Your neighbor needs mental health support
Morning from the Central Plains — here's what's moving through Portage today.
You hear about this stuff all the time, especially when you're out at the co-op or over at the auction mart. The pressure on farmers, it's real. So when I saw that conference happening in Brandon about mental health in agriculture, it really hit home. We're the heart of this province's food supply, and sometimes it feels like we're just expected to keep the gears turning, no matter what's going on under the surface. Gerry Friesen, a "recovering farmer," is out there advocating for more support, and that's exactly what we need to hear in places like Portage la Prairie.
### Why This Matters on the Corridor
We're sitting right here between the potato plants and the grain elevators, with the CN and CP lines running right through us. Everyone in Portage knows someone who works the land, or whose family does. The stress of commodity prices, unpredictable weather — just look at the Diversion levels sometimes – it’s a constant battle. This isn't some abstract problem for folks in Winnipeg; it's our neighbours, our friends from Island Park, the folks we see at Stride Place for a Terriers game.
* **Community Impact:** When a farmer struggles, it ripples through the whole community. It impacts the local businesses, the schools, everything. * **Economic Reality:** The agricultural sector is the backbone of our economy here. If the people running it aren't supported, that has real consequences for Portage la Prairie as a regional hub. * **Breaking the Silence:** Gerry Friesen talking about his own struggles helps open the door for others. That's a brave thing to do, and it’s critical for getting people the help they need.
We pride ourselves on being practical folks here in Portage, and being practical means acknowledging a problem and finding a solution. We need to make sure that support for mental health isn't just something talked about at a conference in Brandon, but something accessible right here, for the people who literally feed the province. It's about looking out for each other, like we always have.
The team dives into the local angle on stories like this every morning – catch it live at mornings.live.