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AS I SEE IT COLUMN: PWHL delivers pure joy, along with societal change

James Loewen 4 minute read 12:00 PM CDT

I hope you were one of the 15,000 plus fans that got to experience the PWHL game last Sunday in person.

Not only was it a rare opportunity to welcome home local legend Jocelyn Larocque, sporting fans in attendance got to experience, first-hand, a completely different kind of hockey game.

When you watch a PWHL game on TV and see young girls, many of them wearing jerseys from the hockey teams they play for, you get a sense that what you are watching is completely unique, but when you are in the building, you can actually feel it.

Call it vibes or atmosphere, a PWHL hockey game is unlike any men’s hockey game.

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COLUMN: Report from the Legislature – People should come before party politics

Bob Lagasse, MLA for Dawson Trail 3 minute read 11:45 AM CDT

A couple of weeks ago, I announced my decision to serve and seek re-election as an independent representative for Dawson Trail.

I made this decision to ensure that the people of Dawson Trail came before party politics, because they deserve an MLA who answers only to them. Families, farmers, small businesses, and municipalities in this region want and deserve a strong representative who is focused on local priorities, not directives from party headquarters.

Being an independent will afford me the freedom to work with any government who is going to deliver results and help move Dawson Trail forward. In the short time since I announced my decision, I have already seen these positive changes coming to fruition, as I have been able to have open and honest conversations with our government, ask tough questions, and ensure that I am getting answers for constituents.

For example, the government just announced the Ste Anne Hospital working group, which will be meeting to explore the regionalization of Hôpital Ste-Anne Hospital. The lack of regional designation for Hôpital Ste-Anne Hospital has been a major concern for the community of Ste Anne, as well as all the neighbouring communities who use its services. I am very excited to see that some steps are being made in moving this process forward, and I greatly appreciate the minister’s office for keeping me up-to-date and informed on this matter.

A Dufresne man who hoarded dozens of animals, including nearly three dozen dogs, in “deplorable conditions” was handed a fine and animal ownership ban in a Steinbach courtroom on March 20.

Albert Tschritter, 39, plead guilty to violating Manitoba’s Animal Care Act. He was previously charged with four counts of the violation, but the three other charges were stayed. The violations don’t count as criminal charges.

“A number of animals ended up in rather deplorable conditions in a way that met the definition in the act of being deprived of adequate food and water so as to significantly impair their health and well being,” said Crown prosecutor Boyd McGill.

Provincial animal care officials received a call on June 1, 2023 about the well-being of dogs on a Dawson Road property, he told the court.

Manitoba launches Ste Anne Hospital regionalization working group

Matthew Frank 1 minute read Preview

Manitoba launches Ste Anne Hospital regionalization working group

Matthew Frank 1 minute read 11:24 AM CDT

A working group to explore designating the Ste Anne Hospital as a regional health care centre has formed and will hold its first meeting later this month.

The province, in a March 20 news release, said the 18-member group will look at the hospital’s infrastructure, staffing and long-term sustainability. It will also assess its service capacity and consider expanding the health care provided. The working group was first created in September 2025

Ste Anne Mayor Yvan St. Vincent and Southern Health’s chief medical officer Dr. Aly Dhala will co-chair the group.

Its members include Association of Manitoba Bilingual Municipalities president Ivan Normandeau, La Broquerie’s deputy reeve Laurent Tetrault and Tyler Blashko, NDP MLA for Lagimodière. Health care officials from Southern Health and Shared Health will also have seats as members.

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11:24 AM CDT

MATTHEW FRANK THE CARILLON

Ste Anne Hospital.

MATTHEW FRANK THE CARILLON 

Ste Anne Hospital.

Taking the polar plunge for Special Olympics

Greg Vandermeulen 3 minute read Preview

Taking the polar plunge for Special Olympics

Greg Vandermeulen 3 minute read 11:23 AM CDT

Volunteers lined up on the ice at Falcon Lake on March 21, to take turns jumping or cannonballing into the icy water, all to raise funds for Special Olympics Manitoba.

Adell Gauthier, senior director of fund development, said 17 people made the plunge, raising more than $23,000 combined.

“When you look at how many people were involved those are just extremely successful results,” she said. “We’re just so grateful for everybody that fundraised and shared the word on their social networks and told their friends and families to get involved.”

“We’re just blown away by these results,” she added.

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11:23 AM CDT

GREG VANDERMEULEN THE CARILLON
Falcon Lake Polar Plunge 2026.

GREG VANDERMEULEN THE CARILLON
Falcon Lake Polar Plunge 2026.

Training day in Steinbach

Greg Vandermeulen 1 minute read Preview

Training day in Steinbach

Greg Vandermeulen 1 minute read 11:00 AM CDT

RCMP dog Sega took time to hone his skills with handlers on Tuesday, scouring the area near The Carillon office on Industrial Drive as part of a drill.

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11:00 AM CDT

GREG VANDEMEULEN THE CARILLON

RCMP dog Sega took time to hone his skills with handlers on Tuesday, scouring the area near The Carillon office on Industrial Drive as part of a drill. Const. Francois Raymond kept his hand on the leash as he and Const. Jordan Lorenz took the dog through its paces. Its tracking skills were put to the test, and Sega completed the task before police left the area.

GREG VANDEMEULEN THE CARILLON 

RCMP dog Sega took time to hone his skills with handlers on Tuesday, scouring the area near The Carillon office on Industrial Drive as part of a drill. Const. Francois Raymond kept his hand on the leash as he and Const. Jordan Lorenz took the dog through its paces. Its tracking skills were put to the test, and Sega completed the task before police left the area.

Access Credit Union will shutter six branches, including one in Emerson, by Oct. 21, citing falling in-person visits.

The branch closures are part of the credit union’s wider consolidation plan to centralize in larger communities and shift towards virtual banking.

“Any Access branch across Manitoba can serve our members and we carefully considered distances between rural communities where members are travelling for other errands. More members are choosing digital ways to bank, and this shift positions us to focus on delivering greater convenience and flexibility in the future,” Access Credit Union CEO and President Myrna Wiebe said in a Feb. 19 news release.

The Emerson branch will be consolidated with its Altona counterpart. Moosehorn will join Ashern. Plum Coulee will shift to Winkler. Sanford will join the credit union’s new Kenaston Boulevard location, set to open this summer. Two Winnipeg locations also combined.

COLUMN: Arts and Culture – Summer Arts Day Camp open for families

Steinbach Arts Council 6 minute read 10:44 AM CDT

Summer Arts Day Camp is back, Explore eight creative, themed weeks for children in age groups 3-4, 5-8, and 9–12. These camps are intentionally designed to nurture well-being and personal growth, offering a safe and supportive environment where experienced instructors lead campers through music, dance, theatre, visual arts and culinary arts.

The Steinbach Arts Council is dedicated to removing barriers for families and opening doors for children through the Steinbach Dodge Creative Kids Bursary Fund, Roxanne Klassen Memorial Fund, and the Vera Friesen Memorial Fund, which provides support specifically for Summer Arts Day Campers. Apply for a bursary for camps online or in person at the SAC Administrative Office.

For the full camp schedule and to register for camps, visit SteinbachArts.ca or call 204-346-1077. Thanks to Canadian Tire Steinbach for sponsoring the Summer Arts Day Camp program.

Backyard Theatre Company to present final perfomance of the season

Springfield mayor frustrated with wait for water treatment plant environmental license

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 4 minute read Preview

Springfield mayor frustrated with wait for water treatment plant environmental license

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 4 minute read 10:41 AM CDT

It looks like the RM of Springfield will have to wait a little while longer to get its environmental license approved for its proposed water treatment plant.

RM of Springfield Mayor Patrick Therrien is frustrated that the province’s environmental board is still withholding the approval of the licence, almost two-and-a-half-years after the licence was applied for.

“I don’t understand why it’s taken so long. It’s not a nuclear waste site, it’s a water treatment plant,” he said.

Therrien said the land has already been selected and the $29 million to build the structure is in the bank.

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10:41 AM CDT

SUPPLIED

A rendering of the planned water treatment facility that was originally expected to be completed in the RM of Springfield in 2025.

SUPPLIED 

A rendering of the planned water treatment facility that was originally expected to be completed in the RM of Springfield in 2025.

1946 – 2026 Watching Steinbach Grow: Steinbach’s past meets future up and down ‘Stony Brook’

Wes Keating 4 minute read Preview

1946 – 2026 Watching Steinbach Grow: Steinbach’s past meets future up and down ‘Stony Brook’

Wes Keating 4 minute read 10:39 AM CDT

The creek, which many believe gave Steinbach its name, winds its way through the community from east to west, or southeast to northwest, depending on your perception of the diagonal slant of Main Street.

This creek was never really given the English translation of the name it shared with the community, but the “stony brook” was just as practically important to the early settlers as it is an historic landmark and a reminder of the past for today’s residents.

The layout of the 20 lots, inhabited by the earliest of settlers in 1874, was mapped out to give each family a piece of this waterway.

Today, the Johann G. Barkman Walkway, from Elm Street to Kroeker Avenue, has a number of plaques on pedestals along the way, to give visitors to the city an idea of where it all started.

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10:39 AM CDT

CARILLON ARCHIVES

Bruno Derksen was never far from the telephone and welcomed calls day or night, whether it was someone wanting to buy an ad in The Carillon News or provide a news tip for a photo opportunity. Be it a middle-of-the-night fire 20 miles out of town, a ribbon-cutting for a new business, or isolated rural residents threatened by spring flood waters, there would be pictures in the paper the next week.

CARILLON ARCHIVES 

Bruno Derksen was never far from the telephone and welcomed calls day or night, whether it was someone wanting to buy an ad in The Carillon News or provide a news tip for a photo opportunity. Be it a middle-of-the-night fire 20 miles out of town, a ribbon-cutting for a new business, or isolated rural residents threatened by spring flood waters, there would be pictures in the paper the next week.

DANKOCHIK’S DRAFTINGS: My biggest hockey confusion

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read 9:00 AM CDT

There is something unique in hockey and specifically in the NHL I have yet to figure out a good explanation for.

Why do the best players hate playing in the most high-profile markets?

This isn’t a thing in basketball, this isn’t a thing in football and this certainly isn’t a thing in soccer. Imagine if a prime Messi or Ronaldo decided to play for Toronto FC because they didn’t like the pressure of trying to win championships in Barcelona/Manchester United.

This isn’t even a thing in baseball, the sport most similar to hockey in a lot of ways. Since the beginning of time players have flocked to New York to play for the Yankees, under the brightest lights in America.

Proposed seniors’ residence hits roadblocks in Steinbach

Greg Vandermeulen 4 minute read Preview

Proposed seniors’ residence hits roadblocks in Steinbach

Greg Vandermeulen 4 minute read 8:26 AM CDT

The issue of granting a conditional use and several variances for the construction of a new seniors’ apartment complex became a thorny one for Steinbach city council on March 17, prompting them to recess the public hearing until more information can be gathered.

The property, located at 185 Friesen Avenue and owned by Steinbach Housing Inc., presented several problems for council.

It required a conditional use as multi-family residential is not permitted in a commercial neighbourhood zone.

A variance is also required to allow for the proposed seven-storey height because the current zoning only allows for three. Variances are also required for a reduced front yard setback to 20 feet from the required 25 feet.

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8:26 AM CDT

GREG VANDERMEULEN THE CARILLON
Representatives of Steinbach Housing Inc.

GREG VANDERMEULEN THE CARILLON
Representatives of Steinbach Housing Inc.

Tabin, Larocque relish in Manitoba PWHL game

Cassidy Dankochik 4 minute read Preview

Tabin, Larocque relish in Manitoba PWHL game

Cassidy Dankochik 4 minute read Yesterday at 12:00 PM CDT

The eyes of the Professional Women’s Hockey League were on Manitoba last weekend, and the Keystone province didn’t disappoint.

The Canada Life Centre in downtown Winnipeg was completely sold out for a PWHL Takeover Tour game between the Ottawa Charge and Montreal Victoire. While Ottawa may have come out with a 2-1 win thanks to a Rebecca Leslie tally just 12 seconds into overtime, after the game both teams were impressed by Winnipeg.

The PWHL is in the middle of their third year, expanding to eight teams this season. The league started their “Takeover Tour,” series of games last season, bringing top women’s hockey action to markets that don’t yet have a PWHL team.

“There were line-ups of people on a Saturday afternoon just to watch us practice,” Leslie said after the game.

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Yesterday at 12:00 PM CDT

Jocelyne Larocque tosses a puck to some of the hundreds of fans who crowded the boards to watch warm-ups during the PWHL takeover tour game. (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

Jocelyne Larocque tosses a puck to some of the hundreds of fans who crowded the boards to watch warm-ups during the PWHL takeover tour game. (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

COLUMN: Carillon Flashback January 6, 2011 – Mennonite bloggers publishing cookbook

Wes Keating 2 minute read Preview

COLUMN: Carillon Flashback January 6, 2011 – Mennonite bloggers publishing cookbook

Wes Keating 2 minute read Yesterday at 11:52 AM CDT

Betty Reimer’s journey into blogging and on to be part of group publishing a cookbook entitled Mennonite Girls Can Cook started when she decided to search online for a new Easter bread recipe.

Reimer had a recipe she usually used, but was curious as to what else was out there. Her search led her to Louella Schellenberg’s blog, and she wondered why this particular recipe caught her attention.

Reimer quickly became a follower, regularly posting comments. About a year after Reimer discovered the blog, Schellenberg put out the idea of starting a group blog by the group of women who, like Reimer, had all linked through her food-based blogs.

A total of 13 women from British Columbia, Manitoba and Washington, aged 49 to 63, originally signed on (though the group now sits comfortably at 10) and in June, 2008, Mennonite Girls Can Cook was launched.

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Yesterday at 11:52 AM CDT

CARILLON ARCHIVES

Betty Reimer shows off her pineapple rolls, a recent baking experiment. Ten of Reimer’s recipes will be part of the cookbook, Mennonite Girls Can Cook, which is expected to be released in May.

CARILLON ARCHIVES 

Betty Reimer shows off her pineapple rolls, a recent baking experiment. Ten of Reimer’s recipes will be part of the cookbook, Mennonite Girls Can Cook, which is expected to be released in May.

Federal and provincial governments fund extension of farmer wellness program

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 6 minute read Preview

Federal and provincial governments fund extension of farmer wellness program

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 6 minute read Yesterday at 8:19 AM CDT

The federal and provincial governments have extended their financial support for the Manitoba Farmer Wellness Program by investing $300,000 over two years through the Sustainable Canadian Agricultural Partnership.

The program, which was started in 2022, has seen the numbers of farmers accessing counselling double year after year, according to the program’s chief administrative officer Gerry Friesen.

“We were very excited to hear (about the funding),” said Friesen. “It’s ongoing support from them and obviously what it does is it helps us carry on with the services that we provide to the farming community, particularly farmers, their spouses, partners, kids over the age of 16 and farm employees. So, our numbers have been increasing steadily and so every dollar counts as it were.”

Friesen said there are more mental health issues facing farmers today than in the past as “farming isn’t getting less stressful, put it that way.”

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Yesterday at 8:19 AM CDT

Submitted

Gerry Friesen, co-founder and CAO of Manitoba Farmer Wellness Program, said he is excited that the provincial and federal governments have extended financing to the program with funding totalling $300,000 over two years.

Submitted 

Gerry Friesen, co-founder and CAO of Manitoba Farmer Wellness Program, said he is excited that the provincial and federal governments have extended financing to the program with funding totalling $300,000 over two years.

Pistons lead Terriers 2-1 after convincing game 3 win

Cassidy Dankochik 6 minute read Preview

Pistons lead Terriers 2-1 after convincing game 3 win

Cassidy Dankochik 6 minute read Friday, Mar. 27, 2026

The Steinbach Pistons are in control of their first-round series against the Portage Terriers, dominating game three in Steinbach March 24 by a 6-2 score to take a 2-1 lead.

“You’re always learning what it takes to be successful in the playoffs,” head coach and general manager Paul Dyck said after the win.

“We have some players that don’t have a tremendous amount of playoff experience at our level, so I think it’s very important for them to see this is what it looks like. It’s different than the regular season. There’s not a lot of ice out there and the importance of simplicity can’t be overstated.”

Jackson Kostiuk, who left the Pistons mid-way through last season to play in the WHL and didn’t play during the team’s loss to Portage, is dominating. He’s scored scored five goals, adding an assist through three games.

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Friday, Mar. 27, 2026

Liam Doyle was named the first star of the game following game three, with two brilliant assists and a goal from the back end. (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

Liam Doyle was named the first star of the game following game three, with two brilliant assists and a goal from the back end. (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

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