🔥 TONIGHT IS A VERY SPECIAL NIGHT! 🔥 This is not just another Manitoba Stronger Together Zoom call—this is a double feature event with three powerful and influential guests, bringing you breaking news, critical insights, and a front-row seat to history in the making!
Get ready for an eye-opening and action-packed evening that will leave you informed, inspired, and ready to take action. You don’t want to miss this!
Click on the Image above to join the Zoom Meeting on Tuesday at 6:30 pm CST
Our Logo ... Want to Know More? Scroll to the Bottom of this page!
🗓 Date: Tuesday, February 25, 2025⏰ Time: 6:30 PM Central Time📍 Location: Online via Zoom (Link Below)
🔥 TONIGHT IS A VERY SPECIAL NIGHT! 🔥
This is not just another Manitoba Stronger Together Zoom call—this is a double feature event with three powerful and influential guests, bringing you breaking news, critical insights, and a front-row seat to history in the making!
Get ready for an eye-opening and action-packed evening that will leave you informed, inspired, and ready to take action. You don’t want to miss this!
🎤 FEATURE 1: WALLY DAUDRICH – SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT FROM PC LEADERSHIP CANDIDATE (APPEARANCE CANCELLED)
We are honored to welcome Wally Daudrich, one of the two candidates currently vying for the leadership of the Manitoba Progressive Conservative Party.
Why This Matters:The next leader of the PC Party will play a pivotal role in shaping the future of Manitoba’s political landscape. If you care about freedom, governance, and the direction of our province, this is a conversation you need to hear.
🔴 Wally Daudrich will be making a major announcement LIVE in an exclusive interview with Ken Drysdale.
💡 What Could It Be?
A bold new vision for Manitoba’s future?
A policy commitment that could change the game?
A call to action that will reshape the leadership race?
🔥 Be the first to hear it—this is breaking news you don’t want to miss!
🎤 FEATURE 2: TERESA & SHAWN BUCKLEY – NATIONAL CITIZENS INQUIRY (NCI) ANNOUNCEMENT
Manitoba Stronger Together is thrilled to welcome Teresa and Shawn Buckley from the National Citizens Inquiry (NCI).
🛑 The Question No One Wants to Ask: "Are Children Safe in Canada?"
💥 The NCI is holding a massive, game-changing hearing in Edmonton on March 6, 7, and 8, 2025.
👀 What You’ll Learn:
✅ The shocking and untold truth about policies affecting our children in Canada
✅ Who is really shaping the future of Canadian families—and why you should be concerned
✅ A sneak peek at the explosive expert testimonies coming to the NCI hearings in Edmonton
✅ How you can get your FREE tickets and witness history firsthand
🗣 We Are Calling All Concerned Parents, Grandparents, Educators, and Citizens!
If you care about the future of Canada’s children, this is an event you NEED to be part of.
📢 Your voice matters. Your presence matters. Be informed and be part of the movement that’s fighting for Canada’s future.
📢 BE THERE OR MISS OUT!
💡 This is more than just a Zoom call. It’s an opportunity to hear breaking news, uncover hidden truths, and take action for your province and your country.
📍 Join us Tuesday, February 25, 2025 – 6:30 PM Central Time🔗 Link Below
🔥 Mark your calendar, invite your friends, and be part of this incredible night of revelation and action! 🔥
📢 #ManitobaStrongerTogether #PCLeadership #NationalCitizensInquiry #ProtectOurChildren #TakeBackOurFuture
📢 Mark your calendar and share this with your networks! Let’s work together to ensure that Manitoba’s future is built on real, local solutions—not global mandates.
How to Join
👉 Zoom Link: is below in the red box, and on our website main page
Let's come together as a community to explore the issues that matter most to us and chart a path forward toward a stronger, more prosperous Canada. See you there!
This Weeks "Special" Agenda.
Intro and Welcome to the MST Zoom Meeting (1 min)
The meeting has a 60 minute time length
We only Video Record Guest Presentation
Respectful atmosphere at all times
Guest speakers represent their own perspective, not necessarily the opinion os MST
We provide an opportunity for diverse opinions
Our meetings are intended to inform and to create community
Welcome (New Members) (1 min)
Social Media Reminders
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/share/g/dQMTnsdYv8jePUa6/
Twitter Feed: @MBStronger
Tik Tok: mbstrongertogether
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/manitobastrongertogether/
Special Presentation by Wally Daudrich (15 Min) CANCELLED February 25 @ 12:57 pm
Special Update from Rosalie Drysdale on East St. Paul Public Meeting Sunday February 23, 2025 (5 Min)
Update on the Manitoba Wildlife Federation Meetings by Larry Bradt (5 Min)
Special Presentation by Teresa & Shawn Buckley (30 Min)
NCI Hearings in Edmonton March 6, 7, 8, 2025https://nationalcitizensinquiry.ca
Upcoming Events (2 min)
This Weeks News (3 Min)
Intramuscular mRNA-1273 injection rapidly crosses the placenta within one hour, accumulates in fetal organs, translates into Spike protein, and persists in fetal tissues after birth.
The study titled, mRNA-1273 is placenta-permeable and immunogenic in the fetus, has just been accepted for publication after successful peer-review in journal Molecular Therapy Nucleic Acids: In this study, mRNA-1273 intramuscularly given to pregnant mice rapidly circulated in maternal blood and crossed the placenta within one hour to spread in fetal circulation.
Regarding the COVID-19 genetic injections, Thorp et al found unacceptably high breaches in safety signals for 37 adverse events after COVID-19 vaccination in pregnant women and called for an immediate global moratorium on COVID-19 vaccination during pregnancy. Some of the adverse events include: miscarriage, fetal chromosomal abnormality, fetal malformation, cervical insufficiency, premature ...
On average, adverse pregnancy events were reported 69.2 times more frequently (PRR = 69.2) after COVID-19 ‘vaccination’ compared to other vaccines, with some events occurring nearly 499 times more often (PRR = 499).The CDC/FDA define a safety concern as a PRR of ≥2, meaning these findings far exceed the established threshold for risk.
The study by Dr. James Thorp et al, titled, Are COVID-19 Vaccines in Pregnancy as Safe and Effective as the Medical Industrial Complex Claim? Part I, was just published after successful peer review in the journal Science, Public Health Policy and the Law:
Winnipeg Municipal Regional
UPDATE CONCERNING THE VOTING RIGHTS OF MEMBERS OF THE BOARD OF THE WMR
(CITY OF WINNIPEG EFFECTIVE VETO)

These questions were raised at the Informal Pulbic Meeting held in East St. Paul this past Sunday February 23, 2025
The voting rights of the directors of the WMR is contained in the WMR Capital Planning Region Organization and Procedures By-Law.
It is in Section 21 - Voting.
Here is what it says:
21 V O T I N G
(1) Each Director has one vote on any decision of the Board.
(2) A Director’s vote must be clearly visible or audible by other Directors and members of the Public, regardless of the meeting method or platform used. The vote may be delivered verbally, by raising a hand, by raising clearly identified voting cards, or by electronic means.
(3) Subject to Subsection 21
(4) of this By-law, a Resolution shall be carriedwhen it is supported by a majority of Directors who are present at aBoard Meeting.(4) The Directors who approve any decision of the Board must together represent regional member municipalities that collectively have at least fifty percent (50%) of the population in the CPR as shown by the most recent census taken and available under the Statistics Act (Canada).
(5) Notwithstanding section 117 of The Corporations Act, no Director shall bedeemed to have consented to or voted in affirmative on any matterunless such Director expressly voted in favour
So, Winnipeg "veto" is the result of item (4). So for any majority vote to be valid, the majority who voted have to represent at least 50% of the population of the WMR... Winnipeg represents about 82%, therefore no majority vote by the board of the WMR is valid without Winnipeg's vote, since no combination of the other 17 municipalities can make up 50% of the propoulaton of the WMR. Sneaky.
To be clear, let's consider an example:
Let's just say there are 18 votes on the board (there are a few more but for our example let's consider only the votes of the 18 member municipalities).
Now let's say that 17 of the municipalities Vote YES on a resolution of the board. And lets say the City of Winnipeg Votes NO.
So under item (3) above the majority of the member municipalities voted YES: 17 YES Vs 1 NO, BUT according to item (3) the validity of that majority is subject to the conditions of item (4)
Under item (4) above. That majority of 17 yes to 1 no is not a valid majority because the 17 municipalities who voted yes, only represent 18% of the entire population of the WMR (since Winnipeg contains 82% of the population of the region).
So item (4) allows the City of Winnipeg to unilaterally "veto" or "invalidate" any vote by the other 17 member municipalities, simply due to the City's population.
On the other hand, in another example, if the City of Winnipeg wishes to get something approved, they need their own vote plus another 8 other municipalities to vote with them, because they need a simple majority of votes, plus the City of Winnipeg already represents 82% of the population so any vote that includes the City of Winnipeg and at least 8 other members will pass.
Following is the link to the file on the WMR site.
THE FOLLOWING IS THE FUNDAMENTAL ISSUE THAT DOES NOT APPEAR COUNCIL UNDERSTANDS:
Once the WMR has completed their plan, up until now it was Plan 20-50, that plan sets out the requirements for development throughout the region. The public became enraged with this plan when they found out about it last summer. BTW the Plan 20-50 would have passed into law this past January if the people would not have protested it. That plan had already gone through your concils at that point.
By the way, I am not aware of any official announcement that the original PLan 20-50 from last year is actually being re-written or by who or by how much.
All we know is that the plan (whatever it is) must be completed and approved by January 1, 2027.
It becomes law on January 1, 2027, and the ACT says it cannot be appealed at that time.
Once that plan is passed, each municipality must conform to it.
Each municipality has a set time to revise all of their development plans and bylaws to be in conformance with the WMR Plan.
So..Once it is all passed and the municipality stays in the WMR, the municipality's only responsibility is to enforce and carry out the WMR Plan.
Now I know the mayor was saying how much they had fought for changes in the Plan 20-50.....HOWEVER, what the public was presented with was that revised Plan 20-50 and it is that document which was going forward last year, and was supposed to be approved by January 1, 2025, and if not for the protests of the public, it would now be in place.
So if the mayor and council had either approved or acquiesced to the last years Plan 20-50, how can they be trusted to represent what the people want now.
ALSO the wording of the Bill 4 is very poor and confusing, as demonstrated by questions raised at the February 14, 2025 meetings between the minister and the municipalities.
There is much to be said about Bill 4, I will try to keep it short! I have also included a current copy of Bill 4
Bill 4 essentially inserts certain new requirements into the Planning Act, purportedly to allow Municipalities to opt in or out of the WMR.
At the current time, the wording of the Bill is extremely confusing.
Not sure if this will be fixed in the next set of readings.
Bill 4 inserts new sections into the Planning Act, the following sections are the new insertions:
Capital Planning Region continued
8(2) The Capital Planning Region is hereby continued and, subject to the regulations, consists of the territory within the boundaries of the following municipalities:
2(3) Subsection 8(3) is replaced with the following:
Change of membership
8(3) The council of a municipality may, by resolution, request to become a regional member municipality of the Capital Planning Region or to withdraw from the Capital Planning Region. The council must send a copy of the resolution to the minister.
Public hearing
8(4) Before passing a resolution on membership in the Capital Planning Region, a council must hold a public hearing to receive representations from any person on the proposed action to become a member of or to withdraw from the planning region and give notice of the hearing in accordance with section 168.
Timing of withdrawal request
8(5) If the council proposes to withdraw from the Capital Planning Region, the public hearing must be held and the resolution must be sent to the minister within 180 days after the day that the Capital Planning Region gives written notice of its initiating a review of its regional planning by-law under subsection 10.5(3).
Changing membership by regulation
8(6) The minister may, by regulation, change the membership of the Capital Planning Region to give effect to a resolution received under this section.
So it essentially says that a municipality can opt out if it meets various requirements such as the Municipality has to hold a public hearing and prepare a resolution to the Minister, the Planning Act requires certain notice of the meeting etc., (40 days notice)
Now it starts to get confusing with 8(5) above, the 180 day timer.
Essentially the WMR gave notice to the municipalities on December 19, 2024 of the review of the regional plan. So in theory the 180 day clock is ticking.
What some of the municipalities are saying is that the Regional Plan has been rescinded and is now being re-written, but we know of no government document stating this, and WMR is not answering questions from the public.
Given the fact that if a municipality has to hold a public meeting, give notice of 40 days to the public and then prepare a memorandum, AND IF the clock is ticking from December 19, 2024, then the municipalities have to get going on this.
NOW...Bill 4 Has a "TRANSITIONAL" section to it that confuses things more.
Section 10(2) states the following:
Member municipality may request withdrawal
10(2) The council of a regional member municipality of the Capital Planning Region may, by resolution, request to withdraw from the planning region.
This is the same thing Bill 4 said in item 8(3), so you have to ask why say it here?
Then it really gets confusing they add 10(3) and 10(4):
Council acts before next municipal general election
10(3) If a council sends the minister a copy of the resolution before the day that the general election in 2026 is held under The Municipal Act, the minister must make the regulation necessary to give effect to the resolution as soon as practicable.
Council does not act before next municipal general election
10(4) If a council does not send the minister a copy of a resolution requesting to withdraw from the Capital Planning Region before the day that the general election in 2026 is held under The Municipal Act, then for certainty, subsections 8(3) to (6), as enacted by subsection 2(3) of this Act, apply to a change in membership of the Capital Planning Region.
So...what is this saying and what is the intent.
I think what they intended to do was to tell municipalities that if they sent in a request to withdraw prior to the next municipal election, then they would only have to send in the memorandum, and would not have to hold public hearings etc.
The trouble is the way this thing is worded; it does not explicitly say that.
Section 10 should have been worded as follows: (Ken Drysdale's Suggested edits)
10(3) If a council wishes to opt out of membership of the Capital Planning Region, and sends the minister a copy of the resolution before the day that the general election in 2026 is held under The Municipal Act, then the provisions 8(4), 8(5) and 8(6) do not apply, for clarity, in this instance the council only needs to send the minister a resolution to withdraw, and is not required to hold a public hearing. Once the resolution is received, the minister must make the regulation necessary to give effect to the resolution as soon as practicable.
10(4) If a council does not send the minister a copy of a resolution requesting to withdraw from the Capital Planning Region before the day that the general election in 2026 is held under The Municipal Act, then the provisions 8(3), 8(4), 8(5) and 8(6) do apply, for clarity, in this instance the council will be required to hold a public hearing.
Even with my edits, there is a subtle but very important change to the wording of what the minister will or may do. Before the election of 2026, it says the "minister MUST make the regulation". After the election it says under 10(4) which would now come into effect, that the "minister MAY...."
BIg difference, so if a municipality gets it done before the election the minister must accept their request, and if they do it after the election the minister may accept their request.
Municipalities Meeting with the Minister February 14, 2025
On February 14, 2025, all of the participating municipalities each had an individual short ten minute meeting with the minister to discuss.
The minister stated that in order to withdraw, municipalities had to wait until the Bill 4 gets Royal Assent.
The minister further stated that the municipality only had to submit a resolution from council to opt out, but that statement is inconsistent with the Bill 4
The minister also said that if a municipality opted out of the WMR their funding would not be affected.
This is a 5 minute explanation of a much larger issue
Contact Information for City of Wpg., RM's Reeves, Mayors and Councillors
City of Winnipeg
510 Main St.Winnipeg, MB R3B 1B9
Ph 204‑986‑5665
Fax 204-949-0566
St. Boniface
Ph 204-396-4636
Fax 204‑986‑3725
North Kildonan
Ph 204‑986‑5196
Fax 204‑986‑3725
St. Norbert - Seine River
Ph 204‑986‑5920
Fax 204‑986‑3725
Councillor Ross EadieMynarski
Ph 204‑986‑5188
Fax 204‑986‑3726
St. James
Ph 204‑986‑5848
Fax 204‑986‑3725
Daniel McIntyre
Ph 204‑986‑5951
Fax 204‑986‑3725
Charleswood - Tuxedo - Westwood
Ph 204‑986‑5232
Fax 204‑986‑3725
Waverley West
Ph 204‑986‑6824
Fax 204‑986‑3725
St. Vital
Ph 204‑986‑5088
Fax 204‑986‑3725
Transcona
Ph 204‑986‑8087
Fax 204‑986‑3725
River Heights - Fort Garry
Ph 204‑986‑5236
Fax 204‑986‑3725
Fort Rouge - East Fort Garry
Ph 204‑986‑5878
Fax 204‑986‑3725
Point Douglas
Ph 204‑986‑8401
Fax 204‑986‑3725
Selkirk (City)200 Eaton Ave. Selkirk, MB
R1A 0W6 (204) 785-4900
Larry Johannson Mayor
April Smith Deputy Mayor
Kelly Cook Councillor
Lorie Fiddler Councillor
John Buffie Councillor
Darlene Swiderski Councillor
Doug Poirier Councillor
Cartier (RM)P.O. Box 117, 28 PR 248 S,S, Elie MB
R0H 0H0(204)353-2335
Christa Vann Mitchell Reeve
(204) 396-4901
James Krahn (Lido Plage/ Whitehorse) Councillor
(204) 396-5360
Kevin Nixon (Dacotah/ Springstein) Councillor
(204) 479-3187
Christian Lachance (Assiniboine-Centre) Councillor
(204) 396-7043
Dan Bouchard (Elie / Glengarry) Councillor
(204) 771-0867
Jason Laramee (St. Eustache/ Poplar Point) Councillor
(204) 396-9852
Village of DunnottarBox 321
44 Whytewold Rd, Matlock MB (204)389-4962info@dunnottar.ca
Richard-Gamble Mayor
(204) 389-4860
Rosalyn Howard Councillor
(204) 389-4000
Bob Campbell Councillor
(204) 771-0333
Jim Kotowich Councillor
(204) 771-0333
Kathy Magnusson Councillor
(204) 641-1904
RM office
Unit 1-3021 Birds Hill Rd.
East St Paul., MB R2E 1A7
(204) 668-8112
Carla Devlin Mayor
Brian Imhoff Councillor Ward 1
(204) 771-7569
Orest Horechko Ward 2 and Deputy Mayor
(204) 792-9500
Brian Duval Councillor -Ward 3
(204) 918-3618
Charles Posthumus Councillor - Ward 4
(204) 791-5595
Headingley (RM)1-126 Bridge Rd, Headingley MB,
R4H 1G9
(204) 837-5766
Jim Robson Mayor
(204) 290-6239
Tom Roche Deputy Mayor
(204) 831-0151
Yolande Franzmann Councillor
(204)895-4002
Glenn Reimer Councillor
(204) 333-9007
Macdonald (RM)P.O. Box 100- Sanford, MB
R0G 2J0
161 Mandan Dr Sandford MBPh (204) 736-2255
Brad Erb Reeve
(204) 771-6611
Matt Bestland Ward 1
(204) 771-3477
Glen Irvine Ward 2
(204) 997-3058
Barry Feller Ward 3
(204) 736-4433
Paul Surminski Ward 4
(204) 791-0410
Bob Morse Ward 5
(204) 223-7660
Rick Schinkel Ward 6
(204) 232-6168
Niverville (town)329 Bronstone Dr. Niverville, MB.
R0A 1E0
Myron Dyck Mayor
(204) 388-4600 ext. 1304
Chris Wiebe Deputy Mayor
(204) 388-4600 ext. 1305
Nathan Dueck Councillor
(204) 388-4600 ext. 1303
Bill Fast Councillor
(204) 388-4600 ext. 1302
Meghan Beasant Councillor
(204) 388-4600 ext. 1301
Ritchot (RM)352 Maint St.
St. Adolphe Mb
R5A 1B9
(204) 883-2293
Chris Ewen Mayor
(204) 803-1447
Shane Pelletier Deputy Mayor - Ward 1 (Ile des Chenes)
(204) 229-3640
Jason Bodnarchuk Ward 2 (St. Adolphe)
(204) 872-1107
Joel Lemoine Ward 3 (Ste Agathe)
(204) 792-8030
Janine Boulanger Ward 4 (Grande Pointe - Howden)
(204) 996-4935
Rockwood (RM)285 Main St. P.O. Box 902 Stonewall, Mb.
R0C 2Z0
(204) 467-2272
Wes Taplin Reeve
(204) 981-5518
Debbie Pansky Councillor Ward 1
(204) 344-5149
Curtis McClintock Councillor Ward 2
(204) 461-4472
Neal Wirgau Councillor Ward 3
(204) 981-5996
Lana Hintz Councillor Ward 4
(204) 513-0813
Miles Tarrant Councillor Ward 5
(204) 886-7175
Lyle Willis Councillor Ward 6
(204) 886-2948
Rosser (RM)Box 131 RM of Rosser, MB
R0H 1E0
(204) 467-5711
Ken Mulligan Reeve
Mike Palmer Councillor Ward 1
Lee Garfinkel Deputy Reeve/Councillor Ward 2
Angela Emms Councillor Ward 3
(204)-694-3956
Kelvin Stewart
Councillor Ward 4
Springfield (RM)Box 219, 100 Springfiled Center Dr. Oakbank, MB R0E 1J0(204) 444-3321
Patrick Therrien Mayor
(204)-902-0728
Glen Fuhl Councillor, Ward 1
(204)-232-4631
Andy Kuczynski Councillor, Ward 2
(204)-403-8971
Mark Miller Councillor, Ward 3
(204)-403-8250
Melinda Warren
Councillor, Ward 4
(204)-403-8201
St Clements (RM)1043 Kittson Road, Box 2 Grp 35 RR1
East Selkirk
R0E 0M0 (204) 482-3300
Debbie Fiebelkorn Mayor
(204) 785-8622
Glen Basarowich Ward One Councillor
(204) 470-9321
Scott Spicer Ward One Councillor
(204) 482-2090
Sandra Strang Ward One Councillor
(204) 482-2092
Robert Belanger Ward Two Councillor
(204) 482-305
Dave Horbas Ward Two Councillor
(204) 482-2091
Dave Sutherland Ward Two Councillor
(204) 485-1166
St. Andrews (RM)500 Railway Ave. Box 130 Clandeboye MB.
R0C 0P0
(204) 738- 2264
Joy Sul Mayor
(204) 485-2335
Chris Mondor Councillor Ward 1
(431) 336-5896
Ken Doornbos Councillor Ward 2 / Deputy Mayor
(431) 990-2399
Tracy Slyker Councillor Ward 3
(204) 485-6713
Rob Mirecki Councillor Ward 4
(204) 485-0141
Justin Fiebelkorn Councillor Ward 5
(204)-481-5805
Laurie Hunt Councillor Ward 6
204-485-1354
St. Francois Xavier (RM)1060 Hwy 26,
St Francois Xavier MB
R4L 1A5(204) 864-2092
Delmer Nott Reeve
(204) 770-9624
Bryan Syrenne Councillor Ward 1
(204) 864-2092
Jim Proulx Councillor Ward 2
(204) 864-2092
Marcel Houde Councillor Ward 3
(204) 864-2092
Phil Fleury Councillor Ward 4
(204) 864-2092
Stonewall (town)293 Main St, Stonewall Mb
R0C 2Z0(204) 467-7979
Sandra Smith Mayor
(204) 513-0268
Peter Bullivant Deputy Mayor
(204) 513-0385
Walter Badger Councillor
(204) 513-0562
Ron Maryniuk Councillor
(204) 513-0572
Kimberly Newman Councillor
(204) 513-0395
Tache (RM)28007 Mun Road 52 N
Dufresne, MB R5K 0N7
(204) 878-3321Info@rmtache.ca
Armand Poirier Mayor
(204) 590-5112
Steven Bowker Councillor
(204) 997-9402
George McGregor Councillor
(204) 270-0511
Dawn Braden Councillor
(204) 795-1233
Colleen Jolicoeur Councillor
(204) 688-4272
Steven Stein Councillor
(204) 782-5861
Marcel Manaigre Councillor
(204) 218-8944
Natashia Lapeire Councillor
(204) 381-1184
West St. Paul (RM)3550 Main St West St. Paul, MB R4A 5A3
(204) 338-0306
Peter Truijen Mayor
(204) 951-1687
Peter Campbell Councillor Ward 1
(204) 801-4444
Giorgio Busceti Councillor Ward 2
(204) 228-4216
Mike Pagtakhan Deputy Mayor Councillor Ward 3
(431)-278-6305
Dorothy Kleiber Councillor Ward 4
(204)-509-6574
Please join on time, we start and finish on time.
Usually I am in the chat ten minutes before the start of the meeting!
Information for First Timers!
Unite and Ignite: Join us for our Engaging Tuesday Evening Gathering!
At Manitoba Stronger Together, we deeply value our members' time and commitment to our cause. As a testament to this respect, we have made a dedicated effort to keep our weekly Tuesday evening meetings strictly to 60 minutes.

We understand the importance of balancing civic engagement with other responsibilities in our members' lives. By efficiently utilizing this time, we ensure that each minute spent in the meeting is productive, purposeful, and impactful. Our commitment to maintaining a concise and engaging gathering exemplifies our dedication to empowering our community without imposing unnecessary burdens on our valued members. Together, we maximize the value of each moment, propelling our mission forward and creating a united front for a stronger and prosperous Manitoba.
What You Can Expect at Our Meetings?
1. Warm Welcomes and Introductions:
Our meetings begin with warm smiles and enthusiastic introductions, as new faces join familiar ones. The spirit of camaraderie and shared purpose fills the air, reminding us of the power of coming together as one.
2. Update on Progress:
The leadership team shares the latest developments within our organization. We are elated to report significant growth in our membership numbers, reaffirming our belief in the importance of responsible governance and community empowerment.
3. A Dynamic Guest Speaker:
Each evening we welcome a special guest speaker who speaks to our membership about topics that are of special interest. Their expertise sheds light on critical issues affecting our province, urging us to keep striving for a better tomorrow.
Do you know someone who would be a great guest speaker? Email us with the name and contact information.
4. Open Dialogue and Discussion:
One of the highlights of the evening is the lively and engaging discussion that follows the guest presentation. Members actively share their insights, opinions, and ideas on pressing subjects that demand our attention. Through respectful dialogue, we reinforce the importance of transparent communication and active civic participation. Remember our 60 minute Deadline! If you cannot speak this week, there is always next, and you can contact us by email through the website.
5. Building Solidarity:
Throughout these meetings, the sense of solidarity is encouraged, fuelling our commitment to fostering a united Manitoba. We discovered that, like the bison herds that once roamed freely, our collective strength lies in standing together, unyielding in the face of challenges.
6. Embracing the Road Ahead:
With each meeting you will feel your spirit soar with the knowledge that we are on the right path. Together, we are building a movement that empowers citizens and redefines the political landscape. The journey may be challenging, but we stand unwavering, ready to create a brighter future for our beloved province.
Join Us Next Tuesday, and every Tuesday:
We extend a heartfelt invitation to all citizens who share our vision of responsible governance, community empowerment, and unity. Our Tuesday regular meetings are more than just gatherings; they are catalysts for positive change.
Exciting news at Manitoba Stronger Together!
We have recently added a dynamic "Schedule of Events" section on our homepage (bottom of page), where you can conveniently review and stay updated on our upcoming guest speakers and other important gatherings. This schedule serves as your go-to resource for planning your engagement with our community.
While we are diligently working on optimizing the schedule for mobile devices, we encourage you to view it on a desktop or tablet for the best experience.
Together, we look forward to exploring a multitude of impactful events that unite us in our mission for responsible governance and community empowerment. Mark your calendars, and let's embark on this journey together!
We can also use this schedule to update members on upcoming events that our membership may be participating in.
What Our Logo Means
The logo for Manitoba Stronger Together incorporates elements that symbolize unity, community, and the strength of the bison.
Bison Icon: Is a silhouette of a stylized representation of a bison, symbolizing strength, resilience, and unity. The bison is depicted in a side stance, representing progress and moving together as a community.
The vertical stripes: represent that the movement includes all people from all walks of life, all beliefs and all political affiliations.
The Horizontal Connecting Lines: across the bison represent the connections and interdependence of community members, emphasizing the concept of being stronger together.
Blue Tones: The blue in the logo design represents growth, harmony, and the natural beauty of Manitoba's landscapes.
Dynamic Font: We choose a strong and modern bold font for the organization's name "Manitoba Stronger Together" to convey a sense of confidence and forward-thinking.
Let us continue to unite, ignite our passions, and work towards building a stronger and united Manitoba. Together, we will shape the future we want and deserve.
Keep an eye out for our next meeting announcement, and let us walk this transformative journey as one!
Comments