
BOB AND Kathy Gregg stand beside Montana 200, picking up trash beside the longest state highway in Montana. (Douglas Wilks/Clark Fork Valley Press)
April 5, 2017
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April 5, 2017 4 a.m.
Church volunteers clean two-mile stretch of Montana 200
Wednesday, March 29 was rainy and cold, which was a typical spring day for Plains and Sanders County. What is not typical on a spring day is seeing nine or ten people on the side of the highway picking up trash and putting it into large black colored plastic trash bags. Who are they? Why are they out there in the rain, walking or standing beside the longest and busiest state highway in Montana?