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  • Thunderstorms possible here today

    The Times|Updated Aug 5, 2021

    DAVENPORT--A Red Flag warning was issued across the Northern Columbia Basin, Palouse and Spokane area from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. today, Thursday Aug. 5 due to the possibility for thunderstorms. Thunderstorms are expected to be scattered across the affected area with lightning and little precipitation. Winds are expected to be 15-25 miles per hour, but gusts could reach up to 45 miles per hour. The hot and dry conditions this summer has shown increases the fire risk from potential lightning strikes. Lightning has caused several...

  • Reyes has commanding lead for Odessa Town Council

    Roger Harnack, The Record|Updated Aug 3, 2021

    ODESSA — Candidate Alberto Reyes racked up nearly double that of his opponents combined Tuesday, Aug. 3, in the initial count of the primary election. Reyes receivd 140 votes, or 65.73%, in the first day of counting. Candidate Amanda Wallace was a distant second with 50 votes, or 23.47%, early count results showed. Ryan Frick was third with 21 votes, or 9.86%. Only the Top 2 candidates advance to the Nov. 2 general election. Lincoln County was reporting it had received 1,834 ballots, or 22.68%. The county has 8,085 r...

  • In Ritzville, one incumbent leads, one trails

    Roger Harnack, Ritzville Adams County Journal|Updated Aug 3, 2021

    RITZVILLE - One incumbent candidate is leading and another trailing in two separate races for city leadership positions in the Aug. 3 primary election. In the race for mayor, incumbent Linda Kadlec had a commanding lead over challengers Glen R. Stockwell and Dennis R. Chamberlain. Kadlec had 234 votes, or 57.35%, at the end of the initial tally Tuesday night. Chamberlain was second with 97 votes, or 23.77% and Stockwell third with 72 votes, or 17.65%. In the city council race, incumbent Mark Weigand isn't fairing as well,...

  • Sprague primary mayoral race hotly contested through first count

    Drew Lawson, The Times|Updated Aug 3, 2021

    SPRAGUE-The primary race for Sprague mayor has one candidate holding a solid position to advance to the general election, while the second spot is hotly contested between three candidates. M. Shawn Coombs has 48 votes upon early returns and is in first place. Sunnie Fortin is barely in second place with 19 votes, but Sprague business owner Dorothy Giddings is right behind with 17 votes. Timothy Wilkens isn't far behind Giddings with 14 votes, while fifth candidate Trace De Gar...

  • Keller Ferry re-opens

    The Times|Updated Aug 2, 2021

    KELLER--The Keller Ferry had re-opened as of 11 a.m. this morning. The ferry, located 15 miles north of Wilbur, links Lincoln County across Lake Roosevelt to Ferry County and the Colville Reservation via Highway 21. The ferry, also known as M/V Sanpoil, had been shut down since July 9 for repairs. The ferry had previously shut down this year due to high winds and dust concerns. WSDOT estimates that 60,000 vehicles per year rely on the service to cross Lake Roosevelt from the reservation to Lincoln County and...

  • Five seek Sprague mayoral seat

    Drew Lawson, The Times|Updated Aug 2, 2021

    SPRAGUE – The seat up for election with the most candidates in Lincoln County this year is that of mayor of Sprague. Five candidates filed during filing week in May, making the race one of just two nonpartisan races in the county with two finalists yet to be determined before the Aug. 3 primary. Sunnie Fortin, M. Shawn Coombs, Trace De Garmo, Dorothy Giddings and Timothy Wilken are all vying to take the Sprague mayor seat. Only Fortin and Coombs responded to multiple invitations from The Times to discuss their desires to run...

  • Wheat harvest begins early for some

    Drew Lawson, The Times|Updated Jul 29, 2021

    DAVENPORT – Dry and hot conditions dominating the weather cycle in 2021 have led many farmers in the Davenport/Harrington/Reardan area to start wheat harvest early, while others are sticking with a traditional start the first week of August. Many farmers in Davenport and Reardan started harvest this week, while several in the Harrington area started last week. Each farmer is different and starts on their own time, so there are exceptions to every rule, but generally harvest i...

  • Trailer crash causes single cow fatality

    The Times|Updated Jul 29, 2021

    DAVENPORT – A pickup truck towing a trailer with five cattle crashed on Highway 2 just east of Bennett Road about six miles east of here after a tire in poor condition blew out on the trailer and caused the truck, carrying two passengers, to tip over and end up facing east. The crash occurred around 10:45 a.m. Sunday, July 25. One cow was killed in the crash, but the two people in the truck were uninjured. The driver and passenger were a husband and wife whose names were not explicitly disclosed in reports from the Lincoln C...

  • Masks to be mandated in K-12 schools this year

    The Times|Updated Jul 29, 2021

    Students and staff in local schools will continue to be masked in schools this year. Gov. Jay Inslee announced the state would be following CDC recommendations and requiring masks among all staff and students in K-12 schools this year, regardless of vaccination status. The announcement came as Inslee also recommended, but didn't mandate, mask-wearing indoors in areas where COVID-19 is once again surging. Since June 30, school staff members hadn't been required to wear masks in settings such as school board meetings if they...

  • New laws force adjustments for local police

    Drew Lawson, The Times|Updated Jul 29, 2021

    DAVENPORT – 12 new laws changing the way law enforcement conducts its job that passed state legislature in May and went into effect Sunday, July 25 are causing concern and an adjustment period for local officers, sergeants, deputies, chiefs and sheriffs. The laws, which vary from restrictions on pursuing vehicles to banning chokeholds to requiring mental health calls to be responded to by mental health professionals or EMS workers instead of law enforcement will change the way many emergency calls and situations are h...

  • Is that a HIPAA violation?

    Drew Lawson, The Times|Updated Jul 29, 2021

    DAVENPORT – Since the COVID-19 vaccine became available to all adults in the United States in mid-April, debate and confusion has raged regarding vaccine requirements, HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act) violations and rights and how that impacts employers, customers, businesses, schools and other regular walks of life folks have become accustomed to. The Times reached out to Lincoln County public health administrator Ed Dzedzy to separate fact from fic...

  • Sergeant rescues horse stuck in mud

    The Times|Updated Jul 29, 2021

    MOHLER – A horse stuck in the mud in a creek near here had the good fortune of receiving help from Sergeant Jerad McLagan, a cowboy with horse expertise. Deputy Jon Evans received the initial call about a horse, “TJ,” just keeping its head above water at Sandygren Ranch on Coal Coulee Road and requested McLagan’s help in the evening of July 22. John and Lisa Sandygren were working with their daughter Jessica to free TJ, but were having no luck. McLagan removed his law enforcement gear and hopped in the creek before submerg...

  • 3-day filing period fast approaching

    The Times|Updated Jul 29, 2021

    DAVENPORT – A special 3-day filing period is coming up Tuesday, Aug. 10-Thursday, Aug. 12 for candidates wishing to file for positions that weren’t filed for in May’s regular filing period. The filing period is exclusive to those positions…any positions that had candidates file in May aren’t part of this filing period. Eight positions need filing in the Davenport/Reardan/Harrington area. Harrington treasurer, currently filled by Michael Cronrath, didn’t have anyone file in May. Reardan town council seat No. 3, currently occup...

  • OTH wins $68,000 from Lowe's centennial

    The Record|Updated Jul 29, 2021

    ODESSA – The Old Town Hall Rejuvenation Society is thrilled to be one of the 100 impact projects that are the cornerstone of 100 Hometowns, an initiative to celebrate Lowe's centennial. Lowe's received more than 2,200 submissions to the 100 Hometowns program, which invited people across the country to nominate their hometown projects in need. The 100 Hometowns program will complete 100 projects across 37 states that rebuild areas reeling from natural disasters, repair c...

  • Harvest 2021 nearly done

    Terrie Schmidt-Crosby, The Record|Updated Jul 29, 2021

    ODESSA – Harvest in Odessa is progressing rapidly this year. The lack of rain and the higher than normal temperatures have reduced yields across the board by about 40 to 50% according to Mark Cronrath of the Odessa Trading Company. Quality is also just so-so, he says. Odessa area farmers were blessed with several back-to-back years of very good crops leading up to what Cronrath calls this "insurance year" in which low yields will lead many farmers to file insurance claims o...

  • Odessa TownCouncil returns to public library

    Terrie Schmidt-Crosby, The Record|Updated Jul 29, 2021

    ODESSA – After months of only ZOOM meetings via computer, followed by more months of social distancing in the community center, the Odessa Town Council met at its ‘normal’ venue, the public library, on Monday evening, with access also available via ZOOM and Wi-Fi. A few community members also attended. Council members had their first look at a proposed 10-year contract with Consolidated Disposal Services, Inc. that is due for renewal in March of 2022. No action was taken, as council opted to take more time to study the propos...

  • Council discusses firework ban parameters

    Drew Lawson, The Times|Updated Jul 22, 2021

    DAVENPORT – City councilmembers discussed an ordinance placed before them that would give the local fire chief authority to enact a fireworks ban on the Fourth of July during times of extreme fire danger, such as the dry conditions oft discussed this year. The discussion took place at council’s July 14 meeting. Mayor Brad Sweet and Fire District No. 5 issued a ban this year which reduced firework usage in the city, but legally, the ban had no teeth. State law dictates that a municipality must have an ordinance written int...

  • Schumacher selected as interim county auditor

    The Times|Updated Jul 22, 2021

    DAVENPORT – Chandra Schumacher, CPA, was selected by the Lincoln County Commissioners to replace former county auditor Shelly Johnston as interim auditor through Johnston’s elected cycle. Schumacher will begin Sept. 1 and will be sworn in around that time. Schumacher, who comes from a third-generation farming family and lives in Harrington, got a degree in accounting from Eastern Washington University. She spent time accounting for several companies in the Seattle area before moving to Odessa Union for five years. She the...

  • County receives broadband funds

    The Times|Updated Jul 22, 2021

    LINCOLN COUNTY – Washington State’s Community Economic Revitalization Board (CERB) recently awarded Lincoln County a broadband construction grant. With a unanimous vote from CERB, Lincoln County was awarded a $2 million grant to start the first fiber build. The grant comes after the county applied earlier this year. That application passed the required threshold, and representatives from the county were invited to present “Connecting Lincoln County” to CERB July 14. Petrichor Broadband will handle management of the network...

  • City remains in the black through second quarter

    Drew Lawson, The Times|Updated Jul 22, 2021

    DAVENPORT – The city has spent just 43% of its budgeted expenditures through the second quarter of 2021, leaving the city in the black through two quarters this year. $3,249,078 was budgeted for spending, and just $1,403,084 has been spent. $741,299 has been spent from the current expense fund, which pays for legislative and executive positions, law enforcement, fire, animal control, planning, building, park/pool and interfund transfers. Law enforcement was the highest expenditure at $159,094 aside from “all others (including...

  • July 4 downtown do draws crowd

    Terrie Schmidt-Crosby, The Record|Updated Jul 21, 2021

    ODESSA – The July 4 car, truck and bike show held in downtown Odessa drew 12 car entries, six truck entries and six motorcycle entries to town. Ed Riederich of Ritzville entered a vehicle he has dubbed Atilla Da Hun Da. Roger and Melissa Simmons of Soap Lake brought their Laguna-type S-3. Roger Egbert of Davenport entered a 1956 Chevrolet. Charles Green of Moses Lake brought a 2009 Dodge SRT8 called Midnight Wolf. Stan Vangen, also of Moses Lake, entered a Chevrolet C...

  • Plastic bags banned as of October 1

    The Record|Updated Jul 21, 2021

    OLYMPIA – Washingtonians will begin to see fewer plastic bags littering the state’s roadsides, parks, and streams beginning Oct. 1 when the statewide plastic bag ban goes into effect. The bag ban prohibits the distribution of single-use plastic carryout bags by restaurants, retail, small vendors and grocery stores. The ban was originally scheduled to begin Jan. 1, 2021, but the limited availability of compliant bags prompted Gov. Jay Inslee to delay it through a proclamation. The proclamation was recently rescinded. “Si...

  • Canada to open border to vaccinated Americans

    The Record|Updated Jul 21, 2021

    VICTORIA, British Columbia — The border closure between British Columbia and Washington will be lifted for some U.S. residents beginning Aug. 9. Canada will allow vaccinated Americans into the country, provided they have been “fully vaccinated at least 14 days prior to entering Canada,” according to a press release. “All travellers, regardless of vaccination status, will still require a pre-entry COVID-19 molecular test result.” If the number of coronavirus cases doesn’t explode after that, the Canadian government...

  • Telford Rest Area Life Flight helipad unveiled

    Drew Lawson, Davenport Times|Updated Jul 15, 2021

    TELFORD – Life Flight helicopters who need to land at the Telford Rest Area to transfer or pick up a patient from an ambulance no longer must land in the parking lot and clear visitors out of the way. A new helipad at the rest area that was funded through this year's legislative budget through a special provision was unveiled by the Department of Transportation-Aviation Division, Life Flight, Lincoln County Fire District No. 7 (Creston area) and 13th Legislative District R...

  • Meet Officer Anthony Diaz

    Terrie Schmidt-Crosby, The Record|Updated Jul 15, 2021

    ODESSA – Officer Anthony Diaz is Odessa's newest law enforcement officer. He arrived in town on July 3 and has been accompanying Chief Les Jimerson for the past several days, getting familiar with the community and awaiting the arrival of his uniform. As of last Saturday, he was in that uniform for a photo and brief interview at the office of The Record. Diaz is a native of Yakima. After finishing high school, he joined the work force there and served in various capacities, i...

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