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As our cover photo points out, fire season is not over in North Idaho. Let’s be thankful for the reprieve we’ve had so far, though thunder and lightning is in the forecast. I remember a few years back when Sandpoint had the na tion’s worst air quality over Labor Day weekend. Someone shared a picture of crossing the Long Bridge and you could barely see the car in front of them. There are currently no fire restrictions, so please take special care while rec reating in the backcountry. Make sure to drown all campfires when leaving them and refrain from tossing cigarette butts outside your vehicles.

111 Cedar Street, Suite 9 Sandpoint, ID 83864 (208) 946-4368 www.sandpointreader.com Publisher: Ben Olson ben@sandpointreader.com Editorial: Zach Hagadone (Editor) zach@sandpointreader.com Lyndsie Kiebert-Carey (News Editor) Cameronlyndsie@sandpointreader.comRasmusson(emeritus)JohnReuter (emeritus) Advertising: Jodi Berge Jodi@sandpointreader.com Contributing Artists: Chelsea Mowery (cover), Ben Olson, Jim Mellen, Bill Borders, BNSF, Rich Milliron, TerraPen Mapping Contributing Writers: Zach Hagadone, Ben Olson, Lyndsie Kiebert-Carey, Lorraine H. Marie, Brenden Bobby, Brad Smith, Ranel Hanson, Clark Corbin, Cate Huisman, Marcia Pilgeram Submit stories to: stories@sandpointreader.com Printed weekly at: Tribune Publishing Co. Lewiston, ID Subscription Price: $155 per year Web Content: TheKeokeeSandpoint Reader is a weekly publication owned and operated by Ben Olson and Keokee. It is devoted to the arts, entertainment, politics and lifestyle in and around Sandpoint, Idaho. We hope to provide a quality alterna tive by offering honest, in-depth reporting that reflects the intelligence and interests of our diverse and growing community.TheReader is printed on recycled paper using soybased ink. Leftover copies are collected and recycled weekly, or burned in massive bonfires to appease the gods of journalism. Free to all, limit two copies per person

I was in a particularly sour mood while checking out at the dentist last week when a man asked me if I could “use a dad joke.” I was not in the mood, but accepted. I don’t remem ber exactly, but I think he asked me, “What do you call a line of bunnies hopping backward?” After a few moments of silence, he said: “You’re looking right at it: a receding hare line.” He then promptly exited, and, despite myself, I cackled. I guess I needed that dad joke. Thanks! that reporter smell It has recently come to my attention that the Bonner County Museum Guild Gift Shop is selling candles inspired by local scents, and one of those candles is called “The Report er.” The label features a photo of a man smoking a pipe and reading a magazine with his feet propped up on a desk. While I certainly love the nod to my profession and reporters come in many aesthetics and scents, I have smelled this particular candle and it smells far too good to accurately represent me. My reporter candle would feature a photo of myself hunched over a Macbook, my hair in a disheveled nest atop my head and the contents of my purse strewn across the desk: recorder, wallet, notes, half-eaten granola bar. Light that candle and you’d be met with aromas of a Secret Thai lunch; aging, sunbleached notebooks; Old Spice deodorant on the verge of no longer deodorizing; and the last dregs of a deadline beer, warmed in the bottom of the can while I try desperately to write a lede for my last news story of the week. All jokes aside, check out the many locally inspired goods at the museum’s shop, located in the north storefront of the Panida Theater.

SandpointReader letter policy: The Sandpoint Reader welcomes letters to the editor on all topics. Requirements:–Nomorethan 300 words –Letters may not contain exces sive profanity or libelous materi al. Please elevate the discussion.

Chelsea has contributed a fair number of photos for Reader covers over the years. You can check out her work here: chelseamowery.com. Have a great weekend, everyone.

The week in random review By Lyndsie Kiebert-Carey Reader Staff lyrics that speak to me

— The chorus of “The Other Side” by Ed Prosek, a really great song my little sister Leslie sent me last week. symmetry My other little sister, Ellie, started classes at the Uni versity of Idaho in Moscow this week. In the lead up to her move, I told her about some of my favorite little-known places on campus from my time as a student there, including a small room in one of UI’s busiest buildings called Cedar Grove. It has comfy chairs, a fireplace and a piano. Music students regularly used the piano for practice. I spent many hours there, studying and writing for the university’s news paper. Ellie texted me from Cedar Grove Monday morning to let me know that a piano student had come to play while she was there. It feels good that even as time passes, we can share our favorite places with people, and, in some way, also pieces of ourselves. dad joke

Email letters to: letters@sandpointreader.com Check us out on the web at: Likewww.sandpointreader.comusonFacebook. About the Cover This week’s cover photo was taken by Chelsea Mowery. The pho to shows a smoke plume from the Eneas Mountain Fire near Porthill in Boundary County.

READERDEAR READERS,

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–Ben Olson, publisher August 25, 2022 R

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Letters will be edited to comply with the above requirements. Opinions expressed in these pages are those of the writers, not necessarily the publishers.

“I hear you calling from the other side/ Begging me to get down in the dirt/ ’Cause that’s the only way to come clean.”

Special thanks to Chelsea Mowery for snapping this week’s cover photo.

“This narrative has been crafted and executed to incite a group of people to act against their own experience and judgment, or worse, to act within narrow self-interest,” the district stated. “So, if the library doesn’t have the materials in question, what is the motivation in pursuing an action that will only succeed in creating division and eroding our commu nity? This is about control of what information our community is allowed access to.”

“Library materials in all Idaho communities are selected by local librarians following locally created collection development policies,” Kennedy continued. “ILA stands behind the rights of communities, parents and individ uals to choose what information they access in the library.”

House on a 51-14 vote in March, but was never heard in the Senate. Opponents of the bill saw it as an effort to criminalize the public availability of media featuring LB GTQ+ characters — a conclusion that support from Family Watch In ternational made all the more prob able. The group is categorized as a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center for its teachings that “homosexuality is a mental illness” and support for “severe criminal penalties for homosexuality both in the U.S. and abroad,” according to the Idaho Statesman The Idaho Library Association weighed in on HB 666 during the 2022 legislative session, argu ing that “harmful material” was too vague a descriptor. Asked to comment specifically on the situation in Boundary County following Glidden’s resignation announcement, ILA Intellectual Freedom Chair Erin Kennedy told the Sandpoint Reader that ILA “fully supports Idaho librarians,” and that the association’s board is “deeply dismayed that any library worker in our state would be ha rassed for doing their job.”

Despite the broader furor over library materials, Flint wrote that the East Bonner County Library District has not experienced similar intimidation or pressure to censor its collection. When patrons do occasionally express concerns about materials, they are referred to the Collection De velopment Policy, which states: “The Library upholds the right of the individual to access informa tion even though the content may be controversial, unorthodox or unacceptable to others. Race, na tionality, religion, gender, sexual orientation and political/social view will not be used as criteria for exclusion of materials.” If necessary, patrons may be provided with a Request for Re consideration of Materials form. “These individuals are reason able, respectful and often attend board meetings,” according to Flint. “They do not threaten library staff or otherwise create a library environment that feels unsafe. It sounds like the situation is very different in Boundary County.” Flint emphasized that regard “... nothing in my background could have prepared me for the political atmosphere of extremism, militant Christian fundamentalism, intimidation tactics and threatening behavior currently being employed in the community.”

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A group of citizens launched a recall effort earlier this year, target ing four members of the board of trustees who voted to adopt a new material selection policy that states, in part, “the Boundary County Li brary Board of Trustees recognizes that given the increasing emphasis on frankness and realism of mate rials including those that explore social, sexual and ethical ssues, some members of the community may consider some materials to be controversial and/or offensive,” and that “selection of materials will not be affected by any such potentialGliddendisapproval.”hasalsocome under fire for having the library dis trict rejoin the American Library Association, which holds a similar philosophy regarding the inclusion of diverse viewpoints in library collections. Meanwhile, according to the recall effort’s online pres ence, the group fronts a mission to “protect children from explicit ma terials and grooming.” An email to the recall group’s Facebook page seeking comment went unan swered as of press time. Boundary County library officials counter that such explicit materials are not even in circula tion — and certainly not available in the children’s section.

Director steps down amid political pressure on Boundary Co. Library

—Outgoing Boundary County library director Kimber Glidden. The Boundary County Library in Bonners Ferry. Courtesy photo.

“The library does not carry a single title being circulated to generate fear and hate,” according to a statement on the homepage of the Boundary County Library District website, which was also shared Aug. 16 on the district’s Facebook page.

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Glidden, who has held the directorship since 2021, told the viewSpokesman-Re that “a con stant barrage of the same rhetoric and people not listening to my answers” pushed her to resign — that threatsincluding“rhetoric”veiled“with fire-and-brim stone language of her accordingdamnation,”imminenttothe Spokesman. Amy Flint, who serves as chairperson of the East Bonner County Library District Board of Trustees, told the Reader in an email Aug. 24 that she doesn’t blame Glidden for resigning. “No one should have to deal with the level of stress she has experienced at the Boundary County Library. Ironically, their library doesn’t even have any of the materials identified as concerns,” Flint wrote. “Obviously, it’s not really about the legallythetoa“TheRather,books.”sheadded,groupdemandingrecallseemsunwillingacknowledgeoracceptfactthatlibrariesareboundtoencourageintellectualfreedom,notdenyit.“Unfortunately,someideologicallyextremegroupsareattemptingtocircumventlibraries’abilitytoprovideawideassortmentofmaterialsrepresentingavarietyofviewpoints.Theydon’tseemtounderstand—oraccept—thatlibrariescannotandshouldnotcensormaterialsbasedonindividualpatronpreferences.”BoundaryCountyisn’ttheonlyplacewherelibrariansandlibrarycollectionshavecomeunderpoliticalpressure.Thetargetingoflibrariesoversupposedinappropriatecontenthasexpandedonastatewidelevelinrecentmonths,illustratedbestbyHouseBill666,whichmeanttorepeallegalprotectionsforlibrarians,educatorsand

Idaho Library Association, E. Bonner Co. Library Board chair weigh in on the 9B library district’s woes

similar figures for making avail able billtodeemedmaterials“harmfulminors.”Thepassedthe

By Lyndsie Kiebert-Carey and Zach Hagadone ReaderBoundaryStaff County Library Di rector Kimber Glidden announced her resignation Aug. 16, effective Saturday, Sept. 10, following months of mounting pressure from a recall effort, as well as what the district called “an increase in harassing behavior, derogative accusations and a purported threat of violence” in a notice for a can celed meeting in July. “I want to thank the Boundary County Library Board of Trustees for providing me the opportunity to serve as Director of the Bound ary County Library,” Glidden wrote in her resignation statement. “My experience and skill set made me a good fit to help the dis trict move toward a more current and relevant business model and to implement updated policy and best“Howeverpractices. nothing in my background could have prepared me for the political atmosphere of extremism, militant Christian fun damentalism, intimidation tactics and threatening behavior currently being employed in the communi ty,” she continued.

By Lyndsie Kiebert-Carey ReaderBonnerStaffCounty commissioners voted to adopt a $81 million bud get for the upcoming fiscal year at a public hearing on Aug. 22, mak ing official a nearly $19 million increase over FY 2022 owing in large part to two one-time boosts: a $8.7 million voter-approved USDA loan for Bonner County Solid Waste, and nearly $9 million in federal stimulus monies from the American Rescue Plan Act.

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“Jeff and I have been in office now for six years,” McDonald said ahead of the Aug. 22 budget vote. “This has been probably the most difficult budget to try to balance we’ve ever had.”

“The most the taxes can go up is 3% of [last year’s] dollar amount,” he said. “Everybody’s valuations could quadruple, but the most the taxes can go up overall is 3%, dollarwise, over last year’s levied dollars.”

As of Aug. 24, 140 visitors had provided 83 responses.

Bonner County adopts FY 2023 budget

“Your feedback will help us determine what parts of the vision statements to keep and what may need adjustments to ensure the Comprehensive Plan reflects the community’s desired vision for the future,” the city stated. The survey takes a few min utes to complete, and includes a variety of options for main taining respondents’ privacy, while giving the opportunity to see how others have answered. Once the survey has closed on Sept. 2 and city staff has reviewed the feedback, it will be posted under the “Outcome” tab on the site. Respondents may also sign up to receive email updates about the Com prehensive Plan revision.

By Reader Staff Growth and its attendant de velopment has been the central concern for Sandpoint residents during the past few years, and how best to manage it has dominated City Hall discus sions for just as long. A critical piece of policy for the city to address Sandpoint’s rapid pace of change is the Comprehen sive Plan, which had remained in limbo amid a long-delayed update.Now, after a pause during the pandemic, city officials are relaunching efforts to revise the plan and bring it more into line with current conditions — espe cially urgent as the last update occurred in 2009. Among the important steps to accomplishing the update is collecting citizen feedback, which the city is gathering through a survey titled “What is your vision for Sandpoint’s future” at

McDonald noted that at the start of the FY 2023 budget pro cess, the board thought the county was “in the hole a bit” and “might need to furlough employees” due to inflation. “Some of this additional money that came in to support de partments gave us some breathing room,” McDonald said, “but it was a long, difficult process.” He encouraged the public to get involved in the budget workshops that begin annually in July, where commissioners go through the budget “line by line” and ask questions of the various department heads about how their money is “That’sspent.really the best time to come and watch how the sausage is made,” he said.

Other notable line item increases are occurring in the Gen eral, Justice and Road and Bridge funds. ARPA is being used for one-time technology improvement projects and revenue replacement, causing part of that financial spike, while other money is being channeled toward increasing wages for positions that Bonner County has had difficulty filling due to employees — particularly sheriff’s deputies and specially licensed truck drivers — seeking jobs in neighboring counties and states with better pay and a lower cost of “We’reliving.trying to keep all those people here,” Rosedale said. “That’s been one of the big pushes.”ARPA funds are also being funneled into the county’s Emer gency Medical Services budget, which will rise from about $5 mil lion to $7 million in the coming fiscal year.

City of Sandpoint invites responses to survey on Comp Plan vision

forcultivatesourcharactercelebratesments,withagreementdentsday,opencom/12151.opentownhall.Thesurveywillremainuntil11:59p.m.onFriSept.2,andasksrespontogaugetheirlevelofordisagreementavarietyofvisionstatesuchas:•“ThecityofSandpointourlocalculture,andconnectionswithscenicsurroundings,andavibrantcommunitygenerationstocome”;•“Adiversemixofbusi nesses and nonprofit organiza tions benefit from the quality education, versatile workforce, fair taxes, sensible regulation, and reliable connections to the region and the •“Developmentworld”;should be based on principles that assure good stewardship of resourc es and responsible outcomes relative to the built and natural environment”;•“Development should provide connections among people through a diverse mix of housing, walkable and bikeable neighborhoods that are safe and secure, ready access to recreational facilities and public spaces, and robust street and digital infrastructure”;

•“The Sandpoint communi ty should be inspired to create, experience and support our his tory, social events, recreational pursuits and art of all kinds.”

Commissioners adopted both budgets with a unanimous vote, marking the last time Commis sioners Dan McDonald and Jeff Connolly will approve a budget while in office. While McDonald opted not to run for a third term this past primary season, Connolly lost his race to Republican challenger Asia Williams.

ARPA funds, solid waste loan contribute to $81M total

less of where a library is located or what some patrons may think or feel about its offerings, the mission of any library is to support intel lectual“Certainly,freedom.parents and caregivers are responsible for monitoring and approving materials for their children; however, it’s not appropriate to expect libraries to deny all pa trons’ access to the materials certain individ uals or groups perceive as questionable,” she stated, later adding: “As public institutions that utilize a demo cratic approach to materials selection, libraries must avoid catering to extremist views and continue to provide a wide range of materi als representing a variety of viewpoints. It’s a threat to our freedom — and therefore our republic — when certain groups or individuals attempt to call the shots for all of us.”

The Boundary County Library District is reaffirming its core mission, and not mincing words.“Now more than ever it is imperative that we guarantee the freedom to read, the freedom of expression, the freedom of information and the right to a fair and balanced education,” officials shared on the district’s website and Facebook page. “The library will stand to pro tect the rights of all people. It is time to take a stand against false narratives. Thank you and spread the word.”

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“The most notable thing about this budget is that it is much larger than last year’s budget,” county clerk Mike Rosedale said during the second of two public hearings hosted Aug. 22, adding later: “Fortunately, that is not reflected in the taxes.”

On the average, county taxpay ers will see a 3% increase on their property taxes, as Bonner County opted to raise taxes the statutori ly allotted annual 3% while also taking taxes on new construction. This average applies despite what Rosedale called “sky-high” prop erty valuations. Some property owners will see increases over 3%, while others will pay less, he said.

In addition to the vision statements, the survey includes more specific policy priori ties, as well as opportunities to provide detailed written comments.“Sandpoint’s desirability and high quality of life means the city will continue to see pressure to grow and change,” the city stated on the survey website. “Having a commu nity-vested vision helps guide and inform the decision-mak ing process to define and manage the city’s future.”

Bonner County Solid Waste will see a total budget increase from about $8 million to $14.5 million in FY 2023 thanks to the $8.7 million USDA loan already approved by voters via special revenue bond in 2021. That loan — which is meant to fund a 10-year solid waste infrastructure improvement plan — will be paid back using annual solid waste usage fees, which were increased in 2019 in order to cover the cost.

Alzheimer’s research is in question after it was revealed that a 2006 Nature paper may have been “deliberately manipulat ed,” The Guardian reported. Attempts by scientists to replicate the research that has underpinned studies since then have not been successful. According to the National Institute on Aging, 6 million Americans are believed to be diagnosed with Alzhei mer’s. While conventional doctors regard it as untreatable, there are people who have reversed their Alzheimer’s and their stories can be found in The First Survivors of Alzheimer’s, with information about the program’s peer-reviewed studies. Weather whiplash is the latest term for climate change events that include flash flooding and “flash droughts.” Rain in Texas recently fell at the second highest rate since 1932, triggering floods and rescues. Earlier in July, extreme heat and drought in Texas killed corn crops. According to numerous media reports, people across Louisiana, Arkansas and Texas are under flood watches. Meanwhile, the ongoing drought in Europe is deemed the worst in at least 500 years, and China is suffering record high temperatures and severe drought, crippling the economy due to compro mised hydropower production and the

6 / R / August 25, 2022 East, west or beyond, sooner or later events elsewhere may have a local impact.

Johnson will face high hurdles at the ballot box — first with a Democratic back ground running in deep-red District 1, and second as a write-in candidate, meaning voters will have to remember his name and what he’s running for when they cast their votes in November. None of his informa tion will appear on the ballot or in official electionHerndonguides.bested two-term incumbent Sen. Jim Woodward, R-Sagle, in the May primary, and he remains unopposed on the Tuesday, Nov. 8 general election ballot.

The Herndon-Woodward primary contest featured what was widely consid ered as an overtly aggressive campaign on Herndon’s part, which included flurries of fliers mailed to area residents fronting a raft of claims that Woodward was obliged to debunk as misleading or outright false. Still, Herndon garnered 7,771 votes to Woodward’s 6,064, or 56.7% to 43.83% of the vote, respectively. In a statement to the Reader in May, Herndon said that his was likely “the leading fundraising campaign in a Republican race for any state legislative seat.” According to Herndon’s July 2022 finance report to the Idaho Secretary of State’s Office, the campaign had received more than $100,000 during the calendar year, while Woodward’s filing in July 2022 listed more than $127,000 in contributions during the same period. In a news release announcing his candi dacy, Johnson’s write-in campaign referred to Herndon as an “extremist” and made note of his hiring of Nevada-based political consul tancy firm McShane LLC during the primary, which his campaign paid nearly $67,000 for services including manage ment, advertising, operations, printing, postage, surveys and polling between July 2021 and June 2022, according to campaign finance filings. McShane LLC has made headlines in recent years for its work with far-right wing Nevada gubernatorial candi date Michele Fiore and Ari zona Republican Congress man Paul Gosar, as well as with the Nevada Republican Party to “check the validity” of 2020 election ballots in Las Vegas. According to media outlets in Nevada, as well as The Washington Post, McShane Vice President Woodrow Johnston sought to recruit members of the Proud Boys extremist group to participate in a 2020 election protest rally in Las Vegas, though the company stated that Johnston acted on his own and “sees the error of what he did.” He remains on the McShane website as vice president of the firm. Herndon has also been a controversial fig ure in local politics, triggering the legal tussle over the weapons ban at publicly owned War Memorial Field during the weeks it is rented by the Festival at Sandpoint. Herndon and another local resident were turned away from the field when they attempted to enter with a firearm during the 2019 concert series. The incident prompted two lawsuits against the city of Sandpoint — which rents the field to the Festival — both of which were thrown out by a judge, but not before costing hundreds of thousands of dollars in legal fees for the parties involved, including Bonner County and the city of Sandpoint. However, Herndon is best known for his “abortion abolition” activism, advocating for a total ban on and criminalization of abortion — including in cases where the procedure would save a mother’s life. As chairman of the Bonner County Republican Central Committee, Herndon made that hardline anti-abortion argument at the Idaho GOP’s state convention in Twin Falls in July, where the party voted on a 2-1 margin to reject “life of mother” language in its abortion platform, according to the Idaho Capital Sun.

Johnson, a retired educator, farmer, rancher, business owner and Sagle resident since 1957, kicked off his campaign Aug. 10 before a packed gathering at 113 Main St. (a.k.a. the former Truby’s building) in downtown Sandpoint. “I’m running because Scott Herndon does not represent the values of North Idaho. When I am elected, I will do real work for the real issues North Idahoans face every day,” he said.

From east, west and beyond By Lorraine H. Marie Reader Columnist shutdown of many factories. The longtime chief financial officer for the Trump Organization pleaded guilty recently to conspiring with former-Presi dent Donald Trump’s company to commit numerous crimes, including tax evasion, The New York Times reported. To reduce his prison time, Allen Weisselberg will share information about the Trump Organization, but not about Trump. In recent months, Trump attorneys have talked with the FBI about returning documents stolen from the White House and moved to the former-president’s Flor ida residence Mar-A Lago. Two witnesses have claimed that Trump refused their return, claiming, “It’s not theirs, it’s mine,” The New York Times reported. A National Archives re view of the material seized from Trump’s home showed hundreds of classified and improperly retained documents, according to The Guardian. Security camera footage is also being reviewed, which shows peo ple taking boxes in and out of the storage area in question. The Justice Department wants to look at more of that footage. After bragging that his father “killed” the Bushes and Clintons, Eric Trump said, “Last night he killed the Cheneys,” referring to Wyoming Republican Sen. Liz Cheney’s recent (sizable) primary loss.

A recentUltra-richsampling:taxevaders under-report their income by an estimated $600 billion a year, NPR reported. The recently signed Inflation Reduction Act has allotted $80 billion for the IRS for helping them address big-timers’ tax dodging. The re turn is expected to be $220 billion in tax revenue over the next decade, according to The Washington Post. Treasury Secre tary Janet Yellen stated that IRS audits on small businesses or households earning less than $400,000 annually will not in crease. According to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, the top 1% of tax filers “account for 28% of the tax gap.” According to Global Forest Watch data, the amount of trees burned has doubled over the past 20 years. Causes are higher temperatures and drier condi tions due to climate change. Most of the loss was in Russia. A GFW analyst noted that about 50% of national fire budgets are dedicated to responding to fires, with less than 1% dedicated to preparing and plan ning. The UN predicts a 50% increase in extreme fires by the end of the century.

Bits ’n’ Pieces

“While Scott Herndon has made it clear that he intends to focus on his personal agenda, I’ll focus on the issues that matter to all of us: affordable property taxes, quality education for our children and grandchildren, and the preservation of our rural lifestyle,” Johnson stated. “As your state senator, those issues will be my top priorities.”

NEWS Steve Johnson announces write-in campaign vs. Dist. 1 Senate GOP nominee Scott Herndon

By Zach Hagadone ReaderOnceStaffthe Democratic contender for the Idaho House 1A seat being sought by Republican nominee Mark Sauter, Steve Johnson has dropped out of that race and announced his intention to run as a write-in for the Idaho Senate against Republican nominee Scott Herndon.

Financial Times writer Edward Luce noted that in his career of covering extremism and violent ideologies worldwide, he’d never come across “a political force more nihilis tic, dangerous and contemptible than to day’s Republicans. Nothing close.” Former CIA Director Michael Hayden affirmed, “I agree. And I was the CIA director.” Blast from the past: The U.S. ended its longest war a year ago. Tens of thousands of Afghan people fled, some on foot. TIME magazine provided bios of how seven Afghan women have adjusted to their new lives, leaving behind freedoms (getting an education, participating in society) they had enjoyed for 20 years, but lost when the Taliban took over. One of those who fled asked, “How can a regime that ignores half of society survive?” Another woman, now living in London, is surprised by how the government accepts people from different backgrounds and “everyone seems to love each other.” A 31-year-old woman now in France managed to arrange for her family to go to Canada, but doesn’t know if she’ll see them again. All wish they had been able to stay — Taliban-free — with family and loved ones in Afghanistan.

For more information visit stevejohn sonforidaho.com. Steve Johnson. Courtesy photo.

Supporters say passage of the Quality Education Act would raise about $323 million per year for a new education fund by raising the corporate income tax from 6% to 8% and by creating a new top tax bracket at 10.925% for individuals making more than $250,000 per year and families making more than $500,000 per year. The Quality Education Act would not change property or sales tax rates.

On Aug. 23, Reclaim Idaho co-founder Luke Mayville told the Sun volunteers will continue to promote the Quality Education Act. He said he can’t be certain that a majority of legislators will vote to pass Little’s proposal. He also said he has unanswered questions about whether Little’s education proposal would repeal the Quality Education Act if they both were to Mayvillepass.said the more than 70,000 Idahoans who signed the Quality Educa tion Act petition and the volunteers gath ered signatures deserve credit for pushing the state to act on education funding.

The bill would also provide $330 mil lion in ongoing, annual funding for K-12 public schools and $80 million for in-de mand career training, with that portion of the money available for career-technical education, community colleges or higher education.Thebill would use the sales tax to pay for the increase in education funding each year, with the amounts increasing by 3% eachLittle’syear.

Gov. Brad Little has officially called for a special session of the Idaho Legis lature beginning on Thursday, Sept. 1 to consider a bill aimed at cutting taxes and increasing education funding.

Two prominent Idaho Democrat ic legislators said they are supporting the proposal because of the education funding increase, which they say they have pushed for years. In interviews Aug. 23, House Minority Leader Ilana Rubel and Ward-Engelking, both D-Boise, said they would work to ensure that if legisla tors approve Little’s proposal during the special session that that money will be protected as additional, ongoing money above and beyond the base education budget that the Legislature sets.

Legislators will consider a bill that Little’s advisers said would provide the largest tax cut and the largest investment in education funding in state history. The 14-page draft bill, which Little’s office re leased Aug. 23, would provide $500 mil lion in one-time tax rebates, lower the in come tax rate from 6% to 5.8%, establish a flat tax rate for all income tax filers and exempt the first $2,500 of income. Under the bill, individuals would receive a onetime, minimum rebate of $300 while joint filers would receive a minimum of $600. The state would use some of its budget surplus, which Little said could reach $2 billion, to pay for the rebates.

“In the big picture, we see the $410 million education investment as a victory for the thousands of petitioners and peti tion signers who worked to build support for large-scale education investments,” MayvilleMayvillesaid.also said that Little’s propos al and the Quality Education Act take dif ferent approaches to increasing funding for education. Little’s plan relies on sales tax dollars, while the Quality Education Act would increase taxes on corpora tions and individuals making more than $250,000 and families making more than $500,000 to pay for it.

Little’s aides said the new bill allows the state to raise even more funding for education while cutting taxes.

The proposal will also go before voters via a non-binding “advisory vote” on the Nov. 8 general election ballot. The advisory vote question will ask voters whether they approve or disapprove of using the record surplus to pay for tax rebates and increasing education funding.

Gov. Brad Little calls for special session of Idaho Legislature

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“Inflation is at a 40-year high, putting gas, groceries and other necessities out of reach for many Idahoans,” Little said in a proclamation issued Aug. 23 authoriz ing the special session. “Idaho taxpayers and the education system are especially imperiled by the consequences of historic inflation.”TheIdaho Legislature adjourned for the year on March 31, and the 2023 leg islative session is not scheduled to begin until Jan. 9. Idaho legislators to consider tax cut, education investment bill

Passage of the education funding bill would also result in effectively repealing and replacing the Quality Education Act ballot initiative that will go before Idaho voters during the Nov. 8 general election, Little’s aides said. If a majority of voters approve the Quality Education Act, that initiative would be set to take effect Jan. 1.But the bill up for consideration during the special session includes language that would make it effective two days later on Jan. 3. That means it would wipe out any changes from the Quality Education Act. Volunteers and organizers with the group Reclaim Idaho promoted and gathered signatures to qualify the Quality Education Act for the general election.

Rubel and Ward-Engelking also said they have assurances from Little that if he is re-elected Nov. 8, he would not allow the Legislature to undue or reduce funding increases during the upcoming 2023

By Clark Corbin Idaho Capital Sun

Lawmakers will return to Boise on Sept. 1 to discuss tax cut, education funding bill

advisers said the bill already has support, with 60 of the 105 legislators signed on as cosponsors, and the governor and his team worked with legislators and education groups over the past two weeks to build support for the proposal.

Bill from special session would repeal, replace Reclaim Idaho’s Quality Education Act

“Thesession.reality is, my Democratic col leagues and I have pushed for increased education funding for years, and this is a way to get it done right now,” Ward-En gelking said. This story was produced by Boi se-based nonprofit news outlet the Idaho Capital Sun, which is part of the States Newsroom nationwide reporting project. For more information, visit idahocapi talsun.com.

Idaho Democrats say increase in education funding is necessary

The authorities met with him and requested the return of the remain ing documents. He had his attorney send a letter stating there were no more documents. The authorities did not believe him and presented their evidence to a federal judge, who agreed with them and issued a searchUponwarrant.thecompletion of this warrant, boxes of documents and secret documents were found.

Dear editor, It is inconceivable to me that Kate McAlister appears to endorse one particular Sandpoint business while sitting on the Sandpoint City Council and serving as the exec utive director of the Chamber of Commerce. (See the advertisement on Page 2 of the Reader, Aug. 18, 2022). Is she going to do the same for all of the other internet-provid ing businesses in Sandpoint? Is the city a customer of this particular provider? Is the chamber? What has become of ordinary common sense and ethical behavior? I believe that both the city and the chamber need to make very strong statements that Ms. McAl ister overstepped her bounds and absolutely does not speak for either the city or the chamber in promot ing a singular business.

becomes life-threatening, Scott Hern don believes they should not have the option of abortion — even if the pregnancy kills them. He states this proudly on his YouTube video. Scott Herndon is a candidate for state senator for Bonner and Boundary counties. I strongly disagree with Scott Herndon. I am an independent write-in candidate for state senator for District 1, Bonner and Boundary counties, and I will support people getting the medical care they need.

GUEST SUBMISSION: •“A bouquet suggestion: Just a quick thanks to all those who put out/ refresh water bowls for the canines of Sandpoint. Walking/biking our pup in South Sandpoint is a lot easier thanks to this small act of kindness!”

SKATE’S UP

Trump’s blame game shirks responsibility…

Steve Johnson Sagle Got something to say? Write a letter to the editor. Send letters under 300 words to elevatestatements,sandpointreader.com.letters@Nolibelousnotrollingandpleasetheconversation.

Marvin Lambrecht Sandpoint

Bouquets:

Welcome to the modern Dark Ages!

While staring blankly out the window on a Monday morning, I noticed these four skaters doing their thing in the parking lot across the street. Left: (From left to right) Oscar Williams, 13; Russel Reed, 11; Dustin Sutto, 13; and Kougar Kyllonen, 14. Bottom: Russel Reed ollies off a curb while his friends wait for their turns. Photos by Ben Olson.

Don ald Trump’s response was to blame the Justice Department and FBI for conducting the search. Blame is another way of refus ing to take responsibility for your actions.

•Barbs: The geniuses in Boundary County who are trying to recall the Boundary County library trustees need to read some histo ry books (or have they censored those, too?). Banning books means that we’re fine with raising chil dren who don’t think for them selves. Face it: Just because you live your life according to some narrow religious doctrine doesn’t mean everyone else has to believe in and follow what you do. Have we forgotten the very first line of the First Amendment: “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion”? How is it that those who bitch and moan about censorship, freedom and liberty are the very first ones to support banning books because they find some content offensive? How about taking some “personal responsibility” (another right-wing buzzword) and monitor your own children’s reading habits? Nazis banned books. Communist Chi na bans books. North Korea bans books. Is this the company we want to keep? If you’re for freedom, just like if you’re for the Constitution, you have to support the whole bun dle, not just cherry-pick those little parts you like and leave the rest.

• Last weekend, I was driving past the roundabout and noticed an elderly woman struggling across the crosswalk. A baseball team of mid dle school kids was holding a fund raiser car wash at Super 1, and one of the players ran over to help the wom an cross the street, holding her hand and making sure traffic stopped for her. I made sure to thank him for his good deed and told his coach what an exemplary kid he had on the team. I wish I’d gotten the kid’s name, but the car wash had already wrapped up when I returned with my notepad. Way to set an example and look out for our elderly community members.

Georgia York Sandpoint

— Submitted by Barry Campbell

8 / R / August 25, 2022 endorsement…Inappropriate ‘The modern Dark Ages’… Against Herndon’s stance on abortion…

Dear Thereeditor,arefederal laws regarding possession and control of presi dential records and laws regarding secret documents. Donald Trump left the White House with boxes of presidential documents. The possession of these docu ments was brought to the attention of the federal authorities, who re quested the documents be returned, which he did but not all of them.

Helen Newton Sandpoint

Dear editor, Good news, all you Idaho women of childbearing years! Do not be distressed about that unplanned or unwanted pregnancy… Gov. Brad Little and the Republican-controlled Legislature have your interests at heart. They will support you and “lift you up” as you are forced to bring the pregnancy to term, regard less of Youcircumstances.maybeanadult and men tally competent, but you are still a woman. As a woman, you cannot be trusted to control your own repro duction. Therefore, those medical decisions will be made for you.

Dear editor, Scott Herndon states in his You Tube video that every female who has an abortion should be charged with murder. Every female who gets an abortion — including the 10-yearold girl who was raped in Ohio by a 27-year-old man, was six weeks pregnant and traveled to Indiana for proper medical care — should be charged with murder. Scott Herndon says in his YouTube video that a fifth-grader who was raped should be charged with a felony. In that same video, Scott Hern don said that the doctor and whoever helped the girl get to Indiana were accessories to murder. Whether someone has been raped, is a victim of incest or if their pregnancy

After the slate of news reports involving bears in our area this year, it is evident that the problem will only grow worse unless we take action as a community to limit the potential for encounters between people and bears.

While bears generally tend to avoid people, that can change when bears are rewarded with something tasty. Grizzly bears used to come into West Yellowstone to raid trash cans for table scraps. Only when residents started storing their trash cans in a secure location like their garage and began using bear-proof garbage cans and dumpsters did that behavior end. Residents also refrained from putting their trash cans out until the morning of trash collection.Ifyoulike to barbeque, then make sure to store your barbeque in your garage or another indoor location when it’s not in use. Keep the grill, drip pan and grease can empty and clean. Do not leave food, dishes or utensils unattended at anyOwnerstime.of livestock large and small should keep their animals in secure locations. It’s a good idea to keep livestock in a locked barn or coop during the night. Electric fencing should be used to keep bears out of pastures and runs. Grain, mash and other livestock feed should also be stored in a se cure location that is separate from your animals. It is often the failure to secure pet and livestock feed that initially attracts bears, but results in livestock or animal depredations. Orchards, berry patches, gar dens, beehives and compost piles also attract bears. Produce should be harvested as soon as it ripens. Avoid using fish-based fertilizers, blood meal and deer repellent, as these products can attract bears. As with livestock, consider install ing an electric fence in order to keep bears out of these areas and out of trouble. If you like to watch birds, then you may be sad to learn that it is not a good idea to fill bird feeders with seed, soot or nectar between April 1 and Dec. 1. Bird foods and nectars are very high in calories and are very attractive to bears. Consider using bird baths instead, or limit feeding to the winter months. Placing salt blocks to attract deer, elk or moose may similarly draw bears into your yard. I understand that cost is a con sideration when it comes to imple menting some of these measures, especially electric fencing. If you need to install electric fencing, then you may be eligible for assistance.

By Brad Smith Reader Contributor One evening my mom opened the front door at our home in West Yellowstone, Mont., to head out and meet up with some friends. Af ter taking one step out the door, she promptly turned around, came back in the house, and closed the door. “Did you forget something?” my dad “Nope,”asked.my mom said pointed ly. “There is a bear in the yard.” These kinds of stories are in creasingly common in Bonner and Boundary counties. You may have read recent news reports about bears killing livestock in Naples and Porthill. Unwanted bear encounters pose a threat to both bears and people. As residents, we need to educate ourselves about steps we can take to limit the po tential for bear encounters.

August 25, 2022 / R / 9 PERSPECTIVES The bear in the yard Tips for living in bear country

Brad Smith is the North Idaho director of the Idaho Conservation League. A grizzly bear in Idaho. Photo by Jim Mellen.

Idaho Fish and Game and Defend ers of Wildlife have programs to aid landowners with installation. You may even be eligible for finan cial assistance to help cover some or all of the costs. Contact these organizations for more information. Black bear hunters should know that bear-baiting is illegal in Game Management Unit 1, which includes all portions of Bonner and Boundary counties north of Lake Pend Oreille and the Pend Oreille and Clark Fork rivers. I have heard but have not been able to confirm that the bear that killed the llama and the pig in Naples this spring had visited an illegal bear-bait site near Clark Fork several times in the last year. If so, it is these kinds of situations that cause bears to seek unnatural sources of food placed by people, putting both the bear and people in danger. As the populations of people and bears in Bonner and Boundary counties continue to grow, it is increasingly important to take these kinds of precautions. If you live in a rural location such as Priest Lake, the Selle Valley, Pack River, Rapid Lightning, the Kootenai Valley or the North Bench, then these mea sures are especially important.

•According to the American Library Association, someone needs to raise objections to a book in order for it to be banned. Only about 10% of books that are challenged ever end up being banned. Nearly half of all challenges involve schools or libraries and 85% of challenges come from

•Allen Ginsberg’s Howl paved the way for one of the most famous censorship trials of the 20th century. Lawrence Ferlinghetti, who published Howl, was on trial after customs officials seized books because they contained “queer con tent” and “you wouldn’t want your children to come across it.” The judge ultimately ruled in Ferlinghet ti’s favor, finding that authorities had no right to censor the work.

Science: Mad about

•In 1982, Banned Books Week started in order to bring attention to works that have been challenged throughout history.

This type of electron micro scope is called a transmission electron microscope, or TEM. There are other types of elec tron microscopes as well, so you should ask a librarian if you’re curious about others. If you’d like to get an up-close look at the microscopic world, you should stop by Pine Street Woods on Friday, Aug. 26 from 10 a.m.-1 p.m., where I’ll be hanging out with the STEM trailer and the library microscopes — along with sample collectors, glass slides and a community observation board that will allow you to be a citizen scientist for the day. See what plants and animals you spot on the trails, or bring back water and soil samples to check under the scopes. If you have a library card, you can even check out a pair of binoculars for your hike — just be sure to bring them back, I’ve only got four sets. Stay curious, 7B.

Think about a microscope for a moment. What does your mind’s eyeAreilluminate?youimagining a doctor in a white lab coat leaning over a high-tech-looking tube surrounded by computers, beakers and slides? Would you believe that the first microscope was developed 700 years ago and has been regular ly used by scientific minds ever since? There is even some histor ical record of the ancient Romans working on a form of microscope 2,000 years ago. Crude glassmaking was a rela tively common practice in Europe around 1200 CE. Artisans even figured out how to grind glass with an abrasive surface to coax light into a focused area to create very crude spectacles and mag nifying glasses, likely for monks and scholars that worked to pen copies of the Bible and historical records. Working in an age before electric light was likely hard on the eyes of folks who spent their entire lives as scribes and scholars, so having a little ocular help must have been a necessity. At some point in the 13th cen tury, someone figured out that they could place a crude lens in a tube and, when aligned properly, could magnify the image that passed through. This was two inventions in one: the telescope and the microscope.Duetothe imprecise nature of early glass grinding, microscopes developed more slowly than telescopes. Three centuries passed before the first intentional micro scope was invented by someone who’s hardly known for the mi croscope, but very famous for his use of telescopes. Galileo Galilei developed the first real microscope in 1609, a device he named occhi olino, which according to various English translations means “wink” or “smallThougheye.”none of his devices survived to the modern day, a number of diagrams were found of the occhiolino. Based on those renderings, the invention looked almost like the base of a candle sitting on a metal tripod — noth ing too fancy, but pretty remark able for its Historianstime.suspect the occhi olino could produce around 30x magnification, meaning Galileo wasn’t going to see any cells with his “little eye,” but it helped pave the way for other inventors to improve on the design. It was around this time that eyeglass makers in the Netherlands and Germany began to work on devel oping microscopes of their own, placing two lenses in opposing ends of the scope to create the first compound microscope, simi lar to what’s used today. In 1665, Robert Hooke, at the age of 30, published the illustrated book Micrographia. Using a mi croscope, an oil lamp and a globe filled with water to create a light condenser, he made a number of observations of the natural world using the microscope and printed them for the world to see. Among these observations: the eye of a fly and a flea, something too small for the average person to see in detail. Hooke was also the first person to discover and name a cell while observing cork under a micro scope. In case you were wonder ing why he named it a “cell,” it’s because he believed it looked like a cellula, the Latin word for a small room or compartment, and used to describe spaces ranging from a monk’s chambers to a prostitute’s workplace to a prison cell. I suppose when you discover the basis of all life, you can name it whatever the heck you’d like, even if it’s after the office of the oldest profession in the world. Though Hooke may have been the first human to discover a cell, the title of “Father of Microbiolo gy” goes to another man, Antonie van Leeuwenhoek — a Dutch scientist and entrepreneur with a wild name and even wilder hair. He developed more than 40 different lenses and other addi tions for microscopes that allowed him to view the world at up to 275x magnification. This allowed him to see larger bacteria and protozoa. Since then, microscope technology has exploded. You can easily purchase a digital micro scope with 1,200x magnification for less than $150, and which requires virtually no training or calibration to use. If you’re reading this article, you know we like to visit ex tremes, so you may be waiting for me to spill the proverbial beans on the most powerful and extreme microscope ever invented. It’s important to know how a regular microscope works before we travel onto the more powerful ones. Photons are light parti cles. When a photon bounces off something and travels to our eye, our eye transmits that information to our brain, which decodes it and forms an image that we recog nize. Photons that travel through microscopes are focused by the lenses, allowing us to see more of a smaller space. An electron microscope works in a similar way, but it uses electrons instead of photons and electromagnetic coils instead of lenses. Scientists fire a beam of electrons into a vacuum chamber, and that beam is morphed by an electromagnetic field emitted by the coils. This morphed beam passes through the specimen and travels through another magnetic field to magnify the image even further. The electrons hit a fluo rescent screen at the bottom of the scope and produce an image that can be as small as the diameter of a single hydrogen atom.

Random Corner

•China banned Alice in Won derland by Lewis Carroll because the censor believed representing animals with human intelligence insulted humanity. Nazi Germany banned All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque because they considered it a “degen erate book” that detracted from the fighting spirit of the army. George Orwell’s Animal Farm was banned in the USSR, United Arab Emirates, Cuba, North Korea and China.

Don’t know much about banned books? We can help!

By Brenden Bobby Reader Columnist microscopes

Brought to you by:

•Severalparents.literary classics have been banned throughout history, including The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger, Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck, Ulysses by James Joyce and many others.

America has a sordid history with banning books. Unfortunately the trend is ramping up again. Here are some facts about books being banned not only here, but around the world:

•The First Amendment not only protects free speech and assembly, but also the right to read what we like in America. Courtesy photo.

•Dr. Seuss’s Green Eggs and Ham was also banned in 1965 in China because of its “portrayal of early Marxism.” The ban was lifted after the author’s death in 1991.

10 / R / August 25, 2022

OUTDOORS Dirt-y Secrets

Just ask around the community ting.com/greatersandpoint

August 25, 2022 / R / 11

“MakeColumnisthaywhile the sun shines.” — ProverbNotruer words were ever spoken. Now is the time to celebrate all growing things and to bask in the life-giving sun shine. And water. Lots of water. Celebrate our beautiful lake by jumping in it! Speaking of water, I want to talk about watering lawns, especially. I have noticed many sprinklers running in the heat of the day, and in the wind. I want to point out that most of the water used at those times is lost to evaporation or blown away. We are so lucky to have our beautiful lake and abundant rivers and streams, and it is tempting to think that losing water is no big deal. But, for the planet’s sake, it just makes sense to conserve. Water in the early morning or in the evening. If you have automatic sprinklers, set them to come on at night. Your plants and lawn will thank Recently,you.areader wondered what mama hummingbirds eat while nesting. I don’t know for sure but, from what I have read and observed, they nest near nectar sources and make short forays to sip nec tar. But, their main source of nourishment is bugs. They need the protein to maintain energy and raise those adorable chicks. Those babies are counting on mom to show them the ropes and it takes a while for them to distinguish the right flowers for feeding, and to find water. You can buy a small solar fountain for a birdbath and watch your hummingbirds play in the spray. Delightful! Recently, I saw a baby playing in my sprinkler water. Adorable. The babies are even smaller than their parents and have big heads — like human babies.Now is the time to trim your leggy or dried out plants. Petunias need a haircut in order to stay vibrant into the fall. Most hanging baskets can benefit from a trim ming and a dose of fertilizer right about now. This will take them into September in good shape. Also, choose a cool eve ning to fertilize (organically) your lawn. Then, turn on sprinklers to water it in. You’ll be rewarded in spring with a greener lawn. Spiders, spiders, every where! They are abundant this year and want to cover everything with their webs. It is tempting to get rid of them chemically, I know. But, remember: They are garden helpers. They eat pests like aphids and are themselves food for hungry birds (including humming birds). Sweep them away, squirt them away, curse them when you run into a web, but try not to eradicate them. Now is prime time for oriental lilies and sunflowers. Deer love lilies and sunflowers, but a sprinkling of blood meal seems to help keep them at bay. As a reader says, though, another good deterrent is a solar sprinkler. Of course, the best deterrent is a tall fence. I planted loads of sunflowers this year as a private support for Ukraine, and I am rewarded with their beauty and their abundant food for the bees. On the bee front: If you want to help our essential bees to survive, I suggest planting mint and allowing it to flower. All the mints attract huge numbers of bees. And, no bees means little food for us humans, or for the animals as well. Butterflies and hummingbirds love mint, too.A note about protecting your pets during hot spells: First, be sure they have ample water on these hot days and give them shade outside or, better yet, a cool inside spot. Also, if you grow grapes, keep pets away from them. They are poi sonous to dogs and cats and even a few can kill. Lilies are also extremely poison ous to cats. In my neighborhood, we have a regu lar magnificent moose visitor. He is about six feet tall at the shoulder, has a huge set of antlers and a beautiful, glossy coat. He likes apples and apple trees. Mostly, he munches the apples and branches and then finds a comfortable spot to rest any where he wants. Your lawn, your bushes, your driveway, under your trees. I have noticed that the damage he does is mostly minimal and the chance to observe this beautiful animal is worth sacrificing a few tree limbs. But, remember, moose are wild and can be dangerous if provoked. Keep dogs away and do not try to get too close. They look slow and clumsy, but can move surprisingly fast. We can all soak in this beautiful sea son and store it up for later!

Visit to place your order or give us a call at (208) 946-5404. Mention promo to receive free standard install, $200 credit, $100 Visa card, plus we will donate $50 to the Angels Over Sandpoint Backpack Program.

By Ranel Hanson Reader

-Kennden & Andrea, Matchwood Brewing Company

RELIABLEtinginternet.com/reliable

"We live and work in a town with less than 10,000 population, and we have fiber internet to our home and business. Sometimes we have to do a speed test to make sure that we aren't dreaming."

Tips and tricks for maintaining a healthy backyard ecosystem this August

Courtesy photo. @tingsandpoint @tinggreatersandpoint Really reliable internet

BNSF nearing completion on second rail bridge over Lake PendcommunityAngelsOreilleOverSandpointgrantsavailable

Ting fiber internet goes live in Kootenai

By Reader Staff

Local fiber internet company Ting announced Aug. 17 that the first Kootenai addresses were hooked up with Ting fiber internet earlier this month. More address es will be added throughout the year, but this milestone promises local residents, businesses and enterprises faster and more reliable connectivity made possible by Ting’s fiber-to-the-home service. “I am thrilled for us to officially be servicing Kootenai with Ting’s fiber,” BNSF announced that contractors have installed the final deck girder segment on the second rail bridge over Lake Pend Oreille during the first week of August, bringing the project into the home stretch. Begun in March 2020, the new bridge parallels BNSF’s existing span, original ly completed in 1904. It’s part of a $100 million project aiming to improve traffic flow on the eastern leg of BNSF’s busy corridor between Spokane and Sand point. Also included in the project are two smaller bridges over Bridge Street and Sand Creek — both completed — as well as two miles of new track that has yet to be BNSFlaid.External Corporate Commu nications Manager Ben Wilemon told Railway Age the next phases of the project will advance quickly now that the principal bridge components are in place. “All girders on the new bridge over Lake Pend Oreille have been set,” Wile mon told the website. “We have plans to proceed with pouring bridge decks and associated work. The bridges over Sand Creek and Bridge Street are complete.” Wilemon said BNSF’s current sched ule is to begin laying track in October. According to BNSF, the second main track installed between East Algoma and the Sandpoint junction will allow for trains to move more freely to and from

Residential pricing for Ting internet comes in three tiers, with 50 mbps offered at $39 per month, 200 mpbs at $69 per month and gigabit fiber at 1,000 mbps at $89 per month. Locals can check if they can access Ting at home or work by entering their address online at ting.com/ greatersandpoint.

•A children and/or youth program

The Angels Over Sandpoint looks forward to your wonderful ideas on how to enhance the lives of our children, seniors, veterans and all Bonner County citizens. Each request will get careful consideration.

Deadline to apply is Sept. 5 the northern corridor toward Chicago and Montana Rail Link’s route across south ern Montana. By that time, it’s possible that the Montana Rail Link route will be fully integrated into the BNSF system. BNSF said it has undergone upgrades on the existing bridge over Lake Pend Oreille since 2008, installing new piers and deck girders as needed. Once the new bridge is operational — which is estimated for 2023-2024 — the work on the existing bridge can continue with less interference from train traffic. After the completion of the second bridge, BNSF will be left with a small section of single track totaling about four miles in length to be resolved on its Spokane-Sandpoint route. This, as well as a single-track section near Otis Orchards, Wash., continue to be the last remaining choke points to be resolved on the route.

Photo courtesy BNSF.

12 / R / August 25, 2022 COMMUNITY

An organization holding a current tax-exempt status under Section 501(c) (3), (4), (6) or (19) of the Internal Reve nue

By Reader Staff

By Reader Staff

•Apurposes;pre-kindergarten to grade 12 public or private school, charter school, commu nity/junior college, state/private college or university;•Achurch or other faith-based or ganization with a proposed project that benefits the community at large;

•ACode;recognized government entity: state, county or city agency including law enforcement or fire departments, that are requesting funds exclusively for charita ble

Thanks to the generous donations from the community, the Angels Over Sand point nonprofit organization is able to continue their Community Grant program for the September cycle. Grant requests for eligible applicants are open until Sept. 5. The Angels Over Sandpoint grants are for $250 to $2,500 to charitable and educational organizations in Bonner County. All services must be for the benefit of Bonner County residents. Applications can be found on the An gels Over Sandpoint website at angelsover sandpoint.org under the “grants” tab. Instructions and a complete description of the grant are under Community Grants. All requests must be received by Sept. 5. Organizations eligible to apply must meet one of the following criteria: said Kari Saccomanno, Ting city manag er for the Sandpoint area. “I know how important fast, reliable and affordable internet access is, and am confident in the benefits that next-generation connectivity will bring for our broader community.”

August 25, 2022 / R / 13

Ben’s suggestions may or may not square with the Idaho Constitution, but he was right about one thing: Forces outside the free market are necessary to address our town’s real estate concerns. The market, left to its own devices, will just continue building houses we can’t afford. The authors of a recent analysis of land use in Sandpoint, Leland Consulting Group, said as much in the presentation of their report on July 12. This confirmation of what many of us who are neither real estate developers nor analyst-consultants have long suspected is reassuring. We can move forward know ing that we must do something. And the hopeful thing is, many of us already are:

At long last, the city’s Planning and Zoning Commission is working again on the long-delayed process of updating our comprehensive plan, which will help us direct and manage growth. The plan lay fallow for all of last year while the city went without a planning director and came under unprecedented pressure from land developers. The commission covered the first three chapters of the 17-chapter plan at its Aug. 2 meeting, and another three on Aug. 16. It will continue as staff provides updated drafts throughout the fall. In reviewing chapters thus far, the commission has shown concern about how well the plan still reflects community concerns, given the enormous changes of the past two years. To address this concern, a survey has been posted on the Open Town Hall website, on Sand point’s Facebook page and on its Engage Sandpoint app to assess current citizen sentiment. The survey will only be up through Sept. 2, so now is the time to let the powers that be know that your vision does not include, for example, yet another set of high-end condos. More opportunities for engagement will come in October and November, when public workshops are in the works to address Chapters 4 and 5 of the plan, which cover the difficult issues of housing andMeanwhile,growth. members of the commis sion appear to want to take direct action to speed the process. Commissioner Luke Omodt introduced a motion at the Aug. 17 meeting that he hoped would provide a nearly immediate increase in housing capacity: He proposed changing the regulations for accessory dwelling units to allow for up to two bedrooms in each unit, instead of just one, as the regulation is currently written. After some discus sion about the limitations of the proposal and the difficulty of scheduling the two public hearings that would be necessary for such a change, the commission voted in favor of it anyway, suggesting that such immediate relief was worth the effort. Due to a procedural error, this vote turned out to be invalid, but the commission cor rected the error with a subsequent vote on Aug.And23.here’s one final ray of hope: A housing land trust is in the process of forming. This approach to providing affordable housing to working citizens has been successful in other communities like ours. More on that in a future piece.

Ben had suffered that week from working in an office just half a block from where retail tenants were moving out in tears from their erstwhile shops on Cedar Street Bridge. The bridge is a local phenomenon — Sandpoint’s counterpart to Florence, Italy’s Ponte Vecchio. For many years it was the flagship store of women’s clothing retailer Coldwater Creek, a com pany started at a Sandpoint kitchen table and at one time a significant employer in town. Then it was taken over by Sandpoint Realtor Jeff Bond, who had painted it decades before as a young contractor and later resurrected it as a retail space. Now its latest owners, whom no one has met but who apparently live in Los Angeles, have raised rents beyond what local retailers can handle, and its future is unknown. (It doesn’t bode well that the new owners have closed the public bathrooms.)

useatOrtownhall.com/portals/287/Issue_12151.linktoitfromthecity’sFacebookpagefacebook.com/cityofsandpoint.YoucantheEngageSandpointapponyour

By Cate Huisman ReaderAnyoneContributorwhoreads the “Bouquets and Barbs” column of this newspaper may recall a recent rant by Ben Olson, who serves our community both as the paper’s publisher and as lovable (if premature) community curmudgeon. (Technically, he is too young to be a curmudgeon.)

PERSPECTIVES Reasons for hope in the housing crisis

Cate Huisman is a writer, editor and journalist who served for 13 years on the city of Sandpoint’s Planning and Zoning Commission.Youcanshare your vision for our future, but only until midnight Thursday, Sept. 2, when the survey closes. Use the Engage Sandpoint app on your phone. Or find the survey on your laptop at open phone to fill out the survey, but you can not get to it from the Engage Sandpoint page on your laptop.

Ben’s column that week decried the loss of both living and working spaces that are affordable to local people. He implored the public to get government to do something about it: “Petition the city council for rent control for residential and commercial tenants. Plea for a moratorium on new housing developments for a year. Advo cate for a new system where out-of-town buyers pay an added tax when buying homes or property in Bonner County, so locals can actually compete and — gasp — own a home in their own town.”

By Ben Olson ReaderSandpointStaff is fortunate to have so many talented artists living in the community, each with unique works in media including painting, sculpting, photography, jewelry, pottery, glass and more. For those in terested in seeing exactly how these pieces go from concept to completion, the 19th annual Artist Studio Tour is a prime opportunity for art lovers to visit the working studios of our local creatives. Visitors can interact with the artists, see their other works and perhaps purchase works directly from theThesource.self-guided tour runs from Friday, Sept. 2 through Sunday, Sept. 4, with studios scattered around the county opening their doors to visitors from 10 a.m.-4 p.m. each day. The tour is free of charge and participants can set their own schedule. Just hop in the car and drive the backroads of Bonner County to the locations you’d like to visit, then witness first-hand where and how art ists create the works you love. There are plenty of stop-off points in towns throughout the tour for lunch, fuel, snacks or any other needs while on the tour.For many local artists, the tour is a great chance to promote their work with locals and out-of-towners, as well as newcomers to the area. “I’ve been doing it for around 10 years now,” said Connie Scherr, who is show casing oil paintings at her studio in Sagle. “When I first started, I didn’t know what to expect; but, over the years, it has become quite fun. Larry Clark is a longtime potter here, and he’s always at my studio, too.”

2.Kim Powers (mixed media, oil and fabric). 6095 Dufort Road, Sagle 3.Gabe Gabel (bronze sculptor, painter) and T Kurtz (soft pastel) 232 Cowboy Way, Sagle 4.Daris Judd (mixed media painting) and Jessie Watt (tie dye) 745 Gallop Circle, Sagle 5.Mary Gayle Young (jewelry) 498 Rocky Road, Sagle

14 / R / August 25, 2022

The following artists’ studios are included in the tour, with numbers corre sponding to the map on this page. For more informa tion, visit arttourdrive.org.

7.Larry Clark (pottery) and Connie Scherr (oils) 333 Birch Haven, Sagle (Scherr Haven Studio) 8.Lucy West (acrylic) 639 Cliffs Above Contest Point Lane, Sagle 9.Don Fisher (photography) 119 N. First Ave., Sandpoint (Monarch Mountain Coffee) 10.Reno Hutchison (carousel restoration) 502 Cedar St. Ste. A, Sand point (The Carousel of Smiles) 11.Carolyn Beckwith (jewelry) and Lee Harris (sculpture, oil) 10000 Schweitzer Mountain Road, Sandpoint (Schweitzer Mountain Gallery) 12.Jenni Barry (kime komi) 1812 White Mountain Road, Naples 13.Terrie Kremer (fabric arts) 3075 Gold Creek Road, Sandpoint (Moose Country Quilts) 14.Jane Burke (marquetry [wood inlay]) 9105 Colburn Culver Road, Sandpoint

Artist Studio Tour offers art lovers behindthe-scenes access to working studios

6.Linda Gue (fiber) and Joanne Walker (silver jewelry) 1705 Garfield Bay Road, Sagle

Drive-thru art

1.Lori Salisbury (oil, acrylic, bronze) 135 Artist Way or 1121 Schneiders Road, Sagle

August 25, 2022 / R / 15 To submit a photo for a future edition, please send to ben@sandpointreader.com. Right: Various photos from the 16th annual Wings Over Sandpoint EAA Chapter 1441 Fly In at Sandpoint Airport on Aug. 20.Regional pilots gath ered for breakfast, fol lowed by a show-and-tell period with their aircrafts at the airport. The event is a fundraiser for the North Idaho High School Aviation program, which helps students find careers in aviation. All photos by Rich Milliron.

According to plans shared by mining companies, Rock Creek mine would require blasting and hauling rock to a mill facility within a grizzly bear habitat, which would result in more than 10,000 tons of rock moved every day. Also, approximately 3 million gallons of wastewater would be discharged into the Clark Fork River — and thus the lake — every day. Finally, a half-square-mile, 300-foot-tall mountain of tailings containing arsenic, lead, copper, zinc and blasting-compound nitrates would leach into groundwater, as well as create a 64-acre reservoir of polluted mine water.

16 / R / August 25, 2022 COMMUNITY

The Rock Creek Alliance believes this mine would have catastrophic impacts on the Cabinet Mountains Wilderness, Clark Fork River and downstream communities, damaging water quality, fish eries, and animal populations andAllhabitats.funds raised at the an nual party will help build a war chest to continue the fight.

Rock Creek Alliance celebrates 25 years with annual party

By Reader Staff For many locals, opposition to the Rock Creek Mine in Montana has occupied a majority of their adult lives. One of the loudest — and most effective — voices in the fight is the Rock Creek Alliance, which is celebrating its 25-year fight to oppose the mine because of its position near the Cabi net Mountains and the headwaters of Lake PendTheOreille.party has become an annual affair to both celebrate the continued fight against the mining companies, as well as an edu cational event to help share news with the community at large. This year’s event will take place Thurs day, Aug. 25 under the tent at Trinity at City Beach from 5-8:30 p.m., featuring a no-host wine and beer bar, complimentary appetizers, live music by local string band Headwaters, a stone skipping competition, silent auction and the latest updates by Bon nie Gestring of Earthworks, an advocacy group tasked with preventing the destruc tive impacts of the extraction of oil, gas and minerals.

“It’s important to remem ber that as long as a mining company holds subsurface mineral claims there is a very real threat of development,” said Mary Costello, executive director of RCA. “An ideal solution would be for the com pany to relinquish its claims.” Visit rockcreekalliance.org for more information. A map showing the proposed loca tion of Rock Creek Mine facilities. Courtesy TerraPen Mapping.

Attendees are encouraged to bring a blanket and chair. RCA members hope to raise additional funds through the sale of commemorative wine bottles from Pend d’Oreille Winery, as well as specialty RCA coffee at Evans Brothers Coffee Roasters. RCA is also a featured nonprofit at Winter Ridge’s “Bags of Change,” where shoppers can donate to a nonprofit of their choice by bringing their own shopping bag.

— working in extremely hot conditions — members of Bike & Build cleared a storage area and hauled multiple loads of material to Habitat for Humanity and the Bonner County Solid Waste facility. According to Program Manager Joanne Barlow, Bonner Homeless Transitions is considering options for use of the space, including renovations for making it us able for housing the homeless.

Really reliable internet

COMMUNITY

@tingsandpoint @tinggreatersandpoint

Traveling bike group passing through Sandpoint helps out local organization

-Stuart, remote worker Visit to place your order or give us a call at (208) 946-5404. Mention promo to receive free standard install, $200 credit, $100 Visa card, plus we will donate $50 to the Angels Over Sandpoint Backpack Program.

August 25, 2022 / R / 17

FPC provided overnight lodging, din ner on their first evening and breakfast for the two mornings the group was in town, as well as helped them procure access to showers and other services such as bike repairs or health care, should the need arise.The group volunteered with Bonner Homeless Transitions on Aug. 18 and hit the road again on the morning of Aug. 19.

"Before we had Ting we had dropouts in service for up to a day. Since we got Ting, there are no dropouts; we haven’t had any interruptions in service."

The mission of the First Presbyterian Church — “Loving, Living, Learning the Joy of Faith” — encourages engagement with projects that match volunteer efforts with community needs. Many members and friends of FPC participated in hosting this ministry to promote affordable hous ing.Bike & Build, Inc., is based in Phila delphia, Penn. The organization’s mission states: “Through service-oriented cycling trips, Bike & Build benefits affordable housing and empowers young adults for a lifetime of service and civic engagement.” Learn more at bikeandbuild.org. Bike & Build members gather for dinner at the First Presbyterian Church of Sandpoint before getting to work. Courtesy photo.

Just ask around the community ting.com/greatersandpoint

By Reader Staff

While at Bonner Homeless Transitions

RELIABLEtinginternet.com/reliable

The First Presbyterian Church of Sandpoint was pleased to host 17 riders from Bike & Build, a traveling bicycle advocacy group that has been advocating for affordable housing since 2003. The group arrived in Sandpoint on Aug. 17 on a cross-country ride from New Hampshire to Bellingham, Wash., and stayed for a couple of days to provide some help. On their way across the country, the riders stop in small towns and volunteer for projects associated with local needs for affordable housing.

18 / R / August 25, 2022 events August 25 - September 1, 2022 THURSDAY, August 25 FriDAY, August 26 SATURDAY, August 27 SunDAY, August 28 monDAY, August 29 wednesDAY, August 31 ThursDAY, september 1 Monday Night Blues Jam w/ John Firshi 7pm @ Eichardt’s Pub Sandpoint Chess Club 9am @ Evans Brothers Coffee Meets every Sunday at 9am Magic Show 5-6pm @ Sandpoint Library A free show with Cecil the Magician! Fun for all ages Live Music w/ Maya, Dave and Mike 5-8pm @ Pearls (Beyond Hope)Live Music w/ Doug Bond and Marty Perron 6pm @ The Blue Room Live Music w/ Mike Thompson 6pm @ The Blue Room Live Music w/ Nefftones 6pm @ The Blue Room Live Music w/ Bright Moments Jazz 5-8pm @ Pend d’Oreille Winery Live Music w/ Bright Moments Jazz 6-8pm @ Arlo’s Ristorante Live Music w/ Maya, Arthur Dave & Mike 5-8pm @ Pend d’Oreille Winery Bluegrass, Celtic and folk music Live Music w/ The Hamiltons 6pm @ Connie’s Lounge A musical duo (read more on Page 21) Live Music w/ Chris Lynch and Lauren Kershner 5-8pm @ Pend d’Oreille Winery Live Music w/ Headwaters 6pm @ Bottle Bay Resort Live Music w/ Dammit Lauren! 9pm-midnight @ 219 Lounge Big Sky-based quartet with a soulful alternative rock sound. No cover. 21+ Live Music w/ Liam McCoy Blues Trio 7pm @ Eichardt’s Pub Live Music w/ Cosmic Wagon 6:30-9:30pm @ MickDuff’s Beer Hall Old country, bluegrass, folk, classic rock Live Music w/ Runaway Symphony 7-10pm @ Matchwood Brewing Co. Dynamic band with perfect harmonies Old-Time Fiddlers acoustic jam session 3pm @ Sandpoint Library This fun, informal group includes 20 fiddlers, guitarists, banjo players, mando lins, ukes and a string bass player. Acous tic musicians and music lovers alike are welcome to join the fun. 208-263-7234 Group Run @ Outdoor Experience 6pm @ Outdoor Experience 3-5 miles, all levels welcome, beer after Rock Creek Alliance 25th anniversary party 5-8:30pm @ Trinity at City Beach (outside) Live music by Headwaters, silent auction, rock skipping contest and legal update on the fight to stop Rock Creek Mine. rockcreekalliance.org Karaoke 8pm-close @ The Tervan Karaoke 8pm-close @ The Tervan Karaoke 8pm-close @ The Tervan Mobius Planetarium 12-1:30pm @ Sandpoint Library Join this 20-minute ocean-themed plane tarium show. Fun for the whole family Sandpoint Farmers’ Market 9am-1pm @ Farmin Park Fresh produce, artisan goods, live music by Bridges Home The Sweet Lillies in concert 7pm @ The Heartwood Center Colorado-based band, with local Brenden Kelty opening. Tickets $12/advance, $15/ door. mattoxfarm.com Sandpoint Farmers’ Market 3-5:30pm @ Farmin Park Benny on the Deck • 6-8pm @ Connie’s Featuring Ali Maverick Thomas Live Piano w/ Annie Welle 5-7pm @ Pend d’Oreille Winery Artist Reception for Susan Gallo • 5-7pm @ Pend d’Oreille Winery Susan presents a lovely variety of acrylic paintings, giclee and collage Open Mic with Fritz 6-10pm @ The Tervan

As one of those fans who read all the Song of Ice and Fire books, eagerly watched every episode of GoT, bought his wife a copy of Fire and Blood, and still listens to lengthy podcasts about all of the above, it pains me to say that I may be leaning toward House Naysayer.

There is a lot to like about House of the Dragon. It is indeed gorgeous, with each episode re ported to cost more than the finale of GoT. The set design, costuming and action — in all their lurid, bloody, opulent glory — are impeccable. The dragons are spectacular, too. Yet, after having watched the premiere twice in as many days, I couldn’t shake it that this vision of Westeros felt flat.

Whereas GoT built its world of tlersdynasticpower-madhusonaglobal scale, jumping across seas and continents to develop rich stories swirling around a massive cast of characters, HotD feels confined by the centrality of the Targaryens to its narrative. Episode 1 consisted in large part of attractive rich peo ple bickering and whispering in low tones. Sure there were some good-old GoT bursts of ultra-vio lence — a gory jousting match, a limb-chopping raid on criminals in the capital city and a Cesarean birth performed without anesthesia — as well as the requisite brothel scenes, but again, these incidents unfolded with little vim. Beyond that, a sense of humor seems entirely absent. For all its blood and guts, nudity and essential shock value, GoT was frequently really funny and even emotionally affecting. By contrast, House of the Dragon so far lacks any characters to compare with the likes of Tyrion Lannister, much less side characters like Lord Varys, Davos Seaworth and San dor “The Hound” Clegane, who chewed up their every scene. We’re only one episode in — with subsequent installments streaming on HBO every Sunday — and I’m holding out hope for something with more fire; but, so far, HotD often comes off as cold as a midnight trudge around Winterfell.

Courtesy photo.

Game of Thrones prequel House of the Dragon debuts with more ice than fire

By Zach Hagadone Reader Staff A little more than three years after Daenerys Targaryen fire bombed King’s Landing atop her dragon, got shanked by her erst while lover-nephew John Snow and opened the way for King Bran to rule Westeros, the world introduced by author George R.R. Martin’s fantasy phenom Game of Thrones is back on the small screen. Never mind that the GoT series on HBO ended in May 2019 with Martin having failed to finish his novel series, which is technically titled A Song of Ice and Fire — and never mind that he still hasn’t delivered those final books — the prequel series House of the Dragon arrived on the scene Aug. 21 with its Episode 1 premiere on HBO. Based on the fictional history book Fire and Blood, published in 2018, HotD (as it’s come to be known) is focused on the dynasty of House Targaryen at the height of the family’s power 172 years before the events of Game of Thrones. For the uninitiated, almost none of the above, nor anything below, will make much sense. By way of simple explanation: the Targaryens are a brood of incestu ous silver-haired aristocrats who alone possess the ability to hatch, raise and ride dragons, making them the superpower of the seven kingdoms of Westeros, which they conquered using their winged weapons of mass destruction. Where HotD begins, the Tar garyens are experiencing a period of transition, with King Viserys I in weary decline while lacking a male heir. His brother Daemon (whose name indicates his person ality) is technically next in line, but he’s an arrogant, misogynistic psychopath, and no one but him thinks he’s fit to wear the crown. Meanwhile, the king’s head strong, intelligent and brave teenage daughter, Rhaenrya, is more than qualified to ascend the Iron Throne, but she’s a female, and hitherto no queen has been allowed to rule the kingdoms. This sets up a viper’s nest of competing inter-family interests, loyalties and betrayals, which anyone with even a passing fa miliarity with GoT will recognize as stock-in-trade for George R.R. Martin’s vision of a feudal Dallas withSodragons.far,the reviews have been overwhelming in their praise. Imdb gives the show a 9/10, 90% of Google users liked it and Rotten Tomatoes rates it at 83%. Still, there are skeptics. The New York Times wrote that HotD is “saddled with respectability. It wants to be taken seriously, or at least not give undue offense.” The Times also called it, “Game of Thrones as Masterpiece Theater.” Slant Magazine went further, writ ing that while HotD may mature into “a good show,” “its current incarnation is a colossal bore.”

August 25, 2022 / R / 19 STAGE & SCREEN

•1 ½ pounds of Brussels sprouts

Mama Marcia.” Laura loved to cook and often reached out for a recipe or cooking advice. Most of my holiday pho tos include at least a couple pictures of Laura helping out in my kitchen or donning a chef’s hat in hers, to teach my young grandchildren how to make her Aunt Doreen’s pizza. Laura had many jobs in the food industry, and it never took her long to receive a promotion. She knew her way around a kitchen and worked circles around the rest of theThecrew.week before she passed, Laura was putting the final touches on her dream kitchen. So it’s bittersweet that Laura, Bryce and their girls spent but one short week in their newly completed home in the moun tains near Rathdrum. I can only imagine how special the first family holiday meal she hosted would have been. No doubt it would have been Thanksgiving. One of my fondest Laura memories occurred before a Thanksgiving dinner I hosted years ago. She called to make sure I would be serving her family’s favorite holidaySweetvegetable.Laura,there will al ways be a place at my table for your family. We’ll share stories of the enduring friendships and family bonds you forged and the love you found with Bryce that only strengthened and grew with motherhood. And I promise to always serve Brussels sprouts at my holiday table.

Wash the Brussels sprouts, removing any loose or brown leaves. If brown, trim the stems. Set aside.

Brussels sprouts with pistachios and Parmesan

In a sauté pan (with a tight-fitting lid), cook the bacon on medium-high heat until crisp. Remove bacon with a slotted spoon, drain on a paper towel and set aside. Turn down heat and add onions to bacon grease, stirring until browned and beginning to caramelize, add the garlic and cook until soft. Add the Brussels sprouts and cover. Continue to cook about 10 minutes, occasionally shaking the pan. While the sprouts are cooking, toss together the bacon, nuts and cheese. Remove lid from pan, stir and scrape up any bits in bottom of pan, and add salt and pepper to taste. Remove from heat and transfer to serving dish. Sprinkle bacon/nut/ cheese mixture on top and serve.

The Sandpoint Eater To Laura with love

DIRECTIONS:

ThisColumnistweek’scolumn was sup posed to be about food trucks. I love food trucks. I seek them out everywhere I go and couldn’t wait to tell you about some of my favorites. But, alas, this week my heart isn’t into these mobileInstead,eateries.Iwould be remiss if I didn’t tell you about Laura. Our sweet Laura passed away nearly two weeks ago from childbirth complications. She left a grieving family — her fiancé Bryce, two precious little girls (newborn Hadley and toddler Mabel), parents Mary and Bob, and a heartbroken community.Laurawas a rare combina tion of quiet yet fierce determi nation with a profoundly loving and warm heart who passed away during the happiest period of her life. A young life that should have been filled with years of Laurapromise.wasmy daughter Casey’s classmate and, early in their middle school friendship, I forged a relationship with Lau ra’s mom, Mary. We’ve been the best of friends ever since. Back then, I was a single, workahol ic mother and, if it wasn’t for Mary, our third partner-in-crime Darcy, and other assorted, car ing parents, Casey (and I) would have never made it through mid dle school — nor built the bonds that still connect us like kin. Since we had no family nearby, we made our own. For the past 20-plus years, we’ve shared countless Sunday dinners and celebrated holidays with Christmas buffets, Thanksgiving dinners and Easter brunches. In addition, we hosted engage ment parties, wedding and baby showers, and myriad birthday celebrations for one another’s family members. When they were younger, Casey made countless road trips with Laura’s family, including to far-away familyLaura,weddings.Caseyand I traveled to many places, too. I took them to see A Christmas Carol in San Francisco, where I had to con vince ever-so-practical Laura to splurge at the concession stand (never a problem for Casey). Once Laura and I went to Ireland — just the two of us — when a friend couldn’t join her at the last minute and Laura was still aching to go. We climbed to the top of Blarney Castle and crawled into the burial chambers at Newgrange. On one chilly evening in Wa tergrasshill, we shared a bed and our host provided us with a hot water bottle to warm the covers. We placed it between us and whispered into the night about the black-and-white pud ding (blood sausage) that Laura had politely consumed that morning. It was her introduc tion to a full Irish breakfast. I’ve been pouring through all sorts of ephemera — pic tures, clippings, old emails and text messages — searching out favorite memories of my Laura. She had many great women in her life, but Laura and I had a special bond, and I’ll forever cherish my collection of emails and notes that start, “Dear

20 / R / August 25, 2022

•½ yellow onion, peeled and coarsely chopped 2 cloves of garlic, chopped 4 strips of partially frozen bacon, sliced into thin strips ¼ cup shelled pistachio nuts coarsely chopped ¼ cup finely grated Parmesan cheese Salt and pepper

INGREDIENTS:

These are a great addition to any dinner. For a vegetarian option, skip the bacon and use half butter/half olive oil (1 tbs each) to sauté the onions and garlic. Serves 6

By Marcia Pilgeram Reader

String music is the music of working, rural people. One of the local bands sharing those sweet string sounds in North Idaho is Coeur d’Alene-based Cosmic Wagon, which plays bluegrass, country, folk and classic rock tunes all over the panhandle. Cosmic Wagon combines the instrumental and songwriting tal ents of Matt Renner, Robert Artz, Ella Ellinghausen and Clayton Howard. Each artist brings years of experience to the mix, which Sky Festival in Whitefish. The band has done all that from the self-described “middle of nowhere” — proof that great things can come from small places. Dammit Lauren! will be a damn good show at the 219, de serving of its exclamation point.

“When you’re more of a sto ryteller artist, like we are, you’re taking people through a little jour ney and each song has this way about it,” Hamil ton said. “That’s a standard Americana.forIt can sound many ways — lean more rock ’n’ roll or country and this and that — but it tends to have a story.”

Local backcountry survival ist and teacher Karie Lee Knoke came in second on season nine of the History Channel series Alone The entire season is now available to watch on history.com. Karie Lee did Sandpoint proud by not only doing so well in the competition, but, in my opinion, in the way she shared her connection to the land. Her vulnerability, tenacity and play ful spirit are all admirable traits.

August 25, 2022 / R / 21 READ

“We definitely feel super comfortable on a stage, just her and I and two guitars,” Phil Ham ilton told the Reader in a phone interview from the road, where that journey is taking on a literal form as he and his family make the trek from homebase in New Mexico up north to Sandpoint and a gig at Connie’s Cafe on Friday, Aug. 26 at 6 p.m. Hamilton said they have a “storyteller show” planned for this particular show, which came about because his best friend and former manager recently relocated to the area. The acousticbeperformanceConnie’swillanintimate,set.“We’lltalkabout the songs we wrote, and who we wrote them with,” he said. “We like to share the stories behind the songs. It’s a fun, up-close-and-personal show.”

This week’s RLW by Lyndsie Kiebert-Carey

The Hamiltons Friday, Aug. 26; 6 p.m.; FREE. Connie’s Cafe patio, 323 Cedar St., 208-255-2227. Listen to The Hamiltons on YouTube, Spotify and other streaming services.

— Lyndsie Kiebert-Carey 6:30-9:30 p.m., FREE, 21+. MickDuff’s Beer Hall, 220 Cedar. St., 208-209-6700, mickduffs.com.

A snapshot of notable live music coming up in Sandpoint

By Lyndsie Kiebert-Carey ReaderSeparately,Staff

Hamilton said the Sandpoint show will feature new and old songs from both of their cata logs, as well as some covers.

I’ve just be gun reading John Green’s The An thropocene Re viewed, which is a book spin-off from Green’s longtime podcast of the same name, on which the best-selling novelist “reviews different facets of the human-centered planet on a five-star scale.” I’m a huge fan of Green’s prior writings — The Fault in Our Stars and Looking for Alaska, in particular. So far, I’ve enjoyed reading his latest work, which is far more personal, but still full of good-hearted quips. I don’t often stumble across mu sic that evokes a visceral response upon first listen; so, when I do, I know I’ve found some thing special. If you ever take the time to set down this newspaper and search up a song that I recommend, let it be now, and listen to “Alleyway” by Anna Tivel. The craftsmanship behind it, from the vocal inflection to the lyr ical content, makes it one of those gems that now sits on its own play list on my Spotify account because I can’t seem to find another song I like enough to listen to after it.

Erica Perry and Phil Hamilton of The Hamiltons. Courtesy photo.

MUSIC

Phil Hamilton and Erica Perry blazed their own trails on the Texas music scene, offering up musical flavors of country and rock, and finding individual success in doing so. However, the past several years have marked a considerable change for the artists, as their marriage and the birth of their first child introduced new elements to that musical journey. As a result, they’ve joined forces as The Ham iltons, a duo made memorable by the easy way the artists compli ment their respective strengths.

Stories, especially about the last few years of parenthood and everything else that’s come with becoming The Hamiltons — both in life and as a band — will take center stage, he said.

Based in Big Sky, Mont., the soulful alt-rock trio Dammit Lau ren! hasn’t been around too long, but already boasts an impressive resume. Lead vocalist Lauren Jackson, guitarist Brian Stumpf and drummer Casey Folley have released two albums (the latest being Electric Restlessness in July) and performed around their home state at events including the Western Montana Fair in Missou la, Yellowstone Harvest Fest in Livingston and the Under the Big

— Zach Hagadone 9 p.m.-midnight, FREE, 21+. 219 Lounge, 219 N. First Ave., 208-263-5673, 219.bar. Listen at dammitlauren.com includes guitars, fiddle, mandolin and bass. The band’s name is a reflec tion of its ambitious philosophy: old-fashioned string music meant to reach audiences far and wide. Cosmic Wagon is playing tunes for the universe, one gig at a time.

The Hamiltons lean into classic rock influences, bordering on a country sound, while remaining true to the storytelling nature of Americana. The result is an elevat ed brand of down-home comfort, perfectly showcasing the song writing talent of each musician.

“Her and I, what we have on stage, it’s very special,” he said. “We’re a couple. We’ve been through all the same struggles and everybody else goes through, and we have this thing that we do, and we were meant to do.”

Dammit Lauren!, 219 Lounge, Aug. 27 Cosmic Wagon, MickDuff’s Beer Hall, Aug. 26

A storied love Americana duo The Hamiltons to play acoustic show at Connie’s on Aug. 26

LISTENWATCH

The Hamiltons released their first joint record, Volume 1, in 2020, but Hamilton and Perry were longtime collaborators before that. Vocals from both can be heard on “Brazos Wind,” the title track from Phil’s 2016 album, which has since amassed more than 2 million streams on Spotify. He told the Reader that it marked a changing of the artistic tides in their“Itlives.was a song we all loved,” he said, adding later, “It [marks] the turn of when I started writing better music and doing things the way I wanted to do them.”

22 / R / August 25, 2021

I think a good way to get into a movie is to show up where they’re making the movie, then stick a big cactus plant onto your buttocks and start yowling and running around. Everyone would think it was funny, and the head movie guy would say, “Hey, let’s put him in the movie.”

From Northern Idaho News, Aug. 23, 1923

Crossword Solution

Finding Schitt’s Creek in ‘the Caribbean of the Rockies’

Bonus: It opened onto the patio of a restaurant next door, which played early-2000s pop hits on a loudspeaker all night long. The courtyard featured a run down playground set, a few mismatched (and many broken) lawn chairs, and a hammock that looked like it had been used to store bowling balls. As it turned out, the “resort” I saw on the internet won’t be built until September 2024, which means the place we were stay ing would soon be demolished. As such, we enjoyed a view of the construction site sprawling between our rooms and the beach. Lesson learned: Read all the way to the bottom of a motel website. Suffice it to say, Bear Lake and surrounds is one of the strangest places I’ve been. The lake covers about 110 square miles and is seven miles across. It is also about four feet deep for what felt like a mile out from shore. The water was indeed vibrant blue and crys tal clear, but felt about 70 degrees. The only aquatic life we encountered was one fish and mounds of snail shells heaped on the beach, which looked like a miniature Jersey Shore, with hundreds of pop-up tents erected next to trucks and cars parked at the water’s edge. A vast swamp separated the town from the lake, meaning boats had to be towed there by tractors.Wemade the best of all this — the kids reveled in the giant bathtub-feel of the lake, but I was less enthused about the fact that no restaurant we ate in had a beer or wine list. Watching people wash down steak with 32 ounces of Mountain Dew is simplyThroughbarbaric.allthis, my children were expert travelers and I commend them. Bear Lake is one of those places we never would have visited if not for my son’s fourthgrade report, and for that I’m grateful. But I’ve also rarely felt so fortunate to call Sandpoint home.

It has taken 10 years, many miles and more car barfs, backseat brawls and emergency roadside pit stops than I care to recall (including an apocalyptic diaper eruption six years ago that devastated the bathroom of a Flying J truck stop east of Twin Falls), but this summer my kids be came road tested and road approved. My 10-year-old son wrote his fourthgrade Idaho history report on Bear Lake and, being the engaged and supportive parents that we are, my wife and I prom ised to make our big summer vacation a road trip to see what is often referred to as “the Caribbean of the Rockies,” owing to its vibrant blue waters. Those who are familiar with Idaho geography will know that Bear Lake strad dles the Idaho-Utah border, almost within spitting distance of Wyoming. It’s also 700 miles away, making it just about as far from Sandpoint as you can go while still remaining in the state. The “Caribbean” thing got us. My wife and I celebrated our 10th wedding anni versary in the U.S. Virgin Islands, and so the idea of basking on a beach beside clear blue waters sounded pretty appealing. Bet ter still, I’d found and booked us accom modations on the Utah side at what was described online as a “resort” and “lodge.” Perusing the website, I saw clean and comfortable rooms with nearby access to the beach. All manner of amenities were promised — best of all, a suite was available with two beds in a separate room, meaning my wife and I wouldn’t have to end up sharing a bed with a kid. So we splurged on the “resort” and looked forward to indulging in the suite life after two days of six-plus-hour driving.

By Zach Hagadone Reader Staff

PIONEER INDIAN SCOUT LOCATES OLD HOUSE

There were a lot of great things we saw between Sandpoint and Bear Lake (as well as on the rest of our 1,600-mile trip through Boise and Pullman, Wash.), but there is neither the space nor interest to hear about them. Next to dreams and health problems, other people’s vacation stories are the most tedious topic of conversation. That said, I have to tell you that our lodging was less resort than lodge, and more “motor lodge” than lodge. And by that, I’m talking Schitt’s Creek. I’m talking “place you stay when you just got out of jail and no one wants you sleeping on their couch.” For instance, our rooms had no air conditioning — just a box fan that had to be plugged into the only outlet in the main bedroom. The deadbolt had a chain but no receiver. The kitchenette featured an ice box from the 1960s and contained two half-consumed raspberry milkshakes left by the previous occupants. Three bathroom wall tiles lay broken on the floor behind the door, and the bath room window had a window that wouldn’t stay shut.

BACK OF THE BOOK

A perfect day and an ideal place for a picnic on the clean white sand at the mouth of the Clarks Fork riv er helped to make a success of the second annual picnic of the Pioneer society. More than 200 people were in attendance.Oneofthefeatures of the day was the discovery by Duncan Mc Donald, noted Indian scout, of what remains of the chimneys of the old Kullyspell House, one of the first houses erected along the shores of Lake Pend d’Oreille. McDonald’s grandfather assisted in teh erection of the building in the year 1809. McDonald had but little trouble in locating the chimneys notwith standing the fact that others had searched for them many times, he being invited to make the search by organization.ComptonWhite

of Clarks Fork, president of the society, introduced Congressman Burton L. French, who had come in the Farmin launch from Sandpoint. French spoke of his boyhood in Idaho where he has lived since 1882 and remarked in looking over the register that he noticed but one who had lived in Idaho longer than he. He related how he received his early schooling from his father and how he learned the multipli cation table from a card tacked up over his father’s work bench. He compared the ease of obtaining an education now with then. He also told of seeing trees in the Yosemite valley that are 2,000 years old, standing there when Caesar was fighting the Gauls. He then told how the Northwest Fur Trading company and its rival, the Hudson Bay com pany, had sent their men into the northwest subsequent to the Lewis and Clark expedition to establish posts to trade with the Indians.

Sudoku SolutionSTR8TS Solution

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