Westman this Week

Westman this Week

High school embraces neurodivergence

By Brenda Sawatzky Local Journalism Initiative Reporter 4 minute read Thursday, May. 14, 2026

Students at Niverville High School recently embraced the world of neurodivergence by celebrating unique human quirks.

Student Cooper Lavin is behind the planning of Neurodiversity Spirit Week for the second year in a row. Lavin is a 16-year-old Grade 11 student who identifies as autistic, one classification of neurodivergence. The goal is to create awareness and education through participation.

On Monday, students were encouraged to wear tie-dye or vibrant colour schemes. Wednesday produced crazy hair or hats.

“For a lot of neurodivergent people, their thoughts are all over the place,” Lavin says. “The thoughts are inconsistent, loud, and out there, like vibrant colours.”

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Westman this Week

Province lights up red and blue for FMD month

By Renee Lilley Local Journalism Initiative Reporter 3 minute read Thursday, May. 14, 2026

Landmarks across Manitoba are being illuminated in red and blue this month to shed light on fibromuscular dysplasia (FMD), a cardiovascular condition that experts say is far more common than its “rare” label suggests.

On May 1, the Island Park causeway and City Hall in Portage la Prairie were lit up to mark Fibromuscular Dysplasia Awareness Month. The initiative is part of a growing movement led by Julie Vogelsang, a Winnipeg-based volunteer for the Fibromuscular Dysplasia Society of America.

Vogelsang, who was diagnosed with the condition in 2022 through MRI testing, has co-ordinated the illumination of 16 landmarks across the province, including the Esplanade Riel Bridge and ‘Winnipeg’ sign in Winnipeg later this month, along with the York Lobby at the Convention Centre. Joe the Steamer train in Austin was also lit up. Other prominent landmarks have been illuminated across the country thanks to Vogelsang’s efforts.

“Researchers used to call it a rare disorder, and now they’re saying they don’t think it’s rare, but rarely diagnosed,” Vogelsang said. “The lack of awareness and education is not just within those who have it, but also in the medical community.”

Westman this Week

New podcast studies Indigenous contributions to science

By Steven SukkauLocal Journalism Initiative Reporter 2 minute read Preview

New podcast studies Indigenous contributions to science

By Steven SukkauLocal Journalism Initiative Reporter 2 minute read Thursday, May. 14, 2026

A Manitoba Métis scholar has launched a new podcast exploring what he describes as the overlooked role of Indigenous knowledge in shaping Western European science.

“Stolen Science,” hosted by Darrell Racine, is now available on YouTube and major podcast platforms. Racine, a professor emeritus of Native Studies at Brandon University, says the series draws on his doctoral research to examine Indigenous contributions to scientific development between 1670 and 1870.

“Indigenous people contributed far more to Western European science and culture than most history books acknowledge,” Racine said in a release. “This podcast is for Indigenous youth, so they can understand what their ancestors gave to the world, and so they can ensure their rights and their communities are protected going forward.”

Racine’s research, completed at the University of Oxford, argues that knowledge from Indigenous communities across Western Canada was incorporated into European scientific frameworks without recognition.

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Thursday, May. 14, 2026

Westman this Week

Swan River eyes economic development role

By Steven SukkauLocal Journalism Initiative Reporter 2 minute read Preview

Swan River eyes economic development role

By Steven SukkauLocal Journalism Initiative Reporter 2 minute read Thursday, May. 14, 2026

The Town of Swan River is looking to strengthen long-term growth and infrastructure planning through proposed economic development initiatives and a major lagoon expansion project included in its 2026 financial plan.

Mayor Lance Jacobson said council has identified economic development as a strategic priority and is exploring the creation of a regional Economic Development Officer position in partnership with neighbouring municipalities.

“The town of Swan River for several years is seeing the value in economic development, and we want to take it that next step,” Jacobson said in an interview.

He said administration has been directed to research what the position would look like and how it could support the broader region.

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Thursday, May. 14, 2026

Westman this Week

Passion for gardening brings award

By Connor McDowellLocal Journalism Initiative 7 minute read Preview

Passion for gardening brings award

By Connor McDowellLocal Journalism Initiative 7 minute read Thursday, May. 14, 2026

RM OF NORTH CYPRESS-LANGFORD — A husband and wife won an award for their Westman garden which has become a community project allowing spontaneous visitors, weddings and field trips.

The Manitoba Good Roads Association awarded its WSP Shield to Glenda and Joseph MacPhee, who operate Gardenview Farm, last month. The award recognized the property as The Best Farm Home Ground-North Western Region in the northwestern region for 2025.

Dozens of residents, the Town of Neepawa, and the Rural Municipality of North Cypress-Langford celebrated the couple’s award in late April, with the RM describing the garden as a community highlight.

“Their beautiful yard is a true point of pride in our municipality, and this recognition is so well deserved,” says a statement posted on the rural municipality website. “Thank you for helping make our community such a wonderful place.”

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Thursday, May. 14, 2026

Westman this Week

NHL draft often a crapshoot

By Bruce Penton 5 minute read Preview

NHL draft often a crapshoot

By Bruce Penton 5 minute read Thursday, May. 14, 2026

To say the National Hockey League draft of 18-year-old players is an inexact science is stating the obvious. It’s more like a crapshoot. Roll the dice and hope, baby. But NHL jobs (scouting directors and general managers specifically) can oftentimes ride on the success or failure of picking junior players.

Now that the order of this year’s draft, to be held June 26-27 in Buffalo, has been determined by last week’s draft lottery, GMs and scouts can start to fret. Will this skinny 18-year-old with great puck-handling skills turn into a superstar four years down the road? Or will he be relegated to a career in the minors? The toughest job for a professional hockey scout is to project a player’s skill level three, four, five years into the future.

Over the years, there have been exceptional picks; and there have been some duds.

In the 2015 draft, the Los Angeles Kings ignored the availability of Kirill Kaprizov when it was their turn to pick in the fourth round. At No. 134, the Kings selected Matt Schmaltz. Minnesota, picking at No. 135, went with Kaprizov. NHL point totals to date: Schmaltz zero; Kaprizov, likely a hall of famer: 475 in 397 games.

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Thursday, May. 14, 2026

Westman this Week

Economist: Nunavut should get more mining money

By William Koblensky Varela Local Journalism Initiative 5 minute read Thursday, May. 7, 2026

Inuit associations and the Government of Nunavut should get more money from the mining industry, according to economist Erin Weir.

Weir, a senior associate at SILO Strategy and former NDP MP from Saskatchewan, presented his research on royalty payments during the Nunavut Mining Symposium on April 20.

“Both Inuit organizations and the Government of Nunavut are receiving only a tiny percentage of the value of minerals being extracted from the territory,” Weir said.

AGNICO EAGLE

Westman this Week

FCM calls on feds to quicken infrastructure funding

By Renee Lilley Local Journalism Initiative 3 minute read Thursday, May. 7, 2026

Municipal leaders are calling on the federal government to accelerate the delivery of infrastructure funding, warning that a lack of urgency is hampering local economies as construction season begins.

Joe Masi, a Portage la Prairie city councillor and Manitoba director for the Federation of Canadian Municipalities (FCM), said the recent federal spring economic update missed a critical opportunity to scale up investment for shovel-ready projects.

“We were looking for something to say, ‘OK, we’re really going to accelerate, get money out the door,’ because we’re into the construction season now,” Masi said. “FCM is going to have to continue to work with the federal government to scale up infrastructure over the next few months so that we can, as municipalities, succeed.”

The local priority remains the multi-million dollar expansion of the Portage la Prairie water treatment plant. The project has already secured $40 million from the provincial government, but the city is still awaiting word on an application for federal support through the Build Community Strong Fund.

Westman this Week

McDavid the best — and most valuable

By Bruce Penton 5 minute read Preview

McDavid the best — and most valuable

By Bruce Penton 5 minute read Thursday, May. 7, 2026

The debate rages on among hockey fans about the merits of the Hart Trophy winner as the National Hockey League’s most valuable player.

Is it the best player in the league? Or should it go to the player ‘most valuable’ to his team; in other words, how would that team fare without that specific player?

If the award goes to the best player, no voting is required; just give the Hart to Connor McDavid of the Edmonton Oilers. Like Bobby Orr and Wayne Gretzky in bygone eras, McDavid is head and shoulders above anyone else in the league.

But should he be named the most valuable player? According to NHL literature, the MVP award is presented to the player deemed most valuable “to his team.”

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Thursday, May. 7, 2026

Local

Waterlogged municipality puts bounty on beavers

Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 7 minute read Preview

Waterlogged municipality puts bounty on beavers

Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 7 minute read Thursday, May. 7, 2026

GLENBORO — The Municipality of Glenboro-South Cypress is trapping beavers as the most recent effort to fix water backup that has flooded farmland, basements and roads in the area for years.

The municipality put out a request for trappers in March, and brought on three trappers, Coun. Dale Fisher told the Sun. Trapping will continue until the middle of May, removing beavers from a crucial channel to the Souris River.

Water needs to flow through — and out — of the community faster, Fisher told the Sun during a recent interview. Glenboro receives a large amount of water that is finding its way to the Souris and eventually the Assiniboine River, but Glenboro has been unable to pass that water quickly enough, he said. That has historically led the local water table to rise, causing expensive problems.

“This is prime agricultural land and it’s been going backwards and continuing to get worse every year,” Fisher said. “There’s been some pissed-off people.”

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Thursday, May. 7, 2026

Local

Local charity rep visits Kenya to witness project impacts

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 4 minute read Preview

Local charity rep visits Kenya to witness project impacts

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 4 minute read Thursday, May. 7, 2026

A recent trip to Kenya showed how donations are making an impact through the Canadian Foodgrains Bank, a representative of the charity said during a meeting in Brandon.

Dale Friesen, Manitoba and northwestern Ontario representative for the charity, hosted a meeting at the McDiarmid Drive Alliance Church following his return from a two-week learning tour to Kenya earlier this year. Friesen shared stories about projects that are underway in Kenya ,thanks to the charity and donations from Canadians.

Friesen said the trip served to put faces and names to the international efforts, which can sometimes be hard to grasp.

“One of the things I’m really stuck with is, these are real people in real places,” Friesen said. “These are very real people in very real places.”

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Thursday, May. 7, 2026

Local

Blossom Festival returns on Mother’s Day

Wendy King 5 minute read Preview

Blossom Festival returns on Mother’s Day

Wendy King 5 minute read Thursday, May. 7, 2026

With Mother’s Day just around the corner and a too-long winter finally receding from our landscape at a glacial pace, it’s time for the second annual Blossom Festival taking place Mother’s Day on Sunday at 11 a.m. at the Assiniboine Food Forest, aka. AFFI.

On a recent day, Dave Barnes, a founding member of AFFI, was in the sugar shack boiling syrup and shared a couple of sweet memories from the inaugural Blossom Festival that took place a year ago.

“People were excited. People were very happy, you know, to get a Mother’s Day flower, and Mother’s Day sweet treats on the house in the beautiful forest setting. It was a very nice day for sure,” Barnes said.

The first Blossom Festival drew 40 or so people, happy to be in the fresh air on the second Sunday in May, when the weather can be unpredictable. But Barnes said it was a beautiful time to be there.

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Thursday, May. 7, 2026

Westman this Week

Fresh looks for top curling rinks

By Bruce Penton 5 minute read Preview

Fresh looks for top curling rinks

By Bruce Penton 5 minute read Thursday, Apr. 30, 2026

Curling’s game of musical chairs has begun.

Now that Brad Jacobs and his rink have won the men’s world curling championship and Kerri Einarson came up one game short at the women’s worlds, Canada’s elite curlers are re-arranging lineups to begin the next four-year Olympic Games cycle. The main goal, besides efforts to win the Brier, Scotties and world championships each year, is to represent Canada at the Olympics in 2030 in the French Alps. While occasional personnel changes happen from year to year, this year’s avalanche of changes was sparked by Brad Gushue’s announcement that he was retiring from competitive curling.

With Gushue no longer at the helm of the rink that won six Briers and one world championship, the remaining three members of his rink had decisions to make. Third Brendan Bottcher’s decision was to become a skip once again and take lead Geoff Walker with him, adding the Horgan brothers from Northern Ontario, Jacob and Tanner, who had been with John Epping of Ontario. The Horgans’ departure left Epping scrambling for replacements, and he wound up forming a Manitoba-based team featuring B.J. Neufeld, Ryan Wiebe and Ian McMillan. Gushue’s veteran third, Mark Nichols, will throw second stones for reigning Brier champ Matt Dunstone.

Veteran skip Mike McEwen departed from his Saskatchewan-based rink — whether he left on his own accord or was pushed is not known — but it didn’t take long for him to find a new rink. He will throw fourth stones for the rink led in recent years by Rylan Kleiter, out of Saskatoon. The shell of the former McEwen rink — Colton Flasch, Kevin Marsh, Dan Marsh — remains intact and will now be skipped by Tyler Tardi, who left the Kevin Koe rink, where he was the third.

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Thursday, Apr. 30, 2026

Westman this Week

It’s always a good time to be prepared

By Wendy King 5 minute read Thursday, Apr. 30, 2026

If there’s one true thing you can say about Manitoba in the spring it’s this: the river is rising. On this day, Tobin Praznik, emergency manager for the City of Brandon has been watching it do just that.

“We’ve been keeping a close eye. The river’s been pretty dynamic over the last couple of days,” Praznik said.

And if that’s not enough to get you thinking about a contingency plan, May 3 to 9 is National Emergency Preparedness Week, a federally designated week to remind all Canadians that emergencies happen and readiness is imperative.

“Emergencies can happen at any time and without warning, that’s the reality. The benefit in preparing is it supports and ensures our safety as individuals and families,” Praznik said.

Westman this Week

Carberry responds to “toxic environment” online

By Connor McDowell Local Journalism Initiative 6 minute read Preview

Carberry responds to “toxic environment” online

By Connor McDowell Local Journalism Initiative 6 minute read Thursday, Apr. 30, 2026

The Town of Carberry has disabled the commenting feature on its social media posts and instructed staff to use the technology as a one-way communication tool following a new social media policy adopted this month.

The “social media information only” policy bylaw was passed at Carberry council’s regular meeting on Apr. 14. The policy comes following repeated harassment online that led to real-world consequences in Carberry, Mayor Ray Muirhead told the Sun in a recent interview.

Earlier this year, with the opening of Chicken Chef under a new owner, a dispute between the restaurant owner and an employee become fodder for public harassment which nearly drove the restaurant out of town, Muirhead said. This was the turning point where council decided they had to take action, the mayor said.

“He was literally thinking of closing the doors,” Muirhead said in a phone call. “This recent one with the Chicken Chef.

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Thursday, Apr. 30, 2026

Westman this Week

Local data now at rural leaders’ fingertips

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 6 minute read Preview

Local data now at rural leaders’ fingertips

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 6 minute read Thursday, Apr. 30, 2026

The Rural Manitoba Economic Development Corporation has packaged data about 125 rural municipalities and released it into a report this month to provide accessible information about the rural parts of the province.

The report, called the Pulse of Rural Manitoba 2026, compiled several sources of data and designed it to be approachable and usable, said RMED CEO Margot Cathcart. She said one potential use was for rural municipalities to have reinforcement for applications for grant funding.

“You need to be able to justify the ask. Whether it’s an ask of council, or the province or the feds,” she said. “Without it, it puts the community on the hind foot, a bit behind, because they are not able to present the best case.”

When issuing grants, bodies like the province increasingly looking for data that convinces them of the need or the importance of projects, she said. But data is hard to come by in rural Manitoba — and so the report fills that gap, among others, she said.

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Thursday, Apr. 30, 2026

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