City Club Missoula

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Rising cost of food subject of next Missoula City Club forum on 9/15

People in the audience are asked to bring ideas and questions about the rising cost of food and what that means to our community.

City Club Missoula – "The Rising Cost Of Food", 9/15, Missoula

Where will our food come from in the future? What are the roles of fuel costs and pressures for other uses for food crops, such as ethanol? What can people do to control the costs to their own households?

City Club Missoula – University of Montana scientist, Scott Debnam, shares stories of Rumsfeld phone calls, possible reasons for bee colony collapse

He stopped the crowd in its tracks when he revealed the Rumsfeld-initiated roadblock to find and remove landmines.

City Club Missoula – UM Bee Whisperer To Discuss Current Bee Research, 7/21, Missoula

UM’s “bee whisperer” Scott
Debnam is responsible for the health and caretaking of up to 75 hives, or
five million bees as part of UM’s 30-year old research involving bees.

City Club Missoula – Nonprofit leaders urge investment in entrepreneurs in Missoula

Donations by western Montanans may help future entrepreneurs launch their own ventures, according to officials from two nonprofits.

City Club Missoula Forum – Recycling Wealth – Investing In Missoula, 6/9, Missoula

How are the fortunes of entrepreneurs of the past being recycled to help
the entrepreneurs of today in Missoula, Montana?

Planning director seeks feedback on growth plans at City Club Missoula

OPG wants to know what people like and don’t like about each one so the process can evolve into a single proposal that will become part of an overarching Missoula growth policy.

Next City Club on Monday 5/19 to focus on urban fringe growth

Millar and his staff are leading public discussion to help develop a framework plan that incorporates what the community wants in its growth policy.

City Club Missoula – “Urban Fringe Development Area Project: How Will Missoula Grow?”, 5/19, Missoula

The next 20 years in Missoula will see the need to create places to live
for 15,000 new households. The market is changing, and people are
interested in smaller-scale neighborhoods with schools, shopping and
restaurants nearby. Missoula can make room for these new places within
the present-day urban area. But how will we choose to grow?

City Club Missoula – Doctors discuss ethics of candidates’ health plans

“This is actually a moral tragedy nationally and it is also a community tragedy,” said Dr. John Stone, a professor and former Missoula cardiologist.