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  • View from the North 40: A snapshot in time

    Pam Burke|Updated Mar 30, 2022

    Feb. 14, four days after President Joe Biden warned U.S. citizens in Ukraine to leave because a Russian invasion was imminent, Hudson, Ohio, Mayor Craig Shubert resigned over the kerfuffle he caused by arguing, with straight-faced sincerity, that ice shanties, aka ice houses, should not be allowed on the pond at Hudson Spring Park because they attract prostitutes and combating that issue will burn up too many law enforcement and judicial resources. Apparently the heckling...

  • View from the North 40: It's the different between sound and caucaphony

    Pam Burke|Updated Mar 30, 2022

    It’s no secret that I love the English language, despite all its frustrating faults. You can really do some magical things with it. The versatility of English by sound alone is a real asset for the language. Compare the sounds of “The drip pooled in the sink, then trickled into the pipes” to “Water gushed from the faucet, showering the walls and flooding onto the floor.” Yeah, yeah, it’s not magic, but listen to the words, how sound adds meaning. In the first sentence th...

  • View from the North 40: When perspective is foreshorted, get a ladder

    Pam Burke|Updated Mar 30, 2022

    It happens on a weirdly frequent occasion that I write on a topic one week and the next week that topic becomes quite relevant to my everyday life. So it is that — in relation to last week’s column about everything in life being a matter of perspective — I am bewildered to announce this week that due to an alteration in perspective I now know what it’s like to live life as a short person. It’s hard work being short. I didn’t expect that much challenge and, yet, here I am t...

  • Reforming pole access rules could mean $1.7 billion for Montana

    Updated Mar 11, 2022

    According to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), 1 in 3 Montanans still lack access to reliable, high-speed broadband, and along with it the wide range of educational, commerce, health, and social opportunities critical to success in the 21st century. Montana’s number of unconnected residents –already three times the national average – is even more dire when we focus on the state’s rural communities, where an astounding 3 in 5 residents still lack connectivity. While Montana’s policymakers and industry leaders h...

  • Looking out my Backdoor: Barking up the right tree

    Sondra Ashton|Updated Mar 10, 2022

    My human asked me to write the column today. She begged, pleaded, and to my shame, she groveled. She also gave me a beef bone with tatters of meat from the carniceria in town. I caved. I told her, I am a dog, “The story I tell will be incomprehensible to human kinds.” She said, “That’s OK. Anything I wrote today wouldn’t make sense either.” She then told me that she is feeling way down in the dumps. Lower level. I don’t understand. Isn’t being down in the dumps a good th...

  • Fix Amtrak first, then look at new lines

    Updated Mar 9, 2022

    Since its formation in 2020, the Big Sky Passenger Rail Authority — BSPRA — has been successful in touting its mission to re-establish rail passenger service through Southern Montana. Enthusiasm for the project was heightened in November 2021 with the passage of Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, which — for the first time in the service’s 51-year history — has designated significant funding for Amtrak, America’s intercity rail passenger service. But often lost in press releases by the BSPRA and in recent news articl...

  • Support for Ukraine and democracy must be bipartisan

    Updated Mar 9, 2022

    As I watched Russian troops march across the Ukrainian border in an unprovoked war that immediately made the world less safe for our kids and grandkids, I thought about the words of a World War I veteran from Great Falls named Mike Mansfield, spoken in the days after Hitler invaded Poland in 1939: “Democracy — as we know it, understand it, and love it — is today facing a challenge to its continuance. This challenge must be met, met by all who believe fundamentally in the process and [who] love the freedom and the respo...

  • The Postscript - Room for more

    Updated Mar 9, 2022

    My husband, Peter, and I were traveling in Mexico when we suddenly found ourselves without a place to stay. Over the years, all our accommodations while traveling have been quirky in one way or another, but they have all been pretty much what we were expecting, and we’ve never had any insurmountable problems. This week, we encountered insurmountable problems. When we arrived at the airport, the caretaker stood us up. That was not a good sign. We found other transportation and, when we finally found the caretaker, we were g...

  • People should attend economic outlook seminar

    Tim Leeds|Updated Mar 8, 2022

    People in the Havre area have the chance to find out the latest news on the state economy and should try to make it if they can. University of Montana’s Bureau of Business and Economic Research will be in Havre March 16 presenting its Economic Outlook Seminar for the year. The seminar, the 47th held by the bureau, travels the state making presentations on various issues including this year an overview of three of the biggest issues on people’s minds right now. The seminar typically looks at potential impacts of recent eve...

  • A top two primary system is a bad idea for Montana

    Updated Mar 8, 2022

    If you are like me, it is difficult to think of a reason why we would want to make Montana more like California. Nonetheless, this election cycle, there are several ballot initiatives being proposed to adopt California policies here in Montana. One such proposal by former Gov. Marc Racicot and former Secretary of State Bob Brown is to adopt a top two primary election system. A top two system is a bad idea for Montana. Today, Montana uses an open primary system. In an open primary system, unlike a closed system, voters do not...

  • At one-year mark, more work to do on Snowbird Fund

    Updated Mar 7, 2022

    A year ago, we launched the Snowbird Fund to help families and friends of missing and murdered indigenous persons by offering immediate cash assistance (no questions asked) to search for their loved ones. Since then, the fund has not only survived but it has doubled its cash amount and increased its funding capacity — all during a pandemic and tough economic times. Meanwhile, through the tenacious efforts of native communities and families around the state and country, the issue of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Persons h...

  • Montana should switch to Top Two Primary

    Updated Mar 4, 2022

    We became acquainted over half a century ago and have always shared a keen interest in government and public service. In our lifetimes of serving in public office, and being close observers of the political process, we have never so regularly heard deep expressions of concern from our fellow citizens about the declining state of our political system. Believing that individual freedom is fundamental to our system of “government of, by and for the people,” we are proposing here an idea to expand freedom within our system that w...

  • Looking out my Backdoor: And just like that! Snap!

    Sondra Ashton|Updated Mar 3, 2022

    We sing the praises and glories of spring. Really, we ought to be more careful. Spring ought to come printed with a warning label, beware, danger of erratic behavior. Spring is warm and wanton with promise one day, and cruel and cold, withholding favors the next day, spurning all pleading and imploring with an imperious frosty demeanor. Like many things, Spring also has a use-by date and just like that, go to sleep one night much like any other, waken and summer has arrived....

  • American energy dominance makes the world safer

    Updated Mar 3, 2022

    I have no doubt that we are all watching the the events unfold in Ukraine with heartbreak and horror. And yet, we are seeing the inspirational courage of the Ukrainian people as they take up arms and fight for their families, liberty and their land. The Biden administration’s retreat and failure in Afghanistan coupled with their inability to deliver any meaningful deterrent to Putin’s onslaught over the past year has given the world a clear message: America under Biden will not or cannot protect and defend freedom. Our allies...

  • The Postscript: Time for butter

    Carrie Classon|Updated Mar 2, 2022

    My great-uncle John never buttered his bread. “I don’t have time for butter!” he insisted. I never knew how much time butter took, but apparently it was more than Uncle John could spare. Time passes so often without notice. A day seems to pass in the time it takes to butter a piece of bread. Last night, my husband, Peter, said that we met seven years ago. “Eight years,” I corrected him. We will celebrate our seventh wedding anniversary next month and, while the romance w...

  • Don't have stupid foreign policy

    Updated Mar 2, 2022

    For an alarming moment reading the Friday editorial in Havre Daily News on Montana politicians bashing the president during the Ukraine crisis, I imagined the United States already at war with Russia. It is true that in times of war American politicians are expected to follow the leader, whether in the case of WWII (with rare exceptions like Montana’s Jeanette Rankin), or our more recent crusade to rid the world of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. Once we are in the fight, a political leader who makes pronouncements a...

  • Transparency needed in the cattle market

    Updated Feb 25, 2022

    In Montana, cattle outnumber people by nearly three to one, so it’s no wonder that Montana beef plays such a large role in our rich legacy of agriculture and our economy. Montana ranchers take pride in producing the best cattle and highest-quality beef in the world. The last thing they should have to worry about is getting a fair price for their product. I’m hearing concerns from hardworking Montana cattle producers who are struggling to compete with the four biggest packers who currently dominate the market. These large pac...

  • Looking out my Backdoor: Don't mess with us!

    Sondra Ashton|Updated Feb 24, 2022

    I thought long and hard before taking on the responsibility of adopting a pooch. Lola has proven to be an asset to my life. If nothing else, she gets me out the door several times a day for short walks, for little chats, for daily interactions. She’s taught me when she wants to be brushed, when she wants a walk-about, when she wants her belly scratched, that sort of thing. My neighbors, Josue and Erika, have two small poochies, Snowball, aged and toothless, and Princess, w...

  • The Postscript: Adequate accomodations

    Carrie Classon|Updated Feb 23, 2022

    “I can always sleep in my rain jacket,” my husband, Peter, announced. Vacationing in rental homes is usually a bit of an adventure. We don’t need luxurious digs, and instead look for apartments offering a hefty discount if we stay for a full month. We did this three years ago in Pamplona, Spain. The apartment required climbing six flights of stairs, but it had a great view of the city — because we were right in the center of it. Only at night did this become a problem...

  • Looking out my Backdoor: Famous, notorious, adequate, anonymous

    Sondra Ashton|Updated Feb 17, 2022

    My friend Cheryl, a former high school classmate, was talking with our “girl-group” this week. She expressed how all her life, when among certain gifted, professional, highly recognized and extremely wealthy people, she has felt inadequate. Haven’t we all felt that way? Isn’t that a universal feeling, to feel like whoever we are, whatever the circumstances, we are not enough? Is it just me, or have we all at times felt like frauds and if people find out, oh, my, what shall w...

  • The Postscript: Listening to the bells

    Carrie Classon|Updated Feb 16, 2022

    The bells ring more or less all the time here. My husband, Peter, and I are in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico, a city filled with old churches. Every old church has at least a couple of old bells, and all the bells are rung frequently. Since there is so much I do not understand when I travel to another country, I assumed that the bells rang according to some sort of system that everyone else understood and I did not. (This is an assumption I’ve made about a lot of things over t...

  • Everyone has a stake in public education

    Updated Feb 14, 2022

    You don’t have to be a parent to care about your local school. But recently there are groups popping up around Montana who refer to themselves as the “parental rights movement,” as though they have more of a stake in public education than those who don’t have kids in the school system. The “parental rights movement” is a relatively small group of people with an axe to grind and clearly don’t represent most parents. Recently they have been attacking masks, vaccines and how we teach history. In their view, they should be abl...

  • View from the North 40: Perspective changes everything, but it's not the only answer

    Pam Burke|Updated Feb 11, 2022

    “Everything in life is a matter of perspective,” that’s one of my favorite quotes from myself — though, to be fair to humans of the world, I hardly think the phrase is unique to me. Still, it is one of my few, and simple, guiding principles for life. You just have to look at things the right way to see and understand them more clearly, or even just to feel better. Sometimes that act of seeing, that just-right perspective, is both literal and figurative. Like a horse I saw in...

  • Looking out my Backdoor: Life before the wood pulp industry

    Sondra Ashton|Updated Feb 10, 2022

    I’m not the least bit enamored with “the good ol’ days,” which, to my mind, were rather rugged. Hard, one might say. I suppose every age is hard in its own way. You might think I’m crazy and perhaps you are right. A few months ago I was standing over the ironing board, dealing with the aftermath of cotton clothing sun-dried on the clothesline, letting all kinds of thoughts ramble through my mind when it seemed as if some of my notions coalesced into a decision without consulti...

  • The Postscript: How things are done

    Carrie Classon|Updated Feb 9, 2022

    One reason to travel is to discover how things are done all over again. My husband, Peter, and I are in Mexico, and I was thinking this as we stood, confounded, in front of the washing machine. It would not start. There was a dizzying array of buttons and commands. I was pleasantly surprised to realize that I actually understood what almost all the buttons meant. Unfortunately, my Spanish skills were of no use whatsoever in making the machine start. “We need to put soap in i...

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