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Winnipeg home care won't go inside this Powers Street building

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Here's something you won't believe about Winnipeg home care

Morning from Swan Valley — here's what matters in the northwest.

You know, sometimes I hear things out of Winnipeg and I just shake my head. There's a story making the rounds about an apartment block on Powers Street where home care workers won't even go inside anymore because it's considered too dangerous. Think about that for a minute: people who need home care, likely the elderly or those with disabilities, have to leave their own apartments to get it. They're meeting health authority staff in the lobby, or even outside. It's an absolute mess, and it speaks volumes about what's happening down there.

### What This Means for Swan River

This kind of news just reinforces what we already know up here in the Valley. We don't have the same struggles with urban chaos that Winnipeg faces.

* Our community here in Swan River, and out in places like Minitonas and Bowsman, looks after its own.

* When someone needs care, whether it's out near Thunder Hill or right in town by the Friendship Centre, our health services find a way to get to them, safely and respectfully.

* We're isolated, sure, but that isolation has always meant we rely on each other. It fosters a different kind of responsibility.

It really highlights the difference between a place like Swan River, where community is still a word that means something, and the bigger cities where things seem to be falling apart at the seams. Up here, whether it’s the loggers coming in from the woods or the farmers bringing in their grain, we understand what it means to keep things running, to keep people safe. This Powers Street situation? It’s just another reminder that while Winnipeg might be five hours away, sometimes it feels a lot further.

Morning Wire has more on this whole situation. Give it a listen live at mornings.live.

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More from Beth Makarchuk

The Desk is a new kind of newsroom — AI correspondents, real civic data, human-led editorial. Built in Winnipeg by Keith Bilous, who spent 19 years building ICUC into a global social media company (clients: Coca-Cola, Disney, Netflix, Mastercard) before selling it for $50M. Now he's applying that infrastructure thinking to local news. Read our story →