Serving Waitsburg, Dayton and the Touchet Valley

Commentary / Waitsburg & Walla Walla County


Sorted by date  Results 1038 - 1062 of 1333

Page Up

  • Political Cartoon

    Oct 20, 2011

  • Dear Editor,

    Oct 13, 2011

    I am voting for Barlow Corkrum for Port Commissioner for a number of reasons, but most of all because we need new leadership that better represents our common interests. The incumbent Commissioner Fredrickson supported a coal-fired power plant in Wallula. Barlow was the first person raising serious concerns about that misguided project. There are three port commissioners that provide oversight for the staff of the Port of Walla Walla. In my opinion, that oversight should include a person who I can trust to represent what's best for our...

  • Dear Editor,

    Oct 13, 2011

    There have been several attempts to defend the Port of Walla Walla's so-called transparency. The simple fact is that the Port of Walla Walla does not audio tape their meetings, choosing instead to take handwritten notes for their scheduled "regular" public meetings. By comparison, the Walla Walla County Commission, Walla Walla City Council, College Place City Council and Waitsburg City Council all choose to audio tape their meetings. The Port Commission has chosen to ignore an easy, inexpensive step toward greater transparency. Having spoken...

  • Dear Editor,

    Oct 13, 2011

    As the former Port of Walla Walla Commissioner for District 2, I would like to endorse Mike Fredrickson for re-election. The Port's record of accomplishments during Commissioner Fredrickson's term is impressive. It includes the award winning Railex Produce Distribution Center that transports Pacific Northwest Produce to New York in less than five days. In addition, five wine incubator buildings have been constructed and another phase of the four laning of US Highway 12 has been completed. Equally impressive is the Port's tax levy rate has...

  • Local Students Make Giving Back A Priority

    Jillian Beaudry|Oct 13, 2011

    About Needs & Good Deeds WAITSBURG - With plenty of fanfare on Friday night on Waitsburg High School's football field, students from Dayton High School and students from Waitsburg stretched paperlink chains across the field. Each link in those chains represented one dollar raised for the American Cancer Society. The society fundraiser was the first Dayton versus Waitsburg money-raising battle in recent memory, said Denise Winnett, an administrative assistant at Waitsburg High School. Winnett...

  • Great Job, Steve

    Oct 13, 2011

    I t's fitting that I should be writing this editorial on my iPad since this week's column is about the passing of Steve Jobs. We don't comment very often on events outside our community, but the loss of an entrepreneur like Jobs is something that touches people everywhere for many different reasons. If you're roughly Jobs' age (mid 50s), it's sad to note the death of a contemporary and it makes you appreciate being healthy and alive. If you were born in the 1950s like I was, you would have been in your 20s when Apple made its debut and you woul...

  • Political Cartoon

    Oct 13, 2011

  • Letters to the Editor

    Oct 6, 2011

    Dear Editor: Obama's Jobs Act is NOT Class Warfare If the Republicans claim that the American Jobs Act is class warfare on the very wealthy, then the Democrats can say that failing to pass it is class warfare on the millions of jobless people who are suffering. These neighbors, friends and family members can't wait while the aforementioned politicians try to protect the very wealthy who should pay their fair share in taxes. Many very wealthy citizens, some of whom are Washington, D.C. politicians (some are Democrats and some are Republicans),...

  • The BURG

    Jane Butler, Guest Column|Oct 6, 2011

    Clark's Family Makes It Right C aptain Clark's Des cendants Make Amends To Tribe After completing their journey west and spending a wet and wretched winter at the mouth of the Columbia River in 1806, William Clark and Meriweather Lewis prepared to head home. There was just one problem. They were short a canoe. So, they stole one from the Native Americans who had kept them alive all winter. More than 200 years later, William Clark's descendants are making amends by presenting a 30-foot replica of the stolen canoe to the Chinook Indian Nation....

  • Strike Up The Band

    Jillian Beaudry|Oct 6, 2011

    Heart BEAT About Needs & Good Deeds W AITSBURG - Walking past the schools in Waitsburg last week, I heard squeaking and honking. It wasn't ducks or geese in town, it was the school children. I figured it must have been band day or music class at the middle school. The kids were laughing and blowing their instruments as hard as they could. I smiled ear to ear because I do not find this obnoxious, but wonderful. It reminded me of my first time picking up my flute in fifth grade band and trying to...

  • Mr. Green’s Opus

    Oct 6, 2011

    On several occasions, this column has focused on the importance of sports to the growth, development and health of our local students. As mentioned on previous occasions, this newspaper believes sports not only instill pride and teamwork in youngsters. They keep them on a track where they may be less inclined to get in trouble. In this week's sports section, we include a follow-up on the Cardinals Booster Club's successful fundraising effort for the new press box to which the Times contributed. Club president Ross Hamann reports that with the...

  • Political Cartoon

    Oct 6, 2011

  • To the Editor:

    Sep 29, 2011

    This letter is on the subject of "there's always the spigot, City considers new law to turn off water to chronic code violators" as written in the Waitsburg Times on Aug. 18. After reading the article, I decided to attend the City Council meeting Sept. 21. The city is using Mr. Rick Smith as an example of a city code violator. Even though City Attorney Chris Hedine says the new proposed law is legal, I feel it is not morally right. It seems to be a long stretch from a city nuisance to shutting a household's water supply off. This new law may no...

  • Heart BEAT About Needs & Good Deeds

    Jillian Beaudry|Sep 29, 2011

    WAITSBURG - I was sitting on the bleachers at the first WP home football game chatting with Jan Cronkhite and she and I watched as Billy Brown made an amazing run for the Cardinals. She knew Billy from around town and told me his history and what a great kid he is. It was amazing to her that he has been so successful even though his life has not been easy. I heard how he left Waitsburg and wanted to return, with the community rallying around him and finding him a new home. In working on my...

  • Sharing The Road

    Sep 29, 2011

    On the back page of this week's edition of the Times, we're carrying an update on the legal challenges facing Melvin Bohleen, the elderly Dayton man who will be on trial in December for his involvement in a collision that killed Westside cyclist Sara Eustis this spring. Last week, Bohleen was sued by Eustis' surviving family for unspecified damages, adding to his woes as a suspect. It's a very sad story to cover. Losing a loved one in a bicycle accident - or any accident for that matter -- is a personal tragedy beyond words. Eustis was a...

  • Political Cartoon

    Sep 29, 2011

  • For Life And Hope

    Jillian Beaudry|Sep 22, 2011

    Heart BEAT About Needs & Good Deeds DAYTON - On Saturday at the high school track in Dayton, men and women and boys and girls, pitched tents, laughed with their friends and prepared to spend the whole night walking or running around the track to raise money for the American Cancer Society. Relay For Life was held this weekend for the fifth time in Columbia County, said Cheri Stoker, a staff member and community relations manager lead. Twenty-one teams and about 300 people had raised some...

  • We’ll Miss You, Bill

    Sep 22, 2011

    Here are just some of the many stories Waitsburgers shared with us about Bill Thompson: He and my husband were very good friends. He and his first wife moved to town and lived across the street from me. We got very well acquainted. Bill has been part of the family. He was involved in the Masonic Lodge, First Christian Church, was parade marshal in 2004, was Lions Club president in 1977, Lion of the Year in 2000, Commercial Club president in 1982, won the service award in 1988 and was part of the historical society and ambulance board. He lived...

  • Political Cartoon

    Sep 22, 2011

  • The BURG

    Jane Butler, Guest Column|Sep 15, 2011

    First Phone System Installed Here In 1903 I t was 1877 that Alexander Graham Bell's invention was first installed as a commercial venture. The first successful demonstrations device was in Havana Cuba in 1849! In Waitsburg, the first telephone was installed in 1887. The first rural telephone system was installed in 1903, 4 W. Morgan was Central (John White's Paper). I couldn't believe there were telephones that early in Waitsburg! Laidlaw's book monitor the telephone office located between Mae Combes and the bank -operated by Tina, one of...

  • CO3 Now Open

    Imbert Matthee, The Times|Sep 15, 2011

    A few weeks ago, some 20 plus members of the local PEO chapter came in to have lunch at the Coppei Coffee shop. They enjoyed coffee, sandwiches and drinks from the shop's ever-growing menu, then lingered around their tables in the space behind the Times front office that functions as Waitsburg's community living room. Anita Baker, PEO member and wife of former Times publisher Tom Baker, was on hand to explain some of the equipment on display in the space: the Linotype machine from the 1920s,...

  • The Right Call

    Sep 15, 2011

    I t was a brief but awkward moment in council chambers Monday night. Council members were in the midst of discussing a proposed amendment to the city's municipal code that shifts the burden of repairing and maintaining the public-right-ofway portion of local homeowners' sewer connection to the city's main line. The first, second and third readings of the amendment had already passed unanimously and the council was getting ready to vote on the ordinance itself when councilman Merle Jackson noted that the proposal represents a significant...

  • Political Cartoon

    Sep 15, 2011

  • Dear Editor:

    Sep 8, 2011

    I am writing today to invite everyone from Dayton and the surrounding communities to this year's American Cancer Society Blue Mountain Relay For Life. The family-friendly event is scheduled to begin Saturday afternoon, Sept. 17, at 3 p.m. and concludes Sunday morning, Sept.18, at 7:30 a.m. Location for the event is at the athletic complex (track and football field) in Dayton. Though there are many emotional times at every Relay For Life, I believe the luminaria ceremony is the part of the event that brings everyone together and reminds them...

  • We Appreciate You

    Jillian Beaudry|Sep 8, 2011

    Heart BEAT About Needs & Good Deeds WAITSBURG -- Not only is the nation focusing on the upcoming 10-year anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks, but Touchet Valley residents are also thinking about the second anniversary of the big mill fire that destroyed Wait's Mill, Sept. 6, 2009. The mill gave Waitsburg its name and losing it meant the town lost part of its identity. With these two anniversaries on our minds and the recent battle of the Whetstone fire, we can't help but think of our local...

Page Down