• Turning red: Analysts scrutinize Sask. deficit
    Mar 20 2026

    The Official Opposition says projecting a deficit until the end of the decade is nothing to celebrate. The province says it’s trying to ‘protect Saskatchewan.’ So which is it? Our political panelists Alexander Quon and Murray Mandryk sift through the budget day political rhetoric to help us understand what being in the red for several years could mean for the province.

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    15 mins
  • Regina drops coin parking meters. Some say that's not fair
    Mar 18 2026

    When the City of Regina announced you could no longer pay with coins to park downtown, people pushed back. As a solution, the city is offering scratch-off parking vouchers for anyone who doesn’t want to download the new parking app, or pay online. The changes have sparked quite the conversation, with many people asking: Can cities modernize without leaving some citizens behind?

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    18 mins
  • Is the new Sask. health-care plan old news?
    Mar 13 2026

    The Saskatchewan government has a plan to fix health care issues but the opposition says it sounds like a similar strategy launched more than a decade ago. Will the province’s latest health-care reform improve surgical wait times or find you a primary care provider faster? We asked our political panelists Alexander Quon and Murray Mandryk.

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    13 mins
  • Could uranium fuel Saskatchewan's next boom?
    Mar 11 2026

    The province’s uranium industry is seeing a major upswing. Saskatchewan company Cameco signed a $2.6-billion trade deal with India to provide 22 million pounds of uranium to fuel its nuclear reactors over the next nine years. Meanwhile, Denison Mines Corp. and NexGen Energy Ltd. just received approvals from the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission to start construction on the province’s first two new uranium mines in a generation. What’s driving this boom and will it benefit the province?

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    21 mins
  • Weekend Listen: The Cult Queen of Canada
    Mar 7 2026

    The tiny Saskatchewan town of Richmound faces a surreal crisis when a cult leader calling herself “The Queen of Canada” occupies an abandoned school. As neighbours turn on each other, a retired teacher leads resistance in a story about what happens when online extremism spills into the real world. Host Rachel Browne investigates how a 120-person community became the battleground over truth, tolerance, and how to confront extremism. The Cult Queen of Canada from Uncover is out now. Listen here.

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    39 mins
  • Library violence: Minister says ‘call the police’
    Mar 6 2026

    Social Services Minister Terry Jenson said if Saskatchewan library workers are concerned about safety, they should call the police, claiming it’s no different than violence occurring outside a 7-Eleven. Is that a fair comparison? Our political panelists Murray Mandryk and Alexander Quon analyze the minister’s suggestion and pose a question: Would he be willing to work a shift at a library?

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    15 mins
  • AI data centres are coming to Sask., and there are questions
    Mar 4 2026

    Bell Canada announced it plans to build an AI data centre campus south of Regina. A flurry of questions are now being asked: What kind of data centre? How will it be powered? Will it use a ton of water? Details remain scarce, but we seek as many answers as we can on this new frontier of tech in Saskatchewan.

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    27 mins
  • Political watchers ponder Moe’s early reports of a deficit
    Feb 27 2026

    It’s a bit unusual for a provincial government to announce we’re short on money before the provincial budget is made public. Politicians are often tight-lipped when money is tight. We ask our political panelists Murray Mandryk and Alexander Quon if there is anything to gain politically by admitting it in advance. Will it make budget day a little less bleak? Or not?

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    13 mins