Obituary - Loretta C. Loftus
Loretta Loftus
Loretta C. Loftus, 82, passed away due to natural causes at Benefis Medical Center Monday, April 26, 2021. A visitation will be held from 5:00 until 7:00 p.m. Friday, April 30, 2021, at Holland & Bonine Funeral Home. Funeral services will begin at 10:00 a.m. Saturday, May 1, 2021, at the Community Alliance Church. Holland & Bonine Funeral Home has been entrusted with services and arrangements. Please visit Loretta s online memorial page and leave a message of condolence for her family at http://www.hollandbonine.com . Loretta was born May 4, 1939 in Temvik, ND, to Ludwig and Bertha (Pfaff) Schoepp. She was raised and educated in North Dakota until the family moved to Anaconda, MT. where she graduated from Anaconda High School in 1957. Loretta attended Montana State University in Bozeman for one year and then transferred to Northern Montana College in Havre, where she graduated with a degree in nursing.
K-12 teachers in Montana start receiving vaccine, pending availability
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Threat temporarily closes Anaconda High School
A student at Anaconda High School phoned in an anonymous threat to do a shooting at the school at about noon on Thursday.
By: MTN News
and last updated 2021-01-28 19:40:03-05
ANACONDA â Anaconda Public Schools were sent into lockdown today Thursday after a student phoned in an anonymous threat to shoot up the school.
The threat came in about noon Thursday forcing administrators to lock down the high school and other buildings to prevent anyone from leaving or entering.
The police presence was then increased at the schools. Just before 3 p.m., officers located the male student who made the threat.
HELENA, Mont. â Montana State Fund (MSF), Montanaâs largest workersâ compensation insurance company, presented personal protective equipment (PPE) grants to 37 classrooms across Montana Tuesday.
The grants, which are part of MSFâs Growing a Safer Montana program, usually include safety eye protection, fall protection gear, gloves and ear protection, among other equipment, and are intended to help students understand the importance of operating safely in their environment.
âThrough our Growing a Safer Montana initiative, we are committed to improving Montanaâs workplace safety culture,â said MSF President and CEO, Laurence Hubbard. âWe can only improve the safety culture through education and reinforcement of positive safety habits. If we start in the classroom, the next generation of Montanaâs workforce will be better equipped when they step onto the job site. Our goal is to send students and workers home safely to their families at the