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Opinion

Guest Column

Thanks for Supporting the Whitefish Trail

On behalf of the Whitefish Legacy Partners board, we would like to express our gratitude for your support of our conservation, recreation and education work. With your support this year, we plan to build 4.5 more miles as well as maintain the existing 22 miles of the Whitefish Trail. More than 40 local businesses and […]

By Whitefish Legacy Partners Board of Directors
Opinion

Affirmative Action – Again?

By John Fuller In 1961, America embarked upon the social practice known as “affirmative action.” It was intended to assist minority, underclass and/or underprivileged groups based on race, gender, or age overcome “overt historical discriminations.” Despite several Supreme Court decisions limiting affirmative action implementation and a much anticipated case (Fisher v. Univ. of Texas) soon […]

By John Fuller | Joe Carbonari
Letter

LETTER: Bankrupting Energy

Fossil fuel development is not going to develop Montana’s economy. Oil and coal companies are greatly overvalued, according to a new report by the Carbon Tracker Initiative. According to the report, if we are going to keep the Earth’s temperature from increasing more than 2 degrees Celsius, the limit which scientists have said is the […]

By Wade Sikorski
Letter

LETTER: Invest in Natural Resource Development that Benefits All of Montana

For many years, Montana has developed our natural resources – we can think of timber in western Montana, copper in Butte, coal throughout many parts of the state and again a resurgence of oil and gas in eastern Montana. At their economic peaks, each energy industry has created a quick demand for additional services and […]

By Steve Arveschoug
Like I Was Saying

Building Season

It’s construction season in Montana and, while at times maddening, it’s at once a welcome sight. As the nation’s infrastructure continues to crumble, our state is spending $372 million building and repairing roads and bridges through the fall – a hefty and much-needed sum. With the collapse of the Interstate 5 bridge crossing the Skagit […]

By Kellyn Brown
Guest Column

Eastern Montana Needs Our Help

It comes as no surprise that much of the budget surplus that Montana has enjoyed for the last eight years has come from energy and natural resource development. Oil and gas efforts across Montana, especially our eastern most counties, have provided opportunity across the state and revenue flows to help fund our government services on […]

By Will Deschamps
Closing Range

Young Dodge, Old Story

Environmentalists have filed yet another lawsuit, against the Kootenai National Forest’s “Young Dodge” project on Lake Koocanusa’s west side. News? Naw … same old story. Young Dodge has been in the “paperworks” for a long time. Its first draft Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) was published clear back in February 2006. The Forest Service lost two […]

By Dave Skinner
Business Is Personal

Why Does Packing A Suitcase Make You More Productive?

Think about the process you go through when preparing for an important business trip. You make a todo list so you’re sure you get all the bases covered. You think of every scenario that might come up at home while you are gone and every scenario that might up come while out of town. Based […]

By Mark Riffey
Letter

LETTER: Benghazi Matters

The article headlined “Does Benghazi Matter?” (May 22 Beacon) was most enlightening. I was especially intrigued by the opinions of Joe Carbonari. He asked two questions: 1. Should a more vigorous military response have been ordered? And 2. Was a politically motivated cover-up attempted? Carbonari’s observations of the Benghazi issue seem to be in agreement […]

By Jerry Molen
Letter

LETTER: Whitefish’s Highway 93 South Corridor Needs Attention

We have come a long way. And have a long way to go. When I was a young boy, my grandparents took me and my two sisters on a summer road trip from our hometown in northern Wisconsin to my aunt’s place in southern California. Before that trip, my family’s meager means prevented us from […]

By John Anderson
Opinion

Is it Time for Eric Holder to Go?

By John Fuller Shortly after being sworn in, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder called America a “nation of cowards.” Within a year, he studiously avoided prosecuting a videoed and documented case of white voter intimidation by the “New Black Panthers.” Then news surfaced that the Department of Justice was involved in a complex scheme to […]

By John Fuller | Joe Carbonari
Guest Column

Baucus’ Unlikely Road to the Senate

I first met Max Baucus in 1973 when he entered the Montana House of Representatives as a freshman member from Missoula. His seat was at the back of the chamber near bright and articulate Dorothy Bradley of Bozeman, the previous session’s only woman and future Democratic candidate for governor. I got to know him well […]

By Bob Brown
Opinion

Goodbye, and Thank You

I arrived in Kalispell on April 15, 2007 with a Toyota RAV4 full of my scant belongings. A mistreated Gibson guitar was likely the most valuable item of the bunch, including the car. I was not so much scared as overwhelmed by the weight of it all: I was starting a new job as reporter […]

By Myers Reece
Uncommon Ground

Plowed Under by Congress

With Congress pledging to reauthorize a new Farm Bill before the fall deadline, there was plenty of political will to get the $1 trillion per decade spending bills toward floor votes. Last week, the Senate was voting on various floor amendments to the Farm Bill. Senators previously wanted to pass the Farm Bill before this […]

By Mike Jopek
Business Is Personal

The Biggest Lie You’ve Ever Told

Many of us have something about our business that acts as a barrier that limits what we can do. In many cases, this barrier isn’t real – it’s simply a belief we’ve allowed to infect our mindset. The trouble with this is that if you believe there’s a limit to your business – there is, […]

By Mark Riffey