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Opinion

Guest Column

First, the Doughnut. Next, Wyoming!

Maybe Montana should take over zoning and planning for Wyoming. We Montanans care more about aesthetics and water quality than our southern neighbors. Undoubtedly, the Cowboy State will be happy that we do all the hard work. I mean, just look at us compared to them. We’re beautiful and they’re screwing up their environment with […]

By Diane Smith
Letter

LETTER: Ignoring an Injustice

For a number of weeks I have witnessed the President of the United States encourage racial discord between blacks and whites because a man was declared innocent by a jury who viewed the evidence and found him not guilty in Florida. I was reminded of all the Blackfeet members who have written him or those […]

By William Old Chief
Letter

LETTER: Bigfork Green Box Site Still in Peril

I attended the July 23 meeting of the Flathead County Solid Waste Board. I was pleased about its decision to extend the timeline for Bigfork’s effort to preserve and improve its solid waste collection site. As Bigfork Chairman Paul Mutascio summarized so well, the local committee has worked long and hard to assess the problems […]

By Faith Brynie
Like I Was Saying

Football Free-for-All

The National Collegiate Athletic Association slapped the University of Montana’s football program on the wrist last week, placing it on probation for the next three years and reducing its scholarships by four over that same time period. Embarrassment aside, UM escaped harsh penalties at the conclusion of an investigation that somehow took more than a […]

By Kellyn Brown
Opinion

Montana’s Next Senator

By John Fuller Now that former Gov. Brian Schweitzer has declined to run for the U.S. Senate (the place “where things go to die”), Montana has been thrust into the national spotlight because control of the U.S. Senate could be determined by the outcome of this election for Montana’s next Senator. Regardless of the candidate […]

By John Fuller | Joe Carbonari
Guest Column

More at Risk than Drinking Water

I am writing to emphasize my grave concern about the entire Flower Creek Drainage, a concern that should prompt every citizen to prevail upon decision-makers to stop talking and take action. As hot summer winds fan an already dry forest, we daily face the threat of catastrophic fire. For many years there have been discussions […]

By Gary Callihan
Closing Range

Water Wrongs

Like many Westerners, I follow water rights issues, usually with the kind of horrified fascination reserved for train wrecks and other disasters. Over the years, combat reports from water war zones (such as the lower Colorado, the Owens Valley, and more recently the Klamath Basin) left me grateful such epic nastiness doesn’t happen in Montana. […]

By Dave Skinner
Business Is Personal

The Most Expensive Refund

During my recent trip to Tulsa, I stopped into a chain drug store (similar to Walgreens) next door to the hotel. When I got to the register, a mom with two young kids was trying to exchange an item she had purchased for a very similar item that had the same price and was made […]

By Mark Riffey
Letter

LETTER: A Tale of Three Trout

Our native bull trout and westslope cutthroat trout were doing just fine until the lake trout population exploded in Flathead Lake due to the misguided introduction of Mysis shrimp. Large runs of adfluvial cutts and bulls would head up river every spring to spawn. Several years later the young return to the lake to grow […]

By Larry Timchak
Opinion

Who are the Racists?

By John Fuller The jury has spoken and declared that George Zimmerman was justified in defending his life from the not-so-angelic young man violently slamming his head onto the concrete. This incident represented a scenario of self-defense in its purest form. However, the race-hustlers saw an opportunity to further their careers and the president and […]

By John Fuller | Joe Carbonari
Like I Was Saying

No Comment

The problem with law enforcement and governing matters on the Blackfeet Indian Reservation is you often only get one side of the story. And there’s a good reason for that. It’s only one side doing the talking. This latest instance, in which a Great Falls man was arrested for posting critical comments of the Blackfeet […]

By Kellyn Brown
Guest Column

The Lake Trout Battlefield Expands

Infested: “to overrun a place or site in large numbers and become threatening, harmful, or unpleasant.” A recent letter to the editor composed by my friend and fellow Flathead Valley angler LaVerne “Lucky” Stultz, and published in several area papers, used this term to describe what lake trout have done to Swan, Lindbergh and Holland […]

By Mike Howe
Uncommon Ground

Retired from Politics

“I love Montana. I want to be here,” said former Gov. Brian Schweitzer, declining a run for the U.S. Senate. Schweitzer will enjoy private life after running three consecutive statewide campaigns. In his last election, the Democrat won reelection with nearly two-thirds majority. Needless to say, Schweitzer is popular in Montana. After three terms of […]

By Mike Jopek
Business Is Personal

The Best Surprise

Hotels often provide fuel for writing and a recent trip I took was no exception. I noticed there were some Goldfish crackers crushed on the floor as I got off the elevator at six this morning. At the time, I figured that the staff hadn’t seen the mess yet. Six hours later as we headed […]

By Mark Riffey
Letter

LETTER: The Risk of Being Risk Adverse

Benjamin Franklin said, “Anyone who trades liberty for security deserves neither liberty nor security.” I find these words most apropos today. Our society as a whole has become so risk adverse every calamity requires an insurance policy or legislation to ensure “ it can’t happen again.” In an effort to make our workplace safe, we’ve […]

By Bill Payne