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  • Schools cash rich, but grade poor

    Liv Finne, Cheney Free Press|Updated Oct 9, 2024

    Recently, state schools superintendent Chris Reykdal announced that he plans to ask the legislature for another $2.9 billion for public education. This would be on top of the current $20.1 billion education budget. Like the changing leaves of Fall, every year around this time Reykdal asks for more money. Let’s ask ourselves, Will pouring in more money make a difference to children? The data shows the answer is “No.” For years the state has increased education spending, and t...

  • There's no doubt community newspapers still matter

    Roger Harnack|Updated Oct 9, 2024

    Sure, big city media printing the same diatribe you see on television is declining. (That’s because the city media moguls have forgotten their place in society.) And sure, with the Googles of the world, cellphones and social media have impacted our advertising, which, by the way is how we pay our bills. But in our community newspapers, we haven’t forgotten our place. Our reporters shop in the same stores, eat in the same restaurants and attend the same community functions as y...

  • Demand direct access to elected officials

    Roger Harnack, Cheney Free Press|Updated Oct 3, 2024

    There’s a disturbing trend among tax-payer funded agencies that needs to be nipped in the bud. If you haven’t noticed, public agencies like hospital and utility districts, school boards, city councils, and others have been taking steps to insulate — dare I say isolate — elected board members from the public. Have a concern about something in your local school district? Don’t like a utility rate increase? Want to know if your local public hospital is making a profit? Have ques...

  • Should family leave act exist?

    Elizabeth New, Cheney Free Press|Updated Oct 3, 2024

    We already know workers with middle and upper incomes most often benefit from the state’s paid family and medical leave fund. It’s also true that many beneficiaries are repeat users, and that those benefiting more than once have higher wages than one-time users. I asked the Employment Security Department how many people have filed more than one claim for taxpayer-paid time off, work given the pattern I know with childrearing — kid one and kid two usually come within a few y...

  • MAGA contradicts meaning of democracy

    Kimball Shinkoskey, Cheney Free Press|Updated Oct 3, 2024

    In the 1840s, Irish Catholics immigrated to America in huge numbers and provoked a secret protest movement known as the Know Nothing Party, founded in 1844 as a precursor to the eventual Republican party. Know Nothings told of a conspiracy by Catholics to overthrow Protestant-based American government. This was an early version of today’s Republican claim that Hispanic Catholic immigrants will kick whites and other native-born Americans out of jobs and power in America. MAGA, or Know Nothing II, is thus really a Make A...

  • Politicians need to emulate Dan Evans

    Don C. Brunell, Cheney Free Press|Updated Sep 25, 2024

    America needs a statesperson of the stature, capability, and perspective of Daniel J. Evans as our next President. Dan Evans died on September 20 at the age of 98 after serving as our state’s three term governor, two term U.S. Senator, a state legislator and in many prominent civic and public positions beginning in the late 1950s. He was political and partisan, but Evans was pragmatic, tough and a problem-solver. He was a visionary who was not afraid to take a risk even if it...

  • Nobody using BEAD program

    Donald Kimball, Cheney Free Press|Updated Sep 25, 2024

    In 2021, the Biden Administration passed the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, which included a provision to give $42.5 billion to the Broadband Equity, Access and Deployment program to provide under-served and rural areas with internet access. To date, it has connected nobody. The plan required U.S. states and territories to submit plans for investment and deployment by the end of 2023, which all have done. Expected roll out won’t occur until 2026 by most optimistic deadlines. It’s better than nothing, right? May...

  • Write to the Point

    Cheney Free Press|Updated Sep 25, 2024

    Airport, Spokane need to step up As you know the city of Spokane is 50% owner of the Spokane International Airport and President Wilkerson sits on the Spokane Airport Board. As such, they are just as liable and responsible for the PFOA water contamination that has contaminated hundreds of private water wells out here on the West Plains. I find it strange that the city of Spokane has been very quiet about all this? Yes, this is also a county problem, but as 50% owners, it is also your problem. Why did it take a whistleblower...

  • Return site control to local level

    Roger Harnack, Cheney Free Press|Updated Sep 19, 2024

    You shouldn’t be surprised the state Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council last week voted to accept a site application for construction of more wind turbines atop Horse Heaven Hills. It’s all part of Gov. Jay Inslee and his financial supporters plan to breach our dams and replace them with unsightly, unpopular and unreliable wind power. The council was pushed by Gov. Jay Inslee, who didn’t like the fact Tri-Citians outright rejected his plan to supplant dams with the unsigh...

  • Reverse natural gas ban law

    Don C. Brunell, Cheney Free Press|Updated Sep 19, 2024

    Whether you call it a ban or a significant deterrent to future natural gas consumption, voter approval of Initiative 2066 (I-2066) in Washington may be only the first giant pothole to fill. The next one in the road ahead may be a hefty tax on natural gas. In 2019, Berkeley, Calif., became the first city to prohibit natural gas connections in new buildings. San Jose, New York City, San Francisco, Seattle, and others followed. However, last year the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeal...

  • Repeal punitive payroll tax

    Elizabeth New, Cheney Free Press|Updated Sep 11, 2024

    All the increased costs Washingtonians experienced during the past year were accompanied by a $1.3-billion hit on workers’ paychecks. The widespread pay decrease in Washington state was compliments of a new payroll tax that began in 2023 to fund a program called WA Cares. In a recent meeting, the Employment Security Department told the Long-Term Security and Supports Trust Commission not to get used to higher-than-expected income, in case wage and employment information c...

  • Schools taking on 'gender identity' in sports

    Roger Harnack, Cheney Free Press|Updated Sep 11, 2024

    School Districts in Eastern Washington are again starting to see boys and girls differently, especially when it comes to sports. The Kennewick School Board got the ball rolling back in July, following boys participation and victories in girls track events. Only a month or two before, a Methow Valley boy won a girls event in Cashmere, claiming he is “transgender.” Then an East Valley boy also competing under the transgender caveat, beat a West Valley girl to win the girls sta...

  • Tight Public Lands Commissioner Race Hinges on Timber Harvesting

    Don Brunell, Cheney Free Press|Updated Sep 4, 2024

    Most down ballot elections draw little attention, but not this year when it comes to Washington’s Public Lands Commissioner. Heading into the November balloting, former Congresswoman Jaimie Herrera-Beutler, a Republican from southwest Washington, faces Democrat King County Council member Dave Upthegrove, who in the last primary election recount, had a razor-thin edge (51 votes) over Republican Sue Kuehl Pederson. It has been the closest statewide Washington election in two d...

  • States should protect Electoral College

    Chris Cargill, Cheney Free Press|Updated Sep 4, 2024

    Seventeen states and the District of Columbia have joined in an agreement to award their Electoral College votes in a U.S. election to the winner of the national popular vote. The National Popular Vote compact, NPV as it is called, has gained steam over the past 25 years, lead mostly by liberal leaning states eager to work around the Electoral College. The legislation, which is identical in each state, requires the state to award its electoral votes to the candidate who receives the most popular votes nationwide. This could...

  • Speak up if you want to stop wind projects

    Todd Imeson, Cheney Free Press|Updated Sep 4, 2024

    My family’s farm received a letter last fall seeking interest in leasing land for another wind project down along Union Flat Creek in Whitman County. When I returned home from the harvest field on the evening of Aug. 27, there was a message on my answering machine asking the same thing, yet again. People, it is well past time to make your voices heard. If Whitman County is to remain an agricultural area and not become a wind/solar industrial catastrophe, the masses must rise up and fight. Contact the commissioners and tell t...

  • Parents need to support cellphone ban at schools

    Roger Harnack, Cheney Free Press|Updated Aug 28, 2024

    Spokane, Reardan, Davenport, Harrington, Odessa. Schools across the region are tackling the issue of cellphone addiction among students, at least while on campus. Well, maybe tackling the addiction is a bit strong. Let’s just say school boards here in Eastern Washington and elsewhere are finally taking action to keep phones out of students’ hands in classrooms. At issue in many districts is whether cellphones should be allowed in class, at lunch, on buses or even on cam...

  • State-based taxpayer-financed health care increases

    Elizabeth New, Cheney Free Press|Updated Aug 28, 2024

    At their Aug. 15 meeting, members of Washington state’s ongoing Universal Health Care Commission talked about recommending further expansion of, and money for, a Medicaid-like program for low-income adults who are undocumented immigrants. The program, called Apple Health Expansion, is shouldered by Washington state taxpayers alone, unlike Medicaid. Medicaid is funded by a federal-state partnership and is not available to people who entered the U.S. unauthorized or who were l...

  • Eventually, the money will run out

    Mark Harmsworth, Cheney Free Press|Updated Aug 22, 2024

    An extensive study published by the National Bureau of Economic Research concludes that universal basic income, the government gifting of taxpayer dollars, doesn’t have the effect that proponents of forced re-distribution of wealth would have hoped for. In fact, the opposite is true. A universal basic income promises a government guaranteed income which is supposed to improve the economic situation of those receiving the money, typically median or lower income families. The s...

  • Cheney must prioritize teachers, students

    Richard McCrow, Cheney Free Press|Updated Aug 22, 2024

    As someone born and raised in the Spokane-Cheney area, now serving as an executive dean at a California Community College and a former Naval Officer, I’ve always valued the importance of strong leadership and sound decision-making. These principles are crucial in education, especially when it comes to supporting those on the front lines — our teachers. My sister, Sally Wall, a dedicated teacher in the Cheney School District, embodies the selflessness and commitment that every educator should be recognized and supported for...

  • Initiatives target state greenwash effort

    Roger Harnack, Cheney Free Press|Updated Aug 14, 2024

    Under outgoing Gov. Jay Inslee, the state has been greenwashing just about everything it can. What is greenwashing? It’s the act of using false or misleading claims that an action will have a positive impact on the environment. This November, voters will have an opportunity to undo some of the greenwashing done by the Inslee Administration and state agencies. Two initiatives on the ballot are designed to restrict government agencies from continuing policies that have l...

  • Boeing's restart restores hope

    Don C. Brunell|Updated Aug 14, 2024

    Kelly Ortberg’s appointment as new Boeing CEO and the company returning its headquarters to Seattle are promising steps toward rehabilitating the aerospace giant started over a century ago. The Seattle Times editorial summarized it best: “Dare we hope?” Ortberg has a sterling reputation, vast aerospace experience, and a record of accomplishment. Hopefully, his experience and success pave the way for Boeing to re-emerge as the pinnacle of aerospace---where it was before the C...

  • Write to the Point

    Cheney Free Press|Updated Aug 14, 2024

    The demise of the Olympic Games The Olympic Games is the mountain top of the athletic realm. After all, when you consider the thousands of young people who dedicate their lives to become a participant in those games and the millions of spectators who eagerly wait every four years to watch these wonderful athletes perform, it must be a world event. Then came Paris. In the opening ceremony, when then mockery of the “Lord’s Supper” — which in my mind had nothing to do with the Olympics — it avalanched the entire ceremony...

  • 'Live long and prosper'

    Roger Harnack, Cheney Free Press|Updated Aug 8, 2024

    When we travel, as Americans we often visit the landmarks of our heritage. I’m not different. I spent most of the last two weeks on the road visiting family from here to Iowa, Minnesota and back. Along the route, I visited the Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument, the Corn Palace, Mount Rushmore and other truly American destinations. But I also stopped at a couple places that were of this world, almost. One of my stops on my way back was at Devil’s Tower, north of Sund...

  • Record Debt Shortchanges Forest Restoration

    Don C. Brunell|Updated Aug 8, 2024

    Our national debt is spreading out of control like a raging wildfire. Among other things, that added liability impacts our ability to fight those fires and reforest those scorched woods and range lands. Replanting trees is necessary to prevent erosion, provide clean drinking water, reduce CO2, protect fish and wildlife habitat, and rehabilitate public open spaces. It is very costly and under current funding schemes, the money is not available. Our national debt just surpassed...

  • Immigrants enrich our country

    Nancy Street, Cheney Free Press|Updated Aug 8, 2024
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    Okay, readers, hands up if you or your ancestors are/were immigrants to the United States, legal or illegal. All hands up? Even American Indians came across the Bering Straits or by land. They have the best claim to land, however, since they arrived long before Europeans, Africans and Asians. Then, explain the mass deportation signs on display at the Republican National Convention and the anti-immigrant tone to the speeches; and why Republicans just scuttled the bipartisan immigration bill. Should legal and illegal...

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