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Winnipegosis Boulevard Receiving Upgrades
 
The boulevard in Winnnipegosis will soon be getting more hydro coverage.
 
Kate Basford, Head of Council for the RM of Mossey River, says the north end of the boulevard doesn't have coverage right now - which she calls an "inconvenience".
 
Basford says the project to have the entire boulevard covered is currently up for tendering.
 
Basford says she wants the project to be completed by early July prior to the Winnipegosis Centennial Celebrations.
 
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Canadian Cities Flood Preparation Is Lacking 

Winnipeg has been ranked second in the country by a new University of Waterloo study on flood preparedness.

The study determined Ottawa was best prepared and gave the city an A-minus, followed by Winnipeg with a B-plus.

Calgary scored a B, Edmonton a C, and Regina got a C-minus.

Overall, the study says Canadian cities have done a poor job of preparing for floods.

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Classes Cancelled For Grieving Students

The northern Manitoba reserve where RCMP are investigating the homicide of an 11-year-old girl has cancelled classes for about 500 students.

A councillor from Garden Hill First Nation said they have closed both the elementary school and the high school on the reserve.

The councillor says the community is too busy dealing with tragedy and trauma of the situation and doesn't know when, or if, children will back in class this year.

Initially it was thought Teresa Robinson was the victim of a bear attack, but RCMP say although animals may have gotten to her body, she was the victim of a homicide.

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Mad Cow Case Could Be Solved Soon

Federal Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz says investigators are narrowing down how an Alberta cow was infected with BSE.

The beef breeding cow was discovered last winter on a farm near Edmonton and was born on a nearby farm.

A final report by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency is expected this summer.

Ritz says investigators are looking for other animals that also might have been infected and any feed supplies that might be the cause.

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Feed Mill Sorters Receive Funding

The owners of a Winnipeg feed mill will receive more than one million dollars from the federal and provincial governments to install two new infrared grain sorters that identify and remove undesirable grain kernels.

Manitoba Agriculture Ron Kostyshyn says the investment will creatre more value from Manitoba's grains and create new marketing opportunities.

He says the damage caused by fusarium and ergot can be a significant cost for Manitoba's farmers.

Standard Nutrition Canada will become the only company in the country using infrared grain-sorting technology.

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Canada Post Posts Profit

There has been a financial turnaround at Canada Post, which says it made $22-million in the first quarter of this year.

That compares with a loss of $37-million in the same time last year.

The Crown corporation says it handled 8.4 per cent fewer letters in the first quarter compared with the same time in 2014.

In an effort to save money, Canada Post is in the middle of a five-year drive to eliminate door-to-door mail delivery.

 

Transit Dispute In Winnipeg

The union representing bus drivers and mechanics in Winnipeg says
it wants a 10 per cent wage increase for drivers and 20 per cent for
mechanics in a three-year contract.

The city says it has offered eight per cent for drivers and
nearly nine per cent for mechanics in a four-year contract.

Amalgamated Transit Union president John Callahan says they are
not happy that the city went public with its offer.

He says it could be putting drivers at risk, noting there's
already been a video posted on Facebook showing a passenger yelling
at a bus driver and bringing up the transit dispute before storming
off the bus.
 
Gimli Viking Gets Some Repairs
 
A 4.5m tall statue of a Viking in Gimli,
Manitoba, has undergone $60000 worth of repairs.

It was built in 1967 and had begun to deteriorate in recent
years.

The Viking isn't the only thing in Gimli getting an update.

The Icelandic Festival has plans underway to turn the green space
surrounding the statue into Viking Park.
 
Federal Prostitution Fund Gets Lots Of Applicants
 
It appears the fund set up by the federal government to get sex
workers out of the trade has drawn a flood of applications.

In fact, Justice Minister Peter MacKay says the $20 million
fund is ``over-subscribed.''

The Harper government set up the program after the Supreme Court
of Canada struck down the country's prostitution laws in December of
2013.

MacKay says Ottawa will soon announce who receives money from the
fund. 
 
Oil Spill In California Getting Bigger
 
An oil slick west of Santa Barbara, California has grown to
26 sq. km

Officials say the slick is thinner than a coat of paint, and is
becoming harder to skim because the water is choppy.

Up to 400000 L of crude oil gushed from an underground
pipeline that ruptured last Tuesday.

About 20 per cent of the oil made it into the Pacific, where it's
now fouling beaches.
 
Gay Marriage Referendum In Ireland
 
Ireland will soon find out whether it's going to be the world's
first country to bring in same-sex marriage by a popular vote.

The ballots are being counted from yesterday's referendum, with
the results expected to be announced later today.

The campaign leading up to the vote saw an often-heated debate
between liberals who want social change and conservative Irish
Catholics opposed to same-sex marriage.

Nineteen other countries allow same-sex marriage, including
Canada where it's been legal for 10 years.
 
Dauphin Gets Finnish Visitors From Rotary Club Program
 
A couple visitors to Dauphin from Finland are touting the benefits of the Rotary Club's youth exchange program
 
Riikka and Ira Venalainen each traveled as students through the Rotary Club, with Riikka coming to Dauphin in 2006.
 
Riikka says it's the best thing she's ever done in her life.
 
The Venalainens co-hosted Nikki Grant's afternoon show at the CKDM studio yesterday. They are touring several countries from Brazil to Canada.
 
Correctional Facility Project Moving Forward
 
The CAO for the City of Dauphin says things are moving behind the scenes when it comes to the transfer of land in the industrial park for Dauphin's new correctional facility.
 
Brad Collett was speaking out on the status of the project at Monday's City Council Meeting.
 
He says the industrial park committee has met with Manitoba's senior capital projects person, and expects to transfer the land to the province in the coming weeks.
 
Collett says the province also expects to hire an architect for the project before the end of the year.
 
Just over 111 acres of land in the west part of the joint industrial park is being allocated to the Province of Manitoba for the correctional facility.
 
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MVSD Holds Off On Student Survey
 
A busy schedule in June has lead to the rescheduling of a survey and video project by the Mountain View School Division.
 
According to CEO Donna Davidson, the plan now is to tie in the survey and video to the student forums taking place this fall.
 
Davidson says the goal of the video and survey is to encourage student involvement with the Mountain View School Division.
 
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Financial Hardships For Mother Of Bus Beheading Victim

The mother of a young man who was beheaded on a Greyhound Bus in 2008 says fighting to keep the man who killed her son off the streets has put her family in financial hardship.

Vince Li was found not criminally responsible for killing Carol de Delley's son, Tim McLean, and ended up in a mental institution, though officials have announced he would be released to a high-security group home in Winnipeg.

De Delley has objected to that and told a rally two weeks ago that she's concerned about walking downtown with Li being free.

De Delley now says her fight to keep Li locked up has meant she missed out on income and career growth and incurred more debt.

Some members of her extended family have set up a GoFundMe page to help her make some money.

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Memorial Held For Slain Girl
 
More than 200 mourners attended a memorial service in Winnipeg for an 11-year-old girl whose partial remains were found on a northern Manitoba reserve.

At first officials on the Garden Hill First Nation thought Teresa Robinson had been the victim of a bear attack, but RCMP later determined her death was a homicide.

Last night, the Calvary Temple in Winnipeg was filled with gospel music and prayer as friends, relatives and aboriginal leaders remembered the young girl.

Perry Bellegarde, national chief of the Assembly of First Nations, told her family to always remember her, saying she had touched their hearts, minds, spirits and souls.

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Graham James Facing More Charges
 
Convicted pedophile and former junior hockey coach Graham James is facing more sex-related charges just weeks before his scheduled statutory release from prison.

Saskatchewan RCMP say James is facing criminal charges of repeated sexual assault that is alleged to have occurred when he was coaching the Swift Current Broncos of the Western Hockey League in the early 1990s.

The Mounties say they began an investigation after the detachment in Swift Current received a complaint from a former Broncos player in September 2013.

The case has been put over to June 19th and the judge has issued a publication ban on details that might identify the complainant.

James is currently serving out the final weeks of a sentence for sexually abusing retired NHL star Theoren Fleury and Fleury's younger cousin, Todd Holt, when they played for him with the WHL Moose Jaw Warriors.

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Thousands Evacuated Due To Alberta Wildfires

Wildfires have forced about two-thousand people from their homes in northern Alberta.

A state of emergency is in place in the Municipal District of Opportunity -- and so far, one-thousand residents from Wabasca and another thousand from the surrounding Bigstone Cree Nation have checked into reception centres.

Another blaze near Cold Lake caused Cenovus Energy and Canadian Natural Resources to pull two-thousand workers and shut down their oilsands operations on the weekend.

The closures have resulted in lost production of about 233,000 barrels of oil a day -- 10 per cent of Alberta's daily production of oilsands crude.

 
Burning Permits Cancelled Due To Current Conditions
 
Dry and windy conditions have led the province to cancel all burning permits in northwest Manitoba.
 
Manitoba Conservation and Water Stewardship yesterday cancelled all burning permits for the area north of Flin Flon and Sherridon south to Grand Rapids, west to the Saskatchewan border and east to Highway 6.
 
The province also says campfires are not allowed in Bakers Narrows, Wekusko Falls, Grass River, and Clearwater Lake provincial parks between 8am and 8pm.
 
114 wildfires have been reported in Manitoba this year, as of yesterday.
 
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New Rural Recycling Depot To Open Soon
 
The Reeve of Gilbert Plains says a new recycling depot for rural residents is hardly costing the municipality a thing, and the only way it doesn't work is if people don't use it.
 
The depot was brought up at last night's council meeting in Gilbert.
 
Blake Price says it's kind of an experiment.
 
"We're gonna see if it works and start it up, and hopefully everybody will buy into it and we can increase the volume of recycling". 
 
The recycling depot is at the old water treatment plant in town and is expected to open some time in June.
 
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Flea Beetles Causing Major Damage
 
Pest insect activity is becoming a concern for producers in some parts of the Parkland area.
 
According to Manitoba's latest weekly crop report, flea beetles are causing severe damage in the Swan Valley area where feeding is occurring, and plants are still recovering from frost damage.
 
Stephanie Jersak - farm production advisor with Manitoba Agriculture Food and Rural Development - says farmers should take steps to watch for the pesky bugs, including cutworms.
 
The crop report advises some post-emergent control measures might be necessary in some cases to limit the insect activity.
 
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Fire Destroys Churchill Metis Heritage Hall

A collection of artifacts was destroyed when the Metis Heritage Hall in Churchill burned to the ground.

The single-story hall was used for Cree language classes, public events and was especially busy during polar bear season.

Resident Joe Stover says the walls were full of memorabilia that had been collected by a local historian.

No injuries were reported.

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Canadian Cancer Diagnosis Expected To Rise

The Canadian Cancer Society says the total number of Canadians who will receive a new cancer diagnosis will rise by 40 per cent over the next 15 years.

The group's executive, Robert Nuttall, says the sharp jump will be because of the country's growing and aging population.

He says most cancers are diagnosed in people over 50, and the large baby boom generation is squarely in that demographic now.

The overall risk for individuals isn't expected to change, and survival rates have been increasing since 1988.

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WW2 Code Breaker Honored

An 88-year-old Calgary woman has been honored for her work as a code-breaker in the Second World War.

Marion Booth received the Bletchley Park Commemorative Badge yesterday in recognition of her ``vital, secret service'' as an employee of the British government's code and cypher school.

Booth joined the Women's Royal Canadian Naval Service in 1944, and months later, began intercepting Japanese radio messages.

Work done by Bletchley Park code-breakers was the subject of last year's Oscar-nominated movie ``The Imitation Game,'' about the cracking of German codes.

Booth later worked for the Canadian government gathering information from the Soviet Union.

Search Continues For Slain Girls Remains

Officials on a northern Manitoba reserve say the search is still on for more remains of an 11-year-old girl who was slain earlier this month.

A funeral was held yesterday for Teresa Robinson on the Garden Hill First Nation, 500 kilometres northeast of Winnipeg.

At first officials on the reserve thought she had been the victim of a bear attack, but RCMP later determined her death was a homicide.

The initial discovery of partial remains took place almost three weeks ago and since then hundreds have rallied to help her family find as much of her remains as possible.

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Red River Found To Have Zebra Mussels

Zebra mussels have been found in the Manitoba section of the Red River for the first time this year.

The invasive species was recently discovered on the underside of a dock near Selkirk Park.

Zebra mussels are already present in much larger quantities upstream in the south basin of Lake Winnipeg.

Conservation and Water Stewardship minister Tom Nevakshonoff says the province is now focusing on preventing the mussels from entering other waterways.

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Manitoba's Huge Dairy Numbers Expected To Rise
 
Milk and dairy products are being exported out of Manitoba at record rates.
 
Dairy Farmers of Manitoba chairman David Wiens says about 75,000 litres of milk are shipped outside of the province on a daily basis.
 
Wiens says market demands are the main reason for this, and those numbers are expected to continue going up as milk production numbers increase.
 
As more milk gets shipped outside of the province, Wiens says there will be increased transportation costs for Manitoba producers.
 
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Government Authorizes Tax Deferrals

The Government of Canada says tax deferrals have been authorized in the four western provinces for 2014 due to the impact of drought or excessive moisture conditions on forage production.

The tax deferral allows eligible producers to defer income tax on the sale of their breeding livestock for one year in order to help replenish that stock in the following year.

Proceeds from deferred sales are then included as part of the producer's income in the next tax year, when those proceeds may be at least partially offset by the cost of replacing their breeding animals.

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Canadians And Americans Participate In Arctic Exercises

Canadian and American fighter jets are flying over the Arctic to practice intercepting foreign aircraft.

The exercises come as Russian military aircraft approach the edges of North American airspace -- something that was relatively common during the Cold War.

Officials say Russia is doing it to show it remains a global power.

The Canadian-American exercise involves 15 aircraft flying out of bases in Nunavut, the Northwest Territories and Alaska.

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Major League Baseball Coming Back To Montreal?

``Extremely positive'' is how Montreal Mayor Denis Coderre described his meeting in New York with the commissioner of Major League Baseball.

Coderre says Rob Manfred is open to the idea of Montreal hosting three or four regular season games next year.

It's part of Coderre's bid to have a major league franchise back in his city through either expansion or the relocation of an existing team.

The Expos were in Montreal for 35 years until 2004, when they moved to Washington and became the Nationals.

Missing Dauphin Girl Located

A Dauphin girl reported missing yesterday has now been located.
 
Gina Marie Ranville was reported missing yesterday after having not been seen in over a week.
 
RCMP are thanking the public and media for their assistance in the search.
 
Former Deputy Education Minister Charged
 
A man who once was deputy education minister in Manitoba has been
sentenced to three years behind bars after pleading guilty to three
child pornography-related charges.

In her decision, the judge said 63-year-old Benjamin Levin, a
father of three, appeared to have it all but had a hidden dark side.

Levin was also Ontario deputy minister of education and a former
professor at University of Toronto.

He was caught by undercover officers who went online and posed as
women interested in sexual activities with children.
 
Chip And Dirt Day Today
 
Today is Chip and Dirt Day in the City of Dauphin.

Residents are invited to bring down some pales to the Ag Barns behind the Rotary Arena to help themselves to wood chips and one free five gallon bucket of soil.

City Councillor Patti Eilers says rain or shine, staff will be on-site to help residents with their soil and wood chip needs.

Chip and Dirt day kicks off at 9am, and runs until 12 noon time.

Plants and perennials will also be for sale.

Winnipeg Police Discontinues Horse Patrol

There's be no more horsing around in the Winnipeg police
department.

They've disbanded their mounted patrol unit, in which two
officers on horses have been patrolling streets since 1998. The unit
was a fixture at parades, community gatherings and festivals.

Police Chief Devon Clunis says the decision was made earlier this
year.

He said at a time of tough fiscal restraints, they felt it was
the best move in terms of the utilization of resources.
 
Peter MacKay Calls It Quits
 
Justice Minister Peter MacKay says he won't run in the fall
election because he wants to spend more time with his young and
growing family.

MacKay and his wife have a two-year-old son and are expecting a
daughter.

The veteran MP and cabinet minister says he'll stay on as
justice minister until the election, then look for work in the
private sector.

And while he also appears to be leaving the door open for a
possible political comeback, he says that's not in his immediate or
long-term plans.
 
Bill C-51 Protests Today
 
Protests against the Harper government's anti-terror legislation
will be held in several places across the country today.

Critics say Bill C-51 would give too much power to security
agencies.

The bill is now before the Senate after it was passed by the
Commons earlier this month.

Harper Honors VE-Day In The Netherlands

Prime Minister Harper paid tribute to Canada's war dead at a service in the Netherlands this morning to mark the 70th anniversary of the end of the Second World War in Europe.

He was joined by a few dozen surviving veterans of the battles to liberate northwest Europe,

 
This Year's Roads Projects Were An Easy Choice
 
More than $900,000 is budgeted for road reconstruction in the City of Dauphin this year.
 
$485,000 is set for 7th Avenue Northeast, $251,000 is for 2nd Avenue Northeast, and $170,000 is for 4th Avenue Northeast.
 
Mayor Eric Irwin says it was pretty easy to prioritize this year's road construction projects.
 
"They're all broken up now. People are driving on gravel. We want to put the asphalt down, so that was easy. The other project that's in that list is Veteran's Drive. It needs (to be) redone. We're going to redo it, but we're doing the storm drains this year first. We're doing some of that work to get ready for completely redoing the street next year."
 
The 2015 financial plan passed a reading by council on Monday and is expected to be approved again next Monday.
 
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Pine Creek Fisher Handed Sentence For Spoiled Fish
 
A commercial fisher from Pine Creek First Nation is down four nets and will have to pay a fine after being sentenced under the federal Fisheries Act.
 
Jessie Lamirande pleaded guilty in Dauphin court yesterday to contravening regulation 36(1)(C) of the act: leaving decayed or decaying fish in any net or other fishing apparatus.
 
Court heard from the Crown attorney that Manitoba Conservation officers found the nets at South Camping Island on Lake Winnipegosis on January 27 and, after removing one initially, checked on the remaining nets again February 13.
 
Court heard the commercial nets had been unchecked for a significant time and $350 worth of fish was spoiled.
 
Defense lawyer Matthew Sinclair told court Lamirande was grieving at the time.
 
Lamirande was ordered to forfeit the nets and pay a fine of $350.
 
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Thief Given 60 Day Sentence
 
A woman living in Ebb and Flow has been given a 60 day conditional sentence for stealing from two different businesses, one of them twice, for the same product.
 
Leona Lacquette pleaded guilty to one charge that included three thefts under $5,000 in Dauphin provincial court yesterday.
 
Court heard she had taken part in stealing bottles of whiskey from the Dauphin liquor store on June 21 last year. 
 
Court also heard Lacquette helped steal a coffee maker from Neepawa's Tim Horton's on two separate occasions last year.
 
Eugene Moore, a co-accused in each of these cases, pleaded guilty to a total of seven different thefts under $5,000 in court yesterday. He will be sentenced at a later date.
 
Lacquette was given 60 days house arrest followed by one year of probation, and must pay restitution.
 
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HERO Club Supports Mental Health Week
 
The Dauphin HERO Club is doing its share in support of this years Canadian Mental Health Week.
 
On-top of their weekly craft projects, the local mental health support organization will also be handing out pamphlets to educate people on the importance of mental health, as well as starting up their summer hot-dog cart.
 
Nancy Guley - president of the Dauphin HERO Club - says mental health week is an important tool to help reduce the negative stigma surrounding mental health in a community.
 
Guley says the HERO Club is also accepting donations for an upcoming garage sale, which is happening the Friday of the upcoming long-weekend.
 
People can also support the club by purchasing one of their client made bat-houses.
 
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Change Is In The Winds...

Alberta politics begins a new era today as the New Democrats under leader Rachel Notley take over the government.

The NDP swept to a majority government in last night's election, taking 53 of Alberta's 87 ridings, including all 19 constituencies in Edmonton and made significant gains in Calgary and rural Alberta.

The Wildrose party took second place and will form the official Opposition, while Jim Prentice and his battered Tories had to settle for third and he announced his immediate resignation as party leader and will also quit as an MLA.

The Tories had been in power in Alberta since 1971.

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Feds Temporarily Block Khadr's Bail

Omar Khadr will have to wait until Thursday to find out if Alberta's Court of Appeal will let him out on bail.

A lower court ruled last month the 28-year-old Canadian and former Guantanamo Bay inmate should be released on bail while he appeals war-crimes convictions in the US.

However, the federal government went to court yesterday to block that release, arguing Khadr must serve out his sentence or Canada risks harm to its international standing on prisoner transfers.

Khadr has been in custody for 13 years.

Khadr Bail Decision Comes Down Today

Omar Khadr will find out today if he'll be released on bail from Alberta's Bowden Institution.

Alberta's highest court will either support a lower-court decision granting the former Guantanamo Bay inmate bail while he appeals his war-crimes conviction in the US, or overturn the ruling.

The federal government argues Khadr should remain in custody.

If the 28-year-old is granted bail, his freedom would come with many restrictions.

He would have to live with his lawyer in Edmonton, wear an electronic monitoring device, observe a nightly curfew, may only contact relatives by phone or video under supervision and chat only in English.

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41 Suspects Nabbed In Global Child Porn Sting

A child pornography investigation that began in southern Ontario has netted 41 suspects, including 17 in Canada, as part of a global police operation.

York Region police say they were notified by the Ottawa-based National Child Exploitation Co-ordination Centre a year ago that child porn images had been uploaded from a home in the area.

Investigators learned a young person had been a victim of child exploitation and was coerced into providing self exploited images to people online.

That finding triggered a larger operation dubbed Project Hydra, with thousands of potential victims around the world.

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Tornadoes Rip Through US

Forecasters say two tornadoes appear to have touched down in the Oklahoma City area.

The first storm hit yesterday afternoon, destroying dozens of homes.

And last night, another severe storm that forecasters believe was a tornado grazed the south side of Oklahoma City, bringing down power lines and flipping over cars.

At least 12 people from a trailer park were injured and at least 35 homes destroyed.

At least nine tornadoes also blew through Kansas and one in rural Nebraska.

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Selinger Speaks On Alberta Election

Manitoba's premier is cautioning about reading too much into the success of the Alberta New Democrats in this week's provincial election.

Greg Selinger says every province is different and has different issues, though he says right now everybody is focusing on the economy.

But Selinger does says the victory over the Tories, who had held power in Alberta for 44 years, is bound to help the NDP brand by showing the party can represent a wider range of the population than many people might think.

Selinger says the Alberta result, especially the NDP's rise in popularity in a matter of weeks, shows a lot can change during an election campaign.

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Safe Work Manitoba Celebrates NOASH
 
Making safety a habit is the theme of this years North American Occupational Health and Safety Week.
 
Safe Work Manitoba is using the week to encourage workers and workplaces to develop a culture where safety is taught from the very beginning.
 
Jamie Hall - the COO with Safe Work Manitoba - says with NOASH, they want to ingrain the principle of making safety a habit in the way you work.
 
Later today, Safe Work Manitoba will be handing out awards to recognize workers and employers whose workplace safety record has stood out over the past year.

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Deflategate

NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell says the league will continue its efforts to protect the integrity of the game.

His comments come after a league investigation that concluded it was likely that employees of the New England Patriots deflated footballs used in the AFC championship game.

The report includes text messages between two team employees, indicating that quarterback Tom Brady had asked that the balls be deflated below the regulation level.

Brady has said he never made that request.

 

Bus Beheading Culprit Moved To Group Home

The man who beheaded a fellow passenger on a Greyhound bus in
Manitoba has been approved to move from a mental hospital to a group
home in Winnipeg.

Vince Li killed Tim McLean during the bus trip on the TransCanada
Highway near Portage La Prairie in July 2008. He was later found to
be not criminally responsible for the murder due to untreated
schizophrenia.

McLean's mother, Carol de Delley, says she will attend a rally
this afternoon at the legislature, saying she's been warning people
about the danger of having Li living among the public.

Doctors, however, say Li is responding well to treatment and is a
low risk to reoffend. They say the group home will have 24-hour
supervision and people who will dispense Li's medication. 
 
Lake St. Martin Flood Evacuees Protest
 
Four years ago, flood waters forced people to leave their homes
in Lake St. Martin First Nation and most of the evacuees are still
displaced.

Yesterday, about 100 of the evacuees walked in protest throughout
downtown Winnipeg, saying they just want to go home and can't
understand why it's taking so long for that to happen.

They walked about 8 km from the Lake St. Martin band
office in Winnipeg, then stopped at the Aboriginal Affairs and
Northern Development office, before ending up on the steps of the
Manitoba legislature.

Some held signs reading; ``We Want To Go Home.''
 
Triple Murder Suicide Investigation In BC
 
RCMP in BC's Fraser Valley are investigating a suspected
triple murder-suicide.

In a Facebook posting, Randy Janzen appears to confess to killing
his wife, 19-year-old daughter Emily, and his sister.

The posting says he did it to end his daughter's suffering from
migraines.

Mounties are at two crimes scenes -- a burned-out house in
Chilliwack, and a home in Langley.

They say they believe the dead are all from one family, and that
the suspect is among them.
 
Terrorism Concerns For CSIS
 
Canada's spy agency is waving a warning flag about the risk of
Canadians becoming radicalized into extremism.

The Canadian Security Intelligence Service says it's a
significant concern.

CSIS says Canadians who become radicalized and go abroad to
fight with extremists could become serious threats if they return
home hardened by battle. 
 
Duffy Trial On Hiatus
 
There's a three-week break in the Ottawa trial of Mike Duffy --
testimony is due to resume June 1st.

The suspended senator is charged with 31 counts of fraud,
bribery, and breach of trust.

The crux of the Crown's case is that Duffy used public money to
cover the costs of attending personal and partisan events that were
irrelevant to his work as a senator.
 
Typhoon Set To Hit Philippines
 
Hundreds of people have been evacuated in the northern
Philippines because of an approaching typhoon.

The storm has winds of up to 195 km/h -- the
equivalent of a Category-Three hurricane.

Many Filipinos still have grim memories of a typhoon that
devastated the central part of their country in November of 2013,
killing more than 6000.