David P. Bond
David Preston Bond was a newspaper reporter, columnist, and editor based in the American Northwest. He chronicled and supported North Idaho’s mining industry over much of his career. "Bond considered himself a defender of the blue-collar man," one tribute added, "who didn’t hesitate to take on big government and those he considered a threat to their livelihood."
Early life and education
Bond was born in Santa Rosa, California. His adoptive parents, Richard and Patty Bond, of Spokane, Washington, were both graduates of the University of California, Berkeley, where, in their senior years, Richard was student body president and Patty, vice president. Richard "Dick" Bond was a natural gas company executive and a Washington State legislator from 1975 to 1987. The family relocated from Spokane to Nanaimo, BC, on Vancouver Island, in 1957 and returned to Spokane in 1965, where David attended Ferris High School. He served as a page in the Washington state’s legislature in his junior year. After high school, in June, 1969, he enrolled at Willamette University in Salem, Oregon, where he studied English and political science. David left Willamette a few credits short of graduation.Journalism career
Bond’s professional journalism career started at the Capital Journal in Salem, Oregon in the summer of 1973 while still a Willamette undergraduate. His bylined column reviewed newly released popular and folk music albums, giving free rein to 22-year-old Bond’s aesthetic judgments and literary gifts.In the latter half of the 1970s he held posts with the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, the Coeur d'Alene Press, and the North Idaho Press and Wallace Miner. Bond freelanced and served as a spokesman for North Idaho’s Sunshine Mine in the early 1980s. In 1984 he was hired by the Spokesman-Review and Spokane Chronicle in Spokane, soon after the two newspapers combined their news staffs. In the summer of 1988 he commenced writing a biweekly column for the Spokesman-Review datelined from a fictional "Patmos, Idaho."
In 1990, Bond left journalism briefly and lived on his sloop in Puget Sound.
In July, 1991 he returned to journalism, now once again at the Coeur d'Alene Press. Businessman and publisher Duane Hagadone, hired Bond initially there to address the controversial issue of summertime field burning by local farmers. Bond remained at the Press through 1997. From 1998 onward Bond defined his status as an "independent writer," largely focusing on mining, the EPA, and North Idaho’s current affairs. He contributed to the local Shoshone News-Press as a freelancer and columnist. From 2003 to 2010 Bond, with partner Shauna Hillman, orchestrated Silver Summit, Inc. investment conferences, annual gatherings devoted to the promotion of silver and the silver market and convened in a succession of cities, including Spokane, Washington, Coeur d’Alene, and Wallace. Bond also launched two publications in this period, the Wallace Street Journal and the Silver Valley Mining Journal. His book, The Silver Pennies: An Investor’s Guide to U.S. Silver Stocks came out in 2005. Also in 2005, Bond played a key role in Mayor Ron Garitone’s proclamation, on September 25, that the City of Wallace, Idaho lay at "The Center of the Universe." Bond supplied the philosophical justification for this claim – it, a spoof highlighting his contention that the EPA relied on unfalsifiable science. Bond traveled extensively on behalf of mining pursuits. From 2006-2014 Bond reported on the mining industry for Platts Metals Weekly, a McGraw-Hill publication, and was a featured contributor to The Free-Market News. More recently, his posts on Facebook gained a wide following.