advertising
print page Print  email page Email 


Click here to see a list of the most popular stories.


Other Articles

The House That Henrybuilt

A dot-com refugee finds success using his hands


The First Declines

The nation continues to flirt with recession, hammered by problems in the financial services...


Daily Insight and Inspiration for Growing Your Business

Every day, Hattie Bryant invites you to watch a 1-4 minute video tip about best business practices...


Hit the Deck

New and unusual options in outdoor dining


Lessons Learned in Merging Well

How to maintain your culture when you get bought out


Gone to the Dogs

Washington's canine love affair pays the bills for these doggie daycare entrepreneurs


Let the Staff Into the Boardroom

Strong leadership propels Approach Management Services to the top


Tour Vancouver

Take a slideshow tour of Vancouver, Wash., Washington's fourth-largest city, with additional...


Where the Customer is King

At Moneytree, staff and management are on the same page


Missing Cowles Details

In "Spokane's First Family," William Stimson mentions legal actions surrounding the River Park Square public-private partnership. As coowner and publisher of The Local Planet Weekly newspaper in Spokane during the first half of this decade, I believe Stimson failed to mention other significant legal aspects.

Betsy Cowles sued several of my advertisers and freelance writers in her attempt to suppress public discussion about River Park Square. She also sought to withhold public documents from my newspaper while releasing them to other media outlets. Editor and Publisher's rebuke of the Cowles came about after E&P editor-at-large Mark Fitzgerald learned of The Local Planet Weekly's coverage of River Park Square. In 2001, with Fitzgerald's judging, The Local Planet Weekly won the national AltWeekly Award for Best Media Reporting for publishing River Park Square coverage by Larry Shook and Tim Connor.

Stimson doesn't question Stacey Cowles's assertion that because the public benefits from the remodeling of River Park Square, the public should help pay for the work. By this logic, the public should help pay for the patio I recently added to my house, because it increased my home's assessed value and therefore my property tax payments.

I don't, and didn't, dispute that a remodeled River Park Square makes Spokane more attractive to businesses and shoppers. And yes, the Cowleses remain economic and charitable leaders in Spokane. But the fact remains that the region's wealthiest family used their media monopoly and personal access to power to shift their business risk onto the backs of average citizens. The public shoulders a disproportionate amount of risk, while the Cowles keep the rewards.

Stimson quotes just a single sentence from City Council member Mary Verner in opposition to the Cowles. By quoting Betsy and Stacey at length and acquiescing to limits on interview topics, Stimson helps feed "the dark Spokane secret: namely, that 'the Cowleses run Spokane.'"

MATTHEW SPAUR Spokane

Comments

Leave a Reply


If you can't read the word, click here.

CAPTCHA image for SPAM prevention

advertising

© Washington CEO Magazine 2008