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  • Battle lines drawn in work comp debate

    MATT GOURAS Associated Press

    HELENA — The battle lines over competing workers' compensation reform plans crystalized Monday at a hearing for the Republican reform plan, as workers made it clear they don't like a bill partially written by the insurance industry. Construction, timber, oil companies all made up parts of the business community that aligned with the medical community in backing a Republican proposal aimed at cutting rates by as much as 40 percent. One eastern Montana oil business said it could save more than $600,000 in work comp costs a...

  • Tom Brokaw to receive honorary degree from MSU

    The Associated Press

    om Brokaw to receive honorary degree from MSU BOZEMAN (AP) — Montana State University will award former NBC anchor Tom Brokaw an honorary degree next month. The Bozeman Daily Chronicle reports the journalist and author plans to deliver a speech on Feb. 28 when university president Waded Cruzado presents him with the degree. Brokaw anchored NBC's Nightly News from 1982 to 2004. He has also written five books, won 12 Emmy Awards, two Peabody Awards, the Edward R. Murrow Lifetime Achievement Award and the Congressional Medal o...

  • Great Falls burglary victims rue sharing travel plans

    Tristan

    GREAT FALLS, — A Great Falls family says they shouldn't have put their travel plans on a social networking site after returning from a 10-day vacation to find their home ransacked and burglarized. Biff and Amy Larson tell KFBB-TV they shared on Facebook the day they were leaving and how many days they'd be gone celebrating their children's graduation. The couple says before leaving they arranged for neighbors and friends to check on their home and made sure all their doors and windows were locked. They say the burglary l...

  • TransCanada pipeline threatened by Nebraska re-routing plan

    Bradley Olson,

    HOUSTON — TransCanada's Keystone XL pipeline may be threatened by legislation in Nebraska that would re-route the $7 billion project designed to bring Canadian crude to refineries on the Gulf of Mexico. At a special session on Nov. 1, Nebraskan lawmakers will consider a bill aimed at forcing Calgary-based TransCanada to move the pipeline to the state's eastern edge, a step that company officials said may put the project in jeopardy. The other five states the pipeline would traverse — Montana, South Dakota, Kansas, Okl...

  • Crews gain on Montana fires; weather forecast bad

    Matthew Brown

    BILLINGS — Crews facing adverse weather forecasts rushed to bolster protective lines around blazes that have scorched tens of thousands of acres in the Northern Rockies, while firefighters in Oregon worked to corral a range fire that forced a kids' science camp to evacuate. Meteorologists warned that fire conditions would rise to critical Thursday afternoon and evening as thunderstorms roll across Montana, central Idaho and northwest Wyoming. The pattern of hot, dry weather and afternoon storms was expected to recur daily f...

  • Exxon Mobil to restart Yellowstone pipeline

    Matthew Brown

    BILLINGS — A failed Exxon Mobil pipeline that spilled an estimated 42,000 gallons of oil into the Yellowstone River was expected to restart operations Saturday after getting approval from federal officials. Changes made during repairs to the Silvertip pipeline have made it less likely to fail again, Montana Department of Environmental Quality Director Richard Opper said. The line broke July 1 after flooding scoured the river bottom and exposed the 12-inch pipe, which was buried just five feet deep in some areas. AP Photo/Juli...

  • New Montana pot law poses problems for regulators

    Matt Volz

    HELENA — Montana's medical marijuana overhaul is due to take effect in less than two weeks, but the new law has been difficult to interpret and may have unintended consequences, the state's chief health regulator said Tuesday The law will ban commercial marijuana sales on July 1, leaving patients to either grow their own or find a provider who will be limited to care for a maximum of three patients. About a third of Montana's medical marijuana users grow their own currently, while the rest obtain the drug from registered p...

  • Plane in fatal Montana crash under FWP contract

    Matt Volz

    HELENA (AP) — A single-engine plane that crashed and killed two people in eastern Montana was conducting a prairie-dog survey for Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks, an agency spokesman said Friday. The Piper PA-18 Super Cub with two people on board took off from Miles City on Thursday morning and crashed in a rugged, remote area near the small community of Vananda, bursting into flames after impact. Rosebud County Sheriff Randy Allies said the men killed in the crash Thursday were 39-year-old pilot Chad H. Cyrus and 4...

  • Lawsuit filed to get salaries of state employees

    Tristan

    HELENA (AP) — A Bozeman nonprofit group has filed a lawsuit to find out additional information about the salaries and compensation for all 13,000 Montana governmental employees. The Montana Policy Institute, a Bozeman-based think tank that advocates government transparency, in its lawsuit filed last week in District Court in Helena contends that the state Department of Administration did not provide it with the workers' actual compensation, including bonuses and overtime. "We want to know what each state employee made, w...

  • Police: Laid-off IT worker hacked former employer

    Tristan

    MISSOULA (AP) — A laid-off information technology administrator that a Missoula company attempted to hire back on a temporary basis after computer servers crashed was the person who hacked into the system that caused the problems to begin with, authorities said. The Missoulian reports (http://bit.ly/u4er6e ) that Vladimir Ivanovich Shved was charged Friday in District Court with two felony counts of unlawful use of a computer. His bail was set at $5,000. According to court records, the company's computer system had been d...

  • Missoula atty pleads guilty to prostitution charge

    Tristan

    MISSOULA — An attorney tied to a Missoula-based prostitution ring promoted through Craigslist has pleaded guilty. Benjamin Michael Williams of Missoula appeared in Justice Court on Friday and pleaded guilty to solicitation to commit prostitution, a misdemeanor. He was given a suspended six-month jail sentence and fined $500. The Missoulian reports he was the 12th client or would-be client charged in the case. The men who ran the ring — 30-year-old Richard Carpita and his then-roommate, 21-year-old Anthony Brazington — have...

  • Disaster declaration means money for Montana floods

    The Associated Press

    BILLINGS — Montana's request for a presidential disaster declaration was approved by federal officials Friday following flooding that has caused at least $8.6 million in damage. The declaration makes the state eligible for federal assistance to repair and replace damaged roads, bridges and other infrastructure washed out by weeks of high water. It also means 31 counties and four tribes can be reimbursed for flood-fighting expenses ranging from overtime, to sandbagging and setting up temporary shelters. Courtesy photo An e...

  • Yellowstone bison relocations proposed in Yellowstone

    Matthew Brown

    BILLINGS— About 150 bison from Yellowstone National Park would be relocated onto state or tribal lands in Montana under a proposal announced Thursday as part of a long-stalled effort to establish new herds of the burly animals. After spending years in a government quarantine, the bison are disease-free and ready to move once the relocation is approved and fences are built, said Ron Aasheim with Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks. About $2 million would need to be spent on fencing for the two state-owned properties under c...

  • Lawsuit against MSU seeks reason for suspension

    Tristan

    BOZEMAN (AP) — The Bozeman Daily Chronicle and Montana Newspaper Association have filed a lawsuit against Montana State University seeking information concerning the school's suspension of MSU Symphony Orchestra conductor Shuichi Komiyama. The lawsuit filed Monday in Gallatin County District Courts contends 47-year-old Komiyama holds a position of public trust and that the public's right to know the reason for the suspension outweighs personal privacy concerns. The lawsuit also seeks court costs. The newspaper reported l...

  • Charter bus driver had 3 previous DUI arrests

    Tristan

    BOZEMAN (AP) — A charter bus driver arrested for drunken driving in Yellowstone National Park while hauling a bus load of middle school students on a field trip had been arrested three times before for driving under the influence. The Bozeman Daily Chronicle reports a search of public records found Jack Kane Parrent Jr. was convicted of drunken driving in Columbia Falls in 1991 and Lewis and Clark County in 2001. The Chronicle also found Parrent was charged with drunken driving in Vancouver, Wash., in 1998. A Clark County, W...

  • Update: Suspended MSU conductor had abuse history

    Tristan

    BOZEMAN (AP) — The Bozeman Daily Chronicle and Montana Newspaper Association have filed a lawsuit against Montana State University seeking information concerning the school's suspension of MSU Symphony Orchestra conductor Shuichi Komiyama. The lawsuit filed Monday in Gallatin County contends the 47-year-old Komiyama holds a position of public trust and that the public's right to know the reason for the suspension outweighs personal privacy concerns. The newspaper previously reported that Komiyama at age 25 pleaded guilty i...

  • Billings postpones vote on medical pot storefronts

    Tristan

    BILLINGS (AP) — The Billings City Council has postponed a final vote on an ordinance that would ban medical marijuana storefronts in the city. City administrator Tina Volek says that because there wasn't notice of a public hearing, it would be prudent to move the vote to the Oct. 24 meeting. Council members took Volek's advice and voted 9-1 Tuesday night to reschedule the meeting. The council passed an emergency 90-day ban on such businesses on July 5, but a judge issued a temporary restraining order on July 22 suspending t...

  • New West may transfer some business to Blue Cross

    Tristan

    HELENA (AP) — The Montana hospitals that control New West Health Services have tentatively agreed to transfer insurance coverage for 10,000 employees of five major hospitals to Blue Cross Blue Shield of Montana. Billings Clinic spokesman Jim Duncan tells Lee Newspapers of Montana (http://bit.ly/mOtmz7 ) that some of the hospitals want out of the insurance business so they can focus on upcoming health care changes. The other hospitals switching employee insurance to New West are St. Peter's in Helena, Community Medical C...

  • Lawsuit challenges state's campaign finance limits

    Matt Gouras

    HELENA — Conservative groups are increasing their attack on Montana's campaign finance laws with a new lawsuit that seeks to dramatically expand how much money candidates can take in and who can give it to them. The federal lawsuit is being led by the same group that has so far been trying to overturn the state's century-old ban on corporate political spending. That case is scheduled for arguments this month before the Montana Supreme Court. The new challenge goes much further. It argues the state's limits on the amount t...

  • Strike shuts down schools in Butte

    Tristan

    BUTTE — School administrators in a Montana town have gone on strike after failing to reach a contract, forcing the closure of schools for the duration of the work stoppage. The 15 principals, assistant principals and directors voted last week to strike at 6 p.m. Tuesday if they did not have a contract. Administrators were seeking the same percentage raise that non-union administrators are set to receive. Schools were closed Wednesday and for the duration of the strike. All school-sanctioned sports and activities were c...

  • Gov says bison can go to reservations

    Matthew Brown

    BILLINGS — Montana's governor said Monday he will not block the relocation of 68 bison to two American Indian reservations. Gov. Brian Schweitzer last week declared that no Yellowstone National Park bison could be moved within Montana. He cited mixed messages from the federal government on whether some quarantined bison could harbor the disease brucellosis. But Schweitzer said Monday the relocations can move forward because an Interior Department researcher said he believes the animals do not have the disease. AP P...

  • Rick Hill asks courts to help in real estate scam

    Matt Gouras

    HELENA — Former Republican congressman Rick Hill is among a group of investors alleging they were cheated out of millions in a real estate investment deal. Rick Hill The group will be asking the Montana Supreme Court later this month to let them take the dispute to court. The issue goes back several years when a real estate investment deal fell apart amid the housing crisis. Investors accused the Idaho-based investment company called DBSI of fraud in a billion-dollar class action lawsuit. The investors are asking the high c...

  • Trial begins in case of Havre boy shot by officers

    Tristan

    HELENA (AP) — A police officer training instructor testified that a Montana Highway Patrol trooper and a sheriff's deputy failed to follow their agencies' policies and procedures and inappropriately used deadly force in shooting a 13-year-old boy who had stolen $8 in gasoline. Alan Baxter, a former police commander and instructor for the Public Safety Officers Standards and Training program, testified Tuesday in Helena at a civil negligence trial in a lawsuit filed by the mother of Mark Keeley, who was fatally shot by the o...

  • Med pot reform popular, poll shows

    Matt Gouras

    HELENA — A new poll released Wednesday found strong support for the state's stricter medical marijuana law, and showed that potential voters are nearly equally split in the U.S. Senate election. The Montana State University-Billings poll said 62 percent of respondents favored the overhaul of the pot law adopted by the Legislature earlier this year. The survey taken in mid-October included 411 adult residents and had a margin of error of 5 percentage points. The Legislature's crackdown on pot repealed the original medical m...

  • Feds close Stillwater mine after death

    Matthew Brown

    BILLINGS — A central Montana precious metals mine was under a partial closure order Tuesday as authorities investigated the death of a worker who crashed while driving a piece of equipment 1,200 feet underground. The victim was identified by Stillwater Mining Company as Dale Alan Madson, 42, a lead equipment operator who had worked at the mine since 2008. AP Photo/The Billings Gazette, Larry Mayer, File This undated file photo shows Stillwater Mining Company's mine at Nye, Mont. Underground work has been suspended at a c...

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