Category Archives: News

Whitefish-Fernie resolution would call for coal summit

From the Thursday, October 11, 2007 online edition of the Whitefish Pilot . . .

The Whitefish City Council learned Oct. 1 about the idea of a joint resolution between Whitefish and Fernie, British Columbia, urging Gov. Brian Schweitzer and B.C. Premier Gordon Campbell to meet and discuss “transboundary issues” — that is, potential impacts to the Flathead River by coal-mining upstream in Canada.

Mayor Cris Coughlin told the council she received a copy of the resolution from Will Hammerquist, a program manager for the National Parks Conservation Association.

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Glacier losing pristine nature, study says

This article appeared in the Monday, October 8, 2007 online edition of the Missoulian. A public meeting to present the study information mentioned here will be held at 7 p.m. October 9 in rooms 144 A and B of the Arts and Technology Building at Flathead Valley Community College.

High in the mountain wilderness of Glacier National Park, far from the modern world’s smokestacks and industries, pristine has officially been downgraded.

Chemicals and contaminants have tainted the park’s most remote corners, with some backcountry fish so toxic they could prove dangerous to the wildlife that eats them.

Such are the stunning results of a three-year field study exploring how airborne pollutants poison national parks by filtering down out of the atmosphere.

On Tuesday in Kalispell, Dixon Landers will share his findings in a presentation titled

U.S., Canada to discuss border mine

Posted on Wednesday, October 3, 2007 to the MSNBC news site . . .

U.S. and Canadian officials plan to meet this month in Paris to discuss how an international park on their border could be protected from a proposed coal mine nearby.

The Waterton-Glacier International Peace Park was designated by the United Nations as a World Heritage Site in 1995. The mine would be north of Montana’s Glacier National Park, which abuts Waterton Lakes National Park in Alberta, where the province meets British Columbia. The two parks make up the international park.

“Proposed energy development north of Glacier has the potential to be a big problem,” said U.S. Rep. Denny Rehberg, R-Mont., who said the U.S. Interior Department told him arrangements will be worked out this week for the meeting during the World Heritage Convention on Oct. 24-25.

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Keeping the Big Sky Clear

From the Wednesday, October 3, 2007 online edition of the Flathead Beacon . . .

Everyone from high school students to community groups are getting involved in air quality study in the Flathead Valley, as testing for one University of Montana [study] ends and another begins.

Tony Ward, a UM research assistant professor, made a dual-purpose trip last week, introducing Whitefish High School chemistry students to an air quality sampling program and collecting months of samples from the North Fork Road Coalition for Health and Safety.

Senators Push for Glacier Designation to Stop Mining

From the Wednesday, September 26, 2007 online edition of the Flathead Beacon . . .

U.S. Sens. Max Baucus and Jon Tester on Wednesday urged top U.S. officials to help add Waterton-Glacier International Peace Park to the “List of World Heritage in Danger,” as part of their efforts to prevent mining and drilling proposals north of the Montana border.

The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization named the park a World Heritage site

North Fork residents Jerry and Linda Wernick were the subject of the lead story in the Sunday, September 23, 2007 online edition of the Daily Inter Lake . . .

When Jerry Wernick was a young teacher just starting his career in southern California, he was determined to build a house for himself and his wife, Linda.

Fire limits lifted

From the Thursday, September 20, 2007 online edition of the Daily Inter Lake . . .

Fire restrictions on public lands in Northwest Montana have been lifted, according to Flathead National Forest officials.

On private land in Flathead County, however, no open burning is allowed through the end of September.

The lifting of restrictions affects public lands in Flathead and Lincoln counties, Lake County outside of Confederated Salish and Kootenai tribal lands, plus all of Kootenai National Forest, Flathead National Forest and Glacier National Park.

Fire restrictions also have been lifted in the Bob Marshall Wilderness Complex.

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