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  • Pet Peeves and Okeydokes: Nov. 26, 2020

    Nov 26, 2020

    Okeydokes: How nice the lights are around the schools....

  • Lessons of a LaCrosse farmer

    Tedd Nealey|Nov 26, 2020

    Since I am now in the process of retiring after more than 40 years of farming, I thought I would pass along some of the things I have learned. I remember as a kid there were ditches in the field from erosion that required filling before crossing with a wheat truck. I remember farming with plows and hoeing weeds in the summer fallow by hand. When I later took over the farm, I believed in chisel plowing deep to break the “plow pan.” Then, I did the strip farming when it was recommended to prevent erosion. I soon learned that this did little to...

  • Military diversity something to be thankful for

    Don C. Brunell|Nov 26, 2020

    Diversity in the ranks has been the lifeline of our military, but it wasn’t always that way. We ought to be thankful for all of the men and women from a variety of ethnic backgrounds who put their lives in harm’s way to protect our freedoms and way of life. When my father was inducted into the U.S. Army during World War II, our military was segregated. That lasted until 1948 when President Harry Truman signed Executive Order 9981. Truman recognized integration was key to winning the war in Eur...

  • Have a safe Thanksgiving

    Nov 26, 2020

  • All-mail election needs immediacy

    Our View, Free Press Publishing Editorial Board|Nov 19, 2020

    Over the last few months, all eyes have been on Washington’s 16-year-old vote-by-mail system. National media has been holding it up as an example of what should become the norm nationwide. But should it? Yes, we have fastidious local election employees resolving problems. And yes, we have years of experience making vote-by-mail work. But, after watching what’s happening outside our state, it’s clear the nation isn’t ready for all-mail elections, whether it’s our system or another state’s. Voting by mail appears to erode confidence in the elec...

  • Shopping Small

    Jeremy Field, U.S. Small Business Administration Pacific Northwest Region|Nov 19, 2020

    It’s no secret that the Coronavirus pandemic has made a huge impact on how Washington retailers and restaurants operate. With additional restrictions implemented at the start of the holiday season as cases surge, it’s another challenge for local small businesses. But that’s where we as a community can step in. Small retailers and restaurants are relying on us to send a message with our dollars that says, “We’ve got your back.” And in 2020, this support is needed more than ever. Approximately 62% of small businesses have reported they need t...

  • Coronavirus spurring air cargo growth

    Don C. Brunell|Nov 19, 2020

    It’s no secret that airlines and airplane manufacturers have been clobbered by the coronavirus pandemic. Particularly hard hit are international flights traditionally flown by jumbo jets. Borders are closed and people aren’t flying. There is a small silver-lining. Just as restaurants started take-out service to survive, airlines are filling planes with freight. U.S. airlines are reeling from the pandemic and have lost more than $20 billion combined in the last two quarters. Even with the surge i...

  • Derailment

    Nov 19, 2020

  • High minimum wage brings low benefit

    Mark Harmsworth, Director of the Small Business Center for the Washington Policy Center|Nov 12, 2020

    Washington has one of the highest minimum wage levels in the U.S. For workers who have a job this sounds like a great deal, but as with all things the government mandates, there are some serious, negative consequences, primarily on young and entry level workers who are forced into joblessness. Nowhere is the harm imposed by a high minimum wage demonstrated more clearly than in Seattle, where the city council has aggressively increased the minimum wage over the last few years. The rash of...

  • Military Diversity's Lifeline

    Don C. Brunell|Nov 12, 2020

    Diversity in the ranks has been the lifeline of our all-volunteer military, but it wasn’t always that way. As we celebrate Veterans Day, we ought to be thankful for all of the men and women from a variety of ethnic backgrounds who put their lives in harm’s way to protect our freedoms and make safe our way of life. When my father was inducted into the U.S. Army during World War II, our military was segregated. That lasted until 1948 when President Harry Truman signed Executive Order 9981. Truman...

  • Why wait 'two-days' when you can have an instant delivery?

    Bill Stevenson, Whitman County Gazette|Nov 12, 2020

    I have learned to shop on Amazon after spending years living in very small rural communities like Omak and Oroville. It beat driving two hours to find what you needed. Not groceries, hardware or general things for home, but the online giant could find me obscure tools I needed to work on my cars and trucks, professional camera supplies, and the latest computer thingy. Amazon Prime seemed like a great deal to receive television shows and movies, and have all my packages sent by “free two-day shipping.” Not paying for shipping offset the state sa...

  • Pet Peeves and Okeydokes: November 12, 2020

    Nov 12, 2020

    Pet Peeves Whitman County Elections office taking an hour and a half longer than every other county in the state to post election results. Radio stations that are already playing Christmas music. Okeydokes People who put up Thanksgiving decorations....

  • Foxhole

    Nov 12, 2020

  • Deep breath - There is a silver lining

    Bill Stevenson, Whitman County Gazette|Nov 5, 2020

    Newspapers ask people to vote in every election. This time we didn’t have to and it’s looking like a silver lining in a contemptuous aggressive ugly political era. Election day has come and gone. The political ads are finished. No more campaign rallies or tour buses. Now we wait for all of the votes to be counted, and most likely counted again. Now, we can take a deep breath or two before the next phase. We can relax a little and remember the “enemy” is our neighbors, coworkers, friends and family. We can remember and reflect on how America has...

  • Immigrant Relief Fund problem is lack of solutions

    Pam Lewison, Initiative on Agriculture for the Washington Policy Center|Nov 5, 2020

    SEATTLE - Undocumented workers are the hidden people in every state, including Washington. Most work hard, pay taxes, and are engaged with their communities. Our state, however, has decided to ignore its own hypocrisy by working toward making legal means of employment through the H-2A program more expensive and creating a $40 million fund for undocumented workers instead. State officials announced today the Immigrant Relief Fund is now accepting applications from “Washington residents who are un...

  • Mountains are broken by drips

    Jana Mathia, Whitman County Gazette|Nov 5, 2020

    I do not know the names of the couple that have the creamy-yellow barn. I pass it every time I come to work and every time I go home. I don’t know their names, but I do know they keep their yard well groomed, he wears a pale straw cowboy hat and they have dogs. I don’t know them, but if they are outside, I wave. They started it. At first I thought it was a fluke, that my vehicle looked like one they knew. No. It doesn’t matter what vehicle I drove, whenever I go by, they wave. Then it occurred to me; they are just friendly people. They wave as...

  • Pet Peeves & Okeydokes: November 5, 2020

    Nov 5, 2020

    Okeydokes: SEWEDA helping small businesses in town stay afloat during Covid-19 Coffee stand patrons who leave enough room for others to get by City and locals’ trick-or-treating efforts...

  • If only...

    Nov 5, 2020

  • Defunding police departments is a bad idea

    Don C. Brunell, Gazette Correspondent|Oct 29, 2020

    A couple of years ago, a major regional medical clinic leader announced his support for a local tax hike to beef up the city’s police force and provide cops with better training and capabilities. His rational was two-fold: the Clinic needed police to augment its security and good public safety attracted the best staff. Any realtor will tell you people want good schools and safe neighborhoods. They want police who can respond quickly to emergency calls and investigate crimes. Today, the p...

  • Dislikes Washington Policy Center editorial

    Oct 29, 2020

    As a Whitman County resident and subscriber to the Whitman Gazette I am dismayed that you would publish (so prominently) an editorial by Liv Finne of the Washington Policy Center, “Inslee funding unnecessary union jobs”, Sept. 10. Liv Finne has probably never seen a Palouse wheat field nor does she have any perspective on rural public schools and the families they serve. Most, if not all Whitman County schools are holding on site classes and the labor force is not unionized. Furthermore, the local public school is the only choice for par...

  • COVID cure comedy

    Oct 29, 2020

    There’s buzz out recently about mouthwash killing COVID after a published study by Penn State amazingly found that it had 99% efficacy, just like it says on the bottle. Mouthwash usually contains some form of peroxide; the old school stuff had alcohol. So, I started thinking. How else can we achieve those results without the rigors of nightly oral hygiene? Consumption! Now, I do not advocate knocking back shots of peroxide unless you want to see your lunch a second time, but alcohol comes in many flavors pleasing to the pallet, and with a l...

  • Voters should reject R-90, support Espinoza

    Free Press editorial board|Oct 29, 2020

    Olympia is clearly out of touch with Eastern Washington, and you won’t have to look any further than your ballot to figure that out. In addition to the East versus West gubernatorial battle, you’ll find Referendum 90, pitting many rural parents against a few city-based lawmakers and state Superintendent of Public Instruction Chris Reykdal over the measure. Referendum 90 targets Senate Bill 5395, a so-called “comprehensive” and “inclusive” sexual education curriculum being mandated by those in Olympia. For the last few years, a version of...

  • Pet Peeves and Okeydokey

    Oct 29, 2020

    Okeydokes: Great customer service at the Colfax Post Office Pet Peeves: Icy bridges Snow before Halloween...

  • Night of the living license tabs

    Oct 29, 2020

  • RVs in the work-from-home economy

    Don C. Brunell|Oct 22, 2020

    People have changed their travel preferences to minimize their COVID-19 exposure. Travel trailers and motorhomes are iconic symbols of campgrounds in our “great outdoors.” Meanwhile, outdoor recreation increased once the initial lockdowns were lifted. Before the pandemic came ashore in the U.S., the number of active camping households was increasing. It reached 1.4 million in 2018. In effect, outdoor recreation came before “social distancing” had a name. As travelers try to keep their separation...

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