Oregon Beach News, Monday 3/20 – Governor Kotek Adds Clatsop County To Homelessness State Of Emergency, Marine Board Seeks Public Comments on Cycle One Grant Applications

The latest news stories across the state of Oregon from the digital home of the Oregon coastal cities, OregonBeachMagazine.com

Monday, March 20, 2023

Oregon Beach Weather

ADVISORIES ISSUED: 2:31 AM MAR. 20, 2023 – NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE

...HAZARDOUS SEAS WARNING REMAINS IN EFFECT UNTIL 2 PM PDT THIS AFTERNOON...
...SMALL CRAFT ADVISORY IN EFFECT FROM 2 PM THIS AFTERNOON TO 11 PM PDT THIS EVENING...

* WHAT...Very steep and hazardous seas 9 to 13 ft at 9 seconds and west to southwest winds 20 to 30 kt with gusts to 35 kt. This afternoon, seas diminishing to 7 to 10 ft and winds decreasing to 15 to 25 kt with gusts to 30 kt.

* WHERE...All waters north of Cape Blanco. The worst conditions are expected north of Cape Arago.

* WHEN...For the Hazardous Seas Warning, until 2 PM PDT this afternoon. For the Small Craft Advisory, from 2 PM this afternoon to 11 PM PDT this evening.

* IMPACTS...Gusty winds and/or steep seas could capsize or damage smaller vessels.

* View the hazard area in detail at https://go.usa.gov/x6hks

Governor Kotek Adds Clatsop And Malheur Counties To Homelessness State Of Emergency

Governor Tina Kotek has added two rural counties to her homelessness state of emergency so the state emergency management department can help coordinate state and local response to the homelessness crisis there.

Kotek announced Friday that Malheur County, with about 31,000 residents in southeastern Oregon, will join the primarily urban counties in the state of emergency she declared in January. Clatsop County, with 41,000 residents on the northwest coast, was added in late February. 

All counties stand to receive a portion of the $200 million for housing and homelessness from a legislative proposal backed by Kotek that passed the House on Wednesday and is scheduled for a vote in the Senate on Tuesday. The proposal includes $85.2 million for the counties covered by the emergency order and $27.4 million for rural counties. 

The original state of emergency applied to the Portland area, central Oregon and Lane, Jackson, Marion and Polk counties, home to Eugene, Medford and Salem. Kotek chose those counties because homelessness in those areas increased by more than 50% between 2017 and 2022, and about three-quarters of the 18,000 homeless Oregonians live in those areas.

Since then, Kotek and Oregon Housing and Community Services have considered adding counties to the emergency order if at least 30 households are homeless and unsheltered, and if unsheltered people make up 80% or more of the county’s total homeless population. 

In Malheur County, 141 people lack shelter, and they make up 83% of the county’s homeless population. Malheur County Judge Dan Joyce, the chair of the county commission, led the county in declaring a local emergency. 

“Malheur County has an overwhelming rate of unsheltered homeless people who need a leg up through shelter and services,” Joyce said in a statement. 

Clatsop County counted 529 homeless people in 2022, and 99% of the homeless population lacks shelter, according to that county’s emergency declaration. 

“Clatsop County has the highest share of homelessness among their general population when compared to other Oregon counties and we are very pleased that the governor recognizes the great need we have to address this critical problem,” Mark Kujala, chair of the Clatsop County board of commissioners, said in a statement.

Marine Board Seeks Public Comments on Cycle One Grant Applications

The Marine Board wants to hear from boaters about its Cycle One grant applications and how the boating dollars are invested. The deadline to review applications and provide comments is April 17, 2023. 

The Marine Board’s Boating Facility Program received 10 grant applications for its Cycle One funding opportunity, requesting $5.4 million in needs, with a total application value of $9.6 million in motorized and nonmotorized funding. These grants are for the improvement or development of motorized and nonmotorized boating facilities, education, and on-water boating experiences for people in underserved communities. 

 Port of Alsea’s new accessible nonmotorized launch being used by a kayaker.

The Marine Board anticipates having $2.2 million in state funding available in its Cycle One grants for motorized and nonmotorized projects. Applicants are requesting nearly double the amount of funding available, so competition is high. 

Public comments are an important part of the grant application evaluation process and will be provided to the Marine Board prior to its June 28 Board meeting to consider the applications. 

Applications for Cycle One motorized and nonmotorized funding closed on March 13. The Boating Facility Program conducts two additional grant funding opportunities during the two-year budget cycle. If you did not see an application for your favorite boating facility, we encourage you to contact the facility owner, share your ideas, and ask how you can help support any future grant requests. 

Visit the Boating Facility Grant Application Comment Page to view the project applications and provide feedback.

Florence Chamber announces Rhododendron Festival Parade Grand Marshal

The Florence Area Chamber of Commerce has selected local resident Mike Bones as the grand marshal for their annual floral parade.

Al Rojas, Chamber board chair; Beth Rudometkin, board member; Angela Nelson, board member; Mike Bones, Kathy Bones; Mitzi Hathaway, chamber director of tourism development, Rich Colton board member and marketing director for Three Rivers Casino Resort. Photo courtesy of the Florence Area Chamber of Commerce.

“Mike Bones personifies this year’s ‘Rip Roarin’ Rhodies’ theme, said Bettina Hannigan, Florence Chamber president and CEO. He is tremendously gregarious with an infectious spirit, a lot of fun, and is known to many in these parts for his longtime interest and expertise with our famous flowers. He’s also a lot like our logo for this year–bright, colorful, beautiful, and he really pops.”

“I was humbled into speechlessness, which is an unusual occurrence for me, after being completely surprised by being awarded the honor of Grand Marshal for the 2023 Rhododendron Grand Floral Parade. I consider getting to be Grand Marshal high praise. I want to thank the Chamber Board for this privilege to represent our great town of Florence,” said Bones.

Bones is a 1966 graduate of Siuslaw High School and is their alumni association president. He’s a Navy vet and former Oregon State park ranger, past Commander for the local American Legion post, and is a current board member who served more than 20 years as president of the Siuslaw Chapter of the American Rhododendron Society. The chapter puts on the second largest rhododendron show in the world behind only Chelsea, England.

According to the release from the Chamber, Bones is completing an 8-year term as the Oregon state representative for the American Rhododendron Society and serves as president of the Florence Area Chamber of Commerce Ambassadors.

Bones has won international recognition for his interest in rhododendrons by being awarded the International Silver Medal for his accomplishments in educating others about the flowers, and for his years of dedication and service to the Siuslaw and American Rhododendron Societies.

He and his wife Kathy were named Florence First Citizens in 2005 for their community service, founding Bones Nursery in 1978, specializing in rhododendrons and azaleas.

“With all his accolades and achievements, it’s his dedication to our festival that truly elevated Mike to grand marshal status this year,” said Hannigan. “During Covid, when the Florence Area Chamber of Commerce was unable to host the Rhododendron Festival, Mike walked the parade route both years, pulling a wagon full of rhododendrons while waving to those passing by. He single-handedly kept the event alive through all that adversity.”

“The festival, with its carnival, Rhododendron Court, parades, classic car cruise, vendor fair, and flower show serves as the unofficial kickoff to the summer tourist season here in Oregon’s Coastal Playground,” added Hannigan. “It’ll be another rip-roarin’ time as we celebrate our local natural beauty and famous flowers. We invite everyone to come enjoy the pageantry of the second-longest running floral festival in Oregon.”

The festival is set to open May 13 with the coronation of Queen Rhododendra, the King of the Coast, and their royal court at the Florence Events Center; and with the Davis Shows Carnival at the Port of Siuslaw property in Historic Old Town.

Throughout the event there will be a vendor’s fair in Old Town, a rhododendron show at the Florence Events Center, and live music, art, and other festivities and activities all over town.

“Generations of families have enjoyed the annual Florence Rhododendron Festival by attending, enjoying the Davis Shows carnival, exhibiting their rhododendrons, showing off their classic cars and motorcycles, being in the parades, and shopping and dining in Old Town and all around town,” adds Hannigan. “It’s a family tradition, an Oregon institution that has drawn generations of attendees.”

For more information on the annual Florence Rhododendron Festival, including applications for exhibitor space, parade entries, or to volunteer on the Chamber’s Rhody Fest committee, contact event coordinator/director for tourism development Mitzi Hathaway at Events@FlorenceChamber.com or 541-997-3128. (SOURCE)

Spring Whale Watch Week Returns in Person for Spring Break 2023

OREGON COAST, Oregon—Oregon State Parks will host Spring Whale Watch Week in person along the Oregon Coast Tuesday, March 28 through Sunday, April 2.

Visitors look for whales during Winter Whale Watch Week 2022

Every year thousands of gray whales pass through Oregon’s waters in the spring on their journey home from the calving lagoons in Mexico, and Oregon Parks and Recreation Department invites visitors to the coast to see them. 

Trained volunteers will be stationed at 17 sites to help visitors spot whales, share information and answer questions from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. daily. The sites are some of the best places to watch for whales on the Oregon Coast. 

“Spring is a great time for whale watching because the gray whales are usually closer to shore on their return trip, typically around a mile or so out, and the weather is a little warmer for visitors,” said Park Ranger Peter McBride.

A map of volunteer-staffed sites is available online on the official event webpage: https://oregonstateparks.org/index.cfm?do=thingstodo.dsp_whaleWatching

An estimated 18,000 gray whales are expected to swim past Oregon’s shores from late March through June as part of their annual migration back toward Alaska. The end of March is the beginning of this migration and timed perfectly for spring break. 

The Whale Watching Center in Depoe Bay will be open 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesday through Sunday. Visitors to the center can enjoy interactive whale exhibits and take in the panoramic ocean views. Binoculars are provided. Rangers from Oregon State Parks will also be on hand to answer questions about the whales.

All Whale Watch Week visitors are encouraged to dress for the weather, to bring binoculars and to follow beach safety guidelines such as remaining out of fenced areas, knowing the tide schedule and keeping an eye on the surf at all times. Go to https://visittheoregoncoast.com/beach-safety/ for a list of safety tips.

For more information about coast parks and campgrounds, visit oregonstateparks.org.

Interior Secretary Haaland Announces Wildfire Risk Money on Visit to Southern Oregon

Deb Haaland, U.S. Secretary of the Interior, visited Southern Oregon on Sunday. She announced $21 million was on its way to Oregon to help reduce the risk of wildfires.

The secretary spoke at a media event in the Oregon Department of Forestry’s log cabin crew house at the department’s command center in Central Point.

Alongside her were U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Oregon, and Mike Shaw, chief of fire protection at ODF. Merkley sits on the Senate Appropriations Committee and chairs the Subcommittee on the Interior, Environment and Related Agencies.

Haaland said the money will go toward completing fuels management work on more than 170,000 acres in the state.

The funds come from the 2021 Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, which contains $1.5 billion over five years to combat the wildfire threat on several fronts, from prevention and mitigation to firefighter response.

Since December, $278 million has been allocated. This includes a $50 million allocation announced Friday that will, among other things, pay for remote sensing equipment that detects wildfires; provide communities with slip-on water tanks that turn trucks into fire rigs; and boost the pay of federal wildland firefighters, whose fire seasons, year after year, begin earlier and end later.

“We’re like fire years instead of fire seasons anymore,” Haaland said. “I know that Oregon, unfortunately, knows this all too well, with so little room for error.”

Oregon is also among 13 states that will benefit from a pilot program supporting projects aimed at fuel reduction — that is, reducing vegetation that can fuel fires — on private lands.

“We must remain steadfast in our commitment to wildland fire preparedness, mitigation and resilience,” she said. “We at the Department of the Interior are doing everything we can to work with the states, Tribes, local governments to reduce these risks and support the firefighting workforce.”

Sunday’s event took place on day three of Haaland’s three-day trip to Oregon. She visited Bend Friday to discuss the Interior Department’s investments in the state’s outdoor recreation economy.

In Central Point, Shaw, the ODF chief, spoke first.

Though snowpack in Southern Oregon is higher than in recent years, he said, “I do project that we’re going to have another challenging fire season.”

Climate change has become inescapable in Southern Oregon, where drought conditions have persisted since 2019 and wildfires have become commonplace.

“‘All hands on deck’ is the approach that we’re taking, and all wildland fire agencies are working together,” he said.

In recent years, wildfire smoke has often covered the region in an orange-gray haze, forcing residents to stay indoors for days and choking off business and tourism.

The 2020 Almeda and South Obenchain fires that displaced thousands of people brought home the risks that wildfires and a warming climate pose.

Last summer’s Rum Creek Fire, sparked by lightning, torched more than 21,000 acres near Galice.

Haaland, the first Native American to serve in a presidential cabinet, had come from a briefing with fire response coordinators, state leaders and others who confront the wildfire threat. “‘Collaboration’ is the word that was most used in that briefing,” she said.

“One thing from our conversation is profoundly clear, that climate change will continue to make fires in the West larger and that we must continue to invest in conservation of our ecosystems. Nature is our best ally in the fight against climate change.”

Will it be possible to tell if the investment in combating wildfire is working when the climate itself is in flux? How will policy makers track progress?

In an interview afterward, Merkley said people can look at such markers as the number of acres that have been treated through prescribed burning, thinning or mowing. They can also look at the number of wildfires that erupt in Oregon, or to the amount of wildland fire personnel dispatched, along with their equipment, to the incidents.

“There are ways of measuring it, even with the ups and downs of fire season,” the Oregon Democrat said.

The public conversation around climate change has evolved in the time Merkley has been in office.

Years ago, in the town halls the senator conducts every year in every Oregon county, the subject produced consternation, he said. People would ask, “‘Is that really real?’ Because there (was) a lot of messaging coming out of the fossil fuel world saying it’s not real,” he recalled.

“But now I don’t get that reaction at all,” he continued. “In those forums, generally the conversation is about the impact that we see on our farming, on our fishing and on our forests. And people who live in rural Oregon see those impacts every single day. They see it through the drought. They see it through the fires. They see it through the beetles attacking our trees. Over on the coast, we’re seeing very significant changes in the warmth and the acidity of the ocean affecting our ocean ecosystem. So it’s everywhere we look.”

Haaland said, “The science is such in 2023 that it’s very difficult to deny that climate change is happening. And people who do deny it aren’t really looking at the science and the reality of the situation.” (SOURCE)

Home Share Could Help Oregon’s Housing Crisis 

Oregon’s housing crisis has been front and center during this year’s legislative session as the state and its new governor, Tina Kotek, struggle to tackle a problem that has been years in the making.

The scale of the shortage makes it difficult for even aggressive solutions to produce quick improvements; it will take a long time to build the hundreds of thousands of housing units Oregon will need to not only make up for the exsiting shortfall but stay ahead of future population growth.

But there is one creative approach that can produce additional housing much faster, and without having to build anything at all: home sharing, in which existing homeowners rent out their unused rooms to tenants in search of affordable housing.

HomeShare Oregon

Tess Fields, executive director of Home Share Oregon, and Margaret Van Vliet, former director of Oregon Housing and Community services, were guests on this week’s episode of Straight Talk to discuss the state of Oregon’s housing crisis and the immediate impact that home sharing can have.

They were joined by James Dirksen, an Oregon homeowner who has rented out a portion of his house for more than 20 years, hosting a variety of tenants, to talk about his experience as a home sharing participant.

The conversation also touched on Oregon House Bill 3032, which would create tax incentives for homeowners who rent out rooms long-term at affordable rates.

A mix of problems have caused Oregon to fall behind on housing production over the years and fail to keep up with population growth, Van Vliet explained.

“One thing that stands out for me is that lots of industries have evolved and changed and seen a lot of innovation, but home building and home construction really has not changed much in many decades. So that’s one piece — the pace of construction really hasn’t changed much,” she said.

Local governments also need to be able to plan, zone and issue permits for building, she said, and that can often become a bottleneck. Financing for affordable housing can also become very complicated.

It’s also not just a question of affordable housing availability, she added. The shortage is more concentrated at lower levels, but Oregon is short on housing stock at all income levels. 

The housing shortage has negative impacts on the state’s economy, she said, because it leaves employers struggling to recruit workers as those workers can’t find affordable housing nearby. First responders and public employees can also struggle to find housing.

Construction costs for affordable housing currently runs about $400,000 per unit, Van Vliet said. Apartment buildings will often use several sources of public money for financing, she said, creating added legal costs, and there are tough requirements for things like energy efficiency and quality building materials.

Home Share Oregon is a relatively new nonprofit that matches people who have unused rooms in their homes with people in need of affordable housing. The group just surpassed 900 homeowners signed up, Fields said.

“There’s about 1.5 million owner-occupied homes across the state of Oregon that have a spare bedroom available, and one out of every three homeowners are mortgage-burdened,” she said. “Our seniors specifically — 40% of our seniors are reporting that they’re at risk of foreclosure.”

Matching those homeowners with housemates could potentially house another 30,000 people, Fields said, without having to build any new infrastructure and while giving homeowners more financial resilience at the same time.

Home Share Oregon’s most common clients are women over the age of 50, many of whom have experienced the death of a spouse or a divorce, Fields said. The average homesharing agreement tends to be about $750 per month, but the agreements can vary significantly, with room for bargaining and negotiations.

The organization provides free screening technology to find compatible housemates and homeowners, she said, as well as free background checks and home sharing agreements, plus case management services for senior clients.

Those components are all important, she said, because the organization does get a lot of questions about safety. The screening process works both ways, making sure housemates feel comfortable too.

“Homesharing isn’t for everyone, and it’s absolutely not a decision that should be made impulsively,” she said.

Dirksen said he and his wife jumped into the home sharing world two decades ago, and they’ve hosted a wide range of housemates in that time.

“Right after the pandemic (began) I think we had 14 people in our home,” he said. “We had four college students, two high school students, a young family plus our own family, all living in various places in our big house.”

And a few years ago, during a summer of intense wildfires, the couple hosted a 75-year-old man who had been homeless in their neighborhood. The thick smoke made it unsafe for him to be outside, Dirksen said, so they initially hosted him for a few days, but he ended up staying with them for about two years until he found his own housing.

Safety concerns are important in the home sharing world, Dirksen said, so the background checks and home sharing agreements are important, and homeowners do need to be conscious of who exactly they want to invite into their homes.

“There’s a large demand for affordable housing right now, so homeowners are in a great situation to be kind of picky about who they want to come in, and make sure it’s a really good fit for them, for their lifestyle and for political choices, dietary choices, do they want dogs, do they not want dogs, do they want sponges or dish towels, those kind of things,” he said.  (SOURCE)

Kotek and lawmakers want to speed home building, but Oregonians say they don’t want increased construction in their communities in a recent Poll

Oregonians overwhelmingly oppose speeding up construction of homes in their neighborhoods and across the state and half don’t like incentives for landlords – attitudes that could spell headwinds for Gov. Tina Kotek’s ambitious plan to vastly accelerate housing construction and availability across Oregon.

Only a quarter of Oregonians want to increase home construction in the community where they live, according to an online survey of 500 Oregon residents conducted by Portland polling firm DHM Research from Feb 24 to March 1. In comparison, 40% want to slow home construction in their community, while 28% believe the rate of construction where they live should remain the same.

Oregonians expressed similar opinions when asked about the state as a whole. Only 29% said that the rate of home construction should increase across Oregon, while 35% said they wanted to see home construction slow and just over a quarter said they wanted the production rate to remain the same.

“I think it’s understandable that people don’t want a bunch of construction next door. There are the noise and nuisance levels, and a lot of people move somewhere because they like it and they don’t want it to change,” said state economist Josh Lehner. “I think that sentiment is pretty easy to understand, but the flip side is what happens if we don’t build? … Prices rise faster, affordability worsens and as long as it’s a place that people want to live, it generally will lead to economic displacement.”

Oregon has the fourth highest rate of housing underproduction for its population in the nation, according to a state reportEditSignEditSign. Estimates suggest the state is short 140,000 houses and apartments, Lehner said. To make up that shortfall while also keeping up with current demand, Kotek and lawmakers are ready to make significant changes to how the state handles home construction.

Kotek’s new housing council met for the first time earlier this month to begin generating recommendations to boost home construction. Lehner said if the state doesn’t address its housing crisis it will have a cascading effect where people are pushed out because “we don’t have enough housing anywhere in the state.” To increase housing production, he said officials have to focus on making better use of existing land available for construction, as well as increasing the number of workers available to build, inspect and permit projects. If they pump money into the system without increasing capacity, he said that will just lead to more public sector projects and less private sector activity.

“We really need to be talking about increasing the whole capacity of the industry,” he said.

proposal that’s quickly moving through the Legislature would call for the state to set yearly goals for the amount of new housing at various price levels needed in each city with at least 10,000 residents. State regulators would then hold cities accountable if they do not clear red tape or take other action to boost development to those levels.

Madeline Baron, a project manager at ECONorthwest who specializes in affordable housing, said setting policies at the state level will force local governments to adhere to state requirements even if there is local pushback, while still giving jurisdictions the authority to decide how to best meet housing goals. While people may oppose increased housing construction in their community as a gut reaction, Baron said where and how jurisdictions decide to build housing is more nuanced and might elicit different opinions from the public.

“What led the state to act is that the jurisdictions have not been able to or not been willing to ramp up the production,” Baron said. “There’s still going to be a lot of control with the local zoning, some design review can probably still exist and community input will never go away. It’s just that we can’t let that grind production to a halt or make production so challenging that it ends up dying, because we’ve seen the consequences of that.”

The legislative plan has been fast tracked in part because it makes no significant changes to the state’s urban growth boundary system, which limits development outside of cities. Fully 71% of Oregonians said they would oppose allowing local governments to permit housing developments in areas currently protected as farm and forestlands, according to the new poll. The poll, whose respondents were selected to match the demographic profile of the state’s adult population, had a margin of error of plus or minus 4.4%.

Several of the poll’s other findings appear to run counter to the state’s housing goals.

Oregonians were split on whether they wanted the state to divert millions to expand incentives for landlords, with 41% saying they opposed that policy, which is currently part of the Legislature’s plans. Part of the state’s plan to immediately house 1,200 people experiencing homelessness, primarily in privately owned apartments, is to guarantee landlords rent, coverage for tenant damages and free tenant-landlord mediation.

In addition, 53% of Oregonians said they thought relaxing building codes on new developments would be ineffective. Developers have said relaxing local land use regulations and expediting the process for approving developments will be key to accelerating housing production.

Two-thirds of the people polled own their own home, which is in line with the state’s owner-occupied housing unit rate of about 63%, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. Fully 68% of respondents who owned their own home said they want the price of their house to increase in the next five years. Only 38% of respondents overall said they want the price of the typical home in their community to increase in the next five years.

“I think there’s a real tension there as twice as many homeowners want to see their values increase but don’t want prices to increase broadly,” said John Horvick, senior vice president at DHM Research. “The self-interest there is evident, and policymakers are going to have to navigate that both in terms of what they put forward and what sort of risks they take and also how they talk about the policies and what benefits they are going to have to the community.”

Even if the state significantly ramps up housing construction, Lehner said that he would still anticipate home prices to increase over the next five years – albeit at a slower rate – assuming there is not an exceptional event that drives prices down.

Baron said ramping up construction will also be crucial to ensuring the state can address another crisis that Oregonians have consistently ranked as their top issue: homelessness. If the state doesn’t increase the housing supply, she said policies aimed at moving people living unsheltered into housing will continue to be less effective and more expensive. At the same time, continued housing instability will lead to more people falling into homelessness, she said.

Mike Wilkerson, partner and director of analytics at ECONorthwest, said it’s not surprising that most homeowners want the value of their homes to continue to increase. He was more surprised, in fact, that more than 30% of homeowners didn’t say they wanted the value of their homes to increase in the next five years.

He said that shows an awareness of the need for housing affordability within the state. “If you looked at it from an entirely self-interested perspective, that number you would assume would be higher than 68%,” Wilkerson said. (SOURCE)

2023 National Earthquake Program Managers meeting in Portland strengthens earthquake preparedness and collaboration

2023-03/3986/162053/OEMLogo_2022_FullColor_NoBackground_PNG.png

PORTLAND, Ore. – March 20, 2023 – The 2023 National Earthquake Program Managers (NEPM) meeting will take place March 21-23 at the Duniway Hotel at 545 SW Taylor St. The event aims to provide information sharing and capacity-building opportunities for state, federal, non-profit and private sector members of the National Earthquake Hazards Reduction Program (NEHRP).

This year’s NEPM meeting is co-hosted by the Oregon Department of Emergency Management (OEM) and the Cascadia Region Earthquake Workgroup (CREW). OEM Geological Hazards Program Coordinator and 2023 NEPM Chair Althea Rizzo will lead the meeting, alongside 2023 NEPM Vice-Chair Scott Gauvin, who also serves as manager of strategic operations and preparedness with the Illinois Emergency Management Agency.

“It’s a privilege to work with people from across the country so passionate about improving earthquake safety,” said Rizzo. “Earthquake preparedness and mitigation is a vital investment in our collective resilience, safeguarding our communities and securing the future against nature’s unpredictable upheavals.”

The NEPM group is primarily composed of state emergency management agency representatives who actively plan and prepare to reduce earthquake-related losses in their states. While some states have a dedicated earthquake program manager, in others, the responsibility is shared. Collectively known as the National Earthquake Program Managers, the group holds annual meetings to develop programs, share best practices and foster relationships.

The NEPM group first began holding annual meetings in the early 1990s, and after a brief hiatus, resumed meeting in 2004 at the National Earthquake Conference in St. Louis, Missouri. Since then, the group has met yearly to continue building resilience against the high-consequence hazard of earthquakes.

For more information, visit EQProgram.net.

Scaled Down Permit System This Summer Will Focus On Congestion At Multnomah Falls Lot

Timed use permits will focus on the Multnomah Falls parking lot and not the Waterfall Corridor for summer 2023 in the Columbia River Gorge.

From Friday, May 26 through Monday, Sept. 4, 2023, from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., a timed use permit will be required for each personal vehicle accessing Multnomah Falls from Interstate 84 Exit 31. 

Project partners will target congestion at Multnomah Falls. The effort will help reduce congestion by:

  • Reducing safety concerns and backups on I-84 with required timed use permits at Exit 31, the Multnomah Falls parking lot on Interstate 84. 
  • Using a flagger to direct traffic at the Historic Columbia River Highway/U.S. 30 crosswalk at Multnomah Falls.
  • Using a private concessionaire to manage the small parking lot along the Historic Highway/U.S. 30 at Multnomah Falls. The concessionaire will operate this lot on a first come, first-served basis. There are six ADA parking spots at this lot for those with valid ADA placards. When the parking lot is full, vehicles will not be allowed to stop or wait for an open space. 

Multnomah Falls (I-84) timed use permits will be available online at recreation.gov for a $2 transaction fee per vehicle up to two weeks in advance of your visit. A limited number of permits will also be available for pickup without a fee at the Gateway to the Gorge Visitor Center in Troutdale and the Cascade Locks Historical Museum.   

Unlike last year, permits will not be required on the Historic Columbia River Highway/U.S. 30 Waterfall Corridor in 2023. Last year’s 2022 Waterfall Corridor timed use permit pilot was successful in providing a safer, more reliable, enjoyable experience for visitors within the corridor. However, without a dedicated funding source, partners cannot staff and operate the full system and will instead focus our limited resources on the main sources of congestion and safety concerns at the most visited site in the corridor: Multnomah Falls.

“We learned a lot in 2022 about visitor practices and that information will help us as we plan for the future,” said Multnomah County Commissioner Lori Stegmann. “Multnomah County, ODOT, Oregon State Parks, the Forest Service, and all our partners are continuing to look for ways we can reduce congestion and improve the visitor experience to this wonderful treasure.”

The most reliable way to see Multnomah Falls continues to be transit, by bicycle or by tour/shuttle. Avoid the congestion by planning your trip in advance. Permits are only needed if you arrive by personal vehicle at I-84 Exit 31 for Multnomah Falls. 

If you want to visit Multnomah Falls by personal vehicle, the best way is to get a permit and take I-84 to Exit 31. 

For more information on the program go to www.WaterfallCorridorPermits.org. — https://content.govdelivery.com/accounts/ORDOT/bulletins/34eb59d

May be an image of 3 people and text

83-year-old Clarence Edward Pitts walked away from his home in Bandon on Tuesday, January 31 at around 1:00 p.m. Pitts is described as:

  • 6′ 00″
  • 150 lbs
  • Gray hair
  • Brown eyes
  • Last seen wearing an orange beanie, plaid jacket, tan pants and white shoes
  • May have a walking cane
  • Has dementia and PTSD

Pitts may be in a vehicle that was also found to be missing from the home:

  • 1999 Toyota Van
  • White
  • Oregon license plate: WYN 788

If you see Clarence or have any information pertaining to where he may be, please call the Coos County Sheriff’s Office Dispatch Center at 541-396-2106 or the Bandon Police Department at 541-347-3189.

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