EBC Fundraising Brunch

Details to come!

Investing in us

Previously published in the Winnipeg Free Press September 3, 2024

September 8, is International Literacy Day. Regrettably, few people know this. Literacy is a subject largely hidden from public view, even though a decade ago 192,000 Manitobans aged 18-65 years had literacy levels sufficiently low that they could not participate fully in society. In addition to these Manitobans, there are additional tens of thousands who, for various reasons, do not have a high school diploma and would like to earn one. Most cannot because for the past two decades, Manitoba’s adult basic education system has been underfunded, thus restricting access.

Tax cuts are bad fiscal policy

Previously published in the Winnipeg Free Press August 28, 2024

Since the oil price shocks of 2021/22, gas taxes have become highly political in Canada. Premier Smith in Alberta, and Premier Ford slashed gas taxes in 2021/22. In January 2024, Premier Kinew followed suit by implementing Manitoba’s gas tax holiday. 

Is Manitoba willing to accept nuclear waste risks?

Previously published in the Winnipeg Free Press August 2, 2024

By Anne Lindsey

Anyone driving Highway 17 from Winnipeg to Thunder Bay will pass through Ignace a couple of hours east of Dryden. A modest Canadian Shield town with about 1300 inhabitants, Ignace was built on the forest industry, but like so many northern Ontario towns, today actively seeks other economic opportunities. 

It’s time to move on from the Houston Model

Previously published in the Winnipeg Free Press August 1, 2024.

By Shauna MacKinnon

Manitoba politicians are fixated on the “Houston model” as the solution to homelessness.  

The obsession began prior to the recent provincial election when then opposition leader Wab Kinew pointed to the Houston model as the approach his government would take if elected. Since then Houston has seen a trail of Manitoba delegations. In September 2023 Mayor Gillingham and his housing advisor visited Houston. In March 2024 the Winnipeg Free Press sent a reporter and a CBC reporter followed in May 2024. This past week Manitoba’s Housing Minister took a delegation of 26 people to Houston. Houston is celebrated for its success in greatly reducing homelessness, however investigative journalists in the U.S. have revealed the same issues that Manitoba housing advocates have long pointed out having seen the limitations of a similar approach used here.

North End Connect: Transformative Research Toward Digital Inclusion

Shauna MacKinnon with Joel Templeman and Shanleigh Chartrand

North End Connect was established during the COVID-19 pandemic by organizations situated on Selkirk Avenue. They were concerned about the pandemic’s impact on low-income households in the neighbourhood who were further disadvantaged because they did not have access to the internet. They wanted to better understand the challenges related to digital exclusion and identify potential solutions. In 2021 Joel Templeman, Executive Director of the Internet Society (Manitoba Chapter) and graduate student at the University of Calgary approached the MRA for support for the research component of this community-led project. Since then, North End Connect has moved from research to action, working in collaboration with the community toward its digital inclusion goals. 

The MRA wanted to learn more about North End Connect’s transformative research approach and the status of the project. MRA Principal Investigator Shauna MacKinnon spoke with Joel Templeman and Shanleigh Chartrand about North End Connect. Their conversation is below, edited for length.

Questions and Answers: Pay Equity in Manitoba

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LADntYGX4GQ

Adult Basic Education in Manitoba: “It’s Like, Life Changing!”

What could lead people to say such things as, “I can physically, like on every level, physically, emotionally, mentally, spiritually, feel myself changing and transforming,” and “my peers, they see a difference, they see me more open and, you know, thinking about future endeavours and what I want to do”? 

These are the voices of adult learners working to earn their mature high school diploma in Adult Learning Centres in Manitoba, as portrayed in Kevin Nikkel’s documentary short film, Live and Learn, supported by the Manitoba Research Alliance. To make the short film, which premiered at the April 19, 2024 Adult Secondary Education Council (ASEC) conference in Winnipeg, Nikkel interviewed 34 adult learners and 14 teachers in Adult Learning Centres at 12 different sites in northern Manitoba, southern Manitoba, Portage la Prairie, Brandon and Winnipeg. 

Cuts to community groups would send wrong message

Previously published in the Winnipeg Free Press June 25, 2024

Call to Action!