Westman this Week

Museum tells story of the Brandon asylum

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 5 minute read Thursday, Oct. 30, 2025

A new exhibit has been installed at the Brandon downtown museum telling the history of a disastrous fire that destroyed the former mental health hospital.

The Brandon General Museum and Archives added a collection recollecting the 1910 November fire that destroyed the Brandon facility, dubbed at the time as the Brandon Asylum for the Insane.

Four storyboards have been installed on the museum’s wall, weaving old photos and descriptions together about the day of the fire and the repercussions it had in the community. Two framed photos are also part of the collection.

The exhibit was added in advance of the fire’s 115th anniversary, which arrives on Nov. 4.

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Southport Senior Bowling League seeks new members

By Renée Lilley Local Journalism Initiative 3 minute read Thursday, Oct. 30, 2025

A senior bowling league at Southport Bowl is issuing an urgent call for new members as dwindling attendance threatens its future.

A long-time participant fears the league may lose its reserved time slots at the Central Plains RecPlex if more people don’t sign up for the five-pin league.

“We need more people,” said Kathy Lilley, a Portage la Prairie resident who has bowled in the league off-and-on for over a decade. “I’m just afraid that if it doesn’t pick up, we’re gonna lose those times.”

Lilley said the Monday night and Friday afternoon leagues are struggling the most to attract bowlers.

One in 17 Manitobans harmed during hospital stays

By Steven Sukkau Local Journalism Initiative 3 minute read Thursday, Oct. 30, 2025

Every year, hundreds of Manitobans are harmed during hospital stays, often from incidents that could have been prevented. Health officials are using Canadian Patient Safety Week to sound the alarm and encourage patients, families, and care teams to work together to make hospital care safer.

Provincial health authorities, including Shared Health Manitoba and Prairie Mountain Health (PMH), are spotlighting the importance of listening, asking questions, and taking collective action to reduce hospital harm.

According to the Canadian Institute for Health Information, in 2024–25, one in 17 acute care hospital stays in Canada involved at least one harmful event, and one in four of those cases involved multiple harmful events. “Despite years of patient safety initiatives, harm rates are not going down,” Shared Health said in a statement. “We need to listen, learn, and act, together with patients and families, to make meaningful change.”

PMH CEO Treena Slate said fostering a culture where patients feel empowered to ask questions is central to their approach. “We remain committed to an organizational culture of safety and continuous improvement through leadership, facilitation, education and capacity building,” she said.

Portage MMF local honours veterans with ‘Poppy Project’

By Renee Lilley Local Journalism Initiative 2 minute read Preview

Portage MMF local honours veterans with ‘Poppy Project’

By Renee Lilley Local Journalism Initiative 2 minute read Thursday, Oct. 30, 2025

PORTAGE LA PRAIRIE — The Manitoba Metis Federation’s Portage Local has honoured seven Métis veterans and dozens of elders through a commemorative beading initiative called the “Poppy Project.”

Twenty participants took part in the project, which resulted in nearly 70 hand-beaded poppies.

The initiative included the creation of seven “Special Poppies,” which featured a Métis infinity symbol, beaded specifically for local veterans. An additional 42 poppies were created for elders as part of the project’s “Make a Poppy, Give a Poppy” theme.

The seven special poppies were presented to the veterans by MMF Minister Will Goodon during the local’s October meeting at the Herman Prior Activity Centre. The Veteran recipients were Len Asham, Joe McNabb, Cliff LaFreniere, Robert Hannah, Lawrence Sandney, Ray Bruneau and Donald Bruneau.

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Thursday, Oct. 30, 2025

Dogs, owners set to have tail-wagging time at show

By Wendy King 5 minute read Thursday, Oct. 30, 2025

It’s going to be wall-to-wall and nose-to-tail dogs at the Wheat City Kennel Club All Breed Show at the Keystone Centre next weekend. From Nov. 6 to 9, dog lovers will be showing off their best friends in conformation (appearance), obedience trials and rally obedience trials. It’s a great time for some family fun, and to learn more about dogs and their behaviours.

Scheduled for the Saturday is the Canadian Kennel Club (CKC) Canine Good Neighbour (CGN) test, which evaluates dogs on well-mannered behaviour while out in the community among people, dogs, and distractions. Its purpose is to encourage responsible dog ownership and to ensure that dogs remain welcome in the community.

The CGN test has no prerequisites and is open to both purebred and mixed breeds who have prepared for the test.

“Any dog is eligible. If you’ve got a dog and you want to train it for the test, absolutely. If you’ve got a blind dog, a three-legged dog, they can all do it!” said Stephanie Inkster, this year’s CGN evaluator at the Wheat City Kennel Club dog show.

New stats flood world of baseball

By Bruce Penton 5 minute read Preview

New stats flood world of baseball

By Bruce Penton 5 minute read Thursday, Oct. 30, 2025

Baseball statistics are getting ridiculous. Every day, it seems, some analytical expert delivers a new statistical category that, ultimately, will probably result in fans learning that a batter produces more hits when his heart is in mid-beat.

Way back when, all a baseball fan knew of his favourite players were batting average, runs-batted-in, base hits, runs scored and walks. If a statistician wanted to get cute, he or she might even break down the regular walks from those issued intentionally.

Today? It’s out of control. A few new baseball-stat categories started showing up 10 or 15 years ago, such as WAR (wins above replacement, a category that determines a player’s value to a team were he playing instead of a replacement player). Offensively, the stat used most often to determine a player’s value is OPS, which is adding up the player’s on-base percentage plus his slugging average. Anyone over 1.000 is an all-star.

Here’s a quiz: What is BABIP? It calculates a hitter’s batting average only on balls in play. In other words, a strikeout or a home run aren’t counted. Only those balls that stay in the field of play. There’s a fairly new stat showing up as ISO, which is described as ‘isolated power’ — measuring a hitter’s rate of extra-base hits per at-bat. Also measured these days are categories for exit velocity, launch angle, hard hit and barrels.

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Thursday, Oct. 30, 2025

Farmers bullish about high cattle prices

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 4 minute read Preview

Farmers bullish about high cattle prices

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 4 minute read Thursday, Oct. 30, 2025

Ranchers have finished the year with a strong sense of optimism, according to the president of the Manitoba Beef Producers.

Following another season of high sales prices, cow producers are feeling hopeful and positive about their industry, Matthew Atkinson, organization president, told the Sun.

“It’s an optimistic group of folks out there, it’s really good to see,” he said.

The Neepawa-area beef producer heard the sentiment among producers through his role as the organization president, representing roughly 6,000 producers in the province.

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Thursday, Oct. 30, 2025

Rural Roundup — Oct. 23, 2025

By Connor McDowell Local Journalism Initiative 5 minute read Preview

Rural Roundup — Oct. 23, 2025

By Connor McDowell Local Journalism Initiative 5 minute read Thursday, Oct. 23, 2025

NEEPAWA

A new Filipino cuisine restaurant celebrated its grand opening earlier this month in Neepawa.

The restaurant, Vegos Pinoy Restaurant, at 336 Mountain Ave., cut the ribbon on Oct. 3. The restaurant has a mix of ten full-time and part-time employees, and will offer a traditional sit down experience. It will also include a buffet and catering service.

It is the sixth Filipino-owned and operated business and second cultural eatery to establish itself within the community.

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Thursday, Oct. 23, 2025

Kids were part of the installation process for the new Kenton playground, seen here to be piling gravel into the play structure base. (Virden Empire Advance)

Kids were part of the installation process for the new Kenton playground, seen here to be piling gravel into the play structure base. (Virden Empire Advance)

Manitoban tussels with province over U.S. medical bill

By Steven Sukkau Local Journalism Initiative 5 minute read Preview

Manitoban tussels with province over U.S. medical bill

By Steven Sukkau Local Journalism Initiative 5 minute read Thursday, Oct. 23, 2025

When gym teacher Rob Trachtenberg began feeling severe numbness and pain in his right hand late in 2024, he never expected that his path to relief would lead him across the U.S. border.

Frustrated by what he says was an 18-month wait for treatment in Manitoba, he opted to drive to Fargo, North Dakota, for a 45-minute procedure, only to be denied reimbursement by his home province. He raises pressing questions about surgical wait times in Manitoba and how, or whether, the province compensates residents seeking treatment outside its borders.

Trachtenberg said his symptoms began late in 2024 and soon worsened. After visits to a minor injury clinic and his family physician, he was diagnosed with carpal tunnel syndrome. But the wait for a specialist and then for surgery loomed large.

“They told me that consultation and surgery could be as long as 18 months,” he says. His right hand had become numb across three and a half fingers. “I was in pain, I couldn’t hold things … I hung in there until Christmas, then went on medical leave.”

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Thursday, Oct. 23, 2025

Winnipeg gym teacher Rob Trachtenberg, facing an 18-month wait for carpal tunnel surgery that risked permanent nerve damage, paid US$2,400 for a quick procedure in Fargo but was later denied provincial reimbursement under Manitoba’s out-of-province referral rules. (Supplied)

Winnipeg gym teacher Rob Trachtenberg, facing an 18-month wait for carpal tunnel surgery that risked permanent nerve damage, paid US$2,400 for a quick procedure in Fargo but was later denied provincial reimbursement under Manitoba’s out-of-province referral rules. (Supplied)

She Bought an Urn for Her Cat. Instead, She Found Someone Else’s Loved One.

By Steven Sukkau Local Journalism Initiative Reporter 3 minute read Preview

She Bought an Urn for Her Cat. Instead, She Found Someone Else’s Loved One.

By Steven Sukkau Local Journalism Initiative Reporter 3 minute read Thursday, Oct. 23, 2025

On a shelf in a quiet thrift store in Winkler, somewhere between chipped teacups and somebody’s old wedding china, an urn sat for weeks, not empty, but full.

Not metaphorically full, as in “rich with memories,” or “filled with meaning.” Literally full. Inside the smooth, silent container: cremated remains.

No name. No inscription. No tag. No clue.

And for weeks, no one noticed.

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Thursday, Oct. 23, 2025

A Winkler woman who bought an urn at a thrift store, hoping to use it for her cat’s ashes, was shocked to discover it already contained unclaimed cremated remains and is now searching for the owner before scattering them next year. (Photo courtesy of Hayley Bueckert-Dyck.

Supplied photo)

A Winkler woman who bought an urn at a thrift store, hoping to use it for her cat’s ashes, was shocked to discover it already contained unclaimed cremated remains and is now searching for the owner before scattering them next year. (Photo courtesy of Hayley Bueckert-Dyck.
                                Supplied photo)

A Halloween dish fit for Dracula

By Wendy King 2 minute read Preview

A Halloween dish fit for Dracula

By Wendy King 2 minute read Thursday, Oct. 23, 2025

Halloween is on Friday this year, at the end of a long school/work week. The kids will be chomping at the bit to get out the door and start trick-or-treating, but the family still has to eat.

Here’s a recipe for the slow cooker - er - slow cauldron that will let parents get a head start on the evening, fill everyone up, and give parents the energy they need, and kids the stamina they need, to trek the neighbourhood: Transylvanian *Ghoulash. Start with a few easy tasks the day before, toss it into the slow cooker on low the next morning and serve it up as soon as you’re in the door in the evening.

*Does not contain actual Ghouls.

Normally, one would expect this dish to be of Hungarian — as opposed to Transylvanian — origin. However, for the purposes of this recipe for the spookiest of holidays we can, in fact, rightly call it Transylvanian Ghoulash as Transylvania was part of Hungary from the 11th through 16th centuries, and again from 1867 to 1918.

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Thursday, Oct. 23, 2025

Transylvanian Ghoulash, a filling meal for all the “Boils and Ghouls” this Halloween. (Photo by Wendy King)

Transylvanian Ghoulash, a filling meal for all the “Boils and Ghouls” this Halloween. (Photo by Wendy King)

McDavid contract a great deal for Oilers

By Bruce Penton 5 minute read Preview

McDavid contract a great deal for Oilers

By Bruce Penton 5 minute read Thursday, Oct. 23, 2025

Connor McDavid could have asked for the moon, and Edmonton Oilers’ owner Daryl Katz would have somehow arranged to have it pulled from the sky. But the 28-year-old superstar hockey player stunned the National Hockey League just before the start of the 2025-26 season by signing a two-year contract for, basically, second-line centre money.

While he and his wife Lauren won’t have to visit neighbourhood food banks after agreeing to accept US$12.5 million per year for two seasons, McDavid sent a stark message to the Oilers, confirming that his No. 1 incentive is not to be the highest-paid player in the NHL, but to win the Stanley Cup. And to win it wearing the Oilers’ blue and orange.

While team-mate Leon Draisaitl is making $14 million a year for the next six seasons, and Minnesota star Kirill Kiprizov recently became the highest-paid NHLer with a $17 million per year contract, McDavid’s decision to take less money gives general manager Stan Bowman some extra cash to play with in order to sign some complementary pieces to surround McDavid, Draisaitl, Evan Bouchard and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, the centrepieces of the Oilers’ still-relevant Stanley Cup contender.

Bowman, whose team lost in the Stanley Cup final to Florida in back-to-back seasons, might want to start by finding a Hellebuyckian-style goaltender who is able to win games by himself. Stuart Skinner and Calvin Pickard, the Oilers’ two goalies, are decent, but not game-stealers or game-breakers. Sometimes they break games in the wrong fashion, as happened on opening night this year when Skinner’s peewee-league-style mishap with a loose puck eventually resulted in a shootout loss to the visiting Calgary Flames.

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Thursday, Oct. 23, 2025

Connor McDavid speaks to the media at Hockey Canada’s National Teams orientation camp in Calgary on Aug. 27. Bruce Penton explains why McDavid’s re-signing with the Edmonton Oilers is a good deal for the team. (The Canadian Press)

Connor McDavid speaks to the media at Hockey Canada’s National Teams orientation camp in Calgary on Aug. 27. Bruce Penton explains why McDavid’s re-signing with the Edmonton Oilers is a good deal for the team. (The Canadian Press)

Warbirds pilot grew up inspired by veterans

By Connor McDowell Local Journalism Initiative 5 minute read Preview

Warbirds pilot grew up inspired by veterans

By Connor McDowell Local Journalism Initiative 5 minute read Thursday, Oct. 23, 2025

Jeff Bell is responsible for flying eight wartime aircraft in Brandon.

The chief pilot at the Commonwealth Air Training Plan Museum, Bell leads a team of volunteer pilots who take oldies like the 1943-built Boeing Stearman Kaydet to the air. His main responsibility is to ensure the wartime planes stored in Brandon are in good condition, follow regulations, and are flown properly.

“I consider myself lucky to get to come here and do this,” Bell told the Sun.

It’s been 10 years flying wartime planes. When asked why he does it, Bell said he grew fascinated for the period as a boy, living in a Winnipeg community with many war veterans.

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Thursday, Oct. 23, 2025

Chief pilot at the Commonwealth Air Training Plan Museum, Jeff Bell, holds an antique Bolingbroke Turrent. The machine guns were mounted on some RCAF aircraft, as seen on the left side of the screen, in the Second World War era. (Connor McDowell/The Brandon Sun)

Chief pilot at the Commonwealth Air Training Plan Museum, Jeff Bell, holds an antique Bolingbroke Turrent. The machine guns were mounted on some RCAF aircraft, as seen on the left side of the screen, in the Second World War era. (Connor McDowell/The Brandon Sun)

Algae left its mark on Minnedosa water park

By Connor McDowell Local Journalism Initiative 4 minute read Preview

Algae left its mark on Minnedosa water park

By Connor McDowell Local Journalism Initiative 4 minute read Thursday, Oct. 23, 2025

The inflatable water park at Minnedosa Lake suffered financially this year because of algae, the business owner said.

Splish Splash Water Park saw a significant drop in sales starting early August and lingering until the end of summer, Gerry Champagne, owner, told the Sun in October. The drop came after an algae alert warned people to stay away from blooms on the lake.

“There’s a couple of days shortly after the warning hit the internet, where it was 25 degrees and there was nobody there, like, literally nobody,” Champagne told the Sun. “We opened that (next) weekend, and we’re lucky if we saw 10 people.”

The remainder of the season was stained with that perception of toxic algae, he said. Almost a month passed before people returned to the water park, but customers never returned in full.

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Thursday, Oct. 23, 2025

Splish Splash Water Park is seen in early August during algae warnings. (Tim Smith/The Brandon Sun files)

Splish Splash Water Park is seen in early August during algae warnings. (Tim Smith/The Brandon Sun files)

Fund helps hospital staff advance careers

By Steven Sukkau Local Journalism Initiative Reporter 3 minute read Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025

The Dauphin Hospital Foundation is putting a strong emphasis on recruitment and retention by investing in the people who provide care every day at the Dauphin Regional Health Centre (DRHC).

At the heart of that effort is the Delha Cort Educational Trust, an endowment fund established in the 1990s through the estate of longtime Dauphin resident Irene Delha Cort. Her bequest was intended to ensure hospital staff would always have support to further their skills and education.

The fund is managed by the Foundation’s Board of Directors. While the principal investment remains untouched, the annual interest provides grants to DRHC employees pursuing professional development opportunities.

Over the years, the fund has helped numerous healthcare workers expand their training, an increasingly vital priority at a time when rural hospitals face challenges recruiting and retaining staff. Recent recipients include respiratory therapist Erin Forsyth, licensed practical nurse Janelle McIvor and health care aide Paige Pogany, each with their own story of how the support has made a difference.

Are CFL changes ‘Americanizing’ our game?

By Bruce Penton 5 minute read Preview

Are CFL changes ‘Americanizing’ our game?

By Bruce Penton 5 minute read Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025

It didn’t take new Canadian Football League commissioner Stewart Johnston long to become a household name among football fans north of the border.

Named as commissioner only five months ago, Johnston announced a series of significant logistical and rule changes to the league, some of which will take effect in 2026 and others in 2027.

Among the changes are a reduction in the length of the CFL field from 110 yards to 100 (same as the National Football League), moving the goalposts to the rear of the end zone instead of at the goal line (same as the NFL) and a reduced end zone, from 20 yards to 15 yards (the NFL’s end zones are 10 yards deep).

Another change involves the rouge, a single point unique to the Canadian game. No longer will a single point be awarded for punting the ball through the end zone or by missing a field goal and having the ball sail into the stands. Teams will still get credit for a single point, however, if the punted ball or missed field goal winds up within the boundaries of the end zone, and the returning player is unable to get it back into the field of play.

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Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025

CFL Commissioner Stewart Johnston leaves the stage after speaking at a press conference in Toronto on Sept. 22. Johnston has made some adjustments to the Canadian game that bring it more in line with the NFL, leading to accusations that the CFL is being Americanized. (The Canadian Press)

CFL Commissioner Stewart Johnston leaves the stage after speaking at a press conference in Toronto on Sept. 22. Johnston has made some adjustments to the Canadian game that bring it more in line with the NFL, leading to accusations that the CFL is being Americanized. (The Canadian Press)

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