CU South housing Council candidates go vegan

Barrie Hartman: CU South: A newspaper’s work

I hope people who are hoping hard to resolve the considerably-far too-previous South Boulder Campus controversy will choose a severe glimpse once more and again at the Everyday Camera’s editorial final Sunday (“CU can be the hero in this story”).

Editorial Web site Editor Julie Marshall supplied a point of view with sensible steps that might be taken to deliver peace in a war that, embarrassingly, has lasted even for a longer time than the disaster in Afghanistan.

What was amazing about the editorial was its calmness — no shouting, no fixing blame on 1 aspect or the other — just sound facts and feasible actions dependent on an outstanding amount of investigation and reaching out to a lot of distinctive voices from the previous and current.

Give the Day-to-day Camera the credit rating it justifies for carrying out what a great group

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Amid tight housing market, some in Bozeman turn to RVs as permanent homes | City

Finding a place to live in Gallatin County is a fraught task.

New rentals are few and far between. Homes for sale seem even fewer and farther with skyrocketing demand and a diminishing housing supply.

The market has pushed some, and pulled others, to give up living in a stationary home — at least for a while — in exchange for becoming full-time residents of their RVs, campers or trailers.

As a result, small cities of all varieties of motor homes have popped up in local campgrounds, big-box store parking lots and side streets.

It’s a result of the pandemic and is new to Bozeman, but the city’s not alone. There’s been a rise in people living in vehicles across the country, Human Resources Development Council CEO Heather Grenier said.

“It really was just a direct correlation to the housing market … so many people were displaced as a result

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