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Opinion

It’s RRSP season again — is it worth additions amid other ways to save?

Joel Schlesinger 6 minute read Preview

It’s RRSP season again — is it worth additions amid other ways to save?

Joel Schlesinger 6 minute read Saturday, Feb. 7, 2026

Canadians have great tools to save tax-deferred or tax-free for the future — and the granddaddy of them all is the registered retirement savings plan.

The calendar now turned to February, RRSPs are on the minds of many, with the March 2 deadline looming for the last contributions for 2025.

Yet in the context of the other ways to save — the tax-free savings account (TFSA) and the newer, first home savings account (FHSA) — the RRSP is not always the most attractive place to park, invest and grow money.

The ideal is to fund all of these savings vehicles, based on need, to their annual maximums.

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Saturday, Feb. 7, 2026

Former prime minister Stephen Harper gestures to the artist after he unveiled his official portrait during a ceremony in Ottawa, on Tuesday. (Adrian Wyld / The Canadian Press)

Former prime minister Stephen Harper gestures to the artist after he unveiled his official portrait during a ceremony in Ottawa, on Tuesday. (Adrian Wyld / The Canadian Press)

Harper paints picture of united Canada in face of danger

Tom Brodbeck 5 minute read Preview

Harper paints picture of united Canada in face of danger

Tom Brodbeck 5 minute read Thursday, Feb. 5, 2026

There are moments in Canadian politics when a message is so pointed, so carefully chosen, it’s impossible to pretend it was meant only for the people in the room.

The unveiling of former prime minister Stephen Harper’s official portrait on Tuesday in Ottawa was one of those moments.

On paper, it was a ceremony steeped in tradition — a gathering of ministers, former MPs and dignitaries in the Sir John A. Macdonald Building, the sort of Ottawa event where the words are usually polite and the stakes are low.

But Harper’s remarks were anything but ceremonial filler. They were not the safe, soft platitudes of a retired leader content to be politely applauded and quietly shelved into history.

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Thursday, Feb. 5, 2026

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Winnipeg MB

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Manitoba has long told itself a comforting story about abundant clean electricity. For generations, hydroelectric power flowing through northern rivers has powered homes, farms and industry while giving the province one of the cleanest electricity systems in North America.

It remains a remarkable achievement. But climate change, rising electricity demand and growing affordability pressures are quietly rewriting that story.

Across Canada, provinces are beginning to rethink their electricity futures. Ontario is moving ahead with construction of what is expected to be the first grid-scale small modular reactor in the G7. Saskatchewan is preparing for potential deployment in the early 2030s. Meanwhile, proposals like StarCore’s concept near Pinawa are beginning to push the nuclear conversation into our public debate.

Manitoba itself has not made nuclear part of its near-term energy plan. Manitoba Hydro’s 2025 Integrated Resource Plan suggests the province could require new electricity supply by around 2030 as demand grows and existing capacity tightens.

Responsibility and accountability

Dr. Alan Menkis 4 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

As Manitoba prepares to release a budget focused on health care, patient safety and nurse-to-patient ratios, the death of Stacey Ross remains a sobering backdrop. A woman who believed she was having a heart attack waited 11 hours in the emergency department of St. Boniface Hospital, the province’s only tertiary cardiac centre. Her family has called for a public inquiry. The province is considering an external review.

Those responses are appropriate. But if this moment is to produce meaningful reform, the conversation must extend beyond a single tragic case. It must examine how specialized cardiac care is organized in Manitoba and where ultimate responsibility resides.

St. Boniface functions, in practice, as Manitoba’s heart hospital. It is the only centre providing tertiary cardiac services for the province. Yet it does not operate under a clearly defined provincial program mandate in the way CancerCare Manitoba does for oncology. That distinction is not symbolic. A formal provincial mandate aligns authority, funding and accountability for outcomes in one place.

Cardiac care in Manitoba spans multiple layers. The provincial government sets policy and funding parameters. Shared Health carries province-wide service responsibilities. The Winnipeg Regional Health Authority oversees regional delivery. St. Boniface provides specialized cardiac infrastructure and clinical expertise.

Submitted/Winnipeg Architecture Foundation

Holy Trinity Church

Submitted/Winnipeg Architecture Foundation
                                Holy Trinity Church

A Sanctuary for the City — and Its Future

Stephen Borys 6 minute read Preview

A Sanctuary for the City — and Its Future

Stephen Borys 6 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

On Saturday mornings during my Grade 12 year, I would head downtown to the Eaton’s department store on Portage Avenue.

I was part of the Eaton’s Junior Executive program, which brought together students from high schools across Winnipeg to host events and represent Eaton’s at community gatherings.

I also had a part-time job in the store’s sporting goods department.

Downtown Winnipeg in those days felt like the centre of my universe. Eaton’s — now the site of Canada Life Centre — was a bustling hub, and on my lunch breaks I would wander outside to explore the neighbourhood.

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2:00 AM CDT

Mocking wife’s gambling losses not your best bet

Maureen Scurfield 4 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

DEAR MISS LONELYHEARTS: My wife and her girlfriends got into some serious betting during the Winter Olympics, and they had so much fun, they carried the betting over into the Paralympics.

At first, it was a kick to see the girls having fun, until I found out they started betting more and more money as the days wore on.

Unfortunately, my wife lost a lot by getting over-excited about early wins and then over-betting on later gambles and losing big time.

I must admit I encouraged her to get into sports betting because she had never appreciated the fun I had with my friends doing it. But I just found out my wife ended up losing amounts into the hundreds of dollars on single races. There may be more lost money she hasn’t admitted to yet.

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Will Wab Kinew’s budget burn us?

Isabel Siu-Zmuidzinas and Eric Reder 5 minute read Yesterday at 2:00 AM CDT

Premier Wab Kinew has been coyly and cleverly dancing around building new infrastructure in Hudson Bay so oil and gas guys can profit. The purported leaders suggesting we ship LNG out of Churchill are publicly sacrificing their values for a big oil pipe dream.

In Manitoba’s coming budget, we’ll see how far gone to the dark side our elected officials are.

Putting fossil fuel exports through Hudson Bay would be a catastrophe. We’re experiencing pain and horror around the world right now from reliance on big oil, and it’s sickening to see war as a rationale for increasing our fossil fuel addiction. Shipping fossil fuels seems to be the only thing CEOs and premiers in Alberta think about, but we don’t have to fall for the con.

Kinew having private conversations with Shell is supposed to be fine because they’re “just friends,” but everyone knows fossil fuels are a losing game that’s deadly to perpetuate.

THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld

Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew

THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld
                                Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew

Taking time to consider time changes

Editorial 4 minute read Preview

Taking time to consider time changes

Editorial 4 minute read Tuesday, Mar. 17, 2026

Twice a year, Manitobans go through the same ritual: stumble out of bed groggy after the clocks change and ask themselves why we still do this.

It’s a fair question. And Premier Wab Kinew deserves some credit for finally asking it and for deciding to look at the evidence and consult Manitobans before making any big decisions.

Kinew announced Friday that the province will survey Manitobans about whether to end the twice-annual clock change. The move comes after British Columbia decided to move toward year-round daylight time, raising the inevitable question of whether Manitoba should follow.

A week earlier, Kinew had suggested his government wasn’t looking at the issue because it had other priorities. Some critics will call his latest move a reversal. It’s not. It’s simply a recognition that Manitobans care about the issue and that it deserves thoughtful consideration.

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Tuesday, Mar. 17, 2026

Safe speeds, big savings: slow pays off

Ian Walker 5 minute read Tuesday, Mar. 17, 2026

In 2019, a group of concerned Winnipeggers came together to form Safe Speeds Winnipeg, a grassroots effort dedicated to making our streets safer by lowering the default speed limit in Winnipeg to 30 km/h.

One of our founding members, Dave Elmore, has written recently about how safer speeds make it easier and far more inviting for people, especially children, to move through their neighbourhoods with confidence.

As a parent, a teacher, and a community leader, I wholeheartedly agree that getting more kids walking and biking to school is one of the simplest, most meaningful ways we can support their mental and physical wellbeing. And it isn’t just children who benefit; pedestrian fatality rates rise sharply with age, and seniors 70 and older are the most at risk, underscoring how vital safer speeds are for all members of our community.

Last week, the City of Winnipeg released its long-awaited report on lowering speeds in our communities. It recommends establishing a default 40 km/h speed limit wherever no other speed limit is posted. While 40 km/h is still not truly a safe speed for residential streets, it represents an important step in the right direction.

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