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Racially motivated attack on 11-year-old boy at Hanover school leaves victim with serious injuries

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 8 minute read Yesterday at 4:24 PM CST

The vicious assault of an 11-year-old Indigenous boy last week at a Steinbach school is being called a racially motivated attack and calls have been made for Hanover School Division to take Indigenous students’ safety more seriously.

Theo Osborne, who attends Stonybrook Middle School, was assaulted during lunch hour on Feb. 11 by two boys from his class. According to his mother, Melissa Johnson, the boys had been bullying him since December 2025. She said the boys would body shame Theo and make comments about how “disgusting” his hair was and how he “looked like a girl.” They also threatened to post racial comments on his social media. She said Theo would defend himself by asking the boys to leave him alone and to stop being racist.

On Feb. 11, the bullying became physical when one of the two boys came up to Theo and threatened to pull out his hair if he didn’t cut it. The two got into a shoving match which ended with the boy leaving. Later, the boy came back with another boy and the two started yelling racial insults at Theo about his hair and calling Indigenous people “gross,” “disgusting,” and saying their rituals were really “f-d up,” according to Johnson. Theo ended up on the ground and one of the boys got on top of him and started hitting him in the head.

“It wasn’t just a punch,” said Johnson. “This kid was sitting on top of my son and hammer fisting him right in the mouth and in the eye. So, I feel that something needs to be done with these boys. This is serious.”

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Jake Epp Library board denies request to ban gender-affirming book

Matthew Frank 3 minute read Preview

Jake Epp Library board denies request to ban gender-affirming book

Matthew Frank 3 minute read Yesterday at 3:23 PM CST

The Jake Epp Library board has blocked an attempt to remove a Christian gender-affirming book from its shelves in December.

During a Dec. 10 meeting, the board passed a motion to deny a request to remove Queerfully and Wonderfully Made: A Guide for LGBTQ+ Christian Teens by Leigh Finke.

The book lays out answers for queer teens and young adults who question how to balance their religious beliefs with their gender identity, according to publisher Beaming Books.

“We need to serve all segments of our society, whatever that looks like.” said Coun. Jac Siemens, Steinbach city council’s representative on the board.

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Yesterday at 3:23 PM CST

SVJETLANA MLINAREVIC THE CARILLON ARCHIVES

The Jake Epp Library board refused a request to ban a book in December 2025.

SVJETLANA MLINAREVIC THE CARILLON ARCHIVES 

The Jake Epp Library board refused a request to ban a book in December 2025.

Puck drops for playoffs across the region

Cassidy Dankochik 3 minute read Preview

Puck drops for playoffs across the region

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

Playoff hockey has kicked off across the region, with the Steinbach Regional Secondary School Sabres starting the marathon of games Feb. 11 when they started their first round series in the Winnipeg High School Hockey League

The first round of the Platinum Promotions division playoffs in the WHSHL was absolute chaos.

While fourth seed Steinbach Regional and fifth seed Collège Jeanne-Sauvé made quick work of their opponents, the three other preliminary round series saw the lower seed defeating the higher one.

The top three seeds got a first round bye, with Steinbach playing CJS in the quarterfinals. Game one was at the Southeast Event Centre after press time Feb. 18.

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Yesterday at 12:00 PM CST

Carter Braun celebrates an early goal for Grunthal during their Hanover Tache Junior Hockey League play-in series against Landmark Feb. 12. The Red Wings defeated the Blues 2-1 in the series and will play Springfield in the quarterfinals. (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

Carter Braun celebrates an early goal for Grunthal during their Hanover Tache Junior Hockey League play-in series against Landmark Feb. 12. The Red Wings defeated the Blues 2-1 in the series and will play Springfield in the quarterfinals. (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

RSR wastewater project awards tender

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 4 minute read Preview

RSR wastewater project awards tender

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 4 minute read Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026

The Red-Seine-Rat (RSR) Wastewater Co-operative just awarded tender for the first phase of the multiphase wastewater treatment plant construction project.

Toronto-based AECON, a construction firm with more than 100 years of experience in infrastructure and utility projects, was awarded tender for the first phase of the $235 million wastewater treatment plant, which will be built north of the Town of Niverville.

“We started it back in 2019, I believe, and finally, we are somewhere where we can start working and doing things. So, it’s great to hear that we have come to a point where we can go ahead and do something,” said co-operative chair Jim Funk.

Funk is reeve of the RM of Hanover, which is part of the six-member co-operative that includes the RMs of Tache, De Salaberry (Otterburne), La Broquerie, and Ritchot, and Niverville. The wastewater project will service 13 communities in those RMs once built.

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Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026

SVJETLANA MLINAREVIC CARILLON ARCHIVES

Red-Seine-Rat Wastewater Co-operative board chair Jim Funk (far right) announced tender had been awarded to AECON, a construction firm with more than 100 years of experience in infrastructure and utility projects. The $235 million project will begin construction in the spring and is expected to be completed in three years. During a press conference in the Town of Niverville on March 26, 2024, Funk, Springfield MLA Ron Schuler (left), City of Brandon city manager and CAO Ron Bowles, Canada Infrastructure Bank (CIB) CEO Ehren Cory, and MLA for La Verendrye Konrad Narth celebrated CIB’s $140 million loan to the co-operative to build its new wastewater facility and the City of Brandon to expand its current wastewater facility. The loan will be split 60 percent to the RSR and 40 percent to the City of Brandon.

SVJETLANA MLINAREVIC CARILLON ARCHIVES 

Red-Seine-Rat Wastewater Co-operative board chair Jim Funk (far right) announced tender had been awarded to AECON, a construction firm with more than 100 years of experience in infrastructure and utility projects. The $235 million project will begin construction in the spring and is expected to be completed in three years. During a press conference in the Town of Niverville on March 26, 2024, Funk, Springfield MLA Ron Schuler (left), City of Brandon city manager and CAO Ron Bowles, Canada Infrastructure Bank (CIB) CEO Ehren Cory, and MLA for La Verendrye Konrad Narth celebrated CIB’s $140 million loan to the co-operative to build its new wastewater facility and the City of Brandon to expand its current wastewater facility. The loan will be split 60 percent to the RSR and 40 percent to the City of Brandon.

COLUMN: Carillon Flashback April 17, 1996 – Arborgate students treated to a lesson on Métis culture

Wes Keating 3 minute read Preview

COLUMN: Carillon Flashback April 17, 1996 – Arborgate students treated to a lesson on Métis culture

Wes Keating 3 minute read Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026

Manitoba’s lieutenant-governor danced a jig with one of the students, joined the Manitoba Métis Federation president for a children’s song and delivered a lesson on Métis culture to an enthusiastic elementary school audience in La Broquerie.

Yvon Dumont commended the staff of Arborgate School for their efforts to showcase the variety of people that make up Canada, during Cultural Awareness Month activities at the school.

“Canada is made up of people from many different cultures from all over the world, determined to work together to make this the best country in the world.”

In Manitoba, more than anywhere else, the Métis identify with each other, separately from French, Indigenous and all other nationalities, Dumont explained. In the past 20 years, people have become more aware of the role Métis played in the history of Manitoba.

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Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026

CARILLON ARCHIVES

Manitoba Métis Federation president Billyjo De La Ronde joins Manitoba Lieutenant-Governor Yvon Dumont in an enthusiastic rendition of a Métis children’s song before joining students sitting on the gym floor in a sing-a-long at the La Broquerie elementary school.

CARILLON ARCHIVES 

Manitoba Métis Federation president Billyjo De La Ronde joins Manitoba Lieutenant-Governor Yvon Dumont in an enthusiastic rendition of a Métis children’s song before joining students sitting on the gym floor in a sing-a-long at the La Broquerie elementary school.

Carillon Sports 2nd Shots: Feb. 12th edition

Cassidy Dankochik 1 minute read Preview

Carillon Sports 2nd Shots: Feb. 12th edition

Cassidy Dankochik 1 minute read Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026

Featuring Steinbach Pistons and SRSS Sabres games Feb. 4, Eastman Selects game Feb. 5, Providence Pilots basketball games Feb. 13, and an SEMHL game in Ile des Chenes Feb. 14.

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Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026

The Steinbach Pistons had a great couple games against the Portage Terriers, including Feb. 4. (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

The Steinbach Pistons had a great couple games against the Portage Terriers, including Feb. 4. (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

COLUMN: Report from the Legislature – Wab Kinew is raising your taxes again

Konrad Narth, MLA for La Verendrye 4 minute read Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026

With tax season fast approaching, Manitobans are about to see their tax bills go up—again.

Under this failed NDP Government, a middle-class family earning $75,000 now pays more in provincial taxes than the same family in Regina, Calgary, Montreal, Toronto, or Vancouver.

The reason? The NDP’s decision to quietly end inflation indexation on income-tax brackets.

Until now, the amount of money you could earn before paying income tax went up a bit each year to keep pace with the rate of inflation.

Steinbacher frequent snow carver for Festival du Voyageur, snow maze

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 7 minute read Preview

Steinbacher frequent snow carver for Festival du Voyageur, snow maze

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 7 minute read Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026

For more than 40 years, Lyle Peters has been showing his creative side every winter by carving sculptures out of snow for the residents of the Southeast and Winnipeg.

Peters, who has been teaching collision repair at Steinbach Regional Secondary School for 20 years, started carving snow when he was 25 years old to beat winter boredom.

“I think I tried to do something in ice at one point, and the block that I froze to carve on, I couldn’t get it out of the container that I tried to make my ice in. So then I just thought, well, I’ll just pack some snow then. And that’s how it started,” said the 63-year-old.

Peters sculpts for his own pleasure. The first carving he did was of a hockey helmet for his backyard and finding the experience enjoyable he continued with a polar bear for the front yard. This eventually morphed into carving for the Festival du Voyageur, The Royal Canadian Mint, the snow maze in Ste Agathe, and Steinbach’s Mennonite Heritage Village.

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Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026

SVJETLANA MLINAREVIC THE CARILLON

Snow sculptor Lyle Peters talks to his son, Tegegne, on how best to approach their carving of an ambulance on the corner of Archibald Street and Provencher Boulevard in Winnipeg for the Festival du Voyager on Jan. 26, 2026. Peters has been sculpting snow for 40 years.

SVJETLANA MLINAREVIC THE CARILLON 

Snow sculptor Lyle Peters talks to his son, Tegegne, on how best to approach their carving of an ambulance on the corner of Archibald Street and Provencher Boulevard in Winnipeg for the Festival du Voyager on Jan. 26, 2026. Peters has been sculpting snow for 40 years.

COLUMN: View from the Legislature – Canadian leaders demonstrate a better kind of leadership

Kelvin Goertzen, MLA for Steinbach 3 minute read Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2026

With the return to Ottawa last week of former Prime Minister Stephen Harper and many of those who were in and supported his government, there was a bit of a nostalgic feel in the nation’s capital. Many people, of all political stripes, commented that, regardless of what they felt about the tenure of the Harper government, it did feel like a simpler time. This is probably a common sentiment when people look back at earlier times in their life or career, but there is also some objective truth to the feeling that we are in a world where things that were previously taken for granted no longer seem to be certain.

But quite apart from the feting of the former Harper government, there were other things that were remarkable about the week that spoke well of all political parties in Canada and about the state of Canada itself. At the unveiling of the portrait for former Prime Minister Harper, the current Prime Minister Mark Carney was in attendance and the two shared complimentary comments between them. None of it felt contrived or insincere. Later in the week, Harper sat on a panel with former Liberal Prime Minister Jean Chretien where, again, the discussion was focused on what was good for Canada and not political divides. It is difficult to imagine, in the current environment, a similar event taking place in the United States.

Observers might be quick to add that it is much easier for politicians of different stripes who are not currently elected to engage in these types of discussions that rise above the political fray. And while that may be true, it doesn’t change the fact that they are happening less at a time when we might need them even more.

Not only do they often provide very important strategic considerations, both Harper and Chretien demonstrated that, in their discussion on the current state of relations with the United States, an important signal is sent to Canadians that our political system is based on something greater than pure partisan politics. There was a sense of a greater common good.

COLUMN: Beyond the Shelter – Healthy relationships 101

Lisa Fast 3 minute read Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2026

When people hear about domestic violence work, they often think about crisis response or shelter services.

Outreach looks a little different. My role focuses on prevention, education, and connection — meeting people where they are, often long before a crisis happens.

At the heart of outreach is Healthy Relationships 101. This means having real, honest conversations about boundaries, consent, communication, and respect. These are topics many of us were never formally taught, yet they shape every relationship we have — romantic, familial, platonic, and professional.

A big part of my work involves youth prevention. I spend time in schools, youth programs, and community spaces talking with young people about what healthy relationships actually look like. We talk about boundaries — how to set them, how to respect them, and how it’s OK if boundaries change over time. We talk about consent as something ongoing and mutual, not a one-time question. We also talk about red flags, power dynamics, and how social media, peer pressure, and cultural messages can blur what healthy behaviour really is.

Ewasko’s ice shining on Olympic stage

Mike McIntyre 6 minute read Preview

Ewasko’s ice shining on Olympic stage

Mike McIntyre 6 minute read Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2026

Greg Ewasko felt a rush of emotions Wednesday evening as the first rocks slid down the pebbled ice he helped create, officially ushering in the start of the 2026 Winter Olympics.

Pride. Relief. A brief moment of horror when a power outage plunged the venue into darkness. And, beneath it all, a deep sadness over what could have — and should have — been.

The Oakbank product had spent years imagining this day alongside his wife, Monique. Together, they mapped out what their first Olympic Games would look like. But not long after Ewasko received the call he’d dreamed of in the fall of 2023 — the World Curling Federation wanted him as an ice maker — Monique died of cancer.

“We didn’t really get to celebrate it,” he told the Winnipeg Free Press, his voice cracking.

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Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2026

Rob Blanchard / Curling Canada

Ice-maker Greg Ewasko at the 2020 Brier in Kingston.

Rob Blanchard / Curling Canada



Ice-maker Greg Ewasko at the 2020 Brier in Kingston.

COLUMN: Tales from the Gravel Ridge – Remembering why they mattered

Maria Falk Lodge 4 minute read Preview

COLUMN: Tales from the Gravel Ridge – Remembering why they mattered

Maria Falk Lodge 4 minute read Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2026

Why, we may ask ourselves, should we remember old stories and the individuals in those stories? Especially when there is so much going on in the world all around us. And, even more importantly, when so much historical information is available on the internet. Perhaps therein lies the reason why we should indeed remember our own personal stories and how they relate to family, friends, and numerous others, lest these stories be buried by information overload.

Ultimately, the stories of our lives, and especially the stories of our childhood and early adulthood will be lost. We may well think that such a loss is of no consequence. John Donne, the English poet thought, however, that our stories do matter. In his famous poem, No Man is an Island, Donne reiterates that all our stories are important; “Any man’s death diminishes me”, and then goes on to say “Because I am involved in mankind.” In essence, the effect that the lives of others have on us is also part of our individual stories.

Of paramount importance and influence on my life were the lives of my parents, and along with them, the members of my entire family. My view of life continues to be shaped by those influences, and by their response to the circumstances of their own lives.

Memories of the lives of others also have an influence on my continuing development. By the end of my first grade at the Rosengard School, under the teaching of Mr. Jakob Penner, I had become trilingual. At home I was already fluent in two spoken languages, being Mennonite Low German and German. My parents, Cornelius and Katarina Falk, were particular about keeping those two languages distinct, even though there were some similarities. Since English was the spoken language at school, I as a six year old had become somewhat proficient in that regard, in addition to learning how to read and write in English, given that the school year consisted of nine months of instruction.

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Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2026

Rosengard students and Jakob Penner, their teacher, 1947.

Rosengard students and Jakob Penner, their teacher, 1947.

Proximus 5 takes Steinbach stage

Greg Vandermeulen 0 minute read Preview

Proximus 5 takes Steinbach stage

Greg Vandermeulen 0 minute read Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2026

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Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2026

GREG VANDERMEULEN THE CARILLON

Proximus 5, a Winnipeg-based, five-voice ensemble, took to the stage at Grace Mennonite Church in Steinbach on Feb. 6. The talented singer held a workshop with the Steinbach Regional Secondary School Chamber Choir before including them in their performance. The chamber choir is a group of auditioned Grade 11 and Grade 12 students.

GREG VANDERMEULEN THE CARILLON 

Proximus 5, a Winnipeg-based, five-voice ensemble, took to the stage at Grace Mennonite Church in Steinbach on Feb. 6. The talented singer held a workshop with the Steinbach Regional Secondary School Chamber Choir before including them in their performance. The chamber choir is a group of auditioned Grade 11 and Grade 12 students.

COLUMN: Think Again – How we can adapt to the new AI reality

Michael Zwaagstra 4 minute read Monday, Feb. 16, 2026

Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates recently made a bold prediction. He said artificial intelligence (AI) will replace teachers within 10 years.

Obviously, Gates doesn’t believe that teachers will literally disappear. But he does think AI will take over some of the tasks currently performed by teachers. This could change teaching jobs in a significant way.

In fact, AI is already having a profound impact on schools. Using programs such as ChatGPT, students can get entire essays written for them in a few seconds. To avoid getting caught, students just tell ChatGPT to make the essay look like it was written by a high school student. AI programs can also create poetry, analyze scientific data and solve complex mathematical equations.

Anytime a student hands in an assignment, there’s a real possibility it was done with the help of AI. And as AI becomes more sophisticated, it’s increasingly harder for teachers to detect it.

Steinbach Arts Council announces new shows

Greg Vandermeulen 2 minute read Monday, Feb. 16, 2026

The 2025-2026 concert season just got more exciting in Steinbach as the Steinbach Arts Council announced three new shows.

They include a community concert, a free professional theatre production for families and a world-class solo piano performance.

Performing arts coordinator, Tara Schellenberg said they chose acts based on how they complement the concert season as a whole.

“We’re excited to reach a wide audience with a free family performance, a community musical concert, and a world-class pianist returning home,” she said.

SCI rink reaches schoolgirls final

Wes Keating 1 minute read Preview

SCI rink reaches schoolgirls final

Wes Keating 1 minute read Monday, Feb. 16, 2026

While the SCI Sabres hockey team managed to win only one of three games in a tournament at Copper Cliff, Ontario, Sharon Dyck and her curling foursome went on a winning streak to give their school its best representation ever at the provincial schoolgirls’ curling championships in Winnipeg during the Christmas holidays.

Dyck and third, Marj Mooney, second Pat Guenther, and lead Donna Armstrong came within two wins of capturing provincial honors at the 94-rink bonspiel. Dyck’s rink reached the finals of the premier A&W event, before bowing to last year’s champs, the Pidzarko rink from Rossmere.

Even the final game was close, until Chris Pidzarko cracked a three on the seventh end and stole singles in the eighth and ninth to put the game out of reach for the Steinbach foursome.

By reaching the finals of the first event, Dyck got a second shot at the provincial honors in a playoff involving the three trophy winners.

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Monday, Feb. 16, 2026

The SCI was well represented at the provincial high school girls’ bonspiel this year. Sharon Dyck, Marj Mooney, Pat Guenther and Donna Armstrong made it to the finals of the first event before being defeated by a Winnipeg rink from Rossmere.

The SCI was well represented at the provincial high school girls’ bonspiel this year. Sharon Dyck, Marj Mooney, Pat Guenther and Donna Armstrong made it to the finals of the first event before being defeated by a Winnipeg rink from Rossmere.

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