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Spring Clean-Up Rolls On

Yesterday's snowfall isn't expected to have much of an impact on the City of Dauphin's spring clean-up campaign.
 
Before the snow fell Monday, the City was able to clean up Whitmore, Mountain, Jackson, 1st Avenue North East, Main Street and in front of the hospital.
 
City of Dauphin Public Works Director Bill Brenner says once the road and boulevard clean-ups are finished, it's on to construction season.
 
Brenner says the City is finalizing the 2015 budget right now, and once that's finished up they'll be able figure out which projects they'd like to tackle this year.
 
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New Responsibilities For MVSD Member 
 
One of the board of trustee members from the Mountain View School Division has some new responsibilities.
 
Della Perih was elected as the Region 1 Director for the Manitoba School Board Association.
 
MVSD CEO Donna Davidson says the board is happy to have Perih as a voice on the provincial organization.
 
Region 1 covers all the school boards in the Southwestern corner of the province, from Swan River down to the US border.
 
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Province To Review School Ski-Safety Manual
 
The Manitoba School Boards Association says the ski safety manual being used by school divisions in the province is being reviewed after three serious incidents in the last six weeks.

A 13-year-old girl died after crashing into a post, a boy broke his leg on a previous school trip, and last week an 11-year-old boy fell four and a half metres from a chair lift, suffering broken bones, dislocated limbs and a concussion.

According to numbers from the Manitoba School Boards Association, 132 students have been seriously injured on school ski trips in the last seven years.

Keith Thomas, risk manager for the association, says they will bring together staff from the two ski resorts involved and education officials to look at what might need to be changed in the safety manual.

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PM Introduces Manitoba's New LG

Prime Minister Stephen Harper has announced the appointment of Janice Filmon as Manitoba's new lieutenant-governor.

Filmon is a social worker, motivational speaker and volunteer known for her charitable work.

She is also the wife of former premier Gary Filmon.

Filmon was awarded the Order of Canada in 2013 and named an officer of the Order of Manitoba in 2007.

She succeeds Philip Lee, who has filled the role since 2009.

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Harper To Expand Canada-Iraq Combat Mission

Prime Minister Harper will present a motion in the Commons this morning that seeks to expand and extend Canada's military mission against the Islamic State group in Iraq.

The motion will seek Parliament's permission to expand airstrikes against targets in Syria -- and to extend the entire mission by a year, to March 30th, 2016.

The NDP has already said it won't support the motion, while the Liberals are expected to discuss the mission during caucus meetings this week.

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Survivors Unlikely After Plane Crashes Into French Alps

French President Francois Hollande says there are likely "no survivors'' in this morning's Alpine crash of an Airbus passenger jet carrying 148 people.

French officials say the Germanwings jet crashed in the French Alps region as it travelled from Barcelona, Spain to Dusseldorf, Germany.

Search-and-rescue teams are headed to the crash site.

Parkland Doctors Needed!

Prairie Mountain Health is looking at bringing in doctors from neighbouring communities to fill a physician gap in Winnipegosis.

The village's doctor is leaving in mid-April.

Michelle McKay, Director of Medical Services Administration with Prairie Mountain Health, says they can't really ask the Dauphin clinic for help right now because Dauphin has less physicians than it would like.

McKay says they're hopeful, if Dauphin can recruit some new physicians, they will provide some services in Winnipegosis.

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Spring Drop-Off Ends Today

Today is the last day to drop-off materials for the RM of Dauphin's Ag plastic recycling program.

Producers can still pick up bags for recycling at Brendonn Holdings and at Sammy's Farm Supplies.

Collected materials are to be dropped of at Sammy's.

If farmers can't make it for the spring drop-off, the RM will be running the program again this fall in October. 

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Can Manitoba Feed The World?

The owner of Canadian Prairie Garden Purees believes Manitoba can play a big role in feeding the world's growing population.

Kelly Beaulieu says other food producing regions, such as California, are struggling with issues such as drought, lack of energy and contamination.

She says Manitoba is not dealing with any of those issues, and has good cropping ability, irrigated land and the right growing conditions.

She says innovations in technology, such as the aseptic puree process currently used by her company, can help alleviate the problem of food wastage.

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Doomed Flight Brought Down By Co-Pilot

A troubling report has emerged on Andreas Lubitz, the co-pilot blamed for Tuesday's jetliner crash that killed 150 people in the French Alps.

A German tabloid says Lubitz had a ``serious depressive episode'' six years ago, and that a medical problem was noted in aviation records.

French officials believe he locked himself in the cockpit and smashed the Germanwings jetliner into a mountain.

Investigators say they've found ``no crucial piece of evidence'' after they searched Lubitz's houses in Duesseldorf and near Frankfurt.

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Numerous Injured In Manhattan Building Fire

A natural gas leak is suspected of causing a fiery explosion that led to the collapse of an apartment building in New York City.

Of the 19 people injured, four remain in critical condition.

Another building suffered major damage.

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Oil Goes Up Again

The price of oil has risen 12 per cent so far this week.

It rose another $2.22 yesterday to close at $51.43 US a barrel.

Traders say unrest in Yemen is fuelling speculation the flow of oil from the Persian Gulf region could be disrupted.

ISIL Combat Mission Extended

Canadian jets could soon be launching airstrikes in Syria now that MP's have approved a plan to expand and extend the military mission against ISIL in Iraq.

They last night voted in favour of extending the mission for up to a year and authorizing bombing runs against ISIL targets in Syria.

Neither the NDP nor the Liberals supported the original mission, nor its extension.

The New Democrats tried last night to amend the motion to remove Canadians from combat and refocus all government efforts on humanitarian work, but their amendments failed to pass.

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Grain Transportation Review

A transportation analyst is hopeful about news Ottawa is not renewing minimum weekly grain transportation volumes for railways.

Walter Spracklin of RBC Capital Markets says the move suggests the government doesn't believe the minimum requirements are an effective way to promote fluidity within the grain supply chain.

Canada's two biggest railways moved more than 50 million tonnes of grain last year, exceeding the minimum volume requirement by 5.5 million tonnes.

Saskatchewan Agriculture Minister Lyle Stewart says the federal government's decision is reasonable.

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Halifax Crash Landing Reviewed By TSB

The Transportation Safety Board says the type of hard landing that happened Sunday at Halifax's airport is something it's been watching for a long time.

The agency's Mike Cunningham calls it a ``runway excursion'' and says the board will investigate why the Air Canada flight from Toronto landed so short of the Halifax runway.

He notes the agency has long called for Canadian airports to make approaches and landings safer.

All 138 people who suffered through Sunday's crash landing survived, but 25 were injured.

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Convicted Rapist On Parole During Attack

Court has been told that a convicted Winnipeg rapist was still on parole when he randomly attacked another young woman whose pleas for help were recorded in a 911 call.

Christopher Assiniboine, who is 32, is being sentenced after being found guilty by a jury last year of sexual assault and uttering threats for the July 2011 attack on Balmoral Street.

Assiniboine has 36 prior criminal convictions, including the September 2009 rape of a 14-year-old girl he randomly attacked on the street.

Crown and defence lawyers have agreed that Assiniboine should be branded a long-term offender and placed on 10 years of community supervision upon his release from prison.

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German Co-Pilot Had Suicidal Tendencies

Authorities probing last Tuesday's deadly crash of the Germanwings Airbus in the French Alps say they've so far identified 78 sets of DNA from the remains.

Meanwhile, prosecutors in Duesseldorf, Germany say co-pilot Andreas Lubitz had lengthy psychotherapy before getting his pilot's license.

They say his medical records referred to ``suicidal tendencies.''

Lubitz is accused of locking the pilot out of the cockpit and intentionally crashing the plane, killing himself and all 149 others on board.

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Manitoba Berry Has Cash Crop Potential

It could be berry good news for northern Manitoba.

Although it's not yet a harvested cash crop in Manitoba, researchers have discovered lingonberries grown in the province are healthier than in most other places.

That could lead to a commercial future for potential growers of what researchers are calling a super-berry.

Chris Siow, a research scientist at St. Boniface Hospital Research Centre, says he's never seen a fruit that has such high antioxidant levels.

Violence Breaks Out On Fairford First Nation

Three males are in custody following a violent afternoon yesterday on the Fairford First Nation.

RCMP responded to a report of a bear macing at a home shortly after noon time, and as they were responding another call came in reporting a shooting had happened at the same location.

A 34-year-old male suffered a lower body gunshot wound, and was treated and released from hospital, while another man was shot at but uninjured.

A 21-year-old male was sprayed with bear mace.

Shortly after 2pm, three males from the Fairford First Nation - ages 16, 18, and 25 - were apprehended by police.

Charges are pending, and the three remain in custody while RCMP investigate.

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Supporters Rally For Bus Beheading Victim

The executive director of the Manitoba Schizophrenia Society says a rally by the group Justice for Tim McLean only creates fear.

Chris Summerville says the rally won't inform the audience about the science schizophrenia, or what is known about people who suffer from the illness getting better.

Carol de Delley, McLean's mother, spoke out against the Criminal Code Review Board decision to allow her son's killer to move to a group home.

About 50 people joined the rally at the Manitoba Legislature yesterday afternoon.

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Hospital Inquiry Begins Tomorrow

An inquest set to begin tomorrow in Winnipeg will look at hospital policies on the nighttime discharging of elderly or frail patients who live alone.

Manitoba's chief medical examiner called the inquest following the death of a 68-year-old woman, who died from a blood clot in her lungs hours after she was discharged from hospital.

She collapsed on her doorstep in January of 2012.

Months later, two other patients from a different hospital died before getting inside their doors after being sent home in a taxi.

The health authority updated its discharge guidelines, but family members of those involved say little has changed.

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Alberta's New Premier Feels Her Age

Alberta's premier-designate Rachel Notley joked that she suddenly felt old when surrounded by her caucus for the first time yesterday.

Notley noted the median age of the caucus is under 40, matching the demographic of Alberta.

The youngest is Thomas Dang, at 20.

There is no date set yet to swear in Notley as premier as elections officials are still verifying ballots from Tuesday's election.

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Mississippi Manhunt

After a statewide manhunt, police in Hattiesburg, Mississippi have arrested three people in the deaths of two officers who were shot and killed in what began as a routine traffic stop.

A spokesman for the Mississippi Department of Public Safety says 29-year-old Marvin Banks and 22-year-old Joanie Calloway have each been charged with two counts of capital murder.

Banks' 26-year-old brother Curtis has been charged with two counts of accessory after the fact of capital murder.

Marvin Banks also faces additional charges.

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Mother's Day

Today is Mother's Day -- so if you haven't done it yet, there's still time to run to the florist or the card store to pick up something for your mom.

Celebrities are also scrambling to get something for their moms -- country singer Tim McGraw says he lets his three teenage daughters do most of the work when it comes to wife Faith Hill, but making her breakfast in bed is the fallback.

Singer Josh Groban says he goes to visit his mom, arriving with flowers and taking her out to dinner.

CEO Explains Manitoba Saltwater Spill

The CEO of Tundra Oil and Gas says the company's first concern about a saltwater spill in southwestern Manitoba last week was that it was near a creek that eventually flows into the Assiniboine River.

Ken Neufeld says the spill of between 250-500,000 litres was contained immediately to a small area.

It happened last Monday about 30 kilometres southwest of Virden on private farmland.

The leak occurred in a water injection line, although the exact cause isn't yet known.

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Hospital Policy Inquest Begins Today

An inquest begins today into a Manitoba woman's death after she was sent home from hospital in a taxi.

Heather Brenan died in January 2012 after she collapsed on her doorstep.

Her daughter, Dana, says her mother spent four days in the ER and was sent home in the middle of the night without her house keys.

Brenan says she wants to make sure there is a standard discharge policy that is followed so vulnerable people aren't sent home alone at night.

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Morden Research Station To Celebrate Anniversary

Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada's Morden Research Station in Manitoba will be celebrating its 100-year anniversary this summer.

Manitoba Pulse and Soybean Growers executive director Francois Labelle says the Morden Research Station has been a big contributor to the expansion of pulse crops in Manitoba.

Over the years, he says the station has helped in identifying disease problems in peas as well as edible beans.

Labelle says they've also helped introduce pea varieties.

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US Vet Concerned With Khadr's Release

A retired U-S special forces soldier is concerned about an Alberta judge's decision to allow former Guantanamo Bay inmate Omar Khadr out on bail.

Layne Morris calls the 28-year-old Toronto native a dangerous terrorist who poses a safety threat.

Khadr was convicted of throwing a grenade that killed a US Army medic during a firefight in Afghanistan in 2002.

He was granted bail last week while he appeals his war-crimes conviction.

Morris was wounded in that same skirmish, and says Khadr has demonstrated a willingness and a capability to do great harm to Western interests.

Khadr has said he has no interest in extremist violence, and is looking for a fresh start and a career in health care.

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Cattle Deal With Turkey

Canada has secured an agreement to open market access for Canadian breeding cattle to Turkey.

Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz's office says Ritz reached the deal while in Istanbul during a meeting with Turkey's Agriculture Minister.

The deal is estimated to be worth $4.5 million annually.

Ritz was in Turkey last week to participate in the G20 Ministerial Agricultural Meeting.

The 20 members adopted a joint communique that supports information sharing on agricultural technologies and markets.

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CN Reveals Infrastructure Plans

CN is revealing more details about how it plans to spend $2.7 billion in promised rail infrastructure.

CEO Claude Mongeau said last week that CN is planning to spend approximately $1.4 billion on track infrastructure, which he says will include the replacement of rail, ties and other track materials, bridge improvements, as well as various branch-line upgrades.

He says safety investments this year will include additional fault detection systems such as wayside inspection system technology, hot wheel detectors, and wheel impact load detectors.

Mongeau says CN also expects to take delivery of 90 new high-horsepower locomotives and will invest in new rolling stock and freight car refurbishments.


DFD Total Incidents Down So Far In 2015

Total incidents in the first quarter of 2015 for the Dauphin Fire Department were down from the same time last year.

Fire Chief Cam Abrey presented the numbers at last nights City Council meeting.

Abrey says the only incident that saw an increase in calls in the first three months of this year has been those kitchen fires.

Overall, the DFD responded to 47 incidents between January and March - 42 city, 4 rural, and one mutual aid.

Last year, they responded to a total of 59 incidents.

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MVSD Names New Assistant Superintendent
 
The Assistant Superintendent position with Mountain View School Division has finally been filled.
 
Dan Ward joins MVSD after having spent the past three years working with Manitoba Education as Lead Liaison Officer for Funded Independent Schools.
 
CEO Donna Davidson says the school board is looking forward to working with Ward.
 
Ward begins his term with MVSD on July 1.
 
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Rally Did More Harm Than Good

The Manitoba Schizophrenia Society says a rally on the weekend to protest the move of Vince Li to a group home may have caused more harm than good.

Spokesman Chris Summerville says the rally served only to present a caricature of a supposed monster who Summerville says is one of the nicest people he's ever met.

A few dozen people turned out to protest the move out of the Selkirk Mental Health Centre by Li, who was found not criminally responsible for beheading Tim McLean on a Greyhound bus in 2008.

McLean's mother, Carol de Delley, said at the rally that she's concerned about walking downtown with Li being free, adding there are many more people like him out there.

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Missing Girl's Body Found

The body of an 11-year-old girl who was missing for nearly a week has been found on the Garden Hill First Nation in northeastern Manitoba.

David Harper, grand chief of the MKO, says it appears Teresa Robinson was mauled to death by an animal.

She had last been seen leaving a birthday party on May 5th. Harper said while there are wild dogs in the community, residents he's talked to believe a black bear is probably to blame.

First Nations leaders from nearby communities have already made their way to Garden Hill to offer support.

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Another Earthquake Hits Nepal

At least four people have been killed in another major earthquake in Nepal, less than three weeks after a temblor that killed more than 8,100 people.

The latest, a magnitude-7.3 quake, hit a remote region near the Chinese border.

A spokesman with the International Organization for Migration says several buildings collapsed in an isolated town that's now a hub for humanitarian aid since the April quake.

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Zimmerman Gets In More Trouble

More troubles for George Zimmerman, the Florida neighbourhood watch volunteer acquitted in the death of black teen Trayvon Martin.

His lawyer says a bullet just missed Zimmerman's head yesterday during a dispute with a man he got into a road-rage incident with last year.

No charges have been filed against either man in Lake Mary, Florida.

Since being found not guilty in Martin's death, Zimmerman has had run-ins with an ex-wife, girlfriends and random strangers.

Missing Man From The Pas Found

An elderly man from The Pas who was believed to be missing is safe and sound.
 
A family member says 80-year-old Lucien Spence is away with no phone and Internet, and had not contacted anyone.
 
Apparently a neighbour told Spence he was on the news, which led him to contact family.
 
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More Local Programming Coming To Westman
 
Westman Communications says they are getting very close to getting more local Dauphin programming on the air full time.
 
Several people attended a meeting last night at their Dauphin studio and got an overview of their production equipment including cameras and editing software.
 
Craig Ratz from Westman says there is still no exact timetable for when the Dauphin community channel will resume full time operations.
 
Ratz says they're hopeful for more local programming over the next few months as volunteers get more familiar with their equipment.
 
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Province Warning About Flea Beetles And Cutworms

The province is warning that some insects are becoming active in the Northwest Part of Manitoba.

According to the provinces weekly crop report, flea beetles have been spotted in the Swan River Valley where feeding is occuring on volunteer canola seedlings.

Stephanie Jersak, farm production advisor with Manitoba Agriculture Food and Rural Development, says because of the dry conditions, producers should also be on the lookout for cutworms.

Jersak says if you notice plants missing or patches on a field, it wouldn't hurt to get there to scout around for cutworm activity.

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Reserve State Of Emergency Lifted

A state of emergency has been lifted at the Shoal Lake 40 First Nation in northwestern Ontario.

The emergency was declared two weeks ago when the ferry connecting the reserve to the outside world failed to pass inspection.

It was lifted when the ferry was repaired.

The reserve, which straddles the Ontario-Manitoba boundary, has been under a boil-water advisory for the past 17 years.

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WW1 Soldiers Buried

Eight Canadian soldiers who fought in the First World War have been laid to rest with full military honours in a British cemetery in Caix, France.

The remains of the eight members of the Winnipeg Grenadiers were found in Hallu, France in 2006 and 2007.

Only five have been identified.

The eight were killed in battle on August 11th, 1918 -- exactly three months before the war ended.

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Canadian Killed In Amtrak Crash

A Canadian is among the seven people killed in Tuesday's crash of an Amtrak train in Philadelphia.

Abid Galani, a 55-year-old married father of two, was an executive with Wells Fargo, a major U-S financial services company.

The company says Galani split his time between New York and Washington.

His wife, Diane, says her husband was a ``very kind person,'' and a ``kind family man'' who will be ``sorely missed.''

She says they moved from Canada to the U-S several years ago, and still have relatives in Ontario.

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Fourteen Killed In Afghan Attack

Afghan officials say the death toll has risen to 14 in the capital of Kabul, where Taliban gunmen stormed a hotel.

They say the dead include nine foreigners and five Afghans.

Although a full breakdown of the foreigners' nationalities is not known, one was American and four were citizens of India.

Reports say the gunfire broke out at a party to honour a Canadian visitor.

The Canadian embassy in Kabul says all its staffers are ``safe and accounted for.''

 

Parkland Doing Better Than Rest Of Province For Ticks

Some black-legged ticks have been found in the Parkland this year, but we're doing better than other parts of Manitoba.
 
Black-legged ticks, or deer ticks, can transmit lyme disease.
 
Dr. Richard Rusk, medical lead for communicable diseases with Manitoba Health, says they have found that deer ticks are spreading across southern Manitoba.
 
Dr. Rusk says there have been a few black-legged ticks found in the Parkland, but they haven't found any established populations like they have in the Morden, Winkler, and Pembina Valley area.
 
Harper Speaking Highly Of His Government Record
 
Prime Minister Harper touted his government's record during a
campaign-style speech last night in Truro, Nova Scotia.

Speaking in a packed high school gym, Harper pointed to free
trade deals his government signed with Europe and South Korea.

He also said the infrastructure program helped Canada survive the
global recession of 2008.

Harper also said the Liberals and NDP would bring higher debt,
higher taxes, and cuts to programs.
 
Sens Owner Melnyk Needs Liver Transplant
 
Ottawa Senators owner Eugene Melnyk is in critical condition and
urgently needs a liver transplant.

The NHL club is making a public plea for someone who is willing
to donate part of their liver so it can be given to Melnyk.

Doctors say a living donor is the best option because Melnyk has
a rare AB blood type.

Although organ donation after death would require the same blood
type, a live donor transplant does not require matching blood types.
 
US Bird Flu Outbreak Hits South Dakota
 
An eastern South Dakota farm with more than a million egg-laying
chickens is the first in the chicken-production business in the
state to be infected with a deadly flu virus despite efforts to
prevent it.

Flandreau-based Dakota Layers noticed an unusual number of dead
birds in one of its nine barns this week.

A South Dakota State University lab confirmed the presence of the
highly pathogenic H5 avian influenza virus. Officials haven't yet
confirmed whether it was the H5N2 strain.

If so, then the virus will have led to the deaths of more than 33
million chickens and turkeys in the Midwest, primarily at farms in
neighbouring Minnesota and Iowa
 
Amtrak Crash Investigators Want To Talk With Driver
 
Investigators probing Tuesday's Amtrak crash in Philadelphia have
found no problem with the tracks, signals, and locomotive.

They want to ask the driver, Brandon Bostian, why the train
accelerated as it approached the curve where it left the rails.

Bostian's lawyer says the accident left his client with a
concussion, and he has no memory of the crash that killed eight
people.

Bostian is due to be interviewed by investigators over the next
few days.
 
BB Kings Passes Away
 
BB King, whose name is synonymous with the blues, has died at
his home in Las Vegas at the age of 89.

King's biggest crossover hit was in 1969 with ``The Thrill is
Gone,'' which was also a hit on the pop and R&B charts.

Although he continued to perform into his 80s, he had diabetes
and his health declined over the past year.

Among his many awards, BB King won 15 Grammys, was inducted into
the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1987, and received the
Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2006.

 

 

Winnipeg Gets New COO

The city lawyer who acted as chief administrative officer this
winter has been named second-in-command of Winnipeg's public
service.

Michael Jack has been appointed the city's chief operating
officer on a permanent basis.

Jack, a University of Manitoba law graduate, was appointed city
solicitor in 2012. He was promoted to acting chief operating officer
in 2013, when Deepak Joshi was appointed acting chief administrative
officer.

Jack then served as acting CAO himself for one month following
Joshi's suspension and subsequent resignation in January.
 
MP Video Creating Controversy On Parliament Hill
 
Opposition MPs and the Canadian Taxpayers Federation are
denouncing the taxpayer-funded YouTube videos that Employment
Minister Pierre Poilievre has made to promote the universal child
care benefit in his home riding.

The NDP and the federation say taxpayers shouldn't be forced to
pay for such partisan ads masquerading as information-based,
government advertising.

Poilievre claims he's simply using innovative ways to inform
Canadians about the enriched child benefit.

Liberal MP Marc Garneau calls that defence ``a slap in the
face'' to Canadians, and a reflection of the -- quote -- ``supreme
arrogance'' of the Harper government.
 
FBI Getting Involved In Amtrak Crash Investigation
 
The FBI will try to answer the latest question about Tuesday's
Amtrak derailment that killed eight people.

The bureau has been called in to investigate the possibility the
windshield of the train was hit with an object shortly before it
derailed.

A regional train and another Amtrak train were both hit by
objects earlier that evening in the same area where the crash
occurred. 
 
Bodies Found From Helicopter Crash In Nepal
 
Days of intense searching in mountains northeast of Nepal's
capital have ended with the recovery of the bodies of all eight
people who were on board the US Marine helicopter that crashed
Tuesday.

The wreckage of the chopper was found yesterday.

It carried six Marines and two soldiers from Nepal who were
ferrying much-needed earthquake relief supplies in the region.
 
Death Sentence For Egyptian President
 
An Egyptian court has sentenced ousted president Mohammed Morsi
to death for his alleged part in a mass prison break during the 2011
uprising that toppled Hosni Mubarak.

As is customary in passing capital punishment, the judge referred
his sentence on Morsi and others to the nation's top Muslim
theologian, or mufti, for his non-binding opinion.

Morsi, Egypt's first freely elected president, was ousted by the
military in July 2013 following days of mass street protests.

He is already serving a 20-year sentence following his conviction
last month in the killing of protesters outside a Cairo presidential
palace in December 2012.
 
Donors Stepping Up To Help Melnyk
 
Offers are pouring in from people willing to be a live donor for
Ottawa Senators owner Eugene Melnyk, who needs a liver transplant to
stay alive.

Melnyk is in critical condition in a Toronto hospital.

But with more than 400 people offering to potentially help out,
transplant teams in Toronto say they're optimistic they'll find a
match for the 55 year old within days.

Power Should Be Back On

Life should be back to usual this morning across the province as Manitoban's head back to a short work week.

Power outages were reported across the province late Sunday-early Monday morning, as fierce weather knocked down trees and power lines around the south end of Manitoba.

Areas around Neepawa, Onanole, Erickson and Clear Lake were affected by the outages.

Manitoba Hydro spokesman Scott Powell said most communities should have had their power back by last night, but did warn sporadic outages might continue into this morning as well.

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Start Getting Out That Yard Waste Today

Dauphin's Annual Spring Clean-up Campaign starts today.

Crews will begin in the Day 1 area and progress through the four day cycle until pick-up across Dauphin is complete.

Residents are asked to place your yard waste near the back lane, but in an area where damage to property won't occur.

If you don't have access to a backlane, please place your yard waste on the boulevard at your curbside.

City crews will be collecting accumulated garden waste, grass, leaves, shrubs and tree branches.

Any unwanted composting material can be dropped off at the City Waste Disposal Site.

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US Loses COOL Appeal

Canada and Mexico have won a final appeal of US country-of-origin meat-labelling rules at the World Trade Organization.

The Canadian government says it will now prepare an application to the WTO for punitive measures.

Failure to change the labelling requirement could lead to tariffs on a wide range of American products including wine, chocolate, cereal and frozen orange juice.

Some U-S lawmakers have already signalled plans to move swiftly -- they're proposing legislation to rescind the labelling rules.

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Flax Processor Seeing Big Business

A Manitoba flax processing plant that faced hard times and closed just a few years ago has had a change of fortune.

Shape Foods sales manager Dane Lindenberg says the Brandon plant is now shipping to twice as many countries as it did just two years ago, and is steadily operating around the clock.

The 65-hundred-square-metre facility was built in 2006 but the previous owner filed for voluntary receivership a few years later and all 60 employees lost their jobs.

The plant reopened about a year-and-a-half later with a new owner, and currently employs about 30 people.

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Wheat Warning

Canadian farmers are being warned about illegally purchasing a variety of hard red spring wheat that was developed at North Dakota State University.

Elgin-ND is becoming popular in the US because of its high yield and quality potential, but FP Genetics is the sole and exclusive licensee and distributor of the seed in Canada.

Elgin-ND is owned by NDSURF and is protected by Plant Variety Protection in the United States.

NDSURF says it will prosecute any known infringement of its PVP rights.

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Study Highlights Canada's Housing Problem

The Federation of Canadian Municipalities is calling on all levels of government to work together to fix what it says is this country's serious housing problem.

A new report by the federation finds the long, steady decline in federal subsidies for social housing has left provinces, territories and municipalities struggling against market forces to keep properties maintained, and affordable for renters.

The study finds while the federal government still spends $1.7-billion a year on housing, federal funding as a share of the country's economy has fallen 40 per cent since 1989.

 

Charges Stayed In Towers Fire

A Manitoba man is no longer charged with arson in a hotel fire.

Terrence Guiboche had been charged with burning down the Towers
Hotel in Dauphin.

This week the Crown stayed the charge.

The Crown says the fire investigator could not determine the
cause of the fire, so there was no way to prove the fire was arson.
 
Bravery Award For Churchill Man
 
A Manitoba man has received the Star of Courage, Canada's
second-highest honour for bravery.

William Ayotte was honoured yesterday in Ottawa for saving a
woman who was being attacked by a polar bear.

The attack happened in Churchill, Manitoba, in November 2013.

The 71-year-old man attended the ceremony at Rideau Hall and
received the award from Governor General David Johnston.
 
Rally Planned For Baltimore Today
 
Thousands are expected to rally today in Baltimore to mark the
latest development in the case of Freddie Gray.

The 25-year-old black man died two weeks ago after suffering a
spinal cord injury while in police custody.

Gray's death has sparked violent protests.

But today's march is being billed as a ``victory rally'' after
six Baltimore police officers were charged in the death.
 
Harper Visits Iraq
 
Prime Minister Harper paid a surprise visit to Iraq this morning.

Under very tight security, Harper met in Baghdad with his Iraqi
counterpart Haider al-Abadi in a show of solidarity in the battle
against Islamic State militants in northern and western Iraq.

al-Abadi praised Canada for contributing six jet fighters and 69
special forces who are training Kurdish fighters in northern Iraq.

Harper is also headed to Europe to take part in events marking
the 70th anniversary of the end of the Second World War.
 
More Help Needed For Nepal
 
The UN is appealing for more helicopters to take
desperately-needed food and other aid to remote villages in Nepal.

It was exactly a week ago that the Himalayan country was
devastated by a powerful 7.8 earthquake.

Many mountain roads are blocked by landslides, making it
impossible for trucks to get aid to where it's needed.

The official death toll from the quake stands at more than
6600.
 
It's A Girl!
 
Kate, the Duchess of Cambridge, has given birth to her second
child -- a girl weighing 8 lbs 3 oz.

The birth happened early this morning at St. Mary's Hospital in
London -- the same hospital where her first child, Prince George,
was born in July 2013.

Officials say Prince William was present for the birth, and
mother and daughter are ``doing well.''

The daughter -- who has yet to named -- is the fourth in line to
the throne after Princes Charles, William, and George.

Weekly Crop Report

Parkland crops are still being assessed for damage following this past weekends storm.

Extreme winds blew soil from exposed fields, and others areas were affected by excessive moisture and frost damage.

According to the provinces latest weekly crop report, there was good seeding progress made throughout the Parkland area over the last week.

Seeding is approximately 70 per cent complete, with 90 per cent of cereals having made it in the ground and seeing about 25 per cent emergence.

Weed growth is general throughout most of the region, and some flea beetle activity continues on volunteer canola.

Pasture and hay growth remains slow due to the cooler temperatures.

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Premier Says Confidentiality Needed In Severance Payouts

Manitoba Premier Greg Selinger cited the need for confidentiality when questioned in the house by the opposition about severance packages given to seven of his former advisers.

He wouldn't say whether the $670,00 in total severance pay was required under the workers' contracts, or something simply offered to them as they left.

He said employment agreements are confidential matters.

Conservative Leader Brian Pallister said the secrecy raises questions about whether taxpayers paid more than they should have for departing political staff.

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Pest Lab Accepting Clubroot Samples

Earlier this year, the Pest Surveillance Initiative was established in Winnipeg with the goal of testing canola soil for clubroot disease.

The lab is currently accepting samples from producers in an effort to help track the disease.

Holly Derksen, field crop pathologist with Manitoba Agriculture, Food and Rural Development says the lab is able to detect clubroot at very low levels.

Derksen notes that sampling may be free of charge depending on where the field is located.

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Students Protest UoM Cuts

Students at the University of Manitoba have staged a mock funeral to mark what they call the death of education.

Yesterday's protest was in response to planned budget cuts at the university, which has a $14 million shortfall.

The new budget would see departments throughout the university facing a four per cent cut.

University president David Barnard said it's possible students won't see some courses offered next year, and some jobs could be affected.

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Canadians Managing Their Massive Debt

A new report by the Fraser Institute shows Canadians are carrying record amounts of debt, but managing their finances prudently.

The report authored by StatsCan's former chief economic analyst, Philip Cross, says the growth of household debt has slowed since 2009, and the cost of servicing that borrowing is at a record low share of income.

Cross says many Canadians have also shifted their borrowing from consumer credit to mortgages, locking in lower interest rates.

StatsCan has reported that for every dollar of disposable income, households late last year owed about $1.63 in consumer credit, mortgage and non-mortgage loans.

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Driven Over Foot Led To Violent Biker Brawl

Investigators are racking up lots of overtime in Waco, Texas at the scene of Sunday's bloody biker gang fight that left nine dead and 18 wounded.

Detectives continue to search vehicles outside a restaurant where rival gangs gathered and have so far collected 50 knives and guns.

Dozens more may found during crime scene analysis today.

Police said yesterday the deadly brawl apparently began with a parking dispute and someone running over a gang member's foot.