Your fines are about to get real, Flin Flon.
Morning from The Rock — here's what's happening in Flin Flon. You know how it is up here; sometimes things feel a little... distant from Winnipeg. But this one? This is a Manitoba-wide move that's going to hit home, even if you live right on the Saskatchewan border, halfway up Main Street where it turns into a rock face. The province is setting up its own collection unit for fines, from speeding tickets on Highway 10 to those court-ordered payments. They're ditching the private agencies and keeping all that cash in-house.
### What This Means for Us
Justice Minister Matt Wiebe says it’s about making sure people actually pay up, and honestly, who can argue with that? For years, those private agencies took a cut – sometimes a hefty 18% – but now Manitoba thinks it can do a better job and save some serious coin. Think about it:
* No more private agencies skimming off the top. * Government using its full power to chase down unpaid fines. * Potentially more revenue for provincial services, which, let's be honest, we up north could always use.
This isn't just some big city problem. We've got our own share of outstanding fines, just like any other town. Whether it's a parking ticket near the Flin Flon Arts Council building or something more serious, the province is about to get a lot more serious about collecting. It means the hammer is coming down, and for a town that's seen its share of ups and downs with Hudbay and the commodity cycles, every dollar counts, even if it's coming from someone who thought they could just ignore a ticket. You can't ignore granite, and you probably won't be able to ignore the province either.
Cole Chicken, MiTL Sports Desk, Flin Flon.
You want the full breakdown? The crew on the Morning Wire dives into this and more every day — catch it live at mornings.live.