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  • Watch out for each other on the road

    Updated Jul 17, 2015

    Last month, a Cheney Middle School student was struck by a car at the corner of Sixth Street and Golden Hills Drive. The driver of the car was a high school student on the way to Cheney High School. The bicyclist was riding on the wrong side of the road and was not wearing a helmet. Fortunately, there were no serious injuries. There are several lessons that can and should be taken from this incident. First, parents should ensure their children are aware that bicyclists should ride with, not against, the flow of traffic....

  • Thank you to those who did not light fireworks

    Updated Jul 17, 2015

    The governor of Washington state, the mayor of Medical Lake and numerous fire officials asked that we forgo using Fourth of July fireworks this year due to the dangerous drought conditions. I was embarrassed and disappointed by the number of people who chose to ignore the requests and instead terrorize pets, traumatize veterans and risk the lives and property of their neighbors. What may I ask is so “patriotic” about watching your hard-earned money disappear with a bang and a puff smoke? Wouldn’t it have been more patri...

  • Thanks from Friends of the Cheney Library

    Updated Jul 17, 2015

    Thank you to everyone who donated books or purchased books at our Friends of the Library Rodeo weekend sale. We also thank all the people who helped us move books indoors during Saturday’s rain. It takes many people to set up the sale and we thank them for their efforts. Special thanks go to the 11 EWU women’s basketball team members who carried up books and to the Cheney Faith Center youth group for organizing and placing tarps over the outdoor book sale area. We could not hold the sale without your help. Funds raised by...

  • Freedom is respecting the rights of everyone

    Updated Jul 9, 2015

    This Independence Day was extremely stressful to many people in my area, especially seniors who long for a quiet and safe place to live. I thank God for His protection and care for all of us. On the human level it was reassuring that the Spokane County Police were monitoring our community and available when help was needed. I truly thank those who made that possible. I choose to keep on the positive side and to believe for the day when all people will celebrate the birth of our great country by means that are indeed peaceful...

  • Holiday weekend was a perfect time to reconnect, reflect

    PAUL DELANEY, Staff Reporter|Updated Jul 9, 2015

    What a great weekend. The just passed Fourth of July holiday served up a perfect menu of generous portions of family and friends topped off by time to dial life down just a little from the hectic pace it had been on recently. It wasn’t totally without sweat, however. I got to check off the big project, finishing the moving of the final dozen wheelbarrows of river rock — the last of 6,000 pounds dumped in my driveway — into the backyard and hopefully make one more flower bed a...

  • Our part-time legislative budgeting process needs work

    Updated Jul 9, 2015

    Being a state legislator is a thankless job — almost as bad as being a Hoopfest court monitor. And even more so this session what with the Legislature needing not only the four-month regular session but also two overtime special sessions and a last-minute, late-night negotiating meeting to pass the $38.2 billion 2015-2017 operating budget. And even then, apparently not all the work is finished as the whole package could unravel over funding, or not funding, K-12 classroom-reduction initiative 1351. We’ll know how the sta...

  • BNSF removes 'I-sore'

    Updated Jul 2, 2015

    During a May 6 community forum on increasing train traffic through Cheney, Cheney resident Pamela Gray brought my attention to a large, dead, pine tree at the end of I Street in downtown Cheney. She even brought a picture of the tree to pass out at the meeting. At the close of the forum I spoke briefly with Gray and indicated I would see what could be done about removing the tree. After I finished talking to Gray, Ross Lane, regional public affairs director for Burlington Northern Santa Fe, introduced himself to me and...

  • Another indictor of racial tensions in our country

    Updated Jul 2, 2015

    Before pointing too many fingers at our beleaguered Secret Service agency and its recent foibles, we should consider its success so far in its bottom line responsibility: to keep President Obama and family alive and injury-free. Interviewed during Obama’s 2012 visit to Portland, Ore., the Secret Service reported that “Obama faces more death threats than any other president. More than 30 a day.” (Portland Oregonian, 7/28/12). This is consistent with the big spike in U.S. hate groups, spread quite evenly over all states excep...

  • Revolution's matchstick: The Trans-Pacific Partnership

    RIVERA SUN, Contributor|Updated Jul 2, 2015

    Rolling down the corporate-political assembly line is a trade deal so treasonous to the people of the world that it should serve as revolution’s matchstick. The treaty is secret, but one fact is well known: the Trans-Pacific Partnership agreement is being negotiated by transnational corporations without a single U.S. legislator present. Each time I hear this, my eyes blink in disbelief. Without a single legislator present ... without their presence at negotiations, without so much as seeing a draft of the deal, and most treac...

  • Charleston's tragedy is the nation's wound

    Updated Jul 2, 2015

    The following June 29 editorial from the Panama City News Herald may or may not reflect the views of the Cheney Free Press editorial board. In the wake of the murders at a Charleston, S.C. church, details are sinking in — and with them, the recognition that racism lives, breathes and festers, even as we dream that it is a thing of the past. A man just 21 — looking more like a schoolboy than a hard-core white supremacist — stands accused of killing nine respected community members, all black, at the historic Emanuel Afric...

  • Letters

    Updated Jun 25, 2015

    Exercise great care when lighting fireworks I’ve had extensive emails with city officials here in Medical Lake about my concerns of Fourth of July fireworks being allowed in this extreme drought season that we are experiencing. There have already been serious fires all around this area. Anyway, the way it looks now is that fireworks for private use will be sold legally, and used as desired once again here in Medical Lake. I just hope that all citizens will make sure their fire hoses are up and running, and will exercise g...

  • In Our Opinion 101 - how the Cheney Free Press editorial board works

    John McCallum|Updated Jun 25, 2015

    "Who wrote that?" It's a question I often receive regarding our in house editorial feature "In Our Opinion." I get it enough, and lately from several readers, that it probably means it's time to reiterate how we go about producing the weekly opinion piece, and maybe a couple other things as well. As I said, "In Our Opinion" is produced here at the Cheney Free Press. It's the product of discussion from our editorial board, the members of which are listed in our mast at the bottom left corner of this page. It works like this....

  • Wildfire season is here, be prepared for it

    Updated Jun 25, 2015

    It’s going to be another hot and dry summer for the West Plains, which means there are plenty of chances for wildfires in the area. It’s late June and we’ve already seen some wildfires in the region, including last week’s 145-acre blaze at Fish Lake, east of Cheney. There have been 306 wildfires this year, according to the Washington State Department of Natural Resources (DNR). Washington has already taken some precautions to address the wildfire season. Earlier this month, DNR imposed a burn ban on DNR-protected lands east o...

  • Conservation, crop insurance and tax dollars

    RACHAEL MEYER, Contributor|Updated Jun 18, 2015

    The federal crop insurance program provides an agricultural safety net, and crop insurance premium subsidies were created to increase usage of these risk management tools. The federal government subsidizes, on average, 62 percent of crop insurance premiums annually. Crop insurance guarantees income year after year, but does not require much at all in terms of good soil and water conservation. And nothing in the federal crop insurance program prevents or discourages the increased planting of marginal land or land that is unsui...

  • Dolezal's family dispute leaks into her professional life

    AL STOVER, Staff Reporter|Updated Jun 18, 2015

    What starts out as a simple dispute can sometimes grow to unimaginable proportions. In the last week, many eyes across the nation have been fixated on Rachel Dolezal, the recently resigned president of Spokane’s NAACP chapter and a part-time African Studies professor at Eastern Washington University. Dolezal, who is originally from Montana, has been under the microscope after her parents revealed to the media that she is white with a trace of Native American heritage and alleging that their daughter has been portraying h...

  • Many questions surround the McKinney incident

    Updated Jun 18, 2015

    Once again the nightly news broadcasts, both national and local, found a story that they could not get enough of. On June 5, a McKinney, Texas policeman, Cpl. Eric Casebolt got caught on cellphone video strong-arming a 14-year-old girl to the ground as he helped to quell a disturbance stemming from a pool party held in this Dallas suburb of 150,000. The problem was, along the way, Casebolt briefly drew his weapon, quickly holstered it, and then returned to try, with the help of 11 other McKinney Police Department officers to...

  • Caitlyn Jenner benefits from status other transgenders don't enjoy

    John McCallum, Editor|Updated Jun 11, 2015

    I’m not sure how to take this whole Bruce Jenner, now Caitlyn Jenner, thing. I won’t recap how a former 1976 Olympic male decathlon gold medallist became a 2015 female talk show and magazine personality. You’d truly have to have returned from a desert island to not know the story. I never gave the transgender/gender change subject much thought until last fall when the Cheney school board considered changes to its non-discrimination policy. The new language recommended by the Washington State School Directors Association propo...

  • Consumers have an out of control spending problem

    Updated Jun 11, 2015

    From 1960 to 2014, the average house size has more than doubled from 1,200 to 2,600 square feet, automobile ownership has gone up from 1 to 1.7 per household and the percentage of household income spent on food has dropped from 17.5 percent to 9.6 percent. In addition, we take longer vacations, retire younger and have a plethora of electronic and other products that didn’t exist in 1960. The reality is that all segments of society, from the poor to the middle class to the richest 1 percent, are better off today than ever b...

  • Catch your own limit of West Plains' summer fun

    Updated Jun 11, 2015

    It’s that time a year when we map out our summer getaways. But as you plan to visit destinations that are maybe far away, or even foreign, think about ratcheting things back a little and remember what might just be in or near your backyard. The West Plains has events that both need your patronage, and maybe even some help, too. If you missed Cheney’s third-annual Mayfest, staged May 29-30, an opportunity passed you by to connect with businesses and neighbors. The event, one of a number that showcases Cheney, was well att...

  • Isn't there a better way to address school funding issues?

    PAUL DELANEY, Staff Reporter|Updated Jun 4, 2015

    Cheers to teachers in Cheney and Medical Lake, plus a significant number of other educators who chose not to disrupt the lives of their real bosses, the taxpayers — and more importantly students — to be part of recent statewide rolling walkout orchestrated by the Washington Education Association. Intended to rattle the cages of lawmakers, WEA and their members want more money devoted to multiple fronts in education, but so does everyone else. In the lead-up to the May 27 demon...

  • History provides understanding of present-day issues

    Updated Jun 4, 2015

    Change the name of the geographical area, throw in the names of the major participants and one could say we are back in the days of the then — so called “advisors.” It was the spring of 1968 — and Tet was near. My company was assigned to locate the main Army advisor on the “Street Without Joy,” as he was the main liaison between MACV and the ARVN division assigned to that area. He sat there on his canvas field chair with his cooler filled with ice and beer, along with his faithful M-1 Carbine and PRC 25 for radio contact to...

  • Defining basic education in Washington

    Updated Jun 4, 2015

    One thing is for certain — and that is the release of the Washington House of Representatives 2015-2017 budget proposal on Monday shows there are still signs of life in Olympia among our elected representatives. That may be a small comfort to K-12 educators around the state who have been trying to send a message to legislators to do something about education via everything from emails to one-day teacher walkouts. Both the House and Senate proposals would add between $1.3 billion – $2.2 billion for educators’ compe...

  • Time to make funding for public mental health services a priority

    ROGER STARK, Contributor|Updated May 28, 2015

    The treatment of mentally ill patients has undergone radical changes in the past 150 years, and not always for the better. Unfortunately, public health treatment remains grossly underfunded and consequently care is fragmented and places a huge social burden on American communities. People with mental illnesses range from perfectly functional individuals, to those with severe disabilities who are unable to care for themselves. The role of government is to serve as a safety-net and to help dysfunctional, impaired people who may...

  • It's time to reform crop insurance and help smaller neighbors

    TRACI BRUCKNER, Contributor|Updated May 28, 2015

    At the Center for Rural Affairs, we’ve heard from farmers across the Midwest and Great Plains about negative impacts of federally subsidized crop insurance for over a decade. A farm safety net is important to help family farmers mitigate risks, but there are real concerns with the current crop insurance program. The federal government subsidizes crop insurance, paying 62 percent of premiums, on average, in 2012. Insurance policies are sold and completely serviced through 19 approved private insurance companies. Not only d...

  • Don't extend Patriot Act without changes

    Updated May 28, 2015

    Reprinted from the Orange County Register The House this past Thursday adjourned for its week-long Memorial Day recess leaving uncertain the fate of three provisions of the USA Patriot Act scheduled to expire June 1. Sen. John McCain, the Arizona, Republican, told CNN on Friday that he expects the House to interrupt its recess “for a few hours” to pass a short-term extension of the expiring provisions. “I think,” said McCain, “one thing we all are in agreement in (is) we can’t shut down the entire operation.” But no one is...

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