
Manitoba premier vows public inquiry into former PC government efforts to approve sand-mining licence
CBC
Premier Wab Kinew says Manitoba will hold a public inquiry as soon as 2026 into the former Progressive Conservative government’s post-election efforts to approve an environmental licence for sand-mining company Sio Silica.
The premier said his NDP government will probably strengthen Manitoba’s lobbying rules in the wake of efforts in 2023 by outgoing premier Heather Stefanson and two of her cabinet ministers to green-light the mining proposal during the two-week caretaker period between the PC's election-night loss and Kinew’s swearing-in ceremony.
Manitoba ethics commissioner Jeffrey Schnoor ruled in May that Stefanson, former deputy premier Cliff Cullen and former cabinet minister Jeff Wharton violated conflict of interest legislation by improperly pushing to approve the Sio Silica licence.
The Manitoba Legislature subsequently voted to mete out an $18,000 fine to Stefanson, and to require Cullen to pay $12,000. A $10,000 fine was given to Wharton, who remains the PC MLA for Red River North.
Kinew said while Schnoor’s report was thorough, there remain questions the ethics commissioner could not answer.
“Mainly motive. Like, why did they do this?” the premier said Friday in an interview in his office, adding Schnoor was “not able to look into financial holdings,” among other matters.
“Like, what was so important about this thing that, you know, they would risk it all for that?"
Kinew said his government is developing terms of reference and searching for a commissioner for a Sio Silica inquiry that could start in 2026 and take two or three years to conclude, wrapping up “maybe before the next election.”
The next provincial vote is slated for Oct. 5, 2027, and Kinew on Friday downplayed talk of calling an election in 2026.
The premier suggested the inquiry will recommend changes to provincial lobbying rules he calls weak.
“Is our lobbying framework strong enough in Manitoba to make sure that you, the average person, know what's going on with your government officials, the people that you affect in our democracy? I think we can do better,” Kinew said.
“What transparency do you need into the dealings of lobbying to government, so that you know that your democracy is strong, your democracy is respected?”
A Sio Silica inquiry would be the third public inquiry promised by Kinew.
A provincial inquiry into the procurement and construction of Winnipeg’s police headquarters is underway. Public hearings are slated to begin in February 2026.













