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(67) stories found containing '02-2026'


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  • Holdout Democrats leave WA House support for income tax in doubt

    Jerry Cornfield, Washington State Standard|Mar 4, 2026

    Washington State Standard March 4, 2026 The votes weren't there yet late Wednesday for Democrats' income tax bill in the Washington state House. Democratic members are withholding support for the proposed income tax on millionaires, saying they want to see if a new version of the controversial legislation, possibly due out Thursday, will satisfy their concerns. Holdouts reportedly number around a dozen and include lawmakers who've publicly opposed the bill and ones who cast themselves as... Full story

  • Workers worry pinching hours in budget cut may hurt school and community

    Scott Hunter|Feb 25, 2026

    A proposed reduction in high school secretary hours has become a flash point in the Grand Coulee Dam School District’s broader struggle to close a mounting budget gap, with staff warning of strained student support and administrators describing a years-long squeeze of rising costs and falling enrollment. High school secretary Tammy Norris told the school board that trimming one secretary position from 9 to 7.5 hours a day is more than a simple line-item cut. “In a district our size, there is no extra, there is no cushion,” Norris said during th...

  • "Rockstar" geologist will pop up at Dry Falls this Sunday

    Scott Hunter editor and publisher|Feb 25, 2026

    The geologist Nick Zentner will be at Dry Falls State Park Visitor Center this coming Sunday, March 1 at 1 p.m. in one of his "pop up" events, where the popular prof just shows up to talk with the geologically curious. If you're me, that sounds like a perfect Sunday afternoon. (If you're new here, this is one of the most interesting geological areas on the planet.) Zentner, the "Science Outreach and Education Coordinator" at Central Washington University, shares his knowledge in entertaining... Full story

  • Squatters

    Feb 25, 2026

    A pair of bald eagles on Saturday appear to be considering moving into a new home in west Coulee Dam. It's not clear what the osprey couple that have occupied the nest for many years might have to say about it when they make their annual return in a few weeks. The osprey pole was erected by the contractors that put up the large high voltage towers that convey the powerlines across the river to Grand Coulee Dam. The nest was originally on a smaller power tower that was replaced by Wilson...

  • Grand Coulee pauses rollout of storefront maintenance ordinance

    Scott Hunter|Feb 25, 2026

    Grand Coulee’s recently adopted Ordinance 1105 is headed back to committee after city officials concluded they need clearer direction on how to enforce it and how quickly property owners must comply. The council briefly revisited the ordinance near the end of its Feb. 17 meeting, focusing not on whether to keep it, but how to implement it. ClerkTreasurer Lorna Pearce told council members that as staff prepared notification letters to business and property owners, several unanswered questions emerged. Chief among them: Who is the designated o...

  • Senate unveils $1.5 billion state transportation budget proposal

    Cassie Diamond|Feb 25, 2026

    OLYMPIA – Sens. Marko Liias, D-Edmonds, and Curtis King, R-Yakima, rolled out their bipartisan supplemental transportation budget Feb. 23, emphasizing its focus on preservation and maintenance, job creation and safety. Liias, the chair of the Senate Transportation Committee, said the supplemental budget prioritizes the preservation and maintenance of the state's highways, bridges and ferries, as well as responding to infrastructure damages caused by the December 2025 flood. The proposal introduc...

  • Re: "Reader offers 'more balance' (Letters from Our Readers 2/11/26)

    Carl Russell|Feb 25, 2026

    Thank you, Anna Kirk, for your support, and your letter was right on. I received several thanks for the letter and even a phone call from Wilbur in agreement for the letter to the editor. Jamie Holman If you cannot see what the Democrats are doing in Congress and Senate you are very naive about what is going on with the criminal illegals. Some city Democrat mayors are cooperating with Ice & border patrol with no problem. But most of the Democrat Cities are not cooperating like Minnesota and calling the ICE officers Gestapo, Hitler Brown shirts...

  • Soft landing in Taipei

    Roger S. Lucas|Feb 25, 2026

    I chose a week’s stopover in Taiwan because I had special arrangements set up with the government there. My congressman at the time was Lloyd Meeds. He had some influence there because his wife was Chinese and knew a lot of government officials. I was set up in a very Chinese hotel with a car and driver at my disposal. I didn’t know at the time that I would land there in the midst of the Chinese New Year celebration. It was The Year of the Horse and the capital was jammed with traffic. It apparently is the custom to pay your debts with “Fu...

  • This Week in History

    Feb 25, 2026

    February 26, 1919. The United States Congress passed an Act establishing the Grand Canyon National Park in the State of Arizona. The park is composed of over one million acres of Northwestern Arizona, including the spectacular are of the 277-mile canyon cut by the Colorado River. The region is still home to Native peoples. The Hopi, Navajo, Zuni, Paiute, Havasupai and Hualapai. Prior to the middle of the 19th Century, little was known about the geography of the Grand Canyon. Spanish explorations were in the general region. Vasques de Coronado...

  • Hatred out in the open, from the bottom to top of society

    Christine Flowers|Feb 25, 2026

    There’s a lot of hatred in the world today. For a while, starting from when I was a young girl, it was classless to openly display your bigotry. People would whisper among themselves about “the others,” and epithets were spoken at cocktail parties and behind closed office doors, but people were savvy enough not to come to work wearing white sheets. Lately, however, that has changed. I’ve already talked about the damage being done to our Jewish communities by the blatant antisemitism displayed by anti-Zionists of all stripes, including other J...

  • Meetings

    Feb 25, 2026

    Final Quilt Tying The Ladies of Zion and Friends are tying quilts thru February every Wednesday 9am to 1pm. For those wanting to help and learn how to tie a quilt, come and help. The finished quilts go to The Crisis Center and World Relief. Usually the group will tie 60 some quilts with another 20 done at home. It’s a good way to learn somthing new and a good thing helping some one in need. A few quilts will stay at the church for emegency. For information please call 509-633-0648 Area AA Meetings In Electric City, the New Hope group now h...

  • Coulee Cops

    Feb 25, 2026

    Grand Coulee Police 2/10 - 2/17 - Reports filed without additional information related to: a traffic accident on Grand Coulee Avenue; disorderly conduct on Dill Street; a family fight on F Street; a suspicious person on SR-155 near milepost 29; disorderly conduct at Four Corners; and a suspicious person on the Bridgeport Highway. 2/14 - Police spoke to a woman out of a relationship whose ex had taken the keys to a car registered to both of them. The officer said he would try to locate the man and ask for the key back, since he had two other...

  • NCW Libraries hosts Free Virtual Humanities Washington Program highlighting Early African American Artists 

    Feb 25, 2026

    NCW Libraries invites the public to explore the powerful and often overlooked stories of early African American artists and performers in a free virtual Humanities Washinton program. The Vanguard Generation: African Artists 1880-1918 will take place on Thursday, February 26 at 6:00pm through Zoom. This online presentation examines the first generation of African American artists whose work helped shape American popular culture in the decades following the Civil War and before World War I. Many of the artists featured in this program were the...

  • Raider wrestlers take fifth at state Mat Classic

    Feb 25, 2026

    The Lake Roosevelt Raiders wrapped up what Coach Casey Brewster called an "incredible showing" at the WIAA Mat Classic in the Boys 1B/2B division, finishing the weekend "with grit, pride, and 141 total team points on the biggest stage in Washington high school wrestling." As a team, they took fifth place in the state. "This group battled through one of the toughest state tournaments in the country and proved once again that Raider Wrestling belongs among the elite," Brewster said. Among them...

  • Five Lady Raiders compete at state wrestling

    Feb 25, 2026

    Five Lady Raiders ended their season at the Tacoma Dome in the 2026 WIAA State Wrestling Mat Classic Feb. 19-Feb. 21, scoring 59 points as a team and placing 20th out of 73 teams. Senior Sienna Atchison finished the season with a 33–16 record and placed fourth at the state tournament. After an early loss, she battled back with four consecutive wins before falling in the medal round. She contributed 20 team points. Senior AJ Cannon finished her season with a 22–19 record and was just one win awa...

  • Raider girls take third in District 5

    Scott Hunter|Feb 25, 2026

    The Lady Raiders will head to the first round of state Saturday, after vanquishing Mabton in the game for third or fourth in District 5 last weekend. The Vikings (13-11) are the top team in the Eastern Washington Athletic Conference East, but the Lady Raiders (14-10) took them down in East Wenatchee last Saturday, 61-37. Despite that score, Lake Roosevelt took some time catching up after Mabton's early five-point lead and did not pull decisively ahead until late third quarter. which ended for...

  • WIAA names LR guard Kenzie Brown 2B Athlete of the Week

    Feb 25, 2026

    Kenzie Brown was named last week as an Athlete of the Week by the WIAA. "Junior captain Kenzie Brown has stepped up in a major way during the postseason, leading Lake Roosevelt both on and off the court. A dynamic shooting guard, Brown leads her team in assists and steals while also serving as the top scorer, tallying 91 points in postseason play alone. Her two-way impact and steady leadership have guided a young Raiders squad through key games, and she consistently displays outstanding...

  • City backs more major wastewater upgrades

    Scott Hunter|Feb 18, 2026

    If you’ve ever dealt with a construction project, you may realize the near certainty of finding more problems than you planned for. Now apply that concept to an industrial plant built decades ago. The Grand Coulee City Council on Feb. 17 approved a significant electrical upgrade at the city’s wastewater treatment plant and advanced several related engineering agreements with Gray & Osborne, Inc., moves aimed at improving safety, reliability, and longterm compliance at the regional facility. The most expensive of the actions was a roughly $24...

  • Elmer City softens sewer hike from Coulee Dam suit

    Scott Hunter|Feb 18, 2026

    Facing a steep jump in sewer treatment costs, the Elmer City Council voted last week to shift its utility rates, raising sewer charges while cutting water rates in an effort to limit the impact on residents. During a public hearing on Ordinance 393, ClerkTreasurer Kelly Ross laid out the numbers now confronting the town. Under an injunction stemming from a legal dispute with Coulee Dam, Elmer City is being billed $98.98 per household per month for sewer treatment and plant loan repayment alone. That does not include the town’s own sewer c...

  • Scout presents flag retirement box to city

    Scott Hunter|Feb 18, 2026

    If you have an old American Flag that's tattered and torn, official protocol calls for a proper disposal. That involves retiring the nation's symbol with respect, not a trash bag. That's where Addison "AJ" Cannon comes in. Cannon, almost 18, is working on getting her Eagle Scout rank, which involves an ambitious project to supply the local area with flag retirement boxes for used flags. She has been working with American Legion Post 157, which will have a key to the boxes. She presented one...

  • Washington state Senate approves tax on personal income over $1M

    Jerry Cornfield, Washington State Standard|Feb 18, 2026

    Washington state moved one step closer Monday to creating a personal income tax two years after the Legislature said it wouldn't. Majority Democrats in the Senate advanced legislation on a 27-22 vote to tax households earning more than a million dollars. Passage of the bill followed a three-and-a-half hour debate on whether this will make for a fairer tax code or harm the economy and incite an exodus of Washington's wealthy residents. House Speaker Laurie Jinkins, D-Tacoma, who watched the vote...

  • Enjoying Star

    Darlene Price|Feb 18, 2026

    We continue to enjoy The Star every week. Please continue our subscription for another year. Your editorials have been “spot on”! So glad to see small town folks marching for democracy! We continue to march and speak up in the Tri-Cities. Darlene Price...

  • One at a time

    Gloria Carroll|Feb 18, 2026

    While reading Letters to the Editor in The Star, I am reminded that change often comes one funeral at a time. Some can’t come too quickly. Gloria Carroll Coulee Dam...

  • Re: "On one, on all"

    Nancy Carlson|Feb 18, 2026

    I have been very troubled with the presentation of the picture chosen to be put on the front page of The Star (Feb. 11). I have not always agreed with the sentiments expressed on the protestors’ signs, but that’s OK. However, the sign that reads, Guardians Of Pedophiles (GOP), is shameful and hypocritical. It is also ironic that the sign next to it states, “No Hate.” Are we supposed to forget that the Democratic Party under the Biden Administration allowed hundreds of thousands of unvetted immigrants into our country and even gave them plum pr...

  • This Week in History

    Feb 18, 2026

    February 21, 1972, President Richard Nixon arrived in China for an eight-day official visit. He was the first U.S. president to visit the People’s Republic of China following its founding by the Communists in October 1949. Prior to 1949, China was called The Republic of China, and had been established in 1912, following the Xinhai Revolution that ended over 2,000 years of imperial rule. The official visit with Premier Zhou Enlia resulted with a positive note. The Shanghai Communique was reached. The communique was a pledge to set aside d...

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