End Homelessness Winnipeg is getting an additional $27.3 million in federal funding to prevent and reduce homelessness.
Human remains found in the Prairie Green landfill near Winnipeg, Canada, have been identified as those of Morgan Beatrice Harris of Long Plain First Nation, one of at least four women linked to a serial killer who targeted Indigenous women, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police have confirmed.
Morgan Harris was one of the Indigenous women slain by Jeremy Skibicki, who is serving multiple life sentences after being convicted of four murders last year.
Chris Byrne, a retired member of the Canadian military, wanted to continue serving his country amid a looming trade war with the U.S. So he went to a busy intersection with a homemade sign imploring passing motorists to stay strong.
The sister of the man at the centre of one of Canada’s most high-profile wrongful conviction cases says she was “absolutely quite amazed” to learn last week that an independent commission being set up to examine similar cases across the country will be headquartered in her home city of Winnipeg.
The Canadian government is investing an additional $27.3 million to help support the homeless in Winnipeg. The funds are going to the group End Homelessness Winnipeg, which helps provide supports to those helping the city’s most vulnerable.
Police and the medical examiner are now investigating and seeking to identify the remains as those of Morgan Harris and Marcedes Myran.
At least one Winnipeg restaurant is making changes to its menu to avoid costly tariffs on some ingredients amid the trade war between the United States and Canada.
The search in Manitoba uncovered possible human remains from two victims of a serial killer, a devastating case that spotlighted an epidemic of violence against Indigenous women in Canada.
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The Winnipeg Wesmen will head to the men’s volleyball national championship already feeling like champions. The Wesmen authored what was perhaps their finest chapter in an already historic season