Saturday, February 16, 2008

About town: The Clintons rock Billings

It is one's patriotic duty to support one's local brewpubs from time to time, so instead of hitting the symphony on this particular Billings Saturday night (not being in a mood to tango,) it is time to visit the Yellowstone Valley Brewing Company after a too-long absence.

When last Montana Headlines featured an evening at the YVBC, it was for a Wilderness Society fundraiser. This time, lo and behold, arriving at the door, the discovery is made that none other than the the Clintons are in town.

No, not those Clintons.

Goodness, there are still some standards around Montana Headlines.

We are rather talking about the Montana Clintons.Whether doing original material that is a strange mix of smooth and seedy (is that why they named their band what they did?) like "White Trash Booty," singing Scottish drinking songs, covering CCR (that's Cross Canadian Ragweed -- not the other CCR) and country hits, or laying down an infectious tune like "Alright Tonight," -- well, they make for some pretty decent listening.

And the YVBC plays a good host and serves up a good product, as always. But soon, it is time for old folks to get back home to take some aspirin and go to bed.

Huge wet snowflakes are drifting slowly out of the sky, putting a little magic in the air, and driving through downtown Billings it is hard not to be glad to live in this town -- a place where even Montana Headlines and the Clintons can find some common ground. As long as it is the right Clintons that we're talking about.

Stockgrowers on brucellosis: is the Board of Livestock really listening?

The MSGA describes the mood of its members as "uneasy," and it seems that it should be. That organization had seemingly staved off the governor's push toward a "split-state" approach to dealing with the brucellosis problem that looms over Montana cattlemen because of the reservoir of that disease in bison in Yellowstone Park. Or at least until the latest "listening session" with the Board of Livestock.

Last fall, the governor seemed to have publicly (in none too good a temper) thrown in the towel on his split-state proposal -- which could also be known as a "split the Stockgrowers" proposal." Not that we blame the governor for wanting to do the agricultural equivalent of union-busting when it comes to an organization that, while itself non-partisan, tends to be supported by Republicans.

It seems, however, that the executive branch may just have been lying low. At the time when the split-state proposal got voted down, the vote was nearly unanimous. Nearly, we say, because one BOL member, Stan Boone, stuck with the governor in spite of the overwhelming testimony that Montana ranchers opposed split-state status.

Boone, as attentive MH leaders will recall, was the member that the governor pushed onto the board in the teeth of opposition from the legislature and over the objections of nearly all of the brand inspectors in the state of Montana. For those who weren't reading MH back then, here's a place to start -- follow the links.

The governor knew he what he was getting when he pushed through Boone over so many objections -- a loyal rubber-stamp. Now again at this latest "listening session," Boone came through for the governor by reviving the specter of split-state status:

"Just to clarify, split-state status is not off the table, it is still an option," stated Stan Boone, a BOL cattle representative from Ingomar.

The MSGA has made no secret of the programs that it thinks will best address the problem, and continues to wait for the Board of Livestock and the governor to be a help rather than a foil for the livestock industry in accomplishing the important task of maintaining Montana's brucellosis-free status. This should not be an issue that provokes partisanship, given the importance of the cattle industry in Montana, but it seems that this is an executive branch that is always looking for a partisan advantage.

We look forward to a Governor Roy Brown, who will work with a united ranching community, rather than working to divide them.