水果视频

My Perspective - Reference points

Kate Jackman - Atkinson
The Neepawa Banner

鈥淒amned if you do, damned if you don鈥檛鈥 seems to be the take away from a 水果视频 story that recently broke.  The story sheds some light on the pitfalls of reference checks, from all sides of the employment relationship.

Read more: My Perspective - Reference points

My Perspective - Questions and uncertainty

By Kate Jackman-Atkinson
The Neepawa Banner

In August, the news broke that proposed changes to how private corporations are taxed could have a wide-reaching impact on small businesses, including incorporated farms and professionals.

Read more: My Perspective - Questions and uncertainty

Right in the Centre -Time to rethink health care funding

By Ken Waddell 
The Neepawa Banner 

The Province of 水果视频 put out three fairly major announcements this past week.

Read more: Right in the Centre -Time to rethink health care funding

Right in the centre - Wanted: more thinking and planning

Ken Waddell
The Neppawa Banner

I think it is a good idea that the City of Winnipeg and the Province of 水果视频 are seeking to have Amazon locate a second home base facility in the city. It would be a good thing for the city and the province. It is a long shot, but as the head of CentrePort Canada said in a radio interview, it is a very good exercise. It is the same thing as the communities of south-western 水果视频 banding together to try and land a soybean processing plant. Both are huge projects and they might not happen. However, the lessons learned in the process should give valuable insight into the capacity for projects.

Read more: Right in the centre - Wanted: more thinking and planning

Trucking, a multi-generational affair

1048528_10151776227537494_1496079647_o-online.jpg

Martin Warner, with 鈥淐ream Puff鈥, and their third place Bobtail Tractor award at Shell Super Rigs in La Crosse, Wisconsin.

Martin Warner

The Neepawa Banner

With 15 years of trucking under my belt, spanning all of the continental United States and coast to coast in Canada, I wouldn鈥檛 consider myself a rookie. Nor do I consider myself a veteran of the highway. The fascination with trucks and the highway came from my grandfather, a driver of 47 years who was by definition a Professional Driver of the highest order. I remember being very young riding with him from Thunder Bay to Winnipeg, hauling resin to Palliser Furniture in a Freightliner cabover and a set of Krohnert super B tankers. Over the many summers, I enjoyed our time together as we travelled back and forth across northern Ontario. I remember the courtesy and respect that drivers showed to each other, this is slowly fading, however a few of us still try to keep the values taught to us by the previous generation.

Read more: Trucking, a multi-generational affair