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  • Spokane firm to prune town trees

    Roger S Lucas|Mar 19, 2014

    A Spokane firm, Senske Lawn & Tree Care, submitted the winning bid to trim trees for the town of Coulee Dam. The firm’s bid of $75,618, was accepted by the town council at its meeting Wednesday night. The town had set aside $75,000 in this year’s budget for the tree trimming project. Senske’s bid was for 400 hours of service at $175.53 per hour. Public works director Barry Peacock told the council that he didn’t think it would take 400 hours to do the work and that this would bring the cost within the budgeted amount. The contract covers... Full story

  • New rules allow for eighth graders in some high school sports

    Roger S Lucas|Mar 19, 2014

    Eighth-graders, under certain conditions, will be able to take part in some high school sports, according to a new policy approved by the school board, March 12. If a team sport is not offered at the eighth-grade level, students will be allowed to try out and participate with high school athletes if high school turnouts in baseball or softball do not exceed 25 athletes. Eighth graders can also try out and participate in basketball if high school turnouts do not exceed nine students and the same for volleyball if high school turnouts do not... Full story

  • Coulee Dam spring cleanup schedule released

    Roger S Lucas|Mar 19, 2014

    The town of Coulee Dam has released its spring cleanup schedule slated for April 1-5. From April 1-4, the town crews will pick up limbs only on the following schedule: • Tuesday, April 1, Mason City addition - Aspen, Birch, Cedar, Fir, Holly, Pine, Spruce, Civic Way and the west side of Central Drive from Civic Way south; • Wednesday, April 2, Airport Addition - Tilmus, Camus, River Drive, 11th and 12th Streets, Crest Drive from Central to River Drive and Central Drive from Civic Way south and north to Crest; • Thursday, April 3, Hilltop Addit... Full story

  • Mayor, officer discuss critical report again

    Roger S Lucas|Mar 12, 2014

    Grand Coulee Mayor Chris Christopherson and police officer Sean Cook had another encounter, this time a brief one, at the council meeting March 4. Cook, during the visitor input time, explained that he was appearing as a private citizen and asked the mayor what was happening on a number of public records requests he had made. He also asked the mayor if he knew who had given a copy of the “Key report” to The Star newspaper. Christopherson acknowledged that he had met with a reporter from The Star newspaper, but had not given him a copy of the... Full story

  • Monument to dam dead may be pursued

    Roger S Lucas|Mar 12, 2014

    A total of 81 workers were killed during construction of Grand Coulee Dam, and there isn't a single marker to commemorate their deaths. That could change if a current effort to develop interest in a commemorative monument is successful. Researcher Susan Dechant was here Tuesday to meet with Coulee Dam Mayor Greg Wilder, and others, to see if there was interest in pursuing a monument. Dechant has been invited back to present the story to council members at their April 23 meeting, when she will... Full story

  • Nez Perce hope to rebuild long house by 2015

    Roger S Lucas|Mar 12, 2014

    Construction of the new Nez Perce Tribe Long House that was destroyed by fire the day after Christmas, 2012, could begin as early as late summer, a spokesman said Tuesday. Albert Andrews Redstar said that a group has been working with the Long House architect and the final drawings could be done by mid-June. The Nez Perce are looking at a $3.2 million price tag on the near 6,000 square-foot building. Shortly after fire destroyed the former structure, it was revealed that the building had been insured for $350,000. Redstar said that the Nez... Full story

  • G.C. commission looking into zoning issues

    Roger S Lucas|Mar 12, 2014

    Grand Coulee’s zoning commission is trying to unlock some restrictions in an effort to work with groups that have come before the council asking for help. Last April, two women, Andrea Marconi and Angela Feeley, went before the council with an interest in putting in a daycare center on the city’s Main Street, only to run into zoning issues. Later last year a senior citizen representative, Larry Curtis, came before the council to ask if the seniors could put in a bus garage to house two transit buses. It was his third appearance before the cou... Full story

  • Report: Lake Roosevelt visitors spent $71 million in 2012 visits

    Roger S Lucas|Mar 5, 2014

    A recent study by the National Park Service shows how a strong visitor base pumps money into local economies. A report on the 2012 season showed that the Lake Roosevelt National Recreational Area had nearly 1.8 million visits in 2012. That resulted in more than $71 million being spent in nearby communities, the report stated. The LRNRA stretches from Grand Coulee Dam almost to the Canadian line, a 151-mile stretch that follows the Columbia River. That spending in communities within 60 miles of t... Full story

  • Comments again heat up commission meeting

    Roger S Lucas|Mar 5, 2014

    Well laid plans sometime just don’t work out. That was the scene at Monday’s Grand Coulee Civil Service meeting at city hall. Commissioners discussed what went wrong at their last meeting when police officer/private citizen Sean Cook, got into it with commission Chair Alan Cain. Commissioners decided at the front of Monday’s meeting to allow persons wishing to address the commission three minutes, with an extension at the request of a commissioner. They also decided that commissioners wouldn’t respond to comments made from the floor. Barely had... Full story

  • Project coming for port district

    Roger S Lucas|Mar 5, 2014

    Port District 7 officials, their engineering firm, USKH of Spokane, and contractor Blackrock Construction, of Moses Lake, plan a pre-construction meeting on a building to house a new dump truck with snow blade sometime next week. The building and truck will cost more than $300,000. Commissioners walked through the construction plan at their last meeting and reviewed funding for the combined project. The truck and building have been on the port district burner for about a year and the need for the truck had reached the critical stage. An... Full story

  • Permit to rebuild long house passes

    Roger S Lucas|Mar 5, 2014

    The Nez Perce Long House destroyed by fire the day after Christmas, 2012, will soon be rebuilt. An application for a land use and development permit was passed after a public hearing on the matter Feb. 27. Albert Andrews Redstar, representing the Chief Joseph Long House Redevelopment, proposed replacing the former 70-by-80-foot building with one nearly twice that size, an 11,000-square-foot building. The new building will be located in the same general area as the old building, about a mile south of Nespelem. The public hearing was held at the... Full story

  • Omak casino construction to start this spring

    Roger S Lucas|Mar 5, 2014

    The Colville Tribes new Omak Casino could open as early as May or June in 2015, according to Colville Tribal Federal Corporation’s chief executive, Joe Pakootas. Pakootas said final planning could occur this week and it was hoped that the project could get underway in April or early May. Pakootas said that the casino would take about 12 months to complete. The casino will be located on a 600-acre site between the Tribes’ convenience store/gas outlet and Omak. Pakootas said the casino would take up about 35 acres of the 600-acre site. The pro... Full story

  • New school taking shape

    Roger S Lucas|Feb 26, 2014

    The new K-12 school facility in Coulee Dam is beginning to show its colors. A walk of the place last Wednesday revealed painted classrooms, some finish work on the final red metal roof and the beginning of rock work on the outside of the elementary wing. School patrons and taxpayers in general may be in for a pleasant experience and surprise. The new school is huge. Many of the classrooms are large with every type of teaching technology device available. The walk through was in concert with... Full story

  • Number of students now trends upward

    Roger S Lucas|Feb 26, 2014

    At one point, the Grand Coulee Dam School District was worried about a declining student population; now it is worried that it could end up with too many students. The issue came up Monday night at the school board meeting with Superintendent Dennis Carlson telling the board that the new school facility could be maxed out when it opens next fall. He asked the question: “Are we going to have a lot of students come here because we have a new school?” When plans were made for the new school, the student population trend line had followed a dow... Full story

  • School board gives green light for gay support group

    Roger S Lucas|Feb 26, 2014

    The first step in developing a Gay/Straight Alliance Club at Lake Roosevelt High School was approved by the Grand Coulee Dam School District board of directors Monday night. The board has asked the group to return in March with a set of bylaws, a purpose statement and financial cost to the district. Associated Student Body President Brandin Smith and LRHS counselor Andrea Sperberg presented the idea to the board. Its members gave a unanimous vote for the idea with a request for more information. The club would provide a place where gay... Full story

  • New lasers should shine in May

    Roger S Lucas|Feb 26, 2014

    The all new laser light show is still on schedule for a late May showing this year. Bureau of Reclamation Public Affairs Officer Lynne Brougher said this week that LumaLaser, the firm designing the show, has made revisions to the story line, graphics and text, and is progressing through the project, the development of which is “well along.” LumaLaser, a Eugene, Oregon firm, landed the $1.6 million contract and has been working with a stakeholder group here as the work on the project continues. The project was supposed to be off and running las... Full story

  • District board mulls realigned administration

    Roger S Lucas|Feb 26, 2014

    The school board Monday night agreed to advertise for one administrative post and delay a decision on a second so it could discuss it more during its March 12 work session. The district begins advertising for a 7th-through-12th-grade principal this week, one that would take charge of the new grade lineup for the new school. Delayed was a decision on hiring a full-time dean of students, activities director and associated student body advisor, all rolled into one position. Brandon Byers is currently principal of Lake Roosevelt High School and is... Full story

  • Mayor, officer spar over report in news

    Roger S Lucas|Feb 19, 2014

    Grand Coulee Mayor Chris Christopherson got another grilling from police officer Sean Cook Tuesday night after information in the city’s “Key report” was published in The Star newspaper, Feb. 12. Cook had confronted the mayor at the city’s previous council meeting, Feb. 4, concerning a number of concerns he had raised earlier and the lack of responses he had received. Tuesday night Cook was told he had five minutes to express his views. When he was told his time was up, he protested that the allotted time had not expired. Christopherson gave hi... Full story

  • Moose Lodge 504 and Bob Valen honored for year

    Roger S Lucas and Scott Hunter|Feb 19, 2014

    The chamber of commerce named two of its own to awards last Thursday night as the "Achiever of the Year," and "Business of the Year." The awards are made by the vote of members of the Grand Coulee Dam Area Chamber of Commerce. Named "Achiever of the Year" was Bob Valen, the chamber's own vice president and a retired National Park Service employee. Valen served over 35 years with the NPS, and in retirement has been as busy as ever. He also now serves as chairman of the Coulee Area Park &... Full story

  • Town discussing trees

    Roger S Lucas|Feb 19, 2014

    Trees. That’s what dominated talk among town council members last Wednesday night. First, it was a move by the town’s public works department to call for bids on someone to clear branches that have grown too close to power lines. Public works director Barry Peacock said the town does this every four years. It prompted town councilmember Bob Poch to say, “The two places people plant trees is over sewer lines or under power lines.” The limb trimming advertisement for bids will go out soon. Then Mayor Gregory Wilder asked the council for authori... Full story

  • Firefighters schooled on legality of fires

    Roger S Lucas|Feb 19, 2014

    Electric City firefighters had a sensitivity training session last Wednesday night at the firehall. It all came about because of Fire Chief Mark Payne’s issue with illegal burning on two separate occasions recently. Mayor Jerry Sands made the announcement at a city council meeting Tuesday night and stated that firefighters were going to hear about what is a legal fire and an illegal fire. When asked if he was going to put a letter of reprimand in Chief Payne’s file, the mayor said “yes” but didn’t elaborate. Payne had been turned in for burni... Full story

  • City will expand pipeline for future

    Roger S Lucas|Feb 19, 2014

    With eyes on the future, the Electric City Council voted last week to move ahead with a 10-inch pipeline for the proposed Sunbanks Lake Resort water project. It will cost the city between $18,000 and $20,000 to expand the size of the pipeline from one that is 8 inches in diameter to a 10-inch pipe, but the move will put the city in a good position to deal with anticipated future housing expansion on the south side of Osborn Bay. The 10-inch line will go some 1,700 feet from the old vacated western store on highway 155 to the entrance to... Full story

  • Tribal burn bans imposed for air quality

    Roger S Lucas|Feb 19, 2014

    The Colville Confederated Tribes have issued seven burn bans from November, 2013, through January of this year, officials said this week. Currently, no burn bans are in effect on the Colville Reservation. The report issued by Kathy Moses, of the Mount Tollman Fire Center, stated that the tribes’ Air Quality Program and the federal Environmental Protection Agency closely monitor air quality on the reservation and in part of Okanogan County. When issued, tribal burn bans include part of Okanogan County. The tribes have sent out public notices t... Full story

  • Corridor kiosk site sought in Electric City

    Roger S Lucas|Feb 19, 2014

    Electric City could land one of a handful of kiosks being planned along the Coulee Corridor. The "corridor" covers the area between Othello and Omak and is recognized nationally for the many unusual landscape features along the route. Birdie Hensley, who has been active in the Coulee Corridor organization from its inception, appeared before the Electric City Council a week ago to ask if the city was interested in getting one of the informational kiosks. She explained to city officials that it... Full story

  • Report details major conflicts within city's government

    Roger S Lucas|Feb 12, 2014

    An investigative report issued by the city of Grand Coulee’s risk management firm details infighting between the chief of police and the mayor, charges and counter charges of nepotism and favoritism, micromanagement by the mayor and a breakdown in authority fueled by a lack of respect, personality conflicts, and an inability “to work together for the good of the city.” The Star obtained a copy of the year-old report after it was referenced in a city council meeting last week. At the Feb. 4 council meeting, Police Officer Sean Cook took issue... Full story

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