Jennifer Laviolette

Jennifer Laviolette

Tuesday, 31 October 2023 08:28

Big Award Win

Ryan Keown got his dream come true at this year’s Josie Music Awards, as he got to deliver his acceptance and thank you speech on the stage of the Grand Ole Opry Circle...

Wednesday, 25 October 2023 10:17

MacTavish awarded Sovereign’s volunteer medal

Another well-deserving community member from The Pas has been presented with the Sovereign’s Volunteer Medal. Bev MacTavish was also presented with the prestigious award for her volunteerism with a few different entities in the community.
“I received the Sovereign’s Volunteer Medal for my involvement with the choir, Sam Waller Museum and my work at the hospital,” said MacTavish.
“I got involved with the Sam Waller Museum in 1978, when I first came to The Pas to teach at the high school. I really love history, so that made me get involved. I got on the board and have been on it ever since.
“I knew Sam Waller and he was such a unique and interesting person,” said MacTavish. “He collected all of the stuff in his school house at Opaskwayak Cree Nation. When he retired, he had nowhere to put it. Then The Pas Rotary Club built him a bigger building and then outgrew that, because there were donations from all over the world to add to the collection.”

Wednesday, 25 October 2023 10:08

Opasquia trails planning session

With the success of finalizing the build of the boardwalk for the Boreal Trail, the Opasquia Trails held a planning meeting last week, to determine what the board and trail’s needs would be for the foreseeable future.
“We wanted to have a planning meeting, because we haven’t had one since inception,” said Opasquia Trails Board Member Al McLauchlan. “The board thought it was time to get together as a board and with organizations in the community, to make sure that we still had community support and were on the track we had anticipated. We were pleasantly surprised and the ideas that came from the planning meeting were consistent with what the board had wanted.
“There is still a huge interest in trails and unbelievable support for what our board is doing. That is evident from what we saw at this meeting and in terms of the number of people using the trail. Our visitation numbers are outstanding and it’s great to see how many people are actually using the trail. This summer we estimated around 14,000 people walked the boardwalk, and that’s a very conservative low estimate. We’re still seeing high numbers of people using the trail during the fall months.”

Wednesday, 25 October 2023 10:03

Get on point with sharps clean up

The litter of discarded sharps in the tri-community has been a long-standing issue that has yet to be properly addressed. While there is a great need for harm reduction in the tri-community, there is also a great need for more public sharp disposal containers to be put out.
There has been some earlier dialogue about this issue, but what it ultimately boils down to is the severe lack of sharps disposal containers in public places and no one wanting to seem to take ownership of that responsibility.
The Pas Bear Clan Patrol has been busy once again picking up discovered discarded sharps in various places throughout the tri-community. Just this month alone, The Pas Bear Clan Patrol has received an overwhelming number of calls about discarded sharps. They were notified of sharps found at Margaret Barbour Collegiate and behind North of 53 Industrial.

Published in Opasquia Times News
Tuesday, 24 October 2023 08:27

SVSD implements Therapeutic Schools Project

During the pandemic, it became more apparent that there needs to be healthy and positive coping mechanisms for students. Students come to class from different backgrounds, experiences and home lives that all have an impact on their ability to focus and learn. Swan Valley School Division (SVSD) recognized this need, which led staff to create a program to apply for funding to assist in giving students a space with activities to help them reset and resume learning.
“In 2020, the SVSD recognized the need to improve the quality of our student’s mental health in order for them to be successful in school,” said SVSD Student Services Achievement Coordinator Patti Hack. “Based on neuroscience, and the research from top trauma specialists such as Dr. Bruce Perry and Dr. Stuart Shanker, we created a four-prong approach to address these needs.”
“The four prongs are first to create a co-regulation room in each school,” said SVSD Counsellor Kerrilynn Behrman. “According to research, there is a correlation between adverse childhood experiences such as abuse, poverty, and parental addictions; and later in life social, emotional and psychological struggles. The one thing that can help them off that trajectory is having one person they feel connected to. Dr. Stuart Shanker’s research also indicates that in order to be successful in school, we need to be connected and regulated so that we can access the cortex or thinking part of our brain. There are many different ways that we can regulate our bodies and nervous systems that are incorporated into the co-regulation room.”
“The co-regulation room has an active area with stationary bikes, mini trampolines, swings, and gliders that help students upregulate,” said SVSD Counsellor Jocelyn Bender. “There is a quiet area with bubble towers and rocking chairs that help students calm their autonomic nervous system. The third area of the room is an expressive area with arts, crafts, and sand trays or games. The co-regulation room also has a caring, trained staff member who connects with the students and helps them choose up to three activities to help them regulate and return to class, ready to learn.
“The students and activities are tracked to ensure the choices are effective. This room is a proactive approach, not a punishment, for all students in the school, as everyone gets dysregulated from time to time. Some are scheduled for regular 15-minute intervals in the day, others may be drop-ins from time to time, depending on life events.”
“The second prong is educating all staff on trauma based on neuroscience and Dr. Bruce Perry’s neurosequential model of therapeutics,” said Hack. “Staff have learned about trauma, its impact on the brain, and tools to help their students.”
“The third prong is teaching all the students about their brains and therapeutic tools that they can use during difficult times,” said Behrman. “They learn about the parts of their brain and make a play dough brain, and how to listen to their bodies to identify and name how they feel. Students then learn different tools in a sequential way, based on neuroscience, to calm their bodies and become regulated. These include body-based tools such as breathing, mindfulness, muscle tension and relaxation, and butterfly hugs and tapping. Later in the year, cognitive tools such as helpful versus unhelpful thinking and how to change our brain channel, as well as empathy and gratitude are learned. In each session, students add a tool to their toolbox and at the end of the year go home with a toolbox full of ideas to help them become regulated through difficult times.
“The final prong was to educate parents about what we are doing and we created a video that can be found on our school division’s website,” said Bender.
Through the Teacher’s Idea Fund, SVSD has been successful in receiving funds to not only pilot the program but to build and expand it to other schools in the division.
“In the fall of 2020, we applied for the Teacher’s Idea Fund with the Manitoba Government and received $15,000 to pilot it in one school, which was Taylor School,” said Hack. “With its success, we then applied the following two years to continue to build and use the full framework in Taylor, Heyes, Benito, Bowsman and Minitonas schools. Swan River Ecole School will be using two of the prongs this year; the co-regulation room and staff training. In the following two years, we received $150,000 to cover staffing and materials to facilitate this program and its framework.
We currently have funding until the end of the 2023/2024 school year.”
This program will focus on elementary and middle school-aged students, with the goal being that by the time they reach high school, they will have all the positive and healthy coping mechanisms they need to be successful in learning.
“The framework has currently been used from students in Kindergarten to Grade 8,” said Behrman. “It has been incorporated in their daily learning by having access to the co-regulation rooms and knowing what the purpose of the room is and how to use it.”
“As well, staff are encouraged to continue using the classroom tools taught, as we know repetition helps create habit,” said Bender. “Their coping toolboxes they create throughout the year are kept in the classroom and we encourage the teachers to have the students use the items in the room when they become dysregulated.”
This program was developed by a local staff member and is being taught to other staff in the division to implement with students.
“The program initially was created and facilitated by Kerrilynn Behrman,” said Hack. “Kerrilynn has a Master’s Degree in Counselling Psychology and training in Dr. Perry’s NME model, as well as play therapy and various therapies used in classroom activities.
“In 2022, the school vision recognized the importance of fostering positive mental health and hired a second counsellor, Jocelyn Bender. Jocelyn is a long-time educator at SVSD. She has a Master’s Degree in both Special Education and Guidance and Counselling and has training in child development, behaviourism, and various therapies including play therapy.
“Together the two have trained the educational assistants who manage the co-regulation rooms in trauma, what co-regulation is and how to manage them,” said Hack.

Tuesday, 17 October 2023 11:27

Sam Waller Museum welcomes new director

There is new face at the Sam Waller Museum as the new museum director. Jaxon Baker recently started the position at the beginning of the month and came to northern Manitoba from the east coast of Canada.
“I’m originally from Truro, Nova Scotia, and moved to Fredericton, New Brunswick in 2011, and have lived there ever since,” said Sam Waller Museum Director. “I hold a BA with a major in History from the University of New Brunswick, an Ontario Graduate Certificate in Museum Management and Curatorship from Fleming College and a Masters in Museology from the Université de Montreal. Both of my parents were teachers, but they have retired now.”

Tuesday, 17 October 2023 11:24

One year later and still remembering Tristin

Please note, some of the details in this story may be difficult, disturbing and traumatic to some readers, as it talks about MMIWG2+.
Stories of missing and murdered Indigenous women, girls and two-spirited people are still running at an all-time high, despite the calls to action. The one-year anniversary of the death of Tristin Jobb just passed, and for her family and loved ones, it hasn’t gotten any easier.
Tristin was a sister, daughter, grand-daughter, who was loved unconditionally and seen as a young woman who was wise beyond her years.
“Tristin was amazing as a small child and very smart beyond her years,” said Tristin’s mother Val Charlette. “One of the ladies that worked at Aboriginal Head Start in Flin Flon, said Tristin was like an elder in a little child’s body. She could read before kindergarten, was incredibly smart, asking questions, talked a lot and figured out things very early in life. Tristin was a very bright girl.

Northland Ford has started their annual Scare Hunger food drive for the month of October. The dealership collects non-perishable food items and donates them to the school breakfast programs and local organizations in the community. They have a truck set up in the showroom and welcome people to stop by and drop off a donation.
“The main things we focus on are the school breakfast programs, so non-perishable items like fruit snacks, granola bars and lunch kit related goods are just some of the things we collect,” said Northland Ford Sales Consultant Rick Lagace. “All the food items must be non-perishable, as we don’t have the space, storage or resources to collect perishable goods.

The Town of the Pas held their council meeting last Tuesday in council chambers.
A discussion was held about community celebrations and which ones the Town of The Pas would facilitate. Mayor Murphy expressed his wish to see a weekend spring event in conjunction with the R.M. of Kelsey, Opaskwayak Cree Nation, Moose Lake, Mosakahiken, Grand Rapids and other areas. He talked about it being a cultural type event that would bring everyone together. Mayor Murphy noted that there are lots of great festivals, but they are run individually and that it would be nice to have something held with everyone involved. He offered to take the lead to explore options and put a committee together.
Councillor Lane brought up Canada Day and how the Town of The Pas will address that. Mayor Murphy said he would like to see a Canada Day committee formed that would take the lead to make sure the event happens, but he doesn’t expect town employees to run it themselves and that there has to be a committee involved. He said it’s like expecting the Town of The Pas to run the Trappers’ Festival, and that isn’t possible.

Published in Opasquia Times News

If you are on the walking path, you will get the chance to see a new work of art. A new community mural has been painted as part of a project to bring have more murals in the community and provide more exposure to art for students and community members.
“The Pas Guest List has created the Artist in Community Murals Project to further strengthen the relationship the Town of The Pas has to the arts by creating an opportunity to showcase local, national and international artists,” said The Pas Guest List Co-founder Gabrielle Swan. “There are three components to the scope of the project. There will be two large scale murals located along the walking path that runs through the Town of The Pas. There will also be in-school speaking engagements and a free community art workshop open to all locals.

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