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Ambiguous divisional email raises concerns of student safety at Niverville school

4 minute read Yesterday at 11:43 PM CDT

An ambiguous email from the Hanover School Division to parents of Niverville Elementary School students was sent last week addressing an incident regarding student safety at the school. But instead of explaining what had happened, the email created confusion and worry leading parents to look for answers on social media.

In the email to parents last Friday, the division stated it was addressing concerns circulating around the school community of “a recent student safety concern” at the school.

The email went on to inform parents that the division was taking the situation seriously and that, “out of an abundance of caution, we have added extra supports and precautions in the building.” Further, the division is aware that situations like this can “create worry for students, staff, and families.”

Ironically, while the email tried to address rumours and alleviate concerns, it only exacerbated them by its ambiguity in not explaining what happened to prompt the security measures.

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Local

LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Sportswriter should consider retirement

Bert Reimer, Richer, MB 1 minute read Yesterday at 8:29 PM CDT

I am writing to voice my support for a letter to the editor written by James Smith in the May 7 edition of The Carillon, (Fighting toxicity starts here).

In the same edition of The Carillon James Loewen has a column, As I See It, (We’re all Habs’ fans now). I particularly take exception to Mr. Loewen’s reference stating that Prime Minister Mark Carney is doing everything he can to protect Canada.

If Mr. Carney was really trying to protect Canada, he would not be cozying up to China, a totalitarian communist state that controls, persecutes and imprisons its own citizens.

Mr. Loewen may be a sportswriter, but when it comes to politics, he probably should do a little research to check facts instead of ranting and raving against people he doesn’t agree with, which has no place in a sports column.

Local

COLUMN: The Carillon Flashback August 27, 1986 – Twin River Farm offers bed, breakfast

Wes Keating 4 minute read Preview

COLUMN: The Carillon Flashback August 27, 1986 – Twin River Farm offers bed, breakfast

Wes Keating 4 minute read Yesterday at 5:11 PM CDT

by WES KEATING

Although it is a distance from the city, the setting is definitely right, and ever since Colleen and Claude Lord opened their La Broquerie area turn-of-the-century farmstead as a bed and breakfast, families have been visiting their place at a steady rate.

The farm buildings are situated in a heavily treed area, well back from the road. Near the barn, several horses graze contentedly in a small meadow and just behind a fenced-in corral on the other side, the Seine River makes a gentle curve.

The farm offers a tranquil place for a family to spend time – to unwind and relax – and enjoy a full-course country breakfast in the pleasant dining room. Although the program is advertised as “bed and breakfast”, visitors may stay as long as they choose, eating all meals at the farm if arrangements are made.

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Yesterday at 5:11 PM CDT

Local

City looks to strengthen sump pit and sump pump bylaw

Greg Vandermeulen 4 minute read Preview

City looks to strengthen sump pit and sump pump bylaw

Greg Vandermeulen 4 minute read Yesterday at 2:59 PM CDT

Steinbach city council will consider first reading of a revised sump pit and sump pump bylaw at an upcoming meeting.

Administration was directed to bring a new draft of the bylaw forward at the next regular meeting, following a sneak peek at the city’s strategic priorities committee meeting on Tuesday.

The revised bylaw includes more explicit rules on how sump pumps and pits must be installed, and how sump and rainwater can be disposed of.

It also includes a schedule of fines for offenders, though city staff said they would do as much as they could to resolve situations before using that tool.

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Yesterday at 2:59 PM CDT

Agriculture

1946 – 2026 Watching Steinbach Grow: Pasteurized milk delivered daily

Wes Keating 3 minute read Preview

1946 – 2026 Watching Steinbach Grow: Pasteurized milk delivered daily

Wes Keating 3 minute read Yesterday at 12:57 PM CDT

SEPTEMBER 5, 1952—Every morning, without the benefit of franchise or bylaw, Steinbach Creamery delivers 700 to 800 quarts of fresh milk to Steinbach’s 2,100 citizens. The milk is pasteurized, some is homogenized, and tests from 3.5 to 4.6 percent butterfat. It is produced on 11 of the districts leading dairy farms, all of which are inspected periodically by the Red River Health Unit sanitation inspector.

A dozen years earlier, the town cowherd would take the cows down Main Street, blowing his bugle for all to hear, announcing it was seven o’clock and time to bring the cows to be taken to the community pasture. Practically everyone had their own cow.

But even before the cowherd hung up his horn, and before the common pasture was made into a farm, commercial enterprise was at work.

A.A. Regehr made a sharp bid to take over the milk business, erecting the present Steinbach Creamery building. A 180-foot well was drilled to supply running water to cool the milk and provide water to wash bottles and milk cans. Equipment included bottle washers, cooling vats, and sterilizers. It was quite an ambitious undertaking under the circumstances, and during the first year, deliveries were only 200 quarts per day.

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Yesterday at 12:57 PM CDT

Local

RM of Piney looking for community feedback with housing survey

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 4 minute read Preview

RM of Piney looking for community feedback with housing survey

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 4 minute read Yesterday at 11:47 AM CDT

The RM of Piney is looking for residents to participate in a regional survey regarding housing in the municipality.

“The RM of Piney does a housing survey every few years, (it) wants to keep sort of a pulse on what demand is looking like, where the gaps are, (and) what people are looking for in the future,” said Monique Chenier, economic development and tourism manager for Sunrise Corner for the RMs of Piney and Stuartburn. Chenier is helping to facilitate the survey.

The survey will ask 19 questions looking at demographics, what people’s current living situations are, the types of housing residents are looking for (seniors, multi-family rentals, single-family homes), and other housing related questions.

Chenier said the majority of housing in Piney is single-family owned homes with a “handful” of rentals mostly as duplexes.

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Yesterday at 11:47 AM CDT

Local

RCMP arrest man flashing fake gun in Morris Hospital

Matthew Frank 2 minute read Yesterday at 8:39 AM CDT

A Plum Coulee man has been accused of flashing a replica hand gun to threaten a woman inside Morris General Hospital and crashing to a highway sign while fleeing last week.

Morris RCMP were called to the hospital at 4:30 p.m. on May 5 after receiving a report of an armed man threatening a female, a March 6 news release said.

Mounties learned two adult women were arguing inside the hospital. A man, who was with one of the females, pulled out a hand gun and threatened the woman.

The two suspects later then left the hospital. RCMP received a second report minutes later that a pickup truck slammed into a Highway 75 sign north of Morris. The truck was abandoned, and the two people were fled on foot.

Local

EDITORIAL: Census data means money in the bank

Greg Vandermeulen 5 minute read Tuesday, May. 19, 2026

One only needs to take a casual look at social media these days to see a plethora of conspiracy theories.

Some of those involve the Canada census, which by now, all households should have completed.

It appears that some, afraid of the detailed nature of the questions, assume they can stick it to Prime Minister Mark Carney and our Liberal government by either ignoring the census completely or filling it out as some sort of redacted version.

In some ways, one can’t blame people for thinking this way.

Local

Mennonite Heritage Village hosts Manitoba Day celebration

Greg Vandermeulen 3 minute read Preview

Mennonite Heritage Village hosts Manitoba Day celebration

Greg Vandermeulen 3 minute read Tuesday, May. 19, 2026

Spectators braved a cold wind to listen to former Olympian Michelle Sawatzky-Koop sing the Manitoba Song as the provincial flag was raised at the Mennonite Heritage Village on May 9, part of the museum’s Manitoba Day celebration.

Close to 600 visitors attended the event that saw heritage demonstrations, free Manitoba Day cake and welcoming speeches in what is the museum’s first event of the season.

Manitoba Day is officially on May 12, but a weekend celebration was planned to honour the 156 years Manitoba has been a province to allow more of the public to attend.

MHV executive director Robert Goertzen shared the importance of the day, which recognizes the moment the Manitoba Act received Royal Assent in 1870, making Manitoba the fifth province in Canada.

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Tuesday, May. 19, 2026

Local

Donated painting honours Filipino artist

Greg Vandermeulen 1 minute read Preview

Donated painting honours Filipino artist

Greg Vandermeulen 1 minute read Tuesday, May. 19, 2026

A painting created by an artist who once called Steinbach home was donated to the Mennonite Heritage Village.

In a ceremony coinciding with Manitoba Day, senior curator Garth Doerksen accepted the art piece from donors Gerry and Shirley Klassen. The painting, a winter scene of a windmill, was created by Juan Vicente Costales Artates, known in the Steinbach area as Vic Artates. Doerksen described him as a pioneer of sorts, as he was the first person born in the Philippines to call Steinbach home. He and his wife moved to Steinbach in 1967 where he became a lab technician at the Bethesda Hospital. He later moved into other work such as real estate and relocated to B.C. Artates, born in 1941, still lives in the Philippines.

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Tuesday, May. 19, 2026

Local

1946 – 2026 Watching Steinbach Grow: Town status leads to urban amenities

Wes Keating 4 minute read Preview

1946 – 2026 Watching Steinbach Grow: Town status leads to urban amenities

Wes Keating 4 minute read Tuesday, May. 19, 2026

With the incorporation of the Town of Steinbach came an explosion of civic pride and progress that saw little time wasted in adding urban amenities that were in keeping with the new status of the community.

In short order, the town had a paved Main Street, an enlarged hospital, running water in a number of homes and door-to-door milk delivery, just like a big city. Residents got together to build a curling rink, which benefited both the community and neighbouring farmers who could be expected to do a little shopping when they came to town for their favorite winter recreation.

A number of churches made a concerted effort to help the aging population, with the purchase of the invalid home on Hanover Street and construction of a replacement, just off Kroeker Avenue, some time later.

And like the larger urban centres that dug up city streets, practically as soon as they were paved, Steinbach’s growing pains included a couple of years of less than passable roads while indoor plumbing made its way into Steinbach homes.

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Tuesday, May. 19, 2026

Local

St Adolphe School parents ask SRSD for new play structure funds

Matthew Frank 3 minute read Preview

St Adolphe School parents ask SRSD for new play structure funds

Matthew Frank 3 minute read Tuesday, May. 19, 2026

St Adolphe School parents are asking the Seine River School Division board to come up with funding and apply for a provincial grant to build a new play structure, after the school’s previous play structure was removed last year.

Members of the school’s parent advisory council presented a plan for the $200,000 play structure to the school board and asked for $46,000 during a May 12 meeting. The previous play structure was removed from the Kindergarten to Grade 8 school in June 2025 when an inspection deemed it unsafe.

“Seeing it empty was very disheartening for myself, and for the kids in the neighborhood and the family in the neighborhood because a lot of them didn’t know. But it also kicked (the council) into action to realize we needed to do whatever we could to get them a new playground,” said Michelle Prairie, the council’s president.

Her eight-year-old son attends the school and told her multiple times that he misses the play structure, she said, adding that its been hard on all students.

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Tuesday, May. 19, 2026

Local

COLUMN: Report from the Legislature – Investments in our communities, affordability for your family

Ron Schuler, MLA for Springfield-Ritchot 4 minute read Tuesday, May. 19, 2026

In 1999, when I first sought the privilege to be an MLA, I believed that the future of our region was bright. As I reflect nearly three decades later, I can say with confidence that my belief has not changed, and it is thanks entirely to the incredible people who call the constituency of Springfield-Ritchot and southeast Manitoba home.

This is why I continue fighting for you, to ensure you and your families have access to the resources and opportunities needed to thrive in our communities. I am proud to share that the past few months have brought historic investments and significant developments to Springfield-Ritchot. Many of these projects first began taking shape under the previous Progressive Conservative government which I was honoured to serve in.

Late last year, $76.9 million in funding was secured for wastewater infrastructure, including $22 million towards the Red-Seine-Rat Wastewater Cooperative. This critical infrastructure will allow for continued urban and economic growth in our communities for years to come. It was a project I worked hard to advance both in government and now in opposition.

In Niverville, Manitoba’s fastest growing community, rapid growth has created a need for further investments in infrastructure. That is why $17.7 million has been allocated for much needed improvements to Main Street. With construction set to begin later this year, the project will see lanes doubled in Niverville’s west end and the construction of a new roundabout. These improvements will help ease congestion, while creating a clear path towards sustained growth. During my time as minister of transportation and infrastructure, I worked to ensure the needs of this fast-growing community were reflected in the province’s long-term infrastructure plans.

Local

Graduating Pistons Quizi, Noad, announce college commitments

Cassidy Dankochik 1 minute read Preview

Graduating Pistons Quizi, Noad, announce college commitments

Cassidy Dankochik 1 minute read Tuesday, May. 19, 2026

A pair of key contributors to the Steinbach Pistons from this season have announced where they will be continuing their hockey careers.

Chris Quizi will be heading back south, suiting up for the University of Wisconsin River Falls Falcons in the NCAA Division III. The 2005-born goaltender joined Steinbach this season after four years with four different junior A programs in Ontario and Alberta.

It was a tough season, injury-wise for the Bradford, Ont. goalie, as he was injured early in the season and was knocked out of the playoffs after a hard collision during the team’s MJHL semi-final loss to Virden.

Despite being limited in his playing time, Quizi was still nominated for the league’s top goaltender award, posting a 21-5-2 record and a save percentage of 0.917.

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Tuesday, May. 19, 2026

Local

COLUMN: View from the Legislature – Manitoba is worth celebrating

Kelvin Goertzen, MLA for Steinbach 3 minute read Tuesday, May. 19, 2026

This past Tuesday, Manitoba celebrated its 156th birthday on what is officially known as Manitoba Day. While there are still many Manitobans who are unaware that May 12 is Manitoba Day, it is worth celebrating the anniversary of the day that our province officially entered the Confederation of Canada.

Every year the Mennonite Heritage Village celebrates Manitoba Day (as it does Canada Day), with free admission and an opening ceremony which invites attendees to reflect on the many things we have to be grateful for in our province and our country. This year, that celebration was held on the Saturday prior to Manitoba Day to ensure as many Manitobans as possible could attend.

One of the traditions that I enjoy the most at this event is the singing of the Manitoba Song, written in 1970 for the province’s centennial year. This year, as in most years past, Steinbach’s own Michelle Sawatzky performed the song for those in attendance. Few Manitobans know of the song’s existence let alone the lyrics, but they include the phrase “Manitoba, home of the blessed,” which feels true even on the coldest of winter days.

And while Manitoba is often mentioned for how cold our winters can be, what makes Manitoba special is how warm and friendly (it says so right on our licence plates), our people are. Whether you have lived in Manitoba your whole life or moved here from another province or country, I am sure you have a story to tell of the generous and kind spirit of your fellow Manitobans.

Local

Hanover parents group opposes anti-Islamophobia action plan in schools

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 4 minute read Preview

Hanover parents group opposes anti-Islamophobia action plan in schools

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 4 minute read Tuesday, May. 19, 2026

A parents group in Hanover School Division has voiced its concerns about teaching the provincial anti-Islamophobia action plan in schools.

“I would clarify myself that we are not here to criticize any religion, beliefs, or any…cultural groups,” said group spokesperson Jaimin Bhatt to The Carillon shortly after giving his presentation on Tuesday to the board of Hanover trustees.

“We particularly support safe, respectful, and inclusive schools for each and every kid in (the) Hanover district. Our concern is focused, basically, on one principle, that is maintaining religious neutrality, as well as (a) non-sectarian education system in public schools.”

The province’s anti-Islamophobia action plan for kindergarten to Grade 12 took more than a year to create with input from national and provincial Islamic organizations, the Manitoba Teachers’ Society, the department of education, Islamic youth representatives, and Islamic associations.

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Tuesday, May. 19, 2026

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