Posted: Dec 24, 2020 5:00 AM CT | Last Updated: December 24, 2020
Once more of Manitoba Public Insurance s services move online, expect insurance brokers to continue to be involved in every transaction.(Jaison Empson/CBC)
Accused road-rage driver not formally charged yet; release not unusual: police
It’s the question on the lips of everyone who has seen Kiana Jobo’s shocking road-rage cellphone video:
It’s the question on the lips of everyone who has seen Kiana Jobo’s shocking road-rage cellphone video:
Who is the man relentlessly pursuing and repeatedly ramming her car as she tried desperately to escape?
City police confirm they arrested a 57-year-old suspect after last Thursday s frightening incident and released him on a promise to appear in court.
His identity, however, has not been disclosed to the public. A charge of dangerous driving has yet to be sworn in court, Winnipeg Police Service spokesman Const. Jay Murray told the
Winnipeg Free Press
Last Modified: 5:02 PM CST Tuesday, Dec. 22, 2020 | Updates
Folks walk through the snowy Manitoba Legislative Building grounds in Winnipeg on Tuesday
After an unseasonably mild fall gave us something to be grateful for in the fading weeks of a miserable 2020, winter which began officially Monday is, literally, storming into view.
After an unseasonably mild fall gave us something to be grateful for in the fading weeks of a miserable 2020, winter which began officially Monday is, literally, storming into view.
Environment and Climate Change Canada is moving up the level of Manitoba s storm watch Tuesday, with heavy gusts of wind and large amounts of snow expected across the southern region well into Wednesday.
Brandon Sun By: Colin Slark
MIKAELA MACKENZIE/WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Premier Brian Pallister gives a mid-year financial update at the Manitoba Legislative Building in Winnipeg on Thursday, Dec. 17, 2020.
Buoyed by transfers from the federal government, the province unveiled a less severe deficit projection on Monday.
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Buoyed by transfers from the federal government, the province unveiled a less severe deficit projection on Monday.
In a mid-fiscal year update, Premier Brian Pallister and Finance Minister Scott Fielding said the deficit for 2020-21 is estimated to be $2.048 billion rather than the $2.938-billion deficit originally projected in September.
A significant portion of that difference is made up of $648 million in transfer payments from the federal government, which will end up offsetting approximately 20 per cent of Manitoba’s expenditures for the fiscal year.