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A Storm System Clips Montana Thursday

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A Storm System Clips Montana Thursday


We are in store for another mild day across the state. Highs will be in the 40s with a few isolated locations reaching 50 degrees. A weak cold front moved through this morning that brought a trace of snow to the mountains. The rest of the day will be partly cloudy and dry.

A storm system’s northern extent will reach southern Montana late tonight into tomorrow. Most precipitation will stay south of I-90, but a few isolated snow showers are possible near Helena. An overall colder and cloudier day should be expected for much of the state, with highs only reaching the 30s and low 40s.

By Friday, we will have already started to move in the right direction. The storm system passes and a ridge of high pressure starts to move in. This will bring mostly sunny skies with warmer temperatures.

The weekend will be another spring-like few days, with highs reaching the 50s and 60s once again. Clouds will start to build in Saturday night, and the wind picks up Sunday. A chinook wind with an associated arch cloud is likey Sunday into Monday.

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Another storm with more seasonable temperatures moves in on Tuesday.

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WEATHER ALERTS:

A FLOOD ADVISORY continues for Richland County until 4 PM Wednesday

A FLOOD WATCH continues for Richland County until 4 PM Thursday

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A WINTER STORM WARNING has been issued for the Absaroka/Beartooth Mountains, Beartooth Foothills, and Red Lodge Foothills from 11 PM Wednesday until 5 AM Friday

A WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY has been issued for Beaverhead and Western Madison below 6000ft from 11 PM Wednesday until 11 PM Thursday

A WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY has been issued for the Gallatin and Madison County Mountains, Centennial Mountains, Ruby Mountains, and the Southern Beaverhead Mountains from 11 PM Wednesday until 11 PM Thursday

A WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY has been issued for the Livingston Area and Paradise Valley from 2 AM Thursday until 2 AM Friday

A WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY has been issued for Northern Carbon, Northern Stillwater, and Northern Sweet Grass from 2 AM Thursday until 2 AM Friday

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A WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY has been issued for the Bighorn Canyon, Southeastern Carbon, and Southern Big Horn from 2 AM Thursday until 2 AM Friday

A WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY has been issued for the Pryor/Northern Bighorn Mountains from 2 AM Thursday until 2 AM Friday

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Helena Temperature Records Today:
High: 73 (1987)
Low: -27 (2019)
AVG: 43/21

Great Falls Temperature Records Today:
High: 74 (1987)
Low: -22 (1947)
AVG: 41/18

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Enjoy the day!
Joey Biancone
Meteorologist

Facebook: Meteorologist Joey Biancone
Instagram: joeybianconewx
Email: joey.biancone@ktvh.com

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Montana’s congressional delegation pushing back on plan to import Argentina beef

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Montana’s congressional delegation pushing back on plan to import Argentina beef


HELENA — When President Donald Trump announced a plan last week to import more beef from Argentina, it drew quick criticism from ranchers in Montana. Now, Montana’s members of Congress say they’re pushing the administration to change course.

U.S. Sen. Steve Daines told MTN he quickly began hearing from Montanans in the cattle business after reports came out about Trump’s plan.

“The word I would describe is they feel betrayed,” he said.

(Watch the video to hear more reaction from Montana’s congressional delegation.)

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Montana’s congressional delegation pushing back on plan to import beef from Argentina

Daines said Montana beef producers have already been under pressure from drought and market forces. He said this step was “an unforced error” by the administration.

All four members of Montana’s congressional delegation are Republicans. They all say the Republican president’s plan was the wrong direction and that they’ve made that case when speaking with administration leaders.

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U.S. Rep. Ryan Zinke, who represents Montana’s western congressional district, says he understands why Trump wanted to tackle high beef prices, but that this wasn’t the right way for him to do it.

“Having a healthy cattle industry, having a healthy poultry industry and having a healthy supply chain for food is really national security,” he told MTN. “So he understands that, and I think we’re going to see some action in making sure or calming a lot of the fears from the cattlemen out there.”

Earlier this year, Daines visited Argentina and met with its conservative president, Javier Milei, during a South American tour advocating for Trump’s trade policies. He said his opinions on the country and its government don’t play any role in his feelings on this proposed deal.

“I don’t care if this is Argentinian beef or beef coming from anywhere else in the world,” he said. “The answer for what’s going on right now in the markets is not to import more beef – bottom line. It doesn’t matter where it comes from; it happens to be Argentina.”

Daines said it would be better for Montana’s cattle industry for the U.S. to focus on opening export markets rather than import markets. In 2017, Daines celebrated an agreement that led to China buying millions of dollars in Montana beef – but he said Thursday that the country has shut the doors to American beef during the ongoing trade dispute with the Trump administration.

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“We were shipping over $1 billion a year in beef last year, and now it’s gone to zero,” he said.

In a statement to MTN, Sen. Tim Sheehy said he’s been talking with Trump and his team, looking for a path forward.

“Empowering hardworking ranchers who feed America and lowering prices for American families at the grocery store are not mutually exclusive,” he said. “Both can be accomplished by lowering input costs and providing a reliable, pro-growth environment for producers so ranchers can grow their operation, capture more of the value they create, and feed the nation with affordable, healthy, high-quality beef.”

Zinke and Daines say they also see areas where the federal government can make moves that will benefit both Montana ranchers and Montana consumers. Daines wants Congress to do more to tackle the huge market share four large packing companies have in the beef industry – a situation he calls a “monopoly.”

“Our ranchers don’t set the price; that price is set for them,” he said.

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Zinke wants to put additional emphasis on country-of-origin labeling for beef.

“In Montana, we have a brand and that brand has value,” he said. “When it’s made in Montana, you know it’s at the top, the quality is there. And our ranchers sell premium product – that’s important.”

Daines said he supports country-of-origin labeling also, though he wants to make sure any additional steps the U.S. takes doesn’t lead to unintended consequences or retribution from countries like Canada.





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2025 Montana high school football scores week 9

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2025 Montana high school football scores week 9





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Montana Morning Headlines: Wednesday, October 29, 2025

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Montana Morning Headlines: Wednesday, October 29, 2025


WESTERN MONTANA — Here’s a look at Western Montana’s top news stories for Wednesday.

The University of Montana removed Business Professor Anthony Richard Pawlisz from faculty after he was charged with criminal endangerment in Ravalli County court. Pawlisz allegedly pulled a gun on a man and fired a shot into the air after a fight outside of a bar in Florence on Aug. 17, according to court documents. His former class will continue under Professor Udo Fluck. (Read the full story)

Nathaniel Luke Smith pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct on Monday after posing a threat to Mission High School on Oct. 8, which prompted increased police presence while classes continued. Smith is also serving a three-year deferred sentence for intimidation from an incident in November 2024. (Read the full story)

Montana Governor Greg Gianforte said he will not be using state funds to temporarily cover SNAP benefits for nearly 78,000 enrolled Montanans if federal funding runs out on Nov. 1. Amidst a government shutdown, he said it’s a federal responsibility — despite calls from Democrats and food banks to use leftover state money. (Read the full story)

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