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Face masks will soon be mandatory for all Manitoba Liquor Mart employees.
Beginning tomorrow, Manitoba Liquor and Lotteries will mandate mask use for all liquor stores in the province.
Some casino workers in the province are also required to wear masks.
Right now, masks remain optional for customers.
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- Contributed by Tess Kovach
A worker at Maple Leaf Foods processing plant in Brandon has tested positive for COVID-19, according to an email sent by the union which represents the plant workers.
UFC local 832 reported the case, but added that the worker has not been at the plant since July 28th.
The union says staff that have come into contact with the employee have been sent home to self-isolate for 14 days.
It’s not clear at this time what the worker did at the plant.
Back in May, a security guard at the Brandon plant also tested positive for the virus. The union claimed that the employee had been away from the plant for more than 2 weeks prior, and believed he got the virus after his last shift.
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- Contributed by Tess Kovach
Manitoba is looking for feedback online, on a broad range of agriculture sector issues and opportunities from producers and industry.
Agriculture and Resource Development Minister Blaine Pedersen says they’re committed to bringing the voices of farmers forward.
“Engaging with farmers allows us to collect important information and make informed decisions and recommendations with my provincial and federal colleagues across the country this October at the annual conference of ministers of agriculture.”
There are four areas the province wants input on, business risk management, market opportunities, innovation and technology, and resiliency.
Business risk management programs are important to help producers manage their risk. For the past two years, producer feedback suggests the existing program isn’t effective for some sectors.
As Manitoba’s Ag industry is export-driven, the province wants to ensure producers and processors have continued access to current and new market opportunities.
Innovation continues to be, more and more, a part of the agriculture and agri-food sector. Technology also can help with preparing for and mitigating risks, addressing labour shortages, improving animal health and welfare, and building increased sustainability to the sector. The government is looking for the public’s input to help shape Manitoba’s capacity through the use of Ag Action Manitoba programs.
With COVID-19 impacting all Manitobans, including the food supply chain, the province is looking for public input to help ensure the sector continues to be resilient in the face of future disruptions and crisis.
The online engagement follows a week-long, in-person tour by the minister which included multiple stops in rural Manitoba in an open dialogue format.
To take part in the online engagement, click here.
The online engagement closes Tuesday, September 1st.
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- Contributed by Isaac Wihak
If you’re looking to teach your dog a new trick or two, Dauphin Recreation Services has got you covered.
The dog obedience program runs on Tuesday and Thursday evenings from September 1st-17th, and will be held at the Parkland Rec Complex Curling Rink from 6:30- 7:30 p.m., and again at 7:45- 8:45 p.m.
Programs & Promotions Coordinator with Dauphin Rec, Tamara Kolida, says the course will provide a basic level of obedience training.
“It’ll just provide a solid foundation for training your dog. In addition to basic obedience, common behavior problems are also addressed.”
The first session will be for owners only and will be held in the Rec Complex curler’s lounge – no dogs will be allowed.
For more information about the course and to register, click here.
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- Contributed by Tess Kovach
Public Health officials say there have been 27 new cases of COVID-19 identified since Saturday, with 2 new cases today.
They advise that one case identified on Monday was removed, as it was a duplicate from another jurisdiction.
Manitoba now has a total of 442 cases; with 94 cases considered active, and 9 people in hospital.
Four people are in intensive care because of COVID-19, and there's been a total of 8 deaths in Manitoba.
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- Contributed by Matt Hamel
Reports of UFO sightings are up this year across North America, particularly in Manitoba where we’re seeing a 5 year high.
This is according to ufologist and science writer Chris Rutkowski, who tells CKDM there’s been a significant increase in sightings during the COVID-19 pandemic.
“We’re also getting reports from UFO organizations across the country, and also from official government agencies such as Transport Canada. Through this, we’re able to get an idea of what people really are seeing across the country,” says Rutkowski.
A study looking at UFO reports in Canada showed sightings were down overall in 2019, however, most Prairie provinces actually reported increases in UFO reports.
“We certainly went up in Manitoba, in fact, we’re at a 5-year high in Manitoba, in terms of UFO reports."
So why have there been more UFO sightings during the COVID situation? Rutkowski thinks part of the reason is the pandemic has given people a better opportunity to enjoy the night sky.
“We think it has something to do with people spending a little more time looking up.”
Canada has around 1,000 UFO reports every year, and about 3% of those remain unsolved.
“A significant number of cases remain unidentified. Sometimes those cases are not airplanes, stars, planets, fireballs and pieces of comet — they are something else and we just simply don’t know what those are yet,” says Rutkowski.
If you see a UFO, Rutkowski says you’re in good company — about 10% of Canadians believe they’ve seen a UFO — and last year in Manitoba there were 78 UFO reports filed.
To submit a UFO report, or to read about some reports from previous years, click here.
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- Contributed by Matt Hamel
At least 120 Salmonella cases across Canada have been linked to onions imported by a California company.
Thomson International Inc. has now recalled all red, white, yellow and sweet yellow onions — as the Public Health Agency of Canada warns against eating or serving their onions for the time being.
The Public Health Agency of Canada says Canadians first started reporting getting sick between mid-June and mid-July — after eating red onions at home, in restaurants, and care home settings.
The Salmonella outbreak across multiple provinces has sent 17 people to hospital.
Canadian-grown onions are not being recalled at this time.
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- Contributed by Matt Hamel
Tim Hortons in Dauphin is holding their annual yard sale fundraiser next week.
The fundraiser is being held on August 8th from 9 a.m. – 4 p.m. at the Tim Hortons in Dauphin in support of the Tim Hortons Foundation Camps.
Tim Hortons supervisor Ellen Sanderson explains how the sale works.
“It’s just by donation, so if you see something you like in the yard sale, you donate what you figure you can for that particular item.”
If you have items to donate to the yard sale, you can drop them off at Tim Hortons at any time.
You can also take part in their raffle draw, where cash donations earn you entries to win some great prizes. The draw will take place on Camp Day, on August 12th.
The grand prize is a Tim Hortons coffee brewer, 1st prize is a $100 gift card, 2nd prize is a $50 gift card, and 3rd prize is a Tim Hortons gift basket.
For more information, check out the post on the CKDM Facebook page.
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- Contributed by Tess Kovach
Two local Members of Parliament are calling on the Trudeau government to do more to support our country’s agriculture sector.
MP for Dauphin-Swan River-Neepawa, Dan Mazier, and MP for Brandon-Souris, Larry Maguire, released a joint statement criticizing the relief measures put forward by the federal government.
They say the COVID-19 assistance programs for farmers are falling short, and accuse the federal Liberals of “reannouncing” old campaign commitments, instead of offering up new funds to help producers.
Mazier says he would like to see a reform of the Business Risk Management programs, and expanded eligibility criteria for the Canadian Emergency Business Account (CEBA).
Both MPs say the agriculture sector has been hit hard by the pandemic, and want to see measures put in place to ensure our country's food chain remains unbroken.
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- Contributed by Matt Hamel
An 18-year-old man from Sioux Valley Dakota Nation has died after an ATV crash over the weekend.
Westman RCMP are investigating after the man lost control and was thrown from the vehicle near the intersection between Highway 21 and the main road at Sioux Valley Dakota Nation.
He was pronounced dead while en route to hospital, and RCMP continue to investigate.
Another off-road vehicle collision over the long weekend in Manitoba sent three youths to hospital with serious injuries, following a rollover in Duff Roblin Provincial Park near Winnipeg.
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- Contributed by Matt Hamel
Part of the criticism directed at the federal government’s new COVID-19 tracing app, is that it’s inaccessible to older Canadians.
The free ‘COVID Alert’ app alerts users when their smartphones have been near the phone of a person who identifies they’ve tested positive for COVID-19.
However, the app requires users to have Apple or Android phones made in the past 5 years, and have a newer operating system — leading some to complain that the app doesn’t work on their phone.
One expert says a contact tracing app would need 65% to 80% of all Canadians using it to properly work, and that the current version of the app makes that impossible.
The app is available to download in all parts of Canada, but is initially being tested in Ontario.
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- Contributed by Matt Hamel