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Highway 34 is Manitoba's worst road AGAIN. What gives?

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Your Main Street drive will make you furious

Good morning from the Parkland — here's what matters in Dauphin today.

You know, every year CAA Manitoba puts out their list of the province's worst roads, and every year I brace myself. But this year, seeing Highway 34 named the absolute worst for the *second* time in a row? That just grinds my gears, honestly. We’re talking about a stretch between Gladstone and the US border, and while it's not our Main Street directly, it tells you a lot about the state of our infrastructure and what drivers in the Parkland are facing daily. When roads are this bad, it’s not just an inconvenience; it’s a real hit to our farmers trying to get goods to market and for folks just trying to visit family.

### Why This Matters in the Parkland

We all rely on these provincial highways, even if they're not right in our backyard in Dauphin. Think about it:

* **Agricultural Impact:** Our canola, our cattle, our grain — it all moves on these roads. Bad roads mean higher maintenance costs for farmers' vehicles and slower, riskier transport times.

* **Regional Connectivity:** Dauphin is a hub. People travel here from all over the region for services, for shopping, for Canada's National Ukrainian Festival or Countryfest. If the routes *to* and *from* us are crumbling, it makes that travel harder and more expensive.

* **Safety Concerns:** Potholes and rough pavement aren't just annoying; they're dangerous. We don't need any more accidents because someone hit a crater they couldn't avoid.

It’s frustrating because we know how vital good roads are for a thriving regional economy. When a major provincial artery gets this kind of black mark repeatedly, it really highlights a bigger issue for all of us in rural Manitoba. It makes you wonder what it'll take for some real action. We keep saying Dauphin serves 56,000 people and most of them have nowhere to get real local business news. That's not a small market — that's an underserved one, and we deserve better infrastructure for our communities.

Tanya Kovalenko, MiTL Sports Desk.

My neighbours are talking about this on the Morning Wire right now – check it out live at mornings.live.

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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 →