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Manitoba opposition calls on province to beef up ventilation in schools before students return

  WINNIPEG Manitoba opposition wants to see the province beef up ventilation in schools before children return to the classroom in September. On Thursday, NDP Leader Wab Kinew called on the province to proactively increase ventilation in classrooms. Investing in ventilation will help ensure that kids who are too young to be vaccinated right now can still have an additional measure of protection and help ensure that they can all return to what educational experts say is the best approach to learning which is direct face-to-face in-person learning, Kinew said. The province plans to have all Kindergarten to Grade 12 students return to in-class learning full-time on Sept. 7.

Renewed Move to Finance Safe Schools

The federal government has initiated a coordinated approach to financing and implementing an integrated safe schools programme across the country, which is government-led and is tailored to the current realities. Ndubuisi Francis reports that a comprehensive and effective plan of action is desirable to stem the current spate of abductions in schools in the northern part of the country Prior to the advent of the COVID-19 pandemic, Nigeria accounted for approximately 20 per cent of the global out-of-school population. With an estimated 13 million children currently out of school in the country, Nigeria sits in the precipice of a socio-economic disaster and a full education crisis, if there is no coordinated action to stop the current wave of systematic attacks on the fundamental rights of children to a safe learning environment.

Manitoba Releases 2021 Budget Which Shows Deficit of $1 597-Billion

By Ryan Young Apr 7, 2021 1:48 PM Today, Finance Minister Scott Fielding released Budget 2021: Protecting Manitobans, Advancing Manitoba and shared the Manitoba government’s plan to protect Manitobans and their services through COVID-19 and advance the provincial economy past the pandemic. “COVID-19 has upended lives and caused hardship and tragedy for many Manitobans. We recognize our province and people will continue to face profound health, social and economic impacts and uncertainty due to the ongoing pandemic,” said Fielding. “Even though we are not yet through the darkness of COVID-19, we must begin to plan for the light of recovery that lies ahead.”

BUDGET NOTES: Education expenses to be rolled into spending increase; streaming tax coming

Article content Education expenses will be slowly rolled to the $1.6 billion increase over four years, which will use 2019-20 as a baseline. The province is budgeting for an overall increase in spending of $70 million based on 2020-21 projections. Operational expenses will go from $3.002 billion to $3.072 billion while there is also an additional $100 million for capital expenditures. We apologize, but this video has failed to load. Try refreshing your browser, or BUDGET NOTES: Education expenses to be rolled into spending increase; streaming tax coming Back to video These numbers will include the $160 million in COVID-19 education funding announced by Finance Minister Scott Fielding on Tuesday, which also includes a carryover of $78.4 million from the $185.4 million Safe Schools Fund. The Safe School Fund is also intended to cover the remainder of this school year.

Remaining Funds in Manitoba s Safe Schools Fund Allocated to Schools on a Per-Pupil Basis in 2021-22 Academic Year | GX94 Radio

Remaining Funds in Manitoba s Safe Schools Fund Allocated to Schools on a Per-Pupil Basis in 2021-22 Academic Year | GX94 Radio
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