Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Second Entrance Explored to Reduce Traffic at North Entrance of Yellowstone Park

Roosevelt Arch

Roosevelt Arch - Yellowstone Park
(Photo by Eric Peterson)

Every day at the north entrance of Yellowstone National Park, cars stream under the historic Roosevelt Arch, a stone structure inscribed with a well-known phrase: For the benefit and enjoyment of the people.

It's a popular place to stop for photos, and it's also a place where traffic congests as long lines form to enter the park.

But the park has a plan to abate that traffic. Thursday, the park released a proposal that calls for adding a second entrance so visitors can choose to use a new access road to avoid the line of cars under the arch.

Expanded parking and new pedestrian walkways would also be added to make it easier for visitors to access businesses along Park Street in Gardiner. An administrative road in front of the Gardiner Transportation Center would be moved to separate traffic from delivery vehicles and employee parking.

The proposal is open for public review and can be found online at http://parkplanning.nps.gov/yell. A hard copy or CD can be requested by calling (307) 344-2661 or by writing to the North Entrance/Park Street EA, National Park Service, P. O. Box 168, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming 82190.

Written comments may be submitted through the website, in person or by mail and must be received or postmarked by midnight, Aug. 13, 2011.

Comments will not be accepted by phone, fax, or email. Submitted responses may be made publicly available at any time.

Story courtesy of the Bozeman Daily Chronicle

All best,
______________________

Jason Frey

Agent

 

PureWest, Inc.

jason.frey@purewestproperties.com

http://www.linkedin.com/in/jasonfreylifewideopen

www.PureWestProperties.com

 

 

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Deputies Struggling to Keep Madison River Floaters from Drinking/Driving

Highway fatalities
A white cross marks the site of a fatal crash along Hwy. 84

While Margaret "Megan" Petersen was driving from the Madison River after floating, her car drifted to the right.

She then overcorrected to the left, hitting a pickup truck head-on.

Petersen, 20, of Belgrade died Saturday at the scene of the wreck along Highway 84.

Investigators said alcohol was involved in the crash, adding that the highway gets dangerous when increased traffic combines with alcohol use, particularly with floaters.

While Madison County Sheriff Dave Schenk said there's nothing illegal about floating the river and drinking, problems begin to arise when floaters get behind the wheel and drive off.

"We always want (floaters) to have fun, but they need to be responsible when they get in the car to drive," Schenk said.

Alcohol was not necessarily the cause of the accident, authorities said, and it has not been confirmed whether Petersen had been drinking at the time.

No other serious injuries were reported from the crash.

Highway 84 has a high volume of traffic when floaters, campers, fly fishermen and others recreating on the Madison River.

On Saturday, vehicles were parked on both sides of the highway outside of designated parking areas. People were walking along the road against traffic, carrying tubes. At least one vehicle stopped traffic to pull over and pick up passengers.

Schenk said his department tries to make sure three or more officers are along the Madison River to monitor floaters, but the deputies are greatly outnumbered.

He said some days more than 150 people float the river in the summertime, and his deputies struggle to monitor them all.

"We try to watch and observe and help them stay safe," Schenk said. "Mainly we just try to be present."

Gallatin County Sheriff's Lt. Jason Jarrett said budget cuts and layoffs have caused deputies to be stretched too thin to patrol floaters.

"We used to monitor that area heavily," Jarrett said. "Now we're six to eight positions down, and we're struggling to answer emergency calls."

Jarrett said floaters have many opportunities to abuse alcohol on the river, but he advised against it.

"Alcohol makes very few things better, with the exception of a few desserts," he said.

Floaters should have a designated driver who is 100 percent sober, said Jenna Caplette, director of the Gallatin County DUI taskforce.

Caplette said the taskforce has paid for road signs warning against drinking and driving at popular floating destinations on the Madison River. Nine more signs are expected to go up along the river this summer.

"It's no secret that drinking and driving are issues with floating the river," Caplette said.

Caplette encouraged floaters to think ahead, to eat and to stay hydrated while they're on the river. She said people shouldn't be afraid to call police if they see someone breaking the law.

"It's not something to leave to the ‘specialists,'" she said. "The way to help is with people power on the road."

Story and photo courtesy of the Bozeman Daily Chronicle

Live in One of Montana's Most Majestic Settings

Grizzly Meadows Ranch, Tom Miner Basin, Jason Frey, Chrisitie's International
Grizzly Meadow Ranch, Tom Miner Basin - MT

Located a few short miles from the north entrance of Yellowstone National Park, the Tom Miner Basin has long been touted among the top 5 most beautiful places in Montana...and that's saying something in a state renowned for its natural beauty. Exploring this area of the state in more detail has been made possible for me through the listing of Grizzly Meadow Ranch, approximately 620 acres directly adjacent to hundreds of acres of Forest Service land with the fish-able water courses of Rock Creek and Tom Miner Creek forming partial boundaries.

Grizzly Meadows Ranch, Tom Miner Basin, Jason Frey, Chrisitie's International
Views of the Yellowstone River and Absaroka Mtn. Range from Grizzly Meadow Ranch

An executive home at the ranch hosts 6 bedrooms, including a massive master bedroom, and 8 bathrooms, inviting family room and bar for entertaining family and friends as well as a professional grade kitchen, formal dining room and game room. The decking is expansive and draws in some of the most dynamic views Montana has to display, which include Tom Miner Basin, Yankee Jim Canyon, the Yellowstone River and the Absaroka Mountain Range.

Family Room at Grizzly Meadow Ranch, Jason Frey, PureWest
Family Room overlooking the Yellowstone R. and Absaroka Mtns.

The land at Grizzly Meadow Ranch defies the deeded acreage by spilling over into hundreds of acres of Forest Service lands that the current owner has used to their fullest recreation potential. Hiking, horseback riding, snowmobiling, hunting and cross country skiing are immediately available on the deeded acreage as well as the adjacent public lands. A magnificent combination of private holdings and public access.

Grizzly Meadows Ranch, Tom Miner Basin, Jason Frey, Chrisitie's International
The Master Bedroom at Grizzly Meadow Ranch

Grizzly Meadows Ranch, Tom Miner Basin, Jason Frey, Chrisitie's International
Kitchen and Formal Dining Room

Grizzly Meadows Ranch, Tom Miner Basin, Jason Frey, Chrisitie's International
Formal Entrance and Foyer

For more information on Grizzly Meadow Ranch, contact me.

Offered at $9,500,000

Montana FWP to Go Forward with "Full-Fledged" Wolf Hunt


Wolves surround a bison

In what one official characterized as Montana's "first full-fledged wolf hunt," the state will allow hunters to kill 220 of the animals this fall, a figure that represents 40 percent of the total known wolf population in the state.

The quota is also nearly triple that of 2009, the last year Montana declared open season on the species that has prompted lawsuits and congressional budget riders as biologists, hunters, environmentalists and ranchers wrangled over whether the wolf in Montana should be protected by the Endangered Species Act.

 

In the latest chapter of the ongoing saga, wolves in Montana and Idaho were removed from the list with language inserted to the 2011 budget by western lawmakers this year.

While there is a lawsuit challenging the budget language, the Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks Commission on Thursday unanimously approved the quota that state biologists expect to reduce the wolf population to at least 425. Currently, at least 556 wolves live in Montana, though the actual population could be as much as 30 percent higher than that.

Regardless, officials said the large quota is not meant to be set in stone and that the coming wolf hunts will weigh heavily in the contentious wolf debate.

"The test will be what happens at the end of four or five years of scientific-based (hunts)," commission chairman and retired biologist Bob Ream said. "If four years from now we have a good, solid, sustained, well-connected population of wolves, much of the argument will be settled."

The plan drew 736 comments since it was initially proposed in the spring. Comments ranged from people arguing for an even bigger quota to those who didn't want a hunt at all. Very few people commented during Thursday's meeting, held at Big Sky Resort.


Collared wolf with elk herd in background

In the end, commissioners largely adopted the plan as proposed. Commissioners did tweak the plan in hopes of reducing the toll the hunt would take on two packs in the Gardiner area. Those wolves split their time between Montana and Yellowstone National Park. With the amendment, commissioners essentially created a buffer along the park's northern border where hunters will only be allowed to take a total of three wolves.

Most of the hunting will occur in northwest Montana, where as many as 123 wolves will be allowed to be killed. In southwest Montana, 43 wolves will be allowed to be killed. The remainder will be allowed to be killed in the Dillon and Bitterroot areas.

After the wolf was taken off the endangered species list in 2009, the state had a hunt that allowed 75 wolves to be hunted. But a successful lawsuit opposing de-listing prevented a 2010 hunt. Rider language attached to the federal budget this year has taken Montana wolves back off the list, opening the door to the hunt.

A lawsuit challenging the rider language will be heard in Missoula later this month by U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy, who has struck down previous efforts to de-list the wolf.

Conservationists say the federal government has given Montana and Idaho too much latitude in how they manage wolves - in Montana, the wolf population could be reduced to 150, with 15 breeding pairs -- putting the species in peril.

But FWP Commissioner Dan Vermillion of Livingston said before the vote that the court battles have had a negative effect on wolves, even if they kept them on the endangered species list longer than federal biologists wanted.

"This endless litigation has endangered tolerance and endangered acceptance of wolves on the landscape, which is unfortunate," he said. "Hopefully this time it will stick, and we can have this wolf hunt and learn something."

Story courtesy of The Bozeman Daily Chronicle

Monday, August 15, 2011

Maya Angelou to Speak at MSU in September

Maya Angelou
Maya Angelou
(Photo Courtesy Montana State University/Dwight Carter)

Acclaimed author Maya Angelou is coming Sept. 13 to speak at Montana State University, the MSU Leadership Institute confirmed.

“We are thrilled,” institute director Carmen McSpadden said, calling the upcoming visit “a very special opportunity for our town.”

Ticketing details are still being worked out. Angelou, 83, was scheduled to speak at MSU last fall but had to cancel because of health problems. She is a poet, author of “I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings” about her struggles growing up as a poor black girl in the South and has been a finalist for the National Book Award and Pulitzer Prize.

Story courtesy of the Bozeman Daily Chronicle

New Listing - Milligan Canyon Ranch

Montana Ranches for Sale, Jason Frey, Montana Real estate

Milligan Canyon Ranch - Three Forks, MT

Milligan Canyon Ranch consists of 1,190+/- acres located 13 miles west of Three Forks, MT. The ranch offers panoramic views of Elkhorn, Bridger and Tobacco Root Mountains amongst its rolling topography. The ranch also provides excellent privacy and a productive mix of tillable dry-land agriculture as well as native grass pasture in a location easily accessible through commercial or private airports in Bozeman, Butte and Helena. Portions of the ranch border lands held by the State of Montana that offers excellent recreational opportunities, specifically the pursuit of elk, mule deer and antelope.

Montana Ranches for Sale, Jason Frey, Montana Real estate

Native Grass Pasture and State of Montana Lands

Access to Milligan Canyon Ranch is exceptional, provided by a short distance of travel along properly maintained county roads connected directly to Interstate 90 assuring easy year-round access. Interstate 90 also provides wonderful access to Bozeman and Butte, with US287 or a combination of MT69 and I-15 providing entry into Helena. Legendary trout waters of the Gallatin, Madison, Jefferson and Missouri are also a short jaunt from the property giving the angling owner a myriad of options and opportunities.

Montana Ranches for Sale, Jason Frey, Montana Real estateBig Sky Country

The town of Three Forks derived its name from the headwaters of the Missouri which is the confluence of the three rivers that are the source of the longest river system on the continent, the Missouri-Mississippi drainage. In 1805, Captains Meriwether Lewis and William Clark and the Corps of Discovery camped at the headwaters of the Missouri River. They named the southern fork Gallatin; the middle fork, Madison; and the northern fork, Jefferson.

Montana Ranches for Sale, Jason Frey, Montana Real estate

Wooded Hillsides and Open Meadows Provide Extensive Wildlife Habitat

Located in the renowned Gallatin Valley, the headwaters area includes the towns of Three Forks, Willow Creek, Trident, and Logan, up the Jefferson toward Whitehall, up the Madison toward Harrison, and down the Missouri toward Townsend. The area of the headwaters and surrounding the town of Three Forks has some of the most colorful legends and early day history of any region in Montana. The headwaters area was a natural crossroads and hunting ground for various Native American tribes, such as the Blackfeet, Shoshone, Flathead, and Crow, many years before Lewis and Clark arrived. Nearby is the Madison Buffalo Jump State Park where buffalo were hunted until about 200 years ago.

FEMA Aid in ND Falls Short

This Flooded House - Rebuilding Help

Thousands of people across north-central North Dakota are facing a bleak financial future because of the Mouse River Flood of 2011.

Jim Olson has information about how other disaster have been dealt with - and how others in this flood are being treated in today's edition of "This Flooded House".

Many victims of the 2011 Mouse River Flood are having to recover largely on their own

For people who suffered losses in excess of the $30,200 maximum payout from FEMA, the finances are daunting

(Florence Anderson, Minot Resident) "$30,000 won't do it." (What kind of damage did you have?) "Way over the max. I came from Hawaii, sold my house there and put everything I had in here and I don't know how I'm going to do it." Many people are facing taking on another loan on their home - on top of their existing mortgage

But what's happened elsewhere where major disasters have struck? We told you Friday about the situation following Hurricane Katrina

Congress approved nearly 17 billion dollars in block grants to Gulf Coast states through the Department of Housing and Urban Development

In the case of Louisiana, the money was distributed through a program called "The Road Home" that carried a maximum per-household grant of $150,000

To date, 128,645 households have been approved for funding totaling 8.82 billion dollars, an average of $68,500

In asking this question, we've been told that budget cuts make such a response unlikely in Minot's case

Which is why we've checked the HUD budget from 2006 - when Katrina money was passed - compared with 2011

That budget was 28 billion in 2006 and climbed to 43 billion in 2010. A jump of over 50% in four years. President Obama suggested a cut to 41.6 billion for this year, but no federal budget has been passed, so it's unclear how much will be spent this year

But, let's look at another disaster - the devastating Tornado in Joplin, Missouri in May of this year

Joplin is a city of about 50,000 people in southwest Missouri

Tragically, 138 people were killed by the twister, something that can't be measured in dollars and cents

For our purposes, we will look only at the property damage in the storm

State Farm Insurance estimated the tornado damaged or destroyed two thousand buildings

The difference between a tornado and a flood is that tornadoes are covered by standard homeowners insurance, whereas floods are not

And the latest estimate from insurance industry officials is that insurance payouts in Joplin will hit two billion dollars

In Minot, only about 10% of the 4,100 homes damaged or destroyed had flood insurance, since it was not recommended after the flood control measures of the 1990s were finished

That means the people of Minot will have to come up with - through loans or other means - the hundreds of million of dollars needed to rebuild their property, beyond the $30,200 FEMA grant limit

And one final note, to our north in Manitoba, residents with damage from this year's flood qualify for a Canadian government grant of up to $240,000 per household for rebuilding

By the way, the woman in Jim's story - Florence Anderson - could really use some help in gutting and cleaning up her home.

Sunday, August 14, 2011

MSU Gives Dorms/Dining Hall $3MM Facelift, Stadium $10MM Upgrade

Facelift for Montana State University dorms
James Tex, left, and Asa Jackson, employees with Tryon General Electric, install lights in a dorm room in Langford Hall on the campus of Montana State University on Aug. 1, 2011.

For years grandparents visiting Montana State University’s Langford and Hapner Hall dormitories have noted with astonishment that nothing seemed to have changed since they were students.

Dorm rooms looked the same and even smelled the same, said Tammie Brown, MSU housing director.

Finally this summer, the two dorms are getting their first major facelifts in 51 years.

Together with upgrades to the Miller and Harrison dining halls, it means nearly $3 million worth of renovations will make living and eating on campus more attractive.

Other construction projects on campus may be bigger, like the $10 million football stadium expansion, paid for with private funds, and the $16 million renovation of Cooley Labs, largely paid for with federal stimulus dollars. But those projects won’t improve the quality of life for as many students as the dorm and dining hall upgrades.

The dorm improvements are being paid for with money earned by MSU’s auxiliary services — dorms, dining halls and other business enterprises — not with tax dollars.

“This is a huge change,” said Tom Stump, MSU’s auxiliary services director. “Kids are going to love it.”

MSU is expecting another strong year for student enrollment, perhaps equaling or exceeding last year’s record of 13,559 students, said Allen Yarnell, vice president for student success.

More than 3,500 of those students will live on campus.

Last year, MSU had to scramble to turn married and graduate student apartments into housing for an overflow of freshmen and older students who’d signed up for the dorms. What was supposed to be a temporary solution became permanent.

This year the university is ready, having turned half of the Julia Martin East housing into 158 freshman apartments.

Todd Jutila, MSU’s food services director, is excited about the upgrades to Miller Dining Hall, which serves roughly 1,500 students some 3,000 meals a day.

The institutional-beige laminate tables that filled Miller Dining Hall for 30 years have been replaced with spiffy new chairs and tables decorated with Bobcat logos. Another 50 seats have been added. Students will have more choice of large and small tables, booths and high bar-stool-style seating.

“It’s amazing what furniture will do to a place,” Jutila said, adding that the most common reaction from students so far has been “Wow.”

The menu is also getting a fresh look, with the addition of 120 new recipes, like chipotle cinnamon chicken. Miller Dining Hall has a new coffee bar, featuring a cappuccino machine and a 60-inch TV screen.

A cool new photomural by SCS Wraps, showing snowboarding and other mountain sports, now decorates Miller’s walls. Harrison Dining Hall has a dramatic new 50-foot photo of the Bridger Mountains, and next year it will get updated seating.

Students have had a big say in the changes. They wanted dining halls open longer hours, so that will happen this fall. Students hated the bright yellow paint picked out for Hapner Hall, so that was toned down. Students picked out new desks, complete with a lockable drawer.

Students hated the staff’s idea of replacing dorm closets and cabinets with armoires, so instead the furnishings were renovated. That’s a more sustainable solution that will send a lot less material to the landfill.

Nick Fulton, a 2004 MSU architecture grad, designed the dorm renovation with Bechtle Architects of Bozeman.

Brian Nostrant, supervisor for BN Builders, said the renovation created jobs for 150 workers and will be finished this week, ahead of schedule.

A lot of credit should go to MSU President Waded Cruzado for strongly supporting the effort to renovate the dorms, instead of just repairing them, Stump and Yarnell said.

Next summer, more work is planned to upgrade the two dorms’ tired-looking entries, lounges and front desks.

“It’s about time,” Brown said. “For students, with what they pay, they deserve a more current presentation.”

Saturday, August 13, 2011

New Website Helps Businesses Start, Grow, Relocate to Bozeman and Gallatin Valley

Gallatin Business Resource Network

The city of Bozeman, Bozeman Area Chamber of Commerce and Montana State University have teamed up to create a website they hope will make it easier for businesses to open or expand in the Gallatin Valley.

Gallatin Business Resource Network, www.gbrn.org, was launched Monday, said Brit Fontenot, city economic development director.

The website is intended to be a one-stop shop for entrepreneurs both here and far away to find information to help them start a business, grow an existing business or move their business here.

“The idea was that we knew that there were a lot of business resources out there locally, but there was no one place you could go to find out about them,” Fontenot said Wednesday.

The new website lists about 50 or 60 different resources such as the nonprofit SCORE, Service Corps of Retired Executives, which is a network of local business people who offer confidential, free consultations. SCORE members answer questions on topics ranging from how to develop a concept for a new business to how to get financing.

Commerce Way Street Sign

Montana State University junior John McGlenn interned for the city this summer and helped put the website together. McGlenn, a Vermont resident, is studying economics and computer science at MSU’s College of Business. He received class credits for his internship. He was not paid. McGlenn is one of two MSU interns working for the city for Fontenot this summer.

McGlenn said the new website creates a shortcut for business representatives. For example, a store owner in New York looking to open another store out West could find information about the Gallatin Valley’s economy, permitting process and more with just a few clicks.

McGlenn said plans are in the works to develop a cellphone application so business folks could access the website on the go.

The chamber helped McGlenn compile the resources to post on the website, and MSU designed and hosted the site online, Fontenot said.

Creating such a website was initially recommended by Bozeman’s Economic Development Council, formed last year to advise the Bozeman City Commission.

SLAM Festival Tops Expectations

SLAM fest
SLAM fest attendees look over some of the sculptures at the Billis Fine Art space at Bogert Park on Sunday.

While the first weekend of August may be known to many around these parts as "Sweet Pea Weekend," this weekend also included a new, free arts festival, the inaugural SLAM Festival at Bogert Park.

And despite what the name might imply to some, organizers of the event said they aren't trying to compete with the established Sweet Pea gathering, but rather complement it.

"Our focus is positive," said SLAM co-founder Callie Miller. "We want people to enjoy everything that goes on this weekend. This is a big weekend for visitors, and we wanted to give artists the most exposure they can get."

SLAM, an acronym for Support Local Artists and Musicians, is a newly formed non-profit group that aims at reinvesting in programs and projects that promote the arts and art education throughout the state of Montana.

This weekend's festival included a wide array of art booths that lined the grassy field in front of the band stage, from visual arts like photography and eye-catching brass sculptures to body art like intricate tattoos and decorative feather hair extensions. Music and dance performances complemented the art booths throughout the day, and of course there were the culinary arts, like corn on the cob, ice cream, and Montana brewed beer.

The inaugural festival attracted a fair amount of visitors during the busy weekend, especially on Saturday, organizers said.

"It really exceeded my expectations," said Miller. "We saw tons of locals and visitors. Basically, anybody at any income can come support art."

Bozeman photographer and booth holder Diana Proemm agreed that the turnout was exceptional.

"Saturday was huge, especially after the Sweet Pea parade ended," she said. "I was pleased with the amount of people coming to my booth and heard a lot of positive comments about the festival in general."

Proemm said she was pleased with the $150 it costs for a booth at SLAM, which is about half of what is charged at Sweet Pea.

"It's reasonable and accessible for me," she said.

Bozeman resident Tina Deweese, a wire sculptor, painter, and T-shirt designer, agreed that SLAM was more accessible. She said the she had sold her wares at Sweet Pea many years in the past, but was turned down this year.

"I loved participating in Sweet Pea, but it did come to a point that you were competing to get in," said Deweese as she ushered in potential customers. "This is a little bit like the old days."

Visitors also seemed happy with the turnout, including Bozeman resident Marcy Long who was relaxing in the shade Sunday afternoon.

"I'm not interested in paying to look at things," she said. "I like to look around and watch people, and this is as good as it gets."

John Palm was there on Sunday to support his son, Matthew, a young saxophonist for the band Cure for the Common that played in the afternoon. He said that while he rarely attends events like Sweet Pea, he was impressed by the free festival.

"The whole idea of this being free just seems right," said Palm.

Local Bozeman Family to Remodel Inn as Restaurant, Stores, Offices

Imperial Inn

Closed for two years, the vacant Imperial Inn might be resurrected as a rustic, mountain-style commercial space containing a restaurant, retail stores and offices.

West Main Holdings, a local family partnership, submitted an application to the city of Bozeman last week to remodel the 13,000-square-foot motel.

Keeping it a hotel didn’t make sense financially, and none of us has experience in hospitality,” said Eric Sutherland, one of four partners in the company.

The inn was shuttered in fall 2009, days before a bank auctioned off the prominent property, at the southeast corner of Main Street and Grand Avenue, to a Florida-based finance company in a foreclosure sale.

Sutherland said the partnership plans to revitalize the rundown, two-story motel with a “modern, mountain-rustic” look and a new stone, metal and glass façade.

Former Imperial Inn motel site

The motel’s lobby, which faces Main Street, would be remodeled to contain a small restaurant.

Directly behind the restaurant space, along the eastern side of the L-shaped building, motel rooms would be reworked into three or four loft-style retail spaces.

The rest of the building, which juts out to the west, would be turned into as many as four office spaces.

The parking lot in the center would be landscaped to contain picnic tables and 22 vehicle spaces.

Sutherland said the project is expected to cost $750,000 to $1 million.

He and his partners belong to the Parks family, the same family that last year remodeled the Gallatin Building, which houses the Co-op Downtown at 44 E. Main St.

The Parks bought the inn last summer and got a $7,200 technical assistance grant from the Downtown Bozeman Partnership to help them determine how to redevelop it.

The inn’s former owner, Thomas Mosser, who died last year, had at one time planned to demolish the building and build in its place a six-story hotel with underground parking. He got approval from the city and sought investors but wound up filing for bankruptcy.

Since the Parks bought the property, Sutherland said they’ve cleaned out the motel rooms. They hope to start replacing the roof before winter.

“Hopefully, by the end of next summer, we’ll have it up and running,” he said.

City Planner Allyson Bristor said the Parks family’s application will not go before the Bozeman City Commission for approval because it is for re-use of the existing building.

City Planning Director Tim McHarg will have final decision-making authority.

The application does not request any deviations or variations, though it does seek to demolish the joint where the building’s L-shape comes together, making the structure two separate buildings.

The inn’s property does not occupy the entire corner at Main Street and Grand Avenue. Part of the parking lot along Grand Avenue is under different ownership, Bristor said. No plans for that site have been submitted to the city.

City staff will also need to determine whether the inn is historic and has any special restrictions. The inn is nearly 50 years old, the national standard for when a building is eligible to be historic.

The Imperial “400” Motel was built in 1963, according to the partnership’s application. The architect and builder are unknown.

Before it was the site of a motel, the property contained a locksmith and welding shop, taxidermist, picture-framing establishment and lumber yard.

City officials gave Mosser preliminary approval to demolish the motel in 2007.

Bristor said it’s hard to say whether the partnership’s proposal could hit any snags.

“We haven’t even really had a chance to review it yet,” she said.

Friday, August 12, 2011

Verizon to Camoflage Cell Tower to Look Like Pine Tree

After residents complained that a proposed cellphone tower would block mountain views and hurt property values, Verizon Wireless has offered to camouflage the tower to look like a pine tree.

“It’s now been modified to a shorter station that will be what we call a stealth site,” Verizon spokesman Bob Kelley said Tuesday. “It’s an attempt to make the site less noticeable.”

Bridger Canyon cellphone tower

An illustration provided by Verizon Wireless to the city of Bozeman showing what a cellphone tower in northeast Bozeman near Bridger Canyon might look like camouflaged as a pine tree.

Verizon applied to the city of Bozeman in May to build a wireless-communications tower at 705 Bridger Drive — on the north side of the road next to Zig’s Electric & Plumbing as you’re leaving town and heading toward the Bridger Mountains.

The tower is intended to improve cellular network capacity for northeast Bozeman and provide coverage to Bridger Canyon, according to Verizon.

But residents say the tower would mar the views for anyone entering or leaving the city through the Bridger Canyon corridor, a popular route to Bridger Bowl Ski Area and the ‘M’ Trail.

The tower was initially proposed as a 90-foot-tall, steel lattice tower.

Verizon revised its proposal this month, shortening the tower to 84 feet, making it a single, monopole and disguising it as part of the treeline, an effort that will cost the company more, Kelley said.

Kelley said Verizon looked at a number of sites, including a nearby water tank, radio broadcast tower and grain elevator. The company decided on the Bridger Drive location, which is zoned for industrial use, because it’s “the optimum site for that section of the city.” Mountain ridgelines block other sites the company considered, according to Verizon’s application.

The proposed new tower would make it easier for people in Bridger Canyon to call 911 in an emergency and for Verizon to serve the growing number of smartphones and data devices in town, Verizon’s application states.

Best Breakfast I've Ever Had

I had a breakfast meeting earlier this week and my client requested we eat at the Cateye Cafe in downtown Bozeman. I had been to the Cateye for lunch but never breakfast, the menu is great so I was looking forward to a hearty meal.

On a recommendation from my co-listing agent, I ordered a breakfast item I normally would not have and it is hands down the best breakfast I ever had.

If you are ever in Bozeman, MT, go to the Cateye and have Banana Bread French Toast.....it is epic. They take two pieces of banana bread, prepare them French toast style, drizzle what I think was a huckleberry cream sauce on it with a dollop of whipped cream, add a touch of maple syrup and prepare to skip lunch.

Seriously, I had to stop conversation to comment on the stuff.....it was that good.

Montana's Economic Recovery May Not Include Construction

HELENA (AP) – A University of Montana economist says the state’s economic recovery likely will happen without a boost in the construction industry.

Patrick Barkey, the director of UM’s Bureau of Business and Economic Research, is presenting a mid-year economic update across the state titled “Montana’s Construction-less Recovery.” The Independent Record reports (http://bit.ly/ppc8Hf) he was in Helena Monday.

Barkey says the bureau forecasts continued growth in household and corporate earnings, is optimistic about energy and agriculture, but expects a stagnant construction and wood product industry.

Barkey says fewer people moved from state-to-state last year, reducing demand for new housing.

Montana Building Industry Association executive director Dustin Stewart says housing usually leads the economy out of a recession. He says once the economy starts to recover, housing will follow.

Thursday, August 11, 2011

My Favorite Montana Micro Brews

I recently pulled up the website for one of my go-to Montana Micro Breweries and the first thing that caught my eye was the slogan "We Make Water Fun". I love it! I enjoy a tasty libation when the moment presents itself, whether that is while floating one of our world famous rivers, listening to Music On Main in Bozeman, or atop a mountain peak before undertaking the trek back down.

Among famous waters, great hiking, epic skiing, legendary hunting and fishing that bucket lists are created around, Montana has some phenomenal micro-brewed beers. Here are a few of my favorites:

 

 

Moose Drool - Big Sky Brewery, Missoula, MT - chocolate brown in color, with a creamy texture and just enough hop to keep it from being too sweet, Moose Drool is my favorite beer, period. There is a reason it is one of the best selling beers in Montana. Moose Drool is brewed with pale, caramel, chocolate, and whole black malts; and Kent Goldings, Liberty, and Willamette Hops.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Copper John Scotch Ale - Madison River Brewing Company, Belgrade, MT - #2 on my list, but not by much, this Scotch Ale is like no other. The brewers use the finest smoked malt for flavor complexity and then combine it with roasted barley, and caramel malts for a rich, distinctive and smokey flavor. These ingredients, together, give this beer a deep, dark color that is pleasant and surprisingly easy to drink. It is smooth and satisfying to many types of beer drinkers. One of my wife's favorites as well.

 

 

 

 

 

Salmon-fly Honey Rye - Madison River Brewing Company, Belgrade, MT - tied for my #3, Salmon fly is a unique style of beer that has proven to be attractive to many types of beer drinkers, old and young, new and experienced, and many more. This unique golden colored brew is made from Montana malted barley, local honey, and German rye malt. Together these ingredients and hops give this beer a great balance, and refreshing flavor. It finishes with a touch of spice from the rye and a very subtle sweetness from the honey.

 

 

 

 

Bozone Select Amber - Bozeman Brewing Company, Bozeman, MT - My other #3 for go to beers, Bozone Select is the flagship offering from Bozeman Brewing Company. A light amber ale that has a medium malt body gently balanced by a hint of hops for a clean, refreshing finish. Dry hopped with Cascade hops for a pleasant aroma. Made with Pale, Crystal & Vienna malts.

 

 

 

 

Check them out at your local package store and if they don't have them, its just one more reason to plan your trip to Montana.

Montana Teachers Learn Archaeology at Nevada City Dig Site

NEVADA CITY— Reading, writing, arithmetic and archaeology.

“They don’t even realize they’re learning about math when they’re doing archaeology,” Crystal Alegria said, giving the measurement of artifacts as an example. “It’s a multidisciplinary science.”

Eight Montana teachers have been excavating in historic Nevada City as part of Project Archaeology, a national program based at Montana State University. The project trains teachers to design lessons for elementary students that incorporate archaeology.

Project Archaeology 2

Judy Stokes, a librarian at Hawthorne Elementary School and Bryan Kelly excavate a test unit at the Richards Cabin in Nevada City on Wednesday

This year, teachers from Browning to Bozeman worked on the Richards cabin, one of about 14 original Nevada City buildings.

The cabin was built in 1864 by the Richards brothers, two miners who brought their wives, children and mother to Alder Gulch in the hopes of striking it rich. The Richards were among 10,000 people who flocked to the gulch in Montana’s biggest gold rush.

Before long, the gold in Nevada City was panned out. The place was nearly empty by 1876, according to the Montana Heritage Commission.

The Richards left in 1868, but they left behind a wealth of objects to tell the story of their lives.

“Look at the size of that mouth!” Judy Stokes said, brushing off a horse’s bit uncovered in her 3-by-3-foot plot. “It’s a bit for a mule or a draft horse.”

Stokes is a librarian at Hawthorne Elementary in Bozeman. A horse owner herself, she explained that the Richards would have used mules or draft horses in their mercantile business to haul goods.

Project Archaeology 1

Amber Dobb, an elementary school teacher in Florence, uses a screen to sift dirt while searching for artifacts at the Richards Cabin in Nevada City on Wednesday as part of Project Archaeology, a program giving teachers hands-on learning opportunities.

“See, I’m learning, too,” said Kate McCourt, as she coached Stokes through proper measuring protocol.

McCourt is an archaeologist with the Montana Heritage Commission. She said the cabin is full of artifacts.

“We’ve found a bit, a thimble, nails, window glass, bottle glass, pieces of dishes and a saucer cup,” she said. “It’s a residential home — they usually turn up a lot of stuff.”

Before the dig is over, McCourt expects to find American Indian artifacts, too.

“I chose this old window because people just kind of threw their stuff out the window,” McCourt said.

The first step of digging is removing an 8-inch level – sediment that’s built up over the years. Underneath, excavation happens in 4-inch levels, numbered successively, until no artifacts are found for two straight levels. The artifacts are recorded and collected.

When McCourt returns to the lab in Virginia City, the artifacts will be washed, classified and entered into a database. Once organized, they will help paint a picture of the Richards’lives.

This type of deductive and critical reasoning is essential to archaeology. Alegria hopes to teach the same ideas to educators. In turn, she hopes teachers apply it in the classroom.

Teachers have been spending half the day in the field getting firsthand experience.

The advantage?

“They feel confident to go back in the classroom and teach it,”Alegria said.

A sixth-grade teacher in Browning, Bryan Kelly plans to kick off the year with an archaeology unit. He hopes to get permission for his students to help excavate around old buildings in his town. He thinks archaeology will get kids excited about learning.

Stokes said the lessons are valuable.

For example, teachers might set up a mock archaeological scenario in the classroom, encouraging students to decide how many people lived there, their ages and their hobbies.

“You take a look at the artifacts you find and you figure out what you want to know about those people, what you want to find out and what inferences you can make,” she said.

Bozeman's Gallatin Field Airport Expansion Opens to Praise

Gallatin Field terminal expansion
New Gallatin Field Terminal Dedicated

Standing in the new $40 million expansion of Gallatin Field Airport’s terminal, Kathi Coyle loved what she saw.

“It’s beautiful,” said Coyle, a Bozeman caterer, as her college-bound daughter repacked an over-stuffed suitcase for a flight to New York City.

“I think it’s marvelous. It so suits Bozeman. I love it,” Coyle said. “When you go to O’Hare or LaGuardia or Denver, there’s nothing beautiful to look at.”

After two years of construction at what officials called “Montana’s fastest growing airport,” the terminal has now doubled in size, big enough to handle up to 1.5 million people a year, twice the 750,000 passengers who now arrive and depart.

The terminal expansion kept the rustic ski-lodge look of the original, repeating the use of Gallatin Canyon granite and wooden beams, fireplaces and artist Jim Dolan’s flying geese sculptures.

“Fantastic,” said Caleb Simmons, a Delta Airlines ticket agent. “It’s got much, much more room. It’s a lot brighter. Very nicely done.”

Airport director Brian Sprenger said he felt relieved and “ecstatic.”

“It’s definitely a world-class facility,” Sprenger said, thanking a crowd of about 50 business leaders from the Bozeman Area Chamber of Commerce and Belgrade Chamber, who came for the ribbon-cutting. “We hope you’re as proud of it as we are.”

Because of Yellowstone National Park, Big Sky and Montana State University, Sprenger said, “We bring in more people to the state of Montana than any other airport.”

“We’re eclipsing Billings,” said Richard Roehm, who served on the Airport Authority board for several years. Gallatin Field is on track to become the state’s busiest airport next year, he added.

Though the terminal is now 200,000 square feet, Sprenger said Bozeman’s Prugh and Lenon Architects wanted to keep a small-town feel. The new terminal is built at an angle to the first, so passengers don’t look down one vast concourse. Pillars of stone and wood were used to make the space feel more human-scale.

“We had outgrown our facility,” Sprenger said. Before, passengers crammed through a Transportation Security Administration screening area that was shoehorned in after the 9/11 attacks required beefed-up security. TSA employees had to X-ray luggage in a cramped area behind the ticket counters. Now security areas have much more space.

Other improvements include an informal first-floor area with tables, chairs and a big fireplace where visitors can wait for passengers. Next to that is a more spacious gift shop and new Copper Horse bistro, serving coffees, Panini sandwiches, bagels and breakfast starting at 4 a.m. There’s also a Copper Horse restaurant upstairs for passengers who’ve gone through security, to encourage people to go through screening earlier.

South-facing windows were added, Sprenger said, “to show off our beautiful valley.”

The terminal still has Dennis Harrington’s grizzly bear sculpture and the bronze cast of a T-rex skull.

The expansion was paid for with about $17 million from the federal Airport Improvement Program, the airport’s savings and $16 million in loans, to be paid off over 20 years with a $4.50 fee on every ticket leaving Bozeman.

Martel Construction owner Tony Martel was beaming. “I’m very, very proud of the airport.”

“We’re done on schedule and in budget,” said Don Stueck, Martel’s project manager.

The two-year project created jobs for about 175 construction workers.

Not everyone was cheering, however. One passenger, Mark Xander, wrote an email complaining of the “horrible” experience he had at 5:30 a.m. The new security screening area was so disorganized, it took him an hour to get through. He nearly missed his 6:30 a.m. Delta flight, and others did miss it, Xander charged.

Sprenger said it’s true there were long lines for early morning flights and about 20 people out of 550 missed their flights. He said the problem was that the federal TSA headquarters had turned down the local TSA request to install new walk-through metal detectors. So two old detectors had to be moved overnight and recertified, Sprenger said. One worked fine, but the second didn’t. And while United and Horizon delayed their flights, Delta’s left right on time.

The airport has no control over the federal TSA agency, which had the detectors working by 9:30 a.m., Sprenger said.

People like to arrive 60 minutes before a flight, but it’s wiser to arrive 75 to 90 minutes early, especially if checking luggage, to leave a margin for error, he added.

Bozeman folks should realize that their small-town airport is getting busier, too.

“Year-to-date, our traffic is up 10 to 12 percent over last year’s record,” Sprenger said.

"Chalk on the Walk" a Sweet Pea Tradition

Chalk on the Walk
NICK WOLCOTT/CHRONICLE Ian Aadland, 9, draws a lion on Main Street's sidewalk Tuesday morning during Chalk on the Walk, an annual Sweet Pea activity.

Chalk covered hands, clothes and Main Street’s sidewalks by the end of the day Tuesday – the colorful aftermath of the Sweet Pea Festival’s 22nd Chalk on the Walk.

People young and old spent the sunny morning hunkered down with their chalk boxes from Grand to Broadway avenues. The idea is to paint the town – literally. What better way to celebrate art than by making art out of the city itself?

For nearly a quarter century, Chalk on the Walk has been a Bozeman tradition. Some parents take the morning off – just like they have since they were kids. Continuing the family affair, they now bring their own children.

William Young, 4, staked out a place under an awning where his art would be more sheltered from tempestuous afternoon rains. His little sister watched him make bold, bright strokes across the pavement. Their mother drew an intricate, flowery, swirled design, but William had other ideas.

“I’m drawing the super blaster,” he said, pointing at the fire-clad rocket at his feet. “It can even run faster than any person.”

Chalk on the Walk

“I drew a huge butterfly last year,” Mozelle Bertelsen, 6, said, stepping aside to reveal this year’s big, pink butterfly.

“I LIKE PEACE,” her brother, Cedar, 8, wrote in big block letters next to his 12-year-old sister Malia’s big, yellow peace sign.

Sweet Pea is a summer highlight, the children said. Cedar is looking forward to Sweet Pea’s children’s run Saturday morning, but he’s also looking forward to the festival’s music and dancing.