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Niverville clinic adds three new doctors

Matthew Frank 2 minute read Yesterday at 5:26 PM CDT

A Niverville clinic has added three new doctors to serve residents and see patients.

Open Health Niverville, a health care facility operated through the town’s administration, announced the new staff in a Feb. 23 press release.

The new doctors bolster the clinic’s existing 12 physicians providing care. Among the new hires, Dr. Trevor Poole, a graduate from both the University of Saskatchewan and Brandon University, will take on new patients as a family doctor, the release said. Poole, raised in Moosomin, Sask., worked as a doctor in clinics and emergency rooms in the Prairie Mountain Health Region prior to joining Open Health Niverville.

He is accepting all ages of patients, with key interests in LGBTQ+ health care, mental health, ADHD and preventative health care, the release said.

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Southeast fire departments amongst first to roll out new first aid model

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 4 minute read Preview

Southeast fire departments amongst first to roll out new first aid model

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 4 minute read Yesterday at 2:57 PM CDT

Three municipalities in the Southeast are amongst the first to train their firefighters under the new advanced firefighter first aid model that rolled out March 1 across the province.

“We had lots of people that were pushing for something to change because they saw that the model that we were currently doing was not sustainable,” said Niverville Fire Chief Keith Bueckert.

Niverville is one of three municipalities that has implemented the new training model, the other two being Dominion City and the RM of Emerson-Franklin.

Work on the AFFA model began about four years ago with a working group consisting of fire chiefs, Shared Health, Association of Manitoba Municipalities, the College of Paramedics of Manitoba (CPM), and the Manitoba licensing and compliance branch, among others.

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Yesterday at 2:57 PM CDT

SVJETLANA MLINAREVIC CARILLON ARCHIVES

Niverville Fire Chief Keith Bueckert is excited about the implementation of a new training model in regards to firefighters getting advanced first aid training across the province. The new model will provide the same level of medical training that firefighters received in the past except that they will now have to get approval from a centralized support service to administer certain regulated medications.

SVJETLANA MLINAREVIC CARILLON ARCHIVES 

Niverville Fire Chief Keith Bueckert is excited about the implementation of a new training model in regards to firefighters getting advanced first aid training across the province. The new model will provide the same level of medical training that firefighters received in the past except that they will now have to get approval from a centralized support service to administer certain regulated medications.

La Broquerie players nab CRJHL honours

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read Preview

La Broquerie players nab CRJHL honours

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read Yesterday at 12:00 PM CDT

A pair of La Broquerie Habs were honoured for their outstanding seasons by the Capital Region Junior Hockey League.

Goaltender Jaxon Loewen was named the league’s top goaltender, while Mario Gagnon was recognized as the most sportsmanlike.

Loewen had an outstanding season for La Broquerie. Starting in 16 games, he posted a 0.916 save percentage, as he filled in with the Steinbach Pistons throughout December when the Junior A team ran into injury trouble in the crease.

Gagnon had an incredible season, racking up 45 points, while playing in all 30 regular season games for the Habs. Despite those numbers and ice time, he only took a single minor penalty across the entire regular season.

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Yesterday at 12:00 PM CDT

Jaxon Loewen was outstanding for the Habs this season, earning CRJHL top goaltender honours. (Cassidy Dankochik Carillon Archives)

Jaxon Loewen was outstanding for the Habs this season, earning CRJHL top goaltender honours. (Cassidy Dankochik Carillon Archives)

Man harasses woman with 364 calls during a two-week period

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 5 minute read Yesterday at 11:28 AM CDT

A Steinbach area man has pleaded guilty to harrasment, wherein during a two-week period he made 364 phone calls to his ex-girlfriend.

Juden Giesbrecht, 19, started dating the victim on Dec. 18, 2024. The two are participants in El’ Dad, where they met. El’ Dad is an organization that helps people with intellectual disabilities with either housing, supports, and/or programing.

On March 4, 2025, the victim called police to report that Giesbrecht had threatened to kill her and harm her friends. She told police she began dating Giesbrecht in December and that she had given him her phone number and since then he had been calling her non-stop. She told him to stop calling so much and that a month prior “things had gotten really bad,” according to Crown attorney Jennifer Neufeld, and that “he began to be manipulative over the phone if she didn’t answer his calls, that he would threaten to harm himself if she wouldn’t speak to him or wouldn’t answer the phone.”

She also told police that on two occasions Giesbrecht had threatened to kill her which led to her breaking up with him and she eventually begin dating someone else. When Giesbrecht found out that she was dating someone else, he threatened to get his friends to attack the new boyfriend and “cut him up into little pieces,” according to Neufeld.

80 years: June 1981 – A second look at the first Carillon News

Eugene Derksen 4 minute read Preview

80 years: June 1981 – A second look at the first Carillon News

Eugene Derksen 4 minute read Yesterday at 8:39 AM CDT

In February of 1946, we printed several thousand of the first issue of the Carillon News for free distribution. I doubt if any of the originals, except the one in our vault is still around. We hope this six-page photographic reproduction will create a nostalgic memory or two, and provide a brief flashback to “the good old days”.

Although the first paper was small and insignificant, the plans around it were big and vigorous. It was to be a paper for everyone in Southeastern Manitoba, according to our blueprints. We would serve every community equally well. These were great plans, and we still try to follow them, though we fail occasionally.

We would have a newspaper with lots of local photos. Back in 1946, that could be nothing but a pipe dream; however, we had already purchased “a heap of junk” (my father said), which in reality, was equipment that would make the necessary zinc engravings needed to print photos. But it took a full year of determined effort, together with many late evenings of experimentation, to make this thing work. It was only a year later that we produced our first useable zinc engraving, but we never looked back from there on.

Also before the first issue was produced, my brother Bruno (now deceased), let me know from his RCAF base in Germany, that he was keenly interested in this venture, and would bring home a good press camera. He was going to be the photographer.

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Yesterday at 8:39 AM CDT

CARILLON ARCHIVES

Eugene and Rick Derksen shared their dream of producing the best regional weekly newspaper in Canada, at Derksen Printers. Rick shifted roles from employee to part owner in 1967 and bought up the remaining shares over the years to become sole owner. That did not break up the father-son team, as Eugene continued to occupy his corner office at 377 Main Street and contribute a weekly column to The Carillon until his death in 1994.

CARILLON ARCHIVES 

Eugene and Rick Derksen shared their dream of producing the best regional weekly newspaper in Canada, at Derksen Printers. Rick shifted roles from employee to part owner in 1967 and bought up the remaining shares over the years to become sole owner. That did not break up the father-son team, as Eugene continued to occupy his corner office at 377 Main Street and contribute a weekly column to The Carillon until his death in 1994.

RCMP encourage Manitobans to be vigilant of fraud

Greg Vandermeulen 3 minute read Sunday, Mar. 8, 2026

RCMP say the number of reported scams and frauds in Manitoba continues to rise.

In a news release highlighting the issue as part of Fraud Prevention Month, police warn that vigilance is key.

“Fraud is increasingly a problem in Manitoba, across Canada and around the world,” said Staff Sgt. Kevin Cavanagh, of the Manitoba RCMP Major Crime Services Cyber and Financial Unit. “We encourage Manitobans of all ages to remain vigilant and do your research before making payments or sharing banking and other personal information, particularly when individuals you don’t know are reaching out in person or online for any reason.”

The Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre reports that Manitobans were defrauded out of $31 million in 2024, noting that’s just from scams that were reported. It’s estimated that only five to 10 percent of victims actually come forward to law enforcement.

SPORTS FLASHBACK 2003: Hockey legend Serge Savard thrills fans at Rat River Classic

Wes Keating 3 minute read Preview

SPORTS FLASHBACK 2003: Hockey legend Serge Savard thrills fans at Rat River Classic

Wes Keating 3 minute read Sunday, Mar. 8, 2026

Real Cure, who doubles as the mayor of St Pierre Jolys and is the owner of Rat River Golf at St Pierre, has pulled it off again as he hosted the Fifth Annual Rat River Celebrity Golf Classic last week, with Montreal Canadiens legend Serge Savard as the guest of honour.

The tournament, with a full field of more than 150 players, is a fund-raiser for the CNIB. Savard was welcomed at the first tee by tournament coordinator Heather Cure and four-year-old George Lafleche, a client of the CNIB.

The golf course owner, a diehard Canadiens’ fan, started the tournament five years ago to raise money for the charity supporting the vision-impaired. The guests at the Rat River Celebrity Golf Classic over the years have been some of the most storied figures of Montreal Canadiens hockey, including Yvan Cournoyer, Henri Richard, Jean Beliveau, Gump Worsley and in 2003, Serge Savard,

Inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1986, Savard spent 17 seasons in the NHL, 15 with the Canadiens, winning eight Stanley Cups along the way. The Canadiens won two more Stanley Cups during the 12 years Savard was their manager, including their most recent one, a decade ago in, 1993.

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Sunday, Mar. 8, 2026

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

New U of M program gives law students taste of Steinbach legal firms, rural communities

Matthew Frank 6 minute read Preview

New U of M program gives law students taste of Steinbach legal firms, rural communities

Matthew Frank 6 minute read Sunday, Mar. 8, 2026

A new University of Manitoba program seeking to connect law students to rural communities and address lawyer shortages made its inaugural trip to Steinbach. The Prairie Business Law Collaboration Just Grow Here program brought 11 students on the road trip to hear from five local lawyers on Feb. 27, the first program of its kind in Canada.

Laura Reimer, program development director for the University of Manitoba faculty of law and head of the Desautels Business Law Accelerator, kick-started the program when local Steinbach lawyers invited the students to get a taste of rural life.

Reimer hopes the program will help address disparity between legal services in urban and rural communities. Her research revealed 88 percent of Manitoba lawyers are in Winnipeg and 11 percent serve the rest of the province, causing many to not access the resources they need or force others to travel long distances, she said.

“You can have a grandma that lives on a farm a couple of hours outside of Dauphin would have to travel to Dauphin to change her will or break up her farm or that type of thing,” she told The Carillon.

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Sunday, Mar. 8, 2026

SUPPLIED

(From left) University of Manitoba law students Ladina Thiessen and Grayson Cranney listen to Steinbach lawyers discuss their rural legal services. The Prairie Business Law Collaboration Just Grow Here program brought 11 students to Steinbach on Feb. 27, the first of its kind in Canada. The program aims to increase exposure and information for rural legal practices.

SUPPLIED 

(From left) University of Manitoba law students Ladina Thiessen and Grayson Cranney listen to Steinbach lawyers discuss their rural legal services. The Prairie Business Law Collaboration Just Grow Here program brought 11 students to Steinbach on Feb. 27, the first of its kind in Canada. The program aims to increase exposure and information for rural legal practices.

COLUMN: Arts and Culture – Message from the executive director

Steinbach Arts Council 6 minute read Sunday, Mar. 8, 2026

At the Steinbach Arts Council, our work is about more than access.

It is about the environment we create — spaces that are safe and welcoming, led by skilled instructors and mentors, with room to try, to learn, and to grow. We believe that environment matters. When people feel supported, they take creative risks. They build confidence. They begin to recognize their own potential.

Each year, SAC supports thousands of people across southeast Manitoba at every stage of their artistic development. Children build critical thinking skills and confidence through music, theatre, and visual arts. Teens strengthen discipline, collaboration, and leadership. Adults continue learning and creating. Seniors find meaningful connection and opportunities to remain engaged. Our focus is not on one moment or one performance. It is on growth that happens over time.

Fundamentally, this work builds something we all believe in - community.

Seine River School Division budget proposes raising taxes 11.4 percent

Matthew Frank 4 minute read Preview

Seine River School Division budget proposes raising taxes 11.4 percent

Matthew Frank 4 minute read Sunday, Mar. 8, 2026

The Seine River School Division has proposed 11.4 percent mill rate hike next fall to address growing classroom sizes and hiring more teachers.

The division’s $81.5-million budget for the 2026-2027 school year was presented to school board trustees on Feb. 24.

Superintendent Colin Campbell said the tax rise for rate payers is an indicator that the division is growing and more staff are needed to provide quality education.

“When student numbers rise, staffing levels need to keep pace or our class-size ratios worsen,” he told The Carillon. “Once you fall behind in that pupil-teacher ratio, it’s difficult to improve.”

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Sunday, Mar. 8, 2026

MATTHEW FRANK THE CARILLON Seine River School Division has proposed an education tax hike of 11.4 percent in its 2026-2027 proposed budget to address growing class sizes and hiring more teachers.

MATTHEW FRANK THE CARILLON Seine River School Division has proposed an education tax hike of 11.4 percent in its 2026-2027 proposed budget to address growing class sizes and hiring more teachers.

Steinbach tenders come in lower than expected

Greg Vandermeulen 3 minute read Saturday, Mar. 7, 2026

As Steinbach city council approved tenders for infrastructure projects on Tuesday, councillors noted that prices were much lower than anticipated.

Council approved a $1.38 million tender to Maple Leaf Construction for their 2026 capital works program projects including asphalt overlay on four streets and new sidewalks. Their consultant’s estimate was $1.98 million.

Moments later they approved a contract for the Millwork Drive wastewater sewer renewal project and a tender to Friesen Hauling & Excavating for close to $1.46 million, well below the consultant’s estimate of $2.13 million.

Combined it represents savings of nearly $1.3 million.

Habitat for Humanity looking to open chapter in Niverville

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 4 minute read Preview

Habitat for Humanity looking to open chapter in Niverville

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 4 minute read Saturday, Mar. 7, 2026

Habitat for Humanity Manitoba is looking to open a chapter in Niverville to help build homes in the community.

“It actually started a few months ago. So, as you’re aware, we don’t currently have a functioning chapter in the Southeast area. And so, we’d really like to have some chapters building in that area of the province…So, now I’m in the stage of trying to find people who would be interested on coming on to the committee to start up a chapter,” said Christina Falk, manager of chapter support for Habitat for Humanity Manitoba.

Falk said she has been in contact with some members of the community, including Mayor Myron Dyck, who is excited about a Habitat chapter opening up in town. He said there is a need in Niverville for Habitat as there is a shortage of affordable housing.

“I believe that there are people in communities throughout our province that would really appreciate the opportunity to have their own home. Habitat for Humanity offers a very realizable way of people being able to have their own home,” said Dyck.

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Saturday, Mar. 7, 2026

Wayne Glowacki Winnipeg Free Press Archives

Habitat for Humanity Manitoba is looking to open a chapter in Niverville and wants volunteers to form a committee. There used to be a Habitat chapter based in Steinbach that covered the whole Southeast, but it disbanded three years ago after operating for 25 years. Here, Winnipeg Mayor Brian Bowman helps with the building of a Habitat home in Winnipeg in 2015. Habitat has been in Manitoba since 1987.

Wayne Glowacki Winnipeg Free Press Archives 

Habitat for Humanity Manitoba is looking to open a chapter in Niverville and wants volunteers to form a committee. There used to be a Habitat chapter based in Steinbach that covered the whole Southeast, but it disbanded three years ago after operating for 25 years. Here, Winnipeg Mayor Brian Bowman helps with the building of a Habitat home in Winnipeg in 2015. Habitat has been in Manitoba since 1987.

Police look for tarp and tire thief

Greg Vandermeulen 1 minute read Preview

Police look for tarp and tire thief

Greg Vandermeulen 1 minute read Saturday, Mar. 7, 2026

RCMP are asking the public for help in identifying a man who stole several items from a Blumenort area address.

In a Feb. 27 news release, Steinbach RCMP said the theft occurred at close to 2 a.m. that same day, at a business lot on Road 32 East in the RM of Ste Anne.

The lone male arrived at the lot driving a two-tone green and beige minivan with rust on the rear quarter panels. Police say it’s possible the vehicle had Winnipeg Jets licence plates.

He was seen on security footage loading a construction tarp and truck tires into his van before leaving.

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Saturday, Mar. 7, 2026

RCMP HANDOUT

Police say this man was spotted loading a construction tarp and truck tires into his vehicle.

RCMP HANDOUT 

Police say this man was spotted loading a construction tarp and truck tires into his vehicle.

Lorette’s Boles will continue hockey career in Regina

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read Preview

Lorette’s Boles will continue hockey career in Regina

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read Saturday, Mar. 7, 2026

Merik Boles has certainly made an impact with the Niverville Nighthawks.

The Lorette product has played more than 200 games with the Manitoba Junior Hockey League franchise just down the road and is one goal or assist away from passing the 150-point mark.

“It’s nice to stay home, play junior here, and still stay close and go to school here,” Boles said after a win against Swan Valley Feb. 27.

The former Eastman Selects standout will continue his career at the collegiate level, as he announced his commitment to the University of Regina last week.

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Saturday, Mar. 7, 2026

Lorette's Merik Boles has committed to the University of Regina to continue his hockey career at the USports level. (Cassidy Dankochik Carillon Archives)

Lorette's Merik Boles has committed to the University of Regina to continue his hockey career at the USports level. (Cassidy Dankochik Carillon Archives)

RM of Piney sees historic building permit values in 2025

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 4 minute read Preview

RM of Piney sees historic building permit values in 2025

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 4 minute read Saturday, Mar. 7, 2026

The RM of Piney saw record breaking permit values last year, which the municipality said is mainly due to an increase in housing throughout the RM, but especially in the Woodridge and Sandilands areas.

“The RM of Piney is that perfect combination of small-town living, all-season outdoor and indoor recreation, and easy driving distance from Steinbach or Winnipeg,” stated Reeve Wayne Anderson in a press release. “Our friendly communities, affordable land prices and taxes, and ease of doing business here make it very appealing for anyone – young families, those nearing retirement, or people who want to work from home or start a business – to consider a move to the simpler lifestyle we offer.”

The municipality issued 63 building permits in 2025, the third highest after 85 permits were issued in 2021 during the COVID epidemic and 69 permits in 2023. The majority of the permits issued in 2025 were for a combination of cottages, cabins, and single-family dwellings.

Piney CAO Martin Van Osch and Sunrise Corner economic development and tourism manager Monique Chenier said the reason for the increase in permits in 2021 during the COVID crisis was people were looking to move to rural areas where they would have more freedom, more lots were made available in Woodridge, and people were also building other structures, such as garages and sheds, rather than homes.

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Saturday, Mar. 7, 2026

Submitted by the RM of Piney
The RM of Piney welcome sign. In 2025, total permit values in the RM reached a historic milestone hitting $5.3 million from 63 permits.

Submitted by the RM of Piney
The RM of Piney welcome sign. In 2025, total permit values in the RM reached a historic milestone hitting $5.3 million from 63 permits.

COLUMN: On Parliament Hill – A strong yesterday defined for today

Ted Falk, MP for Provencher 4 minute read Saturday, Mar. 7, 2026

Last week, Pierre Poilievre delivered remarks at the Economic Club of Canada that spoke of promise, solutions and a way forward that gives hope to Canadians. Mr. Poilievre’s opening comments referred to Roman general and philosopher Marcus Aurelius as a timeless truth:

“You have power over your mind – not outside events. Realize this, and you will find strength.”

The quote framed a speech that looked at history, China’s rise, volatility, low-cost energy, the unblocking of resources, military strength, resources as strategic leverage, digital sovereignty, CUSMA, and tariffs. But the objective was that we need to control what we can control. Mr. Poilievre explained the same is true for countries. “Canada cannot control decisions made by foreign leaders or words by foreign presidents. We cannot control what global shocks and volatility might happen, but we do control what we do in our own country.”

An economy is resilient to the extent that it relies on factors within its own control. Drawing on Canada’s historical strength of “getting things done,” Mr. Poilievre recalled Canada’s record of “building, doing and completing.” Looking ahead to the CUSMA negotiations planned for this summer, he said, “We drove a steel railway across the Rockies in four and a half years. Later, we carved the St. Lawrence Seaway, and we did that in five years. We built the CN Tower – then the tallest free-standing structure in the world – in three years in the 1970s. That is how we built an unbreakable country.”

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