Local

Carillon Sports Second Shots: Jan. 29th edition

Cassidy Dankochik 1 minute read 12:00 PM CST

Featuring photos from male and female Eastman Selects games Jan. 20 and 24, a HTJHL game in Mitchell Jan. 22, Providence Pilots men's basketball games Jan. 23/24, the Steinbach Panthers ringette tournament and a Steinbach Pistons game Jan. 26.

Advertisement

Advertise With Us

Weather

Feb. 4, 6 PM: -7°c Cloudy with wind Feb. 5, 12 AM: -6°c Cloudy with wind

Steinbach MB

-7°C, Cloudy with wind

Full Forecast

COLUMN: Carillon Flashback January 27, 1993 – Manitoba Metis president is appointed lieutenant-governor

Wes Keating 2 minute read Preview

COLUMN: Carillon Flashback January 27, 1993 – Manitoba Metis president is appointed lieutenant-governor

Wes Keating 2 minute read 11:54 AM CST

Manitoba Metis Federation president Yvon Dumont has been appointed Lieutenant-Governor by Prime Minister Brian Mulroney.

The 43-year-old Dumont, raised in St Laurent, becomes the first Manitoba Metis appointed to the vice-regal position. He succeeds George Johnson.

Dumont, active in the Metis Federation since 1967, was elected president in 1984.

He was particularly committed to rebuilding the financial stability of the Metis Federation and to getting the court back in action on the Metis land claims case, which had been effectively stalled.

Read
11:54 AM CST

CARILLON ARCHIVES

Dumont’s down-to-earth approach to his lofty office was certainly most evident when Manitoba’s lieutenant-governor demonstrated fancy footwork, dancing a jig with a student, while visiting Arborgate School at La Broquerie during “Canadian Culture Week” in 1996.

CARILLON ARCHIVES 

Dumont’s down-to-earth approach to his lofty office was certainly most evident when Manitoba’s lieutenant-governor demonstrated fancy footwork, dancing a jig with a student, while visiting Arborgate School at La Broquerie during “Canadian Culture Week” in 1996.

COLUMN: View from the Legislature – Does it really have to be this way?

Kelvin Goertzen, MLA for Steinbach 3 minute read 8:47 AM CST

By now most people have probably become numb to the various ways that people in elected office attack and belittle each other seemingly on a daily basis. While politics has never been for the faint of heart, the overall slide into toxicity that it has taken over the past few years has been well documented. So perhaps it was just another example of petty politics that will slip quickly out of the public memory, but I do think it is worth drawing further attention to in the hope that some course correction may occur in the future.

Last week, Swan River Progressive Conservative MLA Rick Wowchuk was preparing to speak at a community celebration. The celebration was to mark the opening of the $16.6 million expansion of the Swan Valley Regional Secondary School, a school Wowchuk himself had taught at during an earlier part of his life. The expansion of the school had been approved and planned for when Wowchuk was part of the previous Progressive Conservative government. But this celebration, which was organized by the local school division, wasn’t about politics, it was about everyone getting together and expressing gratefulness for the new additions to the school.

This sense of community spirit and celebration was interrupted by a phone call from the office of Premier Wab Kinew. Staff in his office advised the school division that they were to call the local MLA, Mr. Wowchuk, and disinvite him from speaking at the community celebration. Premier Kinew was also scheduled to speak, making it a truly unifying event, or so it was thought. But the instructions from the premier’s office were clear, local organizers were to cancel the invitation to the local MLA.

At this point, those who are reading this must believe that there was something else going on here. After all, this wasn’t a government planned or organized event. This was a community event. Yet the pressure of the Premier’s office was used to make organizers cancel the local MLAs speech. If it all seems a little petty, keep reading, it gets worse.

Niverville Curling Club sent packing as council finds new tenant

Matthew Frank 4 minute read Preview

Niverville Curling Club sent packing as council finds new tenant

Matthew Frank 4 minute read Yesterday at 2:30 PM CST

The Niverville Curling Club is raising transparency concerns over the town council’s decision to lease the club’s namesake arena to a different group, forcing it to play out of town.

The club, which has played at the town-owned rink since 1978, learned Niverville’s council had begun negotiations with the group from a Dec. 2 letter from Mayor Myron Dyck, viewed by The Carillon. No details were given on who would be the new leaseholder.

Niverville spokesperson Cyrus Reimer denied The Carillon’s request for an interview with Dyck or any council members, citing ongoing legal negotiations.

Dustin Krahn, the club’s president, said it’s disappointing council didn’t consult or have discussions with the club when deciding to work with a different party.

Read
Yesterday at 2:30 PM CST

MATTHEW FRANK THE CARILLON The Niverville Curling Club has moved to St Adolphe after the town opted to lease the arena to a different group.

MATTHEW FRANK THE CARILLON The Niverville Curling Club has moved to St Adolphe after the town opted to lease the arena to a different group.

Panthers tournament a highlight for Ringette community

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read Preview

Panthers tournament a highlight for Ringette community

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read Yesterday at 2:27 PM CST

The Southeast Event Centre in Steinbach was filled throughout last weekend, as the Steinbach Panthers Ringette program got their first chance to host a tournament inside the new building.

More than two dozen teams made the trip out to the centre, with games stretching from early Friday morning to Sunday evening in both the big rink and next door at the T.G. Smith Arena.

Steinbach Ringette ice scheduler Lisa Funk said any new building hiccups are well in the program’s rearview mirror.

“Everyone loves the facility,” Funk said as the medal round games took place.

Read
Yesterday at 2:27 PM CST

The Blaze U12 team played up a division, but fell in the gold medal game. (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

The Blaze U12 team played up a division, but fell in the gold medal game. (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

COLUMN: Think Again – Grand opening marred by petty partisanship

Michael Zwaagstra 4 minute read Yesterday at 11:52 AM CST

It was an exciting day for the Town of Swan River. People from across the region gathered to celebrate the grand opening of their new cultural arts centre.

This $16.6 million addition to the Swan Valley Regional Secondary School included a 4,200 square foot cultural arts centre, a 2,100 square foot multi-purpose room, and an outdoor teaching area. Originally approved by the previous Progressive Conservative government and brought to completion by the current NDP government, both parties can rightfully take some credit for this magnificent project.

As typically happens with projects of this nature, a grand opening celebration was held. Along with local dignitaries such as Swan River’s mayor and the school board chair, Premier Wab Kinew attended to bring greetings on behalf of the province. The premier’s attendance was more than appropriate, and Kinew had every right to take credit for his government’s role in this project.

Unfortunately, that wasn’t enough for Kinew. Not satisfied with already getting featured billing at the grand opening, Kinew arranged for Swan River PC MLA Rick Wowchuk to be disinvited from the podium. While Wowchuk attended the event, he wasn’t allowed to speak.

COLUMN: On Parliament Hill – Beyond absurdity and the new order

Ted Falk, MP for Provencher 5 minute read Yesterday at 8:43 AM CST

Much has been made over Prime Minister Mark Carney’s speech from last week at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. Many have praised it as a strong debut on the world stage and a welcome tone of supranational awareness.

But not everyone was pleased with the PM, including our closest ally and most important trading partner. President Donald Trump, at his turn in front of the podium, said that Mark Carney said some things that weren’t very nice. The president then withdrew his invitation for Canada to participate on the Board of Peace that will work to resolve global conflict and then he threatened a 100 percent tariff on Canadian goods if the deal with China proceeds. Late Monday, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent stated PM Carney withdrew what he said in his Davos speech. Bessent speaks about the call between Carney and Trump on Monday, “I was in the Oval (Office) with the president today. He spoke to Prime Minister Carney, who was very aggressively walking back some of the unfortunate remarks he made at Davos,” Mr. Carney denies Bessent’s claims, and the story continues to develop.

But truth be told, after a decade of Liberal government, we know that grand speeches whether reversed or not, cannot compensate for years of bad policy. We were promised a better deal. Mr. Carney portrayed himself as the “master negotiator”. He was the one who could “handle” and negotiate a “win”. Still, we wait.

While the prime minister’s remarks in Davos were well delivered and persuasive, they were also deeply paradoxical. Mr. Carney invoked Czech dissident Václav Havel’s well-known essay The Power of the Powerless to illustrate how communist systems sustained themselves. In Havel’s example, a greengrocer displays a sign in his shop window reading, “Workers of the world, unite!” No one believes the slogan—not even the shopkeeper—but it remains posted to avoid trouble and to signal compliance. The system’s strength, Havel argued, did not rest on belief, but on the routine participation of ordinary people in rituals they knew to be false.

Artista Academy to present High School Musical

Greg Vandermeulen 5 minute read Preview

Artista Academy to present High School Musical

Greg Vandermeulen 5 minute read Monday, Feb. 2, 2026

The first high school age group of actors created by Artista Academy will present High School Musical as their first production.

Called Lumina, the group was created in 2025 as a natural extension of Artista Academy’s program which features local children.

Founder and artistic director of Lumina, Gabriela Gallo, said their program has included kids from Grade 2 to Grade 8. That young talent would say goodbye as their high school careers began.

“I just thought to myself, “Why am I saying goodbye to these kids, when I don’t have to and we can continue to build off the skills they’ve already learned with me,” she said.

Read
Monday, Feb. 2, 2026

GREG VANDERMEULEN THE CARILLON

Left, founder and director of Artista Academy, Gabriela Gallo, leads the cast in stretches as they prepare to rehearse.

GREG VANDERMEULEN THE CARILLON 

Left, founder and director of Artista Academy, Gabriela Gallo, leads the cast in stretches as they prepare to rehearse.

New game coming to annual Steinbach scavenger hunt

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 5 minute read Preview

New game coming to annual Steinbach scavenger hunt

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 5 minute read Monday, Feb. 2, 2026

The games master for the Steinbach Family Resource Centre’s annual Community Scavenger Hunt has prepared a new game this year, and he hopes his games will lure the public into playing and entertain them at the same time, all while raising money for SFRC.

“We want them to have a memorable experience with their groups, their family, and whoever they’re playing with. Honestly, it’s a good thing to have to look forward to in the cold winter months,” said games master Gabriel Verrier, owner of The Puzzler Escape Rooms in Steinbach.

This is Verrier’s third year being games master and every year he comes up with a new interactive and amusing game. New this year is The Spy Game, where players are detectives and have to use their reasoning and deduction skills in order to solve a mystery and get their prize – a sticker for the game board.

“So, we’ve got new sponsors that sponsor the game and also contribute. So, we always try to tailor our games to those sponsors as well, just to try to add value to their sponsorship,” said Verrier.

Read
Monday, Feb. 2, 2026

SVJETLANA MLINAREVIC THE CARILLON

Steinbach Family Resource Centre’s executive director Jo-Anne Dalton (left) holds a Roaming Gnome on her shoulder while program manager Kirstin Gautron holds the grand prize for this year’s Community Scavenger Hunt at the centre on Tuesday. The theme for this year’s event is Roaming Gnomes, based on the Elf on a Shelf idea. This year’s new game is The Spy Game, where players are detectives solving a mystery. The fundraising goal for this year is $50,000 which will go towards the centre’s $453,000 operating budget. Thirty businesses will participate this year in the hunt.

SVJETLANA MLINAREVIC THE CARILLON 

Steinbach Family Resource Centre’s executive director Jo-Anne Dalton (left) holds a Roaming Gnome on her shoulder while program manager Kirstin Gautron holds the grand prize for this year’s Community Scavenger Hunt at the centre on Tuesday. The theme for this year’s event is Roaming Gnomes, based on the Elf on a Shelf idea. This year’s new game is The Spy Game, where players are detectives solving a mystery. The fundraising goal for this year is $50,000 which will go towards the centre’s $453,000 operating budget. Thirty businesses will participate this year in the hunt.

U18 AAA Eastman Selects ready for fight to the finish

Cassidy Dankochik 4 minute read Preview

U18 AAA Eastman Selects ready for fight to the finish

Cassidy Dankochik 4 minute read Monday, Feb. 2, 2026

The Eastman Selects Manitoba Female Hockey League U18 AAA team may be the defending league champions, but they’re feeling like the hunters and not the hunted as their league schedule comes to a close.

The team has been locked in a battle with the Winnipeg Ice for top spot in the standings throughout the entire season, but 21 regulation wins in 24 games isn’t enough to lead in points percentage. The Ice have just two losses so far this season.

“There’s a little bit of pride, trying to finish as high as you can,” head coach Trevor Hildebrand said after a win against sixth-place Central Plains Jan. 24.

“It keeps us a little motivated.”

Read
Monday, Feb. 2, 2026

Reece Beavis lets a shot go during Eastman's victory over Pembina Valley Jan. 24. (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

Reece Beavis lets a shot go during Eastman's victory over Pembina Valley Jan. 24. (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

Dawson Trail recognized by Governor General award

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 6 minute read Preview

Dawson Trail recognized by Governor General award

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 6 minute read Updated: Yesterday at 4:44 PM CST

In 2019, Pierrette Sherwood decided to spearhead a movement to re-energize the Dawson Trail in order to promote the history and importance of the trail in the Southeast and in Canadian history. Two years ago, when the trail officially opened, she never thought she would be getting an award for her work today.

On Monday, the Dawson Trail Arts and Heritage Tour was awarded the Governor General’s History Award for Excellence in Community Programming.

“It is truly exceptional to be recognized at that level is such an honour,” said Sherwood.

“You know, it’s not every day that a project in this province, let alone in Western Canada, gets this recognition. So, I mean, this is a wonderful moment of celebration for us,” she added.

Read
Updated: Yesterday at 4:44 PM CST

Petty Officer 2nd Class Louis Dubé
Governor General of Canada Mary Simon (center) presents the Governor General’s History Award for Excellence in Community Programming at Rideau Hall, Ottawa, to Dawson Trail Arts and Heritage Tour founder and chair Pierrette Sherwood (left) and Mireille Lamontagne, curator and researcher for the trail, on January 23, 2026.

Petty Officer 2nd Class Louis Dubé 
Governor General of Canada Mary Simon (center) presents the Governor General’s History Award for Excellence in Community Programming at Rideau Hall, Ottawa, to Dawson Trail Arts and Heritage Tour founder and chair Pierrette Sherwood (left) and Mireille Lamontagne, curator and researcher for the trail, on January 23, 2026.

COLUMN: Report from the Legislature – Getting ready for I Love to Read Month

Bob Lagasse, MLA for Dawson Trail 2 minute read Monday, Feb. 2, 2026

Despite the cold snap we’ve been experiencing lately, the new year has gotten off to a pretty good start.

Last week, we had our first Coffee with Bob of 2026. It was hosted at the Anola Hotel restaurant. I want to thank everyone who took the time to stop by and chat with me; I had a lovely time, and I hope to see you all at the next one!

February is right around the corner, which means it is almost I Love to Read month. I Love to Read is an event that takes place during the month of February, in which schools across Manitoba dedicate time to celebrating the importance of literacy. Throughout the coming weeks, I will have the pleasure of visiting local schools throughout the Dawson Trail constituency, reading to students, and sharing with them how important reading is, and how fun and enjoyable it is as well. I also take time to answer any questions the students may have about our provincial government and my role as their MLA, and I am looking forward to hearing what unique and interesting questions they will have for me this time. I Love to Read month is one of the events I look forward to every year, so I am very grateful and excited to once again have the opportunity to participate in the festivities.

For more updates and information, visit my website at boblagasse.com. If you have any questions or concerns, feel free to contact my constituency office at ca.lagasse@outlook.com or 204-807-4663.

OPINION: Time to do better for our communities

Courtney Kostesky 4 minute read Preview

OPINION: Time to do better for our communities

Courtney Kostesky 4 minute read Monday, Feb. 2, 2026

This is not something that I would typically post about publicly, but it needs to be talked about. This is simply my opinion from being involved in the municipal world as both a member of council and now as a CAO. Take it as you wish.

Across many communities, there’s growing concern about the shortage of Chief Administrative Officers (CAOs). People are asking why – and the answer is uncomfortable, but important.

Many good, experienced CAOs are leaving the profession. Not because they don’t care, but because the job has become increasingly difficult to sustain. Ongoing negativity, public hostility, name-calling, and personal attacks – often played out loudly on social media – take a real toll.

In just the past few weeks alone I have personally experienced all of this. Everything from being called Coco Puff on a Facebook forum to someone commenting on my for sale post on my personal business page “That’s called karma… lmaooooo” to constant public criticism for past employees actions and decisions that we as current staff and council are only trying to fix. When professionals are routinely questioned, blamed or attacked personally for complex decisions made within legislation, council direction and limited resources, burnout follows.

Read
Monday, Feb. 2, 2026

Courtney Kostesky
CAO for the RM of Gilbert Plains

Courtney Kostesky
CAO for the RM of Gilbert Plains

COLUMN: Tales from the Gravel Ridge – A place of belonging

Maria Falk Lodge 4 minute read Preview

COLUMN: Tales from the Gravel Ridge – A place of belonging

Maria Falk Lodge 4 minute read Monday, Feb. 2, 2026

To have a place to call home, a place where you know you belong, is a priceless treasure. And should you leave for a period of time, be it for studies or employment, or for other reasons, to know that you are welcome to return at any time, is a treasure beyond measure. Perhaps such a place need not necessarily be only a home in a conventional sense, but also a community where you are welcome to share your experiences or your skills. A sense of belonging may well have wide parameters.

Growing up in a community where you are always viewed as being part of that place, regardless of your experiences or your economic circumstances, is tantamount to being, in a broader sense, at home.

The community of Rosengard was such a location. It was the place where I drew my first breath, within the warmth of my parental home, located on a spectacular gravel ridge. That ridge had established itself long before the farming families I came to know over the years, had come to call it their home. The uniqueness of this magnificent landscape was etched over eons of time as glacial Lake Agassiz drained eventually into what is now known as Hudson Bay.

We hear much about homelessness today. Many the world over are displaced due to wars, internal strife and instability, and various environmental disasters of enormous proportions. Others may well be homeless within their own communities for reasons that can vary from person to person.

Read
Monday, Feb. 2, 2026

Berry Picking on our Rosengard Farm, 1947.

Berry Picking on our Rosengard Farm, 1947.

A southeastern Manitoba man was found guilty of sexual assault and was called “reckless or wilfully blind” when ignoring consent in a Steinbach provincial courtroom last week.

Provinical court Judge Kael McKenzie read his verdict for the now 19-year-old man after both the victim and the accused testified during the trial held last year.

The Carillon can’t identify the victim or accused due to a publication ban.

“The accused had a public, positive obligation to ensure she was consenting, and at best was either reckless or wilfully blind whether consent was communicated, even on his evidence,” McKenzie told the court.

Minnesota, Manitoba partner to build sturgeon fish passage on Roseau River

Matthew Frank 5 minute read Preview

Minnesota, Manitoba partner to build sturgeon fish passage on Roseau River

Matthew Frank 5 minute read Monday, Feb. 2, 2026

Minnesota and Manitoba are hatching a plan to build a fish passage at the Dominion City Dam, eliminating the “last barrier” for lake sturgeon swimming in the Roseau River.

Nicholas Kludt, a Red River fishery specialist for the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, championed the fish passage to help reconnect sturgeon spawning grounds and migration routes from the Roseau River to Lake Winnipeg.

“Wouldn’t it be a nice conservation success story to then facilitate those fish, when they achieve sexual maturity, coming back up the Roseau River, back across the international boundary, if they so choose, to spawn and then perpetuate this shared resource,” he told The Carillon.

Kludt approached the Rural Municipality of Emerson-Franklin and the Seine Rat Roseau Watershed District in 2024 to discuss building a fish passage at the dam so lake sturgeon could pass freely, after the state realized it was the final blockage for fish traveling north.

Read
Monday, Feb. 2, 2026

SUPPLIED
Minnesota and Manitoba are developing a plan to build a fish passage at the Dominion City Dam, eliminating the “last barrier” for lake sturgeon swimming in the Roseau River.

SUPPLIED
Minnesota and Manitoba are developing a plan to build a fish passage at the Dominion City Dam, eliminating the “last barrier” for lake sturgeon swimming in the Roseau River.

LOAD MORE