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COLUMN: Carillon Flashback April 12, 1957 – Ste Anne welcomes gas pipeline crew

Wes Keating 4 minute read Yesterday at 5:55 PM CST

Chamber of Commerce president Robert Arbez, welcomes Majestic Contractors to the village of Ste Anne, where the company has set up an operations’ base on the Ste Anne Legion grounds, before beginning to lay 85 miles of pipe for Trans-Canada Pipeline.

“We know the task ahead will be difficult and will demand a great deal of your time and effort, yet at the same time, we hope that you will not be so busy that we cannot get to know you personally. The doors of Ste Anne are open to you and we sincerely hope your stay will be pleasant through the months ahead.”

A soft southern drawl has invaded the quiet village, along with more than $2 million worth of pipe-laying equipment. The Majestic pipe-laying company is one of the many companies working on one of the most ambitious projects in North America. The $280 million Trans-Canada Pipeline, following a 2,250-mile route through four provinces, will carry natural gas all the way from Alberta to Montreal.

Majestic has the responsibility of laying 85 miles of 30-inch pipeline between the Red River and the Ontario boundary. Key personnel moved into Ste. Anne late in 1956 and soon machinery began to arrive, a radio tower was set up and trailers appeared overnight.

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SPORTS FLASHBACK 1980: American teams no match for Steinbach Millers in Utah

Cassidy Dankochik 4 minute read Preview

SPORTS FLASHBACK 1980: American teams no match for Steinbach Millers in Utah

Cassidy Dankochik 4 minute read Yesterday at 5:00 PM CST

The Steinbach U18 Millers had been scoring one-sided victories in the first two months of the 1979-80 season and their trip to Salt Lake City, Utah in December proved to be no different.

With the exception of the first game against the host team, which Steinbach won by a single goal, teams from Salt Lake, Phoenix, Arizona and Aspen, Colorado provided little opposition for the Millers on their way to a six-game winning streak. The Millers completed the tournament undefeated, outscoring the opposition 59-10 in six games.

The only disappointment for the trip was that teams expected from Calgary and Sweden were unable to attend the Salt Lake City tournament.

Millers coach Randy Penner said he was disappointed his team had not faced stronger opposition at the tournament, but thought the trip had been a worthwhile experience for the boys.

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Yesterday at 5:00 PM CST

The Steinbach Millers U18 hockey team get a geography lesson before heading out for their longest road trip of the year. Team manager Bob Loewen and coach Randy Penner display a map outlining the just over 2,000 km route from Steinbach to Salt Lake City, Utah.

The Steinbach Millers U18 hockey team get a geography lesson before heading out for their longest road trip of the year. Team manager Bob Loewen and coach Randy Penner display a map outlining the just over 2,000 km route from Steinbach to Salt Lake City, Utah.

LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Great hope through scripture

Mary Friesen, Steinbach, MB 1 minute read Yesterday at 2:43 PM CST

Dear editor and Carillon readers. I just thought to write you during these very chaotic times when there is so much evil and turmoil worldwide. I believe that God has something to tell us because there is very little truth, mercy or knowledge of the lord in our own country. There is growth of swearing and lying, stealing, killing and adultery and drug abuses all around us, even in Steinbach. For this reason, many people are being destroyed for lack of the knowledge of our kind and loving Heavenly Father and our Saviour the Lord Jesus. Apostasy is even growing in our churches! Yet there is great hope if we turn to the holy scriptures and do what we see in 2 Chronicles 7:14. May we return to the true faith of our Father in real repentance and prayers for our land.

Thank you in Christ,

AS I SEE IT COLUMN: ‘Too late’ MJHL thoughts and predictions

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read Preview

AS I SEE IT COLUMN: ‘Too late’ MJHL thoughts and predictions

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

I know it might come off as disingenuous, but I saw the Niverville Nighthawks season coming.

There were two predictions I made before the start of this Manitoba Junior Hockey League Season that I considered outside common knowledge.

That the Niverville Nighthawks were the best team in the league and that the Winnipeg Blues would be competitive for a playoff spot.

While the Blues have certainly taken a step forward, it’s not quite as big a leap as I had hoped. But the Nighthawks have certainly made me look smart to anyone I told those two predictions to before the start of the year.

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Yesterday at 12:00 PM CST

The Niverville Nighthawks have been dominant to start this MJHL season. (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

The Niverville Nighthawks have been dominant to start this MJHL season. (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

Former South Sudanese refugee shares inspiring story with South Eastman Rotary

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 10 minute read Preview

Former South Sudanese refugee shares inspiring story with South Eastman Rotary

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 10 minute read Yesterday at 11:43 AM CST

Rebecca Atet Deng was just 12 years old in 1987 when she was brutally taken by rebels during the Second Sudanese Civil War. She was playing with her younger sister when the rebels came and took her and 26,000 other children from their homes and marched them in a three-month trek through difficult terrain and random attacks by government forces. Many children didn’t make it and for those that did, what awaited them was a harsh life consisting of malnourishment, disease, and uncertainty. They became known as The Lost Boys and Girls of Sudan.

“My life was beautiful. Amazing life playing at home, happy kid and then suddenly (I was taken),” she told the crowd at the South Eastman Rotary Club gala on Nov. 19 where she was keynote speaker.

Deng came from the City of Bor in what is now South Sudan. Her father was the chief of police who was involved in politics and her mother was a nurse working in a hospital. When the Second Sudanese Civil War broke out in 1983, her father was captured and held prisoner in Bor, where he remained until a peace treaty was signed in 2005.

In 1984, following her father’s imprisonment, Deng, her mother, and her four siblings went to the nearby village of Duk. In 1987, her mother died leaving her and her siblings to be looked after by their grandmother. It was during this time that Deng was taken by rebel forces after the leader of the Sudanese People’s Liberation Army Movement gave the order to zone commanders to move young people aged 10 to 15 to Ethiopia. While the order was to take boys, in two towns girls were taken as well.

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Yesterday at 11:43 AM CST

SVJETLANA MLINAREVIC THE CARILLON

Former South Sudanese refugee Rebecca Atet Deng shared her 18-year journey as a refugee with the South Eastman Rotary Club on Nov. 19, during the organization’s annual gala. Deng’s story began when she was taken at the age of 12 by rebels during her country’s civil war. She was a refugee until the age of 30 when she moved to Canada.

SVJETLANA MLINAREVIC THE CARILLON 

Former South Sudanese refugee Rebecca Atet Deng shared her 18-year journey as a refugee with the South Eastman Rotary Club on Nov. 19, during the organization’s annual gala. Deng’s story began when she was taken at the age of 12 by rebels during her country’s civil war. She was a refugee until the age of 30 when she moved to Canada.

COLUMN: Report from the Legislature – A whole lot of empty promises

Bob Lagasse, MLA for Dawson Trail 2 minute read Yesterday at 8:36 AM CST

On Nov. 18, the throne speech was delivered, which outlined the NDP’s plans and what Manitobans can expect from the provincial government in this session.

Unfortunately, this speech was chock full of flashy announcements with absolutely no plans to follow through. It outlined the NDP’s commitments to improving healthcare, lowering costs, creating jobs to grow the economy, and keeping communities safe. However, there were no hard commitments, no timelines or measurable outcomes provided, just a whole lot of empty promises.

As of right now, our healthcare system is in an unacceptable state, our crime rates are high, and affordability is increasingly unattainable for Manitobans. Rather than providing Manitobans with solutions and an actionable plan, the NDP’s have chosen to ignore their concerns and instead deliver a throne speech that does not reflect the priorities of Manitobans.

Manitobans need fiscal responsibility, strengthened health care, safer communities, rural investment, responsible environmental and economic policies, and transparent governance, not catchy slogans and half-baked ideas. You deserve results and action, which is why, as your MLA, I will make sure that the NDP government is being held accountable by continuing to advocate for you and ensuring that your concerns are being heard and addressed.

COLUMN: Art and Culture – Message from the executive director

Steinbach Arts Council 6 minute read Preview

COLUMN: Art and Culture – Message from the executive director

Steinbach Arts Council 6 minute read Saturday, Dec. 6, 2025

As we approach the holiday season, we want to acknowledge the community that makes the Steinbach Arts Council’s work possible. Your participation — showing up to classes, supporting local artists, attending concerts and events - encouraging creativity in general - is what allows us to contribute to the quality of life in the Southeast. This has been one of our most active and encouraging years yet, thanks to the way our region continues to engage with the arts.

What we’ve seen this year

Participation continues to grow across every area of our programming. Theatre class registrations are at record numbers, our multi-disciplinary art classes are full, and dance in the region is gaining momentum with the return of our dance festival this spring. Teens and adults are also asking for more opportunities to build their skills, showing how strongly the arts are valued throughout the Southeast.

This momentum reflects the commitment of our team and the way the community responds to their work. It’s one of the reasons we were named a finalist for the Chamber of Commerce Non-Profit of the Year Award — recognition of the role arts and culture continue to play in strengthening quality of life in our region.

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Saturday, Dec. 6, 2025

COLUMN: Think Again – Why professional judgment matters

Michael Zwaagstra 4 minute read Saturday, Dec. 6, 2025

One thing a lot of people don’t realize is that teachers make hundreds of decisions every single day.

Most of them are minor, such as deciding how many math problems to assign at the end of a lesson. But others carry much more significance. Some could even be career ending.

Yes, you read that correctly. One wrong decision and a teacher’s professional career might come to a screeching halt.

Consider one decision that teachers make on a regular basis—what videos to show to their students. This is where some teachers have made really bad choices.

MJHL trade market heating up

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read Preview

MJHL trade market heating up

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read Saturday, Dec. 6, 2025

The region’s two Manitoba Junior Hockey League teams are tweaking their rosters, as the annual Canadian junior hockey roster freeze is just over a month away.

The Niverville Nighthawks, in the middle of an undefeated month of November, added 2006-born forward Renat Nahnieiev. Nahnieiev is a Ukrainian International, joining Canadian minor hockey ranks in the 2022/2023 season. After graduating high school, he spent a year with the Winnipeg Blues, before moving to Weyburn of the Saskatchewan junior league at the start of this season.

Niverville sent a player development fee to Weyburn in exchange for the 2006-born forward.

Nahnieiev’s 24 points across 37 games played was good enough to put him third on the Blues for points per game in the 2024/2025 season.

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Saturday, Dec. 6, 2025

Dominion City defenseman Kasen Mateychuk was moved from Steinbach to the Winnipeg Blues via trade earlier this week. (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

Dominion City defenseman Kasen Mateychuk was moved from Steinbach to the Winnipeg Blues via trade earlier this week. (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

Orchestra plays in sold-out Steinbach show

Matthew Frank 1 minute read Preview

Orchestra plays in sold-out Steinbach show

Matthew Frank 1 minute read Saturday, Dec. 6, 2025

The Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra played to a packed house for the Dec. 2 Holiday Tour concert.

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Saturday, Dec. 6, 2025

MATTHEW FRANK THE CARILLON

A member of the Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra plays the bassoon during its holiday tour concert in Steinbach on Dec. 2. The annual event was once again a sold out show.

MATTHEW FRANK THE CARILLON 

A member of the Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra plays the bassoon during its holiday tour concert in Steinbach on Dec. 2. The annual event was once again a sold out show.

Steinbach trial ends for boyfriend allegedly sexually assaulting girlfriend

Matthew Frank 5 minute read Saturday, Dec. 6, 2025

A judge will decide whether to convict or acquit a southeastern Manitoba man accused of groping and sexually assaulting his girlfriend.

Over a two-day trial on Nov. 28 and Dec. 1, a Steinbach court heard testimony from the accused and victim about three incidents involving the accused allegedly grabbing and kissing the victim’s breasts, bruising her butt from a slap and having sex without consent. The 20-year-old man pleaded not guilty to two counts of sexual assault and one count of assault.

“She describes, I think, very vividly, how she felt that she couldn’t move, that she felt numb when this is happening,” Crown prosecutor Jennifer Neufeld told provincial court Judge Donald Slough in her closing arguments. “She’s saying that she did not consent in any way. She was not asked if she was consenting to this activity.”

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

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

Jaysa Thiessen 5 minute read Preview

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

Jaysa Thiessen 5 minute read Friday, Dec. 5, 2025

December is a month of expectation, busyness, and excitement! Malls overflow with hustle and bustle as people frantically purchase the perfect gift for their special someone; calendars are chock full of appointments, family gatherings, events with friends, concerts, and so on; and the thrill of the Christmas season grows as each day passes by on the Advent calendar. It’s easy to let the month devolve into chaos as pressures mount and to-do lists grow. It is my hope that we are all able to balance the to-dos and the want-to-dos of this busy season!

The staff and volunteers here at MHV have their own lists of to-dos during the busy holiday season! We’re preparing for several upcoming events, and we would be honored and delighted if you could make room for them in your already full calendar.

December – February: Winter in the Village

From December -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-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!

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Friday, Dec. 5, 2025

The Village Main Street will be lit by coloured lights on Saturday evening.

The Village Main Street will be lit by coloured lights on Saturday evening.

Taylor’s Story comes to Steinbach

Greg Vandermeulen 1 minute read Preview

Taylor’s Story comes to Steinbach

Greg Vandermeulen 1 minute read Friday, Dec. 5, 2025

Swifties from the Southeast may not be able to see their hero in concert locally, but they will be treated to the next best thing as Taylor’s Story comes to the Southeast Event Centre.

Scheduled for Dec. 13, the show features the Taylor Swift cover band who will offer tribute to the iconic Taylor Swift with music from her albums 1989, Red, Lover and Evermore.

A news release from the Southeast Event Centre said this isn’t just a concert.

“It’s a journey through the music, magic and storytelling that define Taylor Swift’s legacy,” it stated. “With uncanny resemblance, mesmerizing vocals, and heartfelt interpretation, this extraordinary tribute artist brings Taylor’s narrative to life in a way that’s both familiar and refreshingly original.”

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Friday, Dec. 5, 2025

SUPPLIED

Taylor’s Story will come to the Southeast Event Centre on Dec. 13.

SUPPLIED 

Taylor’s Story will come to the Southeast Event Centre on Dec. 13.

COLUMN: On Parliament Hill – If you ate today thank a farmer

Ted Falk, MP for Provencher 3 minute read Friday, Dec. 5, 2025

You may have heard the expression, “If you ate today, thank a farmer” or its close cousin, “strong farms, strong Canada”. Both capture a simple truth: farmers sustain us.

In recent years, some political commentators have been enlightening Canadians that grocery stores don’t grow food – farmers do. Shelves don’t sprout carrots or wheat; stores simply hold the harvest that the farmer has produced and delivered. Here in Provencher, we see this reality firsthand. Long before food reaches a shelf, farmers in our region are putting in the long days and hard work that make our meals possible.

That’s why it should matter deeply to us when Statistics Canada reveals a sharp and troubling decline in farm income for 2024. After nearly a decade under Liberal leadership, farming is becoming increasingly economically unviable, our food security is more fragile, and Canadian producers are losing their global edge.

In 2024, net farm income fell by $3.3 billion—a staggering 26 percent drop. Our province of Manitoba was among six provinces reporting the steepest decline in crop receipts.

Niverville and Oakbank finalists for Jets Town Takeover

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read Preview

Niverville and Oakbank finalists for Jets Town Takeover

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read Friday, Dec. 5, 2025

Voting is now open to see which Manitoba town will welcome the Winnipeg Jets for a day.

Gimli, Niverville and Oakbank were announced as the three finalists for the Jets Town Takeover. The Jets first Town Takeover took place in Morris in 2019, with Stonewall and Oakville hosting in years following the pandemic.

“I am excited to see our community chosen as one of the finalists for the Jets Town Takeover,” Niverville Mayor Myron Dyck said in a town news release.

“Being selected as a finalist is an honour and is in large part due to our many great volunteers. Just being selected as a finalist puts a spotlight on us and our small-town feel. I can’t wait to see Niverville win and have the Jets in our community come March.”

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Friday, Dec. 5, 2025

Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon

Mick E Moose and the Winnipeg Jets could be back in the region, as Niverville, Oakbank and Gimli were announced as the three finalists for the upcoming 2026 Jets Town Takeover. Manitoba’s NHL team will host a watch party during an away game March 19 in one of those three centre. The Jets mascot was in Steinbach to kick off the team’s Whiteout Tour across the province earlier in 2025.

Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon

Mick E Moose and the Winnipeg Jets could be back in the region, as Niverville, Oakbank and Gimli were announced as the three finalists for the upcoming 2026 Jets Town Takeover. Manitoba’s NHL team will host a watch party during an away game March 19 in one of those three centre. The Jets mascot was in Steinbach to kick off the team’s Whiteout Tour across the province earlier in 2025.

Red-Seine-Rat wastewater plant gets $22M from province, feds

Matthew Frank 3 minute read Preview

Red-Seine-Rat wastewater plant gets $22M from province, feds

Matthew Frank 3 minute read Friday, Dec. 5, 2025

The provincial and federal governments are boosting funding by $22 million for a southeastern Manitoba wastewater project servicing six municipalities.

On Nov. 25, Ottawa and the NDP government announced both governments will fund $76.9 million for five water and wastewater projects across the province.

The Red-Seine-Rat Wastewater Co-operative, a wastewater treatment plant slated for construction in 2026, was among the projects earmarked for more cash. Once completed, the plant would allow populations to double for 13 communities in the municipalities of Niverville, Hanover, Tache, De Salaberry, La Broquerie and Richot.

Manitoba’s Minister of Municipal and Northern Relations Glen Simard views the project as a high priority because it’s in one of the province’s fastest growing areas.

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Friday, Dec. 5, 2025

SUPPLIED

The provincial and federal governments announced $22 million in funding for Red-Seine-Rat Wastewater Co-operative’s plant project on Nov. 25. The plant will allow six municipalities to double their populations.

SUPPLIED 

The provincial and federal governments announced $22 million in funding for Red-Seine-Rat Wastewater Co-operative’s plant project on Nov. 25. The plant will allow six municipalities to double their populations.

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