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DANKOCHIK’S DRAFTINGS: Jets fans should hold their nerve

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read Yesterday at 3:00 PM CST

This certainly isn’t the season most Jets fans were expecting.

After a President’s Trophy winning season, the fall has been hard and fast, but it might be exactly what they needs.

With an aging core, a re-set was on the horizon, and I think general manager Kevin Cheveldayoff is the perfect person to be at the head of the team.

The advantage of having a long-tenured, safe general manager is shown exactly in seasons like this. Cheveldayoff isn’t going to be feeling the hot seat, needing to make a move to save his job.

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AS I SEE IT COLUMN: Jonathan Toews’ remarkable story is the balm we need in these turbulent times

4 minute read Preview

AS I SEE IT COLUMN: Jonathan Toews’ remarkable story is the balm we need in these turbulent times

4 minute read Yesterday at 12:00 PM CST

The heart-warming, inspiring odyssey of Jonathan Toews’ return to hockey – in his hometown of Winnipeg no less – is exactly the kind of comfort food we need in a world burning with aggression, violence, cruelty and chaos.

It’s also a reminder of what is so unique about the relationship between fans and players and why sports fans have a such deep and profound love of certain players. The three minute standing ovation that Toews received when the Hawks showed his tribute video was the quintessential example of fans adoring a player and wanting to thank him for all the wonderful memories he made in Chicago. The passion was palpable, even through the TV screen. You didn’t have to be in the rink to feel what the fans in the Windy City were feeling.

And for three glorious minutes, we didn’t have to think about American citizens getting executed by rogue masked goons or about a depraved U.S. president threatening to impose devastating 100% tariffs on Canada.

Instead, we got to see – and feel – the love and gratitude that hockey fans in Chicago were feeling toward Jonathan Toews.

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Yesterday at 12:00 PM CST

Ruth Bonneville / Free Press

SPORTS - Toews / Jets

Photo of Jets forward Jonathan Toews holding a photo of himself as a kid playing hockey during interview with Jets media after event Friday.

New Winnipeg Jets forward Jonathan Toews, along with General Manager Kevin Cheveldayoff and Head Coach Scott Arniel hold press conference at Canada Life Centre Friday.

July 4th, 2025

Ruth Bonneville  / Free Press 

SPORTS - Toews / Jets

Photo of  Jets forward Jonathan Toews holding a photo of himself as a kid playing hockey during interview with Jets media after event Friday. 

New Winnipeg Jets forward Jonathan Toews, along with General Manager Kevin Cheveldayoff and Head Coach Scott Arniel hold press conference at Canada Life Centre Friday. 

July 4th,   2025

COLUMN: Viewpoint – They laughed at intimate partner violence

MaryLou Driedger 4 minute read Yesterday at 11:14 AM CST

They laughed at her! On May 12, 1982, NDP health critic Margaret Mitchell rose in the House of Commons to address the issue of domestic violence. “One in ten Canadian husbands beat their wives regularly,” Ms. Mitchell reported. At her words the predominantly male House of Commons erupted in laughter. She went on with determination and courage, telling her colleagues that of the 10,000 charges laid against abusive partners by Canadian women, so far only two had resulted in convictions. At that point, members of Parliament began heckling Ms. Mitchell.

It’s hard to believe those attitudes existed just a generation ago. While supports for abused women, and stricter penalties for their abusers, have been instituted over the last decades, partner violence is still a huge problem. A news item on Jan. 17 reports that Agape House in Steinbach is seeing an increased need for its services for abused women. In fact demand continues to exceed capacity. I wasn’t able to access the 2025 annual report for Agape House, but the 2024 report I found online, records a 45 percent increase in domestic violence incidents over the previous year, reaching levels the shelter has never seen before.

Statistics like that make clear the importance of quickly and effectively implementing new legislation dealing with intimate partner violence. One such piece of legislation, The Disclosure to Protect Against Intimate Partner Violence Act, will become law in Manitoba on March 1.

A document issued by the Manitoba Ombudsman gives some good examples of how the law might work. If a man is in a counseling group for violent behaviour and discloses his ongoing obsessive need to stalk or harm his partner, the new law will give the man’s counselor permission to break the confidentiality of the counseling relationship to report his client’s dangerous intent to the police. They will in turn inform the woman at risk and provide her with protection.

Springfield passes vote to leave Capital Planning Region

Matthew Frank 3 minute read Preview

Springfield passes vote to leave Capital Planning Region

Matthew Frank 3 minute read Yesterday at 8:34 AM CST

The Rural Municipality of Springfield has voted to withdraw from the Capital Planning Region.

A motion to file the request to Municipal Relations Minister Glen Simard was put forward by Ward 1 Coun. Glen Fuhl and passed with a four to one vote during a Jan. 20 council meeting.

Springfield Mayor Patrick Therrien, the lone vote against leaving, said a decision needed to be made so it wouldn’t drag into the October municipal elections this year.

“I’m a very big proponent of regional planning, but I do accept democracy,” he said.

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Yesterday at 8:34 AM CST

JURA MCILRAITH THE CARILLON ARCHIVES

The Rural Municipality of Springfield voted to withdraw from the Capital Planning Region during a council meeting on Jan. 20.

JURA MCILRAITH THE CARILLON ARCHIVES 

The Rural Municipality of Springfield voted to withdraw from the Capital Planning Region during a council meeting on Jan. 20.

Steinbach Christian School performs first middle years musical

Matthew Frank 2 minute read Preview

Steinbach Christian School performs first middle years musical

Matthew Frank 2 minute read Friday, Jan. 30, 2026

Steinbach Christian School’s middle years students will perform their first ever musical this weekend.

Titled The Most Epic Birthday Party Ever, the musical will run on Jan. 30 and 31, with both shows starting at 7 p.m. in the school’s chapel.

Kristy Penner, the musical’s director, spent hours searching for the perfect show for the school’s first attempt at performing a musical.

“I was looking for a fun, but simple show. Something with minimal costumes and simple set design, but with good music and a script I liked,” she told The Carillon in an email.

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Friday, Jan. 30, 2026

SUPPLIED

Steinbach Christian School’s middle years students will perform their first ever musical on Jan. 30 and 31 at 7 p.m.

SUPPLIED 

Steinbach Christian School’s middle years students will perform their first ever musical on Jan. 30 and 31 at 7 p.m.

Hanover School Division reacts to news article on accused SRSS teacher

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 4 minute read Preview

Hanover School Division reacts to news article on accused SRSS teacher

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 4 minute read Friday, Jan. 30, 2026

The Hanover School Division has issued a statement regarding a Winnipeg Free Press article about a former uncertified teacher as being “uninformed and/or patently false.”

In the statement issued on Tuesday, the school division referred to the article titled, Case of the Invisible Teacher, which was published on Jan. 23 in the Free Press, as having inaccuracies “including statements in the article that were uninformed and/or patently false.”

In the Free Press investigation, former Steinbach Regional Secondary School teacher Braeden Martens was found not to have a certified teaching certificate or a limited teaching permit despite working at the school since 2021 as a vocational instructor and as a football coach.

According to the Free Press, since no permit was issued by the province, the mandatory provincial safety checks that would be triggered by the application were never done. Martens was fired in January 2025 when allegations of sexual misconduct with minors were raised with the division.

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Friday, Jan. 30, 2026

Football Manitoba

Braeden Martens was found to be teaching in the Hanover School Division without proper teaching certification or permit following a Winnipeg Free Press investigation. He has also been charged with a number of sexual offences against two teenage girls. His position as a teacher was terminated in January 2024 after the sexual abuse allegations were made known to the division.

Football Manitoba 

Braeden Martens was found to be teaching in the Hanover School Division without proper teaching certification or permit following a Winnipeg Free Press investigation. He has also been charged with a number of sexual offences against two teenage girls. His position as a teacher was terminated in January 2024 after the sexual abuse allegations were made known to the division.

The case of the invisible teacher

Jeff Hamilton 12 minute read Preview

The case of the invisible teacher

Jeff Hamilton 12 minute read Friday, Jan. 30, 2026

This feature first appeared in the Winnipeg Free Press on Jan. 23.

Braeden Martens was a ghost in plain sight.

In recent years, he had stood at the front of a vocational classroom at Steinbach Regional Secondary School instructing students. Once the bell rang, he moved to the football field, serving as a mentor and coach for the school’s teams and coaching the province’s elite U-18 club.

To parents, students and football leagues of Manitoba, he was a trusted authority figure. But to the government of Manitoba, Martens did not exist.

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Friday, Jan. 30, 2026

INSTAGRAM

Braeden Martens was teaching shop and coaching football at Steinbach Regional Secondary School.

INSTAGRAM

Braeden Martens was teaching shop and coaching football at Steinbach Regional Secondary School.

Eric Loeppky making his mark with Lube in Italian league

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read Preview

Eric Loeppky making his mark with Lube in Italian league

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read Friday, Jan. 30, 2026

There can be no doubt Eric Loeppky is one of the best volleyball players on the planet.

The Steinbach-born Loeppky was named the most valuable player for the month of December in Italy’s top volleyball league. Loeppky plays for Cucine Lube Civitanova. Across five matches in December, he racked up 79 points and three player of the match awards.

The outside hitter was recognized by the team before the start of their match Jan. 18, a tough loss to current club world champions Sir Susa Scai Perugia.

“I consider it a great recognition because I play in the most beautiful and challenging league in the world, but if I’m rewarded, the credit should be shared with my fantastic teammates,” a translated statement from Loeppky on Lube’s website reads.

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Friday, Jan. 30, 2026

Eric Loeppky was named named the most valuable player for the month of December in Italy’s top volleyball league. (Lube Volleyball)

Eric Loeppky was named named the most valuable player for the month of December in Italy’s top volleyball league. (Lube Volleyball)

COLUMN: Village News – Mennonite history across Canada

Robert Goertzen 3 minute read Preview

COLUMN: Village News – Mennonite history across Canada

Robert Goertzen 3 minute read Friday, Jan. 30, 2026

From Jan. 22 to Jan. 24, the Mennonite Historical Society of Canada (MHSC) met for their annual meetings in Winnipeg. Our museum, Mennonite Heritage Village, is privileged to be part of this organization, which includes six provincial Mennonite historical societies, five Mennonite church conferences, several post-secondary Mennonite institutes, a few archival groups and two Mennonite museums.

Together, these organizations promote the collecting and organizing of Mennonite stories and documents in Canada. They encourage research about various diverse topics that relate to Mennonite activities both historically and contemporarily. The society was begun in the 1960s to create a history of Mennonites in Canada book series, Mennonites in Canada. There are three volumes covering 1786 to 1920, 1920 to 1949, and 1939 to 1970, with a fourth volume currently being written to cover the years 1970 to 2000.

MHSC also contributes to online Mennonite content on the Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online (GAMEO) site, and it manages the Mennonite Archival Information Database (MAID), which stores digital photos of Mennonites and their activities. There are also ongoing genealogy projects and academic conferences that continue to promote research of people and topics relevant to Mennonites in Canada.

Mennonite Heritage Village has contributed directly to the work of this organization recently. In 2022, MHV produced a travelling exhibit called Leaving Canada: The Mennonite Migration to Mexico, which was displayed across Canada in dozens of communities. The year 2022 marked the 100th anniversary of Mennonites leaving Manitoba and Saskatchewan for Mexico and Paraguay. They left their established homes and farms because of new provincial laws requiring children to attend government schools even though the federal government had promised them the freedom to educate their children. The government enforced the new laws with fines, jail time, and confiscation of property.

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Friday, Jan. 30, 2026

MHV hosted a worship service in conjunction with the Russlaender 100 train tour across Canada. Singing together with Mennonites from other provinces was a wonderful way to commemorate this event.

MHV hosted a worship service in conjunction with the Russlaender 100 train tour across Canada. Singing together with Mennonites from other provinces was a wonderful way to commemorate this event.

The Steinbach Arts Council invites youth ages 5–12 to join Spring Break Camp from March 30 to April 2 at the Steinbach Cultural Arts Centre. Campers will explore visual arts, music, theatre, dance, and culinary arts in a fun and engaging environment.

Financial assistance is available through the Steinbach Dodge Creative Kids Bursary Fund, Vera Friesen Memorial Fund, and Roxanne Klassen Memorial Fund, helping ensure all families can access quality arts experiences.

Secure your child’s spot at steinbacharts.ca/sbc or call 204‑346‑1077.

Spring Break Camp is sponsored by Canadian Tire.

COLUMN: Grey Matters – A tribute for way-makers

Gary Dyck 3 minute read Friday, Jan. 30, 2026

“The Lord says, “Stand by where the roads cross, and look. Ask for the old paths, where the good way is, and walk in it. And you will find rest for your souls.” Jeremiah 6:16

Jeremiah’s words reach across centuries to speak to us at moments when we find ourselves at a crossroads, unsure which way to go, longing for guidance and comfort. Recently my friend who spent much of his life building and maintaining roads in southeast Manitoba moved on to streets of gold.

What I learned from him is that road-building is at its heart, ditch-building. The road only appears when the hard and messy work of creating ditches is done. It happens slowly with more time spent below than on top. Isn’t that how life is? We often spend years working through challenges, and only in hindsight do we see how far we’ve come. In his younger years my friend wasn’t known in his family as a friendly person, and yet much later in his life he became a super-encourager to many. I can’t get into all the possible reasons for the change, but transformation was real.

For my friend, making connections—both physical and relational—became more than a job; it became a calling in his later life. At Mennonite Heritage Village (MHV), he often brought young men to volunteer, teaching them basic skills and helping them feel part of a timeless community. I cherished his visits to the staff room, where he would affirm the staff and me. I loved he used the positive Low German word ‘yo’ (yes) very often. “Yo, you are doing a good job” he would tell us many times.

Steinbach Chamber Challenge former finalists praise initiative

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 6 minute read Preview

Steinbach Chamber Challenge former finalists praise initiative

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 6 minute read Thursday, Jan. 29, 2026

The Steinbach Chamber Challenge is returning for its third year and past participants say the event positively affected their businesses.

Clinton Plett, who owns Plemark Welding, and was the Challenge’s inaugural winner in 2024, said his business has grown and diversified since he won the first-place prize of $1,000.

He invested his winnings into buying new tools, such as a torch to cut through thicker steel and a hammer drill for welding in structures. The growth he experienced also allowed him to buy a trailer.

Plett said the Challenge really forced him to concentrate on his finances.

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Thursday, Jan. 29, 2026

SVJETLANA MLINAREVIC THE CARILLON ARCHIVES

Seth Friesen won first place at the Chamber Challenge in 2025 with his idea of having customers pay for a monthly subscription to have their water softener and furnace filters changed every month. The contest helped build Seth’s confidence to make his business a reality.

SVJETLANA MLINAREVIC THE CARILLON ARCHIVES 

Seth Friesen won first place at the Chamber Challenge in 2025 with his idea of having customers pay for a monthly subscription to have their water softener and furnace filters changed every month. The contest helped build Seth’s confidence to make his business a reality.

Providence Pilots seasons in full swing

3 minute read Preview

Providence Pilots seasons in full swing

3 minute read Thursday, Jan. 29, 2026

Providence Pilots athletes are busy across three different sports as the collegiate season heats up across the province.

VOLLEYBALLThe MCAC women’s volleyball standings will be a fight to the absolute finish, with three of the conference’s four teams sitting with seven wins heading into play this weekend.

Providence’s place at the national championship is locked up due to the school hosting the upcoming tournament, but they will need some help on the out of town scoreboard to host a playoff game this year.

The men’s team has the most wins of any MCAC team, but trail Assiniboine in the standings due to games the Brandon-based school has in hand.

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Thursday, Jan. 29, 2026

Parker Antonovos dunks the basketball during a Providence Pilots win Jan. 24. (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

Parker Antonovos dunks the basketball during a Providence Pilots win Jan. 24. (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

COLUMN: Ask the Money Lady – What to pay your advisor

Christine Ibbotson 4 minute read Wednesday, Jan. 28, 2026

Dear Money Lady,

I want to change advisors for the New Year because I think I am paying too much. What should I be paying for a portfolio of about $500K. Thanks, John.

Many Canadians worry about the fees they pay their advisors and wonder if they’re paying too much regardless of the amount they have saved. Having been an investment banker for over 30 years, I can tell you, you do get what you pay for. However, fees, inflation, and future market volatility always eat away at your retirement capital, decreasing your purchasing power, and eventually forcing you to lower your lifestyle as you age. Remember, the key is to maintain a well-diversified portfolio which includes bonds, cash, and high-quality stocks. When you’re looking for an investment “partner,” try to pick an advisor who really has your best interests at heart and can help you financially plan your future. Ask them what their goals are for your portfolio and how they plan to achieve them. Understand how they’re paid and question the commissions they receive on your investments. So, let’s talk about that, what should you pay? There are two basic fee structures that most advisors adhere to – transactional or fee-based.

Transactional fees are charged with every investment transaction. This is often the case when you buy fixed income investments such as bonds. A fee is charged when you purchase the bond and then again when you sell it. There are not many advisors that still offer transactional fee structures when buying securities. They seem to have left the industry with the vintage old-school stockbrokers who had to do multiple trades every month to make any money. A method we used to call “pump & dump” back in the day. Now we have investment advisors that want to put you in fee-based plans, designed to offer more protection for clients along with a consistent revenue stream for the advisor and brokerage firm.

Carillon Sports Second Shots: Jan. 22nd edition

Cassidy Dankochik 1 minute read Preview

Carillon Sports Second Shots: Jan. 22nd edition

Cassidy Dankochik 1 minute read Wednesday, Jan. 28, 2026

Featuring an SRSS Hockey game Jan. 14, a Niverville Nighthawks game Jan. 15, an Eastman Selects U18 AAA game Jan. 15, a Steinbach Pistons Game Jan. 16 and a HTJHL game in Steinbach Jan. 17

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Wednesday, Jan. 28, 2026

Niverville beat rivals Selkirk in a matinee game Jan. 15. (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

Niverville beat rivals Selkirk in a matinee game Jan. 15. (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

Steinbach buys land near city dump

Greg Vandermeulen 1 minute read Wednesday, Jan. 28, 2026

Steinbach city councillors voted unanimously to purchase a parcel of land on Hanover Road East, east of the city landfill.

The motion saw councillors approve the purchase of the 6.7-acre lot complete with a 5,400 sq. ft. shop for $450,000. Steinbach already owns land on two sides of the lot.

Coun. Michael Zwaagstra made the motion, saying it creates opportunities for future uses in regard to the landfill.

“While it would not immediately be used for landfill purposes, it does make sense for the city to acquire it,” he said.

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