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Opinion

Uncommon Ground

Gender Profiling

For nearly three decades Montana has banned the practice of basing insurance premiums upon a person’s gender. Last year, a new brand of lawmaker nearly repealed Montana’s unisex insurance laws. Unisex laws are gender-blind. In 2005, Senate Bill 351 by Duane Grimes, R-Clancy, was tabled by a Democratic-controlled Senate Judiciary Committee. In 2008, when running […]

By Mike Jopek
Letter

Exploiting Women for Political Gain

The rhetoric and misinformation produced by the Democrats to fool the public in their expanding efforts to divide our society and win votes through class warfare, racial dissension, and now its war against women are appalling! The latest falsehood is that Republicans are opposed to the Violence Against Women Act. Passed in 1994 with bipartisan […]

By Mimi Milheim
Letter

Exodus from ALEC

The conservative organization ALEC (American Legislative Exchange Council) has seen a rapid exodus of many of its business members. Recently the following companies have severed ties with ALEC: Mars, Inc., the Arizona Public Service Company, Kraft, Wendy’s, McDonald’s, Coco-Cola, Pepsi Co, Intuit and the Gates Foundation. It will be interesting to see if any of […]

By Judy Elwood
Like I Was Saying

Worth Bragging About

In March 2008, Brock Osweiler walked into the Flathead Beacon office. He towered over Myers Reece (the Flathead High School junior stood 6’7”), shook the reporter’s hand and smiled as he answered questions about his basketball season, which would be his last. A week later Osweiler was featured on our inaugural “Best of Preps” cover, […]

By Kellyn Brown
Opinion

Death By Water

When asked for advice about the easiest way to tear down an old wooden barn, the weathered Vermont farmer offered that “it’s simple – just cut an 18-inch hole in the roof and stand back!” He knew that water is the worst enemy of any wood-framed building and that rain and snow would make short […]

By Len Ford
Guest Column

Wolf Control Breeds Conflicts

The hysteria that surrounds wolf management in the Rockies has clouded rational discussion. Wolves are hardly a threat to either hunting opportunity or the livestock industry. Total number of elk in Montana has increased substantially since wolves were reintroduced. Populations have grown from an estimated 89,000 animals in 1992 prior to wolf recovery to 140,000-150,000 […]

By George Wuerthner
Business Is Personal

A Conversation About Growth

Recently I was involved in a conversation on producing business growth. The discussion revolved around what to measure about the business in order to keep track of the growth. A few things to start: Don’t make things complicated. Be sure that you’re measuring the right things. Historical data has some value but the good stuff […]

By Mark Riffey
Closing Range

Clip and Save

This June 5, casting an informed vote (the only vote you should make, dang it) will be hard work. Here in the Flathead, 14 Republicans are vying for two open Commissioner seats. Statewide are numerous contested GOP legislative primaries, and piled on top are seven Republican governor candidates to pick through. Democrats will be not-so-busy […]

By Dave Skinner
Letter

City Airport Should be Put to Highest and Best Use

Here we go again! As someone wrote last week, “When will it end?” I’ve been here now two times now stemmed myself against the realization that as Norb Donahue and also Clarence Krepps, former city manager, who even then were aware of the fact that the location of the present city airport carries too many […]

By Carl Feig
Letter

Ignoring the Campaign Sign Ordinance

Right now in a seemingly endless election year we have lots of candidates vying for the chance to represent us in various government positions that require them to uphold and respect our laws and regulations. It appears that most of them think the sign ordinances don’t apply to them. Columbia Falls, Kalispell and Flathead County […]

By Karen Reeves
Like I Was Saying

Unclear Alternative

As the June primary approaches, fundraising numbers are a little more revealing as to who has the edge in statewide races, especially in crowded fields such as that for the Republican governor nomination. Former Congressman Rick Hill hauled in about $31,400 over the last month, between March 6 and April 5, has more than $300,000 […]

By Kellyn Brown
Guest Column

Cost of Non-Native Lake Trout

This spring native westslope cutthroat and bull trout will stage for their epic journeys from Flathead Lake to spawning streams in the Middle and North Forks of the Flathead River. Once quite common, their numbers are significantly diminished from the recent past because many cannot navigate the gauntlet of predacious non-native lake trout (and illegally […]

By Chris Schustrom & Bruce Farling
Uncommon Ground

Tax Freedom

The conservative Tax Foundation is a Washington, D.C. based think tank with a long history of publishing research studies and comparing state tax policy. The foundation receives funding from big corporations and far-right political groups. Tax Freedom Day is the foundation’s point of the year when Americans have earned enough money to pay for taxes. […]

By Mike Jopek
Business Is Personal

Are You A Juggler?

In a recent Harvard Business Review, Tony Schwartz once again admonishes us about multitasking and offers some tips offering multitasking relief in the context of meetings, response expectations and taking breaks. Why is multitasking “suddenly” the hip thing to rail against? I suspect it’s a reflection of a number of things – including the economy, […]

By Mark Riffey
Letter

Leftists Lie About 1505

Don’t you just love election season? Have you heard the blitzkrieg of anti-Rehberg ads paid for by Citizens For Strength and Security? You know, the ones about the feds (Homeland Security) grabbing tens of thousands of square miles of our land, fencing us off from hunting and other uses and hazing us with helicopters when […]

By Dan Diamond