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COLUMN: Ask the Money Lady – Addressing FOMO and JOMO

Christine Ibbotson 4 minute read 11:12 AM CDT

Dear Money Lady Readers – my daughter said to me the other day that she had FOMO and I was DRIPPING in my outfit. “What??” I had no idea what she was talking about.

If you don’t already know, let me tell you what the young are now calling “FOMO” – the “fear of missing out.”

Here’s the other slangs they use: “FOBO” – the “fear of better options” or “JOMO” – the “joy of missing out.”

For the “DRIP” – that means you look good and it’s apparently a compliment. Other Gen’Z jargon I have now learned are “BOUJEE” – which means fancy, “SLAPS” – which means excellent or amazing, “LIT” – meaning really good, “TEA” – meaning gossip, and “FLEX”- meaning to show off.

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PHOTO GALLERY: Blumenort Fun and Fair Day

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 1 minute read Preview

PHOTO GALLERY: Blumenort Fun and Fair Day

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 1 minute read 8:10 AM CDT

The Blumenort Fun and Fair Day took place Sept. 7 as the community celebrated their 150th anniversary.

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8:10 AM CDT

SVJETLANA MLINAREVIC THE CARILLON
Onyx the border collie jumps into the air to catch a frisbee during the Diamond Dog Show during the Blumenort Fun and Fair at Abe G. Penner Park on Sept. 7, 2024. It was also Blumenort's 150th anniversary.

COLUMN: On Parliament Hill – The deal is dead: What comes next?

Ted Falk, MP for Provencher 5 minute read Yesterday at 5:20 PM CDT

Two years ago, Jagmeet Singh and the NDP made a big show of teaming up with Justin Trudeau to support his radical and reckless policies and agenda.

The result of this alliance has been exactly what Conservatives warned it would: higher taxes, skyrocketing food and housing costs, and more crime.

Now Jagmeet (in a desperate attempt at relevance) is “ripping up” his confidence and supply agreement with the Liberal Government.

Without the deal in place the Liberals are truly a minority government once more, and vulnerable as we head into the fall session, with Parliament due to reconvene next week.

SPORTS FLASHBACK 2004: Fly-In basks in success of national golf finals

Wes Keating 3 minute read Preview

SPORTS FLASHBACK 2004: Fly-In basks in success of national golf finals

Wes Keating 3 minute read Yesterday at 2:36 PM CDT

The Steinbach Fly-In Golf Club and the City of Steinbach put their best foot forward in hosting the highly successful Royale Canadian Senior Women’s Golf Championship last week.

It was the first national championship in any sport staged in Steinbach, and by all accounts came off as an unqualified success.

Sixty-nine of the top senior women’s golfers in Canada converged on Steinbach for the four-day event, which included a practice round on Monday, followed by three competitive rounds on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday.

To a player, the competitors sang the praises of their experience in the Steinbach tournament. Although some of the golfers did not perform as well as they would have liked to, they were generally in awe of the spectacular conditions created by superintendent Rob Fast and his grounds crew.

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Yesterday at 2:36 PM CDT

Alison Murdoch of Victoria, BC, pumps a fist after sinking a final putt to win the 2004 Royale Canadian Senior Women’s Golf Championship at the Steinbach Fly-In Golf Course. (Carillon Archives)

RCMP seek public’s help in identifying man

Greg Vandermeulen 1 minute read Preview

RCMP seek public’s help in identifying man

Greg Vandermeulen 1 minute read Yesterday at 2:30 PM CDT

Police say a man stole multiple items from Canadian Tire in Steinbach before fleeing, breaking the security barriers on the way out of the store.

They are hoping the man can be identified from the security image.

He was described as wearing a blue jacket, grey ball cap and a Batman T-shirt.

Anyone with information is asked to contact the Steinbach RCMP at 204-326-4452, Crime Stoppers anonymously at 1-800-222-8477, or submit a secure tip online at www.manitobacrimestoppers.com.

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Yesterday at 2:30 PM CDT

RCMP HANDOUT

If you can identify this man, the RCMP would like to hear from you.

COLUMN: Report from the Legislature – NDP education policy raises taxes, lowers service

Wayne Ewasko, MLA for Lac du Bonnet 4 minute read Yesterday at 11:10 AM CDT

With the start of another school year, I want to wish all students the best this year and I commend all the educators, staff and parents that work so hard to prepare them for the future. As MLAs are also getting ready to head back into session at the Manitoba Legislature, this is a good time to take a look at Manitoba schools and education funding.

In 2019, the Progressive Conservatives prioritized the building of 23 new schools over 10 years. By 2023, 14 of these schools were completed, under construction, or in design and the remaining nine schools were on plan to be operational by 2027 - two years ahead of schedule. We also gave more funding to every Manitoba school division in 2022 and 2023.

This coming school year, the NDP are shortchanging two out of every three school divisions with operating increases less than inflation, and cancelled the Manitoba Schools Project to build nine new schools. That has forced school divisions to hike school taxes up to 17 percent this year. This means many Manitobans will be paying more per year in school taxes. Eventually these annual tax increases will erase any benefit from the education property tax rebate gained over the past few years. Wab Kinew’s NDP have ended the promised phase out and are orchestrating ever higher taxes on homeowners and seniors.

In 2022 our PC government invested $260 million in capital improvements for schools across Manitoba, plus provided additional money from a separate funding stream that was made available for ventilation upgrades. Our Budget 2023 provided a $62.9 million increase in operating support plus another $106 million to make one-time funding in Budget 2022 permanent. This meant all school divisions received at least a 2.5 percent increase in funding. I’m pleased to note that we did all of this without raising any taxes, and in fact lowered taxes in 2023 while ending the fiscal year with a $270 million surplus.

EDITORIAL: Trudeau doesn’t know when it’s time to leave

5 minute read Yesterday at 8:08 AM CDT

“While it has been my intention to seek re-election, I believe it is in the best interest of my party and the country for me to stand down and to focus solely on fulfilling my duties as president for the remainder of my term.”

— U.S. President Joe Biden

You’d think he could see the signs.

Last June the federal Liberals lost the party stronghold of Toronto-St. Paul’s in a federal byelection — a seat that the party had held for more than three decades.

Living her dreams at 95

Lori Penner 5 minute read Preview

Living her dreams at 95

Lori Penner 5 minute read Saturday, Sep. 14, 2024

It’s never too late to try something new, and Jean Tarnick is living proof.

At 95 years old, the Altona resident fulfilled one of her lifelong dreams last week by attending her very first football game.

A passionate Winnipeg Blue Bombers fan for years, Jean has always admired linebacker Adam Bighill and defensive end Willie Jefferson. While her late husband Michael didn’t share her passion for the game, he supported her enthusiasm for the team.

“They’re a big part of being a Manitoban. You’ve got to cheer for your team,” Jean says.

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Saturday, Sep. 14, 2024

PHOTO BY STEPHANIE DOERKSEN

Blue Bomber fan Jean Tarnick with mascots Buzz and Boomer.

New exhibit looks at one’s artistic journey

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 4 minute read Preview

New exhibit looks at one’s artistic journey

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 4 minute read Saturday, Sep. 14, 2024

A new exhibit opened at the Steinbach Arts Council’s Hall Gallery on Sept. 6 titled Journey, which represents the walk a painter takes in his or her artistic voyage.

“With art I see it as a journey as I’m still learning and I consider myself as a student actually. I’m still learning and I’m still on my journey. I’m not done yet and we always can learn. I can imagine myself sometimes later in life I would be trying out and still learning or gaining experiences,” said Swetlana Stang.

Stang said she wanted to do an art exhibit but didn’t have enough paintings so she asked members of her Southeast Artists Group if anyone wanted to show with her. Kim Gwozdz and Arlene Rattai decided to join Stang.

“To me art is emotional and usually you identify with the subject you’re looking at. Basically, an artist wants a person to enjoy it and buy (the painting),” said Rattai.

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Saturday, Sep. 14, 2024

SVJETLANA MLINAREVIC THE CARILLON
Artists Swetlana Stang (left), Arlene Rattai, and Kim Gwozdz stand next to Steinbach Arts Council executive director David Klassen during their exhibit Journey in the Halll Gallery on Sept. 6, 2024. Journey will run until Oct. 11.

Chamber proposes first membership fee increase in eight years

Greg Vandermeulen 3 minute read Preview

Chamber proposes first membership fee increase in eight years

Greg Vandermeulen 3 minute read Saturday, Sep. 14, 2024

Steinbach Chamber of Commerce members will vote on a proposed fee increase at their Sept. 26 AGM.

The proposed increase is the first for the local chamber since 2016 when all fee categories were raised $10.

This time the proposed increase varies for each category, ranging from a $5 increase for non-profits to a $65 increase for those with 150 or more employees.

Proposed rates are $100 for non-profits, $175 for one to five employees, $300 for six to 20 employees, $400 for 21-49 employees, $500 for 50 to 149 employees, and $750 for 150 or more employees.

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Saturday, Sep. 14, 2024

STEINBACHCHAMBER.COM

Steinbach Chamber of Commerce President Tracy Gromniski said the proposed fees are still below many others in the province.

COLUMN: Village News – Steinbach’s First Families – Klaas B. & Maria (De Fehr) Friesen

Nathan Dyck 4 minute read Preview

COLUMN: Village News – Steinbach’s First Families – Klaas B. & Maria (De Fehr) Friesen

Nathan Dyck 4 minute read Saturday, Sep. 14, 2024

This week we are winding up the exploration of the first families of Steinbach. This series has looked at the 18 families that settled on the 20 Wirtschaft that comprised the original town of Steinbach along what is today Elmdale street. There are many other individuals who contributed to the growth and development of the Steinbach and surrounding communities, and hopefully we will have an opportunity to share some of their stories in the future. Thankfully, many of these important stories have been recorded by family or local historians and we encourage you to come by the Village Books and Gifts to peruse our wealth of books covering stories of Mennonites both local and worldwide.

Klaas B. Friesen moved around the villages of the Molotschna colony as a child due to his father’s work as a school teacher. He married Maria de Fehr in 1861, and they moved to Annafeld, Borosenko to live near his father and stepmother. Together with his parents they travelled to Canada on the Austrian, arriving in Quebec on Aug. 31, 1874. Klaas’ parents settled in Blumenort, while he, Maria and their children settled on homestead SE25-6-6E on a gravel ridge east of Steinbach. Arriving late in the year, they had just enough time to construct a semlin (sod house) before winter and shared their home with a cow and some chickens.

In the spring of 1875 the Friesens moved to Wirtschaft 20 in Steinbach, the most north-west property in the town (where Victoria Plaza stands today). According to KJB Reimer’s history in Die Mennonitische Post, the bush was so thick in summer they could not see the lanterns of their neighbours, a testament to the difficulty of preparing the land around Steinbach for farming. In the late 1880s, Klaas and Maria built a housebarn which stood on the site until 1960, the last remaining example of its kind in Steinbach. It was torn down, to great protest, by A. D. Penner who owned a Dodge dealership and roadworks company (For more info, see: mennotoba.com/protest-medicine-cabinet). They farmed in the Steinbach area until 1909, when they retired and lived on their property until Maria’s death in 1916, after which their property was auctioned.

Klaas and Maria had five children, eldest Cornelius left the Kleine Gemeinde on marrying Maria Klassen and joined the Chortitzer Gemeinde, moving to Osterwick west of New Bothwell. Son Klaas married Anna Wiebe and moved to Greenland, north of Blumenort before leaving for the Mennonite community in Needles, B.C. They lived there less than a year before returning to farm near Friedensfeld. Son Jacob was a cheesemaker in the factory in Steinbach before moving to Kansas. Daughter Katharina married a Dutchman, Herman Krebs, and youngest Johann worked the farm and spoke English by the time he was school-age.

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Saturday, Sep. 14, 2024

George Wright, Steinbach: Is There Any Place Like It?

A. D. Penner gets spanked by his mother for demolishing the last remaining housebarn in Steinbach in this staged photo from 1960. This housebarn was built by the Friesens but later owned by the Kornelsen family. The house was cleared for a car storage lot at the corner of Highways 12 & 52, what is now the site of Victoria Plaza.

COLUMN: Don’t Mind the Mess – Yellow buses and letting go

Lori Penner 4 minute read Friday, Sep. 13, 2024

My mornings became a whole lot different after my youngest son graduated. No more crazy rush every September to get just the right clothes and school supplies. No more trying to prod, bribe and threaten this creature with my features to finally roll out of bed and trudge off to the bus.

Some kids just aren’t fans of school; this boy was one of them.

This morning, curled up on my deck with my first coffee of the day, I heard the familiar weary groan of a school bus coming to a stop to pick up a load of kids at my corner. I could practically smell the new vinyl scent of their new backpacks, as they bounced up the steps, hair carefully styled, a little taller and bolder than they were last September.

I feel sympathetic to all those moms who are sending their little ones off for the first time. At the end of the day, there will be lots of hugs and questions: Did you have fun? Did you make a new friend? (And the silent one: “Did you miss me as much as I missed you today?”)

Grunthal celebrates Family Fun Day

Chris Gareau 1 minute read Preview

Grunthal celebrates Family Fun Day

Chris Gareau 1 minute read Friday, Sep. 13, 2024

Family Fun Day was celebrated in Grunthal on Sept. 7.

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Friday, Sep. 13, 2024

CHRIS GAREAU THE CARILLON
Theo Preteau, 7, takes on Spider-man in a game of Connect Four at Grunthal Family Fun Day Sept. 7. Theo defeated the super hero.

Pansy Fall supper dedicated to former volunteer

Greg Vandermeulen 1 minute read Preview

Pansy Fall supper dedicated to former volunteer

Greg Vandermeulen 1 minute read Friday, Sep. 13, 2024

Pansy kicked off the fall supper season on Sunday. The first of many across the province and close to a dozen in the Southeast, this year was another sellout, with over 1,250 people served.

Organizers said this year’s event was dedicated to the late Justina Golowaychuk who volunteered for over five decades at the Pansy Hall. Organizer Leanne Germain described the event as an amazing show of support with incredible volunteers who not only served the massive crowds that included four packed charter buses from Winnipeg, but also helped with preparation. And that was no small task. Feeding the masses involved the making and serving of 5,000 meatballs, a chest freezer filled with 430 dozen (5,160) perogies, 30 roasters of cabbage rolls, more than 100 litres of whipping cream to top up dessert, 50 quarts of preserved mushrooms, 1,800 perishky and 50 pounds of cottage cheese to fill the nalysnyky.

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Friday, Sep. 13, 2024

Hailey Germain adds to an already overflowing plate as Pansy kicked off the fall supper season on Sunday.

COLUMN: View from the Legislature – Important projects led by community

Kelvin Goertzen, MLA for Steinbach 3 minute read Friday, Sep. 13, 2024

Last summer I was honoured to be part of a funding announcement of nearly a quarter of a million dollars to help establish a new home for the Steinbach and Area Animal Rescue (SAAR). This past week I was back on the sight of that announcement but this time to mark the opening of the new building that will help ensure that animals in need of care and a home will have an opportunity for both.

While it is always an honour to participate in these events and to assist in securing government support, the reality is that projects like these don’t happen without community leadership. Steinbach and Area Animal Rescue is a perfect demonstration of this. Area residents recognized a need to help support animals who were in distress and without shelter and they began to take on this work. In its early days, that meant housing animals in the homes of willing families and volunteers. Through the work and advocacy of many, notably SAAR president Michelle Neufeld, a new permanent location was secured. But it only happened because it was community led and supported first. It wasn’t government initiated, it was initiated by community volunteers.

Currently, there are several projects underway in Steinbach that will have the effect of transforming the community and the region for the better. And they all have one thing in common, they are in some way the result of community support or action.

A new elementary school that began construction last summer and is well on its way to completion was granted funding by the former Progressive Conservative government. But it wouldn’t be happening if people weren’t coming to Steinbach and choosing to stay in the community to raise their family. The fact that local residents make Steinbach a desirable place to live and raise a family, results in projects like new schools being built.

Ste Anne, Grunthal, Mitchell return to HTJHL

Cassidy Dankochik 4 minute read Preview

Ste Anne, Grunthal, Mitchell return to HTJHL

Cassidy Dankochik 4 minute read Friday, Sep. 13, 2024

For the third consecutive season, the Hanover-Tache Junior Hockey League (HTJHL) will be expanding.

Returning to the league are the Grunthal Red Wings, Ste Anne Aces and Mitchell. The Mitchell franchise will now be known as the Mustangs, changing from the previous team name of Mohawks. Those changes were locked in at the league’s annual fall meeting, held Sept. 9.

The name change follows the Mitchell minor hockey program, which made the switch in 2020.

“Part of that is creating a buzz inside the minor hockey program,” Mustangs team president Jason Fehr said.

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Friday, Sep. 13, 2024

The then-named Mitchell Mohawks became the fourth franchise to win the Hanover-Tache Junior Hockey League championship in 1993. Mitchell will return to the league this season. (Terry Frey The Carillon Archives)

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