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HomeLocal News (Page 652)

Crime Stoppers Wanted and Crime of the Week for November 1, 2024

Suspect caught on video surveillance stealing tip jar

Multi-Vehicle Collision at Van Horne and 21st Street Sends One to Winnipeg Hospital with Serious Injuries

Carberry Bus Crash First Responders Inducted into Order of the Buffalo Hunt

Police arrest male for Flight From Police and Trafficking charges

Assiniboine partners with MPI to expand adult driver training in Manitoba

Crime Stoppers Wanted and Crime of the Week for October 25, 2024

Brandon police respond to several theft reports from local businesses

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Party Gone Bad

A 36-year old Carberry man has been arrested on a charge of Assault and Breach of Probation following a drinking party in Brandon on Saturday afternoon. Police say that on Saturday afternoon they attended an apartment in the 600 block of McDiarmind Drive following a complaint of an assault. It was discovered that the apartment dweller, a female, had 2 persons over to her home and she had asked them to leave. She started to escort the male out on the door and which point police say the man took offense to this and pushed the homeowner back and punched her in the nose resulting in a bloody nose. The suspect was arrested and kept in custody at BCC until sober for his release on Sunday morning. His female companion, was also intoxicated and causing problems and was arrested on Breach of Peace and was also held in custody till sober. The victim was treated at the hospital and released. (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});    
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The Westman Traditional Christmas Diner is Looking for Volunteers

The Westman Traditional Christmas Diner is looking for volunteers for this years dinner at the Victoria Inn. They would love to have as many helpers as possible to help make sure no one goes without a meal on Christmas. Now in it's 32 year the event has grown from just 30 meals in it's first year to last year delivering 2200 meals to shut-ins, and serving another 2300 meals to those who attended the dinner. Here's just some of the dates and duties they are looking to fill. Dec 21st and 22nd to prepare turkeys @ 4pm 22nd and 23rd to carve turkeys. @ 8 am Peeling potatoes and making stuffing and wrapping presents on the 23rd. @ 1 pm They also require volunteers on the 25th starting early at 7am to 8pm for cleanup. Please email or call with the information below: christmasdinner@wcgwave.ca 204-728-7987
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YWCA Brandon Keeping Spirits Bright Fundraiser for the 2016 Holiday Season

Press Release YWCA Brandon Keeping Spirits Bright Fundraiser and Awareness Campaign for the 2016 Holiday Season Brandon, Canada – December 1st 2016 – The YWCA Brandon announces their Keeping Spirits Bright Campaign for the holiday season. Please help us spread the word about “Keeping Spirits Bright” this holiday season. Each year the YWCA Brandon Westman Women’s Shelter provides support and shelter to an average of 500 women and children who are fleeing family or domestic violence situations. When violence happens victims and their children will leave, often with no time to pack a bag or gather personal possessions. Help us to bring a little joy and cheer to families during this holiday season and light up our Tree of Safety – because we provide a safe place for women and children! As of the end of November the YWCA Westman Women’s Shelter provided over 4,000 nights to women, men and children who were victims of domestic violence. Our goal is to raise $5,250, this represents $10 for every woman and child who spent a night in our shelter in the past year. With each donation, our tree in the front yard at YWCA Meredith Place at 148- 11th Street, will light up a little more, with purple lights – purple lights for domestic violence. Donate through our webpage- ywcabrandon.com. or ywcabrandon on facebook or by mail at 148-11th Street, Brandon, Mb R7A 4J4, to support our  Keeping Spirits Bright Campaign during this holiday season. For more information please Contact BJ Kirouac & Lorna French Fund Development & Marketing Officers YWCA Brandon 204-571-3680 Email: ywca2@wcgwave.ca
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AMBER ALERT For Portage Girl

(L-R) Colleen Sheryl McIvor & Luisa Noyemi Alvarenga Written by RCMP Release AMBER ALERT: Portage RCMP issue Amber Alert for Luisa Noyemi Alvarenga. On December 2, 2016, at approximately 11:00 am, Luisa Noyemi Alvarenga, 8, was taken from her Portage la Prairie, Manitoba residence by her biological mother, Colleen Sheryl McIvor, 43. Luisa is described as aboriginal, 4’ tall and 60 pounds. She has black, medium-length hair. She was wearing a purple winter coat, black boots and jeans. They are traveling in a stolen black 2012 Chevrolet Sierra pickup truck with Manitoba license plate FPB 968. It is believed they could be in Long Plain First Nation, Manitoba. Police are very concerned for Luisa’s immediate well-being. Anyone who has seen Luisa Alvarenga and her mother Colleen McIvor, or who knows of their whereabouts, please contact 911 or your local emergency number.
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Western Manitoba on the Leading Edge of Art Therapy

Pictured: Kim Burgess in her new art therapy space inside the Inspire Studio of Fine Art in Minnedosa   While Minnedosa celebrates the addition of another professional service to their line-up of health care practitioners in the downtown core, Birtle shares in that success with an expansion of a local business to a wider clientele. On the heels of the “What’s the Big Idea?” entrepreneurship event in Neepawa, both communities can claim a victory. Minnedosa’s Kim Burgess was called to the stage four times as awards were handed out in nine categories at the entrepreneurship event including the RBC award for “Best Pitch of the Day”. Her proposal, to open a satellite office of Valley Art Therapy & Associates in Minnedosa sees her as part of an expressive arts community where only a few practice rurally. Art therapy has been celebrated by the health and wellness community to help people who struggle with trauma to productively communicate their emotions and stresses through different means. This includes painting, drawing, sculpting and even opportunities for role play using a sand tray allowing persons to play out complex issues in a very contained, controlled environment. This approach is also seeing increased delivery to help engage persons suffering from Alzheimer’s disease as the opportunity to create activates areas of the brain and promote general wellness with those patients. In the Westman/Parkland region, her addition to the field doubles the roster of available providers. The area’s most experienced practitioner is Lori Boyko, the founder of Birtle’s Valley Art Therapy. “It’s very exciting,” says Boyko of the Big Idea win and opening a location in Minnedosa. “It expands our availability to help more people. From Birtle, we are serving clients from as far away as Swan River. Opening a Minnedosa location significantly expands our service radius.” Boyko has committed more than two decades as an educator and therapist holding a Master’s Degree in Counselling with a specialty in art therapy. Returning home from British Columbia to rural Manitoba to launch her own private practice wasn’t without its initial challenges. “There were no roadblocks,” Boyko recalls. “Instead, there were just more initial opportunities to provide education about art therapy.” Since she began, Boyko has seen her practice grow to a volume of clients that required her to hire additional staff, which opened the door for Kim Burgess to work with her since June 2015. Boyko describes that the long standing relationship of her practice in the community has seen the public warm up to the discipline and over time it has become increasingly accepted. Burgess is a certified Counsellor with the Canadian Counselling and Psychotherapy Association and has been employed as an educator and counsellor in the school system with the Rolling River School Division for several years. Her pursuit of opportunities in the more specialized field of art therapy serves as an extension of her present role. “I love working in the school setting,” says Burgess. “There are definitely parallels with my work in the school and with art therapy that are both rewarding in their own way. Both roles really complement each other.” Both Boyko and Burgess are looking at the new Minnedosa office as a collaboration that will benefit the community at large and expand the capacity to help people in need.The new location in Minnedosa is set in the seemingly appropriate setting inside the Inspire Studio of Fine Art, a mecca of regional creativity featuring the work of more than 36 Manitoba artisans. Incidentally, Marlies Soltys, the curator of the gallery also points to her 2015 success on stage at “What’s the Big Idea?” for helping to launch her gallery as well. For more information about art therapy in western Manitoba, visit valleyarttherapy.com.