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Steinbach Community Foundation lists 2024 as most grants given
4 minute read 5:53 PM CDTSince 1998 when the foundation was started, Steinbach Community Foundation (SCF) has handed out more than $1 million and in the last two years has granted $500,000. This year alone SCF will have given out from all funds a total of $212,538, the largest annual payout ever handed out by the foundation.
“It’s very exciting and part of that is because we earned more of course so we can only give out a portion of the money that we earn and it’s very exciting that we are able to grant out more this year,” said chair Mary Jane Hiebert.
“The other thing is because of the new spend down fund that we received, we can go to that anonymous doner and they could decide if they wanted to donate more in a one year or not. That was also done. We could meet with them and go over the applications that we thought they would be interested in and we were able to give out more money.”
The Anonymous Spend Down Fund is a new option for donors. The fund is a limited time spend down fund, meaning it is created with a single large gift that is spent annually within a set time frame. This new strategy at SCF is for donors to provide a greater benefit in a shorter amount of time.
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Brunch service with a side of drag queens
4 minute read Preview 2:43 PM CDTPHOTO GALLERY: Notre-Dame-de-Lorette anniversary celebrations
1 minute read Preview 11:57 AM CDTCOLUMN: Report from the Legislature – PCs left NDP with surplus
4 minute read 8:59 AM CDTThe beginning of June saw the end of spring session at the Manitoba Legislature which began on March 5. I had the privilege of being the interim PC party leader during a good portion of this session and was pleased to welcome MLA for Fort Whyte, Obby Khan into the legislative chamber as the elected Leader of the Official Opposition on May 6.
Highlights from the spring sitting include the Public Accounts Committee approval of the 2023 audited statements, that confirm our former PC government left the Kinew NDP with a $373 million surplus. This disproves the NDP’s ongoing claims that they were left in a poor fiscal position, and using it as an excuse for their government’s growing deficit that could reach as high as $1.9 billion. Public Accounts is an independent all-party committee that examines the province’s audited finances and it includes members of the NDP.
Even though the NDP waited until the final days of spring session to introduce Bill 47 – Fair Trade in Canada Act, our PC Party voted to pass the bill as it is legislation that benefits Manitobans by reducing the interprovincial trade barriers between provinces. PC MLA for Midland, Lauren Stone had originally introduced similar legislation in mid April with Bill 227 – The Free Trade and Mobility Within Canada Act. However, the NDP voted against Bill 227 in order to make it their own, running a serious risk that the legislation might not pass before the summer and would have to wait until October 1st when the fall legislative session resumes.
Throughout the spring Manitobans continued to express their concerns regarding the NDP’s Budget 2025 tax hikes that show a significant increase to their education property taxes, and a crafty bracket creep that will cost Manitoba taxpayers $82 million.
Carillon Sports: June 26th Second Shots
1 minute read Preview Updated: 1:34 PM CDTClass of five celebrates grad in Sprague
3 minute read Preview Yesterday at 5:41 PM CDTSte Anne Co-op grand opening includes new pharmacy delivery
3 minute read Preview Yesterday at 2:35 PM CDTConnor Paronuzzi wins community award
2 minute read Preview Yesterday at 2:24 PM CDTRM of Hanover approves gravel operation
1 minute read Yesterday at 11:55 AM CDTThe RM of Hanover has approved a gravel operation on a 74-acre parcel at 31041 Road 27E about one mile west of Roseville Drive.
The RM approved the operation with the condition that it enter into a development agreement with Diamond Construction and Gravel.
Diamond Construction has agreed to pay the RM 45-cents per tonne of gravel collected for road maintenance which over a 10-year period will come to $150,000. Hamm said operating hours will be between 7 a.m. and 6 p.m. Monday to Friday with exceptions on Saturday if needed. Dust suppression equipment will be used, as well trees and berms to suppress noise. There will be environmental remediation after the mine closes.
It’s estimated the project will take about 10 years to mine the area of coarse gravel.
COLUMN: View from the Legislature – The true north strong and free
3 minute read Yesterday at 8:57 AM CDTFor Canadians every July 1st should be special. But it will be hard not to see this Canada Day as extra special. Over the past several months, there has been a surge of Canadian patriotism that has seldomly been seen in our lifetime. While Canadians have always generally been proud of their nation, it has usually been expressed in a quiet more reserved way. Some would say that is a very Canadian way.
But the past few months have seen something different. We have seen a concerted effort by Canadians to buy local products, exuberant singing of our national anthem at sporting events and a change in travel and vacation plans to spend more time and money in Canada.
Of course, this burst of patriotism was the result of a tariff and trade war that was instigated by the United States after a new administration came to power in Washington in January. It was heightened by talk by U.S. President Donald Trump that Canada should cease to be a country and instead join the United States as the 51st state. While this rhetoric has diminished over the past few weeks, the impact of U.S. tariffs on Canadian goods has not, and most Canadians still feel frustrated and even betrayed by our closest neighbour and trading partner.
Former Liberal Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, when asked earlier this year how Canadians define themselves responded by saying that one of the ways is that we are not Americans. But that answer sells Canada far short of what it truly is. Canada is not defined by what it isn’t as much as all the great things that it is.
Historic flag raising and commemoration celebrates the Métis in Ritchot
5 minute read Preview Monday, Jun. 30, 2025Off-leashed dogs, lilacs trampled, and maple trees plucked at Parc Carillon
3 minute read Preview Monday, Jun. 30, 2025Western Canadian Hockey Development program expanding in 2nd year
2 minute read Preview Monday, Jun. 30, 2025COLUMN: Carillon Flashback May 15, 2004 – Niverville selected as site for William Hespeler plaque
3 minute read Preview Monday, Jun. 30, 2025Steinbach Christian School celebrates growth, values, and 75th anniversary
3 minute read Preview Monday, Jun. 30, 2025Library shelves mix-up
1 minute read Sunday, Jun. 29, 2025The Jolys Regional Library board sold 12 tall wooden bookshelves without telling town council or updating inventory, council heard on June 18.
Council had 42 wooden shelves in inventory but were surprised when they found new metal ones.
Coun. Marc Proulx said the wooden shelves were causing mold and mildew according to the Jolys Regional Library board, so the shelves were sold privately to the public on a social media marketplace.
The money went back to the library board, and the funds were used to purchase metal shelves.
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