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1946 to 2026 Watching Steinbach Grow: Frank F. Reimer Park
1 minute read Yesterday at 2:46 PM CDTNestled in a corner between the Steinbach post office and the community cenotaph is a pocket park dedicated to the memory of Frank F. Reimer.
A plaque on a concrete pedastal reads: “This park is in honour of our father Frank F. Reimer who was a Steinbach merchant and entrepreneur known as “Carload Frank”. H
e lived in Steinbach and area from his birth in 1908 until 1967, when he and our mother, Margaret, moved to Winnipeg.
Frank F. Reimer was a great-grandson of pioneer Klaas R. Reimer, who came to Steinbach in 1874 from what is now the Ukraine.
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Carillon Sports Second Shots: March 19th edition
1 minute read Preview Yesterday at 12:00 PM CDTSupport for Minneapolis shown in Melt the ICE fundraiser
3 minute read Preview Yesterday at 11:20 AM CDTCOLUMN: On Parliament Hill – Flip-flops and Liberal policy
4 minute read Yesterday at 8:21 AM CDTIt could be said that Prime Minister Mark Carney has had more flip flops than a fish out of water – only his are on public policy. One day Canadians hear one position and the next day, something completely different. Effective leadership requires clarity and consistency, yet both appear to be missing. Amid global instability, Canadians need clear direction and a reliable path in place.
A prime example of their about-face can be seen in the Liberal government’s response to the war in Iran. The prime minister took four different positions in four days on the war in the Middle East. He was for the attack. He then regretted his support for the attack. He then said it was illegal. And then he said that he would not rule out contributing troops. Such reversals raise deeper questions about judgment. For example, would he have left the evil regime in place? A March 9 Hill Times article reported that the Liberal caucus wanted to be consulted before the PM pledged his support, adding confusion and uncertainty about where Canada stood.
Consequences to the war are not abstract. Gas prices are higher affecting transportation, distribution, and our food supply. In a response to the prime minister, Pierre Poilievre proposed an Emergency Energy Supply Plan to increase Canadian energy production and send more energy to democratic allies. While Canada cannot control global instability, it can control whether its own natural resources are developed and exported – something that has become more difficult under this Liberal government.
That concern was highlighted when one of Canada’s largest oil producers, Canadian Natural Resources Limited, announced it was halting expansion in Canada. The company said federal regulations and the industrial carbon tax were creating too much uncertainty and cost for long-term investment.
SRSS Sabres Bueckert, Froese, named to Free Press top 10
1 minute read Preview Tuesday, Mar. 24, 2026Providence lays off staff, cuts programming due to international student drop
4 minute read Preview Updated: Yesterday at 11:23 AM CDTGault signs pro deal with ECHL team in South Carolina
1 minute read Preview Tuesday, Mar. 24, 2026Manitoba to require employers supply menstrual products by August
1 minute read Tuesday, Mar. 24, 2026Manitoba will soon require employers to stock free menstrual products for their workers.
The provincial government, in a March 9 news release, said that workplace washrooms and other accessible locations must have menstrual products, such as pads and tampons, for employees by early August.
The supplies will be offered at no cost to workers. Manitoba’s NDP government is the first province to require employers to provide the products, which will boost workplace health, reduce stigma and improve gender equity, the release said.
“These changes are about dignity and fairness at work,” Labour and Immigration Minister Malaya Marcelino said in the statement.
1946 – 2026 Watching Steinbach grow: Nothing was ever halfway for Carload Frank Reimer
5 minute read Preview Tuesday, Mar. 24, 2026BLSD plans to cut wards from 7 to 4
3 minute read Monday, Mar. 23, 2026Border Land School Division will be cutting the number of wards in its jurisdiction ahead of the fall election season to address the growing population in the region.
The division will go from seven to four wards, merging former areas, according to a March 11 press release. No changes will be made to school catchment areas, bus routes or the number of school board trustees.
Ward 1 will include Sprague, Piney, Sundown and Buffalo Point First Nation. Ward 2 covers Vita, Stuartburn and Sundown. Ward 3 represents Emerson, Ridgeville, Tolstoi, Dominion City, Arnaud, Rosa, Woodmore and Roseau River Anishinaabe First Nation. Ward 4 has Rosenfeld, Horndean, Letellier, St. Joseph, Gretna, Rosetown, Halbstadt, Sommerfeld, Altona, Gnadenfeld and Neubergthal.
Five trustees will now represent Ward 4, two trustees have seats in Ward 3 and Ward 1 and 2 have one trustee each.
Providence makes history in final year of American basketball play
2 minute read Preview Monday, Mar. 23, 2026La Broquerie $10.7M budget passes first reading
2 minute read Monday, Mar. 23, 2026The Rural Municipality of La Broquerie’s $10.7 million 2026 budget passed its first reading last week.
Annual property taxes will be increasing by $32 for rural ratepayers with an average home value of $326,000. Residents in L.U.D.s will pay $44 more with the average home value of $289,000.
Rural commercial properties valued at $602,000 will pay $45 more in taxes, while L.U.D properties with an average value at $647,000 will see a $60 jump.
The mill rate slightly rose for both rural and L.U.D. ratepayers, but well under the provincial 2025 inflation rate of 2.7 percent. The rural mill rate will rise to 14.22 in 2026 from 14.107 in 2025, a 0.8 percent increase. L.U.D. mill rates grew by 1.2 percent, increasing from 14.310 in 2025 to 14.478 in 2026.
COLUMN: Village News – The Russlaender migration
4 minute read Preview Monday, Mar. 23, 2026enVision celebrates 70 years of working in the community
5 minute read Preview Monday, Mar. 23, 2026COLUMN: Think Again – Focus on recovery, not on enabling addiction
4 minute read Monday, Mar. 23, 2026If there’s one thing this NDP government is determined to do, it’s open a supervised consumption site.
It’s become a matter of doctrine that providing a “safe” place to consume illegal drugs is the best way to save lives. The problem with this rigid doctrine is it causes politicians to defend the indefensible.
Consider, for example, the NDP’s proposed supervised consumption site at 366 Henry Ave in Winnipeg. Last week, the Progressive Conservatives tabled documents in the legislature from the province’s 2024 application to Health Canada for the original supervised consumption site.
According to these documents, people who appear to be as young as 16 years old would be allowed to consume drugs in that site. No identification would be required. To make matters worse, family members would not be informed without the drug user’s explicit consent.
Lakeland Rustlers crowned national champions in Niverville
4 minute read Preview Monday, Mar. 23, 2026LOAD MORE