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Home/Featured Article Archives/2025 Print This Page

AUGUST 21 2025

History on Display

Pioneer Village Museum’s Heritage Day well attended
Hundreds of spectators took in the annual Heritage Day celebrations held at Beausejour’s Pioneer Village Museum this past weekend making the trip down memory lane wildly successful for many.

Established in 1967, the Pioneer Village Museum recreates a small pioneer village complete with a school, community hall, train station, store, blacksmith shop and church. 

With most pioneers of the Beausejour/Brokenhead area being of Eastern European descent, many artefacts and tools depicting this lifestyle are located in the museum’s buildings.

Those on hand Aug. 17 for the Heritage Day celebrations were able to take in musical entertainment, dancing demonstrations and a threshing demonstration. Loaves of homemade bread baked in the clay ovens on the museum grounds were just one of the many tasty treats available at the concessions stand.

Boubard named Miss Indigenous Canada

By Andrea Geary
Gena Boubard plans to use her Miss Indigenous Canada title to raise awareness in support of 2SLGBTQIA+ youth in Sagkeeng First Nation and other First Nation communities in Manitoba and across Canada.

Boubard, 24, is Anishinaabe, Two-Spirit and non-binary. Crowned Miss Indigenous Canada on July 26 at the pageant held at Six Nations of the Grand River near Hamilton, Ont, this year’s pageant included 19 competitors from First Nation communities across Canada.

Miss Indigenous Canada’s mission is to empower and encourage Indigenous youth to develop leadership skills, give back to their communities and connect to their cultures. The pageant features an essay competition, interview, cultural presentation and scrapbook featuring the competitor’s work within their home community.
“The focus of the pageant is not on beauty. It was to honour the diversity of Indigenous traditions, values and practices. It didn’t feel like a competition,” Boubard said. “All of the competitors were incredible and devoted to their communities.”

Boubard was very surprised to be announced as Miss Indigenous Canada 2025. 

“I didn’t enter to win, but to raise awareness of Two-Spirit people.”
Boubard was recognized for her efforts in organizing and running Sagkeeng’s first Pride event held in June. The day included a parade, powwow, community feast, inspirational speakers and entertainment. 

Boubard said the local community was very supportive. 
“It was really beautiful for people to come together.”
At the age 17, Boubard was crowned Miss Southern Manitoba and competed in the Miss World Canada 2018 pageant. Parents and siblings provided inspiration and serving as strong positive role models.

Boubard hopes to continue generating support for 2SLGBTQIA+ youth and their families. 

“I’d really like to spark conversations within communities to better support our youth.”

Boubard added that discrimination and violence against Indigenous 2SLGBTQIA+ individuals still exists within some communities. 

“I want to show them they’re not alone.”

Tariffs, weather slamming canola crop

By Andrea Geary
Slow germination, flea beetles and dry weather are negatively impacting this year’s canola crop, but a recent 75.8 per cent tariff levied by China on Canadian canola seed could be the last straw for some North Eastman farmers.

“It’s a high-cost and very unpredictable crop,” said Brokenhead Reeve Brad Saluk, himself a producer, adding he paid $900 for a bag of canola seed. “It’s a disastrous crop this year.”

Saluk said a cool spring resulted in slow germination and flea beetle infestations meant more spraying was needed which has added to the cost of production. While he won’t be harvesting the crop for a few more weeks, he isn’t optimistic about yield.

“We need a 35-bushel (an acre) average to break even,” he said, adding that he’s estimating a yield of about 25 bushels.

Added to this year’s challenging growing conditions for many North Eastman canola growers is China’s 75.8 per cent tariff effective Aug. 14. China is Canada’s largest canola seed buyer, importing close to six million tonnes in 2024 to generate revenue of approximately $4 billion Canadian.

The tariff was placed a year after China launched an anti-dumping investigation into Canadian canola imports. There is speculation that China’s tariff comes as retaliation for the Canadian government’s 100 per cent levy on electric vehicles exported by China to Canada.
“We’re in this game to make a living,” Saluk said. “We’re the ones stuck in the middle.”

Warren Ellis, Manitoba Canola Growers chair, said the canola tariff hits farmers hard and calls on the federal government for assistance.

“This decision lands like a hammer blow to Manitoba’s canola farmers. We are days away from harvest, and now a critical market is effectively shut. We need the federal government to act decisively and immediately to get this market reopened because every day of inaction deepens the damage to our farms, our rural communities, and our economy,” he said.

Provencher MP Ted Falk said he’s sure China’s tariff is retaliation. 
“Ottawa’s decision to slap massive tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles, without any coherent strategy to protect Canadian exporters – invited a response,” Falk said. “And China chose to hit where it hurts: Canadian farmers.”

He joins Ellis in asking for federal action to ease the financial burden the tariff places on canola farmers. 

Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew stated he believes the federal government should use the $100 million collected through the EV tariff to compensate Canadian canola growers for any financial loss due to the seed tariff.

Changes for Springfield police

Therrien says dual services not functional, Fuhl calls for referendum
By Tony Zerucha
The future of policing in the RM of Springfield could look different, but before council decides, they want to hear from the public.

On Aug. 12, Springfield council discussed how to proceed with the Springfield Police Service (SPS) after a retirement and two resignations left it with no staff. The SPS office has been closed since Aug. 5.

CAO Colleen Draper said she removed all job postings for the chief and two constables.

“At this time, we’re not actively pursuing these postings to give council an opportunity to discuss,” she said. “If there are any changes to be made, the best time is to discuss them before we have people in those roles.”
Mayor Patrick Therrien cautioned that the SPS is not out of service, saying it is in “limbo” until council determines its next steps. He would like to see those next steps produce changes to local policing.

“The two policing services are not a functional way of conducting policing in the RM of Springfield,” Therrien said. “It’s a great idea to have extra police for the RCMP, but the RCMP have a certain level of training.

“The RCMP is thin, but they’re a world-class police service. We have to look at the cohesiveness and cost to the taxpayer. The costs are huge and are only going to go up.”

Therrien said the SPS tax burden is solely on local taxpayer, while the RCMP burden is spread across Canada. 

He said that leaves the issue of who does bylaw enforcement, because it isn’t the RCMP. Therrien suggested community safety officers, who are used by several municipalities. Before council decides, Therrien said that it must be discussed with the community. 

According to Manitoba’s Police Services Act, Justice Minister Matt Wiebe must approve the dissolution of any police service. Therrien said most callers he hears from want the SPS dissolved.

“The vast majority (said) don’t need the police service, only because they don’t want to be paying the extra taxes,” he said. “Other people say they want the police service around; they want to be safe and see the police around. We have to get in touch with the people in the RM.”

“Going forward, we should abide by what the Justice Minister says we need to do,” Coun. Glen Fuhl said. “Part of that process is doing public open houses.”
Fuhl suggested adding a referendum on the SPS to the ballot for next fall’s election.

“More police officers are better than less,” he added. “Do it properly, let the people speak, and bring it forward at election time.”
Fuhl’s referendum suggestion found support from several council members, including Coun. Mark Miller.

“I’m pleased Glen Fuhl is taking a page from Andy Kuczynski’s and my playbook on a referendum,” Miller said. “Our referendum on Sio Silica showed 90-plus per cent didn’t want it.

“Referendums are very important parts of engaging with the community. I’m very thrilled that Coun. Fuhl embraces that point of view when maybe he didn’t with Sio Silica.”

Kuczynski said any solution must ensure a sufficient police presence in Springfield’s industrial park, where businesses are suffering from significant levels of crime.

“We have to think as a council what we’re going to do to help those people,” Kuczynski said. “We have to do something quickly.”

Coun. Melinda Warren said there are rules to follow when dissolving a police service, and the proper process must be discussed with the Minister of Justice. She said council must increase the safety of community safety officers by ensuring, for example, that they have radio and backup communication.
“There are a lot of things to think about before we move forward,” she cautioned.

Therrien said community safety officers shouldn’t be tasked with potentially dangerous duties like stopping vehicles. That is the RCMP’s job.
“The RCMP is our police service, they always have been,” he concluded.

Winnipeg River Burger Trail sizzling

The Lac du Bonnet and District Chamber of Commerce is highlighting the culinary creativity of area restaurants with their annual two-week hamburger festival.
From Aug. 20 to Sept. 3, the Winnipeg River Burger Trail will feature 10 restaurants from Pine Falls to Elma each making unique and original hamburgers with customers voting for their favourites.
After sampling all of the specially created burgers, diners are asked vote for their favourite so a winner can be proclaimed. Guests will be encouraged to visit as many places as they can. 
Organizers hope the event will be a fun social experience while promoting the participating communities to residents and visitors. This is a great event to get people within the region out to explore other communities, and to learn about some of the fantastic restaurants. The event also attracts people from other areas who are burger aficionados.
A solid lineup of participating outlets include Lac du Bonnet’s Black Bear Golf Club, Chicken Chef and Drifters Gulf Restaurant and Lounge, Otter Falls Resort and the Pinawa Golf and Country Club, Papertown Motor Inn and River Front Convenience in Powerview-Pine Falls, Seven Sister Motel and Restaurant, Starlette’s Burger Saloon in Elma, the Spicy Radish in Whitemouth and Wrapz Diner in Seddons Corner.
In 2024, participating restaurants sold a whopping 2,624 burgers combined with Otter Falls selling 325 of their Skeeter Bite Burger burgers to finish first. Drifters and Black Bear finished second and third respectively.
This year, Otter Falls features the Cluckin’ Caesar – a breaded chicken burger topped with Caesar salad with bacon pieces on a toasted garlic butter bun.
Drifter’s Sir Dips-A-Lot is a beef patty topped with cheddar cheese and chipotle sauce, served with warm nacho cheese and crushed cheetos to dip into. 
Black Bear offers a Mexi Burger with fried mixed cheddar cheese, sliced pepper, crispy lettuce and fresh tomato. Served on a toasted brioche bun with homemade bold mexi aioli, diced jalapeños and onions to bring the heat, and house-made seasoned taco chips for that perfect crunch.
Chicken Chef Lac du Bonnet’s Viva la Italia Smash Burger has two smash patties topped with a homemade marinara jam, melted creamy cheese, crispy prosciutto chips and fresh arugula, all on a toasted brioche bun slathered with house-made arugula pesto.
Pinawa Club’s A Whole in One is a fresh, sweet and sticky glazed bagel turned inside out with two smash patties, cheddar cheese and a dollop of tangy mustard.
Riverfront Convenience features The Juicy Lucy – a smoked ground chuck burger stuffed with a blend of sharp cheddar cheeses and caramelized onions. It is topped with a homemade burger sauce, crispy bacon, leaf lettuce and tomato, stacked on a sturdy cheese bun.
The Seven Sisters Motel has the Double Oink Burger featuring a beef patty topped with barbecue pulled pork, bacon and all the fixings – mustard, relish, tomato, pickle, ketchup, lettuce and cheddar – on a bakery-fresh bun.
Starlette’s Burger Saloon has The Big Wild West. This is built with two house-made patties, loaded up with chilli, double cheese, lettuce, tomato, onions and pickles , and smothered in our signature cowboy sauce on a sesame seed bun.
The Spicy Radish has a Steakhouse Burger – a ground chuck beef patty, roasted mushrooms, crispy onions, tomato pepper jam, horseradish sauce, monterey jack cheese and greens on a house made garlic buttered bun.
Wrapz Diner has The Things and Stuff Burger. As it is billed, there’s things in it and stuff. Try it to find out.
For more information contact Lac du Bonnet Chamber of Commerce at ldbchamberofcommerce@gmail.com or call 204-340-0497.

Girl Guides hope to re-open in Beausejour

By Morgan Maguet
After several years, the Beausejour Girl Guides unit is hoping to re-open for the upcoming guiding season.
A lack of volunteers and leaders in recent years has resulted in a gap in program delivery for the Beausejour area. As local Guide leader Tammy Welsh explained, the Brokenhead area programs have been struggling with these issues for many years.
 “Girl Guides has been off and on in the Tyndall, Garson and Beausejour area for at least 40 years,” said Welsh. The last time the Girl Guides program was offered in Beausejour was from 2005 to 2013. Shortly after, units moved to Tyndall as many of the remaining volunteers and leaders lived in the Tyndall and Garson region.”
However, the Tyndall program has also come to an end in recent years. 
“In 2022 the Tyndall units also closed for the same reason – Guiders retired or moved,” said Welsh. “Today, we have many members who live in Beausejour, Garson and Tyndall who have to drive to Oakbank to participate in meetings. This is also putting pressure on some of the Oakbank units, with their program currently holding a wait list of 14 girls.”
In order to re-open the program and offer units to the public, volunteers will have to start coming forward as soon as possible.
“Each unit or age group needs a minimum of two leaders. We are hoping for two volunteers to come through so we can open a mixed unit for both Sparks (ages 5-6) and Embers (ages 7-8, previously called Brownies),” said Welsh.
“As of today, there are two potential volunteers who have contacted the email address. If those two volunteers work out, we will be able to open a Spark/Ember unit by the end of September. Unfortunately, without more volunteers we will have to limit the girls joining the unit to about 10,” said Welsh.
Ideally, the Girl Guides program would have as many volunteers as possible to help with various programs and fundraisers throughout the year, and to run a full slate of age groups in the area. For now, Welsh’s next goal is to have enough leaders to open a Guide unit (ages 9-11).
Welsh has been a part of the Girl Guides program for more than 35 years and would love to see it start up again in Beausejour. She believes both girls and leaders benefit from being in the program.
 “Girl Guides teaches girls to be strong, independent global citizens. We teach the importance of community service, money management, goal setting, protecting the environment and trying to lessen your carbon footprint. We also teach about Girl Guides all over the world. We talk about personal and mental health, and we promote being kind to everyone, no matter how different we are,” she said.
The program also offers many long-term benefits. 
“Girls who join Girl Guides and stay in the program have opportunities to apply for scholarships, work with youth, build strong job references, and travel the world to learn about other cultures.”
The Girl Guides also hope to offer some of the fun events and volunteer campaigns they had been offering in Beausejour several years ago.
“Girl Guide units do activities related to the environment, personal health, learning ‘how-to’ skills, and having fun with games, songs and crafts. Throughout the year, units often volunteer at a local food bank, play games with seniors, volunteer at local pet shelters, visit a fire hall, have sleepovers and camps, and take part in weekend activities such as a pool event or a corn maze,” Welsh said.
The call for volunteers reflects a broader challenge for Girl Guides in many communities, where leader shortages have made it difficult to sustain programs and limited opportunities for girls and their families.
Welsh is optimistic and eager to see the Beausejour program thrive again, bringing girls and leaders together through fun and adventure. Those interested in volunteering can email mb-evergreendc1@girlguides.ca

Pinawa Foundation awards grants

The Pinawa Foundation has announced their Community Project Month efforts in May raised over $113,300 for 17 projects, including the 50 per cent top up provided by the foundation
This year’s grants included:
Children’s Place Day-Care – furniture for new day care $14,259
Survivor’s Hope – Reaching Out Project Sarah Circle raised $10,443
Pinawa CancerCare – Treatment chair replacement $7,627
F. W. Gilbert PAC – 20 gymnastic mats $3,450
Pinawa Lions Club – pergola refurbishment and Pinawa birthday weekend expenses $6,750
Pinawa Public Library – computer upgrades $5,550
WSXC Ski Club – snowmobile for trail grooming $6,611
EMCA – LED stage lighting for the community centre $3,187
Courts of Pinawa Club – picnic tables with umbrellas $1,792
Pinawa Minor Baseball – reviving the game infield $3,879
Two Rivers Seniors – Services for Seniors programs $9,610
Pinawa Minor Hockey – scoreboard project $6,689
Pinawa Health Auxiliary – replacement bed/mattress project Year 2 $14,150
Pinawa Holiday Cheer Committee – tall trees and festive signs $937
Orville Acres Arena – brine line straightening $10,580
Pinawa Swimming Pool – community support for pool refurbishment $7,162
Pinawa Art 211 – Art in the Garden Tour signage and maps $705
All of these grants were awarded at the Foundation’s 2025 Annual General Meeting.
Carol Findlay from the Foundation said May is giving month in Pinawa and none of this would be possible without the support of donors, neighboring communities and municipalities, and second and third generation family members from far and wide.

Koskie enters Twins Hall of Fame

By Tony Zerucha
Friends, family and former teammates travelled from around the world to see Anola’s Corey Koskie be inducted into the Minnesota Twins Hall of Fame at Target Field on Aug. 17. 
With Koskie the 41st member of the club, former teammate Michael Cuddyer introduced the Manitoban, calling him a role model and highlighting his affinity for practical jokes. Former managers Ron Gardenhire and Tom Kelly spoke of his work ethic as the scoreboard video screen showed some of his many highlight-reel plays. Parents Maryann and Leonard sent greetings via video.
Major League Baseball Hall of Famer Rod Carew, who originally telephoned Koskie to inform him of his induction, helped him don his powder blue Hall of Fame blazer. MLB Hall of Famers Bert Blyleven, Tony Oliva, Paul Molitor, Joe Mauer and Jim Kaat, along with ex-teammates Torii Hunter, Joe Nathan, Eddie Guardado, Brad Radke, Kelly and Gardenhire were present. Former Twins Rick Aguliera, Gary Gaetti, Greg Gagne, Dan Gladden, Justin Morneau and Jim Perry were also in attendance.
“Growing up, he was a volleyball player and a hockey player,” emcee Dick Bremer said. “When he became a major leaguer, he played defence like a hockey goalie, and served home runs over the fence like a middle hitter.”
Selected by the Twins in the 26th round of the 1994 draft, Koskie blossomed into a full-time Twin. In 2000, he batted .300, hit 26 home runs, drove in 103 runs and scored 100. He is one of only six Twins to score and drive in 100 runs in the same season. That year he shared the Tip O’Neill Award as Canada’s top baseball player with MLB Hall of Famer Larry Walker.
Also playing in Toronto and Milwaukee, his career numbers include a .275 batting average, 124 home runs, 506 runs batted in, 71 stolen bases, a .367 on-base percentage, .458 slugging percentage and 24.6 WAR (wins above replacement). He was elected to Canada’s Baseball Hall of Fame in 2015.
“He was an incessant worker and became a leader on three consecutive division champions,” Bremer added. “In short, he was a force of nature.”
Festivities included a reception for Hall of Famers and Koskie’s guests. Invitees included family, childhood friends and teammates like Jason Mateychuk and former Elmwood Giants coach Lorne Korol. In addition to his Twins teammates, Koskie invited teammates from throughout his minor league career, with one flying from Australia because he had to be there. Many others made the drive from Manitoba, sitting in the stands.
On induction day, Koskie’s guests were seated in three groups around the field. Koskie, his wife Shannon, and his children sat front and centre.
“I’m excited that the Twins are showing their appreciation, and Twins Territory is showing its appreciation to you in making you a Twins immortal,” Cuddyer said.
“Standing here today, I’m honoured to be among Minnesota Twins legends, my teammates, family, friends and you, the fans,” Koskie said. “The game is bigger than how I feel about myself. It’s about making a kid smile in that five-second moment we have together.”
“A farm boy from Anola, Manitoba, who didn’t start playing serious baseball until 19 is your testament that no mountain is too high, no challenge is too difficult to tackle,” he said to the audience. “Where there is a will, there’s a way; where there’s no will, there’s no way.”

Wildcats finish Top 10 at nationals

By Tony Zerucha
The Eastman Wildcats U17AAA endured some early hardships, but they came together to win a provincial championship and post a strong showing at the national championships. Key contributors were Beausejour’s Kaitlyn Bonkowski and Oakbank’s Sadie Church and Ella Sawatzky.

The season began slowly, with the Wildcats losing three of their first four games. A low point was an early tournament in Brandon, where the Wildcats scored a mere four runs over the weekend.

“The regular season got off to a slower start than we wanted,” Church admitted. “We weren’t playing consistently well in all areas of the game and lost more than we would have liked.”

Following the Brandon tournament, Coach Pat Tetrault held a team meeting.
“Many thought this team would be lucky to finish top four in the province,” Tetrault said. “The sputtering start to the season created adversity and challenged the team to become much closer and develop what started their team’s motto and quiet belief in themselves: ‘We have nothing to lose but to win!’”

That rallying cry keyed a turnaround that saw the Wildcats win 12 consecutive games to close the regular season. Like many teams, the Wildcats found success by focusing on the little things.

“Every pre-game speech from our coach was the same: one catch, one play, one at-bat at a time,” Bonkowski said. “Our focus came from playing clean and relaxed games and not getting ahead of ourselves.”

“Some highlights we had were the way we came together to play so well to win all those games against some very tough teams,” Sawatzky added.
The Wildcats opened the provincials on July 17 with a 10-1 win over the Manitoba Angels. The games tightened after that, as they beat the Westman Magic 2-0 later on opening day. On July 18, the Wildcats won two one-run contests, 1-0 over the Interlake Phillies and 6-5 over the Winnipeg Lightning.
How did the Wildcats stay focused during so many tight games?

“Cheer on your teammates and don’t worry about the things you can’t control,” Sawatzky said.

“A softball game is never over until it’s over, and no win comes easy,” Church said. “There are a lot of great teams in our league, and everybody has a chance to win when we take the field. Focusing on the next play and not getting too high or too low throughout a game is key.”

The club was on a roll, but had to cool their jets for nine days, as wildfire smoke caused a delay. Eastman made the most of it, with a strong practice that helped maintain focus. Once the provincials resumed, the Wildcats topped the Smitty’s Terminators 17-10 and Central Energy 5-2. The playoffs began with a 3-2, 10-inning win over the Lightning.

“(That) qualifier game was more stressful than the championship game,” Bonkowski said. “We ended up winning that game 3-2 in the tenth inning, securing our spot in the Canadian national championship.”

The provincial championship game would be a rematch with the Lightning. Could the Wildcats strike twice?

“The Lightning had runners on base and were hitting. They had already scored, and we had two outs,” Sawatzky said.

“The last few innings of the final game were tense,” Church added. “Despite having a 4-1 lead with an all-star pitcher like Kelsey Warketine on the mound, you have to execute defensively to lock down the win. Each pitch and each play matters.”

The final out was a ball to the shortstop, who fielded it cleanly and fired it to first. The Wildcats were provincial champions.

“The whole team dropped their gloves and ran over to the mound to celebrate with our pitcher,” Sawatzky remembered.

“None of us had ever been provincial champions before, so winning and being undefeated felt unreal,” Bonkowski said.

“It’s surreal when you get that last out,” Church said. “We have come up short in the provincial finals the last couple of seasons, so it is extra special to finally call ourselves provincial champions. We played hard and definitely celebrated hard when we got that last out.”

The momentum carried over to the National Championships in Warman, Sask. The Wildcats won their first three round-robin games by a combined 32-6 score. They lost the next two, including a close call against a powerhouse Quebec team that needed multiple extra innings to decide.

Undeterred, the Wildcats rebounded to beat the top Ontario team in the first playoff game. Their championships ended with a loss to Team British Columbia, who went on to claim the bronze medal.

The Wildcats are proud of their showing.

“The losses could have gone either way and included an extra innings loss to a very good team from Quebec and a 4-2 loss to a strong Ontario team,” Church said. “In the first round of playoffs, we beat one of the top teams in the country, the Ontario provincial champions. I think we shocked them and a lot of other teams by knocking them out of the tournament, but it confirmed that when we’re at our best, we’re one of the top teams in the country. 

“We ended up in seventh place out of 24 teams, which I feel is an amazing result for a group of girls from small towns across southeast Manitoba.”


AUGUST 28 2025

Beausejour crime rate up 300%

Mayor frustrated with repeat offenders, catch and release justice system
By Simon Ducatel
Frustration is mounting among Beausejour’s municipal leaders who are fed up with repeat offenders being released back into the community on bail or under house arrest only to continue committing crimes.
“Every community, unfortunately, has crime. But our crime rate has really driven up here over the last two months,” said Beausejour Mayor Ray Schirle. “And it’s because we’re getting so many people coming here on bail, on house arrest.”
Schirle attributes the substantial rise in instances of breaking and entering to a failure of sufficient bail reform exacerbated by the revolving door of justice, prolific offenders being placed in Manitoba Housing units and a lack of RCMP resources.
“It’s just a combination,” Schirle said.
Schirle said RCMP officers are “working their butts off here to arrest these people,” citing one habitual offender with 13 outstanding charges who was arrested four times in one week and still released and placed under house arrest in a Manitoba Housing unit.
“Now I have a drug dealer I’m trying to get out of a Manitoba Housing house,” he said. “The justice system doesn’t even share the information with the RCMP locally; they find out after the fact when they’re chasing the guy down.”
Incredulously, some of these offenders are found to be from other provinces, he said. 
“They raided a house a couple of weeks ago and they found out there was a guy from Ontario under house arrest in one of the houses,” he said.
“These officers are working day and night right now, making piles of arrests on repeat offenders in our community,” he said. “The RCMP has got their hands full.” 
Compounding matters is the absence of any kind of follow-up from the courts, he said.
“The court system and the justice system are totally failing right now,” he said. “We have over a half a dozen of these repeat offenders in our community that are causing all the crime... and every one of them is waiting for outstanding charges.” 
“People are not feeling safe in their homes (anymore),” he added. “I want to make sure it gets back to that.”
The issue has more to do with a backlog in the courts and lenient sentencing than a lack of room in correctional facilities like Milner Ridge, which Schirle says has a 24 per cent vacancy rate. The provincial government even previously reduced capacity at the facility in 2018 citing a declining prison population. 
Manitoba Housing is another factor, said Schirle. The mayor unequivocally expressed his support for public housing, noting there are people in the community that need it. However, there are some units housing “drug dealers and thieves” on bail or house arrest and they are not adequately monitored. 
“We have lots of units in our community, and out of all them I’ve got four of them that are causing us lots of problems,” he said. “At what point does Manitoba Housing start taking care of their houses?” 
A provincial spokesperson told The Clipper that Manitoba Prosecution Service has no role in co-ordinating how an accused, released on conditions, obtains housing. The Crown may check to confirm the address is legitimate and ensure that it is not near the homes of victims when considering release conditions. Local law enforcement would be responsible for ensuring that any release conditions are met.
The spokesperson added Manitoba Housing is not informed by Manitoba Justice in circumstances of house arrest, bail conditions or parole that someone has provided a Manitoba Housing unit address as their place of residence.
Asked what approach he believes would best mitigate the issue, Schirle said the justice system must share more information. 
“They need to look where they’re putting these people under house arrest,” he added. “They shouldn’t be in Manitoba Housing units. It’s bad enough they’re stealing in (the) community, but now we’re sitting here and we’re actually giving them a place to live and a roof over their head.” 
The mayor said he’s had one meeting with Manitoba Housing with another scheduled for next month. 
“The earliest they can all meet with us is the end of September,” he said. “To me, this is a today problem – not a month from now problem.” 
The municipality also recently sent letters to respective ministers and had yet to receive a response. 
“Maybe people need to start doing their jobs,” he said.
As a regional representative with the Association of Manitoba Municipalities, Schirle said Beausejour isn’t alone and that other communities are pushing for bail reform. Lac du Bonnet Reeve Loren Schinkel – a retired policeman with decades of experience working with Manitoba Justice – said RCMP are doing their best to respond to crime and catch perpetrators, but offenders all too often end up being released before police even finish their paperwork
“The bail reform that’s supposed to hold people that are charged with criminal offenses accountable is so terribly flawed and broken,” he said. “It’s been that way for a long time, and it’s perpetuating itself.”
The reeve was clear that he fully recognizes the need for due process. 
“I understand the need for the presumption of innocence until proven guilty; I get that,” he said, adding the problem arises “when an individual is apprehended successive times... and continually released on bail into the same environment and continues to perform criminal acts.”
Allowing this to go on “is morally and ethically wrong,” he said. 
“Beausejour’s crime rate for theft has gone up 300 per cent in the last few months, and people think it’s a victimless crime, it’s not a big deal. But it is, because that’s where it all starts,” he said. “The same thing is happening in Lac du Bonnet to a lesser degree; maybe it’s the proximity of Beausejour to Winnipeg, and they do have more Manitoba Housing units than we do.”
The reeve firmly places responsibility on Ottawa as it all boils down to the Criminal Code of Canada. 
“It’s got to be dealt with at that level, because it’s not a provincial jurisdiction issue. At the end of the day, this is federal legislation that has been largely, and continues to be, ignored.”
Sentences should more closely reflect the likelihood of a perpetrator re-offending. Someone who is already out on bail multiple times and released on an undertaking who violates their conditions needs to be incarcerated, he said.
“If it’s three strikes, you’re out,” he said. “They’re snubbing their nose at the rest of society and the criminal justice system. There’s no deterrent there.
And when it comes to conditions of release, Schinkel said judges follow the Criminal Code, which stipulates the least restrictive approach to release someone. 
“They’re following the law,” he said. “The laws have to be changed.” 
Despite the ongoing lobbying efforts of organizations like AMM, the reeve feels there’s been no progress on the issue. 
“You talk to the government officials, and then they go on their summer break... they are just not paying attention. My view is they’re not listening,” he said. “The level of frustration is getting higher and higher,” he added.

LdB RCMP seek info on person of interest

RCMP are seeking information on the identity of a person who tried to break into a Lac du Bonnet home twice in the same night.
On the morning of Aug. 21, Lac du Bonnet RCMP received a dispatch for an attempted break and enter to a home in the Town of Lac du Bonnet at 2:17 a.m. An unknown male was observed walking up to the residence’s back door and using a hammer to smash the window. The male did not make entry into the residence due to security camera’s on the property.
The man returned later that morning at 4:30 a.m. to attempt entry through the front door. When the suspect noticed a doorbell camera, they were viewed walking away from the residence. 
The male is described as wearing a black hoodie, black pants, with a trucker style hat – white mesh in the back and a black panel on the front. The hat may be recognizable to someone in the community as it has red lettering on the front of it. 
Anyone with information on the incident is asked to call the Lac du Bonnet RCMP detachment non-emergency line at 204-345-8685, the administration office at 204-345-6311, Crime Stoppers anonymously at 1-800-222-8477 or provide a secure tip online at www.manitobacrimestoppers.com

Double B Ag Fest Back In the Saddle

The 2025 version of the Double B Agricultural Festival has a schedule packed with live entertainment, agricultural and multicultural activities and semi-pro rodeo excitement fit for a 30th Anniversary celebration.

The Double B Agricultural Festival will occupy the Co-op Community Complex Sept. 5-7 with a carnival and midway run by Select Shows and rodeo entertainment provided in conjunction with the Canadian Cowboys Association and the Manitoba Rodeo Cowboys Association (CCA/MRCA)

The Brokenhead Agricultural Society is once again sponsoring the Double B Agricultural Festival and have been a crucial component in the event finding success for over a quarter of a century.

Incorporated in 1917, the Brokenhead Agricultural Society started with local farmers striving to help each other and local families and that has remained the guiding principle for over 100 years.
Schedule of Events
The Manitoba High School Rodeo kicks off this year’s festival Friday at 2 p.m. along with the opening of the Gret Cup Trailer followed by the opening of the Select Shows midway at 5 p.m. 

Saturday will start with a pancake breakfast running 7 to 9 a.m. The Manitoba High School Rodeo will immediately follow with a 9 a.m. start along with parade marshalling at the Beausejour Sportsplex.

At 10 a.m. the Double B Agricultural Festival parade will depart where floats, horses, cyclists, machinery and other participants will head west down James Avenue and turn north on First Street. To avoid construction on Park Avenue, the parade will turn east on Ashton Avenue (new this year) and south on Fifth Street as they wave to the hundreds of children and onlookers lining the roadways.

Chainsaw carver displays will begin at 10 a.m. and run to 4 p.m. 
The Select Shows midway and Prairie Exotics will open at noon and run all afternoon along with children’s activities including a petting zoo, pony rides, face painting, glitter artists and more. Hoop and Hat vintage comedy circus will take place at 12:45 p.m. JUNO award winning children’s entertainer Al Simmons will perform  at 2 p.m.

The CCA/MRCA semi-pro rodeo main attraction will begin at 5:30 p.m. with bull and bronc riding, calf roping, barrel racing and more. Intermission will feature a six-horse hitch team demonstration, wild pony races and wool riders.
The Double B Agricultural Festival’s legendary fireworks display will illuminate the sky when the sun goes down on Saturday evening, followed by a barn dance and saloon. Hazelridge brothers Jon and Daniel Hnatishin, and their country-rock band Banned & Outlawed, will be performing. Admission will be $15. No minors allowed.

Sunday will begin with a pancake breakfast starting at 8 a.m. with a car show at 10 a.m.

The midway will re-open at noon along with children’s activities and the chainsaw carvers display.

The CCA/MRCA semi-pro rodeo events will continue at 1:30 p.m.
Gate admission to the Double B Agricultural Festival on Friday is free with Saturday priced at $15. Sunday admission for adults will be $12. Children 12 and under are admitted free of charge as long as they are accompanied by an adult.

For 50/50 tickets or for more information, go to brokenheadag.ca

Hong Kong vet families at VJ Day 80th anniversary

By Simon Ducatel
As someone who would not be alive today had her father been among the many captured Canadian soldiers who perished during the Second World War amid horrible conditions in Japanese prisoner of war camps following the Battle for Hong Kong, VJ Day holds a special significance for Pamela Poitras Heinrichs.
On Aug. 15, 1945, Imperial Japan formally surrendered to the Allies, finally ending the global conflict in what is now known as Victory Over Japan Day, or VJ Day.
Her father, Pte. Ferdinand Poitras, a Red River Métis infantryman with the Winnipeg Grenadiers who was from St. Vital, managed to survive years of mistreatment suffered at the hands of his captors.
But many of the 1,975 Canadians who were deployed in a scramble to defend Hong Kong – among them 131 soldiers of Indigenous ancestry – did not.
“Many think the war was over in May but while people were celebrating that, the men of these two Canadian regiments were still toiling as slave labourers and being tortured in POW camps,” said Poitras Heinrichs.
Approximately 290 died during the 17-day battle in 1941 with hundreds more wounded. Some 267 later succumbed to appalling conditions in the camps over the following years. Those who were killed in action and others who later died during internment included 49 soldiers of Indigenous ancestry.
“It is unimaginable what they went through,” she said.
“My dad and many of the others were at camps in Japan, and as the length of their time in the camps was progressing, it’s documented that they were getting sicker and weaker,” she said.
“There’s also documentation that it was known that if Allies invaded Japan, all the prisoners were to be executed. And winter was coming – it was August – and medical personnel, after the fact, estimated that if the men would have had to go through another winter, many if not all of them probably would have died because they wouldn’t have had the strength to go through the winter and work in the coal mines,” she said. 
“It’s kind of weird to think myself and many others are sitting here,” said Poitras Heinrichs, who is married and has three children. “It’s really something difficult to get my head around.” 
So she believes their sacrifice must never be forgotten and to that end has for many years volunteered with the Hong Kong Veterans Commemorative Association towards honouring their memory.
“People need to know about history.” 
In recognition of the milestone 80th anniversary of VJ Day, the association participated in organizing an event in Ottawa on Aug. 14-17 that included a focus on soldiers of Indigenous ancestry.
The association has previously conducted research to identify Hong Kong veterans with Indigenous ancestry, and among the attendees were residents from Lac du Bonnet, Beausejour and River Hills who are related to those veterans, she said. Through funding from the Métis Veterans Legacy Program, 32 family members of Métis vets, representing 23 of the Métis veterans in the Winnipeg Grenadiers, were able to attend. 
“Both the family from Beausejour and the family from Lac du Bonnet, this is their first time going to something like this,” she said. “I’ve had people in actual tears knowing that they can go and do this... they’re just beside themselves.”  
The itinerary included a service at the National War Memorial followed by a wreath-laying at the Hong Kong vets Memorial Wall where all the veterans’ names are inscribed, and an educational workshop on the involvement of Indigenous peoples in the Canadian military.
Beyond the event in Ottawa, the effort to further honour and more formally recognize veterans with Indigenous ancestry includes identifying them all on the Hong Kong Veterans Commemorative Association website. The site also features photos including some of her father and those he was interned with.
“He talked about them a little bit,” she said, adding he otherwise did not speak much about his wartime experience. “I learned more as I got older, and more from other people in reading things about the atrocities that they suffered.”
In 2000, Ferdinand took Pam, her husband and their three children on one of the Veterans Affairs pilgrimages to Hong Kong and Japan, where they learned a lot.
“Looking back now and in his later years, once I learned more about it, it certainly explained a lot about him and the way he was with certain things,” she said.
Ferdinand passed away in 2008.
“He was almost 88 years old. I always said he was a prime example of, ‘if it doesn’t kill you, it makes you stronger.’”
The legacy left behind by the Hong Kong veterans through their descendants and the hope for a better future created a sense of connection among their families. 
“Whether it was your dad or your uncle or your cousin or whatever, they all went through the same thing,” she said. “You have that bond with everybody else.”

Dumas retires after three decades of support

By Tony Zerucha
Diane Dumas was lucky enough to find her passion, but after 30 years of helping older adults across eastern Manitoba, it’s time to say goodbye.
Springfield’s Service to Seniors coordinator since 2001, Dumas has retired. Her last day was June 27.
The journey began when Dumas was hired to work with older adults in Selkirk in 1995. Over the next six years, she also served in Whitemouth, Lac du Bonnet and Pinawa. She was hired in Springfield in 2001 and has been working for the municipality since 2010.
Dumas said she has always had a sense of compassion for and love of seniors. As soon as she started in the community, she visited the various programs to introduce herself and get to know the people and their needs. She always brought a list of programs and resources with her.
“Somebody always had a question, and I was there,” Dumas said. “They knew my face.”
She explained that it took many people and groups working together to help the community. Dumas has a roster of volunteers and fee-for-service workers who provide everything from yard care to rides to medical appointments. She also thanked her municipal coworkers and the many community groups, like the Springfield Community Library and The SPACE, for always helping with facilities and finding instructors for programs older adults wanted to try.
Above all, Dumas thanked those many older adults, past and present, for being an important part of her life. She credited them for being open to new ideas, whether it be trips, support groups or exercise programs. The memories are many, from the annual Halloween luncheon to bus trips to museums and the zoo.
Many of those activities provided valuable exercise, but even more important were the many social connections older adults formed. Some people had led more isolated lives, but after being convinced to attend a luncheon or bowling trip to Beausejour, they became fixtures. If they missed an event, folks asked where they were.
This was especially important as pandemic restrictions gradually lifted. Dumas surveyed people on what they wanted to do now that they could leave their homes. The response was unanimous.
“Every single person said the social aspect, making friends,” Dumas said. “And they did.”
That emotional investment in Springfield’s older adults showed its downside many times over the years when Dumas learned an older adult had passed on. Her heart broke many times.
“The toughest part is saying goodbye,” Dumas said. “As I always say, it makes me proud that I was part of their journey, that my volunteers and I could help in some way.
“It’s not a job you do for the money; it’s the love of the people.”
While she’s retiring, Dumas won’t be slowing down. She has long been a fixture at the Daylily Gardens in Beausejour and with animal care groups. Now and then, she’s likely to pop up at an event for older adults near you.
What will she do on her first day of retirement?
“I’ll go outside, drink my coffee with my dogs, and relax.”

Agassiz Garden Club Show a colourful event

Seasoned exhibitors and a number of new participants turned up with 270 entries for the annual Agassiz Garden Club show Aug. 11. 
The Lac du Bonnet Community Centre was filled with flowers, fruits, vegetables, baking and handicrafts. This year, photography entries were digital and were viewed as a slideshow set up Betty Loewen. Kayla Yanchak won the best photo.
As usual, a crowd of visitors came for the afternoon to view the exhibits and enjoy tea, coffee and sweets. In the evening, Laverne Wojciechowski and Ruth Monych presented the prizes and thanked everyone for their effort in staging another beautiful show. 
Junior prize winners were Amelie Holowachuk, Mikko Ikonen, Markku Ikonen and Saija Ikonen. 
Adult winners of plaques were: 
Best cut flower and most points in baking: Carol Clegg
Best gladiolus: Cherry White
Best vegetable in show: Pat Holowachuk
Best floral arrangement and most points in flowers: Laverne Wojciechowski
Most points in vegetables and most points in show: April Obirek 

4P Festival Aug. 29 to Sept. 1

The communities of Powerview-Pine Falls and St-Georges will once again welcome the 4P Festival during the Labour Day weekend and provide a host of activities for all ages.  

The 4P Festival is a celebration of the history and resources that contributed to the establishment of the cluster of communities. The four Ps stand for Paper, Power, Peas and Pickerel. The home coming event brings people of all ages back to visit friends and family and take part in the last blast of summer fun activities for all ages.

The 4P Festival was established in 1982 by the Manitou Rapids Arts Council. The festival ran the same weekend as the Jig and Jam in Pine Falls, and in 1983 organizers combined the two festivals and added a pickerel derby and tours to the Hydro dam, the Pine Falls paper mill and the Winnipeg River Heritage Museum in St-Georges, home of the famous peas used in traditional pea soup.
Activities and Events
Visitors can enjoy a wide range of activities at several locations in Powerview-Pine Falls and St-Georges. The events kick off at 9:30 a.m. Friday morning with the Winnipeg River Carvers Exhibit as well as the launch of the Bird and Butterfly Village Loop Trail Mural.

A Lego sculpture contest will be held at Library Allard at 11 a.m. as well as a youth art exhibit featuring work from the library’s summer camp program.
A community appreciation barbecue will be held at Town of Powerview-Pine Falls’ public works on Dupont Street at 11:30 a.m.

At 4 p.m., the Pine Falls Fire Department will host an open house and a fish fry with the Royal Canadian Legion Branch 64 Pine Falls hosting a meat draw at 5 p.m. 

The Winnipeg River Lions will host a Chase the Ace event from 5:30-8 p.m. with 50/50 tickets and a meat draw. Ace jackpot draw time is 8 p.m.
Comite Cultural de St-Geroges is hosting an Outdoor Movie Night at dusk featuring the French film Un p’tit truce ’n plus.

Saturday starts early as the Norm Vezina Memorial Slo-Pitch Tournament begins at the École Powerview School diamonds at 8:30 a.m. The Knights of Columbus will host a pancake breakfast at Notre Dame du Laus parish hall starting at 9 a.m. while a Bannock Boys 3-on-3 ball hockey tournament at the École Powerview School outdoor arena.

A car show and shine will begin at 10 a.m. at Powerview Auto complete with classic cars and barbecue. A market square and Indigenous Shoreline Museum will be set up at the curling club and a kids zone  will be at the Village Green with inflatable bouncers, train rides, a petting zoo, face painting and crafts.

The Manitoba Living History Society will demonstrate life skills of the Selkirk Settlers, fur traders, voyageurs, Métis and Indigenous people of Manitoba starting at 11 a.m.

The 4P Golf Tournament will begin at 1 p.m. at the Pine Falls Golf Club.
A Manitoba Hydro sponsored firewrosk display will take place at dusk beside Midway Foods while a 4P Summer Sunset Party will start at 10 p.m. at the Papertown Motor Inn.

Events like the slo-pitch tournament,  market square, Winnipeg River Heritage Museum guided tours and Manitoba Living History Society displays will continue Sunday. 

The 4P parade begins at noon and winds down from the Pine Falls pool to École Powerview School.

Plage St-Georges Beach will host A Day At the Beach with live duck race with a chance to win $1,000.

A highlight of the day will be an opportunity to cheer on the Winnipeg Blue Bombers in the Labour Day Classic against the Saskatchewan Roughriders on the big screen inside the beer garden at the Access Arena. Festivities start at 4 p.m. until the game ends.

There will be a Classic Manitoba Social at Access Arena from 8 p.m. to 1 a.m.
Labour Day Monday will feature a Winnipeg River Area Lions family fishing derby at the St-Georges boat launch. Registration for the 25-boat maximum event will begin at 8 a.m. First come, first served. 

Winnipeg River Heritage Museum guided tours begin at noon.

For more information email festival4P@gmail.com

Beausejour Slo-Pitch League playoffs a honerun

The Beausejour Slo-Pitch League (BSL) closed out the 2025 season with exciting action Sunday.
In women’s play, Die Hards returned to previous championship form in defeating Diamond Divas 14-4 in the A-B final Sunday. 
The two teams met Saturday in the A final with similar results, sending the Divas back in the B pool. The Divas topped The Bulls early on Sunday to set up the rematch with Die Hards - a club where some players have been teammates for 40 years. 
A5’s topped Drink N’ Run in the C event.
Ruth Place Eagles won their first BSL men’s title the hard way as they had to defeat the six-time champion Highway Hitmen twice in the A-B final, and did so by scores of 13-12 and 17-9.
The Hitmen won the A division Saturday over the Eagles, who rebounded to win the B event Sunday over Blue.
The Beavers defeated the Gophers in the C final.
In co-ed competition, Old Dawgs retained their 2024 title by defeating Tropical Punch 17-4 in the A-B final. 
Tropical Punch defeated One Hit Wonders in the B final at midday before facing the Dawgs in the afternoon. One Hit Wonders bested Grip and Rip to win the B event and punch their ticket to A-B final. 
Bats and Beavers defeated Rippers in the C final.

Rod Demoline golf tournament set for Sept. 10

The Lac du Bonnet Community Centre is hosting the 22nd annual Rod Demoline Golf Tournament on Sept. 10 at the Granite Hills Golf Club. 
This event is the most significant fundraiser for the community centre as the revenue generated provides a large portion of its annual operating costs.     
Lac du Bonnet Community Centre president Sharalyn Reitlo says the golf tournament is a great way for friends and family to get together or for businesses to say thank you to employees, business partners and loyal customers.
This annual tournament is held in memory of the late Rod Demoline, a community leader who held executive positions with the community centre, curling club, Lions and town council. Demoline passed away in 2003, but left a legacy the Lac du Bonnet Community Centre and their tournament sponsors and golfers continue to honour.
In 2024, the event was a roaring success as golfers raised approximately $12,500 with the winning team of Barry Carpenter, Frank Huber, Chris Hanson and Michel Fillion shooting a sizzling 58 or 14 under par.
“We can’t thank the players and sponsors enough for their support,” Reitlo said last fall.
Registrations are now being received from individuals or teams to enjoy 18 holes of golf in Texas scramble format, a shared power cart, lunch and prizes. Registration is at 9 a.m. with a shotgun start at 10 a.m. 
Golfers will also be challenged to enter contests to win larger prizes and the organizers guarantee a fun time for all.
Golfers wishing to participate are invited to email demolinegolf@gmail.com or call 204-345-6737. 

Hockey MB backs Ste. Anne appeal 

South Eastern Manitoba Hockey League must restore Aces for 2025-26 season 
By Tony Zerucha

The South Eastern Manitoba Hockey League (SEMHL) is back to 10 teams after Hockey Manitoba ruled in favour of the Ste. Anne Aces’ appeal following their expulsion this past spring. 

While the SEMHL executive, led by commissioner Tom Vatrt, has not commented since the May 4 expulsion, the Aces were quietly restored to the SEMHL website after the decision.

At the SEMHL spring meetings, representatives from the Aces, Springfield Winterhawks, and Ile des Chenes Northstars were asked to leave the room, as they are newer teams on probation. After 40 minutes, two teams were asked back in but the Aces were told they had been voted out.

The move came just weeks after the Aces won their third consecutive SEMHL championship, amassing a 41-13 regular-season record along the way. They also had just been crowned the best senior A club in the province.

“We… do not agree with it,” Aces president and head coach Kevin Lansard said in May. “This is a sad day for our players, our community and our fans. Since day one, we’ve worked hard to build a competitive and respectful team, on and off the ice. 

“We will take some time to regroup and reflect - and we’ll share more about our next steps when the time is right.”

In a July 20 email to Vatrt and CCd to the Aces and several Hockey Manitoba officials, Hockey Manitoba executive director Peter Woods said the organization is concerned that the SEMHL has removed the Aces, a decision it was urged to revisit.

“After a review of all the documents we are in receipt of, Hockey Manitoba has difficulty in understanding the underlying rationale that has instigated this decision,” Woods said. “It does appear the action taken against the Aces appears to be overly egregious, and that expulsion seems to be the only resolution that the SEMHL has considered.”

Woods said the action counters the goal of allowing anyone to play hockey. Overall registration numbers are above pre-pandemic levels, save for senior hockey.

Woods added the Aces felt the process was unfair and inconsistent with principles of inclusion and accountability.

“Hockey Manitoba is urging the SEMHL members to reconsider their previous decision and allow the Aces to remain a member,” Woods concluded.

Hockey Manitoba has now forced the decision upon the SEMHL. On Aug. 18, Lansard released a statement saying the Aces’ expulsion has been reversed and that Hockey Manitoba will continue to provide support to the league. 
Under Section 4.2 of its decision, Hockey Manitoba states, “The Ste. Anne Aces, member teams, and the SEMHL shall meet and work together for the benefit of the league and all its member associations and teams to address any concerns.”

“This was a long process, and we are extremely grateful that Hockey Manitoba has recognized our position and confirmed that the league’s actions were not in line with proper governance,” Lansard stated. “This ruling allows us to continue competing in the SEMHL, where we rightfully belong.

“From the beginning, our goal has been to build a respectful, competitive team that represents our players, community and fans with pride. (The) ruling reaffirms those values and gives our players and supporters the clarity they deserve.”

Vatrt declined comment, but said the SEMHL would issue a statement in the future.



SEPTEMBER 4, 2025

Brokenhead Foundation reaches $2M

The Brokenhead River Community Foundation (BRCF) is thrilled to announce that through the incredible support of donors, it has recently surpassed $2,000,000 in gifted funds to date.
“This milestone is a testament to both community and non-community members recognizing and believing in the good work the community foundation is doing in our community,” said BRCF administration and marketing coordinator Debbie Majeau. “It is so gratifying and rewarding to see what the community can accomplish together.”
The Brokenhead River Community Foundation model is unique in that all funds gifted (donated) to it are never spent. Instead, funds are pooled to various endowment funds and sustainably invested with a portion of the interest earned annually given back to the community every year. That giving back happens by way of grants to local groups for projects to make the community a better place to live, work and play, and to scholarships and bursaries to graduating students from the community going on to post-secondary education.
“Less than 30 months ago the Foundation reached $1,000,000 in gifted funds”, acknowledged BRCF president Reg Black. “Reaching $2,000,000 means the Foundation can double the support it provides to the community. To put the benefit of $2,000,000 into context for the community, it means that approximately $80,000 flows back into the community, every year, forever!”.
Black was quick to add that the improved recognition and growth of the Foundation would not have been possible if not for the ongoing support of both the Town of Beausejour and RM of Brokenhead. 
“Both councils understand and believe in the Foundation and its benefit to the community. The Foundation would not be where it is today without their support.” 
Donations of any size can be made to the BRCF at any time and in several ways. Besides monetary donations, the Foundation recently had a number of donors transfer securities (shares) to it which provide significant tax benefits to the donor. Donations are also received through wills and estates. 
A large number of donations received go to the general community fund which assists in the community’s current needs though granting to local groups. Donors also have the option to choose an area of interest to them such as education, recreation, arts and culture, environment – all areas of the community’s wellbeing – or they can create their own endowment fund. 
“Within the last five years, community members and organizations have created 15 new endowment funds to provide benefit to numerous different causes in the community” offered BRCF treasurer Holly Madden. “Many of those donors are committed to growing those endowment funds, to further benefit the community, and the Foundation is having meaningful conversations with others interested in supporting their community.”
To learn more about the Brokenhead River Community Foundation, please visit www.brcfoundation.ca or call Majeau at 1-431-343-2723.

RM approves airport maintenance

Lac du Bonnet asset requires crack sealing to preserve runway integrity
By Simon Ducatel
Recognizing the economic benefits of the Lac du Bonnet Regional Airport, RM council has approved a maximum of $50,000 for crack sealing on the runway to ensure the asset is properly maintained and to support continued growth. 
“A lot of people don’t understand the importance of our airport,” Deputy Reeve Greg Mandzuk said at council’s Aug. 12 meeting. “It’s a regional airport that supplies a lot of services, whether it be to Hydro, to tourism, up north to different communities.
“This is a very expensive piece of infrastructure,” he added. “If we don’t take care of our infrastructure there, we won’t have an airport.”
Coun. Cindy Kellendonk agreed. 
“It’s a key component of our economic growth opportunities,” said Kellendonk, adding the airport also acts as a local job creator. 
Council discussed the airport’s land strip needs, ongoing upkeep to preserve its structural integrity and by extension ensure the safe operation of all aircraft. 
Several cracks have developed over time; some were new and needed to be sealed while others required resealing. If left untended, the cracks would further deteriorate resulting in more extensive and costly repairs in the future.  
The municipality’s financial plan includes $50,000 for crack sealing, and the public works department sought three quotes with two vendors bidding. Following a review of the proposals, council approved contracting out the job to Precision Joint Sealing, a company with previous experience working on the runway. 
While the RM owns the property and is also the landlord, the Lac du Bonnet Regional Airport Authority is the lessee.
“We’re at a turning point when it comes to our airport,” Reeve Loren Schinkel. “We’re one of the unique airports because we have both, obviously, water as well as the land based.”
The municipality’s airport master plan is forthcoming, and is earmarked to receive grant funding from the provincial government, he said. 
“That’s coming to fruition here in the next couple of weeks.”
Additionally, the RM has been developing a business park to help foster further economic opportunities.
“We’ve had absolutely... remarkable growth. Since 2001, there was seven initial hangars at that airport,” he said. “And today we’re at 27. There are another four, five different hangars that are going in there this year.”
That kind of growth naturally comes with economic spin-offs such as good jobs, more investment in the community and a bigger tax base, he said.
“The airport master plan will give us a pathway and some guidance into how to proceed in continuing to build that regional asset.”

Controlled dynamite burn in Reynolds

 A potentially explosive situation was snuffed out last week when the RCMP and the Reynolds Volunteer Fire Department disposed of a cache of old dynamite found in Rennie.
On Aug. 24, the Manitoba RCMP explosive disposal unit, in partnership with Reynolds firefighters, conducted a controlled burn of a structure containing old dynamite.
Police say Whitemouth RCMP received a request for assistance when someone had bought the property in questions and upon inspection found old dynamite – believed to have been used to destroy beaver dams – in a derelict out building. 
RCMP say they are unsure how long the dynamite was in the structure, but it was deemed old enough that it should not be touched. Old dynamite is prone to accidental detonation because the nitroglycerin can leak, crystallize and become more sensitive to shock and friction over time. Improper storage, age or cycles of freezing and thawing can accelerate this sweating process, creating unstable, volatile pockets of liquid nitroglycerin that are dangerous.
“Burning it is a safe procedure conducted by members of the explosive disposal unit who are trained to conduct this method,” a RCMP spokesperson advised.
Police advise this extremely rare disposal process is executed when the dynamite is very old and potentially volatile. Anyone coming across blasting equipment or suspected explosive ordinance is advised to call local RCMP immediately and to make no attempt to move it on their own.

Students heading back to class

Motorists reminded to follow posted speed limits in school zones as of Sept. 1
With students heading back to school, the RCMP and Manitoba Public Insurance (MPI) are sending a reminder to all drivers to stay vigilant in watching for children and driving with caution.
As of Sept. 1, school-zone restrictions in Manitoba have taken effect. RCMP ask all drivers to slow down in these areas and remain alert when approaching school zones.
Along with reduced speeds, parents and motorists need to remember that children are sometimes unpredictable. Drivers are reminded to use extra precautions in and around schools including waiting for children to cross intersections and roadways completely before proceeding.
“It’s important that drivers observe the speed limits and slow down,” an MPI spokesperson advised. “Reducing the vehicle’s speed could save a life.
Slowing down allows the driver to react quicker and reduces braking distance.”
“Whether it’s pedestrian traffic or parents dropping off their children, school zones can be very busy. Slowing down can make everyone safer.” 
The province introduced legislation in 2013 to give local authorities the power to create reduced speed zones for schools. As a result, many municipalities throughout Manitoba have taken the opportunity to reduce speed limits in these areas.
Drivers throughout the North Eastman area are reminded to reduce their speeds to 30 km/hr while in designated areas.
MPI advised that over the last five years, more than 5,000 provincial offence notices for various infractions, ranging from speeding to use of a hand-held electronic while driving, failure to stop at pedestrian crosswalks and other traffic control devices, have been issued to drivers.
If You are Taking the School Bus
- arrive at the bus stop early
- wait in a safe place away from the edge of the road
- wait for the bus to come to a complete stop with its overhead red lights flashing or its stop arm activated before approaching
When Leaving the Bus
- always cross the road in front of the stopped bus, never behind
- look all ways and wait for the driver to signal before crossing in front of the bus
- walk – don’t run – across the road
Drivers
- Slow down in school zones and watch for children crossing the road
- Slow down and prepare to stop whether you are behind or approaching a bus
- Stop for school buses when red lights are flashing – it’s the law and it saves lives
- Stay alert around crosswalks, bike riders, and busy pick-up/drop-off areas

4P Festival a community celebration

The folks of Powerview-Pine Falls, St-Georges and area came together to celebrate the four cornerstone industries that have built their community with the annual 4P Festival. 
Those who participated in the events, which began on Aug. 29 and continued to Sept. 1, enjoyed various activities relating to the 4Ps: Paper, Power, Pea and Pickerel.
Festivities included a family fishing derby and slo-pitch tournament, children’s activities, a car show, market square, a parade and fireworks.

Beauhead Arts Fest shines in the rain

By Andrea Geary
Wind and showers with brief bursts of sunshine on Saturday didn’t stop arts aficionados from attending this year’s Beauhead Arts Fest on August 22 and 23.
Festival artist director Brittany Wurch said the festival committee’s decision to begin the event on Friday afternoon proved successful. 
“It was a very good first day,” she said. “Every year we’re trying new things.”
She added that the Friday schedule focussed on entertainment including a magician, Haystack Productions’ showcase, writers circle and local musicians, while Saturday’s line-up was more family friendly. On both days people of all ages enjoyed an arts activity area where they explored their creativity.
Saturday’s performances began with a drumming circle followed by local musical acts.
This year was the Beauhead Arts Fest’s fifth anniversary. Now that the festival is gaining public recognition, artists from across Manitoba are applying to the judging panel in hopes of participating, Wurch said.
Noah Baker, of Tyndall, was one of this year’s 23 artists, and was enjoying the positive comments he was receiving from patrons. The 28-year-old has limited vision and because of this, he mainly focuses on patterns and shapes in his pencil sketches. 
“Lots of people gave me tips on my sketches,” he said, adding this is the first year he’s taken part in the festival. 
Denise Roy, a Beausejour painter and Peguis First Nation member, was displaying her colourful creations in the Pioneer Village Museum’s Seabright School. She said she’s shown her artwork at all five years of the festival and works months ahead to prepare for the annual event.
Wurch said, while the art festival is only held over a two-day period each year,  committee members are planning other arts-related events throughout the coming year. 
“We want to stay art-active in the community.”

EMCA opens season with Leonard and   Joni

The Eastern Manitoba Concert Association (EMCA) is proud to announce Leonard and Joni: The Untold Love Story as the opening concert of its 2025-26 season, taking place Sept. 27 at the Pinawa Community Centre.
This multimedia production tells the story of the brief romance between Canadian artists Leonard Cohen and Joni Mitchell. Their connection, sparked at the 1967 Newport Folk Festival, influenced several of their well-known songs, including Hallelujah, Both Sides Now, Big Yellow Taxi and I’m Your Man. Through narration, live music and visuals, the show explores their time together in California during the rise of folk music. The performance features Dana Wylie and Joe Nolan, supported by a live band. 
Whether you’re a longtime fan of Cohen and Mitchell or simply love great storytelling through music, this is a rare opportunity to experience their legacy in a fresh and meaningful way.
Doors will open at 6:45 p.m., with the performance starting at 7:30 p.m. Attendees with mobility issues are encouraged to use the backdoor closest to the gym between 6:45 and 7:15 p.m. 
Advance tickets are priced at $50 for adults and $25 for those under 30 years of age. They can be purchased online at emcaconcerts.com or at Solo Market in Pinawa.
Tickets may also be available at the door, subject to availability.

Pinawa Fire Department receives Thomas  Sill Grant

The Pinawa Foundation awarded its 2025 Thomas Sill Manitoba Grant for $22,903 to the Pinawa Fire Department 
In collaboration with the LGD of Pinawa council, the grant will be to be used to establish a fire-based medical first response program. The plan is to have a medically trained firefighter available to respond within minutes to life-threatening illnesses and injuries in Pinawa. The grant is for equipment required by the first responders.
The Thomas Sill Foundation was founded in 1987 through the last will of Thomas Sill, a chartered accountant from Manitoba. The Foundation provided support for charitable initiatives throughout Manitoba for over 35 years. 
At the end of 2023, the Thomas Sill Foundation ceased operations, but the board of directors wanted to continue supporting Manitoba. The assets of the Foundation were transferred to the Winnipeg Foundation to create funds that would carry on Thomas Sill’s legacy of giving. 
The Thomas Sill Manitoba Fund at The Winnipeg Foundation was established to benefit communities within Endow Manitoba. The Pinawa Foundation receives a grant every year to carry on Thomas Sill’s good work.

Springfield council travel expenses   incorrect in 2022

By Tony Zerucha
The RM of Springfield said it has been taking steps to ensure there is “consistency between policy and legislation” after Manitoba’s Auditor General found unidentified council members wrongly claimed roughly $3,000 in travel expenses between January and October of 2022. 
That period coincides with the last 10 months of the previous council. In the report, Auditor General Tyson Shtykalo said the investigations were initiated following tips from “concerned Manitobans” and issues listed by the Department of Municipal and Northern Relations.
On Aug. 28, the Shtykalo released a 34-page report to Manitoba’s Legislative Assembly that analyzed seven municipalities. It also includes suggested improvements for provincial oversight of municipalities.
The investigation into Springfield takes up a half-page of the report. Auditor General staff reviewed the expense reports of council members from January through October, a period concluding with the 2022 municipal election. They compared those reports to Springfield Bylaw 19-02, which governed council indemnities at the time. That bylaw has since been replaced by Bylaw 23-02. Such bylaws are regularly updated.
“We found that the most common ineligible expense claim was for travel,” the Auditor General’s report states. “The bylaw indicates that only time spent engaged in business is claimable, and accordingly, travel would not be eligible. Using a strict interpretation of how the bylaw is worded, we noted that councillors were overpaid approximately $3,000 for the period January to October 2022.”
Contacted by The Clipper, Shtykalo declined to identify which members of the previous council wrongly claimed the expenses or provide any “additional information beyond what (he) reported to the Legislative Assembly.”
On Aug. 29, Springfield released a statement confirming that, according to Indemnity Bylaw 19-02, only time spent in business, and not travel, was claimable. However, councils for several years have been operating under a Council Expense Policy that states, “council members are entitled to be compensated for travel time to and from the authorized event at the per diem rate as set within the council rates and allowance bylaw.”
“While the expense policy has been implemented and followed in practice, the formal update to the indemnity bylaw has not yet been completed,” the RM statement noted. “This delay is not due to oversight, but rather to ensure that any amendments to the bylaw are comprehensive, legally sound and reflective of the expense policy.” 
The statement went on to say council is committed to undertaking this process with diligence.
“We recognize the importance of consistency between policy and legislation, and we are actively working toward harmonizing the indemnity bylaw with the current expense policy. In the interim, council continues to operate transparently and in good faith, guided by the principles of accountability and service to our residents.”
After council members file reports, they are scrutinized by municipal staff before payment is issued. Staff can deny an expense claim or contact the council member for more information. When new council members are elected, staff explain expense eligibility.
CAO Colleen Draper said an updated indemnity bylaw will be discussed at the Sept. 16 council meeting.
Coun. Glen Fuhl said council’s expense policy provides greater detail on eligible expenses. He added that councillors in other municipalities bill for travel time to events outside the municipality.
“We’re pretty much doing it the same way,” Fuhl said. “Now that we know what the Auditor General is looking for, and we can have the policy in line with the bylaw.”

Changing of the guard at Springfield COPP

By Cathy Juskow
Springfield’s Citizens On Patrol Program (COPP) had a changing of the guard recently and paid homage to outgoing coordinator Bernie Litkowich.
On July 30, Litkowich chaired his last meeting as coordinator at the Springfield Public Library. He has been a volunteer with COPP for 26 years, joining the group at its inception in 1999 and becoming coordinator in 2010. 
Litkowich decided that it was time to take a step back and welcomed Robert Schofield as the new lead for the local program developed to assist law enforcement in reducing crime in the RM of Springfield. 
During his years of service, Litkowich has been a staunch advocate of the program and the need for the public to be involved in the patrolling of our communities. Along with those expressing their thanks, representatives from the Springfield Police Service and Oakbank RCMP were in attendance. Litkowich was presented with a Maintiens le Droit (Uphold the Right) plaque from the RCMP in recognition of his service to the community. 
A letter received from Mayor Patrick Therrien, in part, stated, “Your volunteer efforts have made a significant and lasting impact in our community. Through your proactive engagement, problem-solving approach, and commitment to fostering positive relationships between law enforcement and community members, you have helped create a safer and more connected environment for all.” 
Individuals interested in contributing to community safety, COPP are looking for volunteers to join them. The amount of time and when volunteers patrol are up to them. Volunteers must be at least 18 years of age and undergo a criminal background check. No special skills or experience are required as training is provided. 
For more information, visit rmofspringfield.ca/p/citizens-on-patrol-program

Wielgosh captain of Jamestown Jimmies

By Mark Buss
Bethany Wielgosh is starting the 2025-26 season with high hopes for her University of Jamestown Jimmies and looking to elevate her game in what will be her fourth season of U.S. college hockey.
She is also starting the year as team captain.
A former Beausejour resident who now calls Lac du Bonnet home in the offseason, she was given the ‘C’ just after the Christmas break last year. She relishes the chance to lead the club for a full campaign.
“When Coach Hannah (Griffin) had the conversation with me about wanting to name me captain, I was incredibly honoured and extremely excited and grateful for the opportunity to represent the team in this way,” Wielgosh said.
Wielgosh committed to play for the women’s team at the University of Jamestown, a private university in Jamestown, ND, in 2022. The Jimmies women’s team play in the American Collegiate Hockey Association (ACHA) Division 1 program as a member of Women’s Midwest Collegiate Hockey (WMCH).
Wielgosh first hit the ice as a ringette player before making the switch to hockey in Grade 8. She described herself as a physical player, one who puts defence first, but who also has a scoring upside. 
With the Eastman Selects U18 squad in 2021-22, she tallied 12 goals and six assists for 18 points in 43 games. She also attended the 2019 and 2021 Hockey Manitoba Programs of Excellence.
In her first three years with the Jimmies, the now 21-year-old 5’9” forward registered 18 goals and 31 assists for 49 points in 92 games.
Since 2022, Wielgosh has grown on and off the ice. She says her ability to read the game at such a high pace has improved, and she prides herself on being responsible and effective in both ends of the ice. 
Now a senior, she has been an Academic All American since the second semester in her freshman year with a GPA of 3.8.
“I’m also here to get a (Bachelor of Education) degree and I’m really proud of how I’ve grown as a student,” she said.
The Jimmies were seventh in the WMCH in 2024-25 with a 8-20-3 record. With the Jamestown women’s program only entering its fourth year, Wielgosh said the goal this year is to make it to the nationals.
“Our program hasn’t been able to accomplish that yet,” she said. “We know it won’t be easy, but we have so much talent and work ethic on our team... so we are confident we will achieve that goal if we stay focused and work on getting better everyday.”
– with files from Tony Zerucha

U15AAA Wildcats fourth in Canada

By Tony Zerucha

Cooks Creek’s Hannah Skrabek, Oakbank’s Gracie Andersen, Sophie Franklin of Falcon Lake and their Eastman Wildcat teammates finished fourth at the Canadian Championships after winning the 2025 Manitoba U15 AAA Softball title. 
The provincial tourney began on July 24 with two shutouts, 11-0 over Smitty’s Terminators and 10-0 over the Interlake Phillies. The scoreless streak continued on July 25 when the Wildcats blanked the Winnipeg Lightning. They surrendered their first runs of the weekend in a 12-4 triumph over the Westman Magic before concluding the round-robin with a 3-0 win over the Manitoba Angels and a 7-0 victory over Central Energy.
In the playoffs, the Wildcats twice faced Central Energy, beating them 5-0 and 10-6 to claim the provincial title.
The Wildcats didn’t have to go far for the national championships, which were in Winkler this year. They dominated their round-robin pool with a 5-1 record, outscoring their opponents 41-11. In the playoffs, they fell 6-2 to Vaughn, Ont., before rebounding with a 9-1 win over the Phillies. Their quest for a national crown ended with an extra-innings loss to Central Energy, leaving them fourth in Canada.
“We had a phenomenal regular season run with lots of close games that we were able to come out on top of,” Skrabek said. “We played incredibly strong defence all season, which really helped us.”
Andersen said the Wildcats’ 21-1 regular season mark was good preparation for provincial and national competition.
“Winning the league was definitely a goal for our team, but not one that was as talked about as winning provincials or nationals,” she admitted. “Our offence and defence were extremely strong this year, allowing us to have a 162-run difference in those 22 games, which seems absolutely insane to say out loud.”
Before the season, the Wildcats set a goal to win the provincial trophy. That was in jeopardy late in the championship game, as they were down 6-2 in the fifth inning. Then the Wildcats scored eight runs to grab a 10-6 lead.
But Central Energy clawed back, putting two runners on base with two outs. Head Coach Russ Kihn called a timeout and brought the infield together on the pitcher’s mound to remind them to focus on the hitter. The players returned to their spots, and Skrabek threw her best pitch.
“I held my breath as the pitch I had just thrown got hit hard, but then started jumping and cheering when it got caught by our shortstop,” Skrabek said. “I ran straight to my catcher, Sophie, to give her a hug, and I don’t remember much after that because I was so happy.”
The Wildcats’ goal for the nationals was to have fun. It was their last week together as a team, and their goal of playing for the Canadian championship was attained. The Wildcats’ trademark strong defence combined with some hot hitting to take them to the top of their round-robin pool.
Andersen sat out the nationals with an injury, but was proud of how the Wildcats measured up against the best. Skrabek did her part, amassing a 0.71 earned-run average with 30 strikeouts and four wins in the round-robin alone.
Skrabek earned Top Pitcher honours. She’s still letting that sink in.
“I still have a hard time wrapping my head around it, to be honest,” she said. “There were so many incredible pitchers there, so I am very honoured to receive it. I am extremely grateful for my coach and teammates for giving me this opportunity and believing in me - I couldn’t have done it without them.”
“Hannah deserved the top pitcher in Canada so much, and our team was incredibly proud and excited for her to have the opportunity to receive the award,” Andersen said. “Throughout the year, Hannah remained such a confident pitcher and playing behind her, you never worried about her having a bad game. Her award was so well deserved. Her pitching allowed our team to win as many games as we did.”

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