Westman this Week

Rural Roundup for Nov. 13, 2025

Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 6 minute read Thursday, Nov. 13, 2025

VIRDEN

A $1.6 million expansion project has crossed the finish line at the Virden Animal Hospital.

A ribbon cutting was held in late October. New medical equipment was added to the facility, as well as exam rooms, and three new operating rooms were outfitted.

A 20-year loan was signed with the Virden Veterinary Services District Board as well as veterinary partners. The board has a yearly budget of about $60,000. The board receives $6,000 yearly from nearby municipalities, $22,000 from the province, and charges customers a few dollars.

Advertisement

Advertise With Us

Weather

Feb. 5, 6 PM: 1°c Cloudy with wind Feb. 6, 12 AM: -8°c Cloudy with wind

Brandon MB

2°C, Windy

Full Forecast

Survivors Share Heartbreaking Stories to Help Teens Make Safer Choices on Manitoba Roads

Steven Sukkau, Local Journalism Initiative 4 minute read Preview

Survivors Share Heartbreaking Stories to Help Teens Make Safer Choices on Manitoba Roads

Steven Sukkau, Local Journalism Initiative 4 minute read Thursday, Nov. 13, 2025

WINNIPEG — Two Manitobans whose lives were forever changed by dangerous driving are sharing their stories with young people across the province this month, as part of Manitoba Public Insurance’s annual Friends For Life speaker series.

Jon Tiessen was hit head-on by an impaired driver while driving home from watching a hockey game, an instant that changed the trajectory of his life. Sandra LaRose lost her teenage daughter to distracted driving. Now, both are on a mission to prevent others from suffering the same pain.

The two-week Friends For Life tour kicked off Nov. 3 and will reach 20 schools across Manitoba, including stops in Hamiota, Carberry, Powerview, Erickson and Winnipeg.

Jon, his sister Rosalie Finch, and Sandra will speak directly to students about how one choice behind the wheel can lead to lifelong consequences, highlighting three major contributing factors to deaths on Manitoba roads: speeding, impaired driving and distracted driving.

Read
Thursday, Nov. 13, 2025

Survivors of impaired and distracted driving are sharing their powerful stories through Manitoba Public Insurance’s Friends For Life speaker series to urge Manitoba teens to make safer choices behind the wheel and prevent future tragedies on the province’s roads. (Photo courtesy Sandra LaRose Facebook page.)

Survivors of impaired and distracted driving are sharing their powerful stories through Manitoba Public Insurance’s Friends For Life speaker series to urge Manitoba teens to make safer choices behind the wheel and prevent future tragedies on the province’s roads. (Photo courtesy Sandra LaRose Facebook page.)

So close, but no Series’ title, for Blue Jays

Bruce Penton 5 minute read Preview

So close, but no Series’ title, for Blue Jays

Bruce Penton 5 minute read Thursday, Nov. 13, 2025

If this year’s World Series could be narrowed down to a simple ‘Who killed the Toronto Blue Jays?’, let’s get right to the point and play a sports version of Clue. Open the little envelope and here’s what’s inside:

It was Hoffman.

In the ninth.

With a slider.

Read
Thursday, Nov. 13, 2025

Toronto Blue Jays pitcher Jeff Hoffman (23) delivers a pitch against the Los Angeles Dodgers during eighth inning Game 7 World Series playoff MLB baseball action in Toronto on Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Frank Gunn

Toronto Blue Jays pitcher Jeff Hoffman (23) delivers a pitch against the Los Angeles Dodgers during eighth inning Game 7 World Series playoff MLB baseball action in Toronto on Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Frank Gunn

Lymphedema Program Brings New Hope to Cancer Survivors in Prairie Mountain Health

Steven Sukkau, Local Journalism Initiative 4 minute read Preview

Lymphedema Program Brings New Hope to Cancer Survivors in Prairie Mountain Health

Steven Sukkau, Local Journalism Initiative 4 minute read Thursday, Nov. 13, 2025

WINNIPEG — When Prairie Mountain Health received new funding in October 2024 to hire a part-time occupational therapist for lymphedema management, it marked the beginning of a quiet but powerful shift in cancer aftercare for patients in western Manitoba.

For years, cancer survivors experiencing lymphedema, a painful and often debilitating swelling caused by an abnormal buildup of protein-rich fluid, faced long waits or had to travel to Winnipeg for treatment. Many simply went without care.

Now, thanks to support from CancerCare Manitoba’s Centre of Hope, those services are available in Brandon.

Kayla Bueckert joined the CancerCare team as the new occupational therapist shortly after the funding announcement and quickly undertook specialized training to become a certified lymphedema therapist. She integrated herself into the cancer care environment, taking on referrals from across the region and providing targeted therapy to patients experiencing swelling in the breast, limbs, head, or neck.

Read
Thursday, Nov. 13, 2025

Kayla Bueckert, Occupational Therapist. (Photo courtesy Prairie Mountain Health)

Kayla Bueckert, Occupational Therapist. (Photo courtesy Prairie Mountain Health)

Expect a “vibrant” night when Jâca comes to town

Wendy King 5 minute read Preview

Expect a “vibrant” night when Jâca comes to town

Wendy King 5 minute read Thursday, Nov. 13, 2025

Expect the unexpected when you encounter Jâca, a dynamic musical duo made up of guitar and clarinet coming to the Western Manitoba Centennial Auditorium on Nov. 23.

Award-winning Jâca (sounds like Zsa Zsa but with a K-sound in the middle) is made up of guitarist Jaxon Williams and clarinetist Wesley Ferreir.

The musically adventurous guitar/clarinet pairing is unusual. And so is their name, a reflection of their combined cultural roots and ties. An American, Jaxon Williams is connected to Spanish culture (his wife is Spanish) and spends part of the year in Spain and plays Spanish guitar. Wesley Ferreira’s family is Portuguese-Canadian. The word “jâca,” is from Portuguese. The phonetics of the word also come from Spanish. The name Jâca, like the music they play, is a cultural blend.

Both Jâca members come from musical roots. Williams’ mother teaches piano and children’s music classes.

Read
Thursday, Nov. 13, 2025

Award-winning clarinet/guitar duo Jâca are bringing their eclectic musical style to the Western Manitoba Centennial Auditorium November 23. (Submitted)

Award-winning clarinet/guitar duo Jâca are bringing their eclectic musical style to the Western Manitoba Centennial Auditorium November 23. (Submitted)

Wheat Kings broadcaster is dedicated to a rare career

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 8 minute read Preview

Wheat Kings broadcaster is dedicated to a rare career

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 8 minute read Thursday, Nov. 13, 2025

If you’ve ever scrubbed the radio during a Wheat Kings game, you’ve probably heard the voice of Rob Mahon.

The 32-year-old broadcaster is the voice of the Wheat Kings. When residents hear on their car radio that that “Mistelbacher fired a shot,” or “Ruzicka is the man between the pipes,” it’s Mahon making those calls as he stands in a booth at the Assiniboine Credit Union Place.

Mahon has been working in this role for the Wheat Kings for two years now. And it’s not a side-gig, it’s not a community hobby, the broadcasting role is a career job for the man — and work that he takes incredibly seriously.

At a glance, listeners can see a large part of Mahon’s job just by tuning into the show. It might seem straightforward (a guy is describing what happens on the ice. Big whoop, right?) but there is a lot that goes into the work that goes unseen.

Read
Thursday, Nov. 13, 2025

College collective agreement embraces Truth and Reconciliation

By Steven Sukkau Local Journalism Initiative 4 minute read 2:00 AM CST

Red River College Polytechnic’s newly ratified collective agreement will give employees wellness days, cultural and ceremonial leave, and gender-affirming medical leave, following a joint effort with the Manitoba Government and General Employees’ Union to embed Truth and Reconciliation principles into workplace rules.

The changes are part of RRC Polytech’s 2025–28 collective agreement with MGEU Local 73 and are aimed at modernizing leave policies, expanding the definition of family, and removing language rooted in colonial or binary assumptions.

Among the most significant changes is the creation of two paid wellness days to support preventive health, separate from sick leave. The agreement also introduces two paid days specifically for ceremonial, cultural, religious and spiritual practices, rather than requiring employees to use sick time or vacation.

The contract adds 15 days of gender-affirming medical leave, distinct from sick leave, and removes binary language such as “mother,” “father” and gendered pronouns from the agreement.

Weather specialist gives farmers a season preview

By Steven Sukkau Local Journalism Initiative 4 minute read 2:00 AM CST

Manitoba could be heading into a warmer and more volatile growing season, with drought risk lingering in parts of the province despite healthy soil moisture in others, according to a weather outlook presented recently at Manitoba Ag Days in Brandon.

The presentation marked a significant moment for Justin Oertel and The Weather Centre of Manitoba, which delivered its first major seasonal forecast to producers at the western Manitoba farm show.

“I was shocked when I received an email from Ag Days asking me to speak,” Oertel said. “After that initial shock passed, I was extremely honoured to have a chance to speak at one of the province’s major farm shows.”

Oertel told farmers that soil moisture levels vary sharply across the province, largely depending on where heavy storms fell last summer.

Oh, To Be a Raven

By Ken Kingdon 5 minute read Preview

Oh, To Be a Raven

By Ken Kingdon 5 minute read 2:00 AM CST

On long road trips when the girls were young, we would occasionally pass the time playing “What’s your favourite animal?” and its corollary, “If you could be any animal you wanted, what would you choose?”

Occasionally, I still go through the list. Snake or gopher? Too reviled, and too apt to get run over, respectively. How about something engaging, like a chickadee? Alas, their lifespan is too short, and their lives are surprisingly violent, with one gang of birds attacking others for home turf.

Next up is a bear, given that they are intelligent, well adapted for life in the area, and can live to 30 years of age. The only drawback is that they sleep away the coldest months, which means that they miss one of the best seasons in Manitoba.

Which is why I always settle on being a raven. During the frigid days of January they are one of the few animals you can see moving about, flying in the bitterest winds. Not even the coldest parts of the country are off limit to them, as they spend the winter as far north as Baffin Island. They are tough.

Read
2:00 AM CST

Ken Kingdon sings the praises of the raven. (File)

Ken Kingdon sings the praises of the raven. (File)

Koepka alone in return to PGA Tour

By Bruce Penton 5 minute read Preview

Koepka alone in return to PGA Tour

By Bruce Penton 5 minute read 2:00 AM CST

What could have been a mad dash by some of the greatest golfers in the world from the upstart LIV tour back to the PGA Tour turned out to be hardly a trickle. Does one even count as a trickle?

Brooks Koepka, a five-time major champion who is one of a handful of big names who took the Saudi Arabian money and fled the PGA Tour a couple of years ago, had buyer’s remorse in December and announced to the world he was leaving LIV.

Paul Simon wrote in the 1970s that there are 50 ways to leave your lover, but would there be a few more ways for the LIVers to leave the LIV? The PGA Tour brass wanted to find out, so they hastily established what they called the “Returning Member Program” which specifically targeted the cream of the LIV crop — Koepka, Bryson DeChambeau, Jon Rahm and Cam Smith.

Criteria set out by the PGA said the program was open only to major champions or Players’ champs who won their titles between the years of 2022 and 2025. Those four aforementioned players all fit the criteria while everyone else — Phil Mickelson, Dustin Johnson, Patrick Reed, Sergio Garcia and others — didn’t fit the qualifying terms, nor did they have the star power sought by the PGA Tour. They therefore didn’t qualify for return to the bright lights of what is indisputably the best pro tour in the world.

Read
2:00 AM CST

Brooks Koepka has left the Saudi-backed LIV golf tour to return to the PGA. (The Associated Press)

Brooks Koepka has left the Saudi-backed LIV golf tour to return to the PGA. (The Associated Press)

Farmer counselling program gets $300,000

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 3 minute read Preview

Farmer counselling program gets $300,000

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 3 minute read 2:00 AM CST

The co-founder of a mental wellness program is thrilled to see two more years of support targeted at Manitoban farmers.

Gerry Friesen of the Manitoba Farmer Wellness Program said he is still surprised by the growth and continued support of the mental health program that provides counselling to farmers. The remarks came after the province and federal government promised in January to invest $300,000 across the next two fiscal years.

“It was really good news,” Friesen said. “Just the way this program has grown, and the fact that it’s being utilized the way it is is heartwarming.”

“I was there at the outset. Never, never, for a minute, had I thought that it would grow the way it did.”

Read
2:00 AM CST

Gerry Friesen, co-founder of the Manitoba Farmer Wellness Program, said he is surprised to see ongoing support and growth in the mental wellness program he co-founded. (File)

Gerry Friesen, co-founder of the Manitoba Farmer Wellness Program, said he is surprised to see ongoing support and growth in the mental wellness program he co-founded. (File)

Bigger Virden fire hall will be better for firefighters

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 4 minute read 2:00 AM CST

VIRDEN — The fire chief of Wallace District Fire Department Station No. 1 is excited about an upcoming project that aims to double the size of the fire hall in Virden.

Ground is expected to be broken next year on a 5,200-square-foot building, Chief Cory Nixon said. The building will be erected beside the current 4,800-square-fire station building, which will be remodelled so the two buildings form a new, modern station.

“It’s a massive step forward for us,” Nixon said.

The expansion will solve two primary issues: lack of space, and health and safety concerns, he said.

Choirs unite for Brandon performance

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 2 minute read 2:00 AM CST

A joint concert will bring roughly 110 vocalists together to sing at the First Presbyterian Church in Brandon on Saturday.

The concert is set to combine the Horizon Choir of Winnipeg and the Konektis Choir of Brandon for shared performances in addition to individual performances, a Konektis director, Michelle Chyzyk, told the Sun in a recent interview. The theme is Holding Hands, as the group will perform a song of that title by The Magic Lantern.

“We hope to pack the place and give them a warm Westman welcome,” Chyzyk said. “We are very excited to host musicians of the calibre of Horizon choir. We know the choirs will inspire each other.”

The show begins at 7:30 p.m.

Neepawa planning forum for homeownership

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 4 minute read Preview

Neepawa planning forum for homeownership

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 4 minute read Thursday, Jan. 29, 2026

The Town of Neepawa is organizing an unusual program to educate residents about homeownership.

The municipality aims to host a second public forum this spring, following its first in November, to help residents explore pathways to homeownership, Marilyn Crewe, economic development officer for the town, told the Sun in a recent interview. The town is working with residents to accommodate population growth and support a large amount of newcomers.

“It is unusual, but I believe that education is key to making good decisions,” Crewe said. “Especially for our newcomers. Neepawa is like 50 per cent newcomer-Canadian, and they’ve never bought a house, they’ve never walked through a Canadian process for buying a home, and so that drives me to make sure that there’s as much education out there as possible.

The forum was created with newcomers in mind, however the education is general good practice for everybody and should probably be more common in other communities, Crewe said.

Read
Thursday, Jan. 29, 2026

LEFT: The Town of Neepawa is focusing development on a section of land on its west side to accommodate rapid growth the city has received due to immigration. (Connor McDowell/Brandon Sun files) RIGHT: Marilyn Crewe, economic development officer at the Town of Neepawa. (Neepawa and Area Immigrant Settlement Services)

LEFT: The Town of Neepawa is focusing development on a section of land on its west side to accommodate rapid growth the city has received due to immigration. (Connor McDowell/Brandon Sun files) RIGHT: Marilyn Crewe, economic development officer at the Town of Neepawa. (Neepawa and Area Immigrant Settlement Services)

by Wendy King 5 minute read Thursday, Jan. 29, 2026

The days are frozen and life feels a little uninspiring at the end of January. To perk things up and give yourself something to look forward to, why not start planning your annual holiday? Or maybe a dream trip? Or both? Since Jan. 27 is National Plan for Vacation Day, this is the ideal time to look ahead a season or two, or even a year or two.

Start with determining what vacation days you are entitled to and when. See where statutory holidays fall and decide if you can use them to extend your break. Have an easily accessible system to track and store research, notes and checklists.

If you’re planning a vacation close to home, get a budget in order that includes both fun and contingencies, and see that you have the right type of insurance. Arrange for someone to keep an eye on the house, and make sure you are tracking your packing.

For adventure that’s further afield, all of the above still applies. Travel abroad is an investment, both financially and personally. It can be a grand deposit into your lifelong memory bank.

Officials recount night of Lake Manitoba rescue

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 4 minute read Thursday, Jan. 29, 2026

A police officer and a military member who were involved in the rescue of three stranded fishers on Lake Manitoba earlier this month detailed the night as a collaboration that involved some help from the missing fishers.

RCAF member Capt. Zach Hotte was on the rescue plane, a CC-130H Hercules, on the morning of Jan. 10, flying 1,000 feet over Lake Manitoba when a flashing light caught the attention of his spotter. He said the light was cast by the stranded fishers who were signalling for help.

“The search and rescue technician who was sitting in the left window was able to spot them right away,” Hotte said in a recent interview with the Sun. “The second we got close, we had a light shining directly at the plane.”

Hotte said the fishers’ action of shining a blinking light at the plane made a real difference. The rescue team was dealing with reduced visibility due to snowfall, as well as darkness inherent to the overnight search.

LOAD MORE