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Parkhill School granted $40,000 from Indigo foundation

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 4 minute read 8:20 AM CDT

Who can forget in their childhood of going to the library or bookstore and looking at all the colourful books with adventures and knowledge awaiting within? Or of watching Sesame Street or Reading Rainbow where exciting stories from books were shared and explored, enticing many to go to and pick up the book to continue the adventure. These libraries, bookstores, and TV shows encouraged many to read, and in essence love reading.

It is with this spirit that the Indigo Love of Reading Foundation was formed in 2004 after founder and CEO Heather Reisman visited a school in Toronto and realized that there are a number of school and classroom libraries in the country that are under-resourced.

“We run two grant programs currently that provide books to schools and high-needs communities across the country,” said Ian McCann, senior manager of the Indigo Love of Reading Foundation. “Parkhill has been granted out of the Literacy Fund Grant Program, which is a three-year granting program, where schools receive grants that will fill school libraries and provide additional funds for teachers and teacher librarians to meet student needs, and ultimately attempt to build a love of reading for children across the country.”

McCann said Parkhill was chosen because it’s a new school that needed to stock its shelves and because 48 percent of its student body are English language learners.

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SPORTS FLASHBACK 2002: Eastman Raiders upset Lions in semis

Wes Keating 5 minute read Preview

SPORTS FLASHBACK 2002: Eastman Raiders upset Lions in semis

Wes Keating 5 minute read Yesterday at 5:00 PM CDT

For the first time in the 12-year history of the Eastman minor football program, an Eastman Raiders teams has made it to the league finals.

In arguably the most exciting and dramatic victory an Eastman football team has ever been involved in, the 16-18 Raiders staged a monumental upset, as they edged the heavily favored Fort Garry Lions 23-20 to advance to the league championship against Winnipeg Nomads.

This is an unbelievable story, and this is how it reads. The Raiders snuck into the play-offs, nabbing the fourth and final berth with a 4-4 record. That pitted them against the vaunted first place Fort Garry Lions, a formidable opponent, to be sure. This is a team that, just two weeks earlier, at the same Lions Field in Winnipeg, demoralized the Raiders to the tune of 49-7.

Fort Garry won the two previous league championships with 10 straight victories each year. Just a few weeks ago, St Vital handed Fort Garry their first loss in three years, breaking a string of 25 straight wins for the juggernaut Lions. The Lions followed that loss the following week with that 49-7 debacle over the Raiders.

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Yesterday at 5:00 PM CDT

Sports

AS I SEE IT COLUMN: Trump regime has sucked a lot of joy out of the World Cup

James Loewen 4 minute read Yesterday at 12:00 PM CDT

When FIFA, soccer’s governing body, awarded the 2026 World Cup to Canada, Mexico and the U.S. in 2018, their joint bid to co-host represented three countries working together in perfect harmony. Thanks to one deranged, deeply unstable person, that North American unity is long gone.

Leave it to the panoramically ignorant and colossally evil president of the United States to singlehandedly take a ton of happiness out of the World Cup of soccer, the biggest sporting event on earth.

First there was the tale of Somalian referee Omar Artan. Despite having a proper U.S. visa and a diplomatic passport, Artan, Africa’s 2025 referee of the year, was questioned for 11 hours by U.S. customs officials and shamefully denied entry into the United States for the World Cup.

Then the Trump regime forbade the Iranian team to practice in the U.S. This meant Iran has to fly back and forth to Mexico to train. No other team in the tournament has that kind of burdensome travel schedule, enforced solely out of spite and hate.

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1946 – 2026 Watching Steinbach Grow: Patience pays off for local realtor

Wes Keating 5 minute read Preview

1946 – 2026 Watching Steinbach Grow: Patience pays off for local realtor

Wes Keating 5 minute read Yesterday at 11:36 AM CDT

Spending 50 years in the business, Steinbach realtor Bob Schinkel has learned to “go with the flow” and just as he made the transition from working on houses to selling houses and on to selling farms, he has always been ready to try something new.

Celebrating 25 years in real estate sales back in 2001, Schinkel shifted from livestock farm sales to clients in Europe to concentrate on selling farms on the Canadian prairies.

At the time, poultry, dairy and grain farms were much in demand and the upside was the elimination of all that travel and the endless patience that out-of-country sales demanded.

Europeans looking to buy farms in Canada were never in any hurry to buy the first farm they saw, Schinkel explained in a 2001 interview with The Carillon.

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Yesterday at 11:36 AM CDT

Sports

DANKOCHIK’S DRAFTINGS: World Cup hydration breaks cut into soccer’s appeal

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read Preview

DANKOCHIK’S DRAFTINGS: World Cup hydration breaks cut into soccer’s appeal

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read Yesterday at 9:00 AM CDT

In an earlier column this year, I spoke about how I wasn’t really feeling world cup fever, and I can definitely say I’m not exactly sick with excitement.

I have still enjoyed the tournament though, but that is more about Canada picking up a couple good results, and the joy of having a major sporting event happening at noon Manitoba-time.

What has completely done in my enjoyment of the tournament is the mandatory hydration breaks. It’s clear they’re only in place for advertising, as they even happen during indoor games, games where there’s a massive injury break right during a match or games where there’s a massive downpouring of rain.

There’s no doubt oftentimes a break is needed for players to grab a drink of water, but making it mandatory for every game, regardless of what the circumstances are is just silly.

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Yesterday at 9:00 AM CDT

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EDITORIAL – Lack of respect for mature minor designation concerning

Greg Vandermeulen 5 minute read Yesterday at 8:18 AM CDT

At first blush the decision by Hanover School Division to pass a policy that would see parents exercise their control over their children’s health and counselling in school, despite them being of mature minor status, seems like a positive.

It’s also being applauded by many who see any relinquishment of control of their child as a takeover by somebody else.

Unfortunately, those in favour of the decision and the trustees themselves have entirely missed the point.

Mature minor designation is commonly applied to those 16 and over and is meant to apply to someone who has the mental capacity to make their own decisions.

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Hanover Kickers find the win column in MMSL Division 1

Cassidy Dankochik 3 minute read Preview

Hanover Kickers find the win column in MMSL Division 1

Cassidy Dankochik 3 minute read Saturday, Jun. 27, 2026

The Hanover Kickers have finally added a tally into the win column.

The Manitoba Major Soccer League season is off to a slow start, at least in terms of games played, for the region’s top team, with a pair of rain-outs meaning the team had played just three games as of June 22.

The Kickers picked up a solid result in their fourth game of the season, erasing a loss in their first match of the season to Sher-E-Punjab FC with a 3-2 win in the return match June 22 at the Steinbach Soccer Park.

“We knew this team, they will give us a run for our money, so we had to be on our ‘A’ game,” Kickers head coach Andreas Bergen said.

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Saturday, Jun. 27, 2026

Local

COLUMN: Grey Matters – Beauty is truth, truth beauty

Gary Dyck 4 minute read Saturday, Jun. 27, 2026

“Beauty is truth, truth beauty, - that is all

Ye know on earth, and all ye need to know.”

-John Keats

Have you heard the following statement? ‘All truth is God’s truth’. How about this? ‘All beauty is God’s beauty’. And finally, what about further yet the idea that ‘beauty is truth’? This concept that “beauty is truth” points out how aesthetic qualities like elegance, symmetry, and simplicity can be indicators of fundamental reality and truth. This guiding principle can be found in diverse groups like philosophy, physics, and literature. Physicists and mathematicians often argue that if a mathematical equation or physical theory is beautiful, elegant, and simple, it is likely to be true. Albert Einstein famously stated that the only physical theories he was willing to accept were the “beautiful ones”.

Local

Province opens six mini-cabins in St Malo, rest of Manitoba to follow

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 3 minute read Preview

Province opens six mini-cabins in St Malo, rest of Manitoba to follow

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 3 minute read Saturday, Jun. 27, 2026

The province is in the process of completing construction of six mini-cabins in St Malo as part of a multi-phased approach to enhancing the lakeside experience in provincial parks.

On June 12, Environment and Climate Change Minister Mike Moyes was on hand to show off one of the cabins that was only awaiting beds to complete it.

“We know that Manitobans love our parks, and this is another way that Manitobans can enjoy it,” he said. “Our yurts have been very popular, but we wanted to do something that was Manitoba-designed and Manitoba-made, and so that’s what we’re doing with these mini cabins, putting them in some of the most beautiful parts of our parks.”

Moyes said St Malo was chosen as it’s a popular provincial park seeing more than 200,000 people annually. Its accessibility to Winnipeg and other areas of the province and the lakefront views also made it ideal.

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Saturday, Jun. 27, 2026

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Ste Anne’s Zach Lansard ready for NHL draft

Cassidy Dankochik 5 minute read Preview

Ste Anne’s Zach Lansard ready for NHL draft

Cassidy Dankochik 5 minute read Friday, Jun. 26, 2026

A dream years in the making could be come true June 27, as Zach Lansard appears on pace to be selected during the 2026 NHL entry draft.

The Ste Anne-born forward plays with the Regina Pats in the Western Hockey League. He had 56 points in 68 regular season games and even helped Regina steal a game in the playoffs against a heavily favoured Medicine Hat team. They were eliminated April 4, leaving a tough wait for Lansard and his family between the end of the season and this week’s NHL draft.

“Obviously I’m really excited,” Lansard told The Carillon during a phone interview June 18.

“I feel like I had a very successful year this year, and it’s looking good for me to get my name called. These last few months have been a long wait but it’s a very exciting pressure to have.”

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Friday, Jun. 26, 2026

Local

COLUMN: View from the Legislature – Still much to celebrate in Canada

Kelvin Goertzen, MLA for Steinbach 3 minute read Friday, Jun. 26, 2026

As has become tradition at the annual Summer in the City celebration in Steinbach, time was taken to recognize several families who had obtained their Canadian citizenship over the past year. Each had the opportunity to address those in attendance and to tell them how special it was to be a Canadian citizen, citing the opportunities and quality of life they enjoy in Canada and Manitoba specifically.

For those of us who have been fortunate enough to call Canada our home our entire lives, it is always an important reminder of just how valued our country is by many around the world. It’s easy to take many of those advantages for granted. Not that Canada is a perfect country or one without its challenges. It can easily be argued and backed up by data, that over the past many years the country has fallen behind in efficiency, affordability and economically when measured against other similar nations. This is something that all federal political parties seem to agree on, even if they differ on who should shoulder the blame.

But the fact that there are past missed opportunities or current challenges should not hide the fact that Canada still enjoys the freedoms, lifestyle and opportunities that make it a great place to live. And the reality that more can be done to enhance each of those attributes is more of a challenge than a rebuke.

Canadians largely understand this. It was only a year ago that Canadians were demonstrating a renewed patriotism in response to comments from the U.S. President that he desired to make the country the 51st state. I had the opportunity to attend Canada Day ceremonies in Ottawa last July 1 and without question patriotism was running high. And while some of the rhetoric coming from the U.S. has diminished over the past year, there remains a strong sense among the majority of Canadians that what we have in Canada is worth keeping. Even in the face of another question on provincial sovereignty (this time from Alberta not Quebec) there remains many more people who believe in a strong and united Canada than do not.

Local

COLUMN: Village News – Celebrating Canada

Robert Goertzen 3 minute read Preview

COLUMN: Village News – Celebrating Canada

Robert Goertzen 3 minute read Friday, Jun. 26, 2026

Summertime is a popular season for celebrations in Canada. The weather is favourable for outdoor gatherings, and we enjoy spending time with friends, family, and neighbours in both organized and spontaneous settings. The government of Canada has designated a number of dates in June and July as special days and many of our local communities choose to highlight one or more of these days.

National Indigenous Peoples Day on June 21 recognizes and celebrates the traditions, cultures and contributions of First Nations, Inuit and Metis. Occurring on the longest day of the year, this celebration is a time of renewal, connection, and celebration for many Indigenous people. In our area Buffalo Point First Nation and Roseau River Anishinaabe First Nation are the nearest communities in southeastern Manitoba with large Indigenous populations, but we all have friends and acquaintances with Indigenous connections and June 21 is one way to celebrate their culture and background.

Saint-Jean-Baptiste Day on June 24 celebrates the language and traditions of French-speaking people. Approximately 10 million Canadians speak French in Canada, and our region has about a dozen communities with a large Francophone population. For many generations, Mennonite and Francophone neighbours have built strong communities side by side and June 24 highlights the rich culture of our French-speaking friends and neighbours.

Canadian Multiculturalism Day on June 27 honours the numerous cultural communities that help build a strong and vibrant Canadian society. Did you know that Canada was the first country in the world to create a multiculturalism policy, recognizing and respecting our country’s diverse languages, customs and religions in 1971? Our region continues to benefit from the various cultures represented in our communities as we embrace cultural diversity and show mutual respect for all traditions.

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Friday, Jun. 26, 2026

Local

Hanover school trustees called to minister’s office again, expert calls policy open to censorship

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 7 minute read Preview

Hanover school trustees called to minister’s office again, expert calls policy open to censorship

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 7 minute read Thursday, Jun. 25, 2026

The Hanover School Division board of trustees were called to the education minister’s office for the second time in two years over a policy it passed that could be deemed discriminatory and could lead to censorship.

The trustees passed Policy AK – Responsible Use of Educational Resources during the last board meeting. The policy was created after parents, students, and teachers were complaining about inappropriate content in schools, according to board chair Dallas Wiebe.

Wiebe wouldn’t say what the content was, what form it was viewed, or how students were exposed to the content. He did say trustees had been working on the policy for the past two years.

“I’m going to estimate roughly two years in discussion where we had different materials that were graphic (brought to us), and we’ve also had materials, posting things that were – you know, things that were inappropriate…We heard from all kinds (of people) where materials were inappropriate and not by a small margin. I’ll leave it at that,” he told The Carillon after the meeting to approve the policy.

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Thursday, Jun. 25, 2026

Local

Carillon Sultans perfect week gives team breathing room in MJBL

Cassidy Dankochik 3 minute read Preview

Carillon Sultans perfect week gives team breathing room in MJBL

Cassidy Dankochik 3 minute read Thursday, Jun. 25, 2026

Four wins in four days has the Carillon Sultans sitting in a great position heading into the home stretch of games in the Manitoba Junior Baseball League.

The Sultans took down Winnipeg South 4-1 in a mid-week contest June 18, defeated Interlake at the league’s annual showcase event in Steinbach June 20 before back-to-back wins over Elmwood June 21.

Interlake and Elmwood had been part of the group nipping at the Sultans heels in the standings, but after the weekend’s action both teams were 5.5 games behind league-leading Carillon.

“The team is in a really good place right now,” head coach Don Meilleur said after the weekend’s action, adding the team has faced some good pitchers during their current seven-game win streak.

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Thursday, Jun. 25, 2026

Local

1946 – 2026: Watching Steinbach Grow – Town’s first mayor never needed an election

Wes Keating 3 minute read Preview

1946 – 2026: Watching Steinbach Grow – Town’s first mayor never needed an election

Wes Keating 3 minute read Wednesday, Jun. 24, 2026

SEPTEMBER 25, 1959—Being the first mayor of any town is quite a distinction. Being mayor of that town for its first 10 years is an even greater distinction. Although he passed the gavel to L.A. Barkman a year ago, K.R. Barkman is still regarded as the “Mayor Emeritus,” the embodiment of the spirit which welded the Village of Steinbach into a full-grown town.

Reflecting on his time in office, the former mayor was quick to point out that not everyone was “for” him.

“One day, when I was mayor, a man came into my office. He looked me in the eye and said he had been going around saying everything in the dictionary that was bad about me. What is more, he said he was going to keep right on saying it. The fellow turned and walked out. I guess when you live for 50 years in a place, there are bound to be some people that aren’t for you.”

Taking everything together, it appears that the people who “weren’t for” Klaas Reimer Barkman during the years he was mayor of Steinbach, were few and far between.

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Wednesday, Jun. 24, 2026

Local

COLUMN: On Parliament Hill – Sleepless in Canada

Ted Falk, MP for Provencher 4 minute read Wednesday, Jun. 24, 2026

A new United Way report reveals 40 percent of Canadians say they lie awake worrying about how to stretch their paycheque to pay for food, gas and housing. The findings come as Statistics Canada reports how in the first quarter of 2026, household debt has outpaced income with Canadians now carrying approximately $1.80 in debt for every dollar of household disposable income. All of this is occurring under the leadership of Mark Carney’s Liberal government.

According to the United Way, 60 percent of Canadians feel anxious about their personal finances while 38 percent are experiencing food insecurity. One in five respondents said they had run out of food with no money left to buy more. The report also found that 34 percent know someone close to them who has experienced poverty and 22 percent have personally faced it. Furthermore, food bank usage has reached record levels, with 2.2 million Canadians having visited food banks in a single month.

While Canadians are staying awake with anxiety, the Liberal government still refuses to acknowledge they have driven Canada into the only recession in the G20.

Last week, Mr. Carney acknowledged the paradox that Canada, despite being one of the world’s largest food producers, should in theory have lower food prices. Conservatives agree. Pierre Poilievre responded directly to PM Carney’s comment on X: “Your taxes and recession gave Canada the worst food inflation in the G7. You raised the industrial carbon tax on farm equipment and fertiliser; your weak economy and our weak dollar have lowered purchasing power and raised the cost of imported food.”

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