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Doctors Manitoba has launched a campaign to encourage winter fitness and combat medical misinformation.

The organization representing the province's physicians said it's looking to combat the spread of false medical information online as part of this year's Getting Healthy campaign.

This program encourages Manitobans to focus on their well-being during the winter by offering incentives to those who pledge to improve their health.

Participants in the Doctors Manitoba Getting Healthy campaign can take a pledge to do things like catching up on immunizations or taking steps to move more, eat healthier, get better sleep, or reduce stress to earn a chance to win prizes.

This year's grand prize is a Churchill trip for two.

Connie Malcolm of Bacon Ridge is off the hook.

Last February, Ste. Rose RCMP executed a search warrant at a home on the Ebb & Flow First Nation. They seized pre-packaged cocaine, crystal meth, crack cocaine, firearms, ammunition, cash, prepaid credit cards, and drug-related paraphernalia.

The 42-year-old Malcolm was arrested as a result, however, on Thursday in Dauphin Provincial Court, the charges against Connie were stayed.

The Manitoba Art Network is bringing a special musical tour to Indigenous schools across Manitoba.

Nelson Little, an award-winning Métis musician will embark on a first-of-its-kind journey to 18 indigenous schools to share his music and story with students.

As part of his shows, Little will conduct music workshops with students designed to inspire creativity and connect young participants to the power of music.

His storytelling and ability to turn real-life events into moving songs make this tour this year's highlight.

All the stops and dates are listed below:

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Swan River was one of five Manitoba communities to set new January heat records on Tuesday.

According to Environment Canada, Tuesday's high of 4.7 Celsius in Swan River shattered the previous record of 1.0 set back in 1992. 

Steinbach also broke a 33-year-old on that day, with their temperature of 2.9 Celsius breaking the previous high mark of 1.5 C.

Carberry reached a high of 2.5 C, narrowly edging its record of 2.0 set in 1983. 

Other records set that day were in Winnipeg - where their temperature of 3.4 on Tuesday edged the 1976 record of 3.3, while Oak Point's record of 2.1 Celsius broke the record of 0.1 set in 2005. 

In the wake of Parks Canada's announcement this week that it was no longer feasible to try and eradicate Zebra Mussels found in Clear Lake, Manitoba Hydro has started researching how its Brandon Generating Station may be impacted in the future.

Clear Lake connects to the Little Saskatchewan River and down south to the Assiniboine River, where dead Zebra Mussel larvae were discovered last December.

In a story in the Brandon Sun, the province's electric and natural gas utility said it is reviewing its assets that may be at risk at the Brandon plant, while also announcing a plan to increase monitoring next season.

They are also looking at treatment options that may be required in the coming months, which may include using chlorine over a 10 to 14-day period in the summer to kill Zebra mussels that become too densely populated. 

The province has directed Prairie Mountain Health to reduce for-profit nursing agency costs by 15 per cent by March 2026 as part of a systemwide effort to refocus funding on nurses in the public system.

Health, Seniors and Long-Term Care Minister Uzoma Asagwara blamed the previous Tory government for cutting services, closing ERs and firing nurses resulting in millions overspent on private nursing agencies.

Asagwara added this direction comes alongside the Manitoba government’s efforts to invest in publicly funded health care and encourage nurses to join the public system.

In the past, Manitoba held hundreds of distinct contracts with more than 70 private for-profit agencies, with little to no policies on how to limit those agencies’ impact on the nurses working in the public system or the rates they charge to publicly funded service delivery organizations, according to the Minister. 

Public Works in Gilbert Plains wants to remind residents that some work is being done on a water break tomorrow morning at Hwy 10 and the Valley River. 

If you are in the northeast part of the municipality and have municipal water, you may experience low pressure or no water starting at 9:00 am on Thursday, January 30, 2025.

The municipality thanks residents for understanding and aims to resolve this as soon as possible.

The AMC election has concluded, and Kyra Wilson has been named as the new Grand Chief.

The former chief of the Long Plain First Nation fills the role left vacant after the passing of Grand Chief Cathy Merrick Last fall.

In 2022, Wilson became the first female chief elected to lead Long Plain since the 1970s.

Other applicants to this role included former York Factory First Nation Chief Leroy Constant, Sapotaweyak Cree Nation Councillor Bava Dhillon, and former Peguis First Nation Chief Glenn Hudson.

Wilson's election comes with 37 of the 61 available votes, more than the rest of the competition combined.

SCO CONGRATULATES NEWLY ELECTED AMC GRAND CHIEF KYRA WILSON The Southern Chiefs' Organization and Grand Chief Jerry...

Posted by Southern Chiefs' Organization on Wednesday, January 29, 2025

Around 7,000 members of the Manitoba Association of Health Care Professionals could be hitting the picket lines in the near future to back contract demands.

They recently voted 96 per cent in favour of a strike mandate, after their previous contract expired in March of last year. 

MAHCP president Jason Linklater says workers are dealing with increased workloads, lack of competitive wages and critical staffing shortages.

He added that allied health professionals are running out of patience, and are asking for the relief and change they were promised, and for a competitive contract that will give them a reason to stay.

MAHCP members work in labs, clinics, hospitals, and community and long-term care settings across Manitoba.

Sentencing will take place on March 19th for a woman who pled guilty to her role in a 2022 stabbing death in Pine Creek.

42-year-old Sheryl Thompson pled guilty last August to one count of Manslaughter after a 51-year-old man died from injuries suffered in the incident.

Meanwhile, a 40-year-old man from the Key First Nation has avoided any further discipline in relation to a drug and weapons bust in Dauphin last February.

Roland Klyne was one of four people originally arrested in the case, but he has agreed to a peace bond in exchange for the charges against him being stayed in court. 

Here is some great news for boat owners in the region.

Parks Canada has announced that it plans to allow watercraft on Clear Lake this year, under what it calls a "one boat, one lake" aquatic invasive species prevention program. 

Following consultations with the province,  Indigenous advisors, and leading scientific and international experts, Parks Canada determined that eradicating Zebra Mussels completely from Clear Lake would not be feasible. 

The program is similar to one used in 2023, but the public will be given an opportunity to provide input on how it will be applied this year.

Those gatherings are set for this Saturday and Sunday from noon to 4 near the skating rink behind the Visitors Centre in Wasagaming.