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27
Feb
2025
27 February 2025
Leonarda Ross
Leonarda Marie “Lenny’ Ross, died Feb. 15, 2025, at Trinity Hospital in Wolf Point.
She was born May 25, 1950, to JoAnn (Brunelle) Des-Jarlais and Leonard Burshia in Poplar. Her grandparents Lena and Daniel Burshia raised her.
In 1969, she married Jim Murphy and, from this union, they had three boys, James Murphy, Leonard Murphy and Bryon Murphy. They later divorced. Then, she met Dale Ross and they married. They worked for The Hope Ranch and took care of the children. He died 2003.
She then worked at Buckhorn in Poplar for many years as a bartender. She took in her grandchildren, Jorda and Tayton Murphy. In 2005, she relocated to Colorado to help her son Leonard and took care of his three sons. In 2012, she moved to Wolf Point with her two grandchildren.
She is survived by her son, James Murphy; numerous grandchildren and great-grandchildren; sister, Amber Sibbitts; brother, William Onstad; and special friend, David Smith.
She was preceded in death by her sons, Leonard Murphy and Bryon Murphy; grandson, Corey Murphy; granddaughter, Jasmine Murphy; sisters, Kimberly DesJarlias and Vera Vondal; and brother, Jerry Onstad.
A memorial service was held Friday, Feb. 21, at the Wolf Point Community Hall. Clayton Stevenson Memorial Chapel of Wolf Point assisted with the arrangements.
Leonarda Ross
Leonarda Marie “Lenny’ Ross, died Feb. 15, 2025, at Trinity Hospital in Wolf Point.
She was born May 25, 1950, to JoAnn (Brunelle) Des-Jarlais and Leonard Burshia in Poplar. Her grandparents Lena and Daniel Burshia raised her.
In 1969, she married Jim Murphy and, from this union, they had three boys, James Murphy, Leonard Murphy and Bryon Murphy. They later divorced. Then, she met Dale Ross and they married. They worked for The Hope Ranch and took care of the children. He died 2003.
She then worked at Buckhorn in Poplar for many years as a bartender. She took in her grandchildren, Jorda and Tayton Murphy. In 2005, she relocated to Colorado to help her son Leonard and took care of his three sons. In 2012, she moved to Wolf Point with her two grandchildren.
She is survived by her son, James Murphy; numerous grandchildren and great-grandchildren; sister, Amber Sibbitts; brother, William Onstad; and special friend, David Smith.
She was preceded in death by her sons, Leonard Murphy and Bryon Murphy; grandson, Corey Murphy; granddaughter, Jasmine Murphy; sisters, Kimberly DesJarlias and Vera Vondal; and brother, Jerry Onstad.
A memorial service was held Friday, Feb. 21, at the Wolf Point Community Hall. Clayton Stevenson Memorial Chapel of Wolf Point assisted with the arrangements.
Final Environmental Impact Statement For Wolf Management Plan Release
Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks has released a final environmental impact statement analyzing potential environmental impacts from the statewide management of gray wolves. Issuing the final EIS is a key step in a process that started in 2023, when FWP originally released the draft EIS. The draft EIS was made available for public review and comment from Oct. 20, 2023, through Dec. 19, 2023, and again
Final Environmental Impact Statement For Wolf Management Plan Release
Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks has released a final environmental impact statement analyzing potential environmental impacts from the statewide management of gray wolves. Issuing the final EIS is a key step in a process that started in 2023, when FWP originally released the draft EIS. The draft EIS was made available for public review and comment from Oct. 20, 2023, through Dec. 19, 2023, and again
Taylor Schipman
Taylor Lee Schipman, 40, of Circle died Feb. 18, 2025, at St. Vincents Hospital in Billings. The doctors claim his cause of death was cardiac arrest due to complications with his type one diabetes, but all who knew him know he checked out because he’d learned that he would not be able to stream the 3C & 1B District Basketball tournaments while in his hospital room.
He was born June 25, 1984, in Kalispell, the firstborn son of Larry and Patti (Schriver) Schipman. He spent his first years of life in Kila, where he terrorized his dog and welcomed his little brother and sister, Trent and Shoni, to the world. At the young age of four, he was diagnosed with diabetes and spent the rest of his life ignoring that he had it. From then on, living on borrowed time, he lived his life to the fullest, making lifelong friendships and memories along the way.
He moved to the family ranch in Circle when he was in second grade in 1991. On his first day of school at Bo-Peep Elementary, he was very worried about meeting new friends and whether or not he’d have anyone to play with at recess. He came home and excitedly reported to his mother that he had made five new friends. After that, he got really good at making friends.
Playground football and basketball turned into a passion for sports that some might argue was more of an obsession. At a young age, he studied plays, scrutinized defenses and even wrote his own playbooks. While excelling as a Circle Wildcat athlete in multiple sports, he found his true joy in coaching and strategy. His first coaching position was coaching a travel team for his sister when he was a junior in high school. And just last week, before his death, he expressed his desire to begin an AAU basketball program with the goal of helping Circle Wildcats get basketball scholarships to larger colleges.
He received high marks academically at Circle High School and attended both Dickinson State University as well as Montana State University - Billings. Some people are book smart and some people are street smart, but he was both.
He left his mark around the town of Circle with his many roofing and siding jobs. He started working construction as a teenager working for different contractors, but eventually started his own contracting business to support his coaching addiction. He was meticulous in his work, but even more meticulous in the shaping and mentoring of the young men that worked with him. He wanted these young men to be able to one day put a roof over their head, learn work ethic and become the best version of themselves.
Coaching and mentoring the young men and women of Circle was his life ambition, but the true love of his life was Mikenda Seymour. They shared a love of basketball and a genuine desire to make a difference in the lives of the young athletes they coached. A long awaited marriage proposal was greatly celebrated by family, friends and athletes. She stood by his side on the basketball court, supported him while he coached football, drove them on all their adventures, took care of all his doctors’ appointments and medications and loved him more passionately in their seven years together than most experience in a lifetime.
He is survived by his fiancée, Mikenda Seymour; parents, Larry and Patti Schipman; brother, Trent Schipman; and sister, Shoni Townsend.
Funeral services will be held on Friday, Feb. 28, at 10 a.m. at the Circle High School gymnasium.
Taylor Schipman
Taylor Lee Schipman, 40, of Circle died Feb. 18, 2025, at St. Vincents Hospital in Billings. The doctors claim his cause of death was cardiac arrest due to complications with his type one diabetes, but all who knew him know he checked out because he’d learned that he would not be able to stream the 3C & 1B District Basketball tournaments while in his hospital room.
He was born June 25, 1984, in Kalispell, the firstborn son of Larry and Patti (Schriver) Schipman. He spent his first years of life in Kila, where he terrorized his dog and welcomed his little brother and sister, Trent and Shoni, to the world. At the young age of four, he was diagnosed with diabetes and spent the rest of his life ignoring that he had it. From then on, living on borrowed time, he lived his life to the fullest, making lifelong friendships and memories along the way.
He moved to the family ranch in Circle when he was in second grade in 1991. On his first day of school at Bo-Peep Elementary, he was very worried about meeting new friends and whether or not he’d have anyone to play with at recess. He came home and excitedly reported to his mother that he had made five new friends. After that, he got really good at making friends.
Playground football and basketball turned into a passion for sports that some might argue was more of an obsession. At a young age, he studied plays, scrutinized defenses and even wrote his own playbooks. While excelling as a Circle Wildcat athlete in multiple sports, he found his true joy in coaching and strategy. His first coaching position was coaching a travel team for his sister when he was a junior in high school. And just last week, before his death, he expressed his desire to begin an AAU basketball program with the goal of helping Circle Wildcats get basketball scholarships to larger colleges.
He received high marks academically at Circle High School and attended both Dickinson State University as well as Montana State University - Billings. Some people are book smart and some people are street smart, but he was both.
He left his mark around the town of Circle with his many roofing and siding jobs. He started working construction as a teenager working for different contractors, but eventually started his own contracting business to support his coaching addiction. He was meticulous in his work, but even more meticulous in the shaping and mentoring of the young men that worked with him. He wanted these young men to be able to one day put a roof over their head, learn work ethic and become the best version of themselves.
Coaching and mentoring the young men and women of Circle was his life ambition, but the true love of his life was Mikenda Seymour. They shared a love of basketball and a genuine desire to make a difference in the lives of the young athletes they coached. A long awaited marriage proposal was greatly celebrated by family, friends and athletes. She stood by his side on the basketball court, supported him while he coached football, drove them on all their adventures, took care of all his doctors’ appointments and medications and loved him more passionately in their seven years together than most experience in a lifetime.
He is survived by his fiancée, Mikenda Seymour; parents, Larry and Patti Schipman; brother, Trent Schipman; and sister, Shoni Townsend.
Funeral services will be held on Friday, Feb. 28, at 10 a.m. at the Circle High School gymnasium.
Sharon Yellow Owl
Sharon Yellow Owl, age 67, passed away on Feb. 18th at Poplar Community Hospital. A wake will be held on Thursday, Feb. 27th at 7pm, funeral services will be held on Friday, Feb. 28th at 1pm all at the Poplar Cultural Center. Interment will follow at Poplar City Cemetery. Clayton Stevenson Memorial Chapel of Wolf Point assisted with the arrangements.
Sharon Yellow Owl
Sharon Yellow Owl, age 67, passed away on Feb. 18th at Poplar Community Hospital. A wake will be held on Thursday, Feb. 27th at 7pm, funeral services will be held on Friday, Feb. 28th at 1pm all at the Poplar Cultural Center. Interment will follow at Poplar City Cemetery. Clayton Stevenson Memorial Chapel of Wolf Point assisted with the arrangements.
Summer Program To Help Children With Food Cut From State Budget
A legislative subcommittee voted Friday, Feb. 21, to cut $20 million of mostly federal money for the biennium out of the state budget for a summer lunch program for children.
Legislators in support of the cut argued the program was duplicative of other resources that feed children, and they feared it would require additional spending on staff at the state health department.
Those who opposed
Summer Program To Help Children With Food Cut From State Budget
A legislative subcommittee voted Friday, Feb. 21, to cut $20 million of mostly federal money for the biennium out of the state budget for a summer lunch program for children.
Legislators in support of the cut argued the program was duplicative of other resources that feed children, and they feared it would require additional spending on staff at the state health department.
Those who opposed
Pauline Escarcega
Pauline Escarcega, 91, died Feb. 22, 2025, at the Faith Lutheran Home in Wolf Point.
Cremation has taken place.
Pauline Escarcega
Pauline Escarcega, 91, died Feb. 22, 2025, at the Faith Lutheran Home in Wolf Point.
Cremation has taken place.



