Local

Neepawa Titans head coach and general manager Ken Pearson coached his 1,500th game in the Canadian Junior Hockey League in a 4-2 win over the Dauphin Kings at Credit Union Place on Sunday night. The victory also gave the hometown product his 750th career regular season win. (Submitted)

Neepawa Titans head coach and general manager Ken Pearson coached his 1,500th game in the Canadian Junior Hockey League in a 4-2 win over the Dauphin Kings at Credit Union Place on Sunday night. The victory also gave the hometown product his 750th career regular season win. (Submitted)

Pearson relishing time behind bench

By Massimo De Luca-Taronno 8 minute read Preview

Pearson relishing time behind bench

By Massimo De Luca-Taronno 8 minute read Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026

If you asked Ken Pearson when he began his career behind the bench 30 years ago how long he’d last in the business, he wouldn’t have had a clue.

Now, it’s safe to say it’s become more than anything he would have ever expected.

The head coach and general manager of the Neepawa Titans checked off two big milestones on Sunday night after coaching his 1,500th game in the Canadian Junior Hockey League following a 4-2 win over the Dauphin Kings at Credit Union Place. The victory was the Titans 18th of the season and was also the 750th of Pearson’s career in the regular season.

It’s hard to put into words what significance just a pair of numbers means to a person, but for Pearson, it’s rather simple.

Read
Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026

Progressive Conservative finance critic Lauren Stone says raising taxes for Manitoba’s wealthiest may scare them away. (Mikaela MacKenzie/Winnipeg Free Press files)

Progressive Conservative finance critic Lauren Stone says raising taxes for Manitoba’s wealthiest may scare them away. (Mikaela MacKenzie/Winnipeg Free Press files)

Province may target top earners, Kinew hints

By Carol Sanders 5 minute read Preview

Province may target top earners, Kinew hints

By Carol Sanders 5 minute read Saturday, Mar. 7, 2026

WINNIPEG — Premier Wab Kinew’s suggestion that the provincial budget on March 24 may squeeze the “top one per cent” — the richest Manitobans — was met with both positive and negative responses Friday.

Kinew, who dropped the hint in a local radio interview without providing more details, wasn’t made available Friday to clarify who or how, “We’re going to have some help in the budget on the education property tax front, and we might be asking the top one per cent to help us out with that.”

The NDP government is staring down a $1.6-billion deficit while vowing to balance the province’s books in its first term. If the plan is to lean on some of Manitoba’s top earners, how big are those incomes, and will that drive those people away?

To get into Manitoba’s top one per cent of income earners in 2023 required an income of $235,100 or about $244,000 in inflation-adjusted terms, University of Manitoba economics professor Jesse Hajer said Friday.

Read
Saturday, Mar. 7, 2026

Tamarack Golf Tournament

Weather

Mar. 9, 6 PM: -8°c Cloudy Mar. 10, 12 AM: -12°c Cloudy

Brandon MB

-11°C, Snow

Full Forecast

WPS chief unveils anti-corruption plan

By Tyler Searle 5 minute read Saturday, Mar. 7, 2026

WINNIPEG — Winnipeg’s top cop hopes enhanced oversight of officers will help the service regain public trust after its reputation was tarnished by the corruption of a disgraced officer and his co-accused colleagues.

“The trust that the public has in the police is paramount. Without it, we can’t do our job,” Chief Gene Bowers said Friday after meeting with the Winnipeg Police Board.

Among other things, the Winnipeg Police Service has added three investigators to its professional standards unit and the top brass have met with all members to reaffirm the service’s standards and expectations of professionalism and integrity, the chief said.

“The vast majority of our members work with integrity and they’re dedicated, but when somebody does step out of line … I want the public to trust in the fact that we will hold members accountable.”

Tamarack

Winnipeg restaurant owner Ravi Ramberran and others want the province to give restaurateurs a wholesale discount on spirits as relief for the struggling industry. (Ruth Bonneville/Winnipeg Free Press files)

Winnipeg restaurant owner Ravi Ramberran and others want the province to give restaurateurs a wholesale discount on spirits as relief for the struggling industry. (Ruth Bonneville/Winnipeg Free Press files)

Restaurant sector pushes for liquor discount

By Nicole Buffie 4 minute read Preview

Restaurant sector pushes for liquor discount

By Nicole Buffie 4 minute read Friday, Mar. 6, 2026

WINNIPEG — Ravi Ramberran thinks he spends too much money on booze.

The Winnipeg entrepreneur estimates he spends about $250,000 annually on beer and spirits across the two restaurants he owns. He said if it was a bit cheaper to buy from the province’s supplier, the Manitoba Liquor & Lotteries Corp., he could pass on the savings to customers or use it for business improvements.

“(The hospitality sector is) the province’s biggest customer,” Ramberran said. “In any other industry, the biggest customer gets treated differently, period.”

The Manitoba Restaurant & Foodservices Association is lobbying the government to introduce a wholesale discount on spirits to provide some much-needed relief to a sector struggling to rebound since shutdowns related to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Read
Friday, Mar. 6, 2026

The NDP government introduced more than a dozen bills on Thursday at the Manitoba legislature. (The Canadian Press files)

The NDP government introduced more than a dozen bills on Thursday at the Manitoba legislature. (The Canadian Press files)

Government introduces wide array of proposed legislation

By Gabrielle Piché 4 minute read Preview

Government introduces wide array of proposed legislation

By Gabrielle Piché 4 minute read Friday, Mar. 6, 2026

WINNIPEG — The province is looking to crack down on puppy mills and pepper spray in proposed government legislation.

The New Democrats introduced more than a dozen bills Thursday that are set for debate later this year.

Under Bill 19 (The Animal Care Amendment Act), people would need a licence to sell or transfer ownership of pets when selling a large quantity.

That number of pets requiring a licence hasn’t been established yet; licensing requirements for kennels and for breeding or retailing pets would be repealed.

Read
Friday, Mar. 6, 2026

1 minute read Friday, Mar. 6, 2026

Haelin Taylor died on Jan. 23, 2016. Incorrect information appeared on Page A1 of the March 5 edition of the Sun.

Arthur Riazuddin made a permanent move from Winnipeg to Dubai a year ago, after splitting time between the two cities. (Supplied)

Arthur Riazuddin made a permanent move from Winnipeg to Dubai a year ago, after splitting time between the two cities. (Supplied)

Ex-Winnipeggers take war in the Middle East in stride

By Chris Kitching 5 minute read Preview

Ex-Winnipeggers take war in the Middle East in stride

By Chris Kitching 5 minute read Thursday, Mar. 5, 2026

WINNIPEG — Former Winnipeg resident Arthur Riazuddin was relaxing on a Dubai beach with fellow Canadians Saturday when they started hearing loud bangs and seeing puffs of smoke in the sky.

The echoing booms were the sound of the United Arab Emirates’ air defence systems taking out some of the first ballistic missiles fired from Iran while a new war flared in the Middle East.

“We slowly made our way out of there and back home,” Riazuddin, 39, said from Dubai Wednesday. “Obviously, that first evening was a little bit uneasy just because we didn’t know what was going on.”

Iran fired missiles and drones toward the UAE, an American ally, and other countries in the region after the U.S. and Israel launched air strikes against Tehran’s regime Saturday. The UAE is located across the Persian Gulf from Iran.

Read
Thursday, Mar. 5, 2026

Four beds reserved for people in meth-induced psychosis opened Wednesday at the province’s detox centre at 190 Disraeli Fwy. (Mikaela MacKenzie/Winnipeg Free Press)

Four beds reserved for people in meth-induced psychosis opened Wednesday at the province’s detox centre at 190 Disraeli Fwy. (Mikaela MacKenzie/Winnipeg Free Press)

Meth-psychosis beds open at 72-hour detox centre

By Gabrielle Piché 3 minute read Preview

Meth-psychosis beds open at 72-hour detox centre

By Gabrielle Piché 3 minute read Thursday, Mar. 5, 2026

WINNIPEG — Four beds reserved for people in meth-induced psychosis opened Wednesday at the province’s new 72-hour detox facility.

“We all see what goes on in our streets with meth,” Premier Wab Kinew said. “Well, today, we have a facility to be able to hold people until they’re not able to be a danger to other(s).”

The 20-bed facility at 190 Disraeli Fwy., which the province refers to as a protective-care centre, is operated by Main Street Project and fully operational.

The other 16 detox suites are for alcohol detentions and opened in December, which is when the province had hoped to have the entire facility operational.

Read
Thursday, Mar. 5, 2026

School division holds firm on religious exemption refusal

By Maggie Macintosh 4 minute read Thursday, Mar. 5, 2026

WINNIPEG — The Portage la Prairie School Division is upholding a decision to reject a family’s request for a religious exemption from activities related to Indigenous spirituality.

Sharon Sanders Zettler and Vince Zettler have spent the better part of the academic year seeking accommodations for their children at Yellowquill School.

“I have raised my kids in the Catholic faith from Day 1 and I am just looking for respect for that,” said Sanders Zettler, a mother of students enrolled in Grades 5 and 7 in Portage la Prairie.

Her husband echoed those comments while noting they are not interested in policing what other children learn.

Kathy Tran-Riese, owner of KayTran Eyewear, is working hard to repair her business’s relationship with its American customers. (Ruth Bonneville/Winnipeg Free Press)

Kathy Tran-Riese, owner of KayTran Eyewear, is working hard to repair her business’s relationship with its American customers. (Ruth Bonneville/Winnipeg Free Press)

Man. small businesses sour on U.S. trade: poll shows

By Malak Abas 4 minute read Preview

Man. small businesses sour on U.S. trade: poll shows

By Malak Abas 4 minute read Thursday, Mar. 5, 2026

WINNIPEG — When Kathy Tran-Riese’s eyeglass company was faced with a tough decision in the face of a trade war last May — eat the huge tariff cost, or pause shipments to the U.S. — she chose the latter, losing nearly half of her customer base in the process.

Nearly a year later, she has found a way to make it work. KayTran Eyewear opened a distribution centre in Ohio in September to receive the frames, which are made for people with low nose bridges and exported from China, directly into the U.S. But now, she’s navigating a new hurdle: trying to repair her business’s relationship with its American customers.

“From my perspective, I almost foolishly thought that as soon as it opened up, it would be opening up the floodgates in a way, customers that had been waiting to come back and waiting to return with us,” she said Wednesday.

“But once you lose that customer base for several months, a lot of them have gone elsewhere, a lot of them have lost touch with you.”

Read
Thursday, Mar. 5, 2026

Winnipeg man charged with threatening Carney, minorities

By Nicole Buffie 4 minute read Tuesday, Mar. 3, 2026

WINNIPEG — A Winnipeg man has been charged for making threats toward Prime Minister Mark Carney and inciting hate toward Muslim and Jewish communities, police say.

The RCMP federal policing division announced Monday it has charged Jason Paul Rindall, 55, with three counts of threats causing death or bodily harm after it launched an investigation into the remarks in January.

The RCMP’s security enforcement section in Manitoba says an account on X posted threats targeting Carney and the Jewish and Muslim communities, a Monday news release stated.

The charge carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison.

Protesters express their concerns over the U.S.-Israeli military strikes outside the U.S. Consulate on Portage Avenue on Sunday. (John Woods/Winnipeg Free Press)

Protesters express their concerns over the U.S.-Israeli military strikes outside the U.S. Consulate on Portage Avenue on Sunday. (John Woods/Winnipeg Free Press)

One protest condemns strikes on Iran, the other celebrates

By Chris Kitching 5 minute read Preview

One protest condemns strikes on Iran, the other celebrates

By Chris Kitching 5 minute read Monday, Mar. 2, 2026

WINNIPEG — The courtyard outside the U.S. consulate in downtown Winnipeg hosted contrasting demonstrations Sunday as Manitobans reacted to U.S.-Israeli military strikes against Iran’s regime and the latter’s retaliatory attacks.

Peace Alliance Winnipeg condemned the joint strikes, with supporters holding signs reading “No war on Iran” and “Ceasefire,” shortly before members of Winnipeg’s Iranian diaspora danced and waved flags while celebrating the death of Iran’s supreme leader and expressing hopes of “liberation.”

“All of us hope that soon the Islamic Republic of Iran will be overthrown, and we hope for the return of Pahlavi monarchy to Iran,” said Iranian Monarchists of Manitoba manager Shahla Shojaei, who moved to Canada from Iran in 2017.

“The reason that I came here (to Canada) was because there is no freedom in Iran. Human rights were suppressed.”

Read
Monday, Mar. 2, 2026

Advertisement

Advertise With Us

LOAD MORE LOCAL ARTICLES

Opinion

LOAD OPINION ARTICLES

Sports

LOAD SPORTS ARTICLES

Westman this Week

LOAD WESTMAN THIS WEEK ARTICLES