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New health restrictions were put in place on Friday and starting December 5, kids aged 12 to 17 will need to have at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine in order to participate in indoor sports or youth can provide proof of a negative COVID-19 test within 72 hours before playing.
And while most restrictions are targeted towards Southern Health, Manitoba's Health Minister Audrey Gordon says that could change.
"We're monitoring the numbers very, very closely," said Gordon. "We do believe the restrictions that we put in place on Friday will help bend the curve and if they don't, restrictions could be changed on a daily basis."
The province announced another 193 cases on Friday and they say there could be more than 200 daily cases by the middle of next month if things don't take a turn for the better. There are still zero active cases in Dauphin, as reported by the province.
The test positivity rate is at 6.1% provincially.
On Friday, the province also said some surgeries have been cancelled or postponed in order to free up hospital space. Anyone who is affected will be notified. The cancellations and postponements will raise Manitoba's intensive care bed capacity to 110.
"We will be announcing very soon a surgical backlog task force," said Gordon. "They will be very heavily focused on what we need to do to ensure individuals get their surgery and diagnostic test."
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- Contributed by Darnell Duff
It may be more than two months away, but you can start planning your trip to Brandon now if you want to take part in Manitoba Ag Days. Back at the Keystone Centre from January 18-20, the three-day festival is back after the event wasn't held last year.
Kristen Phillips, general manager of Manitoba Ag Days, says this event will be a special one after a year off.
"We're so excited to be back to business, it's a tremendous feeling," said Phillips.
For the first time in the event's 45-year history, Ag Days will be moving to a ticketed admission system for the 2022 show. Tickets will be $15 in advance or $20 at the door. Youth (17 and under) will be free of charge.
"It's been a long time coming, we've been chatting about it for a few years," said Phillips. "We lost two of our rooms this year which meant we lost some revenue. There is a ton of great things going on at Ag Days, it is certainly worth the price of admission."
There will be over 450 exhibitors this year and 33 speakers booked for the 2022 show. The Innovation Showcase will feature 32 new innovations. You can get tickets for the event by heading to Manitoba Ag Days 2022.
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- Contributed by Darnell Duff
From now until Sunday, the Endow Manitoba Giving Challenge is taking place.
During the challenge, gifts given to community foundations like the Dauphin and District Community Foundation will be stretched a little bit further.
"The Giving Challenge is an opportunity for community foundations to grow their unrestricted funds through stretch dollars from the Winnipeg Foundation and the Manitoba Government, so every five-dollar gift you make is stretched to seven dollars", says Kit Daley, Executive Director of the DDCF.
Last year during the Giving Challenge, the Dauphin and District Community Foundation had the third-highest total donations and Daley would love to beat that this year.
"We are asking donors to post on social media that they have made a donation, and then challenge someone else to make one too and that can be a family friend, a business associate, a family member, maybe even a rival business, we're simply trying to promote giving to your foundation and encouraging others to donate."
The DDCF has also partnered with the Dauphin Kings in a competition with the Swan Valley Stampeders. At the Dauphin Kings home game on Saturday, community foundation members will be at Credit Union Place collecting donations. The day before, the Kings play the Stampeders in Swan River and community foundation members for Swan will be collecting donations at that game. Daley says it will be a competition between the two fan bases to see who can raise more for their local community foundation.
Some of the projects that the foundation has contributed to are the North Gate bike trails, the multi-use community courts at Meadowlark Park, the Enchanted Reading Room at the Dauphin Public Library, and the Kings Way trail. They have also made contributions to local playgrounds, daycare centres, the Parkland Humane Society, Dauphin Food Bank, Fort Dauphin Museum and many more. Daley says they have also given out two-million dollars in grants since 1995.
If you would like to donate during the Giving Challenge you can do so online, or you can call Kit Daley at 204-638-4598. Donations can also be dropped off at City Hall in the drop box at the entrance, or at the DDCF office.
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- Contributed by Alec Woolston
The Canadian Crop Hail Association says extremely damaging storms made for near-record claims for Western Canadian farmers in 2021 even though there was a decrease in overall storm activity.
Insurance payments to Prairie producers will total more than $322 million which is a number that has not been seen since 2008. Producer premiums totalled more than $309 million for an industry loss ratio of 104 percent.
Manitoba was the only province to record a positive year with a loss ratio of only 26 percent. On the other hand, Saskatchewan was the hardest hit with an industry loss ratio of 134 percent compared to 65 percent in 2020. Alberta followed with a 97 percent loss ratio, compared to 75 percent in 2020.
The CCHA insured more than $8 billion in crops in 2021.
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- Contributed by Alec Woolston
The Public Health Agency of Canada is looking into an outbreak of salmonella in Western Canada. The majority of people affected became sick in late-September to mid-October but the outbreak appears to be ongoing as cases continue to be reported.
46 people in total so far have reported becoming sick from the bacteria in Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta and British Columbia. 3 people have been hospitalized but no deaths have occurred.
In a release, the agency says individuals that got sick reported eating fresh produce prior to becoming ill.
This does not mean we are telling you to avoid the produce section at the grocery store as only 6 of the cases have come from Manitoba. There are precautions you can take such as washing hands before and after handling fresh produce, cutting off any bruised or damaged areas and washing knives with hot soapy water before cutting something else.
No food recall warnings associated with salmonella in Western Canada have been issued.
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- Contributed by Alec Woolston
On Tuesday, November 9th around 3:20 in the afternoon, Lundar RCMP received a call reporting a man in distress on Lake Manitoba near the shore of Venice Road South in St. Laurent.
The caller said she could hear a man calling out for help on the water and that two bystanders were going to head out onto the water in an attempt to save the man.
Officers from Lundar and Ashern arrived and were told that two bystanders located a canoe on the shore and that they had paddled out to retrieve the man, a 61-year-old from Garson, Manitoba.
The 61-year-old was pulled from the water and brought to shore where he was met by EMS and taken to hospital. He is reported to be in stable condition. According to the 61-year-old, he was fishing in his canoe when he attempted to move some gear, lost his footing, and fell into the water which quickly sapped him of his strength.
In a press release, Sgt. James Munro, Detachment Commander of the Lundar/Ashern RCMP, said "If it were not for the quick actions taken by these three individuals, this situation would have ended tragically."
Munro also said that due to the temperature of the water, the bystanders only had minutes to act and respond.
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- Contributed by Alec Woolston
A couple of stretches of highway that were closed are back open as the first snowfall of the season arrived a couple of days ago and made itself right at home in the Parkland.
#MBHwy10: Clear Lake to N. Ent. Riding Mtn Park, Road Reopened
— Manitoba Roads (@MBGovRoads) November 12, 2021
#MBHwy5: #MBHwy261 to #MBHwy68, Road Reopened
— Manitoba Roads (@MBGovRoads) November 12, 2021
Road conditions still aren't the greatest in the Parkland and you can have a look at them here.
The storm has also caused thousands of Manitobans to be without power. The majority of the outages have occured around Winnipeg and Brandon but there have been a few outages reported along the east side of Riding Mountain near Kelwood, McCreary, Eden, and Erickson. There was also one outage in Dauphin as well as four reported near Gladstone. A quick look at the Manitoba Hydro outage page shows that those outages have since been cleared up.
Keep listening to 730 CKDM for road updates throughout the day, including the speedy glass road conditions report on weekdays at 7:30 am and 3:30 pm.
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- Contributed by Alec Woolston
A Brandon lawyer is facing a number of Law Society of Manitoba charges, one of which is sexual harassment.
Ryan William Fawcett who was barred from contacting female colleagues for any non-work-related purposes has also been charged with breach of an undertaking to the law society and conduct unbecoming of a lawyer.
Fawcett was barred in July 2020 from contacting any female lawyers in Manitoba for any purpose except work-related matters.
Those restrictions were expanded in October 2020 to include any woman who is a legal assistant, or employee of the courts.
Ryan practices law in Brandon with Legal Aid Manitoba.
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- Contributed by Darnell Duff
Manitoba's Crown-owned energy utility is now forecasting a deficit because of ongoing dry conditions.
Manitoba Hydro says it is anticipating a loss of between $190 million and $200 million for the fiscal year that ends in March, down from a break-even projection three months ago.
The utility says low water levels are affecting its ability to sell surplus energy on the spot market, although firm export sales and domestic demand will be met.
Manitoba Hydro has been seeking regular rate increases to help service billions of dollars in debt racked up in the last 15 years as it built new dams and a major transmission line.
The provincial government was planning to set rate hikes of 2.5 per cent a year for three years, but withdrew the required bill from the legislature.
The utility says it is planning to apply to the Public Utilities Board the province's regulatory agency for new rates.
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- Contributed by Darnell Duff
Shawn Charlebois was out harvesting materials on his property near Swan River recently when he noticed parts of a skull sticking out of a riverbank.
And the skull turned out to be one of a bison, so he got his son and they got it out of the bank and took it home, which was a thrill for them.
"We were over the moon excited, I am a real dedicated educator and I love bringing people to the land," said Charlebois.
The skull is estimated to be at least 100 years old and as soon as Shawn and his son found the skull, it was given to Shawn's wife so she could take it to her school to show the kids.
"The kids were super excited, it's not something you see every day," offered Charlebois.
Charlebois, who owns Red Road Compass, an Indigenous land-based education program, said he has found other animal skulls and even bison vertebrae in the past, but nothing this deeply buried. Charlebois says it was about two and a half feet underneath the riverbank.
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- Contributed by Darnell Duff
Every year on Remembrance Day, we honour the sacrifice of the members of our armed forces who stood strong in the past and those who stand strong today.
The day was originally called "Armistice Day" to commemorate the end of hostilities during World War I on November 11th, 1918. It was inaugurated in 1919 throughout most of the British empire and took place on the second Monday of November. In 1921, Canadian parliament passed an Armistice Day bill to observe it on the Monday of the week of November 11th. This coincided with the Thanksgiving holiday and thus, Armistice Day was observed with very few public demonstrations.
In 1928, there was a push by a group of prominent Canadians, which included some war veterans, to separate the two days and get more recognition for Armistice Day. In 1931, a bill was passed in the house of commons to change the name of Armistice Day to Remembrance Day and to declare it to be observed on November 11th only. The Thanksgiving holiday was moved to October.
A little over 600,000 Canadians enlisted with the Canadian Expeditionary Force during World War I and another 1,100,000 Canadians were involved in World War II efforts. Since then, Canadian troops have served in armed conflicts around the world as well as several peacekeeping missions.
In Dauphin today, there will be a commemoration service at Credit Union Place starting at 10:45 this morning. Masks will be mandatory at the service and they will require you to show your immunization card and photo I.D. After the commemoration service, attendees will head to the cenotaph on Memorial Boulevard for 12 pm.
CKDM will air our Remembrance Day program beginning at 10:55 am. There are also services happening in Grandview and Kinisota. Gilbert Plains will hold a service at the legion in Gilbert starting at 10:45.
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- Contributed by Alec Woolston