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With Dauphin Culture Days right around the corner, here's a preview on what the month-long event has to offer.
Organizers have made adjustments to the schedule this year due to restrictions currently in effect for Prairie Mountain Health, and have extended their week-long event into a full month of activities.
Chamber Art Challenge
Culture Days kicks off with the Chamber Art Challenge, where members of the Dauphin District Chamber of Commerce are challenged to create art of their choice. Their creations will be displayed at the Dauphin Public Library as well as online, where you can vote on who made the best art.
Intersection Of COVID And Creativity
Art pieces will be displayed in the window of Mega Deals in Dauphin representing how the COVID-19 pandemic has changed our world.
Dauphin’s Yardfringe
On Saturday, September 26th, the Watson Art Centre is holding its signature bike tour of culture in Dauphin. Due to COVID-19 guidelines, all participants must wear masks and travel in cohorts, as well as book a spot. The tour runs from 1:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. You can book a spot by calling the Watson Art Centre at 204-638-6231.
Found Art
The Dauphin Art Group has teamed up with MR MIKES Steakhouse to create art pieces with reused beverage coasters. If you find one of these pieces, it’s yours to keep.
Arsenic and Old Lace: The Radio Play
CKDM is partnering with Dauphin Culture Days through their Arsenic and Old Lace radio play.
For more updates about the month-long celebration, visit the Dauphin Culture Days Facebook Page.
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- Contributed by Tess Kovach
Public health officials identified 21 new cases of COVID-19 on Monday.
None of those new cases are in Prairie Mountain Health (PMH), while 17 are in the Winnipeg health region. Three cases are in the Southern Health region, and 1 is in the Interlake.
While the case numbers in PMH have dropped significantly in the past week, the province has still not provided a clear timeline of when the region might be taken out of the orange ‘restricted’ pandemic response level.
Chief public health officer Dr. Brent Roussin says while the PMH numbers are moving in the right direction, officials would need to see that trend continue for a longer period of time before considering moving the region back to ‘yellow’ and getting rid of the targeted restrictions.
There are currently 257 active cases in the province, with 1,176 recoveries.
There are 12 Manitobans in hospital with COVID-19, and three in intensive care.
Public health officials are advising of another possible exposure at a Manitoba school. An asymptomatic individual attended Beaverlodge School in Winnipeg on Thursday.
The public health investigation indicates the infection was not acquired at school, and any close contacts of the case have been identified, contacted, and advised to self isolate.
Others who were at the site do not need to self-isolate, but should self-monitor for symptoms of COVID-19.
The site is not being elevated on the Pandemic Response System, given the limited number of contacts identified.
Going forward, Dr. Brent Roussin says the province will be limiting the details they release about individuals who test positive at schools — and will no longer release specific information on things like their age.
When can a student who tested positive COVID-19 return to the classroom?
Roussin says a student can safely head back to school 10 days after the onset of symptoms, provided they are no longer feverish and show a clear improvement in their symptoms.
For asymptomatic students who test positive for COVID-19, Roussin says they can return to school 10 days after the day they were tested.
For more information on COVID-19 in Manitoba, click here.
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- Contributed by Matt Hamel
A man from Minitonas, who was originally fined for not self-isolating while sick with COVID, has been told he can scrap the ticket.
On August 19th, Curtis Rodgers went through a drive-thru testing site after developing symptoms of COVID-19 and tested positive four days later.
He says he couldn’t fully understand the testing site employee’s instructions through their PPE telling him to go straight home and stopped to run an errand before going home.
Rodgers says he didn’t leave home until he was told by public health that he’d recovered. He was then surprised when public health officials and police showed up to give him a fine on September 2nd.
The province says the ticket has been withdrawn because additional evidence became available, but they won’t provide any more details.
This was the first time the province fined anyone for breaking the self-isolation orders since they introduced the new orders in late August.
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- Contributed by Isaac Wihak
The Weather Network has released its preview of what could be in store for us over the next few months.
Manitoba had an early shot of chilly fall temperatures last week, but does that mean the winter weather is right around the corner?
Weather Network meteorologists are saying Manitoba will likely see an extended period of mild autumn weather before we settle into winter.
They say the delay of consistent winter weather is something most of the country will experience.
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- Contributed by Matt Hamel
The Dauphin Fire Department rescued two people stranded on a sand bar last night just after 7:30.
The RCMP Parkland Detachment requested the DFD to help with a water rescue on Dauphin Lake.
It was first reported that 4 people were stranded on a sand bar near the mouth of the Valley River on Dauphin Lake and couldn’t get to shore.
The DFD and RCMP attended Sifton Beach to launch the boats and were able to locate the stranded boaters.
There, it was determined there were only two people stranded, they weren’t hurt, and the DFD returned them and their boat to the shore.
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- Contributed by Isaac Wihak
Provincial biologists are concerned about the walleye population in Lake Winnipeg, but some other groups in the province have a different view on the situation.
A report recently commissioned by Pioneer Commercial Fishers of Manitoba and the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs (AMC) found the walleye population in Lake Winnipeg is actually very well established.
Now the AMC and commercial fishers are calling for an independent review of the Lake’s fish population to help explain the discrepancy between their report, and the information being released by the province.
Commercial fishers are reportedly no longer working with the province on species management, and are hiring their own experts to counter what they view as dubious data from the Manitoba government.
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- Contributed by Matt Hamel
Newly released data suggests that children, compared to adults, are much less likely to develop serious cases of COVID-19.
The ongoing research by the Canadian Paediatric Surveillance Program may help ease some of the fears parents have about kids getting back into the classroom.
Numbers from the Public Health Agency of Canada show 1.4% of kids and teenagers were hospitalized with the virus — compared to 13.5% of cases for all ages being treated in hospital.
Researchers point out these statistics are from when most schools were closed, and that going forward, health officials will have to watch what happens now as students get back into the classroom.
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The total number of COVID-19 cases in Manitoba is now 1,428 thanks to the 18 new cases announced by public health officials.
11 of the new cases are in Winnipeg, while 3 are from the Southern Health region, 2 are from the Interlake-Eastern region, 1 is from PMH and 1 is in the Northern region.
There aren't any active cases in Dauphin, all 7 total cases have recovered.
239 cases are considered active and 1,173 people have recovered.
There are 15 people in hospital with 3 in intensive care and 16 people have died due to COVID-19.
Public health officials strongly encourage all Manitobans to return to the fundamentals to help stop the spread of COVID-19. This means staying home if you are sick, washing/sanitizing your hands, covering your cough and physically distancing when you are with people outside your household. If you cannot physically distance, wear a mask.
Unless recommended by public health, only individuals experiencing COVID-19 symptoms should go for testing. Individuals with symptoms are asked to seek testing as soon as possible once symptoms are present.
For more information on COVID-19 in Manitoba, go to www.manitoba.ca/COVID19.
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- Contributed by Isaac Wihak
Some ongoing road work on Highway 19 in Riding Mountian National Park will be affecting traffic this week.
Parks Canada says they're discouraging visitors from travelling on Highway 19 — from Lake Katherine to Rolling River Road — due to ongoing construction work.
This stretch of highway will close for travel from Monday (Sept. 14) to Thursday (Sept. 17) and will reopen on Friday (Sept. 18) for four days.
Another potential closure is planned for September 22, which will be confirmed as the work progresses.
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- Contributed by Matt Hamel
In Saturday’s update from Manitoba health officials, 17 new cases were identified and the number of active cases in the province continued to drop.
Two of the new cases are in Prairie Mountain Health, and none are in the Dauphin health district.
Manitoba now has 238 active cases; down from the 287 active cases reported a day earlier.
1,156 people are listed as recovered and there have been 16 deaths in Manitoba due to COVID-19. There are 13 people in hospital and four people in intensive care.
First Cases Reported On Manitoba First Nations
The first cases of COVID-19 on Manitoba First Nations were reported this week.
Two people tested positive in Peguis First Nation, according to a statement released Friday evening from Peguis Public Health and the First Nation’s leadership.
The statement says Peguis Public Health is doing contact tracing and plans to notify anyone in the community who will need to self-isolate.
Earlier on Friday, Fisher River Cree Nation announced one of its members had also received a positive COVID-19 test result.
2nd Manitoba School Reports COVID Case
Public health officials are advising of a possible exposure at Ecole New Era School at 527 Louise Ave. in Brandon on Friday, Sept. 11 from 8:45 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. The individual attended school for a limited time while asymptomatic. The public health investigation indicates that transmission was not acquired at school. The school and cohort are being notified.
The province says additional cleaning of high-touch areas is being undertaken out of an abundance of caution. The risk is deemed low as physical distancing was maintained while at school and a mask was worn.
There are no close contacts connected to the case and public health officials have not advised anyone to self-isolate. Others who were at the site not need to self-isolate, but should self-monitor for symptoms of COVID-19.
The site is not being elevated on the Pandemic Response System, given the low risk and lack of close contacts.
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- Contributed by Matt Hamel
Police seized two loaded shotguns from a home on Sandy Bay First Nation earlier this week, and a man from Brandon is facing multiple firearms charges.
Manitoba First Nation Police (MFNPS) responded to reports of a man trying to shoot someone in Sandy Bay First Nation.
On Tuesday, September 8th at around 12:30 a.m., officers received a report of gunshots at a house, and that the suspect was inside.
Police arrested 4 males that were inside the house, and a 23-year-old man from Brandon has been charged with unauthorized possession of a firearm and unsafe storage of a firearm.
He will appear in court at a later date.
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- Contributed by Tess Kovach