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Saturday, June 29, 2024
HomeLocal News (Page 446)

Manitobans Head into Long Weekend with Lowest Gas Prices in Canada Pipeline Restored to Full Capacity

Impaired cyclist tries to fight security guard

Assiniboine to expand North Hill Campus greenhouse facility with $2 Million from Canada Foundation for Innovation and Research Manitoba

Crime Stoppers Wanted And Crime Of The Week For June 27, 2024

Crown Does Not Authorize Charges Following Passenger Bus Collision Near Carberry

Male armed with club altered with nails and barbed wire arrested following Tuesday robbery call

Student robbed in school bathroom, accused arrested

Suspect arrested for allegedly striking acquaintance with a needle

Brandon Police Service receives funding from the Province

Yesterday Premier Brian Pallister announced that the Brandon Police Service will receive over $65,000 in its efforts to reduce repeat offences and skyrocketing bicycle thefts in the city. Bicycle Theft Prevention Strategy The Brandon Police Service will received $43,100 to reduce bicycle theft in the City. There has been a 90% increase in reported thefts of bicycles in 2018, compared to the same period in 2017. Trends across Western Canada indicate that bicycle thefts are related to the rise in drug addiction, with bicycles becoming a form of street currency. Theft of bicycles is a way to make quick cash, comes with a very low risk of being caught and is a low priority for most law enforcement agencies. Strategy components: Bicycle registry: Online bicycle registry through Project 529 Garage. This app service can provide police with our own branded bicycle registry. This app will greatly improve our chances to return stolen bicycles to their owners. Partnerships with the City of Brandon, local bicycle shops, educational institutions, COPP, Bear Clan and other organizations to distribute bicycle theft prevention information and promote registration. Improve bicycle-parking in high-traffic areas: We are currently working with Area Planning to study the availability of bicycle parking structures in high-traffic areas. We would like to also install signage and camera surveillance in high-risk areas. Recidivism Rate Reduction Strategy  The Brandon Police Service will also receive $22,100 for the Recidivism Rate Reduction Strategy. The funds will help offenders released from the Brandon Correctional Centre find permanent employment and reintegrate into society. The pilot project will target 10 individuals seeking to reintegrate into the Brandon community within a year, and it will rely on community partners to ensure its success.

FREE rides on Brandon Transit New Year’s Eve

Brandon Transit is, once again, pleased to provide New Year’s Eve revellers a safe, FREE ride as they ring in the New Year at festivities across Brandon on December 31st. From 6 p.m. on Monday, Dec. 31st (New Year’s Eve) to 3 a.m. on Tuesday, Jan. 1st (New Year’s Day), Brandon Transit will run its buses on a regular modified (hourly) service. During those hours, it will be free to get on or off the bus at any regular route’s designated stops. This is the eighth consecutive year Brandon Transit has offered its free New Year’s Eve Ride Program in the community, a service which wouldn’t be possible without program sponsor, Manitoba Public Insurance. Brandon Transit also thanks this year’s local media partners 96.1 BOB FM/101.1 The Farm and the Brandon Sun for their extra assistance in promoting this important public service to the community. To plan your NYE travel route or for more information on Brandon Transit’s regular modified service routes, visit www.brandontransit.ca.

Two-Car Crash Leads to Traffic Delays

Brandon Fire and Emergency Services along with Brandon Police Service responded to a two-vehicle crash at the intersection of Victoria Ave and McDiarmid Dr near Tim Hortons. The crash occurred during the early afternoon rush, which caused traffic to come to a standstill. Traffic from 27th to McDiarmid on Victoria was blocked off, and rerouted north on 27th St. Sand was deployed to soak up fluids that had leaked from one of the vehicles, and it appeared that nobody was injured in the crash.   Photos by Liam Pattison Photography.

Province Announces Dialysis Services Expanded in Brandon

BRANDON—Dialysis services are being expanded in Brandon, launching new options for Westman residents living with kidney failure, Health, Seniors and Active Living Minister Cameron Friesen announced here today. “Providing more options for dialysis closer to home will allow Brandon and Westman-area residents to manage their own care without having to travel or temporarily relocate to Winnipeg for home training and support,” said Friesen.  “Receiving services closer to home is a cornerstone of our government’s approach to improving Manitoba’s health system and this significant measure will benefit patients in the region in a variety of ways.” The province is investing more than $500,000 annually to support the expansion, which will make home dialysis training and ongoing support more accessible for patients in the region. The home peritoneal dialysis program, which launched this fall, will initially accommodate up to 12 patients.  Peritoneal dialysis cycles a solution into and out of the stomach through a tube to collect and get rid of waste and fluid.  It can be done with a machine at night or manually several times a day. The home hemodialysis program, which will launch in 2019, will initially accommodate up to six patients.  Hemodialysis uses a machine to remove blood from the body, clean it and return it to the body.  Patients and family members receive training and supports to perform the treatment at home, rather than in the hospital. “Together with our health partners, we continue to enhance dialysis services within the health region,” said Penny Gilson, chief executive officer, Prairie Mountain Health.  “The Brandon Regional Health Centre has been offering hemodialysis service for more than 30 years.  We are now very pleased to be in a position to offer all three renal therapies through the Brandon unit.” The site in Brandon is the only one in the province operating seven days a week to treat a growing number of patients with kidney failure.  It is also the only site outside Winnipeg with nephrologists (kidney specialists) on staff. “There are many benefits for patients who are able to receive dialysis at home including more independence, less travel, fewer hospitalizations, less exposure to infection and fewer dietary restrictions,” says Dr. Mauro Verrelli, medical director, Manitoba Renal Program.  “It’s a way for people to live with kidney failure, stay out of a hospital, and remain within their communities and at home with their families.” There are currently more than 1,700 people with kidney failure receiving life-saving dialysis treatment in Manitoba, including 385 patients on home dialysis.  An additional 5,495 people in Manitoba are being treated for stages one to five chronic kidney disease. For more information on the Manitoba Renal Program, visit www.kidneyhealth.ca/wp/.

City of Brandon eyes new development charges for Spring 2019 Implementation

Brandon, MB – After more than two years spent consulting with the business community, residents and other stakeholders, the City of Brandon’s Development Services Division is preparing for a spring 2019 implementation of a new Development Charges By-law to assist in funding the infrastructure required for Brandon’s future growth. Implemented in many municipalities across Canada, development charges are levied against new development (increases in residential units and expansions of non-residential buildings) as a consistent and transparent method of paying for the on and off-site infrastructure associated with this growth. While the on-site infrastructure of such growth is constructed by the developer, off-site improvements – things like necessary transportation routes and water, wastewater and storm water facilities and networks – are generally being constructed by the City. City of Brandon Acting General Manager of Development Services and City Engineer Patrick Pulak says once in place, the City of Brandon’s development charges structure will act as a tool to recover a portion of the costs of off-site improvements from new developing areas. “While the property taxes collected by the City of Brandon annually pay for the maintenance and replacement of existing municipal services, the reality is that new growth is expensive and must contribute to growing the City,” notes Pulak.  “Over the course of the approximately the past two years, we have worked extensively with those in the development industry and others in the community to explore many options for how to fund the infrastructure required for this new growth, and we are now looking forward to getting this framework for future investment in place.” A detailed overview of the City of Brandon’s proposed Development Charges By-law, including the proposed per-unit and per-hectare or per-square foot rates to be paid by developers, can be found here. The City of Brandon is currently awaiting a decision from the Manitoba Public Utilities Board on the proposed Development Charge By-law, with final consideration of the By-law by Brandon City Council to follow. If given final approval by Brandon City Council, it is anticipated that implementation of the new charge structure will be in place prior to the 2019 construction season. A Frequently Asked Questions document on development charges prepared by the City of Brandon Development Services Division can be found on the City of Brandon website here.