Real-Estate Market Drops in Montana Back To Pre Pandemic Normalcy

After red-hot start, Gallatin County real estate market closes year with more typical numbers

BOZEMAN, M.T. —  Gallatin County’s residential real estate market entered 2022 in an extreme seller’s market, with historically low inventory and lightning fast sales. While still in seller’s market territory, the market closed out 2022 with more typical numbers.

“After an extended period of time in uncharted seller’s market territory, the Gallatin County real estate market closed out 2022 at a more normal pace,” said Jim Gingery, 2023 GAR Board President. “In December we saw fewer sales, fewer new listings, and increased inventory with homes spending more time on the market. While those may look like indicators of a downturn, it’s important to remember that our market has been performing at unprecedented levels. Our market is still in seller’s market territory, and prices increased once again as we closed out the year.”


December 2022

Single Family Market – Gallatin County
Compared to December 2021, median sales prices increased 8.5%, from $725,000 to $786,951. Closed sales fell 38.5%, from 117 to 72. The median number of days homes spent on the market jumped 366.7%, from 12 to 56. The average percent of list price received by sellers fell slightly by 1.1%, from 99% to 97.9%. The median price per square foot sold increased 10.3%, from $331 to $365. Pending sales decreased 28.4%, from 74 to 53. New listings dropped 47.5% from 59 to 31. End of month inventory increased 147.1%, from 102 to 252. The months supply of inventory, which is an estimate of the time it would take to sell off the existing inventory, jumped 301.4%, from 0.9 to 3.5 months.

Condo/Townhouse Market – Gallatin County
Median Sales prices decreased 25.6%, from $469,900 to $349,500. The number of closed sales dropped 32.2%, from 59 to 40. The median number of days on the market increased significantly by 2,066.7%, from 3 to 65. The average percent of list price received fell slightly by 1.5%, from 100.1% to 98.6%. The median price per square foot sold also decreased slightly by 2.4%, from $334 to $326. The number of pending listings fell 44.4%, from 45 to 25. The number of new listings was the same as December 2021, at 40. End-of-month inventory increased 208% from 50 to 154. The months supply of inventory jumped 354.3% from 0.8 to 3.8 months. 

2022 Year-End Numbers

Single Family Market – Gallatin County
Compared to 2021’s year-end numbers, median sales prices increased 15.3% in 2022, from $685,000 to $790,000. Closed sales decreased 27.5%, from 1,580 to 1,145. The median number of days on the market jumped 57.1%, from 7 to 11. The average percent of list price received fell slightly by 1.1%, from 100.2% to 99%. The median price per square foot sold increased 17.7%, from $317 to $373. The number of new pending listings fell 29.8%, from 1,548 to 1,087. The number of new listings decreased 8.8%, from 1,768 to 1,613. Inventory and months supply of inventory are not calculated for year-end numbers.

Condo/Townhouse Market – Gallatin County
2022’s median sales price increased over 2021 by 20.7%, rising from $435,000 to $525,000. Closed sales fell 36.4%, from 983 to 625. The median number of days on the market jumped 40% from 5 to 7 days. The average percent of list price received fell slightly by 1.4% from 101.2% to 99.9%. The median price per square foot sold increased by 13.1% from $312 to $353. Pending sales dropped 34.1% from 911 to 600. The number of new listings dipped 6.3%, from 952 to 892.

https://www.gallatinrealtors.com/market-review

Maine Health Care Workers Appeal Against Case Dismissal

BANGOR, ME – Liberty Counsel filed an appeal to the First Circuit Court of Appeals in response to federal Judge Jon Levy’s dismissal of  Alicia Lowe, et al., v. Janet Mills, et al, involving Maine health care workers who were terminated because their religious exemptions from the COVID-19 shot mandate were denied.   Liberty Counsel represents seven health care workers in Maine who have sincerely held religious beliefs that prevent them from accepting any of the COVID-19 injections because of the connections to aborted fetal cell lines and for other religious reasons. Plaintiffs believe that God forms children in the womb and knows them prior to their birth, and that life is sacred from the moment of conception.
Their lawsuit against Governor Janet Mills, health officials of the Maine Department of Health and Human Services, Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention, and five of the state’s largest hospital systems, challenges the Maine law that requires employees of designated Maine health care facilities to be vaccinated against the COVID-19 shot. Governor Mills ordered employers to deny all religious exemptions and ignore the federal employment law known as Title VII that affords employees the right to request reasonable accommodation for their sincere religious beliefs. Governor Mills also threatened to revoke the licenses of all health care employers who fail to mandate the shot to their employees.
On September 1, 2021, Dr. Nirav Shah, former director of Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention, amended the state’s administrative regulation to eliminate the ability of health care workers to request and obtain a religious exemption and accommodation from the COVID-19 shot mandate. However, federal law requires that employers accept religious accommodations to mandatory vaccinations.
In his dismissal, Judge Levy stated there can be no accommodation for the plaintiffs since they only asked for an exemption. However, there cannot be an accommodation without an exemption. He stated to grant an exemption under Title VII would violate state law, so it is an undue hardship. That statement turns the Supremacy Clause of the U.S. Constitution on its head. Judge Levy does not dispute that the complaint stated a claim, which is the standard for a motion to dismiss, but he stated it would create an undue hardship to grant an exemption.   The Free Exercise Clause does not allow for discrimination between religious accommodations and medical accommodations. However, Judge Levy claims that distinguishing between religious accommodation and medical accommodations is irrelevant because the state has different interests in the two. He claims that the risk is different between the two. However, that is contrary to recent Supreme Court precedent involving COVID restrictions on places of worship and many other Supreme Court decisions.   As Liberty Counsel states in the appeal, “Defendants cannot have their cake and eat it too, relying on the Vaccine Mandate to say it would be an undue hardship to violate state law while at the same time espousing that the Vaccine Mandate does not prohibit employers from providing an accommodation under Title VII. It must be one or the other but cannot be both. If the State Defendants prohibit such an accommodation, then compliance with such a rule would violate Title VII by prohibiting that which Title VII requires. If State Defendants do not prohibit such an accommodation under Title VII, then Provider Defendants cannot claim an undue hardship for violating a state law that does not prohibit providing Plaintiffs with accommodations. Yet, the district court permitted this precise ‘heads I win, tails you lose proposition’ which Title VII was intended to prevent and ‘which the law would be unlikely to countenance.’”
Liberty Counsel Founder and Chairman Mat Staver said, “Maine is required to abide by federal law and the First Amendment and cannot summarily dismiss employees who have sincerely held religious objections to the COVID shots. In fact, Governor Mills must abide by federal law no matter what state regulation she creates.” Liberty Counsel is a Public Law Firm and a news partner with the Wyoming News and Montana News.

Biden Destroys Oil Industry: Nothing To Look At Here Wyoming Motorists

Because of the Democrats and their Dementia riddled Joe Biden, gas prices are on the rise in the state of Wyoming.  

On the national level, the diesel average has risen 2.6 cents and is back up to $4.60 per gallon, headed upwards to the 5 to 6-dollar range by late February.

According to several gas trackers such as GasBuddy and Fuel price, Wyoming still has the cheapest fuel in the nation, but that soon will disappear as reported at 3.73, which is up 94 cents per gallon in just a week.

Fuel prices once again have a trajectory that will have a substantially high cost to consumers than when President Donald Trump was in office.

When Biden committed TREASON, released America’s Strategic Petroleum Reserve, and sold it to CHINA, America was immensely weakened.

The fuel future for motorists, agriculture industries, trucking companies, or anyone depending on fuel does not look good.

Biden MUST GO; Democrats are the enemy of the state.

Dangerous End To Supreme Court Leak Investigation

Further investigation is needed.
The Committee for Justice released the following statement by its president, Curt Levey, on the release yesterday of the Supreme Court’s statement and report on the May 2022 leak of the Dobbs draft opinion:   “The failure of the Supreme Court’s report to shed any light on the identity of the leaker is the worst possible outcome of the Court’s investigation. The absence of any punishment or even consequences for the leaker makes it more likely that this “grave assault on the judicial process”—as the Justices’ statement calls it—will be repeated, further damaging the Court’s integrity and cohesion.   It is unfortunate that many voices on the Left have seized upon the failure to identify the leaker as an opportunity to push a theory that the Court is trying to cover up the supposed fact that the leaker was a conservative clerk or justice. These critics cite no evidence and ignore both that yesterday’s statement came from the entire Court and the common sense observation that the leaker was likely angry about the draft Dobbs opinion overturning Roe v. Wade.   A number of those pushing this baseless theory venture even deeper into fantasy by claiming the leaker was Justice Alito. While it’s very unlikely that any of the justices were behind the leak, it is particularly absurd to point the finger at Justice Alito. As the author of the draft opinion, the leak put his life in danger even more so than those of his conservative colleagues.   The Court’s statement that it was unable to identify the leaker “by a preponderance of the evidence” seems to suggest that there are possible suspects, as does the disclosure that investigators “conducted multiple follow-up interviews of certain employees.”   Given that the Court’s investigation identified suspects, the dangerous consequences of allowing this mystery to go unsolved, and the apparent winding down of this investigation, we believe that further investigation should be conducted outside the Court. We are pleased to hear reports that the House Judiciary Committee will investigate the leak, and we believe that the FBI or other federal law enforcement should do so as well.”  

Billings Justice Court Crime Cases


PRISONERS-B K DATE BIRDINGROUND, ROMEY MITCHELL 00/00 GALLATIN CRTSY TK 20-1073 HARDIN CRTSY TK 19-376


SCHILDT (OSBURN), MARY ROSE 00/00 CASCADE CRTSY ADC 22-176


STEWART, DONALD XAVIER 00/00 BIG HORN CRTSY DC 15-101


BOWMAN, DAVID WILLIAM 00/00 PV HOLD


SLATER, ANTHONY LAFONZO 00/00 FELONY REDUCTION CR 23-6


LAMB, AUSTIN LEE 00/00 PRETRIAL CR 22-381


PETER-SEOUN, TURNER SKY 00/00 PRETRIAL TK 22-4852


ROGERS, LUKE ANTHONY 00/00 MISD APPEARANCE CR 15-1056


GOOD, RYAN ALLEN 00/00 MISD INITIAL APP. CR 23-44


KELLEY, REMINGTON 00/00 MISD WAR (FTC) CR 22-375


FINCH, JEROMIAH TANNER 00/00 MISD WAR (IA) CR 22-453


FREEMONT, JORDAN DEAN 00/00 MISD WAR (OMNI) TK 21-682


MISD WAR (OMNI) CR 21-5640

WALK-INS

DONEY, RICHARD MISD STATUS TK 21-3545
TK 21-4629
TK 22-412
TK 22-987
TK 22-1101
TK 22-1776
TK 22-1927
WALL, CAIN WILLIAM SENTENCING TK 21-1214
TK 21-414
TK 21-4452
TK 20-3645
TK 20-1314


IRISH, ROBERT HARRY MISD CHANGE OF PLEA TK 22-4170


HENDERSON, KENDALL MISD APPEARANCE TK 23-371


TEGEN, DAVID BRUCE, JR MISD CHANGE OF PLEA TK 22-6058


ORCUTT, DANEALLE ROBYN HEARING ON MOTION TK 22-5949


GARCIA, DIEGO COLE MISD WAR TK 22-5288
MISD WAR TK 20-3965
MISD WAR TK 20-2754

City of Cheyenne Wyoming Residents, Experiencing Up-tick In Crime: 50 Recent Vehicle Break-Ins

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The Cheyenne Police Department is investigating a recent surge of burglaries
where criminals are targeting valuable items left inside of vehicles.
In the past 30 days, we have received more than 50 reports of these incidents
throughout Cheyenne. In over half of these cases, vehicle windows were broken,
while others gained access through unlocked doors.


Officers are contacting persons of interest and detectives are actively pursuing
leads. We encourage citizens to exercise caution anytime vehicles are left
unattended. Do not leave valuable items or firearms inside of parked vehicles and
always remember to lock up.
Additionally, video evidence can be very valuable in these investigations – we
recommend installing surveillance cameras in a location that captures parked
vehicles. Anyone with information or surveillance video of these crimes is
encouraged to contact the detective bureau at (307) 637-6513.