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  #281  
Old Posted Feb 24, 2010, 6:57 PM
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sweet

anyhow anyone taken the transcanada trail up their?
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  #282  
Old Posted Feb 24, 2010, 7:17 PM
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sweet

anyhow anyone taken the transcanada trail up their?
Taken it up their what?
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  #283  
Old Posted Feb 24, 2010, 7:54 PM
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wth?

there not their
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  #284  
Old Posted Feb 24, 2010, 9:49 PM
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The award for design on the twinning of 59 north to Victoria Beach should be awarded any day now if not already. Construction could start as early as next year, 2012 at the latest.
Including the section within the indian reserve, or are they holding out for big $$$$ like they always do?
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  #285  
Old Posted Feb 24, 2010, 10:49 PM
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if would help them to twin it as they have that casino right on it making for safer acces to it
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  #286  
Old Posted Feb 25, 2010, 12:08 AM
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wth?

there not their
they're not there
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  #287  
Old Posted Feb 25, 2010, 12:28 AM
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now ur just playing with my head i know their there they're (they are) i just typoed and didn't ketch it
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  #288  
Old Posted Feb 25, 2010, 3:40 AM
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now ur just playing with my head i know their there they're (they are) i just typoed and didn't ketch it
What about Ketchup?

(Sorry.)
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  #289  
Old Posted Feb 25, 2010, 5:16 AM
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Originally Posted by RTD View Post
Including the section within the indian reserve, or are they holding out for big $$$$ like they always do?
That part is already in progress.
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  #290  
Old Posted Feb 25, 2010, 2:06 PM
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^^^This last segment under design will complete the twinning all the way to Victoria Beach. So hopefully by 2013 (if the earth still exists, that is) we will have a much safer highway to beach country.
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  #291  
Old Posted Feb 25, 2010, 5:27 PM
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(if the earth still exists, that is)
Spectacles, testicles, wallet, and watch.
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  #292  
Old Posted Mar 5, 2010, 8:22 PM
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Winnipeg Free Press - ONLINE EDITION
New casino being built near Spruce Woods

By: Staff Writer
5/03/2010 1:17 PM | Comments: 3


WINNIPEG — Construction of a new $40-million native casino — the third for Manitoba — near Spruce Woods Provincial Park should begin this fall, officials said in Winnipeg today.
The Spirit Sands Casino will be built off Highway 5 about 16 kilometres south of the Trans-Canada Highway between Carberry and Glenboro and will be run by Swan Lake First Nation.
Swan Lake First Nation Chief Francine Meeches said the business plan for the casino calls for 300 slot machines, five gaming tables, three restaurants and, in time, a full-service hotel.
Profits from the casino will be shared with the 63 other First Nations in Manitoba — a conservative estimate is they will see $60,000 per year initially and more as the casino builds.
Meeches said 200-300 jobs will be created which will go to aboriginal people and others living in the area.
An earlier proposal to build a casino just outside of Brandon fell through last year when the bid's proponents — the Keeseekoowenin, Rolling River and Waywayseecappo First Nations — would not agree to share profits equally with all other Manitoba First Nations.
The south-western Manitoba casino would be the third First Nations casino in the province. The others are the South Beach Casino & Resort south of Grand Beach on Hwy. 59 and the Aseneskak Casino near The Pas.
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  #293  
Old Posted Mar 6, 2010, 5:44 PM
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^From the comments section on the above article:



Posted by: OJSeinfeld

March 5, 2010 at 3:32 PM

Hopefully it's not as bad as the Aseneskak Casino in OCN (The Pas). This place is horrible. First of all it looks bush-league - somewhat like a meat-packing plant, dirt-roads, spit all over the front entrance way, no landscaping, complete eyesore. No pride or professionalism. Spend some profits on making this place look respectable not the embarrassment it is now. It's poorly run and not consumer friendly. There hasn't been a tour group in years !
We went there to eat and waited an hour, one waitress who later said she had to make our meal because there was no staff on duty. Huh ??? Others have also said it's among the worst places to eat in The Pas. Never been back to the restaurant since. The play area is also poorly laid out and many people now know that it's among the "worst bets" for a gambler who might expect even a minimal payout. "Save your money or go play the VLT's" is now a common phrase in The Pas. High staff turnover (most staff are now from neighboring The Pas) sparse crowds, wasted resources. If this is First Nations gaming then all Manitoban taxpayers need to see this place for themselves. You will be outraged and disgusted. It's amateur hour in The Pas and we're footing the bill.
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  #294  
Old Posted Mar 9, 2010, 2:23 AM
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That guy's comment was obviously copied straight from the casino brochure.
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  #295  
Old Posted Mar 9, 2010, 3:14 PM
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Today, even that wouldn't surprise me.
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  #296  
Old Posted Mar 9, 2010, 6:51 PM
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Manitoba & Saskatchewan sign power agreement

By: Larry Kusch

9/03/2010 11:37 AM

WINNIPEG — The Manitoba and Saskatchewan governments will spend the next six months studying how best to more than double their capacity to ship power back and forth between the two provinces.

Rosann Wowchuk, minister responsible for Manitoba Hydro, signed a co-operation agreement this morning with Saskatchewan Energy Minister Bill Boyd in Winnipeg.

The two governments want to be able to move an additional 150 megawatts of electricity between their two jurisdictions. That's the equivalent of powering 150,000 homes. Currently, there is only 105 megawatts of transmission capacity between the provinces on four separate lines.

The decision to co-operate on electricity came out of a joint cabinet meeting of the two governments in February.

The ministers said a working group will be given six months to report back on how to proceed with transmission upgrades. The upgrades themselves may take years to complete, they said.

The group will also look at other ways to co-operate in increasing renewable energy development in the two provinces.

larry.kusch@freepress.mb.ca
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  #297  
Old Posted Mar 13, 2010, 9:01 PM
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The changing faces of Brandon

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/...rticle1497869/

To the uninitiated, the Brandon art gallery might seem to be an unlikely place to hear Spanish. But the other day, three young women were studying a painting and chattering in Spanish.

Hang around Brandon for a little while, and you'll see signs in Mandarin and Ukrainian, too, because a demographic shift has hit this Manitoba city of 45,000 people.

English, Spanish, Mandarin and Ukrainian are the “official languages” used inside the Maple Leaf Foods hog-processing plant, the largest employer in Brandon. About 2,100 hourly workers (all unionized) toil at the plant; 70 per cent of them are from China, El Salvador, Honduras, Mauritius, Mexico and Ukraine.

Their arrival in the past decade, and especially in the past five years, is changing – and challenging – Brandon. It's an example in an unlikely place of what Statistics Canada reported this week: the upsurge in visible minority populations.

Most of the upsurge is occurring in the large cities and the suburbs that surround them. Courtesy of the Maple Leaf plant that opened in 1999, that upsurge is being felt in Brandon.

In the plant's early years, employee turnover was almost 100 per cent a year, a company spokesman said. About a quarter of the work force was aboriginal. The hours were strict and the work – what the company calls “disassembling” hogs – was hard and repetitive. The aboriginals left, but so did almost all of the original employees.

The company tried recruiting in Atlantic Canada and Ontario, but with little success. The first Mexican workers came as part of a pilot program in 2002, and the influx has continued.

The amazing part of the influx – and the good news for Brandon – is how many workers stay on after their two-year temporary work visa. They apply for permanent status, bring their families and settle down. Some of their wives quickly enter the work force in fast-food restaurants and other entry-level jobs.

Last year, the company counted 1,812 people it had brought to the plant, of whom it had retained 1,457. Recently, about 250 Chinese workers became eligible for permanent residency. Only nine did not avail themselves of the opportunity, and 40 of them bought houses as soon as their permanent status was confirmed.

When vacancies arrive, the company has to convince the Canadian government that it's trying to find Canadian employees. But local unemployment is very low, as it is across Manitoba. And Canadians apparently don't want to work in this kind of plant.

Potential immigrants do. The company's last overseas recruiting effort was in Honduras. Maple Leaf representatives interviewed 600 applicants there and offered jobs to 88.

Brandon had experienced small waves of immigrants before, but that was long ago. The eastern Europeans who arrived have been thoroughly absorbed, although self-reliant Hutterite colonies still dot the landscape of southwestern Manitoba. So having people from El Salvador, China and Honduras was not exactly something for which Brandon was prepared.

Brandon was a kind of “set in its ways” city, with its old university, community college and agriculture service industries. It has voted Conservative federally forever. The provincial NDP can win one seat in the east end of the city, but the rest is blue, as are all the rural ridings.

At dinner the other night with community leaders, and during a conversation with the mayor, it seemed Brandon is largely very supportive of the immigrants. Yes, there are challenges for the school system in teaching English as a second language. (A program financed by governments, the union and the company offers English instruction to about 1,300 employees.) Housing in the city is tight. And there is the Canada-wide problem of having people working in a hog-processing plant who have professional qualifications from their native countries.

But a survey taken last year showed 89-per-cent approval of the immigrants in Brandon, especially since there have been few run-ins with police and the immigrants have helped to keep the city's population from declining. The decision of so many plant workers to settle in Brandon displays a commitment that impresses residents.

Community leaders, satisfied thus far, ask the right questions. Can we continue to keep the arrivals? Can our educational system cope? Can we avoid intercommunal misunderstandings?

So far, though, so good.
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  #298  
Old Posted Mar 13, 2010, 9:23 PM
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From the above article, read into it what you want.

"In the plant's early years, employee turnover was almost 100 per cent a year, a company spokesman said. About a quarter of the work force was aboriginal. The hours were strict and the work – what the company calls “disassembling” hogs – was hard and repetitive. The aboriginals left, but so did almost all of the original employees."
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  #299  
Old Posted Mar 17, 2010, 5:40 PM
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What should be read into it?
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  #300  
Old Posted Mar 17, 2010, 6:42 PM
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^ Some people in Canada just don't want to work period. But then again I'm sure the majority of those former employees were all highly educated individuals and all found much better paying jobs. Right.
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