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Your family won't believe what happened in this Dauphin group home

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Your family won't believe what happened here

Good morning from the Parkland — here's what matters in Dauphin today. You know, you hear a lot of news, especially about folks needing care, but some stories just hit different. This one, about a disabled man dying malnourished in a group home, it just sits heavy in your gut. His family is pushing for an inquest, and honestly, who could blame them?

### What We Know

This isn't some quick headline; this is about a life, and the system meant to protect it. Here's the gist of what we're learning:

* An intellectually disabled man, who was supposed to be safe and cared for in a Manitoba group home, died in hospital.

* The cause? Significant malnutrition. That's not just a little hungry; that's a serious failure in care.

* His family isn't just upset, they're demanding answers and an official inquest to figure out exactly how this could have happened.

You think about all the folks we have in care facilities right here around Dauphin, from those at the Health Centre to the smaller group homes scattered through our neighbourhoods, like near Vermillion Park or out closer to the farms. We trust these places to look after our most vulnerable, our neighbours, our family. When something like this comes to light, it makes you question everything. It's a tragedy that reaches beyond just one family; it makes us all wonder about the oversight, about the training, about whether our standards of care are truly what they should be.

It's a stark reminder that while we're focused on the canola prices and whether Countryfest tickets are selling, there are fundamental human care issues that demand our attention. This isn't just a Winnipeg story; it’s a Manitoba story, and it affects how we view care for everyone in the Parkland, from Ethelbert to Grandview. It makes you think about the quiet struggles happening behind closed doors, even on streets you drive every day.

That's the Morning Wire for you. You can bet Keith and the crew are digging into this one, catch their take live at mornings.live.

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More from Tanya Kovalenko

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 →