrate all staff members at the organization are continually thinking of new ways to improve what they do.
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China’s ambassador to Canada makes co-operation pitch to Manitoba premier, local business
5 minute read Preview Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2025Sobr Market in Walmart space
1 minute read Saturday, Nov. 8, 2025Sobr Market, a Winnipeg-based company selling non-alcoholic drinks, will unroll bottle shops in Walmarts across Canada.
The first five locations will open in spring 2026 in Winnipeg, Calgary, Saskatoon, Surrey, B.C., and London, Ont.
Sobr Market launched in 2022, and operates a storefront at 484 Academy Rd. It has a warehouse in Winnipeg and brick-and-mortar shops in Toronto.
— Free Press staff
Province pitches tax relief for manufacturers
2 minute read Wednesday, Nov. 5, 2025Proposed legislation aims to make Manitoba’s manufacturing sphere more competitive.
The NDP government on Tuesday announced plans to convert part of the Manufacturing Investment Tax Credit into a retail sales tax exemption on new machinery and equipment.
The exemption would apply at the time of purchase (for qualifying items). The tax credit’s one per cent non-refundable portion would be retained.
“This gives businesses the opportunity to reinvest those savings to create more good jobs and strengthen Manitoba’s economy,” Business Minister Jamie Moses said in a news release.
Downtowns association makes pitch on Parliament Hill
3 minute read Preview Monday, Oct. 27, 2025Agricultural consequences of 2025 federal budget won’t be visible for years
4 minute read Saturday, Nov. 8, 2025Farm organizations took longer than usual to react and were remarkably nuanced in their response to this week’s long-awaited federal budget.
When the news releases did flow into inboxes, the responses were measured. None gave this budget a failing grade. There were no ringing endorsements either.
The Canadian government has come up with measures that will put real dollars into farmers’ pockets at a critical time. The impact of some of the “takes,” however, is less tangible. The consequences won’t become visible for years.
The government officially backed down on measures such as the enhanced capital gains provisions that would have increased the collection on land transfers by millions due to the relentless appreciation in farmland values.
Making peace at work: finding calm after conflict
8 minute read Preview Saturday, Nov. 8, 2025- Woman, 72, uses shovel to chase naked intruder from her Vancouver home, police say
- Hockey takes centre stage at Rainbow Stage production
- Johnston Group cares about its people and society
- Journeyman puckster brings enthusiasm and experience to Winnipeg Blues bench
- Bombers fans need not panic
- Jets sign defenceman Isaak Phillips
- Death lives large in these small-screen parties
- Support for co-worker’s sexuality calls for subtlety
- Sobr Market in Walmart space
- Polling station staff contradict Elections Manitoba claim they were adequately trained
- Winnipeg entrepreneurs make Forbes list
- An intimate understanding of Oxford’s Word of the Year
- We’re done accepting ‘good enough’
- Federal minister leaves, on principle
- Devoted matriarch made most of cards she was dealt
- Leader dissolving before our eyes
- Are customers aware of value you provide? They need to be
- Vatican correspondent writes book of lament
- Spotify’s top 2025 audiobooks led by romance, fantasy
- Modern day resumé writing
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‘Hub for opportunity’: First Nation breaks ground on 7-storey, 147-unit Elswood
5 minute read Preview Friday, Oct. 24, 2025Duha Colour Services to move U.S. firm’s operations to Winnipeg, add 94 new jobs
3 minute read Preview Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2025Scam centers in southeast Asia are on the rise despite crackdowns to root out the illegal industry
6 minute read Friday, Nov. 7, 2025BANGKOK (AP) — It often starts with a text message asking if you are available on weekends, looking for a part-time job or you get a simple “hello” from an unknown number. Halfway across the world, a laborer is usually pulling in 12-16 hour days, sending non-stop messages, hoping someone will take the bait.
The ultimate goal is always to take your money — victims have lost tens of billions to scams and hundreds of thousands of people are in forced labor to keep the schemes going. These workers are often housed in massive complexes scattered across southeast Asia, where the industry has flourished.
Here is why rooting out the scamming industry is such a complex issue:
The crackdown in Myanmar
CBO confirms hack, says it has implemented new security measures
2 minute read Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025WASHINGTON (AP) — The Congressional Budget Office on Thursday confirmed it had been hacked, potentially disclosing important government data to malicious actors.
The small government office, with some 275 employees, provides objective, impartial analysis to support lawmakers during the budget process. It is required to produce a cost estimate for nearly every bill approved by a House or Senate committee and will weigh in earlier when asked to do so by lawmakers.
Caitlin Emma, a spokeswoman for the CBO said in a written statement that the agency “has identified the security incident, has taken immediate action to contain it, and has implemented additional monitoring and new security controls to further protect the agency’s systems going forward.”
The Washington Post first wrote the story on the CBO hack, stating that the intrusion was done by a suspected foreign actor, citing four anonymous people familiar with the situation.
Province launches first Liquor Mart pop-up store next to new Costco
3 minute read Preview Thursday, Nov. 13, 2025LOAD MORE