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LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Provencher MP hardworking and principled

Don Plett, former senator, Steinbach, MB 2 minute read 2:24 PM CST

I am writing in response to Rick Loewen’s Feb. 12 letter regarding MP Ted Falk and the Conservative Party (Provencher MP wrong about Trump).

I have known Ted Falk to be a hardworking and principled representative for Provencher. The voters in this region have elected him repeatedly because he reflects their values. Disagreeing with him is one thing. Calling him useless is another. Our community deserves better than personal attacks.

On the issue of the United States, this should not be complicated. No matter who is president, the U.S. is our largest trading partner and closest neighbour. Thousands of Manitoba jobs depend on that relationship. Being careful and measured in how we deal with Washington is not weakness — it is common sense. Protecting Canadian jobs and industries should always come before scoring political points.

I was also disappointed by Mr. Loewen’s comments regarding Israel. Canada has long supported Israel as a democratic ally. Israel has a right to defend itself against terrorism. Hamas is a terrorist organization that deliberately targets civilians. Condemning Hamas and standing with Israel does not mean we lack compassion for innocent Palestinians caught in the conflict. It means we recognize the difference between terrorism and democracy.

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Carillon Sports Second Shots: Feb. 19th edition

Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon 1 minute read Preview

Carillon Sports Second Shots: Feb. 19th edition

Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon 1 minute read 12:00 PM CST

Featuring SRSS basketball and hockey games Feb. 11, a HTJHL playoff game in Grunthal Feb. 12, Niverville vs Steinbach MJHL action Feb. 13, Ste Anne vs Warren HTJHL Feb. 14, and Providence MCAC championship basketball Feb. 15.

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12:00 PM CST

Providence beat CMU in the MCAC women's basketball championship. (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

Providence beat CMU in the MCAC women's basketball championship. (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

New Bethesda expansion to see patients in March

Matthew Frank 3 minute read Preview

New Bethesda expansion to see patients in March

Matthew Frank 3 minute read 11:22 AM CST

A Steinbach hospital’s newest expansion will soon be seeing patients next month after construction finished in December.

The second phase of the Bethesda Regional Health Centre’s expansion project cost nearly $64-million and will add 15 new beds, with seven dedicated for palliative care, three operating theatres and a new cultural space.

“I think there’s a general feeling that patients are going to really enjoy the new spaces,” said Kyle MacNair, Southern Health’s implementation lead for clinical planning.

The Bethesda Foundation contributed $8 million for the expansion and the province funded the rest, he said.

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11:22 AM CST

SUPPLIED

Three new operating theatres are part of the Bethesda Regional Health Centre’s completed addition, which will see patients in March.

SUPPLIED 

Three new operating theatres are part of the Bethesda Regional Health Centre’s completed addition, which will see patients in March.

Bayer to build Winnipeg canola facility

Greg Vandermeulen 2 minute read Preview

Bayer to build Winnipeg canola facility

Greg Vandermeulen 2 minute read 8:28 AM CST

Bayer Crop Science will build a new canola research and development facility in Winnipeg in what is one of their largest investments in Canada to date.

The company announced the $45 million facility at the end of January, saying the new facility will strengthen Canada’s leadership in canola innovation by establishing what they’re calling an “innovation” centre.

The facility will house seed development work for canola, camelina and winter canola, focusing on trait integration, yield trial seed processing and seed quality analysis.

Antoine Bernet, country division head for Crop Science Canada said this long-term investment demonstrates their commitment to canola in Canada.

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8:28 AM CST

SUPPLIED

The facility will house seed development work for canola, camelina and winter canola, focusing on trait integration, yield trial seed processing and seed quality analysis.

SUPPLIED 

The facility will house seed development work for canola, camelina and winter canola, focusing on trait integration, yield trial seed processing and seed quality analysis.

COLUMN: Think Again – I am proud to be a Zionist

Michael Zwaagstra 4 minute read Yesterday at 2:17 PM CST

Israel has the right to exist as a Jewish state.

If you agree with this statement, then you are a Zionist. If you don’t, then you are not. It really is that simple.

To be clear, being a Zionist doesn’t mean agreeing with every decision made by Israel’s current government. Nor does it require you to dismiss the legitimate concerns of Palestinian people who also live in the region.

Rather, being a Zionist simply means you recognize that Jewish people have a right to exist as a nation in their ancestral homeland. Sadly, many people in Canada have no problem describing themselves as anti-Zionist.

U15 AAA Selects continuing to produce top WHL talent

Cassidy Dankochik 4 minute read Preview

U15 AAA Selects continuing to produce top WHL talent

Cassidy Dankochik 4 minute read Yesterday at 12:00 PM CST

Three years ago, Brek Liske (Beausejour) was taken by Everett in the first round of the WHL draft. Two years ago Graeme Pickering (St Adolphe) and Asher Gingras (Steinbach) were taken in the first round. Last year Crosby Mateychuk (Dominion City) was selected by Vancouver and has already made the jump to major junior.

In 2026, Île-des-Chênes’ Nixon Gaudet is hoping to add his name to that list, as the U15 Eastman Selects enjoy another strong year in the AAA league thanks in part to the 2011-born forward’s efforts. Gaudet had 50 goals in the first 29 games of the season.

“He’s probably one of the most skilled players in the draft, but because of his size he gets knocked back a few pegs,” Selects head coach Gerald Tetrault said.

“That being said, he’s a dog and he works so hard and I’m super proud of where he’s come in the last couple years as a player.”

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Yesterday at 12:00 PM CST

Eastman Selects forward Nixon Gaudet is on track to be a high pick in this year's WHL draft. The 2011-born Île-des-Chênes product had 50 goals in the team's first 29 games and leads the team in scoring. (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

Eastman Selects forward Nixon Gaudet is on track to be a high pick in this year's WHL draft. The 2011-born Île-des-Chênes product had 50 goals in the team's first 29 games and leads the team in scoring. (Cassidy Dankochik The Carillon)

COLUMN: On Parliament Hill – A nation with a broken heart and open arms

Ted Falk, MP for Provencher 4 minute read Yesterday at 11:20 AM CST

On Feb. 11, parliamentary leaders paused House of Commons proceedings to address the nation following the tragic mass shooting in Tumbler Ridge, B.C. In his comments to the House, Pierre Poilievre’s words included a request for all Canadians to pray for the community and for the families, offering whatever support we can.

Canadians watched as political leaders seized the moment to unite in the face of this unthinkable tragedy. Throughout the weekend, a picture capturing that unity circulated widely in the media, showing political leaders and the governor general standing hand in hand.

Canada stands with the people of Tumbler Ridge.

Standing alongside Prime Minister Mark Carney and other federal party leaders, Pierre Poilievre described the moment as one of grace and unity in Canadian politics. “We all lead political parties,” he said, “But today there are no Conservatives, no Liberals, no New Democrats, no Bloc, no Greens. We are all, as we were on that plane together, mothers and fathers.”

COLUMN: Grey Matters – Dark in the dark

Gary Dyck 4 minute read Yesterday at 8:25 AM CST

“Knowing your own darkness is the best method for dealing with the darkness of other people.” -Carl Jung

Long before clocks dictated our days and electric light chased the night away, human life moved in quiet partnership with the sky. Dawn called us gently into one another’s presence, while dusk invited us home again - to fires, stories, prayers, and rest. Darkness was not an enemy then. It was a dwelling place. We are now realizing that wellbeing does not come from constant brightness and striving, but from moving wisely and faithfully between light and dark.

We have become too binary in our thinking. Yes, there is a dark that is bad, that darkness makes a good metaphor for things like evil, sin and death. But we are not talking about that kind of dark. There is another dark: one that shelters, heals and is good. As Barbara Brown Taylor writes, “I wish I could turn to the church for help, but so many congregations are preoccupied with keeping the lights on right now that the last thing they want to talk about is how to befriend the dark… meanwhile, here is some good news you can use: even light fades and darkness falls – as it does every single day, in every single life – God does not turn the world over to some other deity.”

Our mistakes, our regrets, our willingness to feel the ache of this world – these, too, shape us into better loves of life and one another. After making friends with the dark, we can be moved to tender kindness for our friends when they have their dark times. Naomi Shihab Nye captures this truth in her poem Kindness:

COLUMN: Carillon Flashback October 24, 1946 – Fur farms are significant in Southeastern Manitoba

Wes Keating 5 minute read Preview

COLUMN: Carillon Flashback October 24, 1946 – Fur farms are significant in Southeastern Manitoba

Wes Keating 5 minute read Monday, Feb. 23, 2026

When people think of the animals on the farm, dairy and beef cattle, pigs, chickens and sheep come to mind. But there was a time when mink and foxes were just as important to many a farmer in the Southeast. In 1946, William P. Wiebe, who managed a fur farm in Steinbach’s east end, provided The Carillon News with an up-to-date report on the industry at that time.

Fur farming is a highly specialized industry, Wiebe said, and fur farmers get out of it only what they put in.

In southeastern Manitoba, the raising of fur-bearing animals is steadily gaining in importance, and at present it is estimated that approximately $175,000 worth of pelts are sold annually. Then there is also the revenue from breeding stock that is being sold by some of the top-notch fur ranchers. Breeding animals, of course, nets owners many times as much income as the marketing of pelts.

The gestation period for minks is 40 to 73 days, so minks increase on an average of 3½ times a year; foxes don’t do quite as well, but breeding stock outstrips income from fox pelts as well.

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Monday, Feb. 23, 2026

CARILLON ARCHIVES

Stony Brook Fur Farm manager William P. Wiebe with his pet silver fox.

CARILLON ARCHIVES 

Stony Brook Fur Farm manager William P. Wiebe with his pet silver fox.

Hanover council approves female transitional home in Mitchell

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 4 minute read Preview

Hanover council approves female transitional home in Mitchell

Svjetlana Mlinarevic 4 minute read Monday, Feb. 23, 2026

RM of Hanover council has approved a conditional use order that will allow for transitional housing for women in Mitchell.

The approval of the conditional use order was granted by council Feb. 11 during a public hearing. The housing is an initiative between Initiatives for Just Communities (IJC) and the department of families’ community living disABILITY services.

IJC’s director of services and operations Kevin Drain said the organization has been discussing the housing project with the province for a couple of years and last year IJC put a proposal together to set up housing in a large single detached home.

The province came back and suggested they look for a more manageable and less crowded housing option, so IJC leased two duplexes in Mitchell.

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Monday, Feb. 23, 2026

SVJETLANA MLINAREVIC THE CARILLON

Initiatives for Just Communities director of services and operations Kevin Drain (left) stands next to associate director Bella Harder in front of the transitional housing unit located in Mitchell, on Feb. 11. The duplex is located at 64 and 66 Birchwood Lane and will house six female residents with intellectual disabilities who are high functioning. There will also be two on-site around the clock support staff. The housing program will help the women learn essential life skills, such as budgeting, grocery shopping, housework, working through relationship issues, and getting employment. Residents are expected to move in this spring.

SVJETLANA MLINAREVIC THE CARILLON 

Initiatives for Just Communities director of services and operations Kevin Drain (left) stands next to associate director Bella Harder in front of the transitional housing unit located in Mitchell, on Feb. 11. The duplex is located at 64 and 66 Birchwood Lane and will house six female residents with intellectual disabilities who are high functioning. There will also be two on-site around the clock support staff. The housing program will help the women learn essential life skills, such as budgeting, grocery shopping, housework, working through relationship issues, and getting employment. Residents are expected to move in this spring.

$5 annuities paid to Treaty 1 members worthless, lawyer tells court

Dean Pritchard 2 minute read Monday, Feb. 23, 2026

First Nations that occupy what is now southern Manitoba entered into a treaty with the Crown in 1871 that promised each member a $3 annuity while allowing settlers access to more than 40,000 square kilometres of land.

The annuity was increased four years later to $5, where it has remained for more than 150 years.

Lawyers for Treaty 1 territory First Nations are in a Winnipeg court seeking billions of dollars in compensation for annuity payments they argue have lost all value,

The original treaty was negotiated by the Crown when it wanted to open up Manitoba to settlement, but “did not have the military resources to take the territory by force,” Michael Rosenberg, lawyer for representative plaintiff Zongidaya Nelson of Roseau River Anishinabe First Nation, told King’s Bench Justice Shane Perlmutter in his opening address Monday.

Providence College set to add rugby next fall

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read Preview

Providence College set to add rugby next fall

Cassidy Dankochik 2 minute read Monday, Feb. 23, 2026

Providence College continues to add sports programs to their offerings.

With Cross Country, Curling and now rugby, the Pilots are set to add three new sports during the fall 2026 semester.

Providence will play Rugby 7s in the Prairie University Women’s Rugby Conference, with the aim of playing 15s next year. Isi Masi, who played high-level rugby in Austrailia and Manitoba and coaches the Eastman Warriors women’s rugby team, will head up the program.

Athletic director Joel Coursey said Masi is the perfect coach to build a strong culture around the sport at the school.

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Monday, Feb. 23, 2026

Isi Masi will lead the Providence rugby program in its inaugural season. (Providence College)

Isi Masi will lead the Providence rugby program in its inaugural season. (Providence College)

Tache looks to leave WMR

Matthew Frank 4 minute read Preview

Tache looks to leave WMR

Matthew Frank 4 minute read Monday, Feb. 23, 2026

The Rural Municipality of Taché has voted to leave the Capital Planning Region, joining a growing list of municipalities unhappy with the provincial body.

Taché council unanimously passed a motion to file the ask to Municipal Relations Minister Glen Simard during a Jan. 27 public works meeting. The move came one week after Springfield passed a similar motion to want out of the Capital Planning Region.

Taché Reeve Armand Poirier labeled Winnipeg an “elephant” and took issue with its voting power on the planning region’s board, which allows it to have a double majority on decisions.

“It’s important for Taché and all the other municipalities to be at the table, to be heard on what we expect to see happen in our jurisdictions, rather than sticking our heads in the sand and pretending that we don’t exist,” he said. “By doing that, we’re going to get chewed up and spit out.”

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Monday, Feb. 23, 2026

CARILLON ARCHIVES

The Rural of Municipality of Taché voted to withdraw from the Capital Planning Region on Jan. 27.

CARILLON ARCHIVES 

The Rural of Municipality of Taché voted to withdraw from the Capital Planning Region on Jan. 27.

COLUMN: Village News – Winter memories

Robert Goertzen 4 minute read Preview

COLUMN: Village News – Winter memories

Robert Goertzen 4 minute read Monday, Feb. 23, 2026

Mennonite Heritage Village held its annual winter carnival last Saturday. The mild winter day was conducive to many outdoor activities for all ages, and our volunteers and staff shared stories of the early Mennonite settler experiences of surviving Manitoba winters in the semlin. Hundreds of families and extended families spent the day skating, snowshoeing, and pushing each other around on the kick sleds. The horse-drawn sleigh rides through the peaceful winter village setting and the experience of being pulled on a dog sled by five eager mushing dogs were added features to this day of interacting with nature at MHV.

As brothers and sisters, aunts and uncles, and grandmas and grandpas were enjoying these activities, I was reminded of winter days in my childhood. Growing up on a farm, our family enjoyed the outdoors on a daily basis. We had our regular farm chores of tending to the animals in our barn or in the outdoor shelter, but we also played outside whenever we could. After a fresh snowfall, we would make trails around the yard, following each other in games of tag, hide and seek, and duck-duck-goose. The snow piles on the yard served two purposes, first of all, these became wonderful sliding hills with our toboggan and sliding carpets, either taking turns with my sister and brothers, or piling on as a group to see how far we could travel with the added weight. Secondly, we would designate certain hills safe for creating tunnels and we spent many hours carving out tunnels or cutting out snow blocks to build little snow shelters. Many years, Dad would spend hours flooding an area near our well house to create an ice rink and with our hockey sticks and a puck, we would pretend to be our favourite Montreal Canadiens or Toronto Maple Leafs player.

When it was finally time to be called inside by Mom, we would place our outdoor clothing near the wood-burning stove to dry off and be treated to hot cocoa or a home-baked cookie, as our rosy cheeks indicated that we had benefited from a ‘fresh air’ outdoor experience.

Last Saturday, at MHV, the outdoor firepit was a popular gathering space for warming up and enjoying roasted marshmallows. Some families even brought their own wieners and buns to have a roasted hotdog treat. Many people took time to visit the canteen for fresh waffles with white sauce and a cup of hot chocolate before they went back outside to try their hand at snow carving or crokicurl.

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Monday, Feb. 23, 2026

The Winter Carnival provided opportunities for visitors to learn about animals and their relationships with us.

The Winter Carnival provided opportunities for visitors to learn about animals and their relationships with us.

Drugs found in gun search

Greg Vandermeulen 1 minute read Sunday, Feb. 22, 2026

A search warrant granted on information that a residence was home to unauthorized firearms in Roseau River First Nation, saw officers from the Manitoba First Nations Police Service, the crime reduction enforcement unit and the RCMP emergency response team come up empty, but only in regard to their original purpose.

Instead of guns, police found drug paraphernalia in plain view.

A second search warrant was authorized, and investigators turned up 32 grams of suspected methamphetamine with an estimated street value of $3,000. Police also seized scales, mobile devices and packaging materials.

Three people were charged as a result.

Growing Home program returns

Greg Vandermeulen 2 minute read Preview

Growing Home program returns

Greg Vandermeulen 2 minute read Sunday, Feb. 22, 2026

Communities across Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta and Ontario have an opportunity to access up to $25,000 from a prize pool of $160,000, thanks to BASF Agricultural Solutions and their Growing Home with BASF community program.

Back for its fourth year, the program is designed to empower Canada’s agriculture community to support the organizations that in their words “strengthen the fabric of rural Canada and make a difference in their hometown.”

Last year, thousands of Canadians nominated and voted for local organizations that help rural communities including childcare services, agricultural societies and hospital foundations.

Andrea McConnell, customer solutions for BASF Agricultural Solutions Canada said the program has gained momentum over the last four years.

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Sunday, Feb. 22, 2026

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The 2024 winner from Manitoba was the St Jean Fire Department.

SUPPLIED 

The 2024 winner from Manitoba was the St Jean Fire Department.

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