Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Amy Cannata

This individual is no longer an employee with The Spokesman-Review.

All Stories

News >  Spokane

On the road to Walla Walla

In a little more than a week, Greyhound will eliminate bus service to hundreds of Western towns, including 10 in Eastern Washington and three in Idaho's Silver Valley. Here is an account of a ride on the Spokane-to-Walla Walla route Wednesday. Two towns on that trip – Walla Walla and Ritzville – will lose Greyhound service. The trip covers about 180 miles and takes a little more than four hours, passing through Cheney, Ritzville and Pasco.
News >  Spokane

County to get loan from state

The Washington state Department of Ecology won't loan Spokane County the money it needs to build a new sewage treatment plant – at least not yet. But Ecology will loan the county $8.5 million to rework its plan for the plant and bring it into compliance with stricter guidelines for Spokane River water quality.
News >  Spokane

Development plans north, south draw fire

Two proposed shopping centers were at the center of a storm Tuesday as Spokane County commissioners considered about a half-dozen controversial amendments to the county's comprehensive plan. Residents of the Moran Prairie Neighborhood to the south of Spokane and the North Hatch Neighborhood to the north spoke out about amendments to the plan that would allow grocery stores and other commercial development in their communities.

News >  Spokane

Lampert on ballot for commissioner’s post

Retired nursing assistant Barbara Lampert announced this week that she is running for Spokane County commissioner. The Democrat is seeking the seat being vacated by Commissioner John Roskelley, representing northeast Spokane County.
News >  Spokane

New STA budget includes extra sales-tax revenue

The Spokane Transit Authority Board approved Wednesday a modified budget that takes into account the extra revenue the agency will receive because of a voter-approved sales tax increase. But because STA won't begin receiving receipts from the tax of .3 percent – or 3 cents on a $10 purchase – until December, the budget will still necessitate short-term spending on operations of about $6.7 million originally reserved for other purposes.
News >  Spokane

Higher sales tax on ballot

Spokane County commissioners voted Tuesday to put a sales tax increase for criminal justice and public safety to a countywide vote. The .1 percent sales tax proposition will be on the September primary ballot. It would cost Spokane County shoppers an additional 10 cents on a $100 purchase and would end in five years unless voters reapproved it.
News >  Spokane

Released inmate turns himself in to authorities

A Geiger Corrections Center inmate mistakenly released a year early turned himself in to authorities Tuesday morning. Charles J. Johnson, 40, told corrections officers that he knew he had a year left to serve, and "didn't want to be on the run," said Spokane County CEO Francine Boxer.
News >  Spokane

Ewers running for county commissioner

Local businessman Matt Ewers hopes to replace Spokane County Commissioner Kate McCaslin when she retires from her post at the end of the year. Ewers will be running against two other Republican candidates in the September primary – homebuilders' lobbyist Mark Richard and Liberty Lake Mayor Steve Peterson – but Ewers has McCaslin's endorsement.
News >  Spokane

Eagle Pass program branches out

The Eagle Pass program was a victim of its own success last year. So many Eastern Washington University students, staff and faculty wanted to take advantage of free rides on Spokane Transit Authority buses that many buses filled up, as did the park-and-ride lot under the freeway at Jefferson.
News >  Spokane

Treasurer seeks spot as commissioner

Spokane County Treasurer Linda Wolverton announced Thursday that she will run for Spokane County commissioner. Wolverton, a Democrat, is seeking the position being vacated by current Commissioner John Roskelley.
News >  Spokane

County may ask for sales tax increase

Spokane County residents will likely vote on another sales tax increase this September. Voters in May approved a .3 percent sales tax increase for the Spokane Transit Authority. Now, Spokane County commissioners are likely to put a .1 percent sales tax on the September primary ballot.
News >  Spokane

Loan, permit in peril for sewage plant

Plans to build a new sewage treatment plant in Spokane County are hitting serious snags. The Washington Department of Ecology has already said that it will likely not issue a discharge permit for the plant because of water quality issues. Now officials at Ecology say they aren't going to give the county the low-interest loan it was promised last year.
News >  Spokane

Transit options may save millions

Spokane residents could get a bargain-basement rapid-transit system if regional transportation planners scale back plans for a proposed light-rail line between downtown Spokane and Liberty Lake. Several new options – a bus rapid-transit system and a modified rail line between downtown Spokane and the University City shopping center – would cost far less than half of other proposals for a double- or single-track light-rail system but would sacrifice speed and capacity.
News >  Spokane

Sandifur Bridge to be ready by fall

Compare Spokane to cities like New York, where only a limited number of bridges traverse rivers, and we seem blessed. But then again, we have a fair number of headaches associated with those bridges this summer.
News >  Spokane

More seniors, disabled to get tax breaks

When you live on a fixed income, anything that could lower your property taxes is good news. So when Darlene Humphrey heard Friday that a 2004 change in Washington state law could reduce her property taxes even more, she was excited.
News >  Spokane

Sayrs to run for county commissioner

Liberty Lake City Councilman Brian Sayrs announced Thursday he is running for Spokane County commissioner. Sayrs, a computer software consultant and former Army specialist, is seeking the District 2 seat being vacated by Spokane County Commissioner Kate McCaslin.
News >  Spokane

Convict let out of prison early

Tricia Trail says she's terrified. Her former boyfriend, who was convicted of beating their two children late last year, was mistakenly released from Geiger Corrections Center Sunday, one year early.
News >  Spokane

Letting toys do the talking

Winnie the Pooh says, "Go slow, honey." He, Elmo, Mickey and Minnie Mouse, and dozens of other stuffed animals are standing guard along Courtland Avenue in northeast Spokane as part of a neighborhood bid to stop motorists from speeding to and from Esmeralda Golf Course. All of the signs and stuffed animals are the brainchild of local Block Watch leader Diane Mills, who has lived in the neighborhood for the past 35 years — 30 of those with Esmeralda Golf Course open. The bad news for residents along the three blocks of Courtland Avenue east of Freya Street is that their stretch of neighborhood is the only way to the course, and golfers late for their tee times — as many as 2,000 a week — sometimes cruise by at supersonic speed. Enter Mills, who, since the course opened this spring, has posted toys and signs in front of just about every home along the golfers' Courtland route. "It's actually worked very well. There were years when we would just yell, ‘Slow down,' or spray them if we were watering," says Karikaye Finch, who worries about the safety of her three children. Now, a 2-foot-tall sheep dog asks, "Please go dog gone slow." Mills' creativity gives motorists a little nudge and a little entertainment. "I like to do it lovingly," she says. Still, speed past the stuffed black cat urging safe driving and risk years of getting stuck in the slow lane and suffering flat tires. Mills says she cruises yard sales and "St. Vinnie's" for stuffed animals, orange cones and golf-related tchotchkes. She's stocked rolls of duct tape in every conceivable color, and has her own copy machine to mass-produce signs. Some of the animals stay up overnight, but Mills collects many of them each evening for nightie-night time in her garage. It's a way to keep them clean and dry and prevent theft. Mills says the animals' messages are getting across to drivers. "We have slowed the traffic down at least 50 percent." You ask, we answer
News >  Spokane

Spokane rousts homeless camp

A 10-day camp-out in downtown Spokane ended peacefully Thursday when the city evicted the homeless protesters – but neither side budged on the essential issues. Protesters complained that their civil rights were violated by their forced removal, and they continued objecting to a pending city ordinance that will outlaw transient shelters on city land. Spokane Mayor Jim West, meanwhile, insisted that the ban would take effect and said camping on city land is an affront to other taxpayers. "You cannot go in and squat on other people's property, and that property belongs to 197,000 others," the mayor said. The campers pulled up stakes Thursday morning and moved away without incident after city officials ordered them to leave. No arrests were made. Leaders of the protest said going to jail in an act of civil disobedience would have discredited their cause of seeking help for the city's homeless and protesting the new ordinance. What started as a small protest by several campers – they spent their first night under a large blue tarp strung between trees – ballooned. Tents and makeshift shelters were spread for more than a block on the tree-lined median of West Riverside Avenue, between the Spokane Club, the Catholic diocese office and the production building for The Spokesman-Review. "Last night, we had 50 souls in camp," said protest leader Dave Bilsland of the People 4 People organization on Thursday morning. Signs scrawled on cardboard outside Bilsland's tent read: "Camp Serene Freedom. Home of the Island Campers." While a score of police officers stood by to ensure a peaceful decampment, Mayor West simultaneously announced at City Hall that he would sign the newly approved ordinance on Monday, making it a misdemeanor to erect or occupy a transient shelter on city-owned property. He also announced a task force on the problem. Spokane City Council members adopted the ordinance in a 4-3 vote on June 28. Homeless advocates, who argued against the ordinance, began erecting their camp the same night as the vote. If West changes his mind and vetoes the ordinance, the council would need five votes to override it and force the measure into law. Bilsland said his group intends to mount a referendum petition drive. The mayor said the protest helped convince him the new law is needed, and that he ordered the camp removal. The campers, he said, had become a public nuisance. "We have been patient with them," West said, adding he supports the right of citizens to protest, up to a point. City officials said the campers were ordered to move because their tents and bedding were preventing parks staff from maintaining the trees and grass, and water was blocked to feed the roots of aging linden trees along the picturesque median. Speaking to a group of the protesters later in the day at the New Opportunities apartment building on West Sprague Avenue, Police Chief Roger Bragdon said it was his decision to allow the protesters to stay on Riverside parkway for as long as they did, but it was time for them to get out of the way of Parks and Recreation Department workers worried about the lawn. He complimented Bilsland for not allowing anyone to get hurt or arrested. "I want you to continue keeping the issue (of homelessness) in front of the mayor and the people," the chief said, "but it has to be reasonable. Breaking the law is not reasonable." Just a day before, West poked fun at the protest. After teasing county Commissioners Phil Harris and Kate McCaslin for wearing Hawaiian shirts at a Wednesday meeting about a proposed sewage treatment plant, West bolstered his own decision to wear a tie. "I've got to distinguish myself from the homeless," he said, joking that he planned to deal with the issue by sending the campers to Commissioner John Roskelley's rural home. On Thursday, West told The Spokesman-Review editorial board that he didn't care if the homeless camp is in "your yard," but they weren't welcome on the public parkway. "The bulk of the people down there were protesters. They weren't homeless," he said later, adding that he has reassembled his transition team committee on poverty and human services to come up with a city plan in the next 30 days to help those who are homeless in the short-term. The city is already working with Spokane County and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development to end chronic homelessness within the next 10 years, he said. But in the meantime, West said the campers had to go. At 7 a.m. Thursday, park maintenance manager Taylor Bressler went from tent to tent handing out a single-sheet order detailing the city's authority to force the campers' removal. "Please take notice that the courses of activity in which you are presently engaging constitute a violation of the Spokane Municipal Code," the order read. The order advised campers they were maintaining structures in public right of way, physically occupying a right of way to the exclusion of others, preventing necessary maintenance and obstructing vehicular traffic. "We just got woke up and told, ‘You have an hour to move out,' " said camper Brian Hensley. Office workers, Spokane Club members and passers-by stopped to watch the commotion. On the terrace of the Spokane Club, Manager Alan Arsenault ate his breakfast from a club bowl. Just yards away, boxes of doughnuts lay on the ground outside one camper's tent. Cliff Tvedten was downtown to pick up his mail when he walked past the encampment and saw the police telling the homeless to leave. "They ought to leave them alone," Tvedten said. "They've been around since the time of Christ. They need a place." By 8 a.m., nearly all of the campers were packing their belongings, taking down shelters and clearing refuse from the island. But Bilsland initially decided to remain in his tent and wait to be arrested as a protest against the ordinance. He sat cross-legged on bedding, rolling a cigarette. A book titled "A God in Ruins" lay on his lap. "I have found my niche in helping the homeless," he said. "This is where I want to stay." Bilsland said the campers for several days had been receiving gifts of food. He said some people had ordered pizzas delivered to the encampment. "We had fewer problems than I expected, and it was bigger than I expected," he said of the protest. Across the street, Arsenault stood on the sidewalk watching the decampment. He said that during the protest, overnight guests at the club were being kept awake by motorists responding to protester signs asking them to honk. Also, some club members said they'd been asked for money by protesters and that the protesters didn't represent Spokane well. Rob McCann, associate director of Catholic Charities, eventually persuaded Bilsland to leave the camp peacefully rather than go to jail. "I'm going to stay out so I can continue to lead the good fight," Bilsland said. Then Scott Stanger, another of the protest leaders, took Bilsland's place, and waited to be arrested. Again, McCann approached the tent, this time persuading Stanger to leave. But Stanger stood stubbornly against a tree, even as sprinklers soaked him at about thigh level. Sprinklers had been coming on four times a day during the protest. Park officials said they upped the watering schedule to protect the landscape from drying out, not to chase off protesters. Protesters responded by putting cans over the sprinkler heads. This time, the cans were gone, and the spray became cause for commotion. Protester Charles Clemons ran to a broken sprinkler head and stood over it, sudsing himself with soap and shampoo. "I might as well use it when I've got my chance," he said after finishing his impromptu shower. When the sprinklers stopped, a park maintenance crew fired up machines and began edging and aerating the grass. At 9:12 a.m., Stanger left the median, the last protester to give in to the city order.
News >  Spokane

County wants wastewater plant at Stockyards site

Spokane County commissioners voted unanimously Wednesday to abandon a controversial proposal to build a regional wastewater treatment plant at the former Playfair Race Track. The commissioners settled instead on the former Stockyards site as the location for the proposed plant, canceling a July 20 public hearing on the Playfair site.
News >  Business

Amphicar is real all-terrain vehicle

A little water never hurt anybody. Still, it's a bit shocking when it cascades over the windshield of a convertible onto your lap. But that's all in a drive in the lake for Deer Park residents Kenny and Eleanor Campbell.