Category: News Article

Bozeman Daily Chronicle: Hearing scheduled to name peak after local conservationist

About a week after Montana’s congressional delegation requested it, the bill to name a Madison Range peak after a prominent conservationist who died earlier this year will have a U.S. Senate committee hearing next week. The U.S. Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources will hold a hearing on the Alex Diekmann Designation Act of 2016 next Thursday. The bill would name an unnamed peak in the Madison range after Alex Diekmann, who worked for 16 years as a project manager for the Trust for Public Land. Diekmann, who was 52, died of cancer earlier this year. For the Trust

Flathead Beacon: Whitefish Lake Watershed Project Receives $2 Million in Federal Funding

Montana’s congressional delegation has secured $2 million in funding for the sprawling, multi-phase Whitefish Lake Watershed Project, which furnishes permanent protections on 15,334 acres of prime multiple-use land flanking the lake’s northern shore. The conservation and recreation community praised the easement because it protects critical fish and wildlife habitat and provides continued public access for outdoor recreation, while also securing the city of Whitefish’s water supply, 20 percent of which is drawn from Whitefish Lake. Coupled with the nearby Haskill Basin project on land owned by F.H. Stoltze Land and Lumber Co. — the source of the city’s remaining water

KTVQ: Sen. Steve Daines receives Guardian of Small Business award

U.S. Senator Steve Daines was awarded the National Federation of Independent Business Guardian of Small Business Award this week for the second time in a row. The award is given for outstanding support of America’s small business owners in the 114th Congress. “It’s an honor to receive this recognition from the NFIB, and I will continue to work at every opportunity to help create a business environment where small businesses can succeed, free of unnecessary government interference” Daines stated. “Many elected officials claim that they are champions of small business, but our Guardian Award shows our members and other small business owners who

Ravalli Republic: Hamilton’s Dan Kimzey part of NASSP National Principal of the Year in D.C.

Hamilton High School Principal Dan Kimzey, Montana’s principal of the year, joined the top principals from 49 other states, plus Puerto Rico, in Washington, D.C., this week for the National Association of Secondary School Principals’ award and recognition event. The NASSP Principal of the Year Institute included professional development training and networking for school leaders and an opportunity to advocate for students and schools with each state’s Congressional delegation. “The awards banquet was in the Willard Hotel, which is supposedly the hotel in which Martin Luther King, Jr. penned his famous ‘I Have a Dream’ speech and has been frequented

Great Falls Tribune: U.S. Senate OKs Blackfeet Water Compact

The U.S. Senate OK’d a major Indian water rights deal in Montana as part of a larger water-related bill Thursday. The Blackfeet Water Compact would settle historic claims by the Blackfeet tribe to rivers and streams crossing the reservation including the Milk and St. Mary Rivers allowing the tribe to develop the reservation’s significant water resources. As members of the Senate Indian Affairs Committee, Sen. Jon Tester, a Democrat, and Republican Steve Daines worked together to include authorization for the compact in the Water Resources Development Act approved by the Senate Thursday on 95-3 vote, their offices said. Approval by

Washington Examiner: House approves bill to ban Gitmo transfers for remainder of Obama’s term

The House on Thursday passed a bill banning transfers from Guantanamo Bay for the remainder of Obama’s presidency, in a move that Democrats said is “probably unconstitutional and certainly immoral.” The bill, introduced by Rep. Jackie Walorski, R-Ind., passed the House by a 244-174 vote. It would prohibit the transfer of any detainees from Guantanamo Bay until the next administration takes office or until the passage of the fiscal 2017 National Defense Authorization Act, whichever comes first. Twelve Democrats voted for the bill. Four Republicans voted against it. Walorski told the Washington Examiner ahead of the vote that her next priority will

Missoulian: Never Forget: 15th annual service remembers 9/11 attacks

The statue at the Vietnam Memorial in Rose Park depicts an angel with massive, feathery wings lifting a soldier, whose pained expression is carved with a bit of relief, to heaven. The original copper has faded to a dull, military green, making a fitting, though somber, backdrop to Sunday’s 15th annual Never Forget Service, sponsored by the Missoula Exchange Club. Susan Reneau, a Missoula author who’s put together the event since 2006, organized the placement of more than 4,000 tiny American flags on the lawn in front of the Vietnam Memorial. “Unfortunately, each year we have to add flags to

Kootenai Forest Project Blocked Days Before Logging to Begin

HELENA — Two federal appellate judges have blocked a Kootenai National Forest logging project two days before cutting was to begin. The East Reservoir Project approved by the U.S. Forest Service calls for logging 8,845 acres of forest on the east side of Lake Koocanusa, approximately 15 miles east of Libby. The timber total — roughly 39 million board feet – represents more board feet than the Kootenai National Forest typically harvests in a year. The timber harvest in 2012 was 24 million board feet. During the logging heyday of the 1980s, however, the annual Kootenai timber harvest often topped 200 million

Missoulian: Daines introduces good-neighbor forestry bill

State foresters would have more ways to help manage federal and private forests under a bipartisan proposal authored by senators Steve Daines and Amy Klobuchar. Daines, R-Mont., and Klobuchar, D-Minn., introduced the Environmental and Economic Benefits Restoration Act of 2016 on Monday evening. In an interview on Tuesday, Daines said the legislation would make it easier for states to help the U.S. Forest Service get hazardous fuels reduction work done. “One frustration we have as Montanans, is we see the state out managing state lands, but we don’t see our national forests getting actively managed,” Daines said. “This would allow

Havre Daily News: Little Shell recognition moves forward in Congress

The Little Shell Band of Chippewa Cree Indians won a key victory Thursday in their longtime effort to become a federally recognized tribe.  The Little Shell Tribe of the Chippewa Cree Restoration Act of 2015, introduced by Rep. Ryan Zinke, R-Mont ., would grant the Montana tribe federal recognition. It passed through the House Committee on Natural Resources Thursday.  The same legislation passed the Senate Indian Affairs Committee last year. “I am fairly happy with today’s outcome, and I am happy that we were able to move it forward in a significant manner,”  Zinke said during a telephone press conference.  The legislation is part