Weyburn Review - April 24, 2024

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Coaches-mentors panel seeks to empower young women in sports

A day of breakout sessions for young female athletes was held on Saturday with a team of leaders of young women, and it concluded with a panel discussion with mentors and coaches who talked about issues around women in sports today.

A trio of women formed the group, Spilling Prairie Tea, and they in turn engaged “Girls Beyond Borders” and founder Sarah Pogue, who enlisted young women from the Weyburn area to lead breakout sessions on topics like body image and nutrition. Spilling Prairie Tea is comprised of Lindsee Michel, Felecia Watson and Heidi Bousfield, with Michel taking the mike as the emcee for the panel discussion, for which they invited the public to come and hear what the panelists had to say about their own experiences.

The panel included long-time retired Phys. Ed teacher and coach Jacquie Williams; club volleyball coach Heidi Vogel; Jessie Smoliak, department head for Phys. Ed at the Estevan Comp; trainer Lydia Sanders; volleyball coach and former Team Canada player Tonya Miller; school counsellors Jasmine and Brooklyn Lund; former Gold Wings goalie and assistant coach Jane Kish; and Sarah Pogue, founder of “Girls Beyond Borders”.

Michel opened with the question as to why this initiative to reach young female athletes was important to them, Williams responded, “This is why I’m here, because I’m a woman. I was a young woman like many of you, I became a middle-aged woman, and now I am an older woman. … I attribute my life to being a woman, everything I’ve got was by being a woman. I think we need to empower you to

Discussion panel for ‘Girls Beyond Borders’ event

The

of mentors and coaches

one

know, it’s enough just to be a woman.”

Vogel noted that she is a mother and a daughter, and enjoys coaching young female athletes in volleyball. She added she wants to share her experiences but also to learn from the experiences of others.

Smoliak, who grew up playing sports in Fillmore before going on to be the athletic director at the Estevan Comp, said she’s passionate about females in sports. “We’re all here to empower each other and to be better women and better role models out in our communities,” she said, noting she brought three women to take in the conference, and said of this effort, “This needs to happen in our communities, big or small. I love seeing these girls out in front of us (the team leaders) leading in the conference today with so much passion and confidence. I embrace it and thank you girls for being wonderful leaders.”

Miller said she feels it’s

at the

important for women to be supportive of other women, especially in a smaller community where people can step up and be a positive influence in the lives of young women in sports. “I have three young girls at hom, and hopefully they can have the same opportunities that I had.”

Jasmine Lund, who along with twin sister Brooklyn are both school counsellors at St. Michael School, noted a lot of the referrals they get are from girls with anxiety issues, especially for girls of the age of those attending the conference. “We understand there’s lots of pressure, from social media, peers, teens, and it’s really important that girls get the tools they need, especially if they’re going beyond high school into university sports,” she said.

“There’s a lot of pressure we face as women in sports, so anything we can do as supports we’ll try and help the transition into higher sports.”

One question asked if

any of the panelists ever felt pressure to have a certain body weight as an athlete, and if yes, what effect did that have on them.

Miller, who played for six years on Team Canada’s women’s volleyball team, shared her experience, where they had a coach who insisted players had to have under 10 per cent body fat – and on a team of 15 women, only three of them met this standard, including herself.

“I believe if you’re consistently under 10 per cent body fat, you don’t have a period any more. Genetically I was able to hit that, but there was only three of us who could,” she said, noting some athletes who tried to hit this target saw a big drop in their performance, because it wasn’t sustainable.

She said maybe if they had had a female coach it would’ve made a difference, but it definitely made the athletes count their calories every day, which wasn’t good, and didn’t realize until afterward how

a

much this had impacted her as an athlete.

On the question of whether body image was a factor when they competed, Williams responded that, when she competed, it did not affect her.

“God blessed me with a body that did exactly what I wanted it to do,” she said, noting she grew up as a tomboy. In high school, she developed large muscles in her body, and she began to hear comments like, “Look how big her legs are.”

In university, she had body composition testing, and at five-foot-eight, the only woman heavier than her was six-foot-one, because of her muscles.

“I just never got over the fact that I wasn’t what the world wanted me to be,” she said, and said to the young women in the audience, “Do not wait until you’re 55 to be who you are. Do not wait. … Be happy just to be you.”

On the issue of the effects of social media on young female athletes, Vogel said, “It’s very hard not to have social media affect any young person’s mindset, for athletes specifically. … We all go on it with the realization that what we’re consuming is not even real, it’s been altered or edited, but it can still affect you in negative ways.”

She added what’s important for her and her daughter is to have conversations about what they’re

various

and

seeing, so they’re always talking about it and to see where she’s at and what she’s feeling.

Michel noted when she designed the day of sessions for young female athletes, she acknowledged that she did not grow up with social media and doesn’t know how to parent it, but they had a group of young women as team leaders, many of whom were recent graduates from high school or are in university, and they understand and use social media.

One of the leaders, Natalie Hastings, noted that social media can be used in a positive way, but it can also be negative. As a powerlifter, she noted she could see girls on there lifting weights beyond what she was lifting, but the important thing is to realize what you see on social media is not the whole picture, or the real one.

Miller pointed out that as a coach, she has all her girls hand in their cell phones when they’re at a practice or a game, so it’s not going to distract them while they’re supposed to be playing the sport.

Vogel said she’s used it as teachable moments with her daughter, particularly after an episode of snapchat drama amongst members of her volleyball team. Her daughter learned lessons from that for being a part of it, and this will need to be ongoing, with the team and with her family.

Dated this 24th day of April, 2024.

Weyburn Review, Weyburn, Saskatchewan -- April 24, 2024 NOTICE is
that the assessment roll of the Rural Municipality of Brokenshell No. 68 for the year 2024 has been
is open to inspection in the office of the Assessor
the municipality at (306) 842-2314 or by email at rm68@sasktel.net from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. on the following
to May 27, 2024.
hereby given
prepared and
of
days, Monday to Friday, April 26
A Bylaw pursuant to section 214 of The Municipalities Act has been passed and the assessment notices have been sent as required. Any person wishing to appeal against his or her assessment is required to file his or her notice of appeal accompanied by a $20.00 appeal fee which will be returned if the appeal is successful with: The Secretary of the Board of Revision, Marlene Hassard, Western Municipal Planning Ltd., Box 149, Meota, SK. S0M 1X0, by the 27th day of May, 2024.
NO. 68
for the year 2024 has been prepared and is open to inspection in the office of the assessor from 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. on the following days: Monday to Friday, April 26, 2024 until May 27, 2024.
Jenna Smolinski, Assessor NOTICE OF PREPARATION OF THE ASSESSMENT ROLL RURAL MUNICIPALITY OF BROKENSHELL
NOTICE is hereby given that the assessment roll for the R.M. of Griffin No. 66
A bylaw pursuant to Section 214 of The Municipalities Act has been passed and the assessment notices have been sent as required.
Municipal Consulting Ltd., Box 149,
May, 2024. Dated this 24th day of April, 2024. Tawnya Moore, Assessor NOTICE OF PREPARATION OF THE ASSESSMENT ROLL RURAL MUNICIPALITY OF GRIFFIN NO. 66 Public notice is hereby given that the Council of the Rural Municipality of Bengough No. 40 intends to adopt a bylaw under The Planning and Development Act, 2007 to amend Bylaw No. 39.2016 Intent: The proposed amendment will establish regulations for solar development and adds solar farms as a discretional use in the A – Agricultural District Affected Land: The proposed amendment for accessory solar development to existing principal uses will affect all land within the incorporated area of the Rural Municipality of Bengough No. 40. The solar farm amendments will affect all land within the A – Agricultural District Reason: To provide regulations for solar development and allow for consideration of solar farm development within the A – Agricultural District of the Rural Municipality of Bengough No. 40 Public Inspection: Any person may inspect the proposed bylaw at the Rural Municipality of Bengough No. 40 office during normal office hours. Copies of the bylaw are available at cost. Public Hearing: Council will hold a public hearing on Thursday May 9th, 2024 at 9:00 a.m. The public hearing will be held in the Rural Municipality Council Chambers in Bengough, SK located at 181 Main Street. Any person or group that wants to comment on the matter is welcome to attend or to submit comments prior to the meeting. Council will consider all comments received. Issued at the RM of Bengough No. 40 April 18, 2024. Lara Hazen Administrator PUBLIC NOTICE RM of Bengough No. 40
Any person wishing to discuss the notice of assessment or potential appeal may contact the assessor at the R.M of Griffin No. 66, Box 70, Griffin, SK. S0C 1G0. A notice of appeal, accompanied by a $100 appeal fee which will be returned if the appeal is successful, must be filed with the Secretary of the Board of Revision, Marlene Hassard, Western
Meota, SK. S0M 1X0, by the 27th day of
sports 9
Team leaders share views with panel audience Review Photo 0649 – Greg Nikkel The team leaders for the “Girls Beyond Borders” event shared some of their views during a sports panel on Saturday afternoon at St. Michael School. The leaders, at right, included Emma Bitz, Natalie Hastings (with mike), Randi Paulhus, Hailey Neiszner, Olivia Michel, Reese Marshall and Belle Paisley. panel gathered “Girls Beyond Borders” event on Saturday, for discussion time of topics issues facing girls in sports today. From left are Sarah Hogue, founder of “Girls Beyond Borders”; Jane Kish, former goaltender and coach; Brooklyn and Jasmine Lund, school counsellors; volleyball coach and player Tonya Miller; Lydia Sanders, trainer; Jessie Smoliak, Phys.Ed dept. head at Estevan Comp; Heidi Vogel, coach; and Jacquie Williams, a former coach and long-time Phys. Ed teacher at the Weyburn Comp, with emcee Lindsee Michel at right. Michel is of three partners of “Spilling Prairie Tea”, which put on this event. Review Photo 1144 – Greg Nikkel
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