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  • Levy supports well-rounded education, infrastructure needs

    Updated Jan 15, 2021

    We are parents of a middle school and a high school student in the Cheney School District, and are writing in support of Proposition Nos. 1 and 2 on the Feb. 9 ballot. These propositions would authorize the Cheney School District’s 2021 Educational Programs and Operations and Capital Projects levies. The funds generated by these levies will fund the district budgets for 2022, 2023 and 2024. It is well-understood that students thrive when they have access to small classes and opportunities for extra-curricular and c...

  • Inflammatory language not helpful in fighting COVID

    Updated Jan 14, 2021

    Roger Harnack’s Jan. 7, 2021 Cheney Free Press article, “Pushing back against bureaucratic harassment,” is troubling. Within the article, the governor and state workers are accused of “illegally” and “unconstitutionally” “extorting,” “blackmailing,” “harassing,” “threatening” and “violating the rights of” business owners. In fact, our duly elected (and re-elected) governor has taken legal, medically and scientifically defensible measures to protect the health and lives of Washington citizens. Our legislature, electe...

  • Evangelical support of Trump is undermining Christianity

    Updated Jan 14, 2021

    Cathy McMorris Rodgers’ sudden rush to judgement of President Trump, after enabling him the last four years, rings hollow, given her self-identification as evangelical Christian. Following her reversal, Biblical scripture like Matthew 7:1-5 commands her apology to country and constituents for previously not standing up to Trump — in Biblical parlance, she should repent. Evangelical Christians, by definition, are supposed to bring the good news and love of Christ by witness, so as to gain followers of Christ. Instead, stu...

  • ML replacement levy supports needed functions

    Updated Jan 14, 2021

    The proposed Medical Lake School District Educational and Operations Levy Is a replacement for the levy approved by the Medical Lake School District voters in 2018. The levy would provide approximately $1.5 million per year. If passed, that $1.5 million per year will be matched by an additional $1.5 million per year from the state and would take effect in 2022. This rate of $1.50 per $1,000 assessed property value is the lowest amount needed to be eligible for the state matching funds. MLSD uses these funds to pay for COVID...

  • Working from home is likely here to stay

    DON C. BRUNELL|Updated Jan 14, 2021

    With COVID-19 vaccines being widely dispensed, will an end to this pandemic halt “work from home?” Will workers return to downtown offices at pre-pandemic levels? Not likely! However, it is not an either/or question, said Stanford Professor Nicholas Bloom, who is co-director of the National Bureau of Economic Research’s productivity, innovation and entrepreneurship program. “Working from home will be very much a part of our post-COVID economy,” he added, “so, the sooner poli...

  • Gym reopening vital to our communities health

    Updated Jan 7, 2021

    I am writing in support of efforts being made by “Stronger Together Coalition Spokane” to reopen our state’s fitness centers and coach-led fitness facilities. They are not the problem in the fight against the coronavirus pandemic, but a weapon in the fight against it. They are safe. Time and again, science has shown that fitness facilities of all kinds have one of the lowest rates of transmission (less than 1%). They are committed. They have done their best to pivot their businesses and operate under state-mandated closu...

  • Community support helps feed Medical Lake

    Updated Jan 7, 2021

    Feed Medical Lake says “Thank You” to all who supported our free meal program throughout a very difficult year. To our supporters and patrons, we wish for you a better 2021. May God bless every second of it for you. Not familiar with Feed Medical Lake? Check out our Facebook page or visit our web site at feedmedicallake.org or call me at 509-714-1150. Joanna Williams Feed Medical Lake Director...

  • Wreaths at Medical Lake cemetery appreciated

    Updated Jan 7, 2021

    As a small follow-up to Don Brunell’s thoughtful column about the Wreaths Across America program in the Dec. 24 Cheney Free Press, I’d like to commend the efforts of Gerri Johnson and the Re*Imagine Medical Lake group for remembering the many veterans buried at our own Medical Lake Community Cemetery with wreaths this holiday season. While it may not be a veteran’s cemetery, per se, the remains of soldiers from every conflict since the Civil War can be found there. Thank you, RIML, and thank you as well to the Medical Lake...

  • To prevent the next pandemic, we need new antibiotics

    KENNETH E. THORPE, Contributor|Updated Jan 7, 2021

    The end of the COVID-19 pandemic is finally in sight. Both Pfizer and Moderna have received emergency FDA authorization to distribute tens of millions of doses of their vaccines across the country. This is fantastic news. Unfortunately, the scientific community can’t rest on its laurels. An even worse pandemic is already looming. And this time, developing treatments will prove much more challenging. This coming pandemic may not stem from a virus, but from drug-resistant bacteria and fungi known as “superbugs.” These micro...

  • Bracing for bigger changes from working remotely

    DON C. BRUNELL, Contributor|Updated Jan 7, 2021

    Now that vaccines are available, we hope our lives will return to the way they were before the coronavirus pandemic blanketed the globe. That is not likely to occur. Last March our booming economy was clobbered by COVID-19. A worldwide pandemic ensued. There was no vaccine to counter it and even though vaccines were developed at “warp speed” lots of things changed and have become imbedded in our daily lives. Futurist Bernard Marr, columnist in Forbes, believes employers qui...

  • Better wildland management can create jobs, help prevent a repeat of 2020 wildfires

    DON BRUNELL, Contributor|Updated Dec 30, 2020

    While the coronavirus and its devastating effects on people and economies worldwide were unfortunately the top 2020 stories, the massive impact of western wildfires can't be ignored. It was catastrophic. The National Interagency Fire Center's western states tally shows a record 8.6 million acres were incinerated in 2020 compared with 4.6 million acres in 2019. In Washington just over 700,000 acres were burned; however, California and Oregon were not as fortunate. By...

  • Christmas spirit is alive in Cheney

    Updated Dec 30, 2020

    I don’t often write notes to the editor, but feel compelled to do so this week. The residents of Cheney should be congratulated for going above and beyond with their Christmas decorations and lights this year. There are so many homes and businesses that have done an amazing job of making our city a little more joyful to end a difficult year. I wish I could call out what I’ve seen, but would suggest a drive around the city neighborhoods is worthwhile for you and your family. You might be just as amazed as I was and find joy...

  • Getting away with it

    Updated Dec 30, 2020

    Yesterday, my 13-year-old son asked me about the election, and the fraud charges leveled by President Trump and his supporters. I thought about my answer for a bit, then used the O.J. Simpson trial, and that jury verdict, as an example of how humans who want to believe something badly can be convinced that an enormous “preponderance of evidence” should be ignored. In the O.J. case, the evidence, both physical and circumstantial, was overwhelming. He was obviously guilty. Sadly, a jury predisposed to mistrust police and sup...

  • Call it prohibition version 2.0

    ROGER HARNACK, Publisher|Updated Dec 30, 2020

    On Dec. 18, 1917, Congress proposed the 18th Amendment, which would later make it illegal to make, buy, sell or drink alcohol. Two years later, after ratification Jan. 16, 1919, prohibition became the law of the land. For nearly 14 years, Americans who wanted to have an adult beverage were forced underground. They danced, dined, drank and gambled in what became known as a “speakeasy.” Law enforcement and other public employees often knew about their clandestine watering hol...

  • Wearing a cross but violating basic Christian values

    REV. DR. ANDREA AYVAZIAN, Contributor|Updated Dec 24, 2020

    Everything that comes out of the White House today — the lies, the false claims of election fraud, the absurd lawsuits — makes me retreat and recoil. But I feel a particular sense of dread whenever I am watching the TV news and press secretary Kayleigh McEnany steps up to the podium in the White House briefing room. Even before McEnany says her first word, I cannot help but notice the gold cross she wears around her neck, right at her throat, highly visible to the camera. The cross, I believe, is intentionally obvious and is...

  • Despite coronavirus, wreaths placed across America

    DON BRUNELL, Contributor|Updated Dec 24, 2020

    Christmas is an especially difficult time for anyone grieving for lost loved ones. Try adding a crippling killer virus into that mix. That is the tragic reality of 2020. Even though the traditional ceremonies attended by thousands went virtual this year, more than 1.7 million holiday wreaths were placed against grave markers of fallen service men and women. Normally, the fallen are remembered on Memorial Day, but thanks to a Maine family and over hundreds of thousand donors...

  • Introducing wind blade concrete mixture

    Don C. Brunell, Contributor|Updated Dec 17, 2020

    Would you believe in the future when a cement truck shows up to pour your foundation or patio, the mixture will likely contain ground-up wind turbine blades? As a part of new agreement between GE Renewable Energy and Veolia North America (VNA), old blades, consisting mostly of fiberglass, are shredded at a processing facility in Missouri and then shipped to cement plants across America where they replace coal, sand and clay in manufacturing. Like the coronavirus vaccine, the...

  • Building global unity through tolerance and universal rights

    DAVID GALLUP, Contributor|Updated Dec 17, 2020

    Dec. 10, 2020 marked the 7nd anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Two related documents also celebrate significant anniversaries this year: the 25th anniversary of the Declaration of Principles on Tolerance and the 75th anniversary of the United Nations Charter. Both declarations and the charter provide a framework for building unity in a diverse world. The impetus for creating the Declaration on Tolerance was, as the Declaration’s Preamble states, “the current rise in acts of intolerance, violence, ter...

  • Doctors should have higher behavior standards

    Updated Dec 10, 2020

    I don’t understand the rules. If a man or woman puts their hands on me, against my wishes, does status allow this? Is this a ‘perk’ of being an important personage like Dr. Lutz? Spokane Councilman Breann Biggs says that even knowing what he knows, he would not have voted to fire Dr. Lutz. When would he have voted for firing? How much does he countenance? Fifty percent of voters are women, Councilman. What ‘perks’ do you think your elected position allows? Michael Dunn, Superintendent of ESD 101, argues that Lutz’s fi...

  • Confession, repentance only fix for a life of lies

    Updated Dec 10, 2020

    The people that deserve the most suspicion are the ones who lie the most. The people who lie the most are salespeople. Not all salespeople lie, but the honest ones are hard to find. Who is the most famous salesman in the United States today? When a salesman makes some kind of claim, the first thing you should ask him is “Can you show me some evidence that your claim is true?” If he does not show you evidence and just says things like “Everybody knows this is true,” the smart thing to do is to keep your money and walk away. A...

  • "Unnecessary" care: Is it really a significant cost driver in our health care system?

    Dr. ROGER STARK, Contributor|Updated Dec 10, 2020

    Regardless of a person’s political views, we can all agree that rising cost is a major problem with our health care system. Last year, Americans spent 18 percent of our economy, or $3.6 trillion, on health care. The ever-increasing cost curve would suggest that by the 2030s the country will spend 30 percent of our gross domestic product on medical treatments. Extensive research has been done to identify unnecessary care and wastefulness in the system. Estimates vary, but from 20 percent to 30 percent of health care in the U...

  • Great Conjunction has us looking up -- for a change

    John McCallum, Managing Editor|Updated Dec 10, 2020

    It’s been a difficult year for us all. I know that’s an understatement. But methinks I shouldn’t have to go into many details to explain why. Unfortunately, those reasons are still all around us. It’s said hard times bring out the best and worst in people. I’ve come to see the truth in that first-hand, and — put mildly — it’s disheartening. I’ve seen people come together as a community to support each other, and I’ve seen people who talk about the need for community support refusing to do so by undertaking the sim...

  • Mixing apples and oranges to increase taxes

    Updated Dec 3, 2020

    Are you not tired of elections? If not then here comes another new special election on Feb. 9, 2021. This one is to raise your taxes for the Cheney School District. The last year of collection for the 3 year O&M(EP&O) Levy and two-year capital projects levy is 2021. The authority to collect a new levy against our property in 2022, 2023 and 2024 is therefore requiring a new approval thru a vote. The existing capital projects levy was for specific projects which should be completed. This levy was not meant to be continual like...

  • E-waste reduction requires innovative approaches

    DON C. BRUNELL, Contributor|Updated Dec 3, 2020

    One of the biggest challenges of the 21st Century is dealing with the progress of the 20th Century — especially old computers, monitors, cellular phones and televisions. These appliances depend on hazardous materials, such as mercury, to operate. After a five-to-eight year useful life, many are tossed into dumpsters and sent to landfills where those hazardous materials can leach into the soil, streams and groundwater. That was the opening paragraph of a column I wrote 20 y...

  • Will the doctor see me now?

    SALLY C. PIPES, Contributor|Updated Dec 3, 2020

    Imagine you’re traveling out of state to visit family. When you’re 15 minutes from grandma’s house, you decide to let her know you’ll be arriving soon. For some reason, your mobile phone doesn’t connect. So you stop at a payphone to call your phone provider. They tell you they shut off your service because you entered a new state. This scenario may seem absurd. But it’s an apt analogy for the regulatory regime governing many U.S. doctors. Telemedicine technology made it easier for physicians to provide care from afar. But t...

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