Local
SRSS graduate Sienna Driedger returns to region to host volleyball camp
3 minute read 12:00 PM CSTOne of the region’s best recent volleyball graduates gave back to young players this holiday season.
Sienna Driedger, who graduated Steinbach Regional Secondary School in 2024 after leading the school to a AAAA provincial banner that season, hosted a pair of training camps at the Southeast Event Centre right before Christmas.
“I’ve always had a heart for coaching, but I’ve haven’t really had the time to,” Driedger said after a session Dec. 16.
“I thought this was an ideal time, because girls are done school season but not in club yet… I honestly had no idea what the interest would be.”
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Community challenges need community support
4 minute read 11:52 AM CSTOne of the most significant challenges that Manitoba, and other parts of Canada face, is an addictions crisis. There are few people who have not been touched, either directly or indirectly, by the increase in addiction. And while addiction has been a problem for many decades, the nature of todays drugs, including opioids and fentanyl, add both complexity and severity to the challenge.
The increasing rate of addiction to these drugs has caused a corresponding rise in random violent crime and has resulted in many people feeling unsafe as they walk in certain areas of our cities. And while addiction is not the only cause of homelessness, there is little doubt that the increased number of encampments and homelessness is related to the increase in addiction.
All governments in Canada have made efforts, to varying degrees, to combat this rise in addiction and the deaths that have resulted from overdoses. In provinces like Alberta and Saskatchewan, there has been a particular priority placed on increasing the number of treatment beds and facilities for those struggling to break the chains of addiction. While most Manitobans support greater access to treatment facilities for those battling addiction, the focus of the NDP government has been on establishing a place where people can use illegal drugs under supervision. It is something that the NDP have long said the community supports. Yet, despite this proclamation, for more than a year now the NDP seem to be determined to fight the very community members they say are supportive of a supervised drug injection site.
For almost a year, the NDP insisted that a supervised drug injection site would be located at 200 Disraeli Freeway. Promised consultation with the community did not materialize in a meaningful way and so the local community began to hold their own meetings. They very vocally expressed their concern that the proposed drug injection site was too close to schools and daycares and lacked an actual plan to ensure that residents and those accessing the site were safe. After a year of the NDP telling the local Point Douglas residents that they were wrong, they suddenly announced that they were abandoning plans to open the supervised drug injection site at that location.
Daycare shortage hits home for Niverville mom
7 minute read Preview 8:58 AM CSTPHOTO GALLERY: Christmas on the Farm hosted at MHV
1 minute read Preview Yesterday at 2:24 PM CSTFormer Nighthawk Raiden LeGall commits to NCAA
2 minute read Yesterday at 12:00 PM CSTFormer Niverville Nighthawks goaltender Raiden LeGall is the perfect example of what impact the NCAA changing their recruitment rules has had on the hockey world.
It was clear from the moment the Morden product suited up in the Manitoba Junior Hockey League he was one of the best goaltenders in the league, posting above a 0.920 save percentage across two seasons for the Niverville Nighthawks.
As soon as the NCAA changed their rules to allow major junior players to play high-level American college hockey, the Everett Silvertips came calling.
LeGall was excellent immediately for the Silvertips, earning the starting job and playing 10 games in the playoffs.
Wrong address delays Steinbach fire response
1 minute read Preview Yesterday at 11:20 AM CSTCOLUMN: Village News – January moments you won’t want to miss
4 minute read Preview Yesterday at 8:53 AM CSTSPORTS FLASHBACK 2000: Warriors cling to lead in tight HTHL race
3 minute read Preview Monday, Jan. 12, 2026Steinbach Christian School students to exhibit at Steinbach Cultural Arts Centre
3 minute read Preview Monday, Jan. 12, 2026AS I SEE IT COLUMN: Scheifele’s Olympic non-snub and Hellebuyck proving he’s not the best goalie in the world
4 minute read Preview Monday, Jan. 12, 2026DANKOCHIK’S DRAFTINGS: Loewen’s Pistons debut draws kudos from players, fans
3 minute read Preview Monday, Jan. 12, 2026COLUMN: Think Again – Prioritize victims, not offenders
4 minute read Monday, Jan. 12, 2026When someone has been convicted of a violent crime, whose interests should take priority—those of the victim or those of the offender?
Like most Canadians, you probably said the victim is more important. Sadly, it seems that in our justice system the offender often comes first. That is why many Canadians have lost confidence in our justice system.
For example, suppose a man sexually assaults two women several months apart. He is bigger and stronger than they are. During the assaults, he chokes one woman almost into unconsciousness and forces the other to perform oral sex on him. Most people would agree that this offender deserves to spend many years behind bars for committing such heinous crimes.
Sadly, that’s not what happened in the case of Omogbolahan Jegede, a 25-year-old former university football player. Jegede was recently convicted of sexually assaulting two women in their residences at St. Francis University in Antigonish, Nova Scotia. Despite the obvious trauma these two women experienced, the judge saw fit to sentence Jegede to only two years in prison.
Costs for Grunthal Arena increase
3 minute read Preview Sunday, Jan. 11, 2026Ste Agathe bridge closed parts of January, Febrary
1 minute read Preview Sunday, Jan. 11, 2026Bethesda named as measles exposure site
3 minute read Preview Sunday, Jan. 11, 2026Man killed by semi-truck on Highway 75
1 minute read Sunday, Jan. 11, 2026A man is dead after a semi-truck hit him on Highway 75 last week.
A 57-year-old driver of semi was struck and killed by another semi-truck south of St Jean Baptiste in the Rural Municipality of Montcalm on Jan. 3, according to an RCMP press release.
Morris RCMP received a call at 1 p.m. about a collision on the highway. When Mounties arrived, they found the victim in the median ditch and two semi-trucks stopped on the southbound lane.
Police said the victim was found dead at the scene. The 33-year-old male driver of the other semi had no injuries.
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