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The action plan, touted by the province as shaping priorities and setting direction, will focus on five key areas, including evidence-based, data-driven services, service access and co-ordination, substance use and recovery, population health and wellness and service governance and accountability.
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“Over the years it’s been really clear in our community there’s a great need for mental health services,” Nancy Heinrichs, executive director of NorWest Co-op Community Health said in a press conference on Monday. “The demand continues to grow. We’ve experienced a 500% increase in requests for mental health counselling from January 2020 to March 2021. The main presenting problems of people walking through our door, or recently onto our screen, are around anxiety and depression.”
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Thank the lord above all Manitoba Liberal Leader Dougald Lamont had forgotten was his tie.
Wednesday evening, social media lit up with a screenshot of Federal Liberal MP William Amos who was caught void of all elements of any kind of dress code with just a well-placed cell phone blocking out his unmentionables.
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He claims it was a brain fart, that he had just returned from a jog, was changing and did not realize the camera was on. Instead, Amos was on full display for all sitting members — the session was public but the virtual stream of MP’s was a closed circuit.
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I DON’T usually watch debates in the Manitoba legislature. But I did watch last Thursday as the government introduced Bill 56, a bill that would have the effect of restricting smoking and vaping on First Nations and which will almost certainly be challenged in the courts.
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I DON’T usually watch debates in the Manitoba legislature. But I did watch last Thursday as the government introduced Bill 56, a bill that would have the effect of restricting smoking and vaping on First Nations and which will almost certainly be challenged in the courts.
The conduct in the legislature over the reading of this bill was strikingly combative and hostile. The best comparison I can make is to sittings of the House of Commons just prior to a federal election, when MPs tend to be rambunctious and combative, testing out speaking lines and thumping their chests in anticipation of a hard-fought election. The difference here is the next Manitoba election is slated for October 2023, not tomorrow.
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