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  • LR's grades 7-12 to start returning to in-person school in December

    Jacob Wagner|Nov 11, 2020

    Lake Roosevelt Junior/Senior High School students will start returning to in-person school on Dec. 7 with a phased approach. The Grand Coulee Dam School District board of directors again discussed reopening in person school to 7th- through 12th-grade students at their Nov. 9 board meeting. Just two weeks ago the board chose not to bring back Lake Roosevelt Junior/Senior High students until maybe the second semester, which starts Feb. 1, 2021. Kindergarten through sixth graders are already going to in-person school part time. During Monday’s m...

  • New statewide COViD-19 restrictions announced

    Scott Hunter|Nov 11, 2020

    After Washington families were asked last week not to gather with people outside their households over the coming holidays, the governor added more details and broader restrictions in a modified order Sunday. If you get together for Thanksgiving with people not living with you, you'll be going against that ask, - unless you had already begun to quarantine by Friday and you keep it up until Thanksgiving, or keep it up for seven days prior and get a negative COVID-19 test result within 48 hours... Full story

  • Local county COVID rates are up significantly

    Nov 11, 2020

    All four local counties: Grant, Okanogan, Lincoln, and Douglas, have seen an uptick in COVID-19 cases in recent weeks. As of Nov. 10: Okanogan County has had 1,188 total cases, including 13 deaths. There have been 15 cases in Coulee Dam, five in Elmer City, and 34 in Nespelem. The county has had 33 new cases in the past 14 days, making for an incidence rate of 77.2, up from 37.4 on Oct. 27. Grant County has had 3,809 total cases; 28 deaths; 15 cases in the Grand Coulee Dam area, nine in Coulee City; and an incidence rate of 279, up from an... Full story

  • COVID-19 outbreak reported in Grant County Long-Term Care facility

    News Release, Grant County Health District|Nov 11, 2020

    SOAP LAKE, WA – Grant County is experiencing a COVID-19 outbreak in one long-term care facility (LTC), McKay Healthcare and Rehabilitation Center in Soap Lake, WA, with over 30 cases reported in residents and staff. At this point in time all COVID-19 residents have been moved out of the facility. Unfortunately, one resident has recently died due to COVID-19 complications, which was reported in yesterday's press release. McKay had remained COVID-19 free since the on-set of the pandemic. F... Full story

  • School levy passes by 2% margin

    Jacob Wagner|Nov 11, 2020

    The Grand Coulee Dam School District's Supplemental Educational Programs and Operation passed with 51% of the vote last Tuesday. Results of the Nov. 3 general election show that Okanogan County voters liked the levy more than voters in Grant, Douglas, and Lincoln counties, and liked it enough to help it pass. A majority of school district voters in Grant County voted against the levy 544-481; in Douglas County said no by a 98-89 vote; and in Lincoln County 55% voted no, 105-86. But in Okanogan...

  • Ice Age Park levy fails

    Jacob Wagner|Nov 11, 2020

    Voters hung the fate of Electric City’s proposed Ice Age Park in the cold November breeze as a levy for funding maintenance for the park failed to pass last week. The levy failed with 303 (62%) against it, and 182 (38%) for it. The one-year levy asked for 14.2 cents per $100,000 in property value, or $14.22 for a $100,000 property, and would have gone towards maintenance of the park estimated at $7,000-$10,000 a year. The levy itself costs about $5,000 to get on the ballot for the Nov. 3 general election. Now that the levy has failed, the c...

  • Chamber to put on virtual dinner and auction

    Jacob Wagner|Nov 11, 2020

    The group that puts on popular events such as Colorama and the Harvest Festival is seeking to raise funds in a virtual auction and dinner to help them to keep functioning and hosting these events. With a slew of events canceled this year due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Grand Coulee Dam Area Chamber of Commerce has lost out on a lot of revenue to pay expenses such as rent and wages for its lone employee. “We really want the chamber to survive into the future when we can do live events again,” said board member Solveig Chaffee, who is wor...

  • Local anthropologist to speak next week

    Scott Hunter|Nov 11, 2020

    When Robert Moïse was sent home from work last March as the federal government responded to the burgeoning COVID-19 pandemic, he had a long way to go to his east Coulee Dam home. He was in Africa at the time. Moïse, a consulting anthropologist, has spent a lot of time there, and he's been tapped to share his insights, derived from a career of helping big organizations trying to do good in small communities, in an upcoming Rotary meeting open to the public via Zoom. Moïse will be the guest sp...

  • Online or in-person, public weighs in on public meetings

    Jacob Wagner|Nov 11, 2020

    Locals want to attend public meetings both online and in person, recognizing the benefits and drawbacks of each, a quick survey of readers over the last several days seems to indicate. A short survey posted in The Star online Thursday asked respondents what they thought of public meetings, such as school board and city council meetings, being held online, and how those compare to meetings held in person. The survey only received 18 responses, but those responses show a variety of perspectives, with only one respondent saying they haven’t a...

  • Salmon spawn in San Poil River

    Nov 11, 2020

    Chinook salmon have successfully spawned in the San Poil River for the first time in decades after Chief Joseph Dam and Grand Coulee Dam have "prevented the migration of salmon into the northern reaches of the Columbia River and its tributaries for nearly seven decades," The Tribal Tribune reported Oct. 29. In August, Colville Tribal Fish and Wildlife trapped and hauled 100 adult chinook salmon from Wells Fish Hatchery and released them into the San Poil River, a tributary of the Columbia, at...

  • Coulee Cops

    Nov 11, 2020

    Grand Coulee Police 11/5 - A woman reported that kids may be throwing rocks at her Spring Canyon Apartments window. An officer didn’t locate any kids but noted strong winds at the time. - A wallet found near Safeway was turned into police, who drove to the Elmer City address on the driver’s license but found no one home. Another officer recognized the driver as an employee from Coulee Gas. An employee there contacted him and he retrieved his wallet from the police. - A woman on Miller Avenue reported that she thought someone stole her cat. Pol...

  • 1-minute survey on what you think about public meetings?

    Nov 4, 2020

    The ability to hold public meetings of all kinds has become commonplace. We'd like to know what you think about that. Take our 1-minute survey below: https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/8F7B3XS... Full story

  • Billboards are welcome, internet commenters say

    Jacob Wagner|Nov 4, 2020

    A Main Street property owner is working to change Grand Coulee’s mind toward letting him advertise with signs on his lot, a practice the city says goes against code but which is gaining supporters online. Sam Hsieh, who owns Coulee Plaza on Main Street, was told by the city following a complaint that signs advertising businesses on his property are against City Code Chapter 17.60. That code states that only one freestanding sign is allowed for single-occupancy buildings, as well as for multiple offices or businesses within a structure or planne...

  • Greater internet connectivity coming to reservation

    Nov 4, 2020

    The Colville Indian Reservation will soon have more internet access. The Colville Tribes is one of the first recipients of a spectrum license issued through the Federal Communications Commission and its Rural Tribal Window program. “This license provides the Tribes exclusive use of wireless spectrum in the 2.5 GHz band to connect communities on the Colville Reservation to wireless services,” a release from the tribes announced Tuesday. The Colville Tribes plans to implement this license by deploying wireless broadband in two phases. Phase one...

  • Newsbriefs

    Nov 4, 2020

    NPS to burn around lake The National Park Service will be burning piles around Lake Roosevelt this fall. The Lake Roosevelt National Recreation Area release plans Monday to burn piles at a dozen locations around the lake, including Spring Canyon and Keller Ferry. “A goal of prescribed fire in Ponderosa Pine ecosystems is to decrease forest fuel loads adjacent to recreation areas, residences and structures,” a press release states. NPS said the benefits of such burning include: Reduced small fuels, which are primary fire carriers, Decreased ris...

  • UNOFFICIAL ELECTION RESULTS

    Nov 4, 2020

    PRESIDENT Grant Ok. Lin. Doug. Biden/Harris 7543 5661 1587 6727 Trump/Pence 14101 6272 4466 11241 CongRESSIONAL Dist. 4 Grant Ok. Lin. Doug. Newhouse 15327 6999 7297 McKinley 6103 4942 3064 Governor Grant Ok. Lin. Doug. Jay Inslee 6886 5305 1416 6218 Loren Culp 15074 6799 4715 12006 Lt. Governor Grant Ok. Lin. Doug. Denny Heck 7104 4363 1617 5753 Marko Liias 4507 2796 809 3315 Joshua Freed (W) 2831 Attorney General Grant Ok. Lin. Doug. Bob Ferguson 7244 5480 1534 6374 Matt Larkin 14247 6351 4498 11472 Leg. District 12 State Rep. Pos.1 Grant...

  • Nespelem School looking at bringing students back to campus

    Jacob Wagner|Nov 4, 2020

    The Nespelem School District will hold a public Zoom meeting with parents of students tonight (Wednesday) to see how they think and feel about students returning to physical school. That meeting will be held on Nov. 4 at 5:30 p.m. at https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81107207311?pwd=Y0FoZlhrd3FtMTVnWkVPY1JOVFVWQT09 Principal and Superintendent Effie Dean told The Star on Thursday that kindergarten- through second-grade students would be the first to return, and that the next group of students would...

  • Local garbage rates may go up, but only a little

    Jacob Wagner|Nov 4, 2020

    A minimal garbage rate increase for local residents could result from landfill rates going up in Ephrata. The landfill in Ephrata, to where the garbage from the Delano Regional Transfer Station currently ships, hasn’t raised its rates in 12 years. In March of 2021, those rates could go up nearly 69 percent, from $28.31 per ton to $46.76 per ton, or $49.93 after tax. That would result in about $72,000 more in annual fees for the Delano station, as was discussed at an Oct. 12 Regional Board of Mayors meeting. To cover those fees, rates would rise...

  • Coulee Cops

    Nov 4, 2020

    Grand Coulee Police 10/22 - Police arrested a Weil Place woman on a warrant for failure to comply with a judge’s orders. She was compliant with the arrest and taken to Grant County Jail. 10/23 - Police relayed to a Batchelor Square woman that her ex-boyfriend doesn’t care what she does with his old belongings as he lives in Alabama now. 10/27 - A woman reported being approached by a woman behaving erratically near the Electric City Post Office. Police found that woman nearby, sweating profusely in 37-degree weather. She said she was hea...

  • Grades 3-6 will ease back to LR next month

    Jacob Wagner|Oct 28, 2020

    Elementary students will be at school while junior/senior high students keep on distance learning at home, a decision rendered in a three-hour school board meeting Monday. The Grand Coulee Dam School District Board of Directors voted 4-1 to have third- through sixth-grade students return to physical school two days each week in alternating groups, but that 7th- through 12th-grade students must still wait to return, possibly until the second semester starts Feb. 1, 2021. Kindergarten through...

  • Nespelem School looking at bringing students back to campus

    Jacob Wagner|Oct 28, 2020

    The Nespelem School District will hold a public Zoom meeting with parents of students next week to see how they think and feel about students returning to physical school. That meeting will be held on Nov. 4 at 5:30 p.m. at https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81107207311?pwd=Y0FoZlhrd3FtMTVnWkVPY1JOVFVWQT09 Principal and Superintendent Effie Dean told The Star on Thursday that kindergarten- through second-grade students would be the first to return, and that the next group of students would come three wee... Full story

  • Grand Coulee offers small-business grants

    Oct 28, 2020

    Grand Coulee business owners have until Nov. 20 to apply for grants of up to $3,000 in federal relief funds the city received. The city set aside $18,000 for the grants from the $41,799 total in CARES (Coronavirus Aid, Relief, Economic Security) Act funds the city is eligible for. Applications can be picked up at Grand Coulee City Hall by first calling 509-633-1150 or emailed to applicants who can call first or email city hall at clerkgc@gccitywa.org to receive an application. The grants will be disbursed on a first-come, first-served basis.... Full story

  • Local COVID rate goes down slightly while the state's goes up

    Oct 28, 2020

    The COVID-19 virus is still very much around, although in local counties the incidence rate is down slightly, while the state as a whole has seen a rise in the rate. Grant County Health District reported its 25th death from the disease on Tuesday, of a Quincy man in his 50s with underlying health conditions. They also published on Monday a graphic of an "event cluster" that ended up infecting 39 people, including the "index" first case of someone who attended a public gathering. It spread from...

  • Council: property owner must remove signs

    Jacob Wagner|Oct 28, 2020
    1

    The Grand Coulee City Council voted last week against allowing a local man to keep several small billboards on his property on Main Street. Sam Hsieh owns "Coulee Plaza," a lot with grass and picnic tables overlooking the end of Main Street where he has hosted events ranging from Cars & Coffee to Koulee Kids Fest activities and more, and where he hopes to host live music, wine tastings, and more in the future. Helping pay for the maintenance of the lot is advertising money that comes from signs...

  • Halloween fire safety tips

    Oct 28, 2020

    Scarecrows, jack-o-lanterns, paper ghosts, and dried cornstalks all show that it’s time for Halloween once again in Washington. Unfortunately, Halloween decorations can become truly scary if they catch fire. By planning ahead, you can help make this Halloween a fire-safe one. · Use battery-operated candles, flashlights, or glow-sticks in jack-o-lanterns. They are safer than real candles and can prevent kids’ costumes from catching on fire. · If you use real candles, place lit jack-o-lanterns out of the path of trick-or-treaters and away from... Full story

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