Thursday, April 03, 2025
32.0°F

Lions choose Brown as citizen of the year

Richard Hanners Hungry Horse News | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 13 years, 6 months AGO
by Richard Hanners Hungry Horse News
| September 21, 2011 7:51 AM

A familiar face in the Columbia Falls community rose to accept this year's Lion's Club Citizen of the Year award during the Columbia Falls Chamber of Commerce luncheon Sept. 13.

Dee Brown, who grew up here, attended schools here, taught school here and represented the area in the Montana House until term-limited out, was recognized for her many contributions to the community.

"Volunteers make the world go round," she said. "If not for volunteers, a lot of things in the community would not get accomplished."

Dee Lyngstad was born in North Dakota and moved to Whitefish when she was two. Her father worked for Pacific Power & Light. The family moved to Columbia Falls before she started school, settling down in the Mosquito Flats area - not the best location to be when the 1964 Flood brought high waters to the Flathead.

After graduating from the University of Montana-Missoula, Brown started her 26-year long teaching career in Columbia Falls before transferring to Canyon Elementary School in Hungry Horse.

She retired in 1998 and began working full-time with her husband, Steve, at their Canyon RV campground in Coram. Her three children have grown up and moved on - daughter Dedee is a school principal in Tucson, Ariz., and son Ryan works for Raytheon Computer in New England.

Brown's support for tourism and the Canyon community easily translated into a four-term political career in the Montana House, where she represented the huge Columbia Falls house district.

"I was a member of the first legislative class to be term-limited out under the new law," she said, noting that losing so many legislators with institutional knowledge was a mistake.

Brown is the current president of the Columbia Falls Chamber of Commerce's board. She has also served on the North Valley Hospital Foundation board and the state's tourism board. Locally, Brown organized the all-class reunion "Columbia Falls - A Class Act" for the 2000 Heritage Days and the former jack-o'-lantern festivals.

"I generally stuck my nose in everything," Brown said, adding that "it's groups like the Lions Club, Kiwanis, the chamber and all the small-town ‘give-back' service groups that make rural Montana run."

MORE IMPORTED STORIES

Lions choose Brown as citizen of the year
Hungry Horse News | Updated 13 years, 6 months ago
Lions choose Brown as citizen of the year
Bigfork Eagle | Updated 13 years, 6 months ago
Chamber honors citizens, businesses
Hungry Horse News | Updated 13 years, 3 months ago

ARTICLES BY RICHARD HANNERS HUNGRY HORSE NEWS

November 11, 2011 7:12 a.m.

Local woman wrestles with meth habit

Two-year suspended sentence revoked

October 12, 2011 7:31 a.m.

Tourism is No. 5 polluter

Ski areas without snow, beaches eroding as polar ice melts and oceans rise, forest fires running rampant across mountain ranges, wetlands turning into deserts while deserts get flooded - these are some of the gloomier forecasts tourists will face in the 21st century, according to some climate-change models.

August 19, 2011 3:12 p.m.

Former CFAC owner donates to college

Recent news that the Columbia Falls Aluminum Co. smelter plant has a shot at lining up a power contract with the Bonneville Power Administration coincided with this summer's news about one of the company's former owners.