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Articles from the September 7, 2022 edition


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  • Federal funding should keep park open through 2027

    Jacob Wagner|Sep 7, 2022

    Local park district commissioners have secured funding from the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation to help keep North Dam Park alive for several years to come, provided matching funding can be secured for a park that is the center of community-wide events. “It looks like we have done it, mission accomplished,” Commissioner Kevin Portch of the Coulee Area Parks and Recreation District said Aug. 31 in an email to the other commissioners and interested parties, including The Star. CAPRD, which manages North Dam Park, located on USBR land, was in some fin...

  • First Friday

    Sep 7, 2022

    People at last week's "First Friday" market shop from various vendors at North Dam Park as a couple talk with a candidate running for sheriff. The park, a center of community events, relies on funding from the Bureau of Reclamation matched by local dollars through the Coulee Area Park and Recreation District. - Scott Hunter photo...

  • Fire danger still looms

    Jacob Wagner|Sep 7, 2022

    Fall approaching doesn't mean we are in the clear as far as wildfires go, and many of our worst fire seasons have happened in September and October. "Washington state is in the midst of wildfire season," the Washington State Department of Health warned in a statement last week. "Although it's been a mild season to date, it is important to be prepared and ready to protect yourself and your family from wildfire smoke before the smoke hits." It was in September of 2020 that about half a million acr...

  • "Net Nanny" operation leads to seven arrests

    Sep 7, 2022

    Seven men were arrested in Grant County over the course of several days as part of an operation identifying individuals allegedly involved in the sexual abuse and exploitation of children, after a multi-agency law enforcement effort, officials said late last month. The multi-day operation involved the Washington State Patrol (WSP), local Grant County law enforcement agencies and several partner agencies. The cases will be reviewed by the Grant County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office to determine whether or what criminal charges should be filed. ...

  • Colville Tribes honors Seattle member, artist, author, designer

    Sep 7, 2022

    The Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation honored Lawney Reyes upon his death on August 10 at the age of 91. The Native American artist, sculptor, interior designer, architect and writer was a longtime Seattle resident. Reyes was the son of an immigrant Filipino father and a Sinixt mother. Throughout his work, Reyes was inspired by his mother’s tribal stories. Reyes’ mother, Mary Christian Hall Wong, was a fabled storyteller. After she was killed in a car crash on Memorial Day, 1978, Reyes devoured the taped interviews and dia...

  • Three arrested after chase and crash

    Scott Hunter|Sep 7, 2022

    A Nespelem man and two women from Omak ran into trouble and fruit crates Monday evening before Okanogan County Sheriff's deputies arrested them on several charges, the sheriff said. When a deputy tried to pull over a Ford F-250 in connection with thefts from a Tonasket retail store, the driver wouldn't stop, reached a dead end, then turned and tried to run into the deputy's vehicle, Sheriff Tony Hawley said in a press release. "Deputy Ray was able to accelerate and swerve away to narrowly avoid...

  • EMS Correction

    Sep 7, 2022

    EMS stands for “emergency medical services,” not “emergency management services” as The Star incorrectly wrote in a recent article titled “Regional EMS district idea floated to city leaders.” The writer had some wires crossed....

  • Study carefully, and carry a big idea

    Scott Hunter|Sep 7, 2022

    The recent suggestion that the area consider forming an emergency medical services district is a good one and could lead to a better service for everyone in the area when help is needed. Local leaders should consider it carefully, openly, and with open minds. They should also be mindful that at its core, the idea may be another attempt at an end run around a fundamental problem this community has always had but never faced constructively: lack of unity, even artificially induced disunity. An EMS district could be a great solution if local fire...

  • Resolve to lay down bridges, not walls, on 9/11

    Angel H. Clark-Hall|Sep 7, 2022

    Religious factions which intrude on any government, or pursues the governance of its own nation is a rogue religion. 9/11 is a perfect example of how a religion can be used for its own ends. Let us consider that religion is a calling from God. Whether we acknowledge Him or not, He is our Creator, the Father of all peoples, and as such He has authority over all of us. Yet, it has never been His sovereign intention to force His will upon us, but for everyone to be given the freedom to choose. So that those who would answer His call should do so...

  • The kids are alright, but…

    Roger Lucas|Sep 7, 2022

    This is a continuation of earlier comments that education in America is not properly funded. I had pointed out that we need to rethink the value of teachers and the way we fund education, teachers included. I read a distressing article the other day that said many of our large cities in the U.S. will have to relocate by the end of the century because they will be unlivable due to climate change. The writer pointed out that regions will get so warm as to make them too hot for people to reside there. What makes this, if true, so distressing, is...

  • How county roads are funded

    Rob Coffman Lincoln County Commissioner|Sep 7, 2022

    Where does all the money for our county roads come from? You may be surprised to know that, in Lincoln County, only about 15% is generated from property tax revenue that is received from parcels of land in the unincorporated areas of the county. Parcels of land in our towns do not pay property taxes for county roads. About 21% comes from the federal government. Most of this money is for competitive projects that the county has applied for, as well as safety money for guardrails and emergency money for such things as the Porcupine Bay Road...

  • Howard Joseph Roberts

    Sep 7, 2022

    Howard Joseph Roberts, 84, passed away Monday,August 22, 2022 in Spokane, Washington. He began his impact on all who would be blessed to know him on Thursday, July 14, 1938, when he was born in Deer Park, Washington to the home of Albert and Nora Gonser-Roberts. An outstanding athlete at Deer Park High School, Howard lettered in baseball, basketball and football, graduating in 1956. Howard served with the United State Air Force from October 18, 1956 to October 18, 1960. Following his honorable...

  • Library seeks teen council members

    Sep 7, 2022

    NCW Libraries is seeking teens to serve on its five-county Teen Library Council. The Teen Library Council gives youth in grades 8th-12th living in Chelan, Douglas, Grant, Okanogan and Ferry counties the unique opportunity to meet other teens from across North Central Washington, share their ideas and opinions, and directly impact the services the library offers for teens. As part of the council, teens will attend and participate in monthly meetings, help create content for the library’s website and social media, judge teen writing and art c...

  • NCW Libraries Launches Fall Virtual Author Program

    Sep 7, 2022

    NCW Libraries will host award winning graphic novelist Malaka Gharib, for a virtual author program on Thursday, September 15, 2022 as part of NCW Virtual Reads. Gharib is the artist and author of I Was Their American Dream, about growing up as a first generation Filipino Egyption American, and It Won’t Always Be Like This, about her summers with her family in the Middle East. Both books are available through NCW Libraries. Gharib is the digital editor of the NPR podcast Life Kit. Prior to her work at NPR, Gharib worked at the Malala Fund, a g...

  • Meetings & Notices

    Sep 7, 2022

    Grant County Fire District #14 to Meet Grant County Fire District #14 will hold its regular monthly meeting Monday, September 12, 2022, at 6:00 pm at the Electric City Fire Station. Grant County Mosquito District #2 to Meet Grant County Mosquito District #2 will hold its monthly meeting, Thursday, September 8, 2022 at 4:00 pm at 210 W. Coulee Blvd in Electric City, WA. AA Meetings in the Local Area Confused in the Coulee AA meetings are held on Mondays and Fridays at 6 p.m. at the Vets Center in Electric City. Call Paul at 633-3377 days or...

  • Coulee Cops

    Sep 7, 2022

    Grand Coulee Police 8/29 - Police extracted a fingerprint from a car window that appeared to have been pulled down while parked on Roosevelt Drive. The owner believes it might have been a man she has a protection order against trying to intimidate her. - Police contacted a woman on Dill Avenue whose dogs were running loose in the area. She said she would get them rounded up back home. - A man in the area of Stevens Avenue and Grand Avenue was reportedly punching himself in the face. Police found him and believed he was under the influence of...

  • Welsh gathering schedule announced

    Sep 7, 2022

    People from the surrounding area plan to welcome to a small group of visiting Welsh descendants from the Seattle area in an informal outdoor gathering at the Willows Motel in Wilbur Friday night, Sept. 9, at 6, according to organizer Judy Lindhag. Everyone is invited and advised to bring a lawn chair, beverage, and their favorite charcuterie style nibbles to share. During the weekend, there will be a presentation of the Welsh in the area, a headstone restoration event at a Welsh cemetery seven miles northwest of Almira, along with planting of...

  • Raiders win football season opener

    Jacob Wagner|Sep 7, 2022

    By Jacob Wagner The Lake Roosevelt Raiders won their football season opener in Kittitas Friday to mark a successful start to their season. Against the Coyotes, Sept. 2, the Raiders won 40-21. "The kids played hard for the first game," Head Coach Bubba Egbert said. "We did things pretty clean, really. They did really well." LR led 21-0 at the end of the first half. Kittitas got on the board with a pair of touchdowns with extra points in the third quarter, scoring 14. The Raiders added 13 more...

  • Legal Notices

    Sep 7, 2022

    GCD School District CALL FOR BIDS The Grand Coulee Dam School District hereby calls for bids for the following items: Item # of Items Condition Radial arm saw 1 Poor Bench Grinder 1 Poor Tire Machine 1 Poor Valve Grinder 1 Poor Wheel Balancer 1 Poor Car Wheel Alignment 1 Poor Parts Cleaner 1 Poor Brake Lathe Machine 1 Poor Bids can be sent to: Grand Coulee Dam SD, 110 Stevens Ave., Coulee Dam, WA 99116. Please state “bids” on the envelope For more information contact Nancy Kuiper at nkuiper@gcdsd.org or 633-1442 (Publish August 31 and Sep...

  • Resort offers days of music starting Thursday

    Jacob Wagner|Sep 7, 2022

    Sunbanks Lake Resort's "Blues & Roots Festival" begins Thursday night and runs through the weekend, and locals get a discount to enjoy the music. In the resort's third and final music festival of the year, the tunes aren't limited to "blues" in the strictest sense of the term, although one of the Pacific Northwest's favorite blues rocker bands, Too Slim and the Taildraggers, will top off the show Sunday night. Before the Taildraggers take over the stage, the weekend will be filled with music...