Oregon Beach News, Wednesday 4/12 – The Devereux Center in North Bend Receives Grant Funding For Homeless Transportation, Info Released on the Four In Custody After Home Invasion In Otis

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

Wednesday, April 12, 2023

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The Devereux Center in North Bend Receives Grant Funding For Homeless Transportation

The city of North Bend named the Nancy Devereux Center as one of several recipients of grant funding through the North Bend Revenue Sharing Community Grant Program.

The Devereux Center offers services like a warming center, showers and medical clinics to people who are homeless.

Tara Johnson, the Center’s director, says they applied for the grant to have more funding for transportation.

As part of the Homeward Bound program, the Center provides bus tickets for clients to towns outside the area after family members agree to allow that client to live with them.

“Often, we have people who need to go back to a different community, and they don’t have a family member that’s willing to accept them,” Johnson said. “They have a family member who’s willing to help them, but not actually house them or accept responsibility, so then they don’t meet the requirements for the program… This $1,500 will help offset the cost for people who aren’t eligible for the Homeward Bound program.”

The Devereux Center will also use the money to provide local transportation for clients to get to medical appointments, the Department of Human Services and other appointments.

Each year, the North Bend City Council awards funds to causes that offer community services. Other grant recipients this year include CASA of Coos and Curry Counties as well as Alternative Youth Activities, Inc. or AYA. (SOURCE)

Info Released on the Four In Custody After Home Invasion In Otis

On March 31, 2023, at approximately 2:24AM, Sheriff’s Deputies responded to 393 West View Drive in Otis for a report of a home invasion where gunshots had been fired. Deputies arrived on scene and found that no one had been injured by the gunshots. According to witnesses, five subjects wearing masks forced their way into the home. Two of the subjects were armed with firearms. The subjects then caused severe damage to the interior of the home and fled prior to Deputies arriving.

The Lincoln County Major Crime Team responded to investigate the incident and process the crime scene. The Major Crime Team is comprised of Detectives from the Lincoln County Sheriff’s Office, Lincoln City Police Department, Newport Police Department, Oregon State Police and the Lincoln County District Attorney’s Office.

At the conclusion of the investigation, four of the five subjects have been identified and arrested. Of those taken into custody, two of them were juveniles. The adult subjects arrested were 18-year-old Caleb Thomas of Toledo and 18-year-old Xavier Garcia of Siletz. The charges were as follows: Burglary in the First Degree, Criminal Mischief in the First Degree, Menacing, Unlawful Use of a Weapon, Recklessly Endangering and Assault in the Fourth Degree.

The Lincoln County Sheriff’s Office would like to extend our thanks to the Lincoln City Police Department, the Newport Police Department, the Oregon State Police and the Lincoln County District Attorney’s Office for their assistance with this investigation. At this time the Lincoln County Sheriff’s Office believes there is no risk to the public

Lincoln County Sheriff Seeks Info on Missing Siletz Man

On 04/01/2023, the Lincoln County Sheriff’s Office responded to a call of concern in which the complainant found a wallet and fishing pole near a fishing hole off Old River Rd in Siletz, OR. The wallet contained identification for 74-year-old Larkie Logan out of the State of Idaho. The responding Deputy at the time was unaware of Larkie’s local connection to Siletz, OR and placed the wallet into safekeeping at the Lincoln County Sheriff’s Office as lost property to be returned to him.

On 04/07/2023, the Lincoln County Sheriff’s Office received additional information from locals stating that Larkie was dropped off at the fishing hole on Old River Rd on or about 03/28/2023 and had not been seen since. With this information, Deputies searched the area of the fishing hole, but were unable to locate Larkie. The volunteers-based Lincoln County Sheriff’s Office Search and Rescue Team was advised of Larkie’s disappearance and his status as a missing person. Larkie’s family has been contacted and is coordinating with Deputies to assist in efforts to locate him.

Any information regarding the location of Larkie Logan should be called in to the Lincoln County Sheriff’s Office at 541-265-0777. Reference case number 23S-00560.

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Governor Tina Kotek has announced funding allocations for the Homelessness State of Emergency.

Portland and Multnomah County will get 18-million dollars; Hillsboro, Beaverton and Washington County will get eight-million and Clackamas County will get four-million dollars. Eugene and Lane County will get 15-million dollars; Central Oregon will receive 14 million; Salem, Marion, and Polk counties will receive 10-million dollars and Medford and Jackson County will get nearly nine-million dollars. The money will be used to rehouse families and create
new shelter beds.

OHCS awards funding to reduce unsheltered homelessness in emergency areas included in Governor Kotek’s state of emergency

Oregon Housing and Community Services (OHCS) has approved grant agreements to award funding to regions declared emergency areas in Governor Kotek’s homelessness state of emergency. The regions known as Continuum of Care (CoC) are areas or counties where unsheltered homelessness has increased by 50% or more since 2017. 

The emergency areas are tasked to achieve Governor Kotek’s goals to reduce unsheltered homelessness by January 2024. The initiative will work to prevent 8,750 households from becoming homeless statewide, add at least 600 low-barrier shelter beds in emergency areas, and rehouse at least 1,200 unsheltered households in emergency areas. 

“These goals set by our Governor are bold, but it is the urgent response needed to tackle a crisis that has been destabilizing our neighbors, families and friends for far too long,” said OHCS Director Andrea Bell. “The work ahead will require the galvanization of every community—large and small—for us to achieve these shared goals. All people of Oregon are worth fighting for. To that end, we will be relentless through the lens of humanity in supporting our local partners in the pursuit for meaningful progress.”

Last month, Governor Kotek signed legislation passed by the Oregon Legislature to address the state’s housing and homelessness crisis, including $155 million the Governor proposed to reduce homelessness in all regions of the state. The funding will be used for homelessness prevention programs, more shelter capacity, rehousing services and more. 

House Bill 5019 appropriated $85.2 million for local homelessness emergency plans. OHCS will reserve $3 million to ensure the goals of the emergency order are achieved. An additional $3 million will be used for a statewide landlord incentive, available to landlords participating in local rehousing efforts. In addition, the early funding package included $33.6 million to help prevent homelessness for an estimated 8,750 households. This funding will be distributed statewide through existing eviction prevention programs.

The requests from all regions within the emergency order totaled $98.8 million, so there were not enough funds to provide each region with its full funding request. OHCS in coordination with the Oregon Department of Emergency Management (ODEM) will be offering ongoing technical assistance to MAC groups as they implement their plans. Below is the breakdown of funding allocated to each Continuum of Care included in the emergency declaration, which totals $79.2 million.

  • Portland/Gresham/Multnomah County: $18.2 million to rehouse 275 households and create 138 shelter beds
  • Eugene/Springfield/Lane County: $15.5 million to rehouse 247 households and create 230 shelter beds
  • Central Oregon: $13.9 million to rehouse 161 households and create 111 shelter beds
  • Salem/Marion, Polk Counties: $10.4 million to rehouse 158 households and create 79 shelter beds
  • Medford, Ashland/Jackson County: $8.8 million to rehouse 133 households and create 67 shelter beds
  • Hillsboro/Beaverton/Washington County: $8.0 million to rehouse 121 households and create 61 shelter beds
  • Clackamas County: $4.4 million to rehouse 130 households.

Recognizing that unsheltered homelessness impacts communities in every part of Oregon, the legislature also approved $26 million to address homelessness in the counties that did not meet the threshold of the emergency order when the Governor issued it on January 10, 2023. Counties not in the original declared emergency areas will receive funding in July to create new shelter beds and rehouse people experiencing unsheltered homelessness. 

Frequently asked questions about the grant agreements can be found in the OHCS website here.

About Oregon Housing and Community Services – Oregon Housing and Community Services provides resources for Oregonians to reduce poverty and increase access to stable housing. Our intentional focus on both housing and community services allows us to serve Oregonians holistically across the housing continuum, including preventing and ending homelessness, assisting with utilities, providing housing stability support, financing multifamily affordable housing and encouraging homeownership.

UPDATE: Deadline extended and available funding increased to $18.75 million for community-based organizations to support youth experiencing homelessness

(Salem) – The Oregon Department of Human Services (ODHS), Self-Sufficiency Programs, Youth Experiencing Homelessness Program is inviting community partners to apply for a portion of $18.75 million in grant funding that is now available to provide services and housing supports to youth experiencing homelessness.

Previously announced in March, the available grant funding has increased to $18.75 million thanks to the passage and signing of House Bill 5019 (HB 5019). HB 5019 includes a suite of policy changes and investments intended to address Oregon’s housing needs and provides funding to expand and strengthen the ODHS Youth Experiencing Homelessness Program

The deadline to apply for this grant funding has been extended from April 7 to April 21 and the application can be found online.

Community-based organizations who provide, or desire to provide, services to youth experiencing homelessness are eligible to apply for the grant funding.

Organizations may express interest in supporting more than one of the following service areas that funding is available to support:

  • Prevention Services including youth outreach and drop-in services
  • Early and crisis intervention housing such as shelter and host home programming 
  • Medium-term housing such as transitional living and host home programming 
  • Other Services such as culturally-specific programming, mental health and substance use supports

The ODHS Youth Experiencing Homelessness Program is tasked with coordinating statewide planning for delivery of services to youth experiencing homelessness under the age of 25. It partners with impacted youth, community organizations and other state agencies to support and fund initiatives and programs within the youth homelessness system. More information can be found online

About the Oregon Department of Human Services – The mission of the Oregon Department of Human Services is to help Oregonians in their own communities achieve wellbeing and independence through opportunities that protect, empower, respect choice and preserve dignity. 

Federal Complaint Filed in Medford Against BLM to Stop Timber Harvest Plan

An Oregon-based group have a complaint filed against the U.S. Bureau of Land Management about some of its plans to allow timber harvest.

Monday a coalition of conservation groups filed a legal complaint challenging the Bureau of Land Management’s (BLM) “Integrated Vegetation Management” (IVM) program that they say, “would aggressively log forest stands located within Late Successional Reserves, areas purportedly set aside for forest conservation.”

The groups include Klamath-Siskiyou Wildlands (KS Wild), Cascadia Wildlands and Oregon Wild. They said the IVM authorizes forest “gap creation” and “open seral” logging prescriptions within mature and old-growth forests that are fire-resilient and provide important habitat at risk wildlife species.

In February, BLM said two Josephine County communities were getting federal attention to improve wildfire resilience when it issued its project plan near Murphy and Williams, Oregon, both south of Grants Pass. BLM’s said its decision was intended to promote safe wildfire response, develop fire resilient lands and create habitat for special status species.

The BLM project is called Late Mungers Integrated Vegetation Management Project. It includes prescribed fire, fire fuel thinning and selection harvest actions. BLM said during the next decade it expects wildfire fuels reduction work on about 7,500 acres.

BLM said the project work will start at strategic locations where fire managers have the best chance to catch and contain wildfires.

They also said the project includes 830 acres of proposed harvests split into two timber sales, with selection harvest methods increasing diversity of forest stands. 

BLM said a more complex habitat is important for the northern spotted owl, the marbled murrelet and Pacific marten as federally – species listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act.

KS Wild Conservation Director George Sexton says, “BLM timber planners can dance around it all they want, but it’s crystal clear that gap creation logging creates clearcuts that remove habitat and increase fire hazard.”

Protesters have picketed BLM’s Medford office at least twice this year to challenge BLM’s plans to allow the timber harvest south of Grants Pass.

The plaintiff’s group said the first commercial IVM logging project called Penn Butte is scheduled to be auctioned in late May, saying, “Penn Butte is located in the Williams Late Successional Reserve and would remove over 400-acres of old-growth habitat through ‘open seral’ logging and another 51 acres through ‘gap creation’ clearcutting.”

Crag Law Center, which is part of the plaintiffs’ action, attorney Meriel Darzen said, “The BLM sidestepped its procedural duties and cut the public out of the process when it decided to approve thousands of acres of large tree logging without explaining where the logging will occur and how it would affect existing forests in the short and long-term. This is particularly egregious where these particular forests were set aside by the agency itself as reserve lands with the goal of protecting habitat.”

The group U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Biological Opinion for Penn Butte concluded that the proposed old growth logging is “likely to adversely affect” spotted owls and their designated critical habitat.

Oregon Wild Conservation and Restoration Coordinator Doug Heiken said, “The forests targeted for removal in Penn Butte are resilient, healthy, and most important they are designated as reserves for conservation, not timber supply. If we want to store carbon and provide habitat this is the place for careful conservation, not aggressive logging.”

Cascadia Wildlands Legal Director Nick Cady says, “If the BLM is interested in real fire-focused restoration, we would be fully supportive, but aggressively logging wildlife habitat in the Late Successional Reserves that will increase fire hazard for the surrounding community is ridiculous. It demonstrates that this agency does not care what this community has been through and is only concerned with producing timber volume.” (SOURCE)

You can also find more on this story at OPB t: https://www.opb.org/article/2023/03/08/think-out-loud-southwest-oregon-forest-management-plan-draws-backlash/

A portion of I-5 near Salem closed Monday morning for several hours, following an officer-involved shooting.

Oregon State Police say a trooper stopped to help what he thought was a disabled motorist just before 9 a-m … and discovered the driver of a semi was being held at gunpoint. There was an exchange of gunfire and the suspect – identified as 31-year-old Felipe Manzo – ran into tall grass along the interstate.

When officers reached him, authorities say they provided medical attention, but Manzo died at the scene.  Trooper Andrew Tuttle suffered minor injuries and was placed on administrative leave for his role in the shooting, pending the outcome of the investigation.

The Oregon Zoo has welcomed a new rare African bontebok calf. He was born to eight-year-old “Winter” in the Zoo’s Africa Savanna area.

The bontebok, which is related to the antelope, is arguably the first African animal saved from human-caused extinction after it was hunted almost to extinction in the 18th and 19th centuries. The calf, now weighing about 18 pounds, won’t venture outside to greet visitors until he’s a little older. and the weather gets a little warmer.

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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