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Police save youth from Red River

Greg Vandermeulen 1 minute read 5:15 PM CDT

Quick thinking from the Manitoba First Nation Police Service (MFNPS) on Roseau River First Nation resulted in a water rescue of a youth in distress.

In a Monday press release the MFNPS said they received a call in the early morning hours of May 31 advising them a female youth in distress had left her residence and was believed to be at risk for entering the Red River.

Police spotted her floating down the river in what they describe as a “significant distance from shore”.

“Officers entered the water to reach the individual while another officer remained on the shoreline, maintaining communication with dispatch, monitoring the situation and coordinating updates,” they said.

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Jun. 8, 12 AM: 23°c Cloudy with wind Jun. 8, 6 AM: 20°c Cloudy with wind

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RM of La Broquerie honours couple’s donation with dedication, pickleball court

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 7 minute read Preview

RM of La Broquerie honours couple’s donation with dedication, pickleball court

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 7 minute read 2:50 PM CDT

When Claude and Annette Tétrault first saw the land located south of Highway 210 in Marchand in 1981 they immediately fell in love with it. Never did the couple think they would build a legacy.

On Saturday, the two were honoured with the naming of a park in the municipality – the Claude and Annette Tétrault Park.

“It’s a great day,” said Claude. “Also, very emotional though,” added Annette.

Over the span of 37 years, the former banker and his accountant wife would become land developers owning and developing 600 acres around Marchand. But it was the two acres they donated 13 years ago to the RM of La Broquerie for a park that would cement the couple’s legacy.

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2:50 PM CDT

Local

SPORTS FLASHBACK 1996: Irish dairymen hope hurling catches on

Wes Keating 3 minute read Preview

SPORTS FLASHBACK 1996: Irish dairymen hope hurling catches on

Wes Keating 3 minute read 12:00 PM CDT

The Southeast Hurlers are sporting a perfect two wins-no losses record, after a rematch against Winnipeg opponents at the A.D. Penner Park, showcasing a game never before seen by sports fans in the Southeast.

When talk turns to “hurling”, the names of great baseball pitchers like Nolan Ryan or Randy Johnson usually come to mind, but a pair of Irish dairy farmers, who have settled in the Southeast, are hoping they can change that.

Pat Donnelly and Tom Dooley brought their hurling skills along from “the old country” and are trying to get their Canadian friends interested in what they say is one of the world’s oldest sports.

To the casual observer, the sport of hurling would appear to be a cross between field hockey and lacrosse, with a soccer net and football goal posts thrown in to make it more interesting.

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12:00 PM CDT

Local

DANKOCHIK’S DRAFTINGS: Nighthawks’ Centennial Cup run caps off Carillon’s hockey season

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read Preview

DANKOCHIK’S DRAFTINGS: Nighthawks’ Centennial Cup run caps off Carillon’s hockey season

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read 12:00 PM CDT

The end of an extra long hockey season came to an end for The Carillon in memorable fashion, with the Niverville Nighthawks claiming the Centennial Cup in P.E.I. May 17. The season began in Niverville with the Nighthawks home opener Sept. 19.

I track the events I attend in two chunks of the year (labelled hockey and baseball in my spreadsheet), which start with the first Manitoba Junior Hockey League regular season game of the year, and end either with the Turnbull Cup final or the Centennial Cup, if needed.

With the Nighthawks and Steinbach Pistons out in the first round of the Manitoba Junior Hockey League playoffs last year, our hockey season was extended quite a bit compared to 2024/2025. Those playoff runs fuelled an overall increase of MJHL coverage from 22% of events covered to 31%.

The other big impact on the stats came from the Eastman Selects male U18 AAA program move from Beausejour to Steinbach. The male team’s new proximity meant they became a more prominant team for us to get out to.

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12:00 PM CDT

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1946 – 2026 Watching Steinbach Grow: Kreutzer family enjoys shift from horseshoes to Hondas

Wes Keating 4 minute read Preview

1946 – 2026 Watching Steinbach Grow: Kreutzer family enjoys shift from horseshoes to Hondas

Wes Keating 4 minute read 11:03 AM CDT

One of the earliest businesses on Steinbach Main Street was the blacksmith shop run by Heinrich Kreutzer. Two generations later, the Kreutzer family switched from horseshoes to horsepower as Gordon Kreutzer launched a career with J. R. Friesen and Sons in 1956.

That was early days for “The Automobile City” and the Steinbach Auto Dealers co-operative effort to make sure people would buy their vehicles at any one of the dozen or so dealerships along Main Street.

Today, Doug Kreutzer, Heinrich Kreutzer’s great-grandson, has the distinction of being just about the only remaining independent automobile dealer, while even in Steinbach, most of the dealerships have evolved into buyers’ groups.

Gordon Kreutzer still has an office at his son’s Honda dealership on Highway 12, and some of the customers who drop in these days recall buying their first vehicle from Gordon when he was at J.R.s.

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11:03 AM CDT

Sports

It appears as if a trend is possibly emerging in the NHL: American-born players on Canadian rosters wanting to return home to the excited states and play for an American team.

This all started when the late Johnny Gaudreau left Calgary for Columbus, for less money than what the Flames were offering. About a week later Matthew Tkachuk requested a trade in Calgary and was moved to Florida.

Then defenseman Quinn Hughes wanted out of Vancouver. He got his wish and now plays for the Minnesota Wild.

The “I want out of Canada” theory recently hit close to home when the Jets’ Connor Hellebuyck made it pretty obvious he is re-evaluating his contract extension in Winnipeg given the team’s poor performance this year.

Local

COLUMN: Grey Matters – God is a sentimental God

Gary Dyck 4 minute read 8:41 AM CDT

“Sentimentality is simply the heart’s way of remembering what the mind never wants to let go.” -Anonymous

Did you know that God is sentimental? In the church calendar we recently celebrated Pentecost Sunday which was a special Jewish day long before that. The original Pentecost festival was a celebration of the Torah (law of God) to Israel. “The law would shape them as a people with whom God would dwell. God’s presence with them would be evidenced in the tabernacle that traveled with them. On the day of Pentecost in Acts 2, God comes to indwell his people, the new temple, by the Holy Spirit” (Stanley W. Green). Pentecost for the Israelites is also about offering the first fruits of their barley harvest to God, which is comparable to the next Pentecost where God offers us the first fruits of the Spirit.

Surely God could have sent the Holy Spirit as soon as Jesus was resurrected and ascended, but He waited until the festival day of Pentecost. ‘Pentecost’ literally means ‘count 50 or fiftieth’. Numbers are important to God, especially the number 50, which is the special year of Jubilee in the Old Testament. Maybe God likes to build on our human understanding to make it more memorable for minds and hearts? Could it be that a sentimentality like this helps us remember the things we should never let go of? This type of holy sentimentality is not a weakness; it is the heart remembering what truly matters. In this context, to be sentimental is to honor the moments that shape us and the sacred events that fill our lives with meaning.

This Pentecost the church I work at had several people praying in their mother tongue at the same time! It gave us a sense of what it would have felt like during the Pentecost in Acts 2 when numerous Galilean believers were speaking in foreign languages after receiving the Holy Spirit. What seemed like tongues of fire appeared and rested above them as they met for prayer in Jerusalem and then in the streets Jews who had gathered from different nations for the Pentecost Festival heard them speaking in their own native language. They were amazed. The Holy Spirit made it clear that day that the Good News is for all nations! One old church tradition for Pentecost Sunday is to scatter red rose petals (which resemble tongues of fire) on the people as they enter the church that day. We should do more to commemorate Pentecost!

Local

COLUMN: Think Again – Cheaper junk food won’t help struggling families

Michael Zwaagstra 4 minute read Yesterday at 8:26 PM CDT

After several marathon sittings in the Manitoba Legislature, the NDP passed its annual budget last week. According to Premier Wab Kinew, this budget will remove the PST from grocery bills.

However, most grocery products are already PST exempt. The exceptions are soft drinks, snack foods such as potato chips, and take-out meals. These items are generally not considered essential grocery items.

But since this NDP government apparently does consider these items essential, they will now be PST exempt. Initially, this exemption only applied to large grocery chains like Sobeys and not to small mom-and-pop shops.

This didn’t square well with the NDP’s anti-big business rhetoric, so it quickly amended the budget to include smaller stores as well. One thing it did not do was apply the PST exemption to restaurants. What this means is that takeout meals are tax exempt at large grocery chains but still taxed at full price in local restaurants.

Local

Federal ‘assault style’ gun buy-back program makes MB debut

Graham Walker 2 minute read Preview

Federal ‘assault style’ gun buy-back program makes MB debut

Graham Walker 2 minute read Yesterday at 5:12 PM CDT

The federal government’s controversial Assault-Style Firearms Compensation Program (ASFCP) made its Manitoba debut in Steinbach on Monday, with Public Safety Canada’s Mobile Collections Unit (MCU) setting up in front of the local RCMP detachment.

Members of the MCU said they expected 95 submissions alone on the first day of the two-day visit to the community, before they move on to other stops like Selkirk and Dauphin during the 14-day Manitoba tour.

“Its super easy, and very orderly, you don’t even need to get out of your car,” RCMP reservist Kelly Glaspey said. “Its all done by appointment. Just go online, fill out the form and receive your appointment time.”

People dropping off their declared firearms are received at the entrance to the detachment parking lot and then directed to a check point where public safety officials then complete the documentation process and take the weapons into their custody before issuing a receipt, all without the client so much as turning off their vehicle.

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Yesterday at 5:12 PM CDT

Local

Accent Singers director leaves post, leaves lasting legacy

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 7 minute read Preview

Accent Singers director leaves post, leaves lasting legacy

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 7 minute read Yesterday at 2:25 PM CDT

“I think music is nostalgia. Music is home. It’s family,” this is a quote from Meredith Hutchinson, the soon to be former director of the Accent Singers, and it sums up her life perfectly.

She grew up in a household where music was constantly being listened to, discussed, played, and promoted. In later years this would lead to a career and a pastime that would leave her mark on the music scene in the Southeast.

“I grew up in a family that contributed to the music and art scene here in Steinbach. And it just feels special that I kind of continued from my grandparents being involved when they were alive. And so, I just feel like this has been a really cool way since moving back to Steinbach to find a place to belong myself.”

Hutchinson is exiting the Accent Singers after eight years at the helm.

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Yesterday at 2:25 PM CDT

Local

Hanover School Board approves policy regarding use of school educational resources

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 2 minute read Preview

Hanover School Board approves policy regarding use of school educational resources

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 2 minute read Yesterday at 12:49 PM CDT

The Hanover School Division board has approved a policy that regulates the use of school educational resources after they claim they had complaints from parents, teachers, and students.

Policy AK – Responsible Use of Educational Resources was passed during the June 2 meeting. Board chair Dallas Wiebe read the introduction of the policy, which stated “the board affirms its commitment to ensure that all education materials are accessible (to) students are age appropriate and supportive of educational outcomes.”

“The policy is not intended to restrict legitimate educational inquiries, discussions, or the study of diverse ideas, but to ensure that materials are presented in a manner that is age appropriate, educationally relevant and consistent with student wellbeing. This policy applies to all educational resources and all staff at Hanover School Division.”

Governance chair Jeff Friesen cited the Criminal Code, the Public Schools Act, the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, as well as Hanover policies AH (Responsible Use of Technology) and AG (Safe and Caring Schools) as being referenced in the policy.

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Yesterday at 12:49 PM CDT

Local

Carillon Sultans perfect to start the MJBL season

Cassidy Dankochik 3 minute read Preview

Carillon Sultans perfect to start the MJBL season

Cassidy Dankochik 3 minute read Yesterday at 12:00 PM CDT

The Carillon Sultans have a chance to do something special this season. After claiming back-to-back Manitoba Junior Baseball League championships, the team is returning most of their players in the quest for a three-peat.

There is one major change, as Don Meilleur has taken over for Rick Penner as head coach.

“We’ve virtually brought back the entire team,” Meilleur said after a 9-4 win over Winnipeg South May 28.

“(We’re) potentially getting Cody Gunderson coming back after his college. Expectations are high but this is a really great group and we’re just happy to get going. We want to get another championship at the end of the year.”

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Yesterday at 12:00 PM CDT

Local

COLUMN: Village News – June moments you won’t want to miss

Jaysa Thiessen 3 minute read Preview

COLUMN: Village News – June moments you won’t want to miss

Jaysa Thiessen 3 minute read Yesterday at 11:01 AM CDT

June at the Mennonite Heritage Village is marked by hundreds of students on the grounds enjoying enriching field trips; adult tour groups encountering the living history that our village tells; and the increase of summer visitors on our grounds.

June 19 to 21: Heritage waffle booth at Summer in the City

Mennonite Heritage Village’s famous heritage waffles are back at Steinbach’s Summer in the City from June 19 to 21. Visit our waffle booth for freshly made waffles topped with our legendary white sauce and a strawberry/rhubarb sauce that would make your Oma proud.

Then check out our heritage tent for an old-fashioned photo op and test your history skills by guessing the artifact!

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Yesterday at 11:01 AM CDT

Local

Steinbach mayor announces reelection bid

Greg Vandermeulen 4 minute read Preview

Steinbach mayor announces reelection bid

Greg Vandermeulen 4 minute read Yesterday at 8:37 AM CDT

Mayor Earl Funk will run for a third consecutive term as mayor of the City of Steinbach.

Announcing his plans on Tuesday, Funk has been on council for 16 years, two as councillor and two as mayor.

“We’ve done some really great things,” he said.

Funk said the community had incredible growth and he cited the completion of the Southeast Event Centre and infrastructure projects such as intersection improvements on Highway 12 as key accomplishments.

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Yesterday at 8:37 AM CDT

Local

Hanover school trustee asks for policy to address student activism

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 5 minute read Preview

Hanover school trustee asks for policy to address student activism

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 5 minute read Friday, Jun. 5, 2026

Hanover School Division is currently considering whether or not to have a policy on student activism that would define what would be acceptable.

During the last school board meeting, trustee Brad Unger made the motion to create a student activism policy, which was approved by the board unanimously.

“Recommendation that the board develop a policy that regulates activism in our schools. This policy would define activism as it applies to our schools to determine what, if any, amount of activism is appropriate in any of our schools, and what, if any, kind of activism is inappropriate,” said board chair Dallas Wiebe as he read the motion into the minutes during the meeting.

Unger defined activism as, “an activist is someone who is active…in campaigning for change, normally on political or social issues or environmental (issues)” and that the motivation for someone getting involved in activism are varied.

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Friday, Jun. 5, 2026

Local

Centennial Cup MVP Vigfusson earns NCAA scholarship

Cassidy Dankochik 3 minute read Preview

Centennial Cup MVP Vigfusson earns NCAA scholarship

Cassidy Dankochik 3 minute read Friday, Jun. 5, 2026

Niverville Nighthawks captain Adam Vigfusson showed what an outstanding showing at the Centennial Cup is worth.

The 2005-born forward from Gimli turned a most valuable player award into a NCAA division 1 commitment, signing up to go to St Cloud State.

Vigfusson had committed to York University to play USports, but after a 12 point performance at the national junior A championships, including a hat trick, American universities were sure to come calling.

“That was the dream result. The pressure didn’t faze us at all. We just went about our business and got the job done,” Vigfusson told the Winnipeg Free Press.

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Friday, Jun. 5, 2026

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