logo
Manitoba seeks to grow innovation, investment in bioscience sector

Manitoba seeks to grow innovation, investment in bioscience sector

The province is launching a new clinical trials office to fast-track health research and creating an initiative to grow Manitoba's bioscience sector.
Research Improvements Through Harmonization in Manitoba (RITHIM) will bring industry partners together to streamline the review system so research projects can be approved faster and more efficiently. The new electronic system will also create a single co-ordinated application process.
MLAs Renée Cable, Jamie Moses and Mike Moroz made the announcement Wednesday at Red River College Polytechnic's Notre Dame Avenue campus in Winnipeg.
MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS
Advanced Education and Training Minister Renée Cable speaks at a press conference Wednesday with fellow ministers, Innovation and New Technology Minister Mike Moroz, left, and Business, Mining, Trade and Job Creation Minister Jamie Moses at the RRC Simulation Centre, where they announced the provincial government's launch of a new clinical trials office to fast-track health research and the new Research Improvements Through Harmonization in Manitoba (RITHIM) project to grow Manitoba's bioscience sector.
RITHIM and the clinical trials office will make it 'easier, faster and more efficient' for innovation and investment in the biosciences field in Manitoba, said Cable, the advanced education and training minister.
It will create jobs and signal to students in Manitoba there is a space for people who want to work in biosciences and do cutting-edge research in the province, she added.
The clinical trials office will build on Manitoba's strength as Canada's second-largest pharmaceutical exporter and a hub for biotech innovation, said Moses, who noted Manitoba's biosciences sector adds $5.2 billion to the provincial GDP.
'We have a homegrown network of researchers (and) innovators … that are thriving and driving innovation and new health-care diagnostics and therapeutics right here in Manitoba,' said Moses, the business, mining, trade and job creation minister.
'This clinical trial office will help us leverage their success to even more strengths and success in the future and, on top of that, will attract new investment into our province.'
Research Manitoba, the provincial agency that promotes the funding of research, will lead RITHIM.
RITHIM director Liz Lylyk described the initiative as unique across Canada and said it will harmonize ethics, privacy and health institutional review processes to streamline health research approvals in Manitoba.
The project will create an ecosystem where researchers can focus on science, accelerate innovation and get solutions to the population faster, Lylyk said.
'RITHIM will be an essential element of growing health research here in Manitoba, leading to economic and social prosperity, as well as significant improvements in the health and well-being of Manitobans.'
The province's biosciences sector is largely unknown but delivers more than 14,000 jobs to Manitobans, said Andrea Ladouceur, Bioscience Association Manitoba president and CEO.
'Research can have a long runway in its pursuit of being available to all,' she said. 'RITHIM is a key component in helping us make sure that that process is done properly and within reasonable timelines.'
The government is investing $100,000 this year in the new clinical trials office, Moses said. The investment is part of Manitoba's 2025-26 budget.
Monday Mornings
The latest local business news and a lookahead to the coming week.
RITHIM and the clinical trials office will create more opportunities for businesses to invest in Manitoba, Moses added.
'Not only is this a signal that we're ready to break down barriers to make sure investment happens in Manitoba quicker, but we're also able to work in partnership with industry to understand their needs, listen to them and make sure that we take concrete action to make sure our Manitoba economy continues to grow,' he said.
'At the same time, it's going to improve health-care outcomes for Manitobans.'
Wednesday's briefing followed last month's announcement the province is giving Research Manitoba an annual $5-million funding top-up.
aaron.epp@freepress.mb.ca
Aaron EppReporter
Aaron Epp reports on business for the Free Press. After freelancing for the paper for a decade, he joined the staff full-time in 2024. He was previously the associate editor at Canadian Mennonite. Read more about Aaron.
Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber.
Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hadfield to touch down with new novel in November
Hadfield to touch down with new novel in November

Winnipeg Free Press

time3 hours ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Hadfield to touch down with new novel in November

Beloved Canadian astronaut and bestselling author Chris Hadfield will touch down in Winnipeg in November to discuss his new novel. Hadfield's thriller Final Orbit will be published on Oct. 7 by Random House of Canada, and tells the story of the role of the 1970s Chinese space program in the space race between the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. The Winnipeg launch of Final Orbit will take place in the Muriel Richardson Auditorium at WAG-Qaumajuq (330 Memorial Blvd.) on Thursday, Nov. 13 at 7:30 p.m., and will be hosted by Free Press editor Paul Samyn. Hadfield is the author of two previous novels, The Defector and The Apollo Murders, as well as the memoir An Astronaut's Guide to Life on Earth, the photo book You Are Here: Around the World in 92 Minutes as well as the children's book The Darkest Dark. Tickets for the event are $35 plus fees and include a signed copy of Final Orbit; they can be purchased online.

Child and youth care specialists can make schools safer, association says
Child and youth care specialists can make schools safer, association says

Winnipeg Free Press

time10 hours ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Child and youth care specialists can make schools safer, association says

The Child and Youth Care Workers' Association of Manitoba is calling on public schools to hire more of its members to prevent student outbursts and related staff injuries. Not unlike social workers, the professionals — many of whom have a certificate or diploma from Red River College Polytechnic — are trained in child development, relationship-building and crisis intervention. Chelsea Champagne said she and her colleagues' skill sets are well-suited for 21st-century schools, but they have long been overlooked by the education sector. MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS Child and Youth Care Workers' Association of Manitoba president Chelsea Champagne says her association's members could help 'create more safe space' in Manitoba schools. 'I see so much positive potential for change,' said Champagne, president of the association that advocates for roughly 2,000 child and youth care workers and support staff in Winnipeg. 'We could create more safe space in schools and we're ready to be there.' The workforce is primarily spread out across community health-care settings, group homes and juvenile corrections facilities. Champagne said practitioners build 'therapeutic relationships' with youths and their families. In doing so, they learn about what triggers behavioural challenges and build individualized plans accordingly, she said. School staff made 844 more time-loss injury claims — a 332 per cent spike — to the Workers Compensation Board of Manitoba last year compared to a decade ago. An April survey of local educational assistants found seven in 10 had experienced violence on the job. Half of those respondents indicated they were subjected to it weekly, if not daily, as per the findings released by the Canadian Union of Public Employees Manitoba. Also during the spring, a Brandon-based resource teacher was conducting a similar study for her PhD; Julie Braaksma's early findings suggest student-on-teacher violence is taking place across the province and it often goes under-reported. Alan Campbell, president of the Manitoba School Boards Association, said trustees are both well aware of these safety concerns and realistic that they are unlikely to disappear anytime soon. Student mental-health struggles, stressful household dynamics and unmet educational needs are all 'manifesting in the form of violence,' Campbell said, noting the COVID-19 pandemic worsened matters although such issues predate 2020. 'There is a heightened need and expectation on the part of communities that schools are better equipped to support students, no matter how they, themselves, are equipped to come to school and to learn,' he said. The veteran trustee said school boards are paying closer attention to the size and makeup of their clinician teams. While some boards have added child and youth care workers to their staffing complements, budget constraints continue to prove challenging, he said. Winnipeg's River East Transcona School Division was an outlier in 2007 when it began hiring the specialists. Jón Olafson, assistant superintendent of student services, said they've since become 'an integral part' of RETSD, visiting early, middle and senior years schools to help implement student-specific plans. Nearby Louis Riel School Division established the first of its now-seven child and youth care worker positions in 2021. Administrators in the Pembina Trails School Division followed suit this year. Their roster of the staffers is slated to double, to two, in 2025-26. Champagne applauded the leaders who've embraced the professionals as the experts they are in how childhood trauma and unmet needs impact behaviours. Weekday Mornings A quick glance at the news for the upcoming day. What makes these practitioners different from their school social worker and psychologist colleagues is their training in real-time crisis support, she said. Champagne noted that child and youth care practitioners regularly work with the same students so they can get to know them on a personal level, help them build positive habits and prevent outbursts. 'We're not there to be EAs or TAs (teaching assistants). We're not there to teach kids. We're there to help them manage their social, emotional, behavioural needs,' she added. RRC Polytech has issued 380 diplomas since launching its two-year child and youth care program — which began as a certificate program in 1995 — about 18 years ago. Maggie MacintoshEducation reporter Maggie Macintosh reports on education for the Free Press. Originally from Hamilton, Ont., she first reported for the Free Press in 2017. Read more about Maggie. Funding for the Free Press education reporter comes from the Government of Canada through the Local Journalism Initiative. Every piece of reporting Maggie produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press's tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press's history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates. Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber. Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.

What do we do now regarding emissions?
What do we do now regarding emissions?

Winnipeg Free Press

time14 hours ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

What do we do now regarding emissions?

Opinion Over the past months, multiple impassioned pleas in the Free Press have demanded Canada reduce greenhouse gases. Concern and angst are evident, but no practical or actionable suggestions. This aptly characterizes the wasted decade under Justin Trudeau, with lots of aspirations and haughty pronouncements, but policies poorly conceived and overly political, resulting in woeful performance. That's not just me talking but the United Nations Environment Program. They note Canada as worst of the G7 for over-promising and under-delivering on emissions. Unfortunately, little seems to have changed under Mark Carney, whether on the environment or even on trade; still too much over-promising and under-delivering. Carney, for example, vowed to shield Canadians from content-thievery by U.S. tech giants, only to completely cave, almost on cue, when Trump objected. There is constant touting of 'clean growth,' but nothing concrete and little tangible progress. So, what can we do now? Taking a business perspective on climate is increasingly important, given economics is a key pillar of sustainability. As Vaclav Smil suggests, 'Without affordable solutions, wishful thinking on decarbonization risks unimaginable economic misery.' Carney dropped the useless commodity carbon tax but did not acknowledge failures both on emissions and fairness. Most Canadians, especially lower income, paid more than received back. Carney is now focused on the large industrial emitter tax, a tempting cash-cow. Yet such industries, like steel, are under dire threats. A better idea today is to temporarily drop the tax to help preserve jobs. We could also smartly set up special levies in the case of desired exports to Europe, matching carbon border adjustments there for any exports, but with collected funds going back to affected industries to help make improvements. If people want electric vehicles, fine, but let's drop the unachievable mandates, as recommended by automotive manufacturers. Electric vehicle progress is inconsequential, still only around three per cent of overall fleet, with almost all being imports. The bigger issue is excessive price, unaffordable for most Canadians even with incentives. Speaking of incentives, more than $2.2 billion went overwhelmingly to the top 16 per cent income bracket, hardly in need. A positive alternative, both cost efficient and equitable, is public transit. Across Canada, transit has not fully recovered to pre-COVID ridership, everywhere facing huge challenges, with cumulative financial losses approaching $12 billion. Even diesel buses are good. They too get people out of cars. For personal vehicles, why not modest incentives, say $2,000, but for all more-efficient vehicles including conventional hybrids. These are more affordable, provide reductions, and are made in Canada in significant numbers. Such incentives would go much further too. On the trade side, though, not a dime should go to any company benefiting Elon Musk, given his odious role. Despite pronouncements on heat pumps, there is not much reality. They still represent only three per cent of heating. Air source heat pumps are suitable in only a few provinces, not including the prairies. I know of failures. Ground source heat pumps can save operating costs, but are pricy, $30,000 to $40,000 per single site. Examining government information more closely shows a current focus on trying to shift all-electric homes. This conserves electric power and lowers operating costs, but no GHG reductions, and a high-cost per kW reduced, more than $4,000. For good reasons, we already have efficient natural gas systems, exceeding 90 per cent, and these are affordable. Despite incentives, heat pump economics are questionable for getting off natural gas. There is a logical path, though, involving community loops and multi-house neighbourhood-systems. These have demonstrated high performance and low costs, but no level of government pays any attention. Until this happens, heat pumps will languish at the periphery. Regarding electricity, Manitoba and Canada have lots of energy, i.e., kWh, but are limited on capacity, i.e., kW. These are distinctly different parameters. Jay Grewal stressed we could face problems here before 2030. Wind can provide diversification to guard against drought, so is positive, but solar, often touted, is overly expensive, surprisingly dirty, especially solar trash, involves largely imported equipment, and cannot provide kW. Natural gas turbines are a good capacity option, less than $2,000 per kW. They only generate emissions when actually running. If only operated as needed, say 10 to 20 per cent of the time, numbers show this is better than solar. A last opportunity to note is transforming canola we already grow, but threatened too, into low-emissions sustainable aviation fuel (SAF). A realistic plant has already been proposed for Manitoba. Further analysis is still needed, but there is potential for what could be the largest emissions reduction project in Manitoba, combined with local value-add opportunities, and support for Canada's crucial canola sector, more economically important than automotive but receiving little federal attention. Yes, we have opportunities, but we need to be realistic and think things through. Robert Parsons, PhD, MBA, teaches at the I.H. Asper School of Business, University of Manitoba.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store