Local
Low air quality puts halt on MHSAA track championships
3 minute read 1:35 PM CDTSmoke and storms wrecked havoc on the sports schedule across Manitoba last weekend, including in the Southeast.
The highest-profile event cancelled was the Manitoba High Schools Athletic Association track and field provincial championships. Athletes from across the province were set to compete at the University of Manitoba in Winnipeg June 5-7, before two consecutive days of poor air quality due to wildfire smoke caused organizers to cancel the event outright.
Executive director of the MHSAA Chad Falk said with the short time left in the school year and the impossible logistics of re-organizing an event with more than 1,500 athletes, simply postponing provincials wasn’t a possibility.
“The nature of the event and how many athletes, the unique venue, access to officials, access to venues, kids travelling from across the province, it was just impossible to look at finding a way to reschedule it,” Falk said in an interview with the Winnipeg Free Press.
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Steinbach MB
18°C, Cloudy with wind
Summer in the City results in Steinbach street closures
1 minute read Preview 9:51 AM CDTLogo contest launched for new transit system
3 minute read 9:48 AM CDTA newly proposed transit system for the City of Steinbach is giving the community a chance to help create its first logo.
Created by the South East Equity Coalition, LinK Transit is intended to provide reliable and affordable transit services to residents, enhance their mobility and connectivity, reduce social inequalities and create greater links within the community.
A press release issued by LinK Transit states the logo should illustrate the importance of linking people together and enabling community.
“It will be simple, bold and eye-catching,” they said. “The logo will show the public nature of transit and be used on signs, vehicles, websites and promotions.”
Cultures in the City returns with new cultures
2 minute read Preview 9:44 AM CDTArtists in the City brings young fiddlers to town
1 minute read Preview 9:41 AM CDTU18 AAA Selects moving back to Steinbach
4 minute read Preview Yesterday at 10:00 AM CDTLa Coulee resident named ambassador for Manitoba Possible
2 minute read Preview Wednesday, Jun. 11, 2025Carillon Sports Second Shots: June 5
1 minute read Preview Wednesday, Jun. 11, 2025With STARS on their minds
1 minute read Preview Wednesday, Jun. 11, 2025Looking Glass Theatre announces next season
2 minute read Preview Wednesday, Jun. 11, 2025From wedding dresses to burial garments for infants
2 minute read Preview Tuesday, Jun. 10, 2025Ice rink fees to rise in RM of Hanover
2 minute read Tuesday, Jun. 10, 2025Ice times will get more expensive in the RM of Hanover as rental fees have increased from last year.
The proposed rate would see prime ice time jump to $165 per hour compared to last year’s fee of $160. Non-prime and local minor sport ice times will also see a $5 increase to $135. Evening Game Slots (3 hours of prime ice time) will cost $495 per slot.
“We try to find a balance between what’s affordable for our users and what helps us cover at least a decent amount of the costs to operating our facilities. That’s what goes into those decisions. Trying to stay competitive with the region and also make sure that we manage our facilities properly,” said recreation manager Jason Peters.
Peters was asked what effect the new Southeast Events Centre will have on rink rates in 2026, whereupon he replied that it is unknown as the center hasn’t released its rink rates yet.
Pistons D-man Munro heading to Olaf College
2 minute read Preview Tuesday, Jun. 10, 2025Rural proposals to respond to global challenges
5 minute read Tuesday, Jun. 10, 2025Southeast municipal leaders joined mayors, reeves and councillors from across Canada at the Federation of Canadian Municipalities’ (FCM) annual conference and trade show in Ottawa May 29 to June 1.
It was the first since Prime Minister Mark Carney took office. Southeast leaders were in the room as Carney spoke on his three main local priorities: housing, the economy, and safety.
The Prime Minister’s message to start his speech to the more than 1,500 elected local leaders was that the response to global challenges starts at the local level.
Municipal leaders came prepared with their proposed solutions.
COLUMN: Report from the Legislature – Reflecting on a busy session
4 minute read Tuesday, Jun. 10, 2025This month’s report from the legislature comes as the Manitoba legislature rises for the summer. Tuesday morning marked the end of the spring 2025 sitting after a final day that lasted more than 24 hours for the MLAs. With many bills needing to pass third reading and royal assent, the final vote of all designated bills happened by 8:30 a.m. the next day.
This session of the legislature was very busy for us in opposition. The second half of the session welcomed Fort Whyte MLA Obby Khan into the legislative chamber as the new leader of the official opposition on May 6. This has given our party new life and direction to hold the NDP government to account and move us forward to forming government in the next election. Along with a leadership race the legislature and our party was busy over the past few months with more than 47 different pieces of legislation being brought forward for consideration and debate. Thirty-four of those were government bills that didn’t pass third reading until the final sitting day of the legislature.
The list of bills passed was extensive but included many pieces of legislation that were drafted to increase red tape and regulation for Manitobans making life less affordable and more cumbersome for businesses to succeed. This included bills like Bill 25 the Public-Private Partnerships Transparency and Accountability Act which will now make public private partnerships in infrastructure investment more difficult, showing the NDPs unwillingness to strengthen our infrastructure investment abilities while partnering with the private sector. Along with disincentivizing investment in our province, much of the legislation brought forward does very little other than providing lip service. The title and description of the bill express a desire to increase safety, labour representation or economic growth but the actual substance provides very little value.
A prime example of how our PC team plans for the future growth of our province while the NDP government is more concerned about the media highlights, was the debate around interprovincial trade barriers. We brought forward Bill 227 The Free Trade and Mobility within Canada Act because we realize the importance of eliminating trade barriers within our own country to strengthen our economic position when dealing with the protectionist trade tariffs from the United States. This bill was brought forward early in the session as other provinces were starting to talk about the importance. The NDP voted the bill down and had no other plan in place to work with provinces across Canada to strengthen our Manitoba economy. Then after Kinew and Premier Ford of Ontario met weeks later and positive media coverage was obtained around discussions on free trade within Canada, the NDP came back with their own watered down version for Bill 227 but by that point had missed the back stop date that would allow them to designate it as a bill that needed to be passed by the end of session.
COLUMN: Don’t Mind the Mess – What dads leave behind
3 minute read Monday, Jun. 9, 2025Father’s Day always sneaks up on me.
Maybe it’s because dads rarely demand attention. They’re more likely to show love through fixing things than talking about feelings. They’re the ones who’ll change your flat tire at midnight or drive across town to deliver a forgotten wallet—but won’t remember their own birthday.
My dad was one of those quiet, capable types. A man of the land, with dirt under his fingernails and the weight of the weather on his shoulders. He never had much use for fuss, sentiment, or—most certainly—not yellow flowers.
Mustard weeds, to be precise.
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