Analysis

Opinion

Governing by gimmick

Erna Buffie 5 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

We all know that politicians can be opportunists sometimes, not necessarily for venal reasons like personal financial gain, but to win the hearts and minds of voters.

So, for example, if the current zeitgeist is all about the escalating cost of living, the opportunist politico will miraculously find ways to look as if they’re doing something to address the problem, when what they’re really offering is a flashy gimmick.

I am referring, of course, to our very own provincial government which seems to have become very skilled in the art of governing by gimmick.

It all began with the gas tax holiday — an action touted as relief for a general public facing ever rising prices at the gas pump. In the end that “solution” cost the government more than $340 million in revenue, and for those of us without combustible engines, provided exactly zero in savings.

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Opinion

World gets glimpse of its climate future

Kyle Volpi Hiebert 5 minute read Preview

World gets glimpse of its climate future

Kyle Volpi Hiebert 5 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

Midway through 2026, two major climate dynamics are emerging in parallel. One is a mass rollout of renewable energy. The other is an ominous El Niño brewing, likely to soon trigger fierce weather extremes.

How nations embrace the former and cope with the latter may offer clues to humanity’s fate in the coming decades as climate change intensifies.

The war in Iran has spurred a new rush away from fossil fuels. A common refrain in the capitals of energy importers has been that the wind and sun don’t need to transit the Strait of Hormuz.

Even the fragile truce between the U.S. and Iran changes little — the war’s underlying issues remain unresolved. Plus, Tehran has learned it now has major leverage. Iran can extract concessions from its adversaries by shutting down the vital waterway. It’s a card the Islamic regime will surely reach for again.

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2:00 AM CDT

Opinion

We know who is at risk, but we wait anyway

Sherry Gott 5 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

Children with disabilities are experiencing a mental health crisis and Manitoba’s systems are waiting for them to really struggle before they respond.

Across Canada, children with disabilities experience far higher rates of mental health challenges than their peers. Nearly three-quarters of children and youth with disabilities experience elevated mental health challenges. More than one-third score in the “very high” mental health difficulty category, a rate nearly 10 times higher than among children without disabilities.

Between 30 to 50 per cent of children with neurodevelopmental disabilities are diagnosed with mental health conditions, compared to eight to 18 per cent among typically developing children. This includes children with autism, ADHD, FASD, intellectual disabilities, learning disabilities and communication disorders.

Children who struggle with communication, sensory regulation, mobility, executive functioning, or social interaction are often excluded long before systems recognize the emotional consequences of that exclusion. Loneliness and exclusion are not side issues — they are public health issues for children with disabilities.

Opinion

Solutions, not surveys, needed to prevent sewage spills

Dave Taylor 5 minute read Yesterday at 2:00 AM CDT

The deluge Winnipeg experienced on June 9 and 10 is a harbinger of extreme weather yet to come.

This can no longer be considered a freak event, as such storms are becoming commonplace. Homeowners are being cautioned to prepare their homes with backwater valves and sump pumps to avoid the menace of overland flooding and sewer backups. City infrastructure is not coping well with our changing climate. Five different pumping stations lost power that night, and as a result 8.72 million litres of untreated sewage wound up in our rivers over a 24-hour period.

According to Tim Shanks, director of the City of Winnipeg’s water and waste department, crews are alerted ahead of these storms and put on standby, which means being prepared to move a mobile generator on a trailer to one of 75 pumping stations within the city. Mobile generators are retrieved by staff from city compounds or other stations.

This practice may have proved effective in the past but, as evidenced by this storm, abnormal weather patterns have gained the upper hand. Shanks was not prepared to direct blame, but acknowledged that the present system has its faults, including the delay of 18 hours it took to stem the flow of raw sewage at the Woodhaven pumping station.

Opinion

Fear of retaliation is a very real thing

Pam Frampton 5 minute read Preview

Fear of retaliation is a very real thing

Pam Frampton 5 minute read Yesterday at 2:00 AM CDT

Here’s something we don’t talk about enough: the fear people have that if they complain about how their loved one in a nursing home is treated, the treatment will only get worse.

My mother lives in a retirement home. Many of my friends also have parents who rely on strangers for some aspect of their care. And in conversations we’ve had, it is quite common to hear someone say, “Of course we don’t want to complain, because it might backfire.”

Human nature is what it is. No one likes criticism. So, if you complain that your father’s meals are never hot or that your aunt’s clothes are always soiled, you are never sure what the reaction will be. One person might take a complaint in stride and try to do better, while another person might feel affronted and lash out in some way — perhaps by deliberately treating your loved one poorly.

It’s a crap shoot for seniors in care and their families, and it’s a troubling one.

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Yesterday at 2:00 AM CDT

Opinion

Venezuela: Things could change

Gwynne Dyer 5 minute read Preview

Venezuela: Things could change

Gwynne Dyer 5 minute read Yesterday at 2:00 AM CDT

Bad things happen, and some of them are nobody’s fault. Big earthquakes in Venezuela arrive about a century apart (1812, 1902, 2026), so you can’t blame the planners and the politicians for not being well prepared for this one. How high a priority should they have given to an event that will kill a few thousand people once a century in a country of 28 million people?

Besides, the only thing you can do to “prepare” for earthquakes is to reinforce your buildings and infrastructure, and Venezuela couldn’t afford to do that. Half the population lives below the poverty level. True, they are poor mainly because the regime is corrupt and incompetent, but even a better regime would spend its money on anti-poverty measures, not earthquakes.

So, no shame there — but there’s plenty of blame to share for the regime’s failure to respond quickly and effectively to the aftermath of the twin earthquakes only one minute apart. The chief threat in earthquakes is always collapsing buildings, and anybody who is still trapped under the wreckage after three days is almost certainly dead.

In Venezuela that is probably several thousand people by now, and their bereaved relatives and friends will be keenly aware that in many devastated areas the state emergency services were conspicuously absent. Ambulances usually showed up, but there were no army teams with heavy machinery to dig out the trapped survivors. The regime has shown it is useless.

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Yesterday at 2:00 AM CDT

Opinion

Artificial intelligence requires human-led thinking

Room 309, École Laura Secord 4 minute read Tuesday, Jun. 30, 2026

Picture this. A teacher creates an assignment using AI. There is a provocation generated by a prompt, followed by vague parameters and a generic rubric. The AI-generated emojis are left in, and the task and success criteria are not connected to the passion, interests or soul of the child.

Subsequently, the child responds using AI. The thinking and language are clearly not their own and there has been no transformative or profound educative experience to stir cognitive dissonance. The child has not been asked, or better yet invited, to engage in sophisticated thinking and work that matters to them. That matters to community.

When the child uses AI, it’s considered “cheating.”

So here we are. An opportunity lost because we are not thinking deeply about the impact of AI on our species.

Opinion

What is the responsibility of a national institution?

Gustavo Zentner 4 minute read Preview

What is the responsibility of a national institution?

Gustavo Zentner 4 minute read Tuesday, Jun. 30, 2026

As we approach Canada Day, we reflect on the values that define our country: our way of life, our commitment to fairness, our responsibility to care for those in need and our collective obligation to contribute to a society built on respect, dialogue and shared responsibility.

Yet, as we celebrate these principles, we must also recognize troubling signs that some of our national institutions are failing to uphold the very commitments that make Canada unique. When institutions allow one-sided narratives, incomplete historical context and a lack of meaningful engagement to override reason, transparency and responsibility, they create a dangerous precedent.

There is perhaps no clearer example of this challenge than what has unfolded at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights (CMHR) with the opening of the controversial “Nakba” exhibition.

A national museum dedicated to human rights carries a profound moral responsibility. It must be grounded in intellectual rigour, historical integrity, transparency and balance. It must create space for difficult conversation while ensuring complex histories are presented with the depth, nuance and fairness Canadians expect of a national institution.

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Tuesday, Jun. 30, 2026

Opinion

Safe sport policies make a difference

Mac Horsburgh 4 minute read Preview

Safe sport policies make a difference

Mac Horsburgh 4 minute read Tuesday, Jun. 30, 2026

Times have changed for the better. It is now expected that sports organizations will incorporate impartiality and objectivity into investigations of allegations of misconduct and maltreatment of their athletes. The sine qua non of such investigations has been that an independent third party (ITP) must investigate these complaints.

The historical handling of maltreatment complaints has drawn significant scrutiny and criticism, most recently related to Hockey Canada’s handling of sexual assault allegations dating back to 2018 and 2003. As a result of these concerns, Hockey Canada went through a restructuring in 2022, adopting the ITP system and a national-level complaints system tied to the Office of the Sport Integrity Commissioner (OSIC).

Also in 2022, under Manitoba’s newly enacted Protecting Youth in Sports Act, all provincial sports organizations were mandated to adopt and implement the Sport Manitoba Safe Sport policy manual. For anyone in Manitoba who plays a provincial sport, the Safe Sport policy manual is well worth reading.

It lays out an extensive code of conduct and ethics policy as well as a discipline and complaints policy. The code of conduct references Sport Integrity Canada’s universal code of conduct and, as such, outlines what constitutes psychological and physical maltreatment, neglect, sexual maltreatment, grooming, boundary transgressions, discrimination and other forms of maltreatment.

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Tuesday, Jun. 30, 2026

Opinion

After fire and flood, northern Manitoba gathers data

Emmanuel A. Badewa 5 minute read Preview

After fire and flood, northern Manitoba gathers data

Emmanuel A. Badewa 5 minute read Monday, Jun. 29, 2026

Floods and wildfires are not future risks for northern Manitoba. They are already part of life in the region.

The question is not whether a soil and water-monitoring network can stop them. It cannot. Wildfires will still burn. Floodwaters will still rise. Roads, culverts, shorelines, wetlands, lakes, and community infrastructure will still face pressure from extreme weather and environmental change.

The real question is whether northern Manitoba has the environmental evidence needed to understand what these events leave behind.

As an instructor who teaches natural resources and environmental monitoring in northern Manitoba, I see this need in practical terms. I see it when students measure streamflow and how moving water connects land, lakes, wetlands, and communities. I see it when we observe wildfire-affected landscapes and ask what fire may mean for soil stability, runoff, erosion, vegetation recovery, and water quality. I see it when students collect soil samples from burned sites and realize that environmental change is not just a classroom topic. It is happening on the land around them.

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Monday, Jun. 29, 2026

Opinion

Housing we need has to go somewhere

Jordan Farber 4 minute read Monday, Jun. 29, 2026

Winnipeg is facing a housing shortage. We see it in rising rents, increasing homelessness and the growing number of people struggling to find safe and affordable places to live.

Governments at every level have recognized the need for more housing and the City of Winnipeg has adopted policies such as OurWinnipeg 2045 and Complete Communities 2.0, specifically to encourage the type of development needed to address this challenge.

Yet when new housing is proposed, particularly in established neighbourhoods, opposition often follows.

The recent discussion surrounding the proposed development of a six-storey, 120-unit apartment building at 470 Des Meurons St. is one such example.

Opinion

Health boards cannot borrow credibility

Rafiq Andani 5 minute read Monday, Jun. 29, 2026

‘Credibility is a leader’s currency. With it, he or she is solvent; without it, he or she is bankrupt.’ — John C. Maxwell

In Manitoba health care, credibility manifests on the balance sheet. It shows up when a board asks executives to endure change, patients to trust a plan and the government to fund another deficit. Lose credibility and every decision eventually carries interest.

Dr. Alan H. Menkis, in the Free Press, recently asked: “For the patient, where does the buck stop?”

His concern was a health system with many layers: government, Shared Health, regional authorities, hospitals, boards, agreements, legal counsel and executives. Each layer can be lawful. The patient can still disappear between them.

Opinion

‘Chequebook federalism’ is no solution

David McLaughlin 5 minute read Preview

‘Chequebook federalism’ is no solution

David McLaughlin 5 minute read Saturday, Jun. 27, 2026

It’s pretty rich that the richest province in Canada wants out. Or is it?

In politics, like life, emotion often trumps fact. It fuels grievance. It creates myths that morph into “common knowledge.” Once embedded, it is strikingly difficult to change.

This is where we have arrived with Alberta’s separation movement and the October referendum on whether to “remain in Canada” or “commence the legal process … to hold a binding provincial referendum on whether or not Alberta should separate from Canada.”

By every financial metric, Albertans are the most well-off Canadians. So much so that for years the province marketed the “Alberta Advantage.” That is the factual argument. However, the separatist movement believes the province would have been even better off, but Canada wouldn’t let them. Alberta must therefore separate. That is the emotional argument.

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Saturday, Jun. 27, 2026

Opinion

Canada being side-swiped by Trump’s Cuba policy

Peter McKenna 5 minute read Preview

Canada being side-swiped by Trump’s Cuba policy

Peter McKenna 5 minute read Saturday, Jun. 27, 2026

Canada’s decades-long relationship with revolutionary Cuba has always been a three-country affair — with the United States frequently settling for the spurned third-wheel.

Since the early 1960s, successive U.S. governments have strenuously objected to Canadian trade and commercial engagement with the island. Officials in Washington have always believed that the Canadians were trying to make a “quick buck” at America’s expense, while simultaneously seeking to undermine the U.S. blockade of Cuba.

For almost 70 years now, Canada has had to negotiate the thorny issue of the U.S. trade embargo. Added to that was the anti-Cuba Cuban Democracy Act of 1992 and the still active 1996 Helms-Burton Law. Complicating matters further for Ottawa have been the various additions and subtractions to the unrelenting U.S. efforts to strangle the Cuban economy — particularly during the presidency of Barack Obama.

In January, U.S. President Donald Trump imposed a near-ironclad (some Russian oil is getting through), illegal fuel embargo against Cuba, using American naval vessels and U.S. Coast Guard ships. Additionally, he signed an executive order in early May to expand U.S. economic warfare, or what some call “secondary sanctions,” against those materially assisting the Cuban government.

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Saturday, Jun. 27, 2026

Opinion

What’s happening in our city?

Carina Blumgrund 5 minute read Friday, Jun. 26, 2026

IF you drive through certain parts of the city these days, you’ll see people bent over where they stand. Frozen mid-motion, the way fentanyl leaves a person, folded forward as if the world had simply paused them there. You’ll see people lying on the sidewalk who may be sleeping or may be something more urgent than sleeping. You’ll see it in broad daylight, in view of the bus stop, the convenience store, the school a block away.

Some days the impulse to look away from all the suffering is overwhelming. The mind reaches for something else to focus on, something less heavy, less difficult.

But there are people who don’t look away. Not because it’s easier for them. It isn’t. It’s harder, in fact, because they’re not just seeing it once from a distance. They’re walking into it, every shift, sometimes more than once in an hour.

I think about the outreach workers who carry naloxone the way the rest of us carry keys. Who have, more times than they could count, knelt down beside someone whose breathing had slowed to almost nothing, administered the medication and waited, in that terrible suspended moment, to see whether a life could be saved this time. Who have done this for strangers. Who have done this for people they’ve come to know by name, and have had to do it again, and sometimes again after that.

Opinion

Manitoba misses mark in creating inclusive classrooms

Sherry Gott 4 minute read Friday, Jun. 26, 2026

THE United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child recognizes that all children have the right to an education that helps them reach their full potential. It should develop their personalities, talents and mental and physical abilities. Actualizing these rights in the classroom, however, is not as easy in practice.

Every classroom includes learners with different strengths, challenges, identities and experiences. Some students are especially gifted while others have medical needs, require accommodations or manage complex issues that require additional, individualized support.

Under Manitoba’s appropriate educational programming legislation, students are entitled to educational programming that meaningfully supports both their academic and social lives. However, the number of students in Manitoba who require complex support in the classroom surpasses the number of resources teachers currently have available.

The Manitoba Teachers’ Society recently surveyed 3,400 Manitoba teachers about these gaps. Seventy-eight per cent said students are not getting needed support and 63 per cent reported fewer educational assistants. Eighty-one per cent identified class size, complexity and lack of support as top issues — citing an increase in students with complex needs within the last five years. Today, nearly half of teachers have six or more students with complex needs, a sharp rise from previous years.

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