Local

SAC’s Hall Gallery to exhibit fiber and photography artists

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 4 minute read 6:05 PM CDT

Steinbach Arts Council is holding its second exhibit of the season which will showcase a local fiber artist and a local photographer.

Sharlene Reimer’s fiber art is the abstract beauty of nature captured in macramé and weaving.

“Yes, it’s my first exhibit. The imposter syndrome is kicking in, but excitement is winning out. I’m thankful for the arts community that invests in local artists to give us a chance and expose us to the scene,” she said.

Reimer has been making her art for four years, having gained interest in the medium during the macramé trend a few years back. She started by making items for her home, such as plant hangers, and has now created large wall hangings.

Advertisement

Advertise With Us

Weather

Oct. 22, 12 AM: 16°c Cloudy with wind Oct. 22, 6 AM: 10°c Cloudy with wind

Steinbach MB

15°C, Cloudy with wind

Full Forecast

Niverville High School Panthers joining high school hockey league

Cassidy Dankochik 3 minute read Preview

Niverville High School Panthers joining high school hockey league

Cassidy Dankochik 3 minute read 2:23 PM CDT

High school hockey appears to be on the rise in the Eastman region and across the province, as the Niverville High School Panthers join the third tier of the Winnipeg High School Hockey League (WHSHL).

The team, which was created after a student survey of potential players between grades 6-11 this spring, will be coached by Brandon Lockerby. Lockerby boasts 150 games of Western Hockey League experience, and spent four years playing with the University of Manitoba Bisons.

The Panthers will be a young team, with only two grade 12 players on their roster.

“We’ve got a good group that we can establish a foundation and build a culture for years to come,” Lockerby said before the league’s schedule began.

Read
2:23 PM CDT

Legacy Brandon Sun BRUCE BUMSTEAD/BRANDON SUN Swift Current Broncos' Zack Smith, #15, gets his stick up under Wheat Kings' Brandon Lockerby's stick during a battle in the neutral zone during Friday's exhibition game at the Keystone Centre.

Frantz expansion to open in its 50th year

Chris Gareau 4 minute read Preview

Frantz expansion to open in its 50th year

Chris Gareau 4 minute read 2:01 PM CDT

Winter held off and the concrete is poured in front of the Frantz Inn.

Room is being made to expand the vendor to offer a wider variety of drinks, vapes and more. The new space will also house more VLTs, which means the current VLT space will become a more private extension of the Edge lounge.

Lounge manager Charles Tyson said the goal is to finish the expansion by January next year. When the vendor is done expanding, about half the new space is expected to be dedicated to vapes and possibly cannabis paraphernalia. Cannabis itself is not expected to be sold.

The Frantz was built on the edge of the RM of La Broquerie just outside Steinbach in September 1975, 50 years before it opens another chapter with the expansion.

Read
2:01 PM CDT

CHRIS GAREAU THE CARILLON
The Edge lounge manager Charles Tyson stands on the foundation of Frantz Inn's expansion.

Steinbach Piston Hoffman commits to Tennessee State

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read Preview

Steinbach Piston Hoffman commits to Tennessee State

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read 12:00 PM CDT

The Pistons’ Grady Hoffman is taking a chance with his NCAA division 1 decision.

The 2005-born Hoffman has committed to Tennessee State University, the first historically black college and university (HBCU) in the United States to start a division 1 hockey program.

The school’s program is headed by Duanté Abercrombie, who will become the first black head coach in NCAA hockey history when the Tigers take to the ice to start their first year of play in 2025.

Hoffman is one of seven players who are listed on Elite Prospects on Tennessee State’s roster, including three other Canadians. Just hours before Hoffman’s commitment was announced, Brooks Bandits goaltender Johnny Hicks also signed for the Tigers.

Read
12:00 PM CDT

Grady Hoffman lets a shot go during Manitoba Junior Hockey League action earlier this season. Hoffman has committed to Tennessee State University, a Nashville-based school which will become the first first historically black college and university to introduce division 1 NCAA hockey in 2025. (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

The common sense of ideology

In these troubled times (are there any other?), we are bombarded with persistent appeals to common sense as the solution to our shared problems. Pierre Poilievre promises Canadians that he has “common sense plans” to rectify multiple national problems, and the phrase has become endemic to the current backlash politics of “Common Sense Conservatives Fighting for Canadians.” Common sense, they assure us, will prevail in a Common Sense Revolution.

According to David Moscrop, this is “as appealing to the disaffected as it is vapid and meaningless.” Aaron Wherry adds that it is also a “vaguely egalitarian and inherently populist notion that flatters its purveyors and supporters while implicitly disqualifying its opponents and critics.” Indeed, when appeals to common sense become politicized, they derogate those who disagree, and become their own form of “virtue signalling,” a derisive term used by those who want to signal that they have more virtue than those whom they accuse of virtue signalling.

Common sense is purportedly common because it is supposedly shared by all, and sensical because it is supposedly self-evident, needing no explanation. It implies that, though someone may not have extensive knowledge about a topic or even extensive skill in reasoning, everyone has enough of both to master truth. Reality, they say, is not complex.

The resignation of former Manitoba Progressive Conservative Leader Heather Stefanson earlier this year kicked off the process to elect both the next leader of the PC Party and the Leader of the Official Opposition in the Manitoba Legislative Assembly. There are several steps that a political party undertakes when it comes to selecting a leader.

The first is the establishment of rules and time frames under which candidates run. This will often include a prescribed number of signatures that a candidate needs to have from Party members supporting their candidacy and an entrance fee. These are generally to ensure that a candidate has at least a minimum level of support to enter the leadership race and is committed to the process.

A leadership committee is also established to ensure that the rules of the race are followed and to adjudicate any concerns that the rules are not being followed. They also undertake a vetting process of candidates that will include standard checks regarding criminal records as one example.

These are all things that have been happening over the past few months and this past Tuesday was the deadline for candidates to officially enter the race to become the next PC Party leader. Two applications were completed and submitted. Fort Whyte MLA Obby Khan submitted his application and after the leadership committee interview process was declared as an approved candidate. Churchill hotelier and tourism operator Wally Daudrich submitted his application by the deadline and at the time of this writing it was going through the vetting process by the leadership committee.

DANKOCHIK’S DRAFTINGS: My coldest hockey take

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read Preview

DANKOCHIK’S DRAFTINGS: My coldest hockey take

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read Yesterday at 3:18 PM CDT

In sports, a controversial opinion, given for attention is called a ‘hot take.’ While I have plenty of those I’ll eventually get to in this column, I’d also like to share my coldest take.

There should be more penalty shots in hockey.

Not once have I heard a fan in hockey say ‘oh, I don’t want to watch a penalty shot.’ Even when the team I am rooting for gives one up, I’m happy to give my team’s goaltender a chance to make a stop and not be forced to watch extended pressure that comes from a powerplay.

The penalty shot is a high-stakes one-on-one match-up in a sport dominated by team play. It allows for both skaters and goalies to show personality on the ice and creates a ‘must-watch,’ moment whether it be on TV or in your local arena.

Read
Yesterday at 3:18 PM CDT

A referee signals for a penalty shot during a Steinbach Pistons' game. (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

COLUMN: On Parliament Hill – Liberal corruption knows no bounds

Ted Falk 4 minute read Yesterday at 1:51 PM CDT

The Liberal Party of Canada has never been a stranger to corruption scandals, but the Trudeau Government has made it a way of life.

However, with this government it is not only the gravity of what they have done, but also the artlessness, the utter brazenness and regularity of their misdeeds that has even the most jaded Canadians shaking their heads in disbelief.

What started with a simple flouting of ethics rules for the PM with his taxpayer funded vacation to a lobbyist’s private island—for which he received the dubious distinction of becoming the only sitting prime minister in Canadian history to be found guilty of violating ethics laws—quickly unfolded a pattern of cronyism and ethical violations by Trudeau and his ministers that is unprecedented in Canadian politics.

Canadians can well remember Justin Trudeau’s political interference in the prosecution of SNC Lavalin—ironically charged with corruption themselves—where he bullied and attempted to coerce Canada’s first Indigenous female attorney general to give the former Liberal donor a sweetheart plea deal. When she refused, he fired her and the coverup was on. Trudeau was handed a second conviction for violating ethics laws.

COLUMN: Report from the legislature – Fighting for Green Valley School

Konrad Narth 4 minute read Yesterday at 11:05 AM CDT

This month’s report from the legislature follows the Thanksgiving long weekend and I hope that everyone in Southeast Manitoba was able to enjoy time spent with family and friends. Fall session of the legislature began this month and it felt great to be back, highlighting what is important to the La Verendrye constituency. My focus going back into this session has been to get action and recognition for the needs of our constituency. Along with the issues needing resolution throughout the various communities in the southeast I am also committed to my critic portfolio. Luckily enough, the role of infrastructure critic fits well with many of the concerns our communities have.

I was lucky enough to have the opportunity to recognize an outstanding constituent through a private members statement the second day back to the legislature. This time it was Alain Nadeau, who recently retired from his role as La Broquerie Fire Chief after serving 45 years on the department. It was great to have Chief Nadeau along with his entire family in the public gallery as I delivered my statement.

The recent cancellation of the Green Valley School expansion has been a focus going back into session. Shortly after hearing about the cancellation, I was able to tour the school which gave me a clear image of the need for that community. I quickly organized a meeting with the minister which had gone well and was well received. Through this meeting I was able to secure the commitment for a tour of the Grunthal school and together with the community come up with a solution to the shortage of space for the interim while the department accesses when the project could move forward. Unfortunately, only a couple days into session the minister responsible for education had fallen ill and was not able to carry out his duties as minister.

An interim minister was then appointed who disappointingly has taken the seat warming approach to the role. She will not commit to working with the Green Valley School to find permanent or temporary solutions to their shortage of space. In the meantime, the community has gotten hundreds of signatures on dozens of petitions which I am presenting to the government. These petitions will not only be seen by the minister, but I will also be reading each of them to the entire legislature each day. I am hoping that by doing this the government will be forced to recognize that just because rural Manitoba may be out of sight it can not be out of mind.

SPORTS FLASHBACK 1987: Hawks’ rookie stakes Coach Hares to 300th win

Wes Keating 3 minute read Preview

SPORTS FLASHBACK 1987: Hawks’ rookie stakes Coach Hares to 300th win

Wes Keating 3 minute read Yesterday at 9:15 AM CDT

Steinbach Hawks’ rookie goaltender Russell Mehling put on a stellar performance for two periods before leaving with an injury, and Darren Ivanyshyn came on in relief to stop the St Boniface Saints 6-4 and help Coach Al Hares to his 300th Manitoba Junior Hockey League victory.

A night earlier, the Selkirk Steelers defeated the Hawks 9-3, making sure the coach they had fired a year earlier did not earn his 300th win in their building.

Hares would like to have posted his 300th victory in Selkirk Friday, but settled instead for a little pre-game excitement and a home ice victory against the St Boniface Saints Saturday.

Mehling made 13 saves in the first period, and it looked like the Hawks were headed to the dressing room with a 1-0 lead, compliments of Mike Martens’ power play marker. But the Hawks got sloppy in their own end and Greg Lajoie banged in a second rebound to even the score with 10 seconds on the clock.

Read
Yesterday at 9:15 AM CDT

Rookie goaltender Russ Mehling was well on the way to his second MJHL victory when he was injured in the third period of the game against the St Boniface Saints. The Hawks went on to win 6-4, giving Al Hares his 300th victory as a MJHL coach. (Carillon Archives)

COLUMN: Think Again – Academics, not activism, should be the priority

Michael Zwaagstra 4 minute read Yesterday at 9:00 AM CDT

“Resistance to colonialism is not terrorism.”

This quote was shown to more than 5,000 Winnipeg School Division (WSD) staff last week at a professional development session delivered by Dr. Chris Emdin from Teachers College, Columbia University. Not surprisingly, many teachers found this quote offensive, with more than a dozen walking out.

The teachers who walked out did the right thing. Whatever their political views might be, there is no context where intentionally murdering innocent civilians, which is an act of terrorism, is acceptable.

Even more offensive was the fact that this presentation took place only two days after the one-year anniversary of Hamas’s brutal attack against Israel on Oct. 7, 2023. More than 1,200 Israelis were murdered that day, with many others wounded or taken hostage.

EDITORIAL: Focus on saving lives, not out-pointing rivals

Brandon Sun 5 minute read Saturday, Oct. 19, 2024

Some hard-fought victories are worth celebrating.

And then there are some which ring hollow when you really look at exactly what you have won.

Such a victory came yesterday when Manitoba Health Minister Uzoma Asagwara told reporters at a hastily called news conference at the Manitoba Legislative Building that the province will lower the age for breast-cancer screening to 40 by December 2026.

A woman prepares to receive a mammogram. (Breast Cancer Society of Canada)

Puck drops on new era of hockey in La Broquerie

Cassidy Dankochik 4 minute read Preview

Puck drops on new era of hockey in La Broquerie

Cassidy Dankochik 4 minute read Saturday, Oct. 19, 2024

The long wait for La Broquerie hockey fans to see a team from their town take to the ice for competitive junior or senior hockey games finally came to an end last weekend.

After playing their first two games on the road, the Capital Region Junior Hockey League (CRJHL) expansion La Broquerie Habs finally got a chance to kick off their home schedule with a pair of games Oct. 11 and 13.

Connor Tallaire scored the first goal for the Habs in the HyLife Centre in a 5-1 loss to league-leaders Beausejour Friday night, before a 8-1 blowout victory over Lundar Sunday. Tallaire is from La Broquerie and just 16-years-old.

Despite the 1-1 record, La Broquerie head coach Dan Taillefer was glowing after the weekend’s action.

Read
Saturday, Oct. 19, 2024

Dignitaries including La Broquerie reeve Ivan Normandeau, team president Ken Tallaire and La Verendrye MLA Konrad Narth conducted the ceremonial puck drop at La Broquerie's first CRJHL game. (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

Local choir to sing for food security

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 3 minute read Preview

Local choir to sing for food security

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 3 minute read Saturday, Oct. 19, 2024

A local choir will sing for food security in conflict zones later this month.

Eastman Male Choir is participating in the Canadian Foodgrains Bank’s Singin’ In The Grain concerts in Winkler and Winnipeg with Winnipeg’s Faith and Life Male Choir.

“It’s really a very significant event for us. Of course it’s fundraising, but just as much it is awareness raising and it beings together people with different interests especially this year with people who have an interest in music. We have a lot of farmers and agricultural people supporting (us), but this is a way that our choral community is helping,” said Gordon Janzen, regional representative in Manitoba and Northwest Ontario.

The Canadian Foodgrains Bank is an association of 15 national church agencies who work together to address global hunger. There are numerous community groups across Manitoba that support the organization’s work, which has just launched an appeal for Lebanon.

Read
Saturday, Oct. 19, 2024

Submitted
Eastman Male Choir will sing with the Faith and Life Men's Choir on Oct. 26 and 27 at the Canadian Foodgrains Bank's Singin' In The Grain concerts in Winkler and Winnipeg.

Police arrest human smuggler near Emerson

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 3 minute read Preview

Police arrest human smuggler near Emerson

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 3 minute read Saturday, Oct. 19, 2024

RCMP Integrated Border Enforcement Team (IBET) in Manitoba made several arrests after human smuggling was found east of Emerson.

Police became aware that there were people crossing the border illegally on Sept. 28 at about 10:35 p.m. The smugglers were seven kilometres east of Emerson near Road 18 East.

Officers from the IBET and from the Morris, Emerson, and St Pierre detachments immediately patrolled the area and found an SUV. Inside, there was luggage and people ranging in age from 30 to 53 years old. Six people were arrested under the Customs Act and the driver was arrested for human smuggling. All were taken to the Emersen RCMP detachment with the six passengers later turned over to Canadian Border Services Agency for processing.

Of the six, one man was from the Republic of Sudan, two men and one woman were from the Republic of Chad, one man was from Mauritania, and one man was identified as a Permanent Resident of Canada.

Read
Saturday, Oct. 19, 2024

Submitted by the RCMP D Division
Chief patrol agent Scott Garrett (left) with RCMP Sgt. Lance Goldau stand in front of a U.S. Border Services Patrol SUV. The two police organizations met at the Pembina and Emerson to share knowledge with one another. Both are concerned with illegal border crossings and urge those thinking of crossing the border to do so legally.

Parkhill School boundary declared, changes to catchment areas

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 2 minute read Preview

Parkhill School boundary declared, changes to catchment areas

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 2 minute read Friday, Oct. 18, 2024

Parkhill school will open its doors in September 2025 and with it the school catchment area has been set.

Parkhill school catchment area will run from Brandt Street to Bristol Road and from Highway 52 West to Hanover Road West.

The two-storey school spans 62,304 sq.-ft. and will accommodate up to 500 kindergarten to Grade 4 students. The modern facility includes 19 classrooms, a library, a music room, an art room, a multi-purpose room, a life-skills suite, and various support spaces. The school will also include a child-care facility with 74 spaces.

Because Parkhill has established its catchment area, new boundaries have been set for Elmdale, Woodlawn, and Southwood.

Read
Friday, Oct. 18, 2024

Submitted by the Hanover School Division
School catchment areas for Hanover School Division.

LOAD MORE