Local
SPORTS FLASHBACK 2017: Rest easy, Jean Guy Tetrault
4 minute read Yesterday at 3:00 PM CSTA La Broquerie hockey legend lost a lengthy and courageous battle with cancer New Year’s Day, 2017.
Anybody who ever played hockey with Jean Guy Tetrault remembers him well. Anybody who ever played hockey against Jean Guy Tetrault remembers him even better.
A gentle man off the ice, a tough guy on the ice, and a hockey idol for two generations of La Broquerie Habs hockey fans, Jean Guy Tetrault passed away in the early hours of January 1, surrounded by his family.
He came by his hockey reputation honestly and early in his career. As the story goes, hockey players learned to take a wide berth around young Jean Guy when he first stepped on the ice at St Boniface College as a young student there.
Advertisement
Weather
Steinbach MB
-24°C, Windy
Manitoba launches digital health card
1 minute read Yesterday at 2:14 PM CSTManitobans can now access their health card digitally, along with the previous plastic or paper options.
The province launched its first digital health card on Jan. 12. The new card allows people to store their health card on a mobile device and show it to health care providers.
When signing up, Manitobans can ask for the plastic card options, a digital card or both. The MB Wallet app, the government app which stores the digital card, is free for users to download from the Apple App Store or Google Play. Once the digital card is downloaded, the app stores the information and is accessible offline.
To apply and find more information, Manitobans can go to https://gov.mb.ca/health/mhsip/digitalhealthcard.html
Ritchot contest gives snow plows new nicknames
2 minute read Preview Yesterday at 11:00 AM CSTCOLUMN: On Parliament Hill – Getting our heads around EVs, trade and China
4 minute read Yesterday at 8:25 AM CSTJournalist Brian Lilley posted last week that Canadians are saying we need to pivot from the U.S. because they have become “authoritarian, bad trading partners and a threat to our sovereignty”. The obvious follow-up question is this: if not the U.S., then who, China?
Recent history with China suggests that question deserves careful scrutiny.
Canada’s experience with China raises serious and unresolved concerns. We have opposed human rights abuses in re-education camps and advocated for the rights of the Uyghur and Falun Gong communities. We remember Nortel— Canadian corporate success story undermined by industrial espionage. We still lack clarity about the Winnipeg lab and the Chinese researchers who were escorted out of the country under the guise of national security. Canadians have not forgotten about the Chinese police stations that were positioned across Canada, nor the extensive and alarming revelations about foreign interference in our democratic institutions.
During the last election campaign, Prime Minister Mark Carney was asked what he believed was the biggest threat to Canada. His answer was unequivocal: China. In fact, this assessment was echoed repeatedly by expert witnesses and national security officials before House of Commons committees, where China was described as antagonistic and dangerous.
Drunk slip into ditch a sick experience
1 minute read Saturday, Jan. 24, 2026RCMP investigating a vehicle in the ditch at Hespeler Street and Loewen Boulevard discovered a driver who was significantly under the weather.
On Jan. 17 at about 7:30 p.m. police found the 24-year-old male whose vehicle was in the ditch.
The male was vomiting when police arrived at the scene.
Turns out it wasn’t just his precarious situation that made him sick.
Easter basket for community kids’ campaign begins
3 minute read Preview Saturday, Jan. 24, 2026January 18 blizzard puts halt to hockey across region
2 minute read Preview Saturday, Jan. 24, 2026Hockey tournament counted on to save Vita arena
5 minute read Preview Saturday, Jan. 24, 2026Southeastern Manitoba canola growers ‘cautiously’ welcome Canada-China canola deal
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Jan. 24, 2026Fatal vehicle fire under investigation
1 minute read Friday, Jan. 23, 2026An autopsy and dental records are being used in an effort to identify the victim of a fatal vehicle fire in the RM of Springfield.
Oakbank RCMP said in a news release that they were called on Jan. 14 after a truck was spotted on fire just off Briercliffe Road.
“Officers arrived minutes after being called, as did Springfield Fire Department, and observed a truck fully engulfed in flames in a ditch at the side of the road,” the news release said. “Once firefighters extinguished the fire, human remains were located inside the vehicle.”
Police are also investigating as to whether icy road conditions may have played a role.
La Broquerie skating trail open for season
2 minute read Preview Friday, Jan. 23, 2026Providence Pilots announce launch of curling program
3 minute read Preview Friday, Jan. 23, 2026Province denies Steinbach disaster assistance
3 minute read Preview Friday, Jan. 23, 2026Library regionalization off the table for now
4 minute read Preview Friday, Jan. 23, 2026Manitoba poverty strategy needs rural focus, specific measures, Steinbach charities say
6 minute read Preview Friday, Jan. 23, 2026RCMP stress crosswalk safety
2 minute read Preview Friday, Jan. 23, 2026LOAD MORE