Manitoba's promised plastic health cards pushed to January: premier

The Manitoba government's plan to replace paper health cards with more durable and modern plastic ones is running a bit behind schedule.

Premier Wab Kinew has said on a few occasions, including in a social media video last month, that people would be able to start applying for the new cards in December.

He now says the process is to get underway in mid-January and that it was pushed back in part by the postal workers' strike.

"We had existing (paper) health cards going out the door, just kind of starting to pile up," Kinew said in an interview.

Manitoba government to reinstate fuel tax at a lower rate

The Manitoba government is ending its yearlong fuel tax holiday but bringing back the levy at a lower rate.

The government temporarily suspended the 14-cents-a-litre fuel tax at the beginning of 2024 as a way to help people deal with the rising cost of living.

The province has announced the tax will be back in place on New Year's Day at a rate of 12.5 cents per litre.

The tax holiday caused Manitoba's inflation rate to be among the lowest in the country, but it was criticized by some as favouring people who drive large, expensive vehicles.

Manitoba government's deficit-cutting path not clear, political analyst says

Manitoba Finance Minister Adrien Sala says the NDP government remains committed to balancing the budget before the next election, but a veteran political analyst says the path to balance is muddy, especially after cost overruns this year.

"I'm still not clear on the budgetary path that they claim that they've set for themselves and how they're going to get there," Paul Thomas, professor emeritus of political studies at the University of Manitoba, said Tuesday.

Manitoba premier eyes list of possible retaliatory measures for U.S. tariffs

Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew says his government is preparing a list of potential retaliatory measures if the United States government imposes new tariffs on Canadian goods.

Kinew wouldn't reveal details but says the province has to take seriously the threat of widespread tariffs from U.S. president-elect Donald Trump.

When asked whether Manitoba would consider restricting electricity exports, as Ontario Premier Doug Ford has mentioned, Kinew did not directly answer.

He says Manitoba must be ready to defend sectors such as agriculture, energy and manufacturing.

Higher property taxes, chance of reduced snow plowing in Winnipeg budget plan

Winnipeg is eyeing the largest property tax increase in decades and considering a cut to snow plowing in an attempt to address a fiscal squeeze.

The city's preliminary budget for next year proposes a 5.95 per cent hike in property taxes, following an increase of 3.5 per cent in the last budget.

It also recommends a pilot project that would see residential streets cleared after a snowfall of at least 15 centimetres — up from the current 10-centimetre threshold.

Manitoba premier says conservation officers to help patrol Canada-US border

The Manitoba government is planning to have conservation officers help patrol efforts along the Canada-United States border.

Premier Wab Kinew says the officers would serve as extra eyes and ears for police and other security agencies and could help in humanitarian efforts to rescue people.

He pointed to the case of a family from India who froze to death in Manitoba in 2022 while trying to walk across the border in a blizzard.

Kinew says strengthening border security would address concerns expressed by the US and help protect Manitoba's economy.

'Immoral depravity': Two men convicted in case of frozen migrant family in Manitoba

A jury deliberated for about an hour Friday before convicting two men on human smuggling charges in a case where a family from India froze to death in Manitoba while trying to walk across the Canada-U.S. border.

Steve Shand of Florida and Harshkumar Patel, an Indian national arrested in Chicago, were each found guilty on all four counts they faced related to bringing unauthorized people into the U.S., transporting them and profiting from it.

Prosecutors say alleged smugglers at Manitoba border cared more for money than lives

A prosecutor urged a jury Thursday to find two accused human smugglers guilty, saying the men cared more about money than people's safety and their actions led to the deaths of a family of four in a prairie blizzard.

"They knew they were risking people's lives," Michael McBride said in his closing arguments after three days of testimony in U.S. district court.

"To them, all of those people were nothing but dollar signs."

'My heart sank': Trial hears diapers, mittens set off search for family found frozen

A U.S. border patrol intelligence agent recalled Tuesday feeling horrified when he realized a group of migrants from India, including a young child, were out in a freezing blizzard on a stretch of open prairie at the border between Manitoba and Minnesota.

"My heart sank ... because there's more people out there," Daniel Huguley testified at the trial of two accused human smugglers. 

Some adult migrants had already been picked up after trying to walk undetected across the border on Jan. 19, 2022. One of them had a backpack, and Huguley said he looked inside.