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  • Who benefits from the 'Booming Economy?'

    LAWRENCE WITTNER, Contributor|Updated Jun 14, 2018

    Although the U.S. mass media are awash with stories about America’s “booming economy” the benefits are distributed very unequally, when they are distributed at all. Buoyed by soaring corporate profits and stock prices, the richest Americans have reached new and dazzling heights of prosperity. As of May 2018, the growing crop of billionaires included corporate owners with unprecedented levels of wealth like Jeff Bezos ($112 billion), Bill Gates ($90 billion) and Warren Buffet ($84 billion). Some families have also grown fanta...

  • Plastic straws are public enemy number one

    FRANK WATSON|Updated Jun 14, 2018

    By FRANK WATSON Contributor Seattle is leading the effort to save our planet from ourselves. They have joined Portland and a host of California cities in the battle against plastic drinking straws. A school boy noticed discarded straws outside fast food outlets and wrote an essay spurring environmentalists into action. The fight has spread from the classroom to city councils and state legislatures across the land. The first success I noticed was in Portland’s conversion to biodegradable straws. Some mornings I need my c...

  • Graduation is a time for reflection

    GRACE POHL, Staff Intern|Updated Jun 14, 2018

    I could sit here and write about politics this week since there seems to be a lot going on, but I just really don’t enjoy diving into that. And who wants to really and truly read about it? Not me. So I am going to talk about graduation and the festivities instead, because frankly that is just more fun. This past week I attended the Cheney High School commencement because my younger brother was graduating. Of all the ceremonies I have gone to, I do have to give credit to CHS on getting everyone in and out in less than two h...

  • Hitting the hot spots

    John McCallum|Updated Jun 7, 2018

    A Spokane County Fire District 3 brush truck applies water to some spot fires that broke out on Interstate 90 between the Cheney/Four Lakes and Medical Lake exits last Wednesday morning. Emergency response officials suspected a passing vehicle with defective equipment, such as brakes, may have started the fires, which were quickly contained....

  • Cheney should take measures on pit-bulls

    Updated Jun 7, 2018

    Pit-bull owners say their dogs are just loving and loyal. But if your neighbor owns one you might have a different opinion. In the duplex across the alley from our home, tenants recently came with two pit-bull puppies. They seem obedient to their owners but regarding me they seem increasingly aggressive and territorial as they grow, and apparently their territory is wherever they are. I was cleaning some debris from the alley and my neighbor opened their door and their pit-bull shot across their property line growling at me...

  • Why I support Dave Wilson in the Sixth

    Updated Jun 7, 2018

    I am writing in support of Dave Wilson, my choice for the open seat in Spokane’s 6th legislative district. Dave has the passion and commitment to serve with distinction. He has lived in the district for over 35 years, raised all six of his kids here, started and ran a successful business for over 30 years in Spokane. He knows the district and he knows Spokane. Dave has also served in leadership positions on several community and professional boards. He has a highly organized campaign that is second to none, as well as e...

  • Straw pulp looks like a win-win proposition for everyone

    Don C. Brunell, Contributor|Updated Jun 7, 2018

    Here’s a switch! Rather than closing another pulp and paper mill, a new one is under construction right here in Washington. Columbia Pulp’s plant on the Snake River will use a new technology that pulls cellulose out of the abundant straw left over from wheat and alfalfa harvests. The $184 million plant near Dayton is scheduled to open later this year. Traditionally, pulp comes from wood either grown specifically for paper making or as byproducts from sawmills. When fully ope...

  • 'Everybody knows that' is no substitute for good, hard facts

    FRANK WATSON, Contributor|Updated Jun 7, 2018

    I am usually fairly easy to get along with. I accept most things, even dumb things, without getting my dander up. But, when presented with unsupported claims based on widespread rumors, I have been known to lose my patience. I was venting the other day to a friend of mine who was, is, and always will be a woman’s rights activist. The subject was a political ad that claimed women only make 76 percent of what men make for identical work. I questioned the claim as either a gross misrepresentation of partial data or an example o...

  • Isn't Mother Nature good enough to lead?

    John McCallum, Managing Editor|Updated Jun 7, 2018

    There’s a saying, “You are what you eat.” In this case, our daily news diet. Currently, our intake seems to be all Trump, and almost exclusively Trump. Even if something comes up that takes our attention away from the current White House occupant, president Butternut Squash will emit a Tweet with dog-whistle frequency that calls the national press corps back to yap as his ankles. But Trump isn’t the only newsworthy subject happening right now. Nor is the continued fallout from the #MeToo movement, the Parkland shootin...

  • Watson misses the mark on the Mueller investigation

    Updated May 31, 2018

    In his May 17, 2018, guest commentary, Col. Frank Watson (USAF, Ret.) takes exception to Robert Mueller’s investigation of the Trump campaign’s alleged collusion with Russian operatives in their interference in the 2016 presidential election. Watson claims the investigation is politically motivated and a waste of taxpayer money. Watson’s arguments are so riddled with errors and irrelevancies that it’s hard to know where to start. Let’s start here: Robert Mueller, a Republican, is a special counsel, not a “Special Prosecutor....

  • Trump wasn't the only one not to serve the country

    Updated May 31, 2018

    I am writing in regards to the Priggee cartoon in the May 24 edition of the Free Press. The one I’m assuming is the two couch potatoes are complaining about President Trump’s “Mr. Five deferment-bone spurs and who’s in bed with Russian oligarchs and Chinese phone companies.” Since we’re talking about those who avoided military service, could you please enlighten me as to which branch of the armed forces former president Obama served in? Or former Secretary of State and presidential candidate Hilary Clinton? And another Pre...

  • Teaching isn't what it used to be anymore these days

    Updated May 31, 2018

    I immensely agree with Frank Watson, Cheney Free Press, guest commentary, May 10, 2018. There are two reasons I do not teach for a living. One, the Washington Education Association, I didn’t want to HAVE TO PAY an organization I didn’t agree with. Two, teaching to a test is boring. We wouldn’t need Friday late starts if they were not teaching to a test; they may not even realize it any more. My dad made less than a first-year teacher makes now when he retired. I knew I wasn’t going into teaching for the money. We had excelle...

  • Compassionate America needs to speak out

    Updated May 31, 2018

    What is happening to this country I love? Every day our present government is making life more difficult for many people, the latest is separating children from their families at the border: and among those, 20 percent (1,500) are missing — some babies awnd toddlers. Trump’s Chief of Staff Gen. John Kelly reports that they are either in foster care or “wherever.” I am outraged and saddened. Who is thinking up these terrible policies? What’s more, standing alongside of these government officials day after day is our smiling r...

  • News flash: It's not always all about Trump

    Kevin Martin, Contributor|Updated May 31, 2018

    John Bolton and Mike Pence must have known what they were doing. President Trump’s national security adviser and vice president could not have been oblivious that advocating a “Libya model” for North Korea’s denuclearization would go over badly with leader Kim Jong-un, who presumably does not wish to be overthrown and killed after giving up his nukes, the fate that befell Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi. Trump’s public release of his bizarre letter to Kim canceling their June 12 summit meeting in Singapore (many commentat...

  • A letter to the graduating class of 2018

    FRANK WATSON, Contributor|Updated May 31, 2018

    Congratulations. You have successfully completed your public education and are about to enter the real world. It isn’t that school is not the real world, but it is a special world where you are not fully responsible for your actions and most mistakes have no real long-term consequences. You are considered children still learning the difference between right and wrong. That changes when you walk across the stage and receive your diploma. From the beginning of time, all cultures have had a rite of passage children go through t...

  • Sometimes you wonder what people are thinking

    FRANK WATSON, Contributor|Updated May 24, 2018

    Every now and again I come across something that is unbelievably dumb. It seems that there is currently an epidemic of very stupid things in the news. I don’t have space enough to cover them all, so I have selected three that my old friend Oscar would say, “are as dumb as a whole box of rocks.” It should come as no surprise that the second runner-up comes from the far side of the Cascades. It seems that King County is suing the five major oil companies for global warming. The petition alleges that the oil companies provi...

  • Lt. Dan could use more helping hands from other entertainers

    DON C. BRUNELL, Contributor|Updated May 24, 2018

    On Sunday (May 27), actor/musician Gary Sinise will again co-host the National Memorial Day Concert from the West Lawn of the U.S. Capitol. It will be the 29th annual concert on the 150th anniversary of Memorial Day. The format is much the same as in past years. Sinise and Criminal Minds star Joe Mantegna team with retired Army Gen. Colin Powell to remember those who have sacrificed for our country, our freedom and our way of life. It will attract millions of viewers across...

  • The back-and-forth game of 'net neutrality'

    PAUL DELANEY, Staff Reporter|Updated May 24, 2018

    In a world where the important things — like Harry and Meghan’s wedding — command so much of some people’s attention, stuff tends to slip through the cracks of our consciousness. North Korea, Syria, spies from the “Deep State,” Bitcoin, etc., etc., etc. One of those things that probably got lost in the buzz recently was the matter of something called net neutrality which, for most, has the equivalent radar blip of cricket vs. the NBA playoffs. Like tennis, the topic has b...

  • Special prosecutors do nothing except spend money uselessly

    FRANK WATSON, Contributor|Updated May 17, 2018

    Robert Mueller’s investigation into Russia’s attempt to influence the 2016 election is getting more and more press lately. The prosecutor and his team are not actually tasked with finding out if the Russians tried to influence the election. That is the purview of the FBI. The special prosecutor law limits investigations to alleged misconduct of federal elected officials while in office. Thus, Mueller’s team is investigating whether or not someone in our government worked with the Russians in an alleged attempt to influence ou...

  • Writing letters is a lost art these days

    Grace Pohl, Staff Intern|Updated May 17, 2018

    Growing up with technology, I never really wrote letters to people because I could just send a text or make a phone call instead. Well that all changes when you have a loved one at basic training and writing a letter is the only form of communication you have. Even though it has been difficult to not talk to your person every day, I have gotten into a routine with writing letters and I have grown to love it. That must be the journalist side of me. Also considering that I had never really been into sending mail before, I also...

  • StageWest ends season with great performances

    Updated May 10, 2018

    StageWest Community Theatre ended it’s 2017-2018 season with a bang. The past weekend saw StageWest last three performances of “Seeds of Change” by local author Craig Rickett. We had great audiences all three performances with our dinner theatre being sold out. StageWest would like to thank Mike Hartman for once again serving up a delicious dinner for Saturday night. StageWest would also like to humbly thank the congregation of Emmanuel Lutheran Church for their very generous allowance of the use of their building for all o...

  • Close look at Cheney Schools reveals distrubing facts

    Updated May 10, 2018

    According to data from the U.S. Department of Education Office of Civil Rights, reported in a national NBC investigation “Policing the Schools” (Feb. 27, 2017), during the 2013-2014 school year the rate of student referral to law enforcement in the Cheney School District was 9.86 per 1,000 students. This was over twice the national rate of 4.47, and over three times the Washington rate of 2.94. Twelve of the 43 (28 percent) of these students were reported as having a disability; four of the 12 disabled students referred to...

  • NAFTA supplies America with energy and power

    KYLE ISAKOWER, Contributor|Updated May 10, 2018

    The Trump Administration unveiled an agenda for “energy dominance” shortly after taking office, promising to curb the global influence of countries like Russia and China with American energy exports. Whether or not the administration succeeds will depend a great deal on ongoing trade talks with Canada and Mexico. U.S. negotiators continue to discuss terms to modernize the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), the trade pact between the U.S., Mexico and Canada. NAFTA has fostered a thriving North American energy mar...

  • Teacher's unions may be good for teachers, but not so for students

    FRANK WATSON, Contributor|Updated May 10, 2018

    My first teaching job was in a Spokane middle school. I was hired for one semester while an experienced teacher had both knees replaced. It was an interesting assignment. A week or so after I began, I was given notes for the kids to take home announcing an upcoming open house. I assumed I was included, so I showed up at the announced date and time to discover I was the only teacher there. The principal informed me that this activity was not in the union contract, and teachers were not allowed to attend. As I was not a member...

  • Skilled, civilized drivers we are definitely not

    John McCallum, Managing Editor|Updated May 10, 2018

    I am constantly amazed at how much our nation can sometimes resemble a Third World country. Having been to a couple, one of my observations is that normal day-to-day activities often function without any semblance of order or rules. Take driving, for instance. At times in Guatemala, it seems the basic rule of the road is “every person for themselves.” Change lanes or turn without signaling, force your way into traffic, sometimes without looking, inventive use of shoulders — like for passing, and generally engaging in a free...

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