Opinion

Opinion

Pleasure Vineyard

I have a dream. A dream where Congress and the President are on perpetual vacation. Most Americans might be outraged that President Barack Obama is spending well over $50,000 a week eating designer ice cream cones on Pleasure Vineyard while Congress watches the country economically implode from behind the wheel of a golf cart, but […]

By Robert Seymour
Like I Was Saying

Bad Credibility

Montana’s U.S. delegation responded with a series of predictable prepared statements following Standard & Poor’s decision to downgrade the credit rating of long-term U.S. debt. Glaringly missing from those responses were the politicians’ opinions of a ratings agency whose own approval rating deserves to be as bad as that of Congress. That’s not to say […]

By Kellyn Brown
Opinion

Are Federal Social Programs Working?

Health, education, welfare … the federal government spends more than $630 billion annually on hundreds of social programs. How many of them work? No one knows. And that’s a problem. Most federal programs have never been evaluated for true effectiveness. And most evaluations that are conducted – and there are many – aren’t worth the […]

By David Muhlhausen
Business Is Personal

Talk to the Animals

In a distant past, my business was rather dependent on a product from a particular outside-the-valley company. As good as it was, this product had a rough life, as it was passed from one company to another. Unfortunately, none of the owners anywhere along this trail seemed to have an inkling of customer relationship skills. […]

By Mark Riffey
Closing Range

Dam Thinking

What with our long runoff, the Feds re-writing the floodplain, Whitefish agreeing to re-start its vest-pocket hydro plant, Columbia Falls Aluminum Company talks with Bonneville Power, Judge James Redden in Portland slapping down (yet again) agency salmon plans to the glee of Greens, Fort Peck running full bore over the spillway – there’s lots of […]

By Dave Skinner
Like I Was Saying

Public Relations

The federal government has a public relations problem. And while much of this is unavoidable, equal parts can be blamed on its failure to explain complex policy and its knack for responding to legitimate questions with an air of indifference. Let’s look at the proposed floodplain update in Evergreen. Recently, the Federal Emergency Management Agency […]

By Kellyn Brown
Opinion

Millions Lost by Limiting Archery Elk Drawing

The 2011 archery elk permit drawing results are in, and for some it was a day of reward and excitement. For others there was disappointment in not drawing a permit for this year. For Montana it was an economic bloodletting. Over $16 million in economic activity has been lost due to residents and non-residents who […]

By Mac Minard
Business Is Personal

Lucy and the Aluminum Football

Lately, there has been a lot of talk in the news and around the valley about the Bonneville Power Administration (BPA) offering a four year power supply deal to Columbia Falls Aluminum Company (CFAC). As you’ve read here in the Beacon, the deal is subject to environmental review and other what-ifs, so it isn’t a […]

By Mark Riffey
Uncommon Ground

GOP Seal of Approval

The debt reduction compromise puts a balanced budget Constitutional amendment to a full Congressional vote this year. Montana would ratify the leftover idea from the “Contract with America.” A balanced budget has plenty of populist appeal. “That is not fair to the American people to hold out and say we won’t agree to raising the […]

By Mike Jopek
Like I Was Saying

So Long, ‘Old’ Friend

In February of 2007, when I was beginning to round up a small staff to launch this newspaper, I met Dan Testa at a coffee shop in Missoula. The interview was short. The job was his. And we headed next door to Charlie B’s to toast our new venture, which would later be called the […]

By Kellyn Brown
Opinion

150 Years Since Bull Run

The First Battle of Bull Run, the first major battle of the Civil War, was fought 150 years ago on July 21. The sesquicentennial of America’s bloodiest conflict has now begun. Until Vietnam more Americans were killed or maimed in the Civil War than all our other wars combined. Contrary to the “lost cause” interpretation, […]

By Bob Brown
Business Is Personal

What Do You Want Me To Do Next?

This past week, I had the pleasure of visiting the still somewhat chilly seaside of Oregon thanks to a handful of out of town appointments. In between the productive parts of the week, we managed to visit a couple of western Oregon wineries. While a good time was had by all, I found it interesting […]

By Mark Riffey
Closing Range

Pearls Among Swine

Have you tuned out the mindless screaming about raising the debt ceiling? Pat yourself on the back for being rationally ignorant, as there’s little we riffraff peons can do to prevent America from joining Greece as a deadbeat nation. Vote? Sure, after 18 more months of porcine pandery? Well, I was about to mute the […]

By Dave Skinner
Like I Was Saying

Making it Worse

State unemployment numbers were released last week and – guess what? – Flathead County’s is exactly the same as it was one year ago. The non-seasonally adjusted jobless rate in June was once again 11.4 percent. Meanwhile, as places like Northwest Montana tread water, Washington is doing its best to make things worse. Before now, […]

By Kellyn Brown
Opinion

Addressing Climate Change is Neither Frivolous nor Criminal

In his July 6 Beacon commentary, Dave Skinner accused a number of attorneys and their clients of “criminal frivolity” regarding a petition filed in the Montana Supreme Court. The author doesn’t appear to be well-informed on the petition, science or basic tenets of our constitutional system of government. It is an odd “crime.” Six busy […]

By Jim Manley