City Desk
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November 23, 2022
ButteNews.net
Two young Butte men died last night in Uptown Butte. They were just 18.
They died from gunshot wounds that came from the same bullet.
One man was seated near the other man. The other man held a large caliber hand gun.
The man with the gun discharged the weapon, killing them both with a single shot.
There were others at the residence, 925 West Woolman, Sheriff Ed Lester wrote in a text message.
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After reviewing colorful entries from hundreds of children from local schools in the Butte area, Mainstreet Uptown Butte has selected this year's Stroll button design contest winners. On December 2nd, the winners will be honored during the tree lighting ceremony at 6:30 pm at the BSB Courthouse at 155 W. Granite Street and then will be invited to help lead the Christmas Stroll Children's Light Parade at 6:45 pm.
Many thanks to the sponsors of the Stroll Button Contest and prizes -- Northwestern Energy, and the members of Mainstreet Uptown Butte.
2022 Winners -- The First Place Adult Button Design selected for its creativity was by Drew Kachmarik, age 11, a 5th grader at Hillcrest Elementary. He will receive $200 in Uptown Bucks.
The First Place Child Button Design winner is Rosaleah Big Beaver, age 9, a 3rd-grade student at West Elementary. She will also receive $200 in Uptown Bucks to spend at an Uptown store of her choice.
Two second-place winners in each category were also chosen and they will receive $100 each in Uptown Bucks. Second-place winners are Ophelia Nettles, age 6, a 1st-grade student at West Elementary, and Megan Flanick, 14, a freshman at Butte High.
Mainstreet Uptown Butte is still accepting nominations for Grand Marshal for just a few more days. If you know of someone or some group worthy of this distinction and recognition, please send your nominations that include why they deserve this honor, including how best to contact them to
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Click on the image above for the audio.
PNS - Tuesday, November 22, 2022 - A looming railroad strike could cost the U.S. economy $2 billion a day, a judge in Georgia gives the go-ahead for early voting on Saturday, and a majority of Democratic voters say president Biden could win if he runs again.
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Big Sky Connection -- Waste from a former mill poses a risk to fish, water quality and human safety on the Clark Fork River. Comments from Elena (uh-LAIN-uh) Evans, environmental health manager, Missoula City County Health Department; Julia Crocker, community programs coordinator, Clark Fork Coalition; David Brooks, executive director, Montana Trout Unlimited. (Pronouncers: Salish is "SAY-lish;" Kootenai is "KOOT-nee")
Eric Tegethoff
November 21, 2022
Community members and conservation groups recently toured a former paper mill because of urgent concerns that the site poses a threat to a nearby Montana river.
The Smurfit-Stone Mill near Missoula operated from 1957 to 2010, leaving behind pollutants that continue to leak into the nearby Clark Fork River.
In 2020, the state expanded a fish consumption advisory to a 100 mile stretch on the river.
Elena Evans, environmental health manager for the Missoula City County Health Department, was part of last week's tour.
She said berms separate industrial waste from the Clark Fork over a four mile stretch and cover 380 acres of the river's floodplain.
"The berms cause concern for folks downstream," said Evans, "leaving unlined dumps and landfills and sludge ponds that are impacting our EPA-designated sole source aquifer, and so that's why we had a tour."
Evans said the site also is an issue for Missoula's drinking water.
She said she hopes that by voicing their concerns during the US Environmental Protection Agency's investigation phase of the Superfund site, officials will incorporate the outcomes the community is looking for - such as restoring the Clark Fork floodplain.
In 2018, higher-than-average spring runoff caused part of the berms to erode and released toxic waste into the river.
Julia Crocker, community programs coordinator with the Clark Fork Coalition, was also part of last week's tour.
She said there's anxiety over what an even larger event could do to the waste stored behind those berms.
"As we've seen these large floods happen more and more frequently due to the changing climate," said Crocker, "there's a possibility that if we were to have an episode that happened on Yellowstone here, all of that would get pushed into the Clark Fork."
David Brooks is the executive director of Montana Trout Unlimited and was on last week's tour as well.
His organization is part of a study that will start in 2023 and look at fish and water quality near the former mill to determine the scope and scale of contaminants on the river.
Brooks said this is a critical issue for Montanans.
"People recreate in the river," said Brooks. "People eat fish out of the river. And so even absent a catastrophic event, this is a long term concern for water quality, fish and people."
The effect of toxins in the area also is a concern for the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes, whose ancestral land lies within the 100-mile fish consumption advisory area.
Tribal members rely on subsistence fishing and have been leading efforts for a proper cleanup of the former mill site.
By Eric Tegethoff - Producer, Contact