Missoula News

Your local online source

Follow NewWest on Twitter

Missoula Contributors

Community Bloggers


Missoula Features

More Features
A female grizzly bear and her three large cubs pause in a secluded meadow along Montana's Rocky Mountain Front near Dupuyer Creek. Biologists estimate that as many as 70 to 80 grizzlies may inhabit the high plains east of the Front. Photo courtesy of Mike Madel, Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks. Grizzlies On the Move, Back to the Wide-Open Prairie
A climate-controlled book barn in Wyoming's outback (population: 5) is too good to pass up. Next: Owners Lynda “Mad Dog” German and Polly “The Pilgrim” Hinds. Last: The Mad Dog and the Pilgrim Booksellers
Photo courtesy of Montana FWP Montana Wolf Hunt is Over: Quotas Filled Early
Some assessed values for properties on Flathead Lake jumped by 300 percent between 2002 and 2008. Photo by Lido Vizzutti of the <a target= Reappraisal Process Works, But Will Ire Catch Fire?
Illustration from the <a target= Upside of Real Estate Bust? Buying Ops for Flathead Land Trust

Election Aftermath

Missoula Joins Other Western Cities on Marijuana Prioritization

Missoula voters were not alone in their decision to de-prioritize adult marijuana offenses this month. The Garden City joins the ranks nine other western cities with similar measures -- possibly 10 if San Francisco passes one this week.

If the San Francisco Board of Supervisors gives it the nod, San Francisco will join Seattle, Denver, a slew of California cities and of course, Missoula.

On Election Day, Missoula County voters passed Initiative 2 with 54 percent approval. Missoula city and county leaders are still weighing options with how to handle the mandate and are concerned with some of the possible impacts on the community.  

[more]

Planning

Ravalli County Gets New Subdivision Regs With Key Change For Planning Efforts

Ravalli County commissioners adopted revisions to their subdivision regulations Monday and the changes included a significant move toward long-range planning.

Now, instead of having the county Planning Board hold public hearings and review subdivision applications, that duty will fall directly to the county commissioners.

The subdivision regulations revisions were due Oct. 1, and for the past several weeks, the revisions have been a top priority for a swamped Ravalli County planning office. Two weeks ago, the commissioners and planning board had a joint meeting to discuss the revisions. That meeting was continued until Monday.

The change in direction for the planning board is welcome, said board chairman Dan Huls. With the amount of growth the county is experiencing, the planning board has become more like a subdivision review board, Huls said. 

[more]

elections and planning

City Residents in Ravalli County Not Able to Vote on Zoning Ballot Issues

Voters in Ravalli County’s four municipalities – Darby, Hamilton, Pinesdale and Stevensville – may be surprised this morning as they come to polls and find out they can’t vote on two of the biggest local issues facing all county residents election.

Two ballot measures dealing with zoning are not on the ballots of residents living in the county’s incorporated towns. One measure would repeal an emergency ordinance approved this past summer by county commissioners limiting the size of box stores to 60,000 square feet. The other measure would institute an emergency zoning ordinance limiting development county-wide to one house per two acres. 

[more]

Growth and Development

New Impact Fee Advisory Committee Needs Members In Missoula

If you want to have a say in the regulation of development around Missoula, here’s your chance. The Mayor's Office and the City Clerk's Office are taking applications for volunteer positions on the new Impact Fee Advisory Committee.

As growth continues to shape the landscape of Missoula County, appropriate allocation of resources is an integral piece of the development puzzle. Under Senate Bill 185, which legislators passed in 2005, local governments can impose fees on new development to help fund public infrastructure needed to support the development. State law requires that a local advisory committee meet when there are proposed amendments to impact fee ordinances or resolutions and thus, the creation of the nine-person committee in Missoula County.

The Mayor appoints seven committee members and the City Clerk's office appoints two.  

[more]

Album Review

Tom Catmull and the Clerics Nail New Album

The last five years have seen a boom of local musicians buying multi-track recorders and software, and converting their basements or spare bedrooms into recording studios. The result has been a few full-length CDs that sound every bit as good as the $18.98 Major Label slabs being delivered by the pallet to Wal-Mart. The line between computer geek and musician has blurred -- that pierced hipster in the trendy glasses you see at the coffee shop just might be mixing down an album on his laptop while he sips his triple mochaccino.

Like my recent release, "American Piehole," (which seems destined to become this generation’s "Sgt. Pepper") "Tom Catmull & the Clerics" is a home-brewed project, one that Catmull has been sweating over for upwards of two years. The majority of it was recorded in Tom’s basement, on his Tascam digital multitracker. Other tracks were recorded here and there, and the whole thing was mixed at his guitarist's kitchen table.

This album has more of a country feel than Catmull's previous releases, but I mean authentic, traditional country. Not that plastic, soft-rock ringtone bait they’re churning out these days in Nashvegas. Right from the first listen, TC&C is polished, confident, and achieves a consistent level of musical and lyrical poise, yet is as comfy and easygoing as an old leather jacket. It’s tasty. It's chewy. Hell, by the fourth song, you want to spread cream cheese on the damn thing and eat it. The aural depth and expansiveness of the mix belie the fact that the album was recorded ten feet from Catmull's washer-dryer. 

[more]

PLANNING IN THE WEST

Lewis and Clark County Takes Bold Step with New Zoning Ordinance

When you drive around the Helena Valley in central Montana, it's hard to use the word "planning." Because, of course, there hasn't been any. Now, finally, after 15 years of work and frustration, Lewis and Clark Commissioners have decided to do something about it.

On September 12, the commission voted 2-1 to pass the "intent" to implement a sweeping zoning ordinance. It was sweeping in the sense it provides some land use planning in a rapidly growing community where there has been none, but county officials readily admit it's only the first step in guiding growth around Helena.

Like any zoning plan, this one has been burdened with controversy. 

[more]