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SRSS graduate Sienna Driedger returns to region to host volleyball camp

Cassidy Dankochik 3 minute read 12:00 PM CST

One 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

Kelvin Goertzen, MLA for Steinbach 4 minute read 11:52 AM CST

One 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

Matthew Frank 7 minute read Preview

Daycare shortage hits home for Niverville mom

Matthew Frank 7 minute read 8:58 AM CST

Dakota Johnston didn’t expect she would have to search for a daycare before she had her baby.

The 21-year-old single mother from Niverville began hunting for a spot when she was three months pregnant in April 2025. She called dozens of daycares, signing up for at least 30 wait lists in and around Niverville.

Johnston got the same answer with each call: there’s no room and she’d have to wait up to four years for a spot.

“I thought that was absolutely insane. Like, three to four years by that time she’s in school,” she told The Carillon. “As a single mother, there’s not a lot of support.”

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8:58 AM CST

MATTHEW FRANK THE CARILLON

Dakota Johnston holds her four-month-old daughter Raelynn in their Niverville home. Johnston signed up for roughly 30 daycare wait lists across southeastern Manitoba because there wasn’t space in Niverville’s only child care centre.

MATTHEW FRANK THE CARILLON 

Dakota Johnston holds her four-month-old daughter Raelynn in their Niverville home. Johnston signed up for roughly 30 daycare wait lists across southeastern Manitoba because there wasn’t space in Niverville’s only child care centre.

PHOTO GALLERY: Christmas on the Farm hosted at MHV

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 1 minute read Preview

PHOTO GALLERY: Christmas on the Farm hosted at MHV

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 1 minute read Yesterday at 2:24 PM CST

Christmas on the Farm took place at the Mennonite Heritage Village on Jan. 4. The free event was organized by the South East Manitoba Draft Horse Association as a way to give back to the community and bring people together. There was also a Tin for the Bin for folks who wanted to donate food, which last year produced 300 pounds for food banks in the Southeast. This is the second year that the association has held this event at MHV, but it has been holding wagon ride events for 20 years. This year there were five teams and one single horse pulled wagon for crowds to enjoy. Teams came from Mitchell, La Broquerie, Kleefeld, Roseau River, and just south of Steinbach.

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Yesterday at 2:24 PM CST

SVJETLANA MLINAREVIC THE CARILLON
Steinbacher Alycia Thompson holds her year-and-a-half year old daughter Emerson while petting draft horse during the Christmas on the Farm event at the Mennonite Heritage Village on Jan. 4, 2026. The free event was organized by the South East Manitoba Draft Horse Association as a way to give back to the community and bring people together. There was also a Tin for the Bin for folks who wanted to donate food, which last year produced 300 pounds for food banks in the Southeast. This is the second year that the association has held this event at MHV, but it has been holding wagon ride events for 20 years. This year there were five teams and one single horse pulled wagons for crowds to enjoy. Teams came from Mitchell, La Broquerie, Kleefeld, Roseau River, and south of Steinbach.

SVJETLANA MLINAREVIC THE CARILLON
Steinbacher Alycia Thompson holds her year-and-a-half year old daughter Emerson while petting draft horse during the Christmas on the Farm event at the Mennonite Heritage Village on Jan. 4, 2026. The free event was organized by the South East Manitoba Draft Horse Association as a way to give back to the community and bring people together. There was also a Tin for the Bin for folks who wanted to donate food, which last year produced 300 pounds for food banks in the Southeast. This is the second year that the association has held this event at MHV, but it has been holding wagon ride events for 20 years. This year there were five teams and one single horse pulled wagons for crowds to enjoy. Teams came from Mitchell, La Broquerie, Kleefeld, Roseau River, and south of Steinbach.

Former Nighthawk Raiden LeGall commits to NCAA

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read Yesterday at 12:00 PM CST

Former 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

Greg Vandermeulen 1 minute read Preview

Wrong address delays Steinbach fire response

Greg Vandermeulen 1 minute read Yesterday at 11:20 AM CST

Confusion resulted after a 911 call that dispatched Steinbach Fire Department on Jan. 2. Fire Chief Kel Toews said the call came in stating there was a fire at a Pleasantwood address. Because no such street exists in Steinbach, crews went to Pleasant Drive instead. They quickly learned that was incorrect as well, responding instead to a fire in a garage on Crescentwood. Toews said the time lost did not change the outcome as the damage was to the item burning in the garage and not the structure itself.

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Yesterday at 11:20 AM CST

GREG VANDERMEULEN THE CARILLON
The time lost did not change the outcome as the damage was to the item burning in the garage and not the structure itself.

GREG VANDERMEULEN THE CARILLON
The time lost did not change the outcome as the damage was to the item burning in the garage and not the structure itself.

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

Jaysa Thiessen 4 minute read Preview

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

Jaysa Thiessen 4 minute read Yesterday at 8:53 AM CST

Ahh January, the month of new beginnings, a fresh slate, a sigh of exhale after the busy Christmas season. To me, January signifies the opportunity to begin anew. We say goodbye to the past as we welcome in the new year. So 2026 looms ahead full of possibilities and new memories to make. While MHV remains closed until Jan. 6 at 9 a.m., we are busy planning and preparing for a new year full of events, programming, and memory-making opportunities.

December to February: Winter in the Village

From December to February, experience winter in MHV’s picturesque village! Enjoy skating, snowshoeing, sleigh rides, and a roaring bonfire. Don’t own skates or snowshoes? Rent them here! Try your hand at Crokicurl, a Canadian game that blends crokinole and curling into one fun, outdoor activity! See MHV’s Main Street lit up with Christmas lights during our light show on Saturday evenings. Warm up with our Winter in the Village Cafe, featuring hot chocolate, hot apple cider, and a variety of freshly baked goods. Open Tuesday to Friday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Saturday 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. (most activities happening on Saturdays). While winter often feels long and dark, it is my hope that Winter in the Village at MHV can be a place for celebrating the unique winter season we experience here in Manitoba!

Jan. 8 and 22: Exhibit Explorers

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Yesterday at 8:53 AM CST

SUPPLIED

Join in the winter activities and enjoy the coloured light display every Saturday until 8pm.

SUPPLIED 

Join in the winter activities and enjoy the coloured light display every Saturday until 8pm.

SPORTS FLASHBACK 2000: Warriors cling to lead in tight HTHL race

Wes Keating 3 minute read Preview

SPORTS FLASHBACK 2000: Warriors cling to lead in tight HTHL race

Wes Keating 3 minute read Monday, Jan. 12, 2026

Despite an 8-3 loss to the La Broquerie Habs last Wednesday, the St Malo Warriors still hold a precarious one-point lead atop the standings in the Hanover Tache Hockey League.

But the four HTHL teams that will be involved in the first round of the Allan Cup playdowns later this month are within easy striking distance of the Warriors and all four have several games in hand. Springfield and Ile des Chenes are a point back. Springfield has three games in hand on the Warriors and the North Stars have two.

Grunthal and La Broquerie are tied with 16 points each and each have played only 13 games compared to 16 for St Malo, in what is turning out to be one of the tightest races in the HTHL in years.

Wednesday at La Broquerie, when Michel Normandeau opened the scoring for the Habs with a shorthanded marker just two minutes into the game, it set the stage for a surprisingly easy victory for the Habs, who held period leads of 2-1 and 5-1 on the frontrunners. Normandeau also scored the final goal of the game for the Habs in the third.

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Monday, Jan. 12, 2026

Grunthal’s Gil Friesen controls the puck against St Jean in one of two Red Wings victories in the HTHL last week. The trail to the Allan Cup begins in Grunthal this week with the Red Wings/Habs taking on Ile Des Chenes/Springfield in the opening game of the playdowns.

Grunthal’s Gil Friesen controls the puck against St Jean in one of two Red Wings victories in the HTHL last week. The trail to the Allan Cup begins in Grunthal this week with the Red Wings/Habs taking on Ile Des Chenes/Springfield in the opening game of the playdowns.

Steinbach Christian School students to exhibit at Steinbach Cultural Arts Centre

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 3 minute read Preview

Steinbach Christian School students to exhibit at Steinbach Cultural Arts Centre

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 3 minute read Monday, Jan. 12, 2026

Steinbach Christian School students will be exhibiting their artwork at the Steinbach Cultural Arts Centre’s Hall Gallery and Studio Gallery from Jan. 9 to Feb. 20.

“I think we sometimes put teenagers in a bit of a box and assume a lot about them. I think these types of exhibits that show adolescent artists - teenage artists - that we can still learn a lot from them and that they have fresh ideas that we can be inspired by as well,” said Ryan Polinsky, head of the school’s visual arts department.

SCS has exhibited previously at the Steinbach Cultural Arts Centre, with the last time being before the COVID pandemic. This year’s theme is tension and conflict in storytelling, which was left open to the students’ interpretation. They were shown other artists’ interpretations of tension and conflict to get them thinking about the theme.

“Stories aren’t interesting without some sort of conflict. Even if we don’t want that conflict to be there while we’re reading it, we still find it very intriguing to see how it gets solved,” said Polinsky.

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Monday, Jan. 12, 2026

Submitted by Ryan Polinsky
Artwork by Grade 10 and 11 students from Steinbach Christian School will be on display from Jan. 9 to Feb. 20 at the Steinbach Cultural Arts Centre. The artwork explores the theme of tension and conflict.

Submitted by Ryan Polinsky
Artwork by Grade 10 and 11 students from Steinbach Christian School will be on display from Jan. 9 to Feb. 20 at the Steinbach Cultural Arts Centre. The artwork explores the theme of tension and conflict.

AS I SEE IT COLUMN: Scheifele’s Olympic non-snub and Hellebuyck proving he’s not the best goalie in the world

James Loewen 4 minute read Preview

AS I SEE IT COLUMN: Scheifele’s Olympic non-snub and Hellebuyck proving he’s not the best goalie in the world

James Loewen 4 minute read Monday, Jan. 12, 2026

Congratulations to Team Canada winning bronze at the World Juniors. Finishing third in the world is impressive. Full stop.

Many hockey fans and broadcasters have described Mark Scheifele not making the Olympic team as a snub. Those people are wrong. It wasn’t a snub. It was a strategic decision.

Scheifele has been an elite player these past two years. The grit he showed playing just hours after his father passed away and the game he played against the Leafs after learning he didn’t make the Olympic roster, showed that Scheifele has enormous courage that matches his impressive skills.

He is undeniably one the best offensive players in the NHL, but he’s not better than the players named to the top two lines on Team Canada.

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Monday, Jan. 12, 2026

Mark Scheifele (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

Mark Scheifele (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

DANKOCHIK’S DRAFTINGS: Loewen’s Pistons debut draws kudos from players, fans

Cassidy Dankochik 3 minute read Preview

DANKOCHIK’S DRAFTINGS: Loewen’s Pistons debut draws kudos from players, fans

Cassidy Dankochik 3 minute read Monday, Jan. 12, 2026

There aren't many things that could happen in the middle of a 6-3 victory for the Steinbach Pistons over a league bottom feeder on New Year’s Eve which cause me to rush to one end of the ice to the other and have the entire Steinbach Pistons injured/scratches come down from their place above the ice.

But that’s exactly what happened Dec. 31, as Jaxon Loewen was called into the net for the final 90 seconds of game action.

Loewen, who was born in Steinbach, normally plays for the junior B La Broquerie Habs, where he’s one of the better goalies in the Capital Region Junior Hockey League but has been called into action for the Steinbach Pistons for well over two months now.

With Chris Quizi and Easton Thvedt, the team’s starter and back-up to begin the season, both out with long-term injuries, the team needed someone to battle, not just as a back-up for game days, but also in practice week-in, week-out.

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Monday, Jan. 12, 2026

Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon

Jaxon Loewen saw some game action for the Pistons Dec. 31

Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon 

Jaxon Loewen saw some game action for the Pistons Dec. 31

COLUMN: Think Again – Prioritize victims, not offenders

Michael Zwaagstra 4 minute read Monday, Jan. 12, 2026

When 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

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 3 minute read Preview

Costs for Grunthal Arena increase

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 3 minute read Sunday, Jan. 11, 2026

Costs for the Grunthal Arena have increased by $1 million since the project was first announced in 2024, when estimated costs were between $4 million and $4.5 million.

“Construction costs went up,” said Ward 6 Coun. Curtis Dawydiuk.

The current anticipated cost of the project has risen to between $5 million to $5.5 million. Funding for the arena will be divided between local fundraising, the municipality, and the federal and provincial governments. So far, the community has raised about $1.4 million of a $2 million goal.

The build will see an additional 9,895 sq-ft built onto the existing arena, which will include a new lobby, four new changerooms, a new viewing area, a multipurpose room, a hall, and a kitchen. There will be no changes to the rink area other than making the washrooms more accessible.

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Sunday, Jan. 11, 2026

Submitted by RM of Hanover

The cost for the Grunthal Arena has increased by about $1 million to about $5 million. The renovation will include many upgrades such as a new lobby, new change rooms, and a new kitchen.

Submitted by RM of Hanover 

The cost for the Grunthal Arena has increased by about $1 million to about $5 million. The renovation will include many upgrades such as a new lobby, new change rooms, and a new kitchen.

Ste Agathe bridge closed parts of January, Febrary

Matthew Frank 1 minute read Preview

Ste Agathe bridge closed parts of January, Febrary

Matthew Frank 1 minute read Sunday, Jan. 11, 2026

The Louis Riel Bridge in Ste Agathe will face partial closure in January and February as crews continue construction.

A Town of Niverville announcement said the Provincial Road 305 bridge over the Red River will be closed from 9:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. on weekdays starting Jan. 6. and lasting until Feb. 13.

Workers will be installing structural steel for the new westbound lane on the bridge during the closure, the announcement said.

The Carillon previously reported the $48.6 million project will widen both lanes, add new shoulders and rehabilitate the bridge. Work began on the 1959 bridge in October 2024, and its expected to be reopen by September.

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Sunday, Jan. 11, 2026

CARILLON ARCHIVES

Construction began in 2024.

CARILLON ARCHIVES 

Construction began in 2024.

Bethesda named as measles exposure site

Greg Vandermeulen 3 minute read Preview

Bethesda named as measles exposure site

Greg Vandermeulen 3 minute read Sunday, Jan. 11, 2026

Bethesda Regional Health Centre and the De Salaberry District Health Centre have been named by the province as measles exposure sites.

A Tuesday news release stated that the emergency waiting room at the Steinbach facility saw measles exposure on Dec. 27 from 8:30 p.m. to 11:59 p.m. and again on Dec. 28 from 12 a.m. to 2 a.m.

Those exposed should monitor symptoms until Jan. 18 and Jan. 19 respectively.

The De Salaberry District Health Centre in St-Pierre-Jolys saw exposure on Dec. 31 from 1:15 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Those present are asked to monitor symptoms until Jan. 22.

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Sunday, Jan. 11, 2026

JORDAN ROSS CARILLON ARCHIVES

Bethesda Regional Health Centre emergency was a measles exposure site on Dec. 27 and Dec. 28.

JORDAN ROSS CARILLON ARCHIVES 

Bethesda Regional Health Centre emergency was a measles exposure site on Dec. 27 and Dec. 28.

Man killed by semi-truck on Highway 75

Greg Vandermeulen 1 minute read Sunday, Jan. 11, 2026

A 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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