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Carillon Sports Second Shots: June 25th edition
1 minute read 12:00 PM CDTFeaturing a U17 AAA Eastman Wildcats softball game June 18, the Summer Skate Series in downtown Steinbach June 19 and a Hanover Kickers match June 22 at the Steinbach Soccer Park.
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Local
Long-time Southeast Tabs for Wheelchairs volunteer coordinator looking to retire
6 minute read Preview 11:38 AM CDTLocal
Steinbach woman sentenced for drunk driving crash with infant daughter on board
5 minute read 8:24 AM CDTA Steinbach woman involved in a single-vehicle crash on June 14, 2024 was given a four-month conditional sentence, a two-year driving prohibition and $3,500 fine for “a series of bad decisions” at a court date on June 19.
Miriam Stoll, who is pregnant with her next child, appeared before Judge Stacey Cawley to receive the sentence for her guilty plea. Stoll, who was supported by her pastor and several members of her prayer group was visibly distraught and expressed her deep shame and remorse to the court for her actions.
The single-vehicle crash occurred as Stoll was travelling northbound on Highway 12, at speeds the police estimate to have been between 134 and 154 km/h, when her infant daughter began to fuss in the back seat and she lost control of the vehicle as she tried to comfort the child while she drove.
The crash, which had multiple witnesses, sent Stoll and her vehicle into the right-hand ditch and then rolled the vehicle back over the highway and into the left-hand ditch, coming to a stop on the vehicle’s roof. Bystanders recovered the infant found lying on the interior ceiling and cut Stoll from the smouldering wreckage.
Local
Providence Pilots standout heading to Manitoba Bisons
2 minute read Preview Yesterday at 12:00 PM CDTLocal
Premier’s comments spark Steinbach council frustration
4 minute read Preview Yesterday at 11:34 AM CDTLocal
COLUMN: Think Again – Real life and social media are two different things
4 minute read Yesterday at 8:22 AM CDTThe more time you spend on social media, the angrier everyone seems. No matter which platform you use, people appear to be in a state of perpetual outrage.
Whether it’s personal attacks made against politicians, criticisms of long-established businesses, or drive-by smears against churches, there’s no shortage of negativity online. If this truly reflected how most people felt about those around them, it would be a depressing state of affairs indeed.
Perhaps this is why people who spend most of their time on social media are more likely to be depressed than those who don’t.
Fortunately, the real world is quite different from social media. I was reminded of this fact when hanging out at Summer in the City this past weekend.
Local
Jets draft pick Martin announces college destination
1 minute read Preview Monday, Jun. 29, 2026Local
Dual-sport star Carrière picks softball, Valley City State
2 minute read Preview Monday, Jun. 29, 2026Local
While the AI wars continue, a local battle is won
3 minute read Monday, Jun. 29, 2026Opponents of an Ile des Chenes AI date centre were elated at the start of June when plans for the facility in their community were shelved. Concerns over noise, energy needs and water consumption were all factors for people living in the area to be squarely against the proposal.
But the battle against such facilities may be far from over.
Local activist Christie Little said she knows there’s more to do.
“I was elated when the project here got squashed, but I’m not naive. This isn’t over. We need governments and regulators to seriously reconsider what they’re doing. We can’t have these things in Manitoba. We need to be smart about this,” she said.
Local
Parkhill School granted $40,000 from Indigo foundation
4 minute read Preview Monday, Jun. 29, 2026Local
SPORTS FLASHBACK 2002: Eastman Raiders upset Lions in semis
5 minute read Preview Sunday, Jun. 28, 2026Sports
AS I SEE IT COLUMN: Trump regime has sucked a lot of joy out of the World Cup
4 minute read Sunday, Jun. 28, 2026When 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.
Local
1946 – 2026 Watching Steinbach Grow: Patience pays off for local realtor
5 minute read Preview Sunday, Jun. 28, 2026Sports
DANKOCHIK’S DRAFTINGS: World Cup hydration breaks cut into soccer’s appeal
2 minute read Preview Sunday, Jun. 28, 2026Local
EDITORIAL – Lack of respect for mature minor designation concerning
5 minute read Sunday, Jun. 28, 2026At 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.
Local
Hanover Kickers find the win column in MMSL Division 1
3 minute read Preview Saturday, Jun. 27, 2026LOAD MORE HOMEPAGE ARTICLES