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Migrants charged, another convicted

Greg Vandermeulen 2 minute read 2:52 PM CDT

Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) and the RCMP issued a pair of press releases a week apart in March, one announcing the arrest of three migrants and another the conviction of a man court found was involved in human smuggling.

In a March 13 news release RCMP say it was thanks to community help that they tracked down three people who snuck into Canada from the U.S.

On March 10, the RCMP’s Integrated Border Enforcement Team (IBET) was notified at 8 a.m. that two possible migrants were travelling on foot along Highway 201 near Neuenberg, a village south of Winkler.

Police found the migrants at what they stated was “the hospital” though the closest hospital would be Boundary Trails Health Centre at 18 km away. They did not say how the men made it there but said it was confirmed they had crossed into Manitoba from the United States. They were both treated for minor cold-related injuries and released into custody.

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CARILLON SPORTS SECOND SHOTS: March 26th edition

Cassidy Dankochik 1 minute read Preview

CARILLON SPORTS SECOND SHOTS: March 26th edition

Cassidy Dankochik 1 minute read 12:00 PM CDT

Featuring game two of the SEMHL finals in Ile des Chenes March 18, a U17 AAA championship game in Beausejour March 19, Games one and three of the MJHL series between Steinbach and Portage March 20/24, CRJHL semi-final a U15 AAA championship game in Landmark March 21, a U18 Manitoba Female Hockey League game in Niverville March 22.

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12:00 PM CDT

Ile des Chenes won game two of the SEMHL championship finals. (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

Ile des Chenes won game two of the SEMHL championship finals. (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

COLUMN: Village News – Great communities: Built by volunteers

Robert Goertzen 4 minute read Preview

COLUMN: Village News – Great communities: Built by volunteers

Robert Goertzen 4 minute read 11:50 AM CDT

Not-for-profit organizations exist to meet a need in the community. Most of us have a job and we have obligations to look after our place of residence, whether an owned or a rented home. But a community requires more than that to thrive.

For many people, participating in their church or religious organization is one of the ways that they contribute to making our community better. The church has been the main way to address needs in the community for 2,000 years. But our modern society has changed and there are now many charities that have formed to serve the local community and the global village, in which we find ourselves.

Besides the goal or mission of each not-for-profit organization, and the donations of financial support that most charities depend on, what every organization requires is volunteers.

Mennonite Heritage Village has been around for nearly 62 years and it is a prime example of the many ways that volunteers have been crucial to its mission (preserving and exhibiting the history of Mennonites in southern Manitoba) and to its service to the community (valuing our heritage, celebrating our values and accomplishments, and providing a basis for generosity and care for our friends and neighbours).

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11:50 AM CDT

Volunteers baking bread during Fall on the Farm 2025.

Volunteers baking bread during Fall on the Farm 2025.

Steinbach charities see rising demand as fuel prices spike

Matthew Frank 3 minute read Preview

Steinbach charities see rising demand as fuel prices spike

Matthew Frank 3 minute read 8:12 AM CDT

Steinbach food banks and charities are seeing extra demand and facing supply shortages as more families feel the squeeze from soaring fuel prices.

Fuel costs have been on the rise since Israel and The United States attacked Iran on Feb. 28, striking multiple targets throughout the middle eastern nation and killing its Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. Gas prices in Manitoba jumped from 122.7 cents per litre on Feb. 21 to 169.7 on March 24.

Ken Dyck, executive director of South East Helping Hands, said donations aren’t keeping up with the rising number of people. He lays blame on gas prices forcing more people to rely on charitable support.

”If you’re living sort of paycheck to paycheck, that changes things right away,” he said.

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8:12 AM CDT

MATTHEW FRANK THE CARILLON

Ken Dyck, executive director for South East Helping Hands, stands beside an empty pallet spot at the food bank’s warehouse. He said soaring fuel prices are raising the demand for the non-profit’s food.

MATTHEW FRANK THE CARILLON 

Ken Dyck, executive director for South East Helping Hands, stands beside an empty pallet spot at the food bank’s warehouse. He said soaring fuel prices are raising the demand for the non-profit’s food.

BLSD names new Shevchenko principal

Greg Vandermeulen 1 minute read Preview

BLSD names new Shevchenko principal

Greg Vandermeulen 1 minute read Yesterday at 5:38 PM CDT

Shevchenko School will have a new principal beginning next school year.

Border Land School Division said in a news release that Leanna Doig will take over the position.

An educator since 2006, Doig has taught in both middle and senior years a variety of subjects.

She has been the principal of Emerson School since September 2023 and has previously worked in Altona, Washington and Nebraska.

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Yesterday at 5:38 PM CDT

SUPPLIED

Leanna Doig will become the new principal of Shevchenko School in Vita.

SUPPLIED 

Leanna Doig will become the new principal of Shevchenko School in Vita.

Hockey Manitoba announces initial Program of Excellence roster

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read Preview

Hockey Manitoba announces initial Program of Excellence roster

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read Yesterday at 3:00 PM CDT

The initial roster for Hockey Manitoba’s U16 Program of Excellence spring selection camp was announced March 20, with 12 players from the Eastman region named to the camp.

The spring selection camp will take place in Winnipeg at the Hockey for All Centre April 10-12. The Program of Excellence will once again be in Steinbach this May, as the province’s top-40 camp will be hosted at the Southeast Event Centre.

Brad Purdie, who is the director of operations and the U15 prep head coach at the Rink Hockey Academy will be heading up the U16 team this year. Two players from the region who suit up for Rink HA made the selection camp roster. They will be joined by 10 players from the Eastman Selects U15 team, which lost in the league finals 3-1 to Brandon this season.

This year’s final roster will be Team Manitoba at the 2027 Canada Winter Games, which will take place next year in Quebec City.

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Yesterday at 3:00 PM CDT

Nixon Gaudet celebrates a goal during the U15 AAA finals. Gaudet is one of 10 players from the Eastman Selects who were invited to Hockey Manitoba's program of excellence spring selection camp. (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

Nixon Gaudet celebrates a goal during the U15 AAA finals. Gaudet is one of 10 players from the Eastman Selects who were invited to Hockey Manitoba's program of excellence spring selection camp. (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

1946 – 2026 Watching Steinbach Grow: Gerhard Derksen picks printer’s ink over plow

Wes Keating 2 minute read Preview

1946 – 2026 Watching Steinbach Grow: Gerhard Derksen picks printer’s ink over plow

Wes Keating 2 minute read Yesterday at 2:49 PM CDT

Gerhard S. Derksen created more than just a printing and newspaper publishing business when he changed career paths in 1932. He brought home to his family his enthusiasm and his love of the role of the community newspaper to people’s daily lives.

His strong and positive example led to family businesses covered in printer’s ink for all five of his children.

Derksen had found it difficult to adjust to farm life on the Saskatchewan prairie. Nine years after immigrating to Canada, he moved his wife Maria and young family to Steinbach, where he began work as a writer with the German-language community newspaper, The Steinbach Post.

At the time, the German newspaper and its small commercial printing shop was operated by Arnold Dyck, a friend and former colleague of Derksen’s in Russia.

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Yesterday at 2:49 PM CDT

CARILLON ARCHIVES

Gerhard S. Derksen and Bill Kornelson look over an article about school grants that will be translated into German for the next issue of the Steinbach Post.

CARILLON ARCHIVES 

Gerhard S. Derksen and Bill Kornelson look over an article about school grants that will be translated into German for the next issue of the Steinbach Post.

Carrière commits to University of Moncton

Cassidy Dankochik 1 minute read Preview

Carrière commits to University of Moncton

Cassidy Dankochik 1 minute read Yesterday at 12:00 PM CDT

Another Eastman Selects player has committed to play USports hockey.

Isabella Carrière will continue her hockey career in New Brunswick, with the Université de Moncton. Carrière tallied 22 points this season with the Selects U18 AAA team, as they posted a 25-2-2 record this season.

Carrière played for the Selects last season as well, chipping in four goals during the team’s championship-winning playoff run.

The Moncton Aigles Bleus play in the Atlantic University Sport conference.

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Yesterday at 12:00 PM CDT

Isabella Carrière lets a shot go during game four of the 2025 U18 AAA championship finals. (Cassidy Dankochik Carillon Archives)

Isabella Carrière lets a shot go during game four of the 2025 U18 AAA championship finals. (Cassidy Dankochik Carillon Archives)

COLUMN: On Parliament Hill – Friendship, trade and vision

Ted Falk, MP for Provencher 5 minute read Yesterday at 11:47 AM CDT

Former NDP Leader Thomas Mulcair recently described Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre’s conversation with podcast host Joe Rogan, an “outstanding piece of political communication.” He added that he was “super well prepared” navigating difficult questions with notable skill and ease.

As you may know, American podcaster Joe Rogan, has a global audience of 20 million subscribers on YouTube alone. His podcast provides a platform shaping public opinion across Canada and the United States, featuring prominent figures from politics, entertainment and public life.

When asked about his U.S. visit last week and why he was there, Mr. Poilievre explained he was speaking directly to Americans because public opinion “indirectly” influences policymakers.

To Mr. Mulcair, the trip aimed at communicating the importance of Canada’s relationship with our southern neighbours, was effective. He praised Mr. Poilievre’s speech in NY as, “One of the best political speeches from any political leader on Canada/US relations in a long time.”

COLUMN: Grey Matters – What should the symbol for Easter be?

Gary Dyck 3 minute read Yesterday at 8:23 AM CDT

Where the cross says, “It is finished,” the empty tomb says, “It has begun anew.”

Recently I attended the Steinbach Bible College leadership conference. I noticed that all four Christian organizations sponsoring the event had crosses in their logo. With Easter approaching it made me wonder why crosses have become the dominant symbol in the church worldwide? The empty tomb is a symbol that should be more common. Afterall, if there was no empty tomb, the cross would have just been the death of a noble man.

The empty tomb of Easter is a significant image of threshold. Each of us experiences many thresholds in our lives. Not just the physical junctures where we move from room to room, but places which lead us to the next frontier, the next chapter of our life, a different atmosphere. They raise feelings of confusion, excitement, apprehension and hope.

When Jesus’ disciples approached the tomb with its rolled away stone, Mary Magdelene sat and cried, John stood outside and believed - Peter, though the last one, ran right in to get a closer look. Celtic author John O’Donohue writes, “It is wise in your own life to be able to recognize and acknowledge key thresholds, to take your time; to feel all the varieties of presence that occur there; to listen inward with complete attention until you hear the inner voice calling you forward. The time has come to cross.”

COLUMN: Tales from the Gravel Ridge – Roll-call at Rosengard School #2168

Maria Falk Lodge 4 minute read Preview

COLUMN: Tales from the Gravel Ridge – Roll-call at Rosengard School #2168

Maria Falk Lodge 4 minute read Monday, Mar. 30, 2026

There was a time, during the 1940s when my sister Anne answered “present” when her name was called in the morning, and again in the afternoon during roll-call at the Rosengard School. The school was closed in due course, which means, of course, that calling the roll was no longer part of the daily routine. Anne, however, never stopped learning during the 90 years of her life.

Anne was born in her parental home in Rosengard on Jan. 13, 1936, during the Great Depression of the 1930s, which according to Britannica, “… was the longest and most severe depression ever experienced by the industrialized Western world, …”. Needless to say, my family, arriving in Canada in 1929, felt keenly the astronomical effects of this worldwide state of affairs. They had already experienced numerous setbacks before leaving the Mennonite village of Schoeneberg, now Smolyane, in Ukraine in December, 1928. These challenges included the First World War, the Russian Revolution, civil war, and anarchy, along with famine and epidemics, followed by being robbed on the train enroute to Moscow. A new life in Canada beckoned them.

Our mother, Katarina Falk always had many household and family activities to which she needed to respond daily. I think our mother had learned early in her life that in order to achieve what needed to be done, she had to be organized, and perhaps equally importantly, she needed to evaluate how to do what needed doing, and at the same time remain composed. It was within that scenario that our sister Anne, and we her siblings, heard from our mother the stories of her early life. Our mother was, all the while, darning socks or possibly knitting a new pair, or mending clothing.

My sister lived in Rosengard during her early life, and even though she no longer attended the Rosengard School, some of those classmates remained her lifelong friends. So too did numerous friends and co-workers she came to know over the years. Anne was kind and considerate throughout the 90 years of her life, and had a unique capacity for working under a range of circumstances. It can truly be said of her that those who associated with her, be it in a work environment, or in a serving capacity in her church, as well as in neighbourly interaction, came to view Anne as a friend.

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Monday, Mar. 30, 2026

Anne with her sister, brother-in-law, and grandniece, Oct. 9, 2023.

Anne with her sister, brother-in-law, and grandniece, Oct. 9, 2023.

Niverville Force MMSL team folds

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read Preview

Niverville Force MMSL team folds

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read Monday, Mar. 30, 2026

After five years of rising through the ranks of amateur soccer in Manitoba, the Niverville Force are no more.

The team, founded in 2021, started in Division 4 of the Manitoba Major Soccer League and got all the way to Division 1, just one step below the Premier Division, the top level of soccer in Manitoba.

“After five enjoyable seasons, our men’s soccer team has decided to conclude our journey,” a statement from team management reads.

“Together, we created a community of friendship, teamwork and passion for the game. It’s been a wonderful experience, and now it’s time for everyone to pursue new opportunities. We appreciate all the support from our players, families, and fans throughout the years.”

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Monday, Mar. 30, 2026

A Grant Park Sporting Club player (white) knocks the ball away from a Niverville Force player during MMSL Division One action at Niverville June 12. (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

A Grant Park Sporting Club player (white) knocks the ball away from a Niverville Force player during MMSL Division One action at Niverville June 12. (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

Southeastern Manitoba farmers are facing extra strain ahead of the spring planting season as fertilizer and fuel prices surge due to the escalating conflict in the Middle East.

Randolph-based farmer Kevin Peters is watching the price turmoil closely. He plants rye, canola, wheat, soybeans, corn and sunflowers on his 7,500 acres. Peters locked in pricing for his year-long fertilizer supply in November and considers himself lucky.

“There’s always concern about geopolitical issues.” he told The Carillon. “Whether it has to do with trade or, in this case, fertilizer supply…it can really affect imports and exports for a lot of things.”

The United States and Israeli attacks on Iran began Feb. 28, striking multiple targets throughout the middle eastern nation and killing its Supreme leader Ali Khamenei. Iranian military personnel retaliated, launching missiles and drones at neighbouring nations and vessels passing through the Strait of Hormuz, which flows between Oman, the United Arab Emirates and Iran, grinding the shipping lane to a halt. The New York Times reported on March 25 at least 17 ships have been struck since the conflict began.

Steinbach Pistons forward Paronuzzi commits to Windsor

Cassidy Dankochik 1 minute read Preview

Steinbach Pistons forward Paronuzzi commits to Windsor

Cassidy Dankochik 1 minute read Monday, Mar. 30, 2026

Connor Paronuzzi has announced his commitment to play hockey at the collegiate level.

The Steinbach Pistons forward will suit up for the University of Windsor Lancers at the USports level.

Paronuzzi had a historic season in Steinbach last year, setting new all-time single season records and becoming the first Piston to be recognized as the league’s most valuable player. He scored 93 points in 58 games last season, setting the single-season assists record for Steinbach.

Paronuzzi started the season with the Brooks Bandits in the B.C. Hockey League, returning to Steinbach just before the January roster freeze.

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Monday, Mar. 30, 2026

Connor Paronuzzi. (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

Connor Paronuzzi. (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

COLUMN: Beyond the Shelter – Healing after sexual violence

Lisa Fast 3 minute read Monday, Mar. 30, 2026

Insights from Emily Roy, sexual assault counsellor advocate:

When people think about healing after sexual violence, they often imagine a clear starting point or a defined path forward. In reality, the journey looks different for everyone, and support can take many forms. Emily Roy, a sexual assault counsellor advocate at Agape House, sees this firsthand in her work with survivors across the community.

At Agape House, sexual assault counselling is not one-size-fits-all. It can include psychoeducation, safety planning, learning healthy coping strategies, support with protection orders, and, just as importantly, offering a space where someone can speak openly without fear of judgment. Adults aged 18 and over who have experienced sexual assault—or who simply have questions about sexual violence—can access these services by reaching out to book a session.

Survivors come forward for many different reasons. Some are trying to better understand their current relationships or are looking for support as they consider leaving. Others want guidance around legal options, such as protection orders, or help building coping skills. For many, the first step is simply having someone who will listen. “Sometimes people just want a place where they can talk and be heard,” Emily explains, emphasizing that every reason for reaching out is valid.

COLUMN: Think Again – Things are getting worse under the NDP

Michael Zwaagstra 4 minute read Monday, Mar. 30, 2026

“We elected a strong team of New Democrats to fix healthcare and make your life more affordable.”

That is how newly elected Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew started his election night victory speech on Oct. 3, 2023. Now, two-and-a-half years into his government’s mandate, it’s time to ask whether Kinew has made good on his promise.

He hasn’t.

On most observable metrics, health care is demonstrably worse now than it was before the NDP took power. For example, emergency room wait times are now so high that the government recently had to promise to update its online wait time trackers. It turns out the estimates they provided were often far below the actual wait times experienced by patients.

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