(302) stories found containing 'irrigation'


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  • Airway Heights plans to ask Legislature for $10 million

    SHANNEN TALBOT, Staff Reporter|Updated Oct 25, 2018

    As the city of Airway Heights prepares to present $10 million agenda to the state Legislature for the 2019 session, staff is debating which projects in need of additional funding should be prioritized, and it looks like the city’s recreation complex may be put on the back burner. For the last several months, city officials have discussed the possibility of requesting $2 million in Capital Budget funding to complete phase two of the Airway Heights Recreation Complex. This phase would have a second baseball/softball field, a...

  • West Plains legislative battles

    Updated Oct 25, 2018

    Holy, Lewis square off to see who will replace Baumgartner BY PAUL DELANEY Staff Reporter With the resignation of incumbent 6th District Sen. Michael Baumgartner who is running for Spokane Country Treasurer, his seat is being contested by 6th District House member Jeff Holy and political newcomer Jessa Lewis. Holy s a 52.2 percent to 47.8 percent victory in the Aug. 7 primary. Candidates’ statements are from their websites as follows: Jeff Holy: Republican Catholic schools, an enlistment in the U.S.Army, a career as a S...

  • Native, not lush lawns

    John McCallum, Managing Editor|Updated Sep 27, 2018

    Cheney’s Planning Commission got an overview of proposed landscaping regulations officials would like to implement in order to encourage water conservation in the city. The regulations would apply to all residential developments as well as commercial, industrial and public institutions. The regulations would govern traditional landscaping techniques, but would also encourage residents to look at alternatives such as xeriscape practices. Xeriscapes is a style of landscape design used in arid regions that requires little or n...

  • Blackhawks smash East Valley, come up short against other rivals

    SHANNEN TALBOT, Staff Reporter|Updated Sep 13, 2018

    East Valley showed off an impressive repertoire of tricks and fancy footwork in the Sept. 6 game against Cheney, but it was no match for the Blackhawks' rock-solid defense, allowing the Blackhawks to triumph 5-0 in their first home game of the season under the lights. The girls varsity soccer team started strong with a goal early in the fourth minute and didn't let up, beating East Valley for the first time in four years. The team's defense has only allowed 11 shots on goal...

  • Cheney looks at consultant for water issues

    John McCallum, Managing Editor|Updated Sep 13, 2018

    City of Cheney officials are putting together a request for qualifications/quote (RFQ) they hope will get City Council approval and allow them to go out and hire a consultant to address the city’s water supply issues. “We’d like a fresh set of eyes to come in and take a holistic look at this problem and come up with a multifaceted approach,” City Administrator Mark Schuller said. Cheney residents and businesses have been beset by irrigation restrictions over the past four years that stem from a variety of reasons. Severe...

  • Cheney looks at consultant for water issues

    John McCallum, Managing Editor|Updated Sep 13, 2018

    City of Cheney officials are putting together a request for qualifications/quote (RFQ) they hope will get City Council approval and allow them to go out and hire a consultant to address the city’s water supply issues. “We’d like a fresh set of eyes to come in and take a holistic look at this problem and come up with a multifaceted approach,” City Administrator Mark Schuller said. Cheney residents and businesses have been beset by irrigation restrictions over the past four years that stem from a variety of reasons. Severe...

  • Money for (hopefully) water

    John McCallum, Managing Editor|Updated Aug 23, 2018

    Cheney’s City Council gave unanimous approval at its Aug. 14 meeting to Mayor Chris Grover to sign a direct appropriation grant agreement between the city and the state Department of Commerce enabling the receipt of $727,500 in state funding to help pay for the Well 3 redrilling project. The funding allows Cheney to seek reimbursement for initial spending on the $1.8 million project to bring another well online to help the city’s strained water supply system during irrigation season. “This is the one we’ve been waiting...

  • Columbia River Treaty talks are too vital to ignore

    DON C. BRUNELL, Contributor|Updated Aug 23, 2018

    While most of our attention in the Pacific Northwest these days is on trade wars, tariffs and wildfires, there are critical talks underway between the U.S. and Canada over future allocations of the Columbia River system’s water. The two countries are renegotiating the Columbia River Treaty which went into effect in 1964. It is a 50-year agreement under which both nations can redo, providing there is a 10-year advanced warning. That occurred and negotiators are now busy meeting...

  • Smoke, heat take toll on Fairways golf

    PAUL DELANEY, Staff Reporter|Updated Aug 16, 2018

    As another round of acrid wildfire smoke settled across the region recently, the conditions have affected many outside activities. However, for The Fairways Golf Course on the West Plains, the smoke is just one culprit. "I think it's affected us in the past," Kris Kallem, head PGA pro and general manager said. "Three out of the last four years we've had this issue; there's not a lot we can do about it." Kallem said, however, that in his estimation the smoke is not as much of...

  • As temps rise, levels go down

    John McCallum, Managing Editor|Updated Aug 16, 2018

    For the second time in two weeks, Cheney residents were faced with the imposition of irrigation restrictions to deal with low water levels in the city’s five reservoirs. Unlike past mandatory restrictions, the prohibiting of irrigation from July 25-28 and Aug. 8-10 was brought about by extremely hot weather only, rather than hot weather combined with mechanical malfunctions at city wells. A third irrigation restriction was imposed early in July when levels dropped to 12.8 feet on July 10 as temperatures hit the high 80s f...

  • Temps heat up, water draws down

    John McCallum, Managing Editor|Updated Jul 19, 2018

    A recent rapid draw down in reservoir levels has led city of Cheney officials to impose watering restrictions on several large users as well as call for additional conservation measures from residents. Public Works Director Todd Ableman said levels in the city’s five reservoirs were at 20.8 feet Friday morning, July 6, but there was no recovery overnight and during the day on Saturday. “During demand time we can lose between one and two feet and recover during the day,” Ableman said in an email. “When we don’t recover,...

  • Project work underway at Cheney schools

    John McCallum, Managing Editor|Updated Jul 5, 2018

    Construction work on all four of the Cheney School District's facilities included in 2017's $52 million bond is underway. In a presentation to the school board last Wednesday, June 27, OAC project manager Rusty Pritchard said work on the three elementary school expansions was "going gangbusters." Prior to the meeting at Cheney High School, the board toured work at nearby Betz Elementary School, where walls and most of the framing is up on the $2.448 million expansion....

  • Fire station upgrades, well 3 top improvement plan lists

    John McCallum, Managing Editor|Updated Jun 28, 2018

    Cheney’s Planning Commission approved an annual update to the city’s six-year capital improvements plan at its regular meeting in June. The plan identifies project the city views as essential to maintaining established levels of service (LOS) over the next six years, and names revenue sources to be pursued in bringing those projects to fruition. Senior planner Brett Lucas told the commission the improvements plan is a smaller portion of two other plans the city utilizes when it comes to handling growth: the capital fac...

  • Irrigating instructions

    John McCallum, Managing Editor|Updated Jun 21, 2018

    Even though the spring weather has been mostly cool, Cheney Public Works officials aren’t taking any chances when it comes to the city’s water supply. Cheney has implemented its annual water conservation schedule it recommends residents and businesses follow in order to reduce any potential strain on its 4.438 million gallon storage system. As in previous years, the schedule is advisory. “It’s not mandatory,” Public Works Director Todd Ableman said. “It’s just be conscious of your water needs.” The schedule calls for odd-e...

  • Dye concerned about water over dams

    STAFF AND NEWS SOURCES|Updated Apr 12, 2018

    Ninth District state Rep. Mary Dye, (R-Pomeroy) recently joined U.S. Rep. Dan Newhouse, (R-Sunnyside) and key stakeholders in expressing opposition to judicial orders allowing more water to be spilled over regional dams. The meeting came as the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals rejected an appeal to counter the decree, issued by U.S. District judge Michael Simon in Portland last spring. Simon mandated the release of increased amounts of water over the Columbia and Snake River dams from April to mid-June. In an April 6 news...

  • Water pressure mounting in West as population goes up

    DON C. BRUNELL, Contributor|Updated Apr 5, 2018

    As we deal with our population growth, we must address sufficient supplies of drinkable fresh water for residential, commercial, agriculture, fisheries and industrial needs. Not only will our numbers continue to climb, but so will competing pressures for fresh water. While demographers can project population growth fairly accurately and planners are good at assessing future needs, nature controls the supply of rainfall and mountain snowpack; and, when it occurs. Too often prec...

  • A forgotten side of the Alamo can be seen in Washington State

    Don C. Brunell, Contributor|Updated Mar 29, 2018

    Most of the 2.5 million annual Alamo visitors focus on the epic 1836 battle in which a small band of brave Texans was eventually overrun by the Mexican army. Folk heroes like Davy Crockett, Jim Bowie and William Travis were among the Texans killed while fighting for independence from Mexico. However, the Alamo is more than a small Spanish-style church depicted on tourism brochures which barely withstood a 13-day pummeling from Mexican cannons. It is a large complex built...

  • Project season nears for Cheney utilities

    John McCallum, Managing Editor|Updated Mar 29, 2018

    The weather still may carry threats of winter, but city of Cheney officials are beginning to look past the bluster to the heat of the upcoming projects season — one that will include a large mixture of public and private work. The Public Works Department will be engaged in the lion’s share of work, beginning with the $1.8 million redrilling of the city’s well 3 later in the summer. The well, drilled in 1960 and located on Erie Street, originally was a high-producer but fell off several years ago due to what officials think...

  • We need to save humanity in order to save this planet of ours

    FRANK WATSON, Contributor|Updated Feb 22, 2018

    I drove over to Wenatchee last week for a meeting. As is normal for me when I travel alone, I enjoyed the countryside and day-dreamed most of the way. As I drove pass the irrigation canals, forests of electric transmission lines and crossed the bridge at Vantage, it dawned on me that we have transformed this planet into a habitat for humans. Not long ago, Central Washington was an expanse of arid sage brush. Now it is crisscrossed with paved roads, and the sage brush scrubland has been replaced with lush cropland. As a boy I...

  • The abbreviated Tom Trulove

    John McCallum, Editor|Updated Jan 29, 2018

    Even Tom Trulove's short resume is long, although in Pullman mayor and fellow academician Glenn Johnson's view, that's pretty good. "I sometimes read (resumes from professors) 14-18 pages long," Johnson said. "If he can get it down to three pages, that's short for an academic." For the former Cheney mayor who retired at the end of 2017, Trulove's resume is the brief summation of a long and distinguished career of service. It's a career that has taken him from university halls...

  • News Briefs

    STAFF AND NEWS SOURCES|Updated Jan 18, 2018

    County library has family passes to Mobius, Northwest MAC Spokane County Library District has a new way for library customers to visit local cultural and educational centers — family museum passes, available at all libraries. In partnership with the Northwest Museum of Arts and Culture (MAC) and Mobius Children’s Museum and Mobius Science Center, the Family Museum Pass Program is a single-day admission for a family of two adults and up to four children. The family museum pass for Mobius will get you into either location, or...

  • Inslee introduces carbon tax proposal at State of State address

    Updated Jan 11, 2018

    In his annual State of the State address given to the Legislature on Jan. 9, Washington Gov. Jay Inslee proposed a measure to set a price on carbon emissions in the state. Inslee said more than 75 percent of the tax would be reinvested in a range of emission-reducing and job-creating programs such as helping more people pay for energy-saving insulation in their homes, incentivizing further use of electric vehicles and buses, building more solar panels, supporting development of other clean energy technology, as well as...

  • Chris Grover takes over

    John McCallum, Editor|Updated Jan 11, 2018

    Fifteen years ago, Chris Grover wrote down as one of his goals the desire to be the mayor of the city he has called home since the early 1980s - Cheney. While his timetable for fulfilling that goal was originally about four years away, the recent retirement of two-term Mayor Tom Trulove sped things up a bit. Grover was elected to replace Trulove this past November, a foregone conclusion since he faced no challengers - something that surprised him. "I wanted somebody to run,...

  • It's all about the water

    Updated Jan 5, 2018

    For the third time in four years, Cheney restricts irrigation uses By JOHN McCALLUM Editor The top story of 2017 literally begins under everybody's feet. Water was on the minds, if not always coming out of the faucets - inside and outside - of West Plains residents. In Cheney, water issues once again took the form of restrictions enacted to meet a supply emergency in mid July, just as it did in July 2015 and in August 2014. In 2014, lightning knocked out pumps at Wells 6 and...

  • Looking Back

    Updated Nov 22, 2017

    1 Years Ago Nov. 22, 2007 Century West Engineering corporation and Spokane Geo-Engineers officials presented a new design and landscape plans for a proposed water reclamation plant to be located in the city of Airway Heights. A new ordinance from Medical Lakesought to conserve the city's water supply by limiting summer irrigation. A first violation would be a written warning. The second offense is a civil infraction with a fine of up to $250. The third offense counted as a...

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