Werier honoured for Lake Winnipeg columns

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VAL Werier's relationship with Lake Winnipeg has lasted a lifetime.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 24/04/2010 (5885 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

VAL Werier’s relationship with Lake Winnipeg has lasted a lifetime.

That’s part of the reason why the Lake Winnipeg Foundation has awarded the longtime journalist the Alexander Bajkov Award for his writings on the massive body of water and its importance to the makeup of Manitoba.

"I’ve won a few awards in my time but this one is special," Werier said Friday.

Val Werier: 'this one is special
Val Werier: 'this one is special

For over 70 years, Werier has served as a reporter and story-teller in this province. Lake Winnipeg has been his focus for most of that time, from the days of camping up in Boundary Park as a teenager to present-day cottage ownership in the region.

Werier, who turns 93 in June, is as passionate as ever about the lake.

"I’ve written about that lake going back 50 years," said Werier, who still works as a freelance columnist for the Free Press. "I feel it is the most important thing in our province; it’s a source of our power, it’s a source of beauty and it’s a source of our great heritage."

The Alexander Bajkov award is presented to a person or group who has contributed to the health of Lake Winnipeg.

"(Werier’s) legacy of many impassioned columns has stirred citizen awareness and activism as well as focused public policy issues," LWF president Bruce Smith said in a release.

 

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