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HELENA — The Occupational Safety and Health Administration has ordered BNSF Railway to reinstate workers in Montana and Wyoming, with back pay, after an agency investigation determined the employees were illegally fired after reporting they suffered a back injury at work. OSHA said Monday it found that BSNF violated the whistleblower portions of the Federal Railroad Safety Act for firing an employee in Greybull, Wyoming, in 2010 and one in Havre in 2011 within weeks of when the men reported work-related injuries. OSHA o...
HELENA (AP) — Upon further review, the University of Montana has decided to remain in the Big Sky Conference. Less than a month after Royce Engstrom took over as president of the university, he announced Thursday that the school would not move up to the Football Bowl Subdivision. "It was a complex decision with many pros and cons," Engstrom said in a statement. "In the end, the better course is to stay with the conference we helped establish in 1963 and to continue building on its solid foundation." Engstrom said there w...
Eighty of the 88 bison that have been held in a quarantine compound outside Yellowstone National Park were loaded in large stock trailers Wednesday for the two-hour ride to their new home on Ted Turner's ranch. "It went very, very well," said Ryan Clarke, a veterinarian with the USDA's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service. "Better than you can ask for moving these large, excitable animals." Turner's ranch manager Russ Miller said the first group of bison left the Gardiner area shortly before noon Wednesday and arrived a...
The state Land Board voted 3-2 Tuesday to reduce the asking price for development rights to a vast reserve of publicly owned coal near the Wyoming border after not receiving any bids on an earlier offer. The board in December set the bonus bid at 25 cents a ton, or about $143 million. But by the Feb. 8 deadline received only a letter from St. Louisbased Arch Coal Inc. stating that the price for the coal near Ashland was too high. On Tuesday, the board lowered the bonus bid to 15 cents a ton, or about $86 million, and gave...
Public Service Commissioner Brad Molnar violated state ethics laws by accepting illegal donations and using state office equipment for campaign purposes, a hearings examiner found. University of Montana professor William Corbett recommended that Commissioner of Political Practices Dennis Unsworth fine Molnar $5,750 and require him to pay for part of the cost of the proceedings against him because Molnar refused to acknowledge any w ro n gd o i n g , wa s eva s i ve, attacked the complainant and caused delays in the...
A sharply divided Montana Supreme Court has upheld a state law that requires someone planning to sue a bar over liability in a drunken driving crash to notify the bar within 180 days of the crash. The Supreme Court issued the 4-3 ruling on Dec. 23 in a lawsuit filed by C a r y a n d Terra Rohlfs over a June 2006 drunken driving crash that seriously injured Cary Rohlfs. The driver, Joseph Warren, had been drinking for much of the day at the Stumble Inn in Victor. The Rohlfs sued the bar just over a year after the crash,...
A sharply divided Montana Supreme Court has upheld a state law that requires someone planning to sue a bar over liability in a drunken driving crash to notify the bar within 180 days of the crash. The Supreme Court issued the 4-3 ruling on Dec. 23 in a lawsuit filed by C a r y a n d Terra Rohlfs over a June 2006 drunken driving crash that seriously injured Cary Rohlfs. The driver, Joseph Warren, had been drinking for much of the day at the Stumble Inn in Victor. The Rohlfs sued the bar just over a year after the crash,...