Local
Safety and well-being plan offers action items for Steinbach
3 minute read Yesterday at 5:04 PM CSTSteinbach’s community safety and well-being plan is nearing completion and city council was given a host of recommendations during a Zoom presentation at their strategic priorities committee meeting on Tuesday.
The Canadian Centre for Safer Communities, tasked with coming up with the plan alongside a local steering committee, shared their findings from surveys and other fact-finding missions.
Katie Cook, the director of operations and services for The Canadian Centre for Safer Communities, walked council through the process of the plan that is designed as a strategic framework to help guide and inform local decisions and actions to enhance safety and wellbeing.
Steinbach is one of 12 communities to receive provincial funding to develop a plan. The agreement will also see a one-time grant of $60,000 that the city will be able to use to implement some of the recommendations.
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SPORTS FLASHBACK 1988: SPORTOPICS — Give it the inturrrn, Rrrrobbie
3 minute read Preview Yesterday at 3:00 PM CSTLETTER TO THE EDITOR: Grand Slam of Curling a world-class event
2 minute read Yesterday at 2:24 PM CSTAs a civic address, 326 Hanover Street no longer exists. It is now section 109 of the snazzy, new Southeast Event Centre. The bungalow built on this site in the 1950s was my childhood home.
While watching the world’s best curlers at the recent Grand Slam of Curling, our family remembered that house and yard with fondness. We intentionally selected tickets on what was once our property. We were literally sitting where we once hung out laundry, picked raspberries, held a funeral procession and burial for our three goldfish, and planted spruce seedlings from our Grade 6 class trips to the Hadashville forest nursery. It was a great place to grow up.
Nostalgia aside, it was really neat to attend this world class event in Steinbach in such an amazing facility. It seems overwhelmingly unanimous that the event and venue were a smashing success. That Steinbach can now attract high calibre elite events like the GSOC is very impressive. Many people worked hard to make the SEC reality and they, and all Steinbachers should be proud. They deserve a modern, spacious, state-of-the-art sporting venue.
As the city continues to grow, evolve and respond to the needs of the community, it is my sincere hope that Steinbach City Council’s next land expropriation project includes a modern, spacious, state-of-the-art performing arts centre. Steinbachers deserve that too.
Manitoba Junior Hockey League teams cement standings at deadline
2 minute read Preview Yesterday at 12:00 PM CSTHanover hires new CAO, brings fresh perspective to council
3 minute read Preview Yesterday at 11:32 AM CSTAS I SEE IT COLUMN: Sporting events can reveal the best (and worst) in humanity
4 minute read Yesterday at 9:00 AM CSTOne of the beautiful aspects of sport is its unique ability to show us the best of the human condition.
Such was the case last week with the Grand Slam of Curling (GSOC) bonspiel in the Southeast Event Centre. By every measure it was a smashing success. The curlers loved it, the GSOC is already talking about coming back, the crowds loved it and it was in every way a very special experience.
Steinbach looked great on the national and international stage.
To think that 13 Olympic teams were curling in Steinbach, teams we’ll soon see at the Winter Olympics in Italy, is almost beyond description. There is a very real possibility that fans in attendance will see gold, silver and bronze medal winners in the men’s and women’s curling competition at the Olympics and be able to say with a huge smile, “we just saw them a few weeks ago at the Southeast Event Centre.” That is crazy cool.
COLUMN: Ask the Money Lady – Soft culture
4 minute read Yesterday at 8:19 AM CSTDear Money Lady Readers – Why not adopt the new “Soft-Life” culture in 2026?
The hustle culture is something my demographic, (ages 50 to 65) and our parents have been used to all our lives. Living by the motto that you can’t be successful unless you “work really hard, show up every day ready to overcome any obstacle, with a no-limit attitude, and of course, programed for greatness.” We quickly passed judgment on anyone who didn’t seem to be working hard, and everything in our lives had to become second to our all-encompassing career. Sound familiar? There are tonnes of books out there printed in the 80’s, 90’s and early 2000’s pushing the hustle culture. Suggesting you should create your own “vision board;” telling you to not limit yourself, and this one I love: “never settle for less than what you truly deserve.” My generation was always told to: “suck it up buttercup – stop complaining and get out there, get over it, work harder, and do more.” Well, that’s not the way life is now.
Today young Millennials and the vast majority of Canadian and American Gen’Zs are adopting the new “Soft Life” culture, the complete opposite of their parent’s belief system. They don’t want to live to work, like mom and dad did. No, they want to enjoy their life, focusing on balance, ease, self-care and personal fulfillment through intentionally enjoying the small wins. Have your Gen’Zs hit you with these statements yet: “we need you to respect our boundaries” or how about this one, “it’s not about the money” (regardless of you paying, you still have to go along with their choices not yours). Parents and older generations are having a tough time making this mental shift and many have written me about their troubles. They believe their kids are unmotivated or ungrateful for the monetary assistance from their parents.
While I definitely can relate, I’m thinking the hustle culture generation should also adopt the “Soft-Life” mantra too. Now before you throw down the paper is disgust – keep reading please. When we were young, it was all about proving “you could do it!” But to what end? I’ve seen co-workers, family and personal friends hit their late 40’s and 50’s still pushing, only to be silenced by a single tragedy. Was it worth it – maybe, only you will know? I never thought I would ever say this, but I’m glad this next generation is pushing back on the hustle mentality. Good for them to want more out of life than just their career. It’s been tough for all of us oldies to deal with the micromanaging bosses, back-stabbing coworkers and peers that have accomplished more in less time.
Rainbow Trout Music Festival takes hiatus
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Jan. 17, 2026Edwards lands in Niverville with a bang
2 minute read Preview Saturday, Jan. 17, 2026COLUMN: Report from the Legislature – NDP bring high taxes, debt and overregulation
4 minute read Saturday, Jan. 17, 2026Recently, the NDP government admitted their budget deficit would be $1.6 billion—more than double what they said it would be at the beginning of the year.
Despite this sudden and drastic increase, Wab Kinew and the NDP still claim they will balance the budget by next year—a claim that would be laughable if the consequences were not so serious.
Saying you have a plan to balance the budget is not a plan to balance the budget.
Small wonder this financially illiterate NDP government continues to miss budget projections, rack up debt, and generally act like Manitobans are made of money.
Reigning MJHL MVP Connor Paronuzzi returns to Steinbach Pistons
5 minute read Preview Saturday, Jan. 17, 2026PHOTO GALLERY: Steinbach hosts elite curling event
1 minute read Preview Saturday, Jan. 17, 2026Access CU announces focused funding grants for schools
2 minute read Preview Saturday, Jan. 17, 2026COLUMN: Beyond the Shelter – Inside Agape House: Who we are and why this work matters
3 minute read Preview Friday, Jan. 16, 2026Seine River School Division’s U.S. travel ban to remain
2 minute read Friday, Jan. 16, 2026Seine River School Division will continue its U.S. travel ban for divisional staff and students.
The ban, first put in place on March 11, 2025, was brought forward for trustees to revisit during Tuesday night’s board meeting following the administration receiving requests from multiple teachers and staff to attend training opportunities across the border.
Trustee Gary Nelson told the board he has no interest in changing the policy.
“I think things are more difficult now than they were a year ago,” he said Tuesday night.
Southeast Event Centre hits ‘Grand Slam’ with curling event
4 minute read Preview Friday, Jan. 16, 2026LOAD MORE