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  • Thank you from StageWest Community Theatre Inc.

    Updated Mar 26, 2015

    StageWest Community Theatre, Inc. just finished their run of Paul Elliott’s “Exit Laughing.” We enjoyed large crowds for most of our performances. We would like at this time thank the members of Emmanuel Lutheran Church for the generous use of their building for our auditions, rehearsals, and performances of this play. We would also like to give a hearty thank you to Mike Hartman for the delicious dinner he catered for our dinner theatre. More thanks also goes to the members of the community that continue to support us throu...

  • Republicans's letter undermines nuclear negotiations with Iran

    Updated Mar 19, 2015

    Back when some prominent Republicans were reasonable, they endorsed some measures now advocated by the Obama administration. Quickly coming to mind is Obama Care, which essentially copied Massachusetts’ 2006 health care reform under then-Republican Gov. Mitt Romney, who now effectively opposes his own plan. This Massachusetts reform included the individual mandate of Obama Care, now opposed by Republicans, but also included in the Republican response to the Clinton administration’s unsuccessful 1993 health care reform pro...

  • Residents should be alarmed about increased train activity

    Updated Mar 19, 2015

    On Saturday afternoon, March 7, around 4 p.m., I left our house near Sutton Park to collect some materials from the Cheney Library. Before I opened the door to leave, I heard a train rumbling around the curve. It got louder as I approached the library, and after I checked materials out of the library, I could hear the continual clicking of the train down First Street, so I headed southwest, and met cars backed halfway down the street toward the Cheney Federal Credit Union. I continued to Mitchell’s Harvest Foods, and met m...

  • Each individual should evaluate the WPC's agenda

    Updated Mar 19, 2015

    March 5, the Free Press printed Dave Daugharty’s letter re: Washington Policy Center (WPC) and six related issues. Dave — a long time colleague/friend — and I both wish the best for our country, our state and our people but have differing views on what that means. I wish to address each of his six points. 1. Dave’s claim: A supermajority needed for state tax increases will “ensure tyranny by the minority.” He then asks if such represents democracy. Of course not. The United States has never been a democracy but rather a repre...

  • Cheney Schools should look at alternatives

    Updated Mar 19, 2015

    As one of the “Uninformed” voters who live on the West Plains and north of Fairchild Air Force Base, I was one of the ones who voted no on the Cheney School District’s last bond issue. This was not because I don’t support schools or children’s learning, but more about living within a budget. According to my property tax statement for this year I paid $2,087.98. Out of that, $814.47 or 39 percent of all taxes raised goes to schools. Over the last few years, Cheney School District has come to the voters to approve a $79 milli...

  • It's time to do right for Cheney High's performing arts

    Harlan Henderson, Contributor|Updated Mar 19, 2015

    We all should make informed decisions when we vote. In regard to the need for an auditorium at Cheney High School, I would like to address some points presented in previous letters to the editor. Perhaps on-the-job experience of a 40-year, music-teaching career will help. Multipurpose rooms One one-third of the CHS student population participates in the performing arts. Part of the students’ learning experience (required by the state) is performance etiquette while watching other groups. The multi-purpose facilities in the di...

  • Bullying - like everything else - has an online presence

    AL STOVER, Staff Reporter|Updated Mar 19, 2015

    Whoever coined the phrase, “Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me,” probably never dealt with bullies. Maybe they did but never told anyone about it. Bullying is one of those problems that never seem to go away. No matter how far advanced we like to think we are as a society, bullying continues to exist in different types of forms. I like to think bullying began in the caveman era. The bigger caveman pushed around the smaller caveman and messed up the latter’s cave paintings because he was jealous...

  • Thank you from Feed Cheney

    Updated Mar 12, 2015

    Thank you Cheney, for your generous support of Feed Cheney during the “Souper Bowl of Caring” on Super Bowl Sunday. In addition to the special collections at eight local churches — United Church of Christ, United Methodist, Church of the Nazarene, Emmanuel Lutheran, St Paul’s Episcopal, Cheney Faith Center, Cheney Community Church, and St. Rose of Lima Catholic — donations were received from the Cheney Kiwanis Club, as well as from individuals who donated directly through the Feed Cheney web site. The goal of the fundraise...

  • Please support HB 1735 and SB 5740

    Updated Mar 12, 2015

    I am asking for readers’ support of House Bill 1735 and Senate Bill 5740. Your support is needed to help “finish the job” and fully implement Extended Foster Care (EFC). So far EFC has been successfully implemented for four out of the five eligibility categories allowed by the federal government. The last group that remains is unfortunately the most vulnerable of the vulnerable — youth with documented medical conditions that prevent them from participating in school, work, or other programs that would help them obtain...

  • Inslee's proposal will improve the state

    Updated Mar 12, 2015

    Let’s see if I have this right. According to Paul Delaney, Feb. 26, 2015, now is not the time to tackle climate change because he’d have to pay more to fill up his tank. Delaney is taking Gov. Jay Inslee to task for his “Don Quixote quest,” of “singlehandedly” combating climate change by “adding ethanol to our fuels.” According to Delaney, making him pay more to drive to and from work at the Cheney Free Press is not only onerous, it’s unnecessary. Why? Because by Delaney’s “math,” the Earth has only warmed 1.4 degrees sinc...

  • Raise in minimum wage has many unseen problems

    Updated Mar 12, 2015

    On the surface it certainly sounds good. Bumping the minimum wage in Washington state from its current $9.47 per hour —the highest in the nation — to $12 could help some people elevate themselves out of poverty. House Bill 1355 recently passed the Democrat-leaning chamber of the state Legislature and is now in the hands of the Senate, primarily a Republican body. The conjecture is it will either die there, or undergo significant changes before it reemerges. But before it might see daylight, what are some of the other costs be...

  • Widening SR 904 is about more than helping football fans

    John McCallum, Editor|Updated Mar 12, 2015

    I’ve been thinking about Coral Muscarella lately. I’ve also been thinking about Lorissa Green. The latter many area residents will remember as the Cheney High School 16-year-old girl killed in a Jan. 17, 2009 collision at what used to be the at-grade intersection of Cheney-Spokane Road and State Route 195. Thanks to the dedicated, focused efforts of her mother, Debbie Hammel, who worked tirelessly to make legislators aware of the dangers, that deadly intersection is no more — replaced by a safer, $11 million inter...

  • Cheney students deserve better

    Updated Mar 5, 2015

    I am writing to encourage the residents of Cheney School District to get behind our kids and vote “Yes” to rerun the bond for the remodel of Cheney High School. We only had 30 percent of our voters turn out for this election. Our kids need you to mail in your ballot. It’s like not turning in your homework when you only have to mark one little circle. It is not hard! Having a child in the high school, I have to say sitting on the floor in the hall to eat your lunch because there is no room in the cafeteria, is not only germy...

  • Washington Policy Center's agenda is detrimental to the state

    Updated Mar 5, 2015

    I recently listened to a speech by the Spokane director of the Washington Policy Center. His opening claimed the center is an organization dedicated to improving our state, he then, in my estimation, proceeded to explain an agenda detrimental to our state. The booklet he presented to us confirms my suspicions. Examples are: 1. Any tax increase should only be passed by a supermajority. Such an action ensures tyranny by the minority. Is this a democracy? 2. Medicaid expansion should NOT be increased. Judeo-Christian and Greek...

  • Take a closer look at alternative approach

    Updated Mar 5, 2015

    Cheney has incredible teachers and schools. The high school may be in need of additional classrooms but I find most of the other items on the bond to be excessive. Bill Johns’ alternatives to the school bond are informative and well researched. I agree with Chris Stewart’s letter that the financial impact on voters with two bonds to pay off is not affordable for many people. Students have eaten lunch sitting in the hallways for as long as I have volunteered there the past 20 years. It is their choice and comfort. The gym sit...

  • Taxpayers should ask questions

    Updated Mar 5, 2015

    I attended the school board meeting on Feb. 25 and got to listen to the staff of the school district belittle those who dared question the bond issue for nearly two hours. Various teachers and students demanded and insisted they “deserve” or “have a right” to my tax dollars in various ways. Not a single one said, “please” or “thank you” for the tens of millions of dollars we already give them. My tax dollars are not a “right” and as a voter I am entitled to know they are being spent carefully and all due diligence is being...

  • Increased taxes will affect families

    Updated Mar 5, 2015

    Any time we talk about levies and bonds, it is important to remember they are simply taxes, specifically taxes on homes and property. We need to be very careful that we don’t endanger our neighbors’ ability to keep their homes, for the sake of something unnecessary. Regarding the proposed Cheney High School bond, it is easy to toss around numbers and forget the tax hike is a significant amount for many families. The $.75 per $1,000 valuation is about $100-$200 per family. What if a family can’t afford this? Would it reall...

  • Quality of facilities play a role in student's education

    Updated Mar 5, 2015

    As a parent, community member and educator I ask Cheney’s citizens to consider the important role quality facilities can play in the education of our youth, and also about the message sent to the children and educators in our community when people choose not to vote. I have lived and worked in Cheney for nearly 12 years. Cheney School District hires outstanding people, and I know they will do their best work given any circumstance. However, the amazing new facilities we have built for our Cheney and Westwood middle school s...

  • Bond failure needs to generate community debate

    Updated Mar 5, 2015

    With the county’s certification of the Feb. 10 special election last Wednesday, Feb. 25, the Cheney School District’s nearly $44.8 million construction bond for expanding and remodeling the high school has come up short of the needed 60 percent majority for passage. The bond received 3,712 yes votes, 58.43 percent, which according to school district officials and bond supporters is about 100 votes shy of passage. With an eye to possibly re-running the bond in April, the district’s school board accepted extended public input...

  • Voting "no" is not against kids

    Updated Feb 26, 2015

    The notion that the NO vote for the high school bond issue was a vote against kids lacks respect of possible voter wisdom, or more importantly, people’s pocketbooks. In the early 1990’s Cheney school district officials put forth a bond issue to enclose the high school — converting it from California-style buildings to one facility. I remember well listening to the district presentation in the high school’s Little Theatre and thinking at the conclusion: I hope there’s a Plan B. When that bond issue failed to receive a 60 perc...

  • Students need more space

    Updated Feb 26, 2015

    As I watched the drama performance this past Friday at Eastern’s Showalter Hall, something seemed to be not quite right. Watching my fellow high school students perform very admirably on a stage that wasn’t their own seemed again, not quite right. Without a remodeled high school, the Cheney community has made it difficult for our drama performers and others to have a place they can call home for years to come. After evaluating my four years at the high school, the time has never been greater for a refurbished high sch...

  • Inslee's carbon fuels folly could halt transportation bill

    PAUL DELANEY, Staff Reporter|Updated Feb 26, 2015

    You had to like that nice Christmas present, and maybe some of the extra cash with gas costing under $1.75 a gallon provided, right? I know my wife and I enjoyed saving about $300 a month from the fuel bills that were nothing short of overwhelming eight years ago when I first started working at the Cheney Free Press in the latter half of 2007. That’s when gas hit the mid-$4 range and the minimum 50-mile daily round trip was quite a shock to the wallet and budget. Especially f...

  • Johns' proposal is not the answer

    Updated Feb 26, 2015

    Bill Johns has argued that renovations to Cheney High School can be accomplished for $11.65 million. He presented this option to the citizens’ committee, school board and in newspapers. The truth is that his plan is simply inadequate. While his plan would add classrooms and a small alternative school, many needs would be left unmet and CHS would still fall short in key areas. Sports teams would still be short gym space, leaving them practicing late in the evening or busing to elementary schools, which displaces elementary act...

  • U.S. should be silent partner in war against ISIS

    Updated Feb 26, 2015

    Somebody is going to have to cut the cancer out. When it comes down to defining a strategy on how to deal with the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, or of Iraq and the Levant, depending on your preference, that statement is pretty much it in a nutshell. The question then becomes, who is going to do it? Who will take the lead in removing from the world a terrorist organization that revels in beheadings and burning people alive to enact its vengeance and to enforce its form of ultraconservative, theocratic form of government?...

  • Yes, vaccinations do their part to help fight diseases

    Updated Feb 19, 2015

    Vaccinations have been a hot subject over the years but it has been put at the forefront due to the recent outbreak of measles in the United States. According to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention, there have been 121 cases of measles throughout the U.S. in 17 states. The Spokane County Health District confirmed that there are no cases of measles in Spokane County. The CDC stated that the majority of people who have contracted the measles were unvaccinated. The disease can spread throughout communities among...

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