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East Braintree church closes after 109 years

Matthew Frank 6 minute read 8:43 AM CDT

Every time Margaret Feilberg walked through the East Braintree Community Church’s doors it felt like a hug.

The 74-year-old church clerk was one of the last remaining members of the small evangelical church hidden away among the towering boreal forest. The church held its last service on April 26, marking 109 years in the community of roughly 200 people.

“God is in the forest, and he’s everywhere. But you feel very special when you’re coming in here. And I feel that God is sad now this church is closed,” she told The Carillon.

Feilberg was dedicated as a baby in the church’s first location, a nearby school house, in 1956. She’s watched the church go from 35 people at its height down to herself and one other person. On the average Sunday, three or four people would attend services. The church’s final service brought 11 people to honour its end.

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Local

Death of well-known chef, Ste. Anne volunteer firefighter investigated as homicide

Nicole Buffie 4 minute read Preview

Death of well-known chef, Ste. Anne volunteer firefighter investigated as homicide

Nicole Buffie 4 minute read Yesterday at 5:44 PM CDT

A renowned chef and community volunteer has been identified as the victim in a weekend slaying in the Rural Municipality of Ste. Anne.

Officers were sent to investigate an aggravated assault in the community, located about 50 kilometres southeast of Winnipeg, Steinbach RCMP said Tuesday.

A man suffered life-threatening injuries and was rushed to hospital, but died a few hours later. His death is being investigated as a homicide, RCMP said. They declined to provide further details.

Friends and former colleagues identified the victim as 49-year-old Cameron Huley. Huley was a restaurant industry consultant for Food Service Solutions Canada and a volunteer firefighter with the Town of Ste. Anne fire department. He formerly worked with the Ste. Anne Police Department as an auxiliary police officer.

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Yesterday at 5:44 PM CDT

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COLUMN: Village News – May moments you won’t want to miss

Jaysa Thiessen 5 minute read Preview

COLUMN: Village News – May moments you won’t want to miss

Jaysa Thiessen 5 minute read Yesterday at 2:02 PM CDT

May is an exciting month here at the Mennonite Heritage Village! On May 1 at 9 a.m., our heritage buildings in the village got unlocked for the first time in the spring season. We eagerly invited people into the village to experience the living history that the village showcases. Also on May 1, the Livery Barn Restaurant opened for the first day of the year. We are delighted to welcome guests into the village and Livery Barn Restaurant every day of the week during the spring and summer season. Whether you are coming for the Sunday buffet, a school field trip, or a weekday family visit to your local museum, we are excited to have you come!

May 9: Manitoba Day

Manitoba Day, the day which marks the province’s entry into Confederation in 1870, is officially recognized as May 12. Here at the museum, we have decided to stick to the second Saturday in May as MHV’s official Manitoba Day celebration. This year, May 9 is our Manitoba Day celebration, and this marks our first community festival of the season. Admission is free for this event, and we are excited about our lineup of events. At 10 a.m., the Steinbach and Area Garden Club will be doing a planting pansies for mom activity! Children will get the opportunity to plant their own pansy to give to their moms to celebrate Mother’s Day. At 11 a.m., we will have a short ceremony in the pavilion featuring speeches from local dignitaries. This will be followed by raising the Manitoba flag and hearing The Manitoba Song. Free cake and coffee will be given out to all in attendance.

After the ceremony and flag raising, our festival events will begin including pioneer demonstrations and interpretation, wagon rides, and barrel train rides. We are excited to be partnering with Eastman Immigrant Services again for this event. They will be providing fun, outdoor family carnival games from 11 a.m. to 2 pm. Enjoy old-fashioned carnival games like a tug of war, a 3-legged race, a sac race, an egg and spoon race and much more!

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Yesterday at 2:02 PM CDT

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Brett Howden powers Vegas into second round of NHL playoffs

Cassidy Dankochik 4 minute read Preview

Brett Howden powers Vegas into second round of NHL playoffs

Cassidy Dankochik 4 minute read Yesterday at 12:00 PM CDT

Brett Howden has become one of the Vegas Golden Knights’ key contributors, as the Oakbank forward was tied for the team lead in goals following their first-round series victory over the Utah Mammoth.

Howden had no goals through three games, but came alive with his team down 2-1 in the series, finding the back of the net in three straight Vegas wins to clinch the series.

“I just try to put pucks to the net,” Howden said in a post-game five news conference.

“Sometimes they go in, and sometimes they don’t but right now they’re going in.”

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Yesterday at 12:00 PM CDT

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MHV opens for the season

Matthew Frank 1 minute read Preview

MHV opens for the season

Matthew Frank 1 minute read Yesterday at 11:58 AM CDT

The Mennonite Heritage Village opened for the season on May 1. Free admission to the museum grounds will be available on May 9 as part of Manitoba Day celebrations. The Livery Barn Restaurant will host a Mother’s Day buffet meal on May 10. Last year’s meal saw more than 400 people attend.

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Yesterday at 11:58 AM CDT

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COLUMN: Tales from the Gravel Ridge – A canoeing adventure beyond Rosengard

Maria Falk Lodge 5 minute read Preview

COLUMN: Tales from the Gravel Ridge – A canoeing adventure beyond Rosengard

Maria Falk Lodge 5 minute read Yesterday at 11:27 AM CDT

I could not possibly have imagined while I was a student at the Rosengard School #2168 that someday in the distant future I would be participating in a canoe trip down the historic Hayes River in Manitoba. Indeed how could I? The creek that meandered lazily through woodlands and pastures in our community was the closest we came to having any waterway whatsoever. Our creek did not represent even remotely something akin to navigable waterways. The Hayes River on the other hand is a premier Canadian Heritage River, and the longest naturally flowing waterway in the province.

During the winter of 1998, Andrew, the eldest of our children, suggested that he would like to take us on a wilderness canoe trip, as a gift to us for our upcoming 25th wedding anniversary. We would not be alone on this adventure. Rather, three of his wilderness-experienced tree-planting friends would be joining us. It would be fun he assured us. It took some time for the idea to resonate with us. As children tend to do, our horizons had stretched far beyond what we had anticipated 25 years earlier when we got married at the end of December in 1973. What we have experienced, and indeed continue to learn day by day, is that for us being a family with three children has exposed us to all sorts of new ideas and experiences, and countless adventures we would not have dreamed of on our own.

Canoeing down the historic Hayes River gave us a new perspective on Manitoba’s waterways. Maps have long held a significant hold on me as we crossed the prairie provinces over the years visiting our children and their families living west of the prairies as we know them. While Alberta may well qualify as a prairie province, Calgary, where our younger son lives, is decidedly closer to the Rocky Mountains than those of us who call Manitoba our home. As for the West Coast, we have had occasion to visit our daughter, son-in-law and grandchildren repeatedly over the years in various locations both at the coast as well as in more northerly interior regions of Canada’s most westerly province.

My early childhood education exposed me, along with the rest of the students at Rosengard, to two very important maps. Memories of these roll-down maps, one of Canada and the other of the entire world, remind me to this day of that so important step of my formal education. And while much of the learning at the Rosengard School was part of a full academic curriculum, the imprint of those huge maps has never stopped shaping the trajectory of my life. Again and again, innumerable place names on those maps that point back to my early childhood education, have become part of the actual adventures of my life, and more specifically life experiences I could not even remotely have imagined so many decades ago.

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Yesterday at 11:27 AM CDT

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Steinbach Family Resource Centre executive director resigns

Matthew Frank 3 minute read Preview

Steinbach Family Resource Centre executive director resigns

Matthew Frank 3 minute read Yesterday at 8:35 AM CDT

Steinbach Family Resource Centre’s executive director will be stepping down in the next month after serving in the role for eight years.

Jo-Anne Dalton’s departure was announced in a May 1 news release, and her last day will be on June 4.

“Dalton has served as executive director for the past eight years, providing thoughtful and dedicated leadership while guiding the organization through a period of meaningful growth and strengthening community presence,” the news release said.

Dalton told The Carillon the decision wasn’t made lightly, and the charity’s board has known about her resignation for a year. She’s proud of the work that was accomplished.

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Yesterday at 8:35 AM CDT

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Edwards pair gives Niverville Nighthawks Centennial Cup victory on opening night

Cassidy Dankochik 4 minute read Preview

Edwards pair gives Niverville Nighthawks Centennial Cup victory on opening night

Cassidy Dankochik 4 minute read Thursday, May. 7, 2026

Marlen Edwards showed his Centennial Cup experience, nabbing Niverville's first and last goal at the national championships, powering his team to a 5-4 national championship win over the host Summerside Western Capitals May 7. Edwards suited up for Northern Manitoba at last year's nationals.

The Nighthawks broke up a set play in overtime, with the Capitals trying to spring a forward after winning the opening faceoff. Edwards was the closest man to the breakout pass, and picked it off, backhanding a shot into the net for a Niverville victory, flapping his arms like his team's namesake in celebration.

"I was reading the eyes of (the defender) and I could tell by watching him during the game they like to swing the middle," Edwards said in a post-game interview during the game broadcast on HNLive.

"Obviously, taking the middle away from them is probably the key part to all of it."

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Thursday, May. 7, 2026

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Zwaagstra acclaimed as Steinbach PC candidate

Greg Vandermeulen 5 minute read Preview

Zwaagstra acclaimed as Steinbach PC candidate

Greg Vandermeulen 5 minute read Thursday, May. 7, 2026

Michael Zwaagstra was acclaimed as the PC candidate for Steinbach in a meeting on April 30.

Originally a two-person race, fellow city councillor Susan Penner pulled her bid for the nomination to focus on family issues.

That meant the current deputy mayor for the City of Steinbach, long-time schoolteacher and father of four Michael Zwaagstra won the uncontested nomination.

The meeting in Mitchell saw current MLA Kelvin Goertzen make the nomination with Susan Penner as the seconder.

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Thursday, May. 7, 2026

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The Carillon heading East for Centennial Cup

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read Preview

The Carillon heading East for Centennial Cup

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read Thursday, May. 7, 2026

Readers of The Carillon will get the inside scoop at the Centennial Cup.

Sports Editor Cassidy Dankochik will be at the tournament, hosted by Summerside P.E.I. to cover the Niverville Nighthawks attempt to win Manitoba’s first national Junior A championship since Portage claimed the title on home ice in 2015.

Manitoba teams have won the cup just three times, with Portage and Selkirk claiming the trophy in the 70s. The 1974 Selkirk Steelers were powered by a slate of Eastman players who made the jump to play for the team, including five from Steinbach.

There are other Manitoba connections at the tournament, with the Flin Flon Bombers representing the Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League at the 2026 edition of the Centennial Cup after they swept Yorkton in the league championship series.

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Thursday, May. 7, 2026

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Shevchenko School brings intensity to annual drama

Greg Vandermeulen 3 minute read Preview

Shevchenko School brings intensity to annual drama

Greg Vandermeulen 3 minute read Thursday, May. 7, 2026

Actors at Shevchenko School in Vita are primed to bring the intensity as they present Ken Ludwig’s Sherwood: The Adventures of Robin Hood.

With performances scheduled for May 7 and 8, the students were pulling out all the stops at their dress rehearsal on May 1.

“Robin of Locksley is a young noble who discovers that those citizens under his care are being abused by Prince John,” the synopsis stated. “Prince John is taxing the citizens supposedly to pay for his brother’s return except everyone knows the money is going to line his pockets. Robin begins to fight for them. Along the way he encounters others who wish to protect the weak and fight against tyranny.”

It’s a story filled with humour, bravery and courage, and actors agree it will be an audience favourite.

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Thursday, May. 7, 2026

Local

Man dies under ATV

Greg Vandermeulen 1 minute read Thursday, May. 7, 2026

A 46-year-old man from the RM of Tache is dead following an ATV accident on Sunday.

RCMP say they received the report of the crash on Road 46 East at 7:13 p.m.

When emergency services responded to the scene, they found the victim pinned under an overturned ATV.

“Officers determined the male had lost control of his ATV after attempting to negotiate a turn and the ATV landed on top of him,” RCMP said in a Monday press release.

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Niverville Nighthawks land in P.E.I for national championship

Cassidy Dankochik 4 minute read Preview

Niverville Nighthawks land in P.E.I for national championship

Cassidy Dankochik 4 minute read Thursday, May. 7, 2026

The Niverville Nighthawks won the Manitoba Junior Hockey League thanks to structure, discipline, skill and a deep roster of experienced players who knew how to handle the long hockey season.

There won’t be as many experiences to lean on at the Centennial Cup, but the Manitoba representative has a couple players with experience at the national junior A championship. Marlen Edwards and Aaron Krestanowich played for Northern Manitoba last season, helping their team to a quarterfinal appearance. Edwards had five points in four preliminary round games, including a three assist performance in the team’s 6-3 win over Greater Sudbury.

Head coach Dwight Hirst repeated his mantra from the entire season, “pressure is a privilege,” during an interview after the team arrived in the Maritimes.

“We’ve come a long way from the beginning of the year to where we are now,” Hirst said.

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Thursday, May. 7, 2026

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COLUMN: Think Again – Exploring the limits of party loyalty

Michael Zwaagstra 4 minute read Wednesday, May. 6, 2026

Political parties aren’t mentioned in the 1867 Constitution Act.

It’s an interesting omission since nowadays it’s nearly impossible to get elected as an MP or MLA if you aren’t running as an endorsed candidate with a political party. Most independent candidates simply don’t have the name recognition or resources necessary to make a credible run for Parliament or the Legislature.

In contemporary federal and provincial elections, most people vote based on the party rather than on the individual candidate. While being an incumbent MP or MLA does provide a small boost in support, incumbents will still likely go down to defeat if their party becomes too unpopular. That’s a tough pill to swallow for an incumbent who gets dragged down by his or her own party.

Human nature being what it is, it’s not surprising that some politicians are less loyal to their parties than others. Some are mavericks who push back on policies that are unpopular with their constituents while others go so far as to quit their caucus and become an independent MP or MLA. Still others switch parties entirely, and, on rare occasions, make the switch more than once.

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COLUMN: On Parliament Hill – Legal ruling and the Canadian dream

Ted Falk, MP for Provencher 4 minute read Wednesday, May. 6, 2026

Growing up in Canada, there were expectations. If we applied ourselves, invested ourselves, worked hard and contributed to the world around us, it wasn’t a big leap to expect that we could support our family, buy a house, live in a warm community and enjoy reliable work. Sadly, the next generation is not feeling that same certainty.

You’ve heard Conservatives talking about the Canadian dream and wanting to bring it back. Until the last decade under Liberal rule, Canadians believed that “if you worked hard, you should be able to get a nice home on a safe street in a great neighbourhood”—as Pierre Poilievre has repeated. That was the social contract Canadians were raised to believe was available to them. That was the Canadian promise.

Sadly, in less than one generation, the promise is no longer assumed—especially for young Canadians living in larger urban settings. Under Mr. Carney as Prime Minister, Canada’s economy has suffered from the highest household debt in the G7, the most unaffordable housing in the G7, the lowest investment per worker in the G7, the worst food price inflation in the G7, the second lowest productivity in the G7 and the second highest unemployment in the G7. Furthermore, the Liberal government has made Canada poorer with policies that have blocked economic growth, fueled inflation, and racked up nearly $1.3 trillion in debt, with a deficit of $78.3 billion in their most recent budget.

Canada could be one of the richest, most affordable countries in the world—if bad laws like the anti-resource law, the tanker ban, the industrial carbon tax and capital gains taxes on reinvestment in Canada were repealed. This would be possible if the Liberal government got out of the way of growth.

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LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Bridge Park Manor lacking pet friendly status

Linda Brazil, Steinbach, MB 2 minute read Wednesday, May. 6, 2026

I visited Bridge Park Manor a short time ago because I am of the age where I need to make a plan for my future. I was very pleased to see that this type of facility is available in Steinbach.

They have exactly what I’m looking for except they are not pet friendly. A huge disappointment. This rule means I will have to leave Steinbach, something I don’t want to do. I retired here because this is where I wanted to live out my remaining time.

I’m surprised that this rule exists in that pets are very important to us old folks. They provide company and comfort and give us a reason to get up in the morning. Studies have shown this to be true.

I’m hoping by the time (which isn’t too far away) that management will see the error of their ways and allow pets. I’m guessing there are already people living there who would benefit from having their pet with them.

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