Hi test smelter

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The Newport Miner the voice of pend oreille county since 1901

Wednesday, OCTOBER 4, 2017

www.pendoreillerivervalley.com

Volume 115, Number 36 | 2 Sections, 20 Pages $1.00

It’s a go, HiTest to start permitting for silicon smelter By Don Gronning Of The Miner

NEWPORT – HiTest Sands has made a decision. After a process that started in 2015, HiTest Sands, Inc., has selected an area south of Newport as the site of a $325 million silicon smelter. HiTest President Jayson Tymko showed a power point presentation that outlined the silicon industry and HiTest Sands proposal during a series of public meetings in Newport on Monday, Oct. 2. Starting at the county, Tymko said the reason he had been so slow to decide on a site and announce it was because he didn’t want to create false expectations. Now that the company has selected a site, he’s ready to start the process. The plan is to build a $325 million silicon smelter that would employ about 150 people at an average annual wage of about $70,000 for hourly workers and significantly higher for salaried workers. Tymko said there would be about 120 hourly jobs and 20-30 salaried positions. In addition there would be as many as 750 indirect jobs, including about 400 people employed for the construction. The plan is to start the permitting process now and to have the plant up for a test run by Sept. 20, 2019. People who attended the county See Hi test, 2A

Miner photo|Don Gronning

HiTest Sands President Jayson Tymko announced that HiTest will start the permit process for HiTest Silicon, a silicon producing plant planned in Pend Oreille County, just south of Newport.

West Bonner School board OKs float riding High school principal wanted to limit By Don Gronning Of The Miner

PRIEST RIVER – The West Bonner School District Board of Trustees voted 4-0 in a special meeting Tuesday, Sept. 26 to allow students to ride on homecoming floats. In doing so, they overrode Priest River Lamanna High School Principal Joe Kren’s decision to limit float riders to homecoming royalty, band members and athletes. Kren said he saw students jumping on and off floats at last year’s parade, despite being instructed not to. He saw that as unsafe and decided at the first of the school year to limit students who ride the floats. A week earlier students and parents had attended a board meeting to express their displeasure with Kren’s decision. The board set the special meeting to decide if they would

Deputy identified in Coolin shooting COOLIN, ID – The Bonner County Sheriff’s Deputy that shot and killed a Coolin man, Craig Johnson, on Tuesday, Sept. 26 has been identified as Sergeant Shawn Deem. Deem has been with Bonner County Sheriff’s Office for eight and a half years. The shooting was the result of a welfare check that took a tragic turn two days later when the subject brandished a firearm at police. According to a press release from the Idaho State Patrol (ISP), on Sunday night, Sept. 24,

permit students to ride on floats. In the public comment part of the meeting, parent Amanda Grisham told the board that she didn’t see anything unsafe at last year’s parade. She said teachers rode on the float. PRLHS junior Gabby Hagman proposed that the floats have 42-inch railings and undergo a safety check before the parade starts. Kren said he was there to answer questions and didn’t have a comment. Comments were closed and trustee Samuel “Ranger Rick” Hall opened the discussion. “I can’t see kids being held back because somebody did something wrong last year,” he said. “Did we take action against the kids last year?” He wanted the students to be able to ride the floats. He joked that he carries a taser and would use it on float jumpers. Trustee Margaret Hall asked Kren what he saw last year.

Robin Johnson, the wife of Craig Johnson, called the Bonner County Sheriff’s office and requested a deputy travel to their residence in Coolin for a welfare check on her husband. Mrs. Johnson said she had been trying to contact him and he was not returning her phone calls. She was worried and requested law enforcement contact him to make sure he was okay. At approximately 11:54 p.m., deputy Gary See coolin, 2A

Fire District 2 hires new chief By Don Gronning Of The Miner

IONE – Fire District 2, which serves the north county, has hired a new fire chief/paramedic. The district hired Chris Haynes, 51. There were four candidates for the position. Fire District 2 Commissioners Donna Mitchell and Pete Smoldon voted for the hire and Frank Mundy voted against it. Haynes was offered the job the day after the vote.

See float, 9A

Saturday, Sept. 30, commissioners held a special meeting to finalize Haynes’ salary. Commissioners voted 2-1 to approve Haynes salary of $49,000 annually, with Mundy Haynes voting no. Fire District 2 has a 2017 budget of $239,096, according to the county Auditor. Haynes was lead paramedic for AMR, the ambulance

company that served Newport for a while. “My primary goal is getting advanced life support services back,” he said. He has been in contact with Fire Chief Mike Nokes of South Pend Oreille Fire and Rescue to help facilitate that. Fire District 2’s Drug Enforcement Administration license expired in May. Some resignations came following Haynes hiring. Robyn Turcotte - EMT/ See district, 2A

B r i e f ly Exbabylon enters IT talks with Priest River PRIEST RIVER – Information Technology (IT) and how it relates to the city were some of the topics discussed at the Monday, Oct. 2, Priest River city council meeting. Alex Stanton, owner of Exbabylon, attended the meeting to discuss services for the city. Councilman Greg Edwards made a motion to approve the Master Services Agreement with Exbabylon for site survey and IT review services at all city locations, for no charge. The council unanimously approved. Stanton also presented the updated IT support quote.

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After a lengthy discussion, the item was tabled for the preparation of a service agreement to be presented at the next council meeting.

‘Clockwork’ opens next Friday SACHEEN LAKE – Mystery returns to Circle Moon Theatre with the performance of Clockwork, a frantic comedy mystery by Pat Cook and presented by Northwoods Performing Arts. “The show is a complete night of murder, mayhem, and outrageous laughter,” said Alice Booth of Northwoods

Performing Arts. Clockwork is scheduled on Oct. 6-7, 13-14, and 20-21. Tickets are $25 per person for dinner and show, or $12 for the show only. Seniors and children’s tickets are $10. Dining service begins at 6:30 p.m. and the curtain opens at 7:30 p.m. For tickets and reservations call 208-448-1294 or go to NorthwoodsPerformingArts.com and at Seeber’s Pharmacy in Newport. Circle Moon Theater is located on Highway 211, 3-1/2 miles north of Highway 2.

classifieds

7B

Opinion

4a

Record

6B

Life

5B

Police Reports

6B

sports

1B-3B

6B, 10A

Public Notices

7B-10B

Obituaries

Senior Calendar

8A

hunting guide

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