Analysis

Opinion

Counterpoint: the new transit system is good

Joe Kornelsen 5 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

Winnipeg’s new transit network is actually good.

It might surprise people to hear it, but the more you ride it, the more sense it makes.

The old network was a cobbled-together hodgepodge of legacy routes trying to accommodate city growth by appending ever more weird routes into a system built for the city we were decades ago. Riders can remember many of these: the spaghetti-shaped No. 77 or the old No. 16 with its three radically different southern branches and the No. 29, which sometimes went southbound from the Health Sciences Centre to Pembina and sometimes southbound to … city hall.

Most of us who ride had learned to live with and even thrive amid these absurdities. But they were absurdities.

Advertisement

Advertise With Us

Weather

Mar. 26, 6 PM: -8°c Cloudy Mar. 27, 12 AM: -10°c Cloudy

Winnipeg MB

-10°C, Partly cloudy with wind

Full Forecast

The rush for Wellington bike lanes is misguided

John Youngman 4 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

I have lived on or within a block of Wellington Crescent for 35 years.

I drive my vehicle on the Crescent almost every day, and cycle regularly on the Crescent in the summertime. Not once have I felt unsafe driving or cycling on the Crescent. However, that could soon change.

The city is voting on whether to approve bike lanes on Wellington Crescent, which would reduce vehicular traffic to one lane each way from Academy to Stradbrook and reduce speed to 40 km/h.

If the botched bike lanes on River and Stradbrook avenues are any indication, drivers on Wellington Crescent are in for a rough ride.

A new low in American politics

Mac Horsburgh 4 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

U.S. President Donald Trump didn’t invent insulting people but with his latest comment about Robert Mueller, he has taken American politics to a new low.

According to former president George W. Bush, Mueller “dedicated his life to public service.” As a marine in Vietnam, he earned a Bronze Star and a Purple Heart. Former president Barack Obama referred to Mueller as “one of the finest directors in the history of the FBI … it was his relentless commitment to the rule of law and his unwavering belief in our bedrock values that made him one of the most respected public servants of our time.”

What did Trump say about Mueller?

“Robert Mueller just died. Good, I am glad he is dead. He can no longer hurt innocent people.”

Respite care cuts will break strained system

Jennifer Anderson 5 minute read Yesterday at 2:00 AM CDT

When people hear the word “respite,” they often imagine a break — a little time off for parents caring for a child with disabilities.

For single-parent families like mine, respite is not a break.

It is survival.

My son was born with cerebral palsy and severe epilepsy. His seizures began when he was still a baby and escalated to the point where he was having multiple seizures an hour. Over the years he has required intensive care admissions, emergency interventions, and constant monitoring. He is nonverbal, requires a feeding tube for nutrition, and needs assistance with mobility and daily care.

Pam Frampton photo

The house in St. John’s that columnist Pam Frampton shared with her very good dog, Willie.

Pam Frampton photo
                                The house in St. John’s that columnist Pam Frampton shared with her very good dog, Willie.

The old house is gone but not forgotten

Pam Frampton 5 minute read Preview

The old house is gone but not forgotten

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

I bought my first house when I was 33 years old, as soon as I crawled out from under my student debt.

I could not believe my good fortune when I went to view the old two-storey — it had everything I ever wanted. It was detached, circa 1909, and still retained some of its original charm. Sheathed in cedar clapboard painted yellow, it had forest green trim with burgundy shutters. It even had decorative corbels on the front eave, a wooden mailbox that was a miniature version of the house itself, plus a pocket-square-sized front garden surrounded by a dark green picket fence.

It was situated on a narrow, tree-lined lane in my favourite part of St. John’s, a neighbourhood whose oldest streets are graced with stately mansions whose interiors and amenities I could only fantasize about.

It was love at first sight. That there was an actual house I could afford within a stone’s throw of those heritage homes and Signal Hill was astonishing to me. I figured the fact that the house was yellow — the same colour as my childhood home — was a good omen.

Read
Yesterday at 2:00 AM CDT

Seniors and families deserve better

Michael Abon 4 minute read Yesterday at 2:00 AM CDT

“We’re making these decisions not for the 60, 70-year-olds. No disrespect, because a lot of them do use these facilities, but we’re trying to make the decisions what infrastructure is needed for the 30-year-olds, the 25-year-olds, and that future generation.”

That was Winnipeg Mayor Scott Gillingham at the executive policy committee on March 17, defending the decision to cancel the Wellington Crescent bike lane pilot project.

My parents downsized to a condo on Wellington Crescent. My wife, our three-year-old daughter, and I walk or bike along Wellington Crescent to visit them at least once a week… or we used to.

Since a driver going, at minimum, 159 km/h killed Rob Jenner on this street nearly two years ago, we take a longer route to avoid Wellington entirely. We shouldn’t have to be afraid just to visit my parents.

ALEX LUPUL / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS/FILE

Manitoba’s Golden Boy may shibe atop the Manitoba Legislative Building, but the province’s laws against political lobbying are more than a little tarnished.

ALEX LUPUL / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS/FILE
                                Manitoba’s Golden Boy may shibe atop the Manitoba Legislative Building, but the province’s laws against political lobbying are more than a little tarnished.

The need to reform Manitoba’s lobbying legislation

Paul G. Thomas 6 minute read Preview

The need to reform Manitoba’s lobbying legislation

Paul G. Thomas 6 minute read Tuesday, Mar. 24, 2026

It’s time to do something about Manitoba’s lobbying laws.

On Dec. 22, 2025 when announcing the intention of his government to establish a public inquiry into the unconstitutional, failed attempt by the former PC government to green light the controversial Sio Silica sand mine proposal, Premier Wab Kinew suggested that strengthening Manitoba’s weak, mainly symbolic lobbyist registration law would be the primary outcome of the inquiry.

An earlier investigation by the ethics commissioner under a new integrity law led to a former premier and two former PC cabinet ministers being fined after a vote in the legislature. However, the ethics commissioner’s report covered only part of the background story.

As a result, a number of private-sector actors backing the Sio Silica proposal who engaged in inappropriate conduct, including failing to register as lobbyists, were not held fully accountable in terms of paying a material price for their actions.

Read
Tuesday, Mar. 24, 2026

A series of miscalculations

Gwynne Dyer 5 minute read Tuesday, Mar. 24, 2026

Still not four full weeks into the war, and already Donald Trump’s “short-term excursion” — decapitate the Iranian regime with a surprise attack and impose harsh terms on the defeated survivors — has morphed into a global economic crisis and a region-wide war that could destroy the wealth of all the countries on both sides of the Gulf. At the very least.

Back in January, Trump was high on his success in changing the regime in Venezuela (just a bit), so he was an easy mark for Israeli prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s suggestion that he could do the same to Iran. Netanyahu probably knew better than that himself, but his life’s goal has been to inveigle the United States into a joint attack on Israel’s greatest enemy.

Trump swallowed the plan hook, line and sinker, and they cobbled together a story about a new nuclear threat from Iran.

Even if untrue, the Israeli-American allegations and threats were grave enough to frighten the Iranians back to the negotiating table, and this time they surprised the American team by offering major concessions. The new offer didn’t meet every U.S. demand in full, but it certainly warranted further discussion and the next meeting was fixed for March 3.

Bad policy: the fallout from rent changes

4 minute read Tuesday, Mar. 24, 2026

Manitoba’s government recently introduced Bill 13, the Residential Tenancies Amendment Act, paired with regulatory changes described as the “largest expansion to rent controls in decades.” Lost in the political messaging is what these changes will actually mean for tenants, workers, and an economy that cannot afford another deterrent to investment.

The accompanying regulation proposes two significant changes.

First, the claimable portion of capital expenses in above-guideline rent increase applications would be cut by 50 per cent, meaning a landlord who spends $100,000 on a qualifying project could only claim $50,000.

Second, the monthly rent exemption threshold would rise from $1,670 to $2,000, bringing thousands of additional units under rent control. The government’s own regulatory document acknowledges landlords will see reduced revenue as a result but characterizes the impact on financial viability as manageable.

MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS

Bill 232, The Autism Strategy Act, will go to a committee in the legislature, but when will meaningful autism supports arrive in Manitoba schools?

MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS
                                Bill 232, The Autism Strategy Act, will go to a committee in the legislature, but when will meaningful autism supports arrive in Manitoba schools?

The autism strategy gap is already here

Ann Evangelista 5 minute read Preview

The autism strategy gap is already here

Ann Evangelista 5 minute read Monday, Mar. 23, 2026

In Winnipeg classrooms, the autism strategy gap is not theoretical. It is visible every day.

On March 17, I witnessed the second reading of Bill 232, the Autism Strategy Act, in Manitoba’s Legislature — and was deeply disappointed by the lack of meaningful support from the government. Legislative action should signal progress. Instead, what it revealed was a disconnect between policy debate and the realities already unfolding in our schools.

We speak of an autism strategy as if it belongs to the future — while students and educators are already paying the price in the present.

Autism diagnoses in Manitoba have nearly tripled over the past decade, with approximately one in 60 children now identified on the spectrum. That rapid growth is not abstract — it is showing up in our schools, where educators are being asked to respond to increasingly complex needs within a system that has not kept pace.

Read
Monday, Mar. 23, 2026

Iran war fallout has barely begun

Kyle Volpi Hiebert 5 minute read Monday, Mar. 23, 2026

Roughly a month into America’s latest war of choice and the consequences are already profound.

U.S. and Israeli airstrikes have destroyed 15,000 targets inside Iran. Supreme leader Ali Khamenei is dead, replaced by his even more extremist son. Traffic through the Strait of Hormuz — a vital artery for global energy supplies and other commodities — is paralyzed.

And yet the full butterfly effect of the conflict is only starting to sink in.

Even as U.S. and Israeli officials claim Iran’s missile launchers and munitions stockpiles lay in ruins, Gulf states’ energy infrastructure is still being targeted. Iran’s military regime has told the world to brace for oil prices to hit US$200 a barrel.

Lessons from school attendance

Ken Clark 4 minute read Monday, Mar. 23, 2026

The Free Press editorial Government data shows extent of truancy issue (March 16) notes that “More than 15,000 students were chronically absent in the 2023-2024 school year, a staggering number” which was also broken down by school division and Aboriginal status. An MLA previously expelled from the NDP caucus presented this information from a leaked government briefing note some time after filing an unsuccessful freedom of information request on the topic.

The editorial holds that “Obviously, work should be done immediately to find ways to bring down truancy rates” and posits that “…data exists to be seen and to be used, and to act as clear justification for what should be, in this case, immediate action.”

Education Minister Tracy Schmidt is quoted as saying that “Data in decision-making is very, very important but we have to balance that with our concern about not stigmatizing any particular community or school division” while not conceding to the release of such information in the future.

First, for clarity, it is not data at issue; it is summaries, tabulations and reports — let’s call them STRs — generated from data. STRs are idiosyncratic, specific to a purpose and audience. Data — person-specific in the current context — are collected with the understanding of responsible management, use and confidentiality. Neither exists “to be seen”; they are for specified use and to be handled with care and discretion.

Education taxes not a ‘hot mess’

John R. Wiens 5 minute read Saturday, Mar. 21, 2026

While I mostly agree with Dan Lett’s analysis (Councillors brace for impact when provincial education property tax hikes hit mailboxes, March 19), there are some significant reasons to challenge his statement about education funding being “a hot mess.”

As for the suburban councillors’ despondency, I find it hard to be sympathetic. My experience has been that most homeowners, even if they do not understand fully the purposes of all property taxes, do understand that some of them go to fund city services and some to the school division they live in. This has been made clear repeatedly by the separation of the taxes on the tax notices.

In my view, councillors should be pleased that some citizens might actually consider them an essential part the adequate funding of children’s education. The issue is not, as implied, lack of accountability or ownership — nothing is hidden and trustees are quite willing to take credit for their decisions. The councillors’ complaints seem more self-serving than conscientious leadership.

What is a hot mess is what the current government was left with at the end of the last Conservative era, akin to what they were left with after the previous one — the Conservatives would do well to rethink several aspects of their political strategies. Manitobans have repeatedly let them know that they are less concerned about tax savings than they are about support for public education.

Will Trump try the Venezuela method in Cuba?

Peter McKenna 5 minute read Saturday, Mar. 21, 2026

I’m wondering whether the Cuban government is presently angling for some sort of Delcy Rodríguez-like arrangement with the Trump Administration. There has been some reporting that Havana has approached Pope Leo XIV to act as an interlocutor between the U.S. and Cuba.

It is unclear at this time what role the current Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel is playing in any ongoing diplomatic negotiations between the two sides. He could well be marginalized and pushed to the side. Most of the focus appears to be on those Cuban officials who are close to former president Raúl Castro.

In fact, it was widely reported that Castro’s grandson, Raúl Guillermo Rodríguez Castro, had recently met privately on the Caribbean island of Saint Kitts with American officials from U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio’s inner circle. It is still unknown if any substantial progress was made, but the secretive talks are said to be continuing.

Additionally, there are credible reports that high-level discussions are taking place between senior Trump administration officials and the small coterie of advisers associated with Raúl Castro. In the words of Florida Republican House member and Cuba hardliner Mario Díaz-Balart: “There have been conversations with multiple people around Raúl Castro, basically with everyone around Raúl, at the highest level, but they aren’t negotiations.”

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS

Premier Wab Kinew’s government should review a new study on safe consumption sites before restarting the process of establishing one in WInnipeg.

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS
                                Premier Wab Kinew’s government should review a new study on safe consumption sites before restarting the process of establishing one in WInnipeg.

Consumption site research shows surprising result

David McLaughlin 5 minute read Preview

Consumption site research shows surprising result

David McLaughlin 5 minute read Saturday, Mar. 21, 2026

Premier Wab Kinew’s government is having some difficulty in opening their promised supervised consumption site. He can at least be reassured that there will be much less difficulty if it never goes ahead.

That’s not politics talking. Nor ideology. It’s science. And evidence.

It’s all contained in a just-published study in the medical journal Addiction for the Society for the Study of Addiction. The journal has been around since 1884, so it has some game on these matters. Pithily titled “Healthcare utilization and mortality after overdose prevention site closure: A linked cohort analysis using segmented difference-in-differences time series,” it is a first of its kind study in Canada.

Ok, that’s not pithy. Admittedly, neither is much of the text, which is replete with medical and scientific jargon. It will not make a general public reading list. But government decision makers and health care and community activists should not let either the title or the writing style deter them from reading it from end to end. It’s what it found that matters. And that matters a lot to the Manitoba public who has been worried about what has been their government’s ‘hell-for-leather’ approach to opening a controversial new supervised consumption site for overdose prevention for opioid users to be run by the Aboriginal Health and Wellness Centre.

Read
Saturday, Mar. 21, 2026

Andy Wong / The ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES

Chinese President Xi Jinping and the Chinese Communist Party are now moving to remove minority languages and have schools move to teaching in Mandarin.

Andy Wong / The ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES 
                                Chinese President Xi Jinping and the Chinese Communist Party are now moving to remove minority languages and have schools move to teaching in Mandarin.

Why is China launching a new language law?

Gwynne Dyer 5 minute read Preview

Why is China launching a new language law?

Gwynne Dyer 5 minute read Friday, Mar. 20, 2026

In Quebec, the English-speaking minority used to call them ‘tongue-troopers’: the government functionaries who come around to check that the French on signs in shops is in a typeface twice as big as the English. Now China will have tongue-troopers too, although the regime has no fear that Chinese might be replaced by Zhuang, Kazakh or Korean.

Frankly, French-Canadians have not had a real reason to fear that French might die out either, at least not for the past 175 years. The proportion of first-language-French speakers in Quebec has remained stable at 77 per cent to 83 per cent since the 1850s, with minor fluctuations mostly due to changes in birth rates or immigration rates.

Nevertheless, every niche in politics is always occupied by some ambitious politician seeking a platform and a cause. In Quebec, therefore, there will always be some politicians who declare that French is in peril and promise to defend it. When they win power, they do things like mandating bigger print for French on signs.

But can this explain why the Chinese regime is requiring bigger print for Chinese in parts of the country where many people speak a minority language? More than 90 per cent of the country’s 1.4 billion people speak Chinese. Surely they don’t feel threatened by the minorities, who speak 52 different languages, even the biggest of which has only 14 million speakers.

Read
Friday, Mar. 20, 2026

LOAD MORE ANALYSIS ARTICLES