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  • All invited to Earth Day event Friday, April 20

    Roger Lucas|Apr 18, 2012

    The public is invited to the Colville Tribal “Earth Day” celebration, Friday, April 20, beginning at 10 a.m. at the Indian Agency powwow grounds. Organizers were hoping for over a thousand people turning out to take part in activities and visiting displays and information booths. Joaquin Bustamante said that last year about 600 attended the event and that he has been working to expand activities and increase attendance. “We have over 50 booths scheduled and many of those will be giving away...

  • City retreat moves to Ephrata

    Roger Lucas|Apr 18, 2012

    Electric City’s council retreat inched a bit closer to home Tuesday night when members voted to hold the six-hour meeting in Ephrata instead of Moses Lake. What swayed council members was that City Clerk Jackie Perman found a free room at the Grant County Health Board. The city would have had to pay for a room at Big Bend Community College, but the Health Board room is free. It wasn’t exactly clear why the council wanted to meet out of town. About the only item for the agenda that cropped up was one suggested by Councilmember John Nordine. He...

  • New school complex funded in state capital budget

    Roger Lucas and Scott Hunter|Apr 11, 2012
    1

    Sometimes dreams do come true. The Grand Coulee Dam School District’s plans for a new school appear to be a go. After long budgeting hassles in Olympia, the governor, the House and Senate finally agreed today, mostly, on a budget — one that includes enough money to build a new school for the Grand Coulee Dam community. Added to the $14 million already approved two years ago for the project, a $17 million line item in the supplemental capital budget appeared virtually assured of passage early thi...

  • Grand Coulee pressed to enforce cleanup in city

    Roger Lucas|Apr 11, 2012
    1

    Getting the city cleaned up was again a topic at Grand Coulee’s city council meeting April 3. Becky Billups, who lives on Burdin Boulevard, appeared for the second time to ask city officials what they were going to do about the mess in her neighborhood. Two weeks earlier she had told the council that it was getting to look like a “ghetto” on Burdin Boulevard. Billups argued last week that if she wanted to improve her property permits would be required and there would be a penalty if she didn’t pay for them. But, she said, “people can let their...

  • Garbage hauler rebuts recycling argument

    Roger Lucas|Apr 11, 2012
    1

    Recycling was again the main topic at the Regional Board of Mayors meeting on Monday. The mayors all paid lip service to the idea but by the end of the day nothing had changed. The recycling idea had come up at the mayors’ March meeting when Kimberly Christensen informed the mayors that she wanted to start a recycling program in the area. She had already developed her own recycling company called Ever-Green Recycling. Christensen said she wanted to get locations in each of the towns for recycling bins. She also suggested to the mayors that t...

  • Aerial mosquito spray discussed

    Roger Lucas|Apr 11, 2012

    A proposal to spray mosquitoes from the air brought an exchange between Chairman Randy Gumm and new Commissioner Holly Allen at last Wednesday night’s Mosquito District 2 meeting in Electric City. Commissioners, in one of their last actions in November, had budgeted $100,000 for aerial spraying this year in the hopes of controlling the mosquito population and to prevent a serious outbreak again this summer. Gumm, who was elected chair of the group Wednesday, said possibly the only way to prevent another major outbreak of mosquitoes was to s...

  • Police software request on hold

    Roger Lucas|Apr 11, 2012

    A request for nearly $17,000 for police software was put on hold by Grand Coulee’s city council last Tuesday night. The police department is seeking the funds to pay licensing fees for new software for patrol car laptop computers. The request was for 10 licenses at $1,675 each, prompting Councilmember David Tylor to ask if “police could write more tickets to pay for the licenses.” The new software will allow officers to gain information about vehicles and their owners or drivers before confronting a possible felon or someone wanted by autho...

  • Oasis gets park maintenance bid

    Roger Lucas|Apr 11, 2012

    Oasis Lawn Care was awarded the contract to keep up North Dam Park and the softball fields, Coulee Area Parks and Recreation District Chairman Phil Hansen said last Thursday. Two bidders submitted proposals, Oasis and Mr. E’s. Hansen said the Oasis bid was under $22,500 and details of the bid were more complete. Hansen said the two bids were close. North Dam Park came under the park district’s control last year after Grand Coulee gave up maintenance and the Bureau of Reclamation, owners of the park land, stated that it didn’t have money budge...

  • Electric City Council to meet in Moses Lake

    Roger Lucas|Apr 4, 2012

    Electric City’s council will retreat, May 4. That is, they will go on a retreat. The council members, at the urging of Councilmember Birdie Hensley, agreed to set aside a day to go to Moses Lake for discussions. The council, at their regular meeting last Tuesday night, wasn’t specific on what members wanted to talk about. City Clerk Jackie Perman was working with Big Bend Community College for a meeting room. Members of the council, Mayor Jerry Sands, and any city employees the council wanted in attendance will go to Moses Lake in the mor...

  • Golf rates slashed by commissioners

    Roger Lucas|Apr 4, 2012

    Golf play is open at Banks Lake Golf Course, and the port district has slashed membership rates significantly. Individual memberships have dropped from $750 a year to $400 and membership for couples or families has been trimmed fom $950 to $450, less than half. Port District 7 commissioners said last Thursday that this was an effort to soften the blow to some 39 golf members who pre-paid for the season, and whose money and memberships got caught up in the closing of the course a month ago when officials of the Banks Lake Golf and Country Club...

  • LR’s head basketball coach resigns from position

    Roger Lucas|Apr 4, 2012

    Brad Wilson’s resignation as boys’ varsity basketball coach at Lake Roosevelt High School was accepted by the school board at its last meeting. Athletic Director Rich Black said the district will start advertising for a replacement within the district in the next few days and then, if he doesn’t receive any viable candidates, outside the district. He said he would like to get the position filled by the time school begins in the fall, if not sooner. “It is going to be difficult to replace...

  • Full slate filed for tribal elective offices

    Roger Lucas|Apr 4, 2012

    All seven Colville Tribal Business Council members up for election this year are being challenged for their two-year terms. A total of 29 have filed for the seven seats with the primary election barely four weeks away on May 5. Both positions in the Nespelem District received four challengers. In Position 1, incumbent Harvey Moses, Jr., will have four challengers: Jonnie L. Bray; Milton “Jewie” Davis, Jr.; William “Billy” Nicholson II; and Tum-chis-Lii-wit Mylan Williams, Sr. Incumbent Ricky Gabriel, in Nespelem Position 2, faces off against La...

  • City OK’s agreements

    Roger Lucas|Apr 4, 2012

    Electric City’s city council approved agreements with three entities last week. • An agreement with the Grand Coulee Veterinary Clinic details rates for euthanasia and disposal fees for animals brought into the clinic and also for boarding them. Killing animals and disposing of their carcasses will range from $83.50 to $151, based on weight. The city and clinic also agreed on a $13.50 daily fee to hold animals. • Electric City will help provide fire protection coverage within Fire District 14 for a fee of $4,000 a year. • And council reverse...

  • State awards over half million for energy upgrades

    Roger Lucas|Apr 4, 2012

    The Grand Coulee Dam School District has received an energy grant from the state of $580,268, district officials said Monday. Coupled with energy incentives in the amount of $174,243, and net costs to the school district of $406,025, the energy saving upgrade is $1.16 million venture. Superintendent Dennis Carlson said Monday that the district learned of the grant being awarded late last week. The grant was submitted only a few days before. The monies will enable the district to replace outdated and obsolete lighting, and pay for modernized...

  • Man found dead

    Roger Lucas|Apr 4, 2012

    A Coulee Dam man was found dead Monday about noon in Fiddle Creek, near 402 Columbia, an apparent suicide victim. Lyle Allstot, 30, was a graduate of Lake Roosevelt High School in 2000 and a longtime employee of Harvest Foods. Coulee Dam Police Chief Pat Collins said two children saw the body and told an adult who reported to police. Collins said Douglas County Sheriff’s Deputy Curtis Flatray is the lead investigator in the case. No autopsy was planned, according to the sheriff’s office. Collins said strangulation was the apparent cause of dea...

  • Firefighters to train for red cards

    Roger Lucas|Apr 4, 2012

    A number of fire departments will be in training April 11 and 12, at Electric City, for “red card” wildfire certification. Firefighters who go out on range fires need eight hours of training each year in order to keep their “red cards” up to date. Fire official Mark Payne said the group will receive four hours training, from 6-10 p.m., each of the two nights. Firefighters from Electric City, Grand Coulee, Coulee Dam, Elmer City, and Douglas County will take part. About 70 firefighters will be involved. In a separate training program, new vol...

  • Updates coming for network, phones

    Roger Lucas|Apr 4, 2012

    The Grand Coulee Dam School District board approved an E-Rate project totaling some $232,000, at its meeting March 26. Of the project total, the district will put in just over $57,000. E-Rate funds come from both state and federal governments and are based on rates the district pays for its various services. The project will update the district's phone system, provide new network wiring, and provide some $99,000 worth of network hardware. Board members asked if the district had the $57,000, for its share of the project, and were told by...

  • Complaint points out mess

    Roger Lucas|Mar 28, 2012
    1

    A Grand Coulee woman complained that her area was turning into a “ghetto,” and two men complained about loud music at last Tuesday night’s Grand Coulee City Council meeting. Becky Billups, who lives on Burdin Boulevard, told council that the collection of old cars, boats, trailers and debris was making her residential area look like a “ghetto.” The area’s new hospital, Coulee Medical Center, is but a half block away on the same street. One man referred to the general area as being owned by “slum” landlords. Ross Clune and Jerry Ratcliffe told t...

  • City collecting on ambulance back bills

    Roger Lucas|Mar 28, 2012

    The city of Grand Coulee has collected $47,900 in ambulance billings for 2011, the city council was advised last Tuesday night by Fire Chief Rick Paris. That sum represents about 26 percent of all billings for 2011. Statistics provided the council show that there is still $133,059 pending and an additional $4,710 has been disallowed. An additional $35,000 is owed by private parties, the report showed, putting the total accounts receivable not yet paid for 2011, at $165,924. The city hadn’t made ambulance billings since July, 2009, until P...

  • School board approves energy project schedule

    Roger Lucas|Mar 28, 2012

    An energy savings project for Grand Coulee Dam schools got a little momentum Monday night when the board of directors approved a production schedule submitted by the firm of McKinstry. Superintendent Dennis Carlson said the schedule was based on the assumption that the district will receive a grant from the state Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction. He told Grand Coulee Dam School District board members that the district faces a tight construction schedule and that by approving the schedule in advance the project can be moved on...

  • Riding clinic starts Saturday Auction sold out

    Roger Lucas|Mar 28, 2012

    A Ridge Riders riding clinic begins at 9 a.m. Saturday, continuing daily through Tuesday. At the helm is veteran organizer Janet Doughty, who this year is putting on her 36th riding clinic. The clinic offers riding instruction in four categories: Intermediates, beginners, advanced and adults. Doughty said that well known clinic instructor Tara Johnson returns this year, and will offer instruction in the four categories all four days. In addition to the 9 a.m. intermediate class from 9 -11; beginners ride from 11 a.m. to noon; those with...

  • Board reverses young athlete decision

    Roger Lucas|Mar 28, 2012

    Eighth graders at the local middle school will be allowed to “move up” to practice with high school athletes in sports that don’t have enough players, following a turn-around decision this week. The Grand Coulee Dam School District board reversed itself from an earlier decision at its Monday night meeting. At issue was whether eighth graders at the Grand Coulee Dam Middle School could move up and play high school sports when there weren’t sufficient numbers turning out to field a team. The idea was revised a bit Monday night after an hour-lo...

  • Crime watch idea raised

    Roger Lucas|Mar 21, 2012
    2

    Two Electric City council members concerned about the amount of criminal activity are interested in developing a “neighborhood watch.” Lonna Bussert and Birdie Hensley discussed their interest at last Tuesday’s council meeting, and have asked for the topic to be on the council agenda again in two weeks. The council next meets March 27. The two would pattern the “neighborhood watch” after one they learned about in Sultan. Hensley said that she wanted a full discussion when all members of the council are present. Two members were absent la...

  • Town will put $30,000 to school upgrade

    Roger Lucas|Mar 21, 2012

    The town council of Coulee Dam has voted $30,000 worth of energy credits to help the school district upgrade Lake Roosevelt High School’s gymnasium. The council heard of a request by school district Superintendent Dennis Carlson and Jayson Schmidt from McKinstry — an energy company assisting the district in putting together an energy saving plan for its schools — for funds for an upgrade project at Lake Roosevelt’s gymnasium. Coulee Dam received some $37,000 worth of energy conservation funds from the Bonneville Power Administration for the...

  • Famous bull riders plan to attend event

    Roger Lucas|Mar 21, 2012

    Rodeo fans will want to take advantage of the Ridge Rider’s Banquet and Auction April 2, and get to meet some of the world’s premium bull riders, including the world champion from Grand Coulee, Shane Proctor. The banquet and auction is a new feature for the Ridge Riders and currently tickets are on sale through George Kohout (631-0018) and Monty Fields (633-3319). Ticket costs are $30 for an individual and $50 a couple. The event is scheduled at the Vets Center in Electric City, beginning with a social hour from 5:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m., wit...

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