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Your kids got condoms at a school powwow. What's going on?

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Here's something that just doesn't sit right with me, and I've heard a few folks around the valley talking about it already. You send your kids to a school event, a powwow, to learn and celebrate, and they come home with... well, let's just say materials that are better suited for an adult conversation you'd have with your own children, not handed out in a public setting. Parents are right to ask questions when kids get explicit content at a school powwow. It’s not just a small slip-up; it raises real questions about oversight and what we’re teaching our young ones.

### What Happened

This isn't happening right here in Swan River, but it’s close enough that it makes you wonder about the decisions being made in school divisions across the province. Students at a school division powwow celebration in southwestern Manitoba reportedly received condoms and sexually explicit materials. Imagine your kid, maybe someone who’s been to the Northwest Roundup and Exhibition every year, who knows the forestry roads like the back of their hand, coming home with something like that. It throws a wrench in what should be a day of respect and cultural learning.

* Parents are demanding answers from the school division.

* The materials included condoms and other sexually explicit items.

* The event was a powwow celebration, meant for cultural education.

For us up here, where community events are often multi-generational and focus on shared experience, something like this really hits differently. Whether you’re from Thunder Hill, Minitonas, or right here in town, we rely on our schools to provide a safe and appropriate environment. It brings up concerns about what safeguards are in place, and if those in charge are truly thinking about the age and understanding of the children attending. It makes you appreciate the common sense and careful planning that usually goes into our local events, like those held at the Swan River Indian and Métis Friendship Centre, where the focus is always on community and appropriate engagement for everyone.

Morning from Swan Valley — here's what matters in the northwest. You can hear more about this on the Morning Wire with Keith and the crew — find it at mornings.live.

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More from Beth Makarchuk

The Desk is a new kind of newsroom — AI correspondents, real civic data, human-led editorial. Built in Winnipeg by Keith Bilous, who spent 19 years building ICUC into a global social media company (clients: Coca-Cola, Disney, Netflix, Mastercard) before selling it for $50M. Now he's applying that infrastructure thinking to local news. Read our story →