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  • View from the North 40: No time at the present

    Pam Burke|Updated Feb 3, 2023

    Ahhh, the third week in April, the days are noticeably longer, the birds of summer are returning and their primarily nocturnal enemy, the cat, is spending more nighttime hours outside. Spring is in the air. But I’m pre-obsessing over the coming sleep deprivation. The longer daylight days are my only unhealthy relationship. I love that the sunlight burns away the cold and dark of winter, but so do the birds. They sing songs about it … all the time. That combination of light and...

  • Letter to the Editor - 'Where there is no vision people perish'

    Updated Apr 26, 2022

    Editor, Recent actions by our federal government to cut needed Medicaid funding, historic patterns of inadequate and inequitable funding for mental health and disability services are giving me a terrible sense of deja vu. In 1971, my Shelby High School sociology class toured the Montana facilities at Warm Springs and Boulder. I was appalled by the terrible living conditions and an overbearing sense of hopelessness. I remember asking our tour guides a couple questions: How do you give 2,000 people showers? (Answer: All at one...

  • Constitutional Convention Celebration Committee

    Updated Apr 26, 2022

    Fifty years ago I was unbelievably blessed to be the research staff for the Declaration of Rights Committee of the Montana Constitutional Convention. As we approach the 50th Anniversary, I must give a solemn nod to the recent passing of two giants: Bill of Rights Committee Chairman Wade Dahood and Committee member Bob Campbell, primary reasons Montana has such a spectacular document. They had a lot of help, from committee members Chet Blaylock, Dorothy Eck, George James, Don Foster, Marshall Murray and Lyle Monroe as well as...

  • Money talks too much

    Updated Apr 22, 2022

    A lot of people were relieved when Twitter parried Elon Musk's takeover grab, and are now worried about what happens next because free speech radical Musk seemed about to invite Donald Trump to start tweeting again. Should the one-time tweeter in chief get his Twitter account back? For democracy to work, every citizen has to get a chance to put up a soapbox on the town square ( now called Twitter), including former presidents whose social media opus, even before Jan. 6, 2021, was vituperative, repetitive, assertive of the thi...

  • Looking out my Backdoor: Building a sturdy spite fence

    Sondra Ashton|Updated Apr 21, 2022

    Unfortunately, I have friends stuck in a spite fight. As is often the case, one party is bewildered while the other party is self-righteously sticking pins in voodoo dolls, metaphorically speaking. I’m the onlooker. There is nothing I can do but watch it unfold. I feel sad. I know about spite. And I know who spite hurts. Not so much the intended victim, who often is unaware. My first clear and vivid memory of my own spiteful action occurred when I was five or six years old. M...

  • Explaining voting, campaigning and lawmaking to high schoolers

    Updated Apr 21, 2022

    This past week, I was invited to the North Star School to speak about voting and the importance of open elections. North Star School is holding class elections and students wanted to learn more about state and local elections. Thanks to Rhett Wolery and Kaine Berardinelli for the personal invite and opportunity for me to share about my participation in both local and state elections as a county commissioner for 18 years and as a senator in Montana Legislature. I like to start...

  • The Postscript: A very bad smell

    Carrie Classon|Updated Apr 20, 2022

    Of course, we should have known something was wrong. The nice thing about living in our new condo is that we don’t have the responsibilities of a stand-alone home. There is no yard to rake, no snow to shovel. There is someone at the front desk who will take in our mail and even water our plants. We were so pleased that we could leave for an extended trip to Mexico without these worries. But then, we got a notice from our electric company that indicated our electric bill was v...

  • Congress needs to act on climate to save our winters

    Updated Apr 18, 2022

    Research recently revealed that the drought we are experiencing in the West is the most severe and prolonged drought in 1,200 years. This megadrought directly affects the ski industry: less precipitation means less snow (which was painfully clear this winter). Our snowpack is of particular importance, not only because it makes for better skiing, but also because it is our water storage. In the spring, snowmelt refills our lakes and reservoirs, irrigates our pastures, and keeps river levels up and temperatures cool enough to...

  • CI-121 misleading, bad for Montana

    Updated Apr 18, 2022

    Know the consequences before signing the petition to put CI-121 on the November ballot. At face value, CI-121 and freezing your residential property taxes may sound like a good idea. But if you further investigate the details of this misleading ballot initiative, you will find several adverse consequences. What is CI-121? It is a ballot initiative proposing a constitutional amendment that would freeze residential property value at the 2019 level and changes the assessed value to the acquisition value when purchased. This...

  • View from the North 40: Some vegetables go over the line

    Pam Burke|Updated Apr 15, 2022

    I just didn’t imagine myself saying this, but some lines in the sand might be worth drawing. Mind you, I’m not talking about breaking laws, or bucking society, or compromising principles, or shirking responsibilities, or bending the rules — or even throwing myself on a sword or dyin’ on a hill. Sure you could do those things with your little line in the sand. The line represents a border between either and or, this and that, one or the other. Maybe the line is one you won’t c...

  • Choices

    Updated Apr 15, 2022

    Americans have vital choices to make. Failure to make choices before voting is not an option. Some people are trying to limit your access to the poll and invalidate your ballot. For example, Texas’s new state law permitted nearly 270,000 ballots destroyed. We need to redouble efforts to help everyone to vote. If many of us fail to vote, then by default we may push our society towards living in a right-wing political cultist environment. There we will have to accept big lies and endure a country fraught with tension, fear, a...

  • Clerk and Recorder's Office needs change

    Updated Apr 15, 2022

    Hello, my name is Tina Louise Salazar, and I am running for the office of Clerk and Recorder. I’m originally from Texas and my education and experience make me the best person for the office of clerk and recorder. I’ve always considered running for office, but it wasn’t until I became a resident in Havre, Montana, that I decided to run. When I arrived in Havre, I was worried that people wouldn’t be friendly or that I’d never feel part of a community like I did in Texas, but I was wrong. The people that I have met here are...

  • The Postscript - A lot of cake

    Carrie Classon|Updated Apr 15, 2022

    The plan was to buy everyone cake. My husband, Peter, and I are finally getting ready to leave Mexico, and we can’t say we are too happy about it. The last two months in San Miguel de Allende have convinced us that it is a place we want to return to, and now leaving it feels very hard — especially when my sister tells me about the freezing rain hitting her home right now. “We had to cancel our trip to visit Uncle Andy and Bea!” she tells me. “The roads were terrible!...

  • Looking out my Backdoor: Go with the flow

    Sondra Ashton|Updated Apr 15, 2022

    Remember those words from long ago? I glance at tee-shirts on computer side-bar ads, and see that phrases from when I was young and innocent, or at least oblivious, our phrases are making a comeback. So go with the flow even if you’ve no idea what it means. I remember during a particularly tough few years when my mantra (I didn’t know the word mantra back then) was “acceptance is the answer to all my problems today.” I thought if I said it often enough the words would magical...

  • Looking out my Backdoor: Pay de pimiento morron and other wonders

    Sondra Ashton|Updated Apr 15, 2022

    In the space of a few days I’ve transformed from a hermit grub to social butterfly. It all began when John and Carol invited me to please, please, please join them for a lunch before they headed off into the sunrise back to Minnesota. I had turned down numerous such invitations during these last months, just not comfortable being out in the greater community. When you come to visit we will take you to spend an afternoon walking the grounds of the Hacienda del Carmen, a b...

  • Letter to the Editor - Vote for Montana values

    Updated Apr 13, 2022

    Editor, My name is Samuel Thomas. I am running to give Montana voters a viable alternative to Matt Rosendale, whose views and votes in Congress do not represent Montana values. I’m running because our country is in trouble. We have extremist politicians like Rosendale who voted “no” on the critically important infrastructure package that provided historic investment in Montana highways, roads, bridges, broadband expansion, and water projects, including the restoration of the Milk River Project that provides drinking water...

  • Letter to the Editor - Hileman for quality, enrichment, and engagement at HPS

    Updated Apr 12, 2022

    Dear Editor and the Havre Community, As many of you already know, I am running for a seat for the Havre School Board of Trustees in the upcoming school board election May 3. I have been involved in community building efforts throughout the region for the past 14 years. In my professional life, I served as the commercial loan officer for Bear Paw Development Corp. for six years and have helped local business owners and governments as Brownfields Specialist for NewFields Companies for the past eight years. In my personal time,...

  • View from the North 40: So how foodie are you willing to go?

    Pam Burke|Updated Apr 8, 2022

    One of the benefits of the modern foodie fascination for people like me is that we can just keep throwing ingredients together with abandon, but now we can attach professional-sounding terms to it and all of a sudden our haphazard cooking process is legit. When you make chicken something out of whatever you found in the fridge, it’s more eater-friendly to say the meal is “based on a traditional dish from the Oaxaca region of Mexico,” rather than “It’s kind of Mexican ....

  • Want to save democracy? Listen to the poets

    Updated Apr 8, 2022

    “A child said, What is the grass? ….................................... “Growing among black folks as among white, “Kanuck, Tuckahoe, Congressman, Cuff, “I give them the same, I receive them the same.” Walt Whitman, Leaves of Grass Recent expert panels point to voter suppression efforts, legislative bodies that don't bother that much with the issues that concern citizens, and rancid partisan politics as “flaws” in American democracy. Each of our major parties agrees that the other party has become an existential thr...

  • An old-fashioned idea: Let's debate!

    Updated Apr 7, 2022

    The stage is now set. Although the general election is still months away, we know who will be on the ballot in November to represent Havre in the Montana House of Representatives. I’ve had the great honor of working for and with the community of Havre and a significant portion of northern Montana for the past 22 years in my role as executive director of Bear Paw Development Corp. During that time, I have worked with a committed team of economic and community development professionals to bring millions of dollars into our c...

  • The Postscript: My grouchy friends

    Carrie Classon|Updated Apr 6, 2022

    I have a weakness for grouchy people. I have a couple of friends I would describe as perpetually grouchy, and I’m not quite sure why, but I think they are good for me. To clarify, I’m not fond of being around people who are in the habit of deliberately messing up their lives. I think everyone has known at least one person like this, and it’s hard to watch. I see the train coming down the tracks. I hope my friend will alter course. I try not to be too bossy as I suggest it mi...

  • Why getting hit in the head is now more dangerous than ever

    Updated Apr 1, 2022

    What if, when you wake up from the coma, the hospital people are having one of those political differences of opinion? Medical Person One:“So Mr, Rawn, could you tell us who is president?” Me: “That's an easy one: Joe Biden.” Medical Person One: “Stop the steal! The real president is Donald Trump!” Me: “Well, things have been kind of hazy ever since the asteroid fell on me, so if you say so.” Medical Person Two: “Actually, Mr. Rawn was technically correct the first time, but in reality Joe is just a place holder while Kama...

  • We need to bring integrity back to PSC

    Updated Apr 1, 2022

    In 2021, a state audit of the Montana Public Service Commission revealed “several situations indicative of an unhealthy organizational culture and ineffective leadership, including certain commissioners overriding department controls.” They added, “We believe this culture limited management personnel’s ability to enforce compliance with state and department policy.” Put differently, at a taxpayer funded agency, there was a complete failure of integrity that created an environment ripe for fraud. Being incompetent is bad, b...

  • View from the North 40: It's who we are on the inside that really inspires questions

    Pam Burke|Updated Apr 1, 2022

    With the peer review process complete as of last month, the scientific community has officially announced that they have now completely mapped human DNA, and winging it without any review or guidance whatsoever, I am here to tell you to keep the champagne corked because that doesn’t mean as much as it should. Reuters ran an article Thursday covering a statement from Eric Green, director of the National Human Genome Research Institute about the March announcement of the a...

  • Random observations of an opinionated woman

    Sondra Ashton|Updated Mar 31, 2022

    Birds: Karen from Floweree reported to our girl-group that she heard her first meadowlark singing from atop a fencepost in her garden. We who no longer live in Montana sighed as the meadowlark’s unmistakable and beautiful song rang in our refreshed memories. Here in Jalisco, as everywhere else in spring, the skies crisscross with bird travel, some heading north, some arriving to build nests in which to plant new baby birdy eggs. Especially in early morning and late afternoon,...

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