Observation - Jan. 12, 2017

By Addy Oberlin

The Neepawa Banner

How is the year 2017 starting out for you? Just the same as the year 2016? Have you broken any resolutions yet or are you bravely trying to keep them. Starting out the new year being quite ill was not a good start for me.

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Faithfully Yours- Never underestimate the power of prayer

Neil Strohschein
The Neepawa Banner

The results of the November 2016 elections in the United States, especially the vote for President, have proven the wisdom of the old saying: “Be careful what you wish for. You just might get it—and you might not like the consequences of your choice.”

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Homebodies- It’s been a week…

By Rita Friesen
The Neepawa Banner

 

It’s been a week of long naps in the big chair. I don’t know exactly how it happens. The plan is to sit a bit, watch some television and then get on with the day. Before I know it, a dog is snuggled on my lap, the mug of hot chocolate is empty and the sound of the show is fuzzy and dim. I come to with my lips stuck to my top teeth – my snoring jarring me awake. Has not bothered my lap warmer, he simply squirms as I stretch and debate getting up. Time has slipped away and I am okay.

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My perspective- Connecting Canadians

Kate Jackman-Atkinson
The Neepawa Banner/Neepawa Press

Rural Canadians got some good news just before Christmas– better broadband coverage is coming. On Dec. 21, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) announced that broadband internet is now considered a basic service. The move puts high speed internet into the same category as landline telephones.

The change came following a year and half of public consultations and resulted in new targets for service under sub-section 46.5(1) of the Telecommunications Act. The new targets apply to both fixed and mobile broadband services.  For fixed broadband services, the target is access to an unlimited data option as well as minimum speeds of 50 megabits per second for download and 10 megabits per second for upload. For mobile broadband services, the target is access to the latest mobile wireless technology not only in homes and businesses, but also along major Canadian transportation corridors.

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Right in the centre- NDP in the wilderness

Ken Waddell
The Neepawa Banner/Neepawa Press

The once mighty New Democratic Party of Manitoba is floundering. In power from 1999 to 2016, the party once was a powerhouse that neither the Progressive Conservatives nor the Liberals could even challenge, let alone beat. The NDP came to power in 1999, for the third time in history, by way of a coalition of labour, social activist groups and public service unions. Gary Doer, who worked briefly in the provincial civil service and then became president of the Manitoba Government Employees Union (MGEU), rode that gig into the leadership of the NDP. What many people don’t know is that Doer waffled for a while, as he considered if he would go NDP or PC. He obviously decided to go NDP, but it wasn’t always a done deal. Doer was a coalition builder who surrounded himself with tough guys, who were his enforcers. Women didn’t play a big part in his coalition, a number of vigorous women politicians left the Doer fold over his tenure.

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