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

Tracy Ellig

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

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News >  Nation/World

Deaths Stun Neighbors Of Eik Family ‘They Just Seemed Like A Happy, Normal Family’

Brian Eik is a nice, polite 11-year-old who mowed his neighbor's lawn and took bike rides with his dad. He comes from a family where everything seemed right, a neighbor said Sunday. But on Saturday night, Brian Eik was in a place that wasn't right. He was in a GMC Yukon parked on an isolated stretch of Vicari Road dialing 911 from a cellular phone at 10:17 p.m. He told a dispatcher he'd been shot by his mother, said Lt. Jim Finke, with the Spokane County Sheriff's department. About 20 minutes later, sheriff's deputies found Brian alive. He had a bullet hole in his upper right chest. His mother and younger brother were in the Yukon, dead from gunshot wounds.
News >  Spokane

Position 2 Candidates Are Not New To Politics ‘Anything We Can Do To Create Jobs,’ Former Councilman Says Of The Perception He’s Backed By Businesses

Robert Higgins rocks in his chair. It's a calm rock, as steady as a metronome at times. Candidate Higgins has another habit: Before speaking he gives the lapels of his jacket an authoritative tug. They're habits of a Spokane City Council Position 2 candidate who says he's "not running on a mission to try to change something." He's a man friends don't hesitate to describe as "practical" and "common sense."
News >  Nation/World

Va Expands Health Care But Veterans Must Register For Improved Services

A quick stick of the needle and a little bit of paperwork could do a lot of good for roughly 13,000 veterans in the Inland Northwest this fall. The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs is vastly expanding the health care services it offers veterans. But to deliver on the new services, the VA needs former soldiers, sailors and fliers to fill out an 18-question form. "This is probably the most important change that has taken place in the VA in the past 25 years," said Gus Fabbe, chief of health care administration at the Spokane Veterans Affairs Medical Center.
News >  Nation/World

Spokane Man Charged In Parkwater Hotel Fire No One Injured In Blaze At Building Used For Storage

When the 88-year-old Parkwater Hotel burned Sunday morning, it gave off enough heat to melt the vinyl siding on a house across the street. No one was injured in what is suspected to be an arsonist's caper south of Felts Field. But the two-story Parkwater was reduced to a fried husk. Its walls were knocked down Sunday by a demolition crew as a safety precaution. It's been a while since the hotel on Union and Airport had lodgers. Most recently it has been used for storage, said Lt. Michael Zambryski, investigator with the Spokane Fire Department.
News >  Spokane

‘Photo-Red’ Would Focus On Traffic Violators Council To Consider Using Cameras Aimed At Drivers Running Red Lights

The Spokane Police Department wants to hire a new team of crime fighters who never sleep, blink or crack a joke. They live in bulletproof boxes and will move to town next May if the city gives the nod. They are cameras that will photograph anyone running a red light at select intersections around Spokane. The Spokane Public Safety Committee reviewed a draft contract for the cameras on Monday.
News >  Nation/World

Bridge Critics Find A Friendly Audience Most Attending Public Forum Agree Lincoln Street Structure Should Not Be Built

For those bashing the Lincoln Street bridge, there was applause; for those defending it, there was silence. The clap-inclined made their feelings known during a public forum on the Lincoln Street bridge at The Met Sunday night. About 90 people attended. Sponsored by the Citizens League of Greater Spokane, the forum was moderated by KPBX's Doug Nadvornick. The public radio station will air the broadcast at noon Tuesday at 91.1 FM.
News >  Nation/World

Thief Takes Money From Family Fair $7,500 Meant For Nonprofit Groups Missing

Money from a three-day event promoting Spokane as a great place for kids and families was stolen Sunday afternoon when a thief took roughly $7,500 in gate receipts. About 20,000 people visited the Family-a-Fair at the Spokane Convention and Ag Trade centers over the weekend. The event had 180 booths showing off local products and services for families and children in the Spokane area.
News >  Spokane

Lucky Winner’s Not Lucky After All

The Two Rivers Casino at Fort Spokane raffled off a $27,000 Dodge truck on Saturday, but took it back after learning the winner was an employee. Since late August, the Spokane Indian tribe's casino had been giving gamblers a raffle ticket for the truck if they won more than $100, said Aaron Scott, assistant manager.
News >  Nation/World

Vet’s Valor Honored Wwii Medals Finally Awarded

1. A hero's welcome. After finally being awarded his World War II medals - on the table in foreground - during a ceremony Sunday, veteran Orval Radtke, 81, is hugged by his six-year-old great-granddaughter Amanda. Photo by Colin Mulvany/The Spokesman-Review 2. Rep. George Nethercutt, who awarded the long-delayed medals to Orval Radtke Sunday, also thanked Radtke for his military service and presented a bouquet of roses to Radtke's wife, Lila. Photo by Colin Mulvany/The Spokesman-Review
News >  Idaho

Area Vets Left Out Of Review Not Told About Fda Seeking Input On Experimental Drugs

Inland Northwest veterans groups are angry that no one told them about an upcoming review of a rule allowing the military to give soldiers experimental drugs without consent. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has been taking public comment on the rule since July 29, but veterans from Spokane to Omak, Wash., say they didn't know about it. The comment period ends Oct. 30.
News >  Spokane

Park Designer Backs Bridge Says Lincoln Street Span Would Beautify Riverfront And Aid Area

The man who designed Riverfront Park said Tuesday the Lincoln Street bridge would be good for the park. Through the bridge project, the park would grow by 1.83 acres and add 10 overlooks of the Spokane River, Bob Perron said during a public hearing at City Hall. The hearing was the public's chance to speak out on a shoreline permit the city is seeking in order to build the $36 million bridge.
News >  Spokane

Showdown Brewing Over Casino Project Spokane Tribe Says It Will Pull Out All The Stops To Stop Kalispel Plans For Airway Heights

Claiming it will devastate their own gambling resort, Spokane Tribe leaders said Tuesday they will "take all actions necessary" to stop a proposed Kalispel tribal casino in Airway Heights. Those actions include lobbying Gov. Gary Locke to kill the proposal, seeking land near Spokane for their own casino and condemning U.S. Secretary of Interior Bruce Babbitt. "It's nothing new," said Dave Bonga, Kalispel development manager, of the Spokanes' complaints. "I don't really think it's worth the effort to respond." The Kalispel Tribe wants to build a $17 million casino with 50 gaming tables, a 600-seat bingo hall and a restaurant on 40 acres near Airway Heights. The project would be financed by Carnival Hotels and Casinos of Miami. Profits from the casino would fund social programs for the tribe. The proposal has been controversial from the outset because it would use trust land outside the Kalispels' reservation near Usk, Wash. Under federal law, a tribe needs approval from the secretary of interior to build a casino on such land. In mid-August, Babbitt signed off on the proposal and forwarded it to Locke, who has the final say in the matter. It will be November at the earliest before Locke makes a decision, said spokeswoman Helen Chung. If built, the Kalispel casino would be in the middle of the Spokane Tribe's customer base and "on the very highway that connects our market to our Resort and Casino at Two Rivers," 24 miles north of Davenport, the Spokane Tribe said in a written statement. The Spokanes also operate a casino and bingo hall in Chewelah, Wash. "It would devastate us," said David Wynecoop, secretary of the Spokane Tribal Business Council. Wynecoop and council members Alfred Peone and Greg Abrahamson gave the tribe's written statement to The Spokesman-Review at a meeting Tuesday. Babbitt ignored the Spokanes' economic concerns and "had the audacity to deny the Spokane Tribe's offer to hire economists to study the market," the tribe contends. However, Babbitt's August letter to Locke indicates he did not overlook all economic considerations. The letter notes that the Spokanes have slot machines, but the Kalispels will not. "The existence of table games in Airway Heights should have little impact on the Spokane slot revenue at its casinos," Babbitt's letter states. However, should the Kalispels also get slots, or the Spokanes lose their slots, circumstances could change. "There is no reliable way to predict the outcome of competition, but intense competition can be expected," Babbitt's letter states. The Spokane Tribe is having an economic analysis done, which it will forward to Locke. The tribe plans to meet with the governor next week, but it's doubtful the analysis will be done by then, Wynecoop said. Aside from using an economic argument to lobby the governor, the Spokane Tribe is also threatening to open casinos in Spokane, and possibly Seattle, if the Kalispels' plan proceeds. In Washington, every tribal casino but one is on reservation land. To open a casino near Spokane, the tribe would have to go through the same process the Kalispels are involved in. "That's no real threat. They have the legal right to do that, they can go through the process," Bonga said. In its statement, the Spokane Tribe offered to help the Kalispels "make a gaming operation work on their reservation." The statement goes on to contend the Kalispels broke a promise that they wouldn't build a casino on the Airway Heights land. "The Kalispel Tribe has not kept their word," the statement reads. "It's not a truthful portrayal of what happened," Bonga said. Twice the Kalispel Tribe asked the Spokanes whether they wanted to participate in the Airway Heights casino and "twice they laughed and said they wanted no part of it," Bonga said.