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Manitoban organizations see volunteer shortage amidst return to in-person events – Winnipeg | Globalnews.ca

Manitoban organizations see volunteer shortage amidst return to in-person events - Winnipeg | Globalnews.ca

The cut-back on COVID-19 restrictions is prompting Manitoban charities, festivals and organizations to return to in-person events, but finding volunteers is becoming a bigger challenge than in previous years.

The Manitoba Marathon’s first full-scale event in years is two weeks away.

Upwards of 6,000 runners have signed up, but executive director Rachel Munday says their volunteer turnout is down by 30 per cent.

Read more:

Manitoba Marathon returns with in-person race for first time in 2 years

“It might not seem very much when you say 30 per cent, but every volunteer that we have is needed. Everyone does an important role.”

Munday says prior to the pandemic, the Manitoba Marathon had a manageable handful of helpers not return each year, but with three years passed, the number has become exponentially larger.

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“It’s not that people don’t want to volunteer,” she says. “I think it’s just like a culmination of all these years of not putting a race on.”

Volunteer Manitoba’s communication manager, Dawn Bourbonnais, says it’s “a perfect storm of a lot of different things” that are contributing to a volunteer shortage.

“I think we’re in a period where the last two years is meeting the next two years. We’ve scaled back on volunteers right across the board over the pandemic.”

According to Bourbonnais, most volunteers are senior citizens who, for a number of reasons, are hesitant to offer their time.

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Aside from health risks related to the pandemic, she says people’s attitudes around donating spare time have changed in recent years.

“Everybody’s just coming out of the long winter that we’ve had and gone, ‘Wait, I can do things in person again,’” she says. “So it’s competition for people’s time.

“All of us have redefined what our time means to us in the last two years. We’ve all looked at the value of our time and where to best deploy it.”

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Bourbonnais says organizations might have to change the way they recruit helpers by offering shorter shifts and emphasizing the impact their time would have on the community. She also says having a volunteer manager on the team is critical.

“When you lose that connection with your volunteer team and you lose that sort of that leader, that grand marshal, the champion of what it is you’re doing and the person who’s responsible for recruiting those volunteers and making sure that they’re properly engaged within the organization — if you don’t have that person there, then you’re going to see a loss.”

Munday says plans are underway to have a safe event with the volunteers they have, but extra help won’t be turned away.


Click to play video: 'Winkler care home asking families to volunteer due to concerns over staff refusing vaccine'







Winkler care home asking families to volunteer due to concerns over staff refusing vaccine


Winkler care home asking families to volunteer due to concerns over staff refusing vaccine – Oct 15, 2021

“We like to respect everybody’s time and make it fun, and so the more people we can find to come out in any capacity, the better — the better it is for us and for all of our other volunteers as well.”

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Anyone interested in helping out can head to the Manitoba Marathon website and check out the opportunities listed on the volunteer page.

© 2022 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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Winnipeg’s Festival du Voyageur back with hybrid events – Winnipeg | Globalnews.ca

Winnipeg’s Festival du Voyageur back with hybrid events - Winnipeg | Globalnews.ca

Winnipeg’s annual celebration of winter, history and culture has returned amid the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

The Festival du Voyageur is back both online and in-person, and it all kicks off Friday.


Click to play video: 'Winnipeg’s Festival du Voyageur to feature live outdoor music'







Winnipeg’s Festival du Voyageur to feature live outdoor music


Winnipeg’s Festival du Voyageur to feature live outdoor music

“So can you believe that we’re here in person?” said the festival’s Executive Director, Darrel Nadeau, during a press conference.

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“Three months ago I would have told you we’d have a regular festival. One month ago would have told you we would go virtual. And here we are today with a hybrid festival.”

Read more:

Winnipeg’s Festival du Voyageur to feature live outdoor music

During the 10-day run, festival-goers can check out all the signature events.

There’ll be snow sculptures, delicious food, tobogganing, snowshoeing and two new additions that festival organizers say they’re proud of.

The first is the new mobile concert trailer that’ll serve as a stage for entertainers to perform while keeping warm.

The second is the infinity fire, which holds a deeper symbolic meaning. “The infinity fire is a new warming station in the shape of the infinity symbol in honour of the Red River Metis,” said Nadeau.

Read more:

Festival du Voyageur planning hybrid program with 2022 event a few weeks away

“It will serve as a large gathering place where festival-goers can meet and warm up in the heart of the Parc du Voyageur.”

Online participants will experience concerts, kids’ activities, a cultural video series, take-home meal kits and much more.

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© 2022 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.