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COLUMN: Village News – A community celebration

Judson Rempel 3 minute read 8:04 PM CDT

I was drawn to Mennonite Heritage Village because of my own family history. Raised a Mennonite in jantsied, I grew up eating forma vorscht and schmauntfat. I also grew up knowing the importance of community, and of celebrating together. That’s what we are inviting you to at our annual Spring Gala Fundraiser on May 22.

This elegant evening will feature fine dining from our very own Livery Barn Restaurant, drinks by Manitoba’s own Blumstein Brewing, and music from three-time Juno nominee Don Amero. It is also an opportunity for you to invest in the legacy and future growth of MHV; it’s why we are the premier interpretive centre for the Russian Mennonite story, a vital community hub for events in southeast Manitoba, and Steinbach’s official tourist information centre.

To top it all off, we will be officially launching the new Gerhard Ens Gallery exhibit, Mennonite Medicine: Cures + Curiosities – 1800-1950. This exhibit will look at life before modern medicine and how faith shaped the health and healing of Mennonites. During the sneak peek, you can test your Plautdietsch medical vocabulary, learn more about the practice of bloodletting, and discover one Mennonite man’s cure for cataracts. Spoiler: it involves smacking your head on a post.

This isn’t just a fancy evening with good food. It truly is an opportunity to connect with the community and be a part of this incredible legacy. I look forward to meeting every one of you, whether it’s at our gala, or out on the grounds this summer.

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Steinbach Family Resource Centre cuts program after Manitoba denies funding ask

Matthew Frank 6 minute read Preview

Steinbach Family Resource Centre cuts program after Manitoba denies funding ask

Matthew Frank 6 minute read Updated: 8:25 PM CDT

Steinbach Family Resource Centre is facing cuts to its nutritional and chronic disease programming, citing rising wages and operating costs, after the Manitoba government rejected its request for funding.

The non-profit, located on 101 North Front Dr., previously offered the only free registered dietitian service for young families in the Southeast. Now, the centre will cut its registered dietitian position, ending its chronic disease referrals and stopping all pediatric and prenatal dietitian consults because it can’t afford to maintain the programming.

When executive director Jo-Anne Dalton received the funding denial letter on April 2, she re-read the email at least 18 times, certain the province made a mistake.

“It was like air was let out of our balloon,” she told The Carillon.

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Updated: 8:25 PM CDT

Open Health Niverville opens expansion to the public

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 4 minute read Preview

Open Health Niverville opens expansion to the public

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 4 minute read 2:58 PM CDT

Open Health Niverville cut the red ribbon on its new 970 square-foot expansion inside the Niverville Heritage Centre compex on Tuesday.

Four new exam rooms were opened bringing the number of rooms to 15, including a minor procedures room where invasive procedures, such as sutures, mole removals, and skin biopsies, can be performed under local anesthetics.

“We’re really, really excited to see an expansion for our community,” said Deputy Mayor Nathan Dueck, who is also a director with Open Health Niverville and president of Niverville Health Care Services Inc. (NHCSI), a non-profit created by the Town of Niverville when it took ownership of then Open Health Clinic in 2020.

Dueck said the town will grow steadily from its current number of 7,500 residents to 12,000 people in the next decade and that the clinic needs to keep up. On average, the clinic’s 15 doctors see about 200 people a day, with requests for prescriptions that number increases to about 300.

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2:58 PM CDT

Steinbach Pistons raised $25K for minor hockey this season

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read Preview

Steinbach Pistons raised $25K for minor hockey this season

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read 12:00 PM CDT

It isn’t just the Steinbach Pistons reaping the benefits of the increased attendance and revenue at the Southeast Event Centre.

All season, the Pistons have been raising money for Steinbach’s minor hockey through their 50/50 draws.

“Our partnership with the Pistons has been fantastic,” Steinbach Minor Hockey President Josh Plett said in a Pistons news release.

“The money we get from the 50/50 proceeds goes directly into lowering costs for families to register their kids as costs continue to increase.”

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12:00 PM CDT

LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Time to let Hellebuyck go

Louis Balcaen, Winnipeg, MB 1 minute read 11:08 AM CDT

Re: As I See it column by James Loewen (Does Hellebuyck want out? If so, good riddance, April 23, The Carillon)

James, I could not agree with you more. In fact, I sent an email to Mike McIntyre of the Free Press last week expressing the same feelings.

You did an even job.

I have not heard from him. Surely, we are not the only ones who have noticed.

McAllister wins Springfield-Ritchot PC nomination

Greg Vandermeulen 3 minute read Preview

McAllister wins Springfield-Ritchot PC nomination

Greg Vandermeulen 3 minute read 8:59 AM CDT

St Adolphe’s Adam McAllister will be the next PC candidate for Springfield-Ritchot, replacing the retiring Ron Schuler who has been the elected PC MLA for the constituency for 27 years.

McAllister won the PC nomination on Tuesday, beating the only other contender, Niverville’s Craig Tomlinson.

The nomination meeting held in Grande Pointe had a festive atmosphere as the line to vote stretched into the parking lot. Eager PC members donned blue hats being given out and packed the hall for opening speeches from the candidates.

Both candidates focused on sharing their values which included faith, family and integrity. They talked about the importance of education, health care, creating economic growth and the need for the constituency to have strong representation.

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8:59 AM CDT

COLUMN: The Carillon Flashback December 1, 1993 – Retired builder needs one more licence plate for his collection

Wes Keating 2 minute read Preview

COLUMN: The Carillon Flashback December 1, 1993 – Retired builder needs one more licence plate for his collection

Wes Keating 2 minute read Yesterday at 11:26 PM CDT

Simon Reimer will probably rest a little easier once he has added just one more licence plate to his considerable collection.

It’s not as if he doesn’t have enough to fill an entire wall of his garage. He has plenty to do that, and many more duplicate plates are stored away to use as traders with others who collect automobile licence plates as a hobby.

In nearly a quarter of a century, the retired Steinbach home builder spent some of his spare time collecting plates from all over North America, the only state or province to elude him was the tiny commonwealth of Massachusetts on the Atlantic coast.

Collecting license plates was a natural extension of Reimer’s travels all over the continent, which he enjoyed during his long career, first as a home builder and then a further 27 years in home and material sales for C.T. Loewen and Sons.

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Yesterday at 11:26 PM CDT

COLUMN: View from the Legislature – More questions than answers

Kelvin Goertzen, MLA for Steinbach 3 minute read Yesterday at 8:02 PM CDT

It is the sort of behind the scenes work that most people never see. When a government makes a major policy announcement, for the public, it is often the first time they become aware of it. While it may feel like the beginning of a process, for those working in government on the announcement, it is often the culmination of weeks or months of preparation and work. Everything from where the announcement is made to the communications material behind it are usually carefully scrutinized.

Most of this preparation work is to ensure that when the announcement is made and the questions come from the media and public (the how, what, where and when questions), there are answers. Of course, sometimes not every answer is readily available at the time of the announcement, but the goal is always to be able to fill in the blanks as much as possible to provide credibility for the announcement and the government.

None of this seemed to be the case this past weekend when Premier Wab Kinew announced that his government would be implementing a ban on social media and some artificial intelligence apps for youth in Manitoba. This is a major announcement that immediately garnered attention and, naturally, raised many questions. What age would it apply to? How could a province enforce it? When would it start? Which social media would it apply to? These, and others, are the types of questions that a government would know would come with such an announcement and should be prepared to answer. But no answers, or details, followed the announcement.

That was partially because the announcement wasn’t made at a press conference, as you would expect. It was made at an NDP fundraiser where you had to pay hundreds of dollars to attend. Mr. Kinew made the announcement from the stage and then left. He took no questions after the announcement or in the days immediately following. It left many wondering after, if the announcement was made in haste or with little planning.

1946 to 2026 Watching Steinbach Grow: Steinbach Hatchery celebrates 90 years

Wes Keating 4 minute read Preview

1946 to 2026 Watching Steinbach Grow: Steinbach Hatchery celebrates 90 years

Wes Keating 4 minute read Yesterday at 5:37 PM CDT

There is an old saying, “When the going gets tough, the tough get going”, but the opposite was true for the feed mill staff in the early days of Steinbach Hatchery. Few men were tough enough to keep going for years on a job that required heaving 100-pound bags of feed onto the back of a farmer’s truck, day-after-day.

But that was then, and now modern equipment to go along with modern technology has made the job much easier than it was when Roy Bartel was a young man, just out of high school.

Actually, Bartel who worked his way up the ranks to become general manager, was working for the company even before he finished high school. And the same holds true for Steinbach Hatchery CEO Joel Friesen, whose father Jake was one of four partners until his death in 2017.

Bartel started working at Maple Grove Farms in August of 1970, when he was living with his grandparents, Peter and Anne Bartel, in Kleefeld. Peter Bartel worked on the Maple Grove farm on Loewen Boulevard and he asked Elvin Reimer whether he had a job for his grandson.

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Yesterday at 5:37 PM CDT

COLUMN: Grey Matters – A chaplain’s role

Gary Dyck 4 minute read Yesterday at 2:55 PM CDT

As a hospital chaplain (aka spiritual care provider), I often find that people misunderstand my role. When I introduce myself, some people say they aren’t religious, some say they are from a faith that is not Christian, some say they have a pastor or that they are OK for now. However, there is a reason this role is now called ‘spiritual care provider’. It is a role that is to serve all. It is not called Christian care provider, religious care provider, but spiritual care provider because it is about tending the spirit that is in all of us. Pain is not only biological, but it also has emotional and spiritual impacts.

Our word ‘psyche’ includes the human soul in its etymology. For the ancient Greeks it was an all-inclusive word that involves the mind, emotions and spirit of a person. That is why most hospitals have spiritual care providers as part of their inter-disciplinary team. We know that for the best hope of recovery or adjustment it is essential that we help the body and spirit together. The first thing I usually say to a patient is ‘I am here for you. This is your journey and I’m here to support you in whatever way I can. If it is just to listen or to pray if desired, it is all about you.’

The spiritual care provider walks through hospital corridors with quiet anticipation, knowing that in each room there is pain. In each room there is space for a little more hope. The chaplain’s role is not defined by procedures or charts, but by presence - sitting with people at a vulnerable time of life. Spiritual care providers offer spiritual and emotional care to patients of all beliefs and to those who have no belief in God, listening for meaning more than the words and forms people use. In sterile rooms buzzing with machines and monitors, they remind patients and families that they are more than their diagnoses, that their stories, fears, and faith matter more. Biography over biology.

Much of a spiritual care provider’s work unfolds through gentle, open questions that invite reflection rather than demand answers. “What is giving you strength right now?” “What worries you the most in this moment?” or “Are there beliefs or practices that bring you comfort?” or simply “How was your sleep last night?’. These questions open doors to reflection, allowing patients and families to voice hope, doubt, anger, or grief. Often, the greatest gift is a silence that listens - a safe space where complicated emotions can rest without being judged or rushed. It is amazing how much better one can feel after talking a little with a trustworthy person.

Audette and Kidd honoured by MASRC at banquet

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read Preview

Audette and Kidd honoured by MASRC at banquet

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read Yesterday at 12:00 PM CDT

A current and a now retired hockey player from the region who are Red River Métis were recognized for their acheivements last week.

St Adolphe’s Taylor Audette was named as one of the 2025 Maniotba Indigenious athletes of the year and Trevor Kidd was inducted into the Manitoba Indigenous Sports and Hall of Fame.

Audette, who is from St Adolphe, scored 42 points in 35 games for the Silvertips in the Manitoba Women’s Junior Hockey League in the 25/26 season. She also races dirt-track and plays softball.

Kidd, who was born in Dugald and played on one of the first Eastman Selects teams when the program was founded in the 1987/1988 season, would go on to play nearly 400 NHL games.

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Yesterday at 12:00 PM CDT

1946 to 2026 Watching Steinbach Grow: Facelifts and complete makeovers on the ever-changing face of Main

Wes Keating 3 minute read Preview

1946 to 2026 Watching Steinbach Grow: Facelifts and complete makeovers on the ever-changing face of Main

Wes Keating 3 minute read Yesterday at 11:58 AM CDT

The old-timers who were lounging in the lobby of the Tourist Hotel, back in 1954, watching television and swapping tales about the tremendous changes in the world they had observed over their past 50 years, have been replaced decades later by the coffee-shop crowd at Main Bread and Butter, who remember every store they went to with their parents as kids and how they skated on the creek, and played hockey outdoors.

But as much as the world of Steinbach has changed during the past 80 years it has been its own decision maker and tax collector, there are still some things that remain the same.

Steinbach still has its fair share of automobile dealers, though they don’t sell tractors as they did back in the 1950s. There are still a few old buildings along Main Street that have undergone a number of facelifts over the years and many others that have been replaced by multi-storied buildings in the ever-growing City of Steinbach.

It may not be long before the final traces of what used to be called the “Million Dollar Mile” will disappear altogether, replaced by what may well be termed the “Multi-Billion Dollar Mile.”

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Yesterday at 11:58 AM CDT

Students get hands-on learning at Manitoba Envirothon

Matthew Frank 4 minute read Preview

Students get hands-on learning at Manitoba Envirothon

Matthew Frank 4 minute read Yesterday at 8:52 AM CDT

Owen Edmonds pored over a soil bag with four of his classmates, exchanging tips and scientific instruments.

The 17-year-old Collège Churchill High School student, located in Winnipeg, was racing against the clock to scribble down results from the team’s experiment on April 23 during the Manitoba Envirothon’s east regional competition at the Tourond Creek Discovery Centre. It’s the second year his team has entered the competition. It’s a rare opportunity where students can take lessons from the environment back to their classroom studies, Edmonds said.

“It’s good that we can spread word to other people about the importance of preserving land and making sure that the environment is staying healthy,” he said.

The discovery centre, located in the RM of Hanover, hosted the Manitoba Association of Watershed’s competition for the second year.

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Yesterday at 8:52 AM CDT

Steinbach job fair makes connections

Greg Vandermeulen 1 minute read Preview

Steinbach job fair makes connections

Greg Vandermeulen 1 minute read Yesterday at 8:37 AM CDT

More than 200 job seekers connected with 37 local employers as part of the Steinbach Job Fair, organized by the Steinbach Chamber of Commerce on April 23.

In a news release the chamber described the event as energetic and productive.

“Businesses reported strong interest from candidates and meaningful conversations that could lead to future hires,” the news release stated. “One employer noted they connected with two promising leads for specialized skilled labour positions.”

Steinbach Chamber of Commerce executive director Tessa Massi said they were pleased with the results.

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Yesterday at 8:37 AM CDT

Niverville gets first group home, will service disabled adults

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 6 minute read Preview

Niverville gets first group home, will service disabled adults

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 6 minute read Sunday, May. 3, 2026

The Town of Niverville will be getting its first group home after council approved the application during a council meeting last Tuesday.

Simaril, a Winnipeg non-profit that houses people with physical and intellectual disabilities and addiction issues, was approved to house up to four people with severe physical disabilities to live in a home located at 225 Third Street North.

“From a council perspective, we have the logo, Where you belong, and we really want everyone to feel that they can belong here. That’s our goal. So, whether they are, however they are, from their physical means to their neurodivergent means to their emotional and mental means, we understand that as the community grows, we’re looking to provide additional services so that all people can believe that this is a place where they also belong,” said Mayor Myron Dyck during the public hearing on the matter.

The meeting had about six residents who live on the street come to voice their concern that the home will be used to house those recovering from addictions.

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Sunday, May. 3, 2026

Steinbach will maintain a waterway that previously was under provincial responsibility, after both levels of government agreed to transfer its jurisdiction.

Steinbach city council voted unanimously on April 21 to sign a memorandum of understanding with the Manitoba government to bring the section of the Manning Canal that ran through the city under Steinbach’s control. The city was in negotiations with the province since 2022 about taking over the only provincially-maintained drain running through the municipality.

Mayor Earl Funk said having the Manning Canal under city responsibility will allow improvements to happen faster as more developments are built in Steinbach.

“I think this will help everyone downstream manage their water better, as we can slowly develop it. It’s not going to happen overnight. It’s going to take years, and as development happens along, it will keep improving,” he told reporters after the council meeting.

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