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	<title>NewWest Montana Business (c8)</title>
	<link>http://www.newwest.net/index.php/city/main/C26/L8/</link>
	<description>New West Network: The Voice of the Rocky Mountains</description>
	<dc:language>en</dc:language>
	<dc:creator>info@newwest.net</dc:creator>
	<dc:rights>Copyright 2009</dc:rights>
    <pubDate>Sun, 08 Nov 2009 08:00:35 MST</pubDate>
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    <item>
		<title>Yahoo, Newspapers, and the Challenge of Local Journalism</title>
		<link>http://www.newwest.net/city/article/yahoo_newspapers_and_the_challenge_of_local_journalism/C26/L8/</link>
		
		<pubDate>Wed, 22 Nov 2006 10:03:00 MST</pubDate>
		<description>The deal announced Monday between Yahoo and a group of newspaper chains to share local classifieds – and, eventually, editorial and advertising services &#45; makes all the sense in the world, on the face of it. Yahoo gets local content, and an entrée into local markets. The newspapers get Yahoo&apos;s online tools, and access to its massive national customer base. Whether these entities can actually work together effectively is very much an open question, but you can&apos;t fault the logic.

You can, however, fault the lack of ambition.</description>		      
    </item>

    <item>
		<title>Regional Airline Pulling Out of Kalispell, Great Falls, Spokane</title>
		<link>http://www.newwest.net/city/article/big_sky_airlines_pulling_out_of_kalispell_great_falls_spokane/C26/L8/</link>
		
		<pubDate>Fri, 28 Jul 2006 08:52:00 MST</pubDate>
		<description>Airline rumors floating around the Flathead the last couple of days have proven to be true: as of August 5 Big Sky Airlines will discontinue its service to Kalispell, Great Falls and Spokane.  

Currently Big Sky&apos;s route through Montana is as follows: Billings to Helena, Helena to Great Falls, Great Falls to Kalispell, Kalispell to Spokane.  I spoke with Big Sky President Fred Deleeuw this morning, who confirmed that August 4 will be the last service day for that route.</description>		      
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    <item>
		<title>Schweitzer&apos;s Tax Rebate, Open Space Bond &amp;amp; County Attorney Takes INSA Investigation</title>
		<link>http://www.newwest.net/city/article/schweitzers_tax_rebate_open_space_bond_county_attorney_takes_insa_investiga/C26/L8/</link>
		
		<pubDate>Thu, 29 Jun 2006 09:29:00 MST</pubDate>
		<description>There&apos;s just so much news to keep up with today. The highlights: 

Come November, we&apos;ll all be voting on an $10 million open space bond for Missoula County. As Mea Andrews reports for the Missoulian today, County Comissioners made it official last night in a formal public meeting. For more background on this issue, read Greg Lemon&apos;s report for New West on open space from this winter. It&apos;s a good overview of what the county bond means versus what the city wants to do to expand the open space we&apos;ve got now.

Missoula County Attorney Fred VanValkenburg will take the lead on deciding whether to file criminal charges against the two fomer University of Montana employees at the center of the Inland Northwest Space Alliance scandal. As the AP reports, the state attorney general office&apos;s cheif ciminal counsel has handed the case over to VanValkenburg. Earlier this month, a Legislative Audit report concluded that the two former employees, George Bailey and Lloyd Chesnut may have violated state ethics laws involving conflict of interest and nepotism in the creation and their work with the Alliance &#45;&#45; a spinoff company of UM&apos;s Northern Rockies Center for Space Privatization.

Gov. Brian Schweitzer says his tax rebate &#45;&#45; $400 to 250,000 homeowner in Montana  &#45;&#45; is the largest rebate in state history. As Chuck Johnson reports for Lee Newspapers, the legislature will have to sign off on the rebates &#45;&#45; which will come from the projected state surplus of $525 million.</description>		      
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    <item>
		<title>A Year&#45;Round Recreation Destination</title>
		<link>http://www.newwest.net/city/article/bitterroot_resort/C26/L8/</link>
		
		<pubDate>Tue, 27 Jun 2006 11:08:00 MST</pubDate>
		<description>The Bitterroot Team aspires to build a family&#45;friendly recreation venue that is accessible to and benefits all members of the Missoula and Bitterroot Valley communities. Bitterroot Resort is designed to be a year&#45;round recreation destination with alpine, snowboard and cross&#45;country ski venues, signature golf, fly&#45;fishing, mountain biking, ice skating and other amenities existing alongside a four&#45;season resort village and residential community.

Bitterroot Resort has recently submitted a special use permit application to the forest service requesting 1,680 acres of federal land, adjacent to the Maclay Ranch in the northern Bitterroot Valley, be designated as part of a destination ski resort.  This proposal represents only a small portion of the envisioned 12,800 acres of potential skiable terrain on Lolo Peak and Carlton Ridge.

Show your support and sign the Bitterroot Petition online.</description>		      
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    <item>
		<title>The Downsides of Whitefish&apos;s Booming Real Estate Market</title>
		<link>http://www.newwest.net/city/article/the_downsides_of_whitefishs_booming_real_estate_market/C26/L8/</link>
		
		<pubDate>Mon, 19 Jun 2006 14:44:00 MST</pubDate>
		<description>Tonight on NPR&apos;s Montana Evening Edition, Whitefish, Montana&apos;s painfully high (or beautifully high, if you&apos;re selling) real estate market will be featured.  MTPR&apos;s website gives a pre&#45;cap of tonight&apos;s report:

&quot;What was once an ordinary working class town now offers some of the most expensive real estate in Montana. In our continuing series on poverty in the state, reporter Kevin Maki visits Whitefish, a community where affordable housing is frequently out of reach &#45; even for many of her long time residents.&quot; 

The real eastate market has been on fire here for a number of years.  A February Daily Inter Lake article reported that more than a billion dollars in commercial and residential property changed hands here last year, fueled by factors like population growth, investment buying and limited land supply.  That was a 25% increase from just 2004.  

I also read the other day that Northwest Montana houses 25% of the state&apos;s realtors.  My hairspray, power&#45;skirt&#45;suit and Bluetooth earpiece phobias aside, that&apos;s an overwhelming statistic.</description>		      
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    <item>
		<title>Schweitzer Anti&#45;Arab?</title>
		<link>http://www.newwest.net/city/article/schweitzer_anti_arab/C26/L8/</link>
		
		<pubDate>Tue, 13 Jun 2006 08:21:00 MST</pubDate>
		<description>Montana Gov. Brian Schweitzer is gathering heat for the part of his regular alternative energy stump speech in which he referrs to &quot;sheikhs, dictators, rats and crooks&quot; in oil&#45;producing countries.

It&apos;s no surprise that someone would eventually take offense and as Mike Dennison reports for Lee Newspapers today, it&apos;s happened. John Zogby, the president of the Arab American Institute in Washington, D.C., tells Dennison that it&apos;s all part of a trend to make Arabs the scapegoats as energy prices soar. 

The surprising part is Schweitzer&apos;s response to the criticism. He says his comments are in no way directed at Arabs. Instead, he says he&apos;s referring to dictators in general. But, he says, &quot;If they&apos;re not supportive of our way of life, if they&apos;re a direct threat to our children or our grandchildren having a better chance at life than we do, then I&apos;m not supporting them.&quot; He&apos;s also quoted as saying the United States should make friends with those who support our &quot;way of life and our values.&quot; 

Huh?</description>		      
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    <item>
		<title>Stream Access Law? Private Property Rights? Sportsman Access? ... Who Wants To Know?</title>
		<link>http://www.newwest.net/city/article/stream_access_law_private_property_rights_sportsman_access_who_wants_to_kno/C26/L8/</link>
		
		<pubDate>Wed, 24 May 2006 10:43:00 MST</pubDate>
		<description>When telemarketers call I try to remember my Sunday School lessons. I actually try to be gracious and give them a chance to state their business before I hang up. Monday afternoon, just as I was ready to shut off the computer and crack open a beer, the phone rang. I expected the institutional voice I got on the other end of the line. What I didn’t expect were the questions he asked.

For nearly 20 minutes he grilled me concerning my views on issues, people and groups all involved in public access in Montana.</description>		      
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    <item>
		<title>Geothermal Scholar to Discuss Renewable Energy Resources</title>
		<link>http://www.newwest.net/city/article/geothermal_scholar_to_discuss_renewable_energy_resources/C26/L8/</link>
		
		<pubDate>Tue, 09 May 2006 10:09:00 MST</pubDate>
		<description>At a time when gas prices are going through the roof and everyone wants a piece of the pie that is alternate energy, Dr. John Lund, director of the Geo&#45;Heat Center in Klamath Falls, OR and president of the International Geothermal Association will speak at Fairmont Hot Springs resort on Thursday, May 18.</description>		      
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    <item>
		<title>Montana Gets A Much&#45;Needed Angel Fund</title>
		<link>http://www.newwest.net/city/article/montana_gets_a_much_needed_angel_fund/C26/L8/</link>
		
		<pubDate>Thu, 04 May 2006 09:08:00 MST</pubDate>
		<description>Our friend Elizabeth Marchi at Montana West Economic Development today announced an initiative that&apos;s sure to delight entrepreneurs in Montana and throughout the region: the Frontier Angel Fund, an investment group that will finance growth businesses in Northwest Montana and nearby locales.

The new fund is being created in partnership with St. Paul&#45;based RAIN Source Capital, which has a network of 14 similar funds in rural areas in Minnesota, Iowa, and the Dakotas. Steve Mercil, the CEO of RAIN Source, says the group is actively working on additional funds in Montana, Idaho, Washington and Oregon. As an entreprenuer who recently spent a considerable amount of time raising money for a Montana start&#45;up business, I can testify that such funds are sorely needed, especially in areas that are far from the major financial centers on the East and West coasts.</description>		      
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    <item>
		<title>Kalispell Retail Development Moving Forward</title>
		<link>http://www.newwest.net/city/article/kalispell_retail_development_moving_forward/C26/L8/</link>
		
		<pubDate>Wed, 03 May 2006 07:36:00 MST</pubDate>
		<description>Construction on the 46&#45;acre site on U.S. Highway 93 called Hutton Ranch will begin in July after a final approval by the Kalispell City Council on Monday to develop about 30 acres of the land.</description>		      
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