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  • New long-term care income tax begins in 2022

    Joe Schmick, 9th District Representative|Jul 22, 2021

    Washington citizens will soon see less money in their monthly paychecks unless they opt-out of mandatory long-term care insurance foisted upon them by Democrats in Olympia. No, this is not hyperbole. Not one House Republican voted for the legislation that passed in 2019 and goes into effect in January of 2022. Beginning Jan. 1, 2022, workers in Washington State will pay $0.58 per $100 of their earnings to fund the Long-Term Services and Supports Trust Program. Those who pay into the trust progra...

  • White House approval needed for free speech

    Bill Stevenson, Whitman County Gazette|Jul 22, 2021

    It’s shaping up to be the year for conspiracy fans. UFOs are confirmed by the U.S. military and now government censorship through social media platforms. “We are in regular touch with social media platforms … We’re flagging problematic posts for Facebook,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said on July 15 during a press conference. She was speaking alongside Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy about information provided about COVID, treatments, and vaccinations. Psaki outlined steps the White...

  • The Evergrateful State

    Jul 22, 2021

  • Pharmacists may be unable to fill prescriptions

    Shane Desselle, Washington, D.C. pharmacist|Jul 15, 2021

    As a pharmacist and pharmacy researcher, I watch cutting-edge medicines save and improve patients' lives every day. And I am the father of a daughter with Ulcerative Colitis (UC), which is an autoimmune condition that causes severe bowel problems, and potentially life-threatening bleeds. I've seen firsthand why it's important for patients to have access to a wide variety of treatments. UC often requires trial and error to find the right medication that works for the patient. I shudder to think...

  • Fighting critical race theory in our public schools

    Sen. Jim McCune, Republican from Graham|Jul 15, 2021

    Last month, South Kitsap School Board member John Berg introduced a resolution to prohibit classroom teaching of theories that promote racial hatred. For that he was called a nut. District officials said they won't be teaching critical race theory in the Kitsap schools. The teachers' union said the poor fellow must be watching too much Fox News. The Tacoma News Tribune made him out to be a conspiracy theorist, allowing its reporter to make the astonishing assertion that "no K-12 district in the...

  • Losses trivialized as Inslee spikes the COVID football

    Sen. Shelly Short, Republican Floor Leader|Jul 15, 2021

    Over the last 16 months, each one of us has suffered through endless chaos and uncertainty of COVID-19 and the seemingly endless monarchical restrictions affecting every facet of our lives. We've all borne witness personally in some way - sick and dying loved ones (not just from COVID), economic insecurity, long-term isolation from family, friends, church, and helping each other in time of need, loss of personal freedom, watching individuals and families struggle with job loss or the collapse...

  • Invasive species

    Jul 15, 2021

  • Religious and secular involvement

    Jul 8, 2021

    The controversy in the Southern Baptist Convention over systemic racism (critical race theory) points to the politicized nature of Christianity from the beginning. The earliest issue was whether or not to fellowship with heathens. By the time of the Reformation, the church had been on a 1,500-year quest to amass wealth and influence in the world through political means. When modern nations enforced separation of church and state, the church found continuing self-importance by asserting the idea that it alone can provide for the success of...

  • Temperatures are climate change

    Jul 8, 2021

    Something exceptional has happened these past few days. It is not the three days of record-breaking temperatures hitting our state. We’ve been warned by forecasters for days that this was likely to happen. It was not exceptional that temperatures over 100 degrees had everyone talking about how they felt and how they tried to cope. It was very natural to talk about fans, air conditioners, and water. What was exceptional, in my mind, was how almost no one I heard say the two words that the Whitman County Gazette had also not used in its lead s...

  • COUNTER-POINT: Concerns about mail-in ballots and voter fraud

    Stanley Pratt, Gazette Reader|Jul 8, 2021

    The opinion published in the June 3 issue of the Gazette, titled ”Dangerous Rhetoric,” is what she wrote about mail voting criticizing Nancy Churchill’s concerns that vote-by-mail leads to voter fraud shows Ms. Vaughn either does not recognize the issues with vote-by-mail or chooses to ignore them. The days of the secret ballot are gone with vote-by-mail. First, there is nothing to prevent the person who opens and counts the ballots from looking at the name on the mail on the envelope and then looking at their ballot. The larger loss of secre...

  • County follows the law about Ewan beavers, trees

    Art Swannak, Whitman County Commissioner|Jul 8, 2021

    I am writing in regards to your July 1, 2021, front page article titled "County, Conservation district at odds over Ewan flooding." I will first state the county is not in favor of flooding occurring at Ewan. Our public works and planning departments have attempted to work with Mr. Andrew Wolfe (manager of the Rock Lake Conservation District) and come to a reasonable compromise on the issue of tree removal in a wetland creek area. Mr. Wolfe is quoted as saying "The state statute ought to trump the county ordinance." However what is not...

  • Electricity should be for locals first

    Roger Harnack, Whitman County Publisher|Jul 8, 2021

    Why are there power shortages, rolling brownouts and blackouts in the Pacific Northwest? One regional utility alone – Avista – had brownouts that affected 15,307 ratepayers on June 28, then 6,793 the next day, and another 602 on June 30. Other utilities had brownouts too. I know we’ve had a day or two of record-setting high temperatures. But that’s not an excuse to shut down power to residents and businesses here in Eastern Washington. Columbia River basin dams generate roughly 44% of the electricity in the entire United States. Our dams pr...

  • Reopening

    Jul 8, 2021

  • Job requirements versus pay

    Jean Hall, Colfax|Jul 1, 2021

    What if you worked for a local company that requires you to have a commercial driver’s license (CDL) and hazmat endorsement on your driver’s license? Job requirements – handle all kinds of hazardous chemicals, do any mechanical that comes up, rebuild pumps and sprayers, run a sandblaster, do all the painting, keep paper records, know all the tractors, worked 5-15 years … and don’t make the same as a new employee at Zip’s....

  • Show true compassion to LGBTQ

    Lydia Fletcher, Tekoa|Jul 1, 2021

    As I’ve been listening to the discussions around gay pride month, the argument I’ve heard that troubles me the most is the notion that we need to celebrate the LGBTQ lifestyle as a way to show love and inclusion to those who practice that lifestyle. However, is it really showing love to these individuals to celebrate a lifestyle that causes harm to themselves? Statistics have shown that homosexuality significantly increases the risk of venereal disease. As one example, 69% of new HIV diagnoses in the U.S. in 2018 were “gay and bisexual men,” ac...

  • Be proud you're American

    Roger Harnack, Whitman County Gazette|Jul 1, 2021

    This Sunday, our nation celebrates Independence Day. And on this 245th birthday of our United States, it’s important to take time to remember why we mark July 4. Sure we celebrate the holiday with barbecues and fireworks, parades, and apple pie. But that’s not what it is about. Independence Day is about freedom from tyranny. It’s about being able to own property, speak your mind, worship how you want, gather together, be protected from government corruption and overreach and, when necessary, def...

  • Support peace for Palestine

    Jun 24, 2021

    Where did the mainstream media report the major atrocities taking place in Israel and occupied Gaza? Of course, we heard about the bombing and destruction of the building housing Associated Press and Al-Jazeera and the numbers killed, but we haven’t heard much about the “roof knocking,” the killing of Palestinian doctors, the destruction of the COVID testing lab in Gaza, the “squatting” of non-Arab Israelis in Arab-Israeli homes in Jerusalem, and other human rights violations. One heart-wrenching story reported that every night an entire Pa...

  • America's goose that lays the golden eggs

    Walter G. Copan, Center for Strategic and International Studies|Jun 24, 2021

    America's research and development institutions have long been the envy of our competitors, flourishing at the top of global rankings. But our state-of-the-art innovation capabilities – responsible for bringing COVID-19 vaccines and countless other breakthroughs to market – haven't flourished here by happenstance. They have been nurtured over decades of smart policies, and those policies are now at risk. Current misguided efforts are unwittingly pushing the very ecosystem that lays our gol...

  • 'Conspiracy Theories' turn out to be true

    Nancy Churchill, Dangerous Rhetoric|Jun 24, 2021

    Over the past year, there has been a methodical and systemic assault on free speech across all media platforms. It's considered a great sport to accuse anyone who disagrees with the "expert" media narrative of supporting "conspiracy theories" and wearing "tinfoil hats." Many on the left thought this mockery was very amusing. But last week, new scientific evidence was released on three important issues-hydroxychloroquine, Ivermectin, and the origin of the COVID virus. In a recent episode of "The...

  • Family tree farms key to cutting greenhouse gases

    Don C. Brunell, Business analyst|Jun 24, 2021

    As climate change concerns grow, researchers are turning to small tree farmers for help. Actually, they have been helping for nearly a century, but their efforts have largely gone unrecognized. For decades, the American tree farm program has emphasized sustainability and managing lands for water quality, wildlife, wood and recreation. Now, it is adding climate change. According to the American Forest Foundation, families and individuals collectively care for the largest portion of forests in the...

  • Health insurers raise alarm about 'public option'

    Janet Trautwein, National Association of Health Underwriters|Jun 17, 2021

    Congress is trying to chart a path forward on health reform. Several congressional Democrats just announced plans to draft a bill that would create a public health insurance option. That's bad news, given that a public option could destroy the private insurance market and deprive the majority of Americans of the employer-sponsored coverage they like. According to polling data, two-thirds of Americans with employer-sponsored coverage are satisfied with their current plan. Public option proponents...

  • Dr. Fauci's evolving science displayed in emails

    Nancy Churchill, Dangerous Rhetoric|Jun 17, 2021

    Thank goodness! America’s leading scientist, Dr. Fauci, let us know this week that science is always evolving. We often hear phrases like “the science is settled,” so it was nice to hear Dr. Fauci confirm that what we learned in science class really is true: science always evolves. You don’t know what you don’t know, so there’s always room in the scientific method to adjust for new data. This week, new data and Dr. Fauci’s recently released emails reveal we have now gathered a significant amount...

  • Honor the American father

    Roger Harnack, Gazette Publisher|Jun 17, 2021

    There’s a lot of talk about endangered species. But the most important endangered species in America may not be a plant or a wild animal. The most endangered species may be in your home or a friend’s home or next door. The endangered species I’m talking about is the American Dad. This coming Sunday is Father’s Day, the one day set aside each year to honor the American Dad. Honoring and thanking the fathers in your life should be your highest priority this weekend. Fathers typically don’t a...

  • Hiring

    Jun 10, 2021

  • State liquor control board wants more power

    Nancy Churchill, Dangerous Rhetoric|Jun 10, 2021

    Does your favorite restaurant or bar have a liquor license? If it serves alcoholic drinks, it does. A good restaurant is often the heart of a small community, bringing families and friends together for food and fellowship. That’s true in our community, and it’s true in communities all across Washington. Do you wonder why your favorite eatery went along with the governor’s emergency orders and shutdowns? Why it complied with policies that were clearly destroying their business, hurting employees, and isolating vulnerable community membe...

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