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  • Missing plane was reportedly flying too low

    MATT GOURAS Associated Press Writer MOIESE

    After two days of unsuccessfully combing the rough, wild terrain of northwestern Montana, authorities pledged Tuesday to keep looking for four people who never returned from an afternoon of sightseeing in a small airplane. The 1968 Piper Arrow single- engine plane was rented by a recent University of Montana graduate who had gotten his pilot's license about a year ago, with his friend and two newspaper reporters from the Daily Inter Lake of Kalispell as passengers. Sonny Kless, 25, flew Brian Williams and reporters Melissa...

  • Regents weigh impact of budget cuts

    MATT GOURAS Associated Press Writer HELENA

    The Montana Board of Regents put a framework in place Thursday that would allow for cuts of up to 5 percent in the university system, the first of the state agencies to publicly heed the governor's request to do so. The board decided unanimously during a conference call to honor Gov. Brian Schweitzer's request to start planning for such cuts, even though it has unique constitutional authority among executive branch agencies to establish its own budget. The board recognized the cuts are needed as Montana grapples with...

  • Both sides talk changes to medical marijuana law

    MATT GOURAS Associated Press Writer HELENA

    Medical marijuana advocates and opponents worked Wednesday to reach an agreement on fixing a law that has come under heavy scrutiny — even as a new initiative was in the works to repeal the measure altogether. A ballot initiative proposed a day earlier would ask voters to undo their 2004 decision legalizing medical marijuana. But it faces a strict mid-June deadline to qualify for the ballot by clearing legal review and completing the arduous task of gathering thousands of signatures in a short period of time. The medical m...

  • Montana regents eye budget cuts up to 5 percent

    MATT GOURAS Associated Press Writer HELENA

    The Board of Regents will evaluate budget cuts of up to 5 percent for the state's colleges and universities at a meeting this week. The regents have decided to join other state agencies that are drafting the proposed budget cuts following a request from Gov. Brian Schweitzer — even though the university system has the authority to establish its own spending priorities. "The regents want to be responsible leaders in the state and contribute as much as possible," Commissioner of Higher Education Sheila Stearns said of the effor...

  • Billionaire stands ground in trial

    MATT GOURAS Associated Press Writer MISSOULA

    Yellowstone Club founder Tim Blixseth stayed on the attack Thursday as lawyers and accountants debated over who knew what — and when — during the financial collapse of the ultra-exclusive alpine getaway for the rich and famous. Nearly $300 million of Blixseth's personal fortune is at stake — just a piece of one of the biggest bankruptcy cases ever to roll through Montana, as the best experts money can buy bat t led in a packed Missoula bankruptcy court. Banking giant Credi t Suisse is accused of pushing a $375 million loan...

  • Rehberg could support phased-in wilderness plan

    MATT GOURAS Associated Press Writer HELENA

    U.S. Rep. Denny Rehberg said Monday that he could support U.S. Sen. Jon Tester's plan to expand wilderness and increase logging - but only with more assurances that the logging will occur. Rehberg, who has held 22 meetings on the measure, said he doesn't think Tester's plan accomplishes its intended goals the way it's written. Tester's bill would create more than 600,000 acres of wilderness, mostly in southwestern Montana's Beaverhead- Deerlodge National Forest, and mandate 70,000 acres of logging in the Beaverhead-Deerlodge...

  • Caught after 38 years

    MATT GOURAS Associated Press Writer HELENA

    A hitchhiker originally sentenced to be executed for the 1951 killing of a Montana man who picked him up during a blizzard has been found running a wedding chapel under an assumed name in Arizona 38 years after he skipped out on parole. Frank Dryman was found after the victim's grandson hired an investigator who tracked the fugitive to his Arizona City notary and chapel business, where he was known as Victor Houston. Now 78, Dryman was awaiting extradition proceedings after his Tuesday arrest by the Pinal County sheriff's...

  • 3 initiatives on Montana ballot in Nov.

    MATT GOURAS Associated Press Writer HELENA

    The state said Monday that three proposed initiatives received enough signatures of support from voters to qualify for the November ballot. Secretary of State Linda McCulloch said a fourth initiat ive, the cons t i tut ional l y required question on whether voters want a Montana constitutional convention, will also be on the ballot. Initiative 161 qualified for the ballot and seeks to change the way hunter-access programs are funded. Another, I-164, caps the interest rate that payday loan operators can charge. Constitutional...

  • Brady Center joins fight over gun rights

    MATT GOURAS Associated Press Writer HELENA

    The Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence is joining the federal government's fight to stop states that want to exempt themselves from national gun control laws, arguing the effort threatens public safety. The gun control advocates and the U.S. Department of Justice both filed new arguments Tuesday in the ongoing legal battle over federal gun control and states rights. The issue was sparked with the "firearm freedoms act" first enacted in Montana last year and subsequently in several other states, and is leading to a...

  • Coal lease wins in split vote

    MATT GOURAS Associated Press Writer HELENA

    Mo n t a n a accepted Thursday a mining giant's $86 million bid for the rights to a vast tract holding a half-billion tons of state-owned coal — but not before environmentalist protesters briefly shut down the hearing and promised a long fight. Gov. Brian Schweitzer was joined by two other Democrats on the state Land Board in endorsing the deal with Arch Coal Inc. The governor said if developed, the state will get billions of dollars in taxes and royalties over the coming decades on top of the upfront cash to be delivered n...

  • Stimulus money questions

    MATT GOURAS Associated Press Writer BOZEMAN

    Few governors with political aspirations would bother to debate a riled-up city commission, on their turf and in front of television cameras, over its "misuse" of federal stimulus money. Montana Gov. Brian Schweitzer did — and relished every minute of it. Picking on the tiny sliver of stimulus funding has created a buzz and ,along with tough budget talk, has helped burnish the fiscal conservative credentials of a popular term-limited governor — but one who has no apparent place to go next. The unusual Democrat continues to...

  • AP Interview: Fugitive hid 40 years in plain sight

    MATT GOURAS Associated Press Writer HELENA

    The aging Frank Dryman, a notorious killer from Montana's past, had hidden in plain sight for so long that he forgot he was a wanted man. In an exclusive jailhouse interview with The Associated Press, Dryman detailed how he invented a whole new life, with a new family, an Arizona wedding chapel business — and even volunteer work for local civic clubs. "They just forgot about me," said Dryman, in his first interview since being caught and sent back to the prison he last left in the 1960s. "I was a prominent member of the c...

  • Helena sex ed proposal sees opposition

    MATT GOURAS Associated Press Writer HELENA (AP)

    A proposed sex education program that teaches fifth-graders the different ways people have intercourse and first-graders about gay love has infuriated parents and forced the school board to take a closer look at the issue. Helena school trustees were swamped Tuesday night at a hearing that left many of the hundreds of parents in attendance standing outside a packed board room. They urged the school board in this city nestled in the Rocky Mountains to take the sex education program back to the drawing board. The proposed...

  • Gov.: Pine beetle woes here to stay

    MATT GOURAS Associated Press Writer HELENA

    Gov. Brian Schweitzer, speaking to land use managers, said that state and federal agencies must tell the public that the scarred forests left behind by voracious pine beetles will remain for years. Millions of acres of forest land in the state are affected by the pine beetles, which kill trees in large swaths. The trees turn red as they die, leaving behind a stark landscape that once was green. Schweitzer, speaking to a group of land use managers from state and federal agencies this week, said that only so much can be done....

  • Bison roundup

    MATT GOURAS Associated Press Writer HELENA

    Montana livestock agents are on track to push several hundred bison back into Yellowstone National Park by a Saturday deadline, despite the objections of advocates who want the bison left to roam outside the park. Workers are using helicopters, all-terrain vehicles and horseback riders to haze the bison, which ranchers don't want mingling in areas where domestic cattle will be grazing this summer. Advocates say roughly a third of the several hundred bison being pushed up to 10 miles or more are calves, some just a few days...

  • Advocates contend at hearing: At least one assisted suicide in Montana

    MATT GOURAS Associated Press Writer HELENA

    Doctors in Montana have helped at least one patient commit suicide since a state court ruled late last year it wasn't illegal, advocates said Friday, but authorities have no way of knowing how many others there may be, who is doing it or even how it is being done. The state Supreme Court ruled Dec. 31 that nothing in state law prevents a doctor from prescribing the lethal drugs to mentally competent, terminally ill patients, making Montana the third state to allow physicianassisted suicide. But the court didn't determine...

  • Gov.: Change needed in marijuana law

    MATT GOURAS Associated Press Writer HELENA

    Gov. Brian Schweitzer said Thursday that legalization of medical marijuana has not worked out as voters planned and that the state needs a legislative fix. The medical marijuana law, passed with a 2004 ballot initiative, has become one of the hottest topics facing lawmakers as the state deals with an explosion in the number of medical marijuana patients, caregivers and growers. Montana has seen a fivefold growth in cardholders in just one year thanks in large part to traveling clinics that sign up hundreds of new patients at...

  • Dry western Mont. Could see big fires

    MATT GOURAS Associated Press Writer HELENA

    A new report shows that western Montana's forests are seeing near-record dry conditions so far this year — exactly 100 years after the Great Fire of 1910. The annual drought report, delivered to the governor Friday, warned that snowpack is about half of normal in some river basins in the west. That, along with millions of acres of forest land packed with trees killed by beetles, could lead to another bad fire season. "The potential for a very active fire year is out there," said Mary Sexton, director of the Department of N...

  • Baucus buys ads defending health vote

    MATT GOURAS Associated Press Writer HELENA

    U.S. Sen. Max Baucus is not shying away from his role in health care reform in a new television commercial airing in Montana. In the spot to start running Friday, Baucus acknowledges the legislation he played a big role in drafting may have come at a political cost. "Taking on a tough issue like health care may not have been the political safe thing to do, but it is the right thing to do for Montana," Baucus tells the audience. Baucus is not up for re-election until 2014 but has seen his approval rating drop after taking a...

  • Mont. Lawsuit challenges corporate political ban

    MATT GOURAS Associated Press Writer HELENA

    A conservative group filed a lawsuit in Montana on Monday that seeks to overturn the state's ban on corporate political advocacy. The challenge from a group called the Western Tradition Partnership comes in the wake of a U.S. Supreme Court decision paving the way for more corporate financing in elections. The Denver-based group said that it is joined by Champion Painting of Bozeman, a corporat ion that would l ike to get involved politically, in the lawsuit that was filed in state district court in Helena. Montana state law...

  • Rehberg in familiar role as obvious front-runner

    MATT GOURAS Associated Press Writer HELENA

    U. S. Rep. Denny Rehberg is in the familiar position of being the obvious frontrunner in his re-election bid, but says he is not taking anything for granted in a primary in which he faces challenges from both the left and the right. Rehberg, who considers hims e l f a " c o n s e r v a t i v e Republican," is facing challenges from two political newcomers. One, lab scientist Mark French, seems to be riding the rising tide of tea party politics to mount a campaign as someone even more conservative. So far Rehberg, seeking his...

  • Legislator’s company got stimulus funds

    MATT GOURAS Associated Press Writer HELENA

    A state lawmaker carved money out of last year's stimulus spending bill for an energy study shortly before investing in a company to help get that money, according to newly released documents. Rep. Llew Jones of Conrad used his position on the House Appropriations Committee last March to propose an amendment to carve out $475,000 for a biomass energy study. E-mails obtained by The Associated Press show that Jones was also actively contemplating starting a company to get that money. Jones defended the arrangement, saying he...

  • State freeze on local money draws GOP criticism

    MATT GOURAS Associated Press Writer HELENA

    A move by Gov. Brian Schweitzer's administration to freeze a bunch of money spent on local projects came under fire Wednesday as lawmakers started looking at a budget situation that has prompted the governor to consider widespread cuts. Republicans said that the Schweitzer administration overwhelmingly targeted rural counties with GOP lawmakers when it recently decided to hold back spending on $3.5 million in grants to local governments. "Of course that's what it was," said Sen. Dave Lewis, R-Helena. "The majority of it is...

  • Mont. Cracks down on tax cheats, recovers $80M

    MATT GOURAS Associated Press Writer HELENA

    Gov. Brian Schweitzer said Monday that efforts to track down tax cheats is leading to a big increase in audit collections at the Department of Revenue. Schweitzer said audit collections were close to $80 million over the past year, a new record and way up from previous years. Schweitzer indicated he may ask lawmakers to give the agency more enforcement tools. The governor said the increased collections come from a multiyear effort to find those not paying taxes, mostly nonresidents and out-of-state corporations. Schweitzer sa...

  • Governor decries inaction on energy bill

    MATT GOURAS Associated Press Writer HELENA

    Gov. Brian Schweitzer said Friday that Congress' failure to move energy legislation will slow investment in all types of coal projects — clean or dirty — but won't slow mining for the state's coal needed to supply current power plants. The U.S. Senate recently dropped plans to pass a broad energy bill after it was clear there wouldn't be enough votes to support a so-called cap and trade proposal, or even a more limited approach that focused on utility carbon emissions. The plan was slammed by Republicans as a tax, and it mad...

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