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  • A win for grandma's cookies

    Updated May 12, 2015

    My grandma made amazing cookies. They weren’t just the best on the Hi-Line. They were the best in Montana. I’m sure those are fighting words to anyone lucky enough to grow up with doting grandparents. However, if she were still here to bake them today, I could prove it thanks to a new law. As of Oct. 1, my grandma could have sold her baked goods to the public. With bipartisan support, House Bill 478 passed the Montana Legislature easily and provides a new tool for food entrepreneurs by implementing cottage food. As of Oct...

  • 2015 Legislature: Successes, disappointments

    Updated May 6, 2015

    In the run-up to the 2015 legislative session, expectations were low. Montanans expected this session to be more about politics and less about performance. Four months later, I’m pleased to report that the 64th legislative session has been anything but. Where previous sessions were dominated by partisan bickering at the expense of real benefits for Montanans, this year we saw a bipartisan group of legislators joining me in working to find common ground on some of the biggest issues facing our state. Montanans should be p...

  • Meyers' Capitol experience

    John Kelleher|Updated May 4, 2015
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    G. Bruce Meyers said he was exhilarated and terrified when he took his seat in the Montana House. At 66, this political newcomer is the most unlikely of state lawmakers. A Native American Republican with no political experience, he was elected from the most Democratic district in the state by defeating a respected opponent. But in a western version of “Mr. Meyers Goes to Helena,” he went to the state Capitol and made his mark in his first session. He reflected on the recently completed session Friday at the Hill County Pac...

  • View from the North 40: No crystal ball required

    Pam Burke|Updated May 1, 2015

    A humor columnist and a spiritual guide walked into a coffee shop, and it wasn’t a joke. Really. It was, in fact, more like a blind date only, y’know, not as creepy as that sounds. OK, I’ll admit it. A total stranger emailed me, mentioned the right names and connections, flattered me outrageously and asked if I wanted to have tea or coffee in a public place some day. I said, yeah, sure, why not, sounds great. And even though the situation sounds a little like the plot openi...

  • Looking out my back door: Getting drunk on the great big everything

    Sondra Ashton|Updated Apr 30, 2015

    Holy Smokeroonies. Saturday late afternoon I sit with a book open in my lap, my eyes in the sky, watching the play of light on the cirrus clouds. Suddenly, an apparition. Kathy and Richard stand at my door, grins splitting both faces. For a brief time I am paralyzed. (Certifiable? Candidate for sainthood? Visions portend one or the other.) Fast forward: hugs, babble of voices, I can’t believe it, we wanted to surprise you, what are you doing here, it was hard to keep our t...

  • Politics won out over sense

    Updated Apr 30, 2015

    I noticed with great interest that some of the Montana newspapers were criticizing the actions of Republican House members who voted against Senate Bill 416. As one of the guys in the room — trying to get the deal done — I have a few observations to share. Senate Bill 416 was a bi-partisan effort designed by Senate Democrats and Republicans, with direct input by House Democrats and Republicans, and then reviewed by the governor’s office. Along the way, everyone had to give and take and no one got everything that they wante...

  • View from the North 40: Re: life, the universe and my cat

    Updated Apr 24, 2015

    Sometimes the Universe stops orchestrating ironic life twists — and creating cracks in the sidewalk of life just to laugh at seeing you trip and fall — long enough to do you a favor. A real favor. Sometimes that real favor feels like a sucker punch to the solar plexus. You’re just lying there in the dirt with your mouth gaping uselessly like a fish on a dry bank waiting for the clubbing that’s sure to follow to put you out of your misery. The knock-out blow doesn’t come, but the air does, eventually, and that means you gotta...

  • Thanks, Montana

    Updated Apr 23, 2015

    Montanans love to talk about how special our state is. For those from some place other than Montana, you may think that we mean our beautiful mountains, the vast golden prairies, and incredible blue sky that never seems to end. And you would be right — we do mean that. But what really makes Montana special is the people. The people of our state are kind and generous. We are the type of people who celebrate together during the good times, and look out for each other when times get tough. Montana is particularly lucky because t...

  • Looking out my back door: Voice of the turtle dove is heard in our land

    Sondra Ashton|Updated Apr 23, 2015

    Even Solomon knew we need to hear a familiar voice from time to time. And what could be more familiar than the mournful Coo-OOO-oo-oo-oo of the bird that in our country is called the mourning dove. In Mexico she is la paloma. But that doesn't mean I invited her to stake out a homestead in the hanging planter outside my back door. The planter itself is colorful, a traditional flat-backed, painted hanging wall planter. I suppose Senora Paloma looked around and decided the many...

  • Young Republicans should stand up to big government

    Updated Apr 23, 2015

    By Young Republican Caucus You often hear Republicans talking about the downfalls of big government. The face of the Republican Party is changing and as members of the “next generation” we feel it’s vital to the state that we serve to explain why we must uphold this ideal, and why you should, too. There are four principal areas that our joint Republican caucus agreed on at the beginning of the session to guide our priorities: • Strengthening jobs and the economy; • Putting students and parents first; • Safeguardin...

  • Shouldn't every day be Earth Day

    Candi Zion|Updated Apr 22, 2015

    The recycling community is well aware that April 22 is Earth Day. It is today that recycling businesses, organizations and savvy schools advertise their products and/or sponsor events to celebrate taking care of the earth and, hopefully, positively impact others to do likewise. It is a day that celebrates preserving a clean environment for the future. But, shouldn’t that be everyone’s responsibility, every day? Most people would agree that Americans use a lot of resources and produce a lot of garbage. Take a look at the lan...

  • Bullock's free clinics certainly aren't cheap

    Updated Apr 17, 2015

    In Montana, the Legislature is responsible for establishing the state programs to benefit the public, while the executive branch is charged with administering them. That structure has worked very well for decades, and is referred to as the separation of powers. When the power of the purse is taken over by the executive branch, that’s when we start having problems. In 2011, then-Gov. Brian Schweitzer established — without legislative authority — “free” health clinics for state employees and their dependents to use “free of...

  • Ends don't justify means in House rules panel votes

    Updated Apr 17, 2015

    Many on the left and in the media are praising Senate Bill 405 as a “bipartisan” health care solution. However, one thing is clear to the conservative legislators I serve with: SB 405 is an all-or-nothing expansion of Obamacare for Montana. There was no compromise in the drafting of this bill after it was rubber-stamped by the governor and the sponsor shot down all amendments in committee. Make no mistake about it, this bill is a massive expansion of Obamacare in our state and will add tens of thousands of new par...

  • Looking out my back door: The last mechanical clock in the whole USA

    Sondra Ashton|Updated Apr 17, 2015

    Just when life in my neighborhood returned to normal: 8,000 motorcycles roared out of town. 50,000 tourists followed. Lingering snowbirds flew north. An unexpected and welcome rain shower blessed, washed and renewed the atmosphere. Geckos came out of hiding to skitter across my walls. Peace and quiet defined both day and night. Peace. Quiet. Too quiet. I rolled over in bed and looked at my clock. I distinctly recalled winding it last night. Poor thing expired halfway between...

  • View from the North 40: Flight of the Postman

    Pam Burke|Updated Apr 17, 2015

    If you don’t already know who 61-year-old Ruskin, Florida, mailman Doug Hughes is, you should make it your business to know. He’s just spent the last 2 1/2 years planning and executing a spectacular, death-defying stunt that has landed him in jail, and he did it for you. He did it for America. He did it on the White House lawn. Hughes flew an ultralight airplane-helicopter hybrid, called a gyrocopter, through restricted air space over Washington, D.C., and landed on the Whi...

  • Community Focus: Workload, tensions go up in the Capitol

    Updated Apr 14, 2015

    Just before Easter, the Senate passed my Senate Bill 416, which is the only major infrastructure bill that might have a chance to pass. SB 416 passed the Senate on a 47 to 3 vote. Today SB 416 will be heard in the House Appropriations Committee and to pass the House it must get a two-thirds vote as it has a bonding component. This bill is one that no one particularly stomachs, but is a compromise bill that has a chance to pass. Just before Easter, Sarah Swanson Partridge and...

  • View from the North 40: The duct tape whisperer

    Pam Burke|Updated Apr 10, 2015

    The three most importand tools in my barn are duct tape, bailing twine and WD-40. The first two on the list are in a constant battle for Top Tool, the primary go-to solution in any farming-ranching or equine handling emergency. For problems that are mechanical or generally metal in nature, WD-40 has been invaluable. It pitches in doing everything from starting an engine to breaking free a rusty bolt, and one time I used it as rattle snake repellent which, strictly speaking...

  • Looking out my back door: Mexican-American Graffiti - during Holy Week

    Sondra Ashton|Updated Apr 9, 2015

    I never know. I never know what each day might bring. I think I do. I’m always wrong. Back when my children were youngsters, I used to pray, literally pray, for a boring day, just one boring day, please. At the same time, if one of my youngsters dared mouth, “I’m bored,” invariably I got a gleam in my eye and whipped out a list of positive motivational activities, i.e., jobs to do. Interestingly, following the initial attempt, my children were never bored. I never said li...

  • CASA- where ordinary folks make a difference

    Mark Douglass|Updated Apr 7, 2015

    It’s one of those priceless moments in film: In the saddle, crusty old Curly (Jack Palance) turns to wise-cracking Mitch (Billy Crystal) and asks: “Do you know what the secret of life is?” A wry grin on Curly’s weather-beaten face. “No. What?” Mitch quietly responds. “This” says Curly, holding up one finger. “Your finger?” puzzles Mitch. “One thing. Just one thing,” Curly replies. “Just one thing” to change the world. “Just one thing” to make life worth living. “Just one thing” that makes everything else “click.” April is Nat...

  • View from the North 40: Pamville News: It's nature

    Pam Burke|Updated Apr 3, 2015

    New Hampshire legislators prove it’s not just Montana senators who feel it’s their elected and sworn duty to crush children’s dreams. A group of Bozeman elementary kids and their learned presenters went before the Montana Senate with a detailed and researched proposal that Scobey soil be declared the state soil, and the bill sponsor, JP Pomnichowski, D-Bozeman, explained that the soil helps grow Montana’s $4.7 billion agriculture industry, said an article by The Associa...

  • Looking out my back door: Upstairs, downstairs, balance on the bannister

    Sondra Ashton|Updated Apr 2, 2015

    Like anyone, I have my “up” days and my “down” days. But, really, it is all about keeping life in perspective and finding balance. Take today, for instance. I leave the house for my morning walk at first light. I like to greet the sun. And as thoughtful as those words sound, it is as much about walking in the cool of the day. Perspective. Balance. Generally, I walk between 45 minutes and an hour. Don’t think I’m covering the miles. I am a mere two months away from hip-replace...

  • Right-to-know bill affects everybody

    G. Bruce Meyers|Updated Apr 2, 2015

    Montana residents assume that our state government supports the basic American goals of freedom, fairness and equal justice for all — the founding principles on which our nation and constitution were established. Yet some Yet many of our state leaders are overlooking a policy that denies Montana citizens a basic constitutional right. Some tribal people, as citizens of Montana, are not granted some civil rights — such as open meeting laws — that other Montana citizens take for granted. The “Right to know” is guarantee...

  • Invest in America, not in more war

    Updated Mar 31, 2015

    Jon Tester Seems like every time I turn on the TV, I see another pundit or politician calling for greater American military intervention in response to ISIS, or heading to war with Iran, or cleaning up after some other conflict around the world. While these threats are real and must be taken seriously, America can no longer afford to go it alone. We spend billions overseas every year and put thousands of young American men and women in harm’s way. And we pay for it by taking out new loans — mostly from foreign countries lik...

  • Our View: Hi-Line darts and laurels

    Updated Mar 27, 2015

    Laurel — Havre Police did a great job in capturing an escapee last week. Eric Bruce Fowler escaped from a Warm Springs drug and alcohol center for addicted inmates. He ended up in Havre. When local police tried to apprehend him, he took off in a car driven by a friend. A wild chase ensued that ended up outside of Chinook. Several other police agencies joined in the effort. We’re not the biggest fan of high-speed chases for fear they endanger police officers and bystanders more often than the criminals. But in this case, off...

  • From the North 40: Doomed to domestic disaster

    Pam Burke|Updated Mar 27, 2015

    Despite my long, sordid history of being unable to snap out of my obsessive obsession with, well, random obsessive things, I had fully planned on writing this week about something besides my house project. It would’ve happened, too, if I hadn’t suddenly realized that I am doomed. Duh-ooomed, I tell you. I could have written about any number of disasters, weird news items or politics, or the trifecta of disastrously weird politics, or even weirdly disastrous politics, whi...

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