Oregon Beach News, Wednesday 8/2 – Clatsop County Fair In Full Swing, Two Earthquakes off the Coast of Port Orford

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

Wednesday, August 2, 2023

Oregon Beach Weather

Clatsop County Fair In Full Swing

The Clatsop County Fair & Expo is located on 109 verdant acres overlooking the Wallooski River, just three miles from Astoria. MORE INFO: https://clatsopcofair.com/https://www.facebook.com/clatsopcountyfair

Two Earthquakes off the Coast of Port Orford

The United States Geological Survey (USGS) reports a 4.0 magnitude earthquake occurred off the Oregon Coast near Port Orford at about 12:30 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 1.

This is the second such undersea tremor in the area in the past seven days.

A 4.4 magnitude earthquake rattled the Oregon Coast at 6:55 a.m. July 29, but the tremors do not pose a threat of triggering a larger earthquake – but they do serve as a reminder for residents that we live in a seismically active area, according to a local expert.

The July 29 earthquake shook the ground west of Coos Bay between 200 to 400 miles offshore. It happened in the Blanco Fracture Zone, said Althea Rizzo, Geologic Hazards Program Coordinator with Oregon Emergency Management (OEM).

“It’s where we have two tectonic plates offshore that are sliding past each other and it’s just a really active area for these kinds of earthquakes,” Rizzo said.

This fault line has not recently seen an uptick in earthquakes, she said. It is known by seismologists to be a hot spot for quakes.

May be an image of 2 people and text that says '530 Y0 SHERIFF LINCO SILETZ COMMUNITY MEETING for the Siletz Enhanced Law Enforcement District DOUGLAS SHERFT'

🤝 Wednesday, August 2, 2023 🤝Join us at the Siletz Community Meeting for the Siletz Enhanced Law Enforcement District. The meeting will cover information on the enhanced services offered, review project funds, and give participants a chance to ask questions about the contract area. You’ll also have a chance to meet the Deputies assigned to the Siletz community. More information: https://www.facebook.com/events/293771029998815?ref=newsfeed

Cannon Beach Police have posted another cougar warning alerting citizens and beach visitors of the incidents.

“Be aware that there have been 2 separate reports of a potential cougar in the area between 2nd and Sunset west of the highway,” the Cannon Beach Facebook post states. “One in the morning and one this (Monday) afternoon. There are also coyotes in the area and an injured elk. Please be very cautious in the area. “

Cannon Beach Police have also advised State Police of the sightings.

Most recently, a cougar had been sighted on the rocks at Cannon Beach in Mid -July. Wildlife officials believed that cougar left the beach area.

Cougar populations have been growing in the Coast Range as cougars migrate from denser population strongholds in other areas of the state and seek out new habitat. Their primary prey are black-tailed deer, and recent research with fecal DNA shows higher densities than previously thought. But cougars will pursue smaller prey like rabbits, small rodents and birds.

Wanted Coos County man arrested after committing Domestic Assault

On July 31st, 2023, around 2:58 pm, Coos County Dispatch received a 911 call reporting an ongoing domestic disturbance at a residence on Harmony Road in Coos Bay.

May be an image of text that says 'STRENGTH ACTUALLY QUESTIONDIFFE BITING DAMAGING EXPLOITING CONTROLS COUNSELING OTHERS EXPRESSES SOMETHING DEPRIVING PREVENTING CHALLENGES ADDITIONAL CON MIGHT CONTA CTING OFFENDERS RESTRAINING COHABITING ROVOKINGPRIVATELY ACQUISITION PHYSICAL LIVINGNECESSITIESO THREATENING WITHHOLDING TRESPASSING MAINTAINING MENTAL DOMESTIC DOCUMENTATION PSYCHOLOGICAL LASSIFICATION UMA FORCEFU 00 IMP ARRANGEMENTS STTTS AGGRESSI INSECURITY VIOLENCE SAFETY ACCEPTABILITY DISORDER SYNONYMOUSLY BIBLIO EMPLOYMENT NACCEPTABLE PENDENCE HOUSEHOLD EPIDEMIOLOGY BRIDE HREATENS PREVENTION GOVERNMENT EMOTIONALLY NTERVENTION CONSUMPTION, PUT UCATION PROGNOSIS SIGNIFICANT INFORMATION THROWING INTIMIDATES BEHAVIORSPREGNANCY UNDERMINES RESOURCES STILLCONSTANTLY OCCURRING VICARIOUS Coos County Sheriff's Office SHERIFF Gabe Fabrizio Media Release'

Deputy J. Vinyard immediately responded to the home.Upon arrival, Deputy Vinyard learned that the suspect, William Sandusky (46), was in a shed on the property and had an active Coos County warrant for his arrest. Deputy Vinyard made contact with Mr. Sandusky in the shed. Mr. Sandusky was up in a loft-style section, and upon contact, he jumped down and ran away from Deputy Vinyard.

Deputy Vinyard gave chase in his vehicle with his lights and sirens running. Deputy Vinyard caught up to Mr. Sandusky heading toward Penny Road and took him into custody without further incident.Deputy Vinyard concluded his investigation and transported Mr. Sandusky to the Coos County Jail for the active warrant and additional charges of Domestic Assault, Domestic Harassment, and Escape in the 3rd Degree.Mr. Sandusky remains in custody.

May be an image of text

Reedsport School District Selling Flooring From The Reedsport Community Charter School’s Gymnasium 

Reedsport locals have an opportunity to own a little piece of school history.

Reedsport school district officials announced that they are selling flooring from the Reedsport Community Charter School’s small gymnasium as surplus materials, according to district officials. School district officials said that depending on how much is raised from the sale, the district may look at future purchases in support of the gymnasium or athletic programs.

School district officials said that the surplus sale and bidding will close at 5 p.m. on Monday, August 7. Sections of flooring range in size and cost from two feet by one foot for $10 up to four feet by four feet for $75, the district said. Reedsport school district officials said that a limit of one four-by-four-foot section per person is in place.

Bidding for a half-court section starts at $5,000, the district said. School district officials said that all purchases must be picked up by August 8 or prearranged for a scheduled pick-up.

School district officials said that replacement of the small gym’s floor is among the summer maintenance projects currently underway on the school’s campus.

While there isn’t a specific purpose in mind yet for funds generated by the sale, future discussions will examine possible purchases if more than $1,000 is raised, school district officials said.

Requests for purchase or bids for half court can be emailed to Sharmen Tipten, while pick-up of purchases may be arranged with Brian Watts.

$10.7 million coming to Oregon to protect forest land

A historic investment from the Forest Legacy Program will help protect more than 11,000 acres of working forest in Oregon

SALEM, Ore. – Two working forests in Oregon received a major investment from the US Dept. of Agriculture’s Forest Legacy program, which protects environmentally and ecologically important private forest lands across the country. The Minam Conservation and Connectivity Project in northeast Oregon and the Tualatin Mountain Forest Project in northwest Oregon are among 34 projects nationwide that will receive funds from the program to protect working forests for wildlife, people, and climate resilience.

Some 3,111 acres of the Tualatin Mountain Forest in northwest Oregon will be secured as a working research forest�to be�owned�and managed�by Oregon State University thanks to grants from the US Dept. of Agriculture’s Forest Legacy program, administered in Oregon by the Oregon Dept. of Forestry.

These investments were made possible by the Land and Water Conservation Fund and the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), which provided a historic $700 million over 10 years to permanently conserve state and privately-owned forestlands through the Forest Legacy program. The program is administered in Oregon by the Oregon Dept. of Forestry (ODF).

Josh Barnard, Chief of ODF’s Forest Resources Division, said, “The Forest Legacy program’s investments ensure that working forests that are vital to the fabric of local economies remain working forests. They also maintain the ecological benefits of working forests, including natural watershed functions, maintaining habitat for at-risk species and mitigating climate change.”

Kelley Beamer, Executive Director of the Coalition of Oregon Land Trusts, agrees with Barnard. “The Forest Legacy Program is a critical tool to keep working forests working while protecting important habitat for fish, wildlife, and people,” she said. “This is the largest investment in Oregon’s working lands in the Forest Legacy program’s history and land trusts are poised to leverage these funds to protect even more of these ecologically and economically important lands.”

The Minam Conservation Connectivity Project phase II will acquire 10,964 acres of working forestland and a corridor along the Minam River in Union and Wallowa counties. Spearheaded by the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation, this project will conserve scenic viewsheds on over 2.4 million acres of adjacent public lands. This property has been managed as a working forest since the early 1900s and will continue to generate timber and support jobs in the local area.

“This commitment of Forest Legacy funding is a vital step toward completion of a landmark conservation project that will conserve and protect habitat for elk, mule deer, fish, birds and other wildlife, while also providing access by hunters, anglers and others,” said Kyle Weaver, Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation president and CEO. “We would like to recognize our partners at Manulife, Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, and the U.S. Forest Service as well as support from elected officials, both locally and in Congress, for making this conservation victory possible.”

The Tualatin Mountain Forest project will secure a 3,111-acre forest near Scappoose as a working research forest to be owned and managed by Oregon State University. The project will serve as a national model for an actively managed forest, mitigate climate change, and create public access and recreation opportunities..

“The Tualatin Mountain Forest project has great potential to develop a research and demonstration forest with expanded community benefits,” says Kristin Kovalik, Oregon program director for the Trust for Public Land, who is acquiring the land. “Projects like this require diverse partners and we are grateful for the Oregon Department of Forestry and US Forest Service ongoing commitment to the Forest Legacy Program, and Senators Merkley and Wyden for supporting the Inflation Reduction act and the Great American Outdoors Act which help fund projects like the Tualatin Mountain Forest.”

About the Coalition for Oregon Land Trusts – The Coalition of Oregon Land Trusts (COLT) serves and strengthens the land trust community in Oregon. At COLT, we build connections and advance policies that help protect our natural world—our water, wildlife and open space—for all people, forever. This work helps our coalition members—30 conservation organizations around the state—do what they do best: protect wildlife and wild places, defend working farms and forests, provide recreation and parks, drive climate solutions and science, champion clean water for all and engage communities to protect our natural world.

About ODF – The Oregon Department of Forestry protects some 16 million acres of Oregon’s forest lands from wildfire, and regulates timber harvests to protect soil, water quality and threatened and endangered species. The head of the agency – the Oregon State Forester – approves a Forest Stewardship Plan developed by ODF staff for each project approved for funding under the Forest Legacy Program. Through Oregon Department of Forestry,  the Forest Legacy Program seeks projects that strengthen local communities across Oregon, through state, local and private partnerships in conservation.

FBI Portland Seeking Additional Victims After Woman Escaped Makeshift Cinderblock Cell in Klamath Falls

Interior

The Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Portland Field Office is asking for the public’s help in identifying potential victims of a violent sex assault offender who has lived in at least 10 states. 

29-year-old, Negasi Zuberi (aka Sakima, Justin Hyche and Justin Kouassi), is in federal custody for interstate kidnapping after a Washington woman escaped his home in Klamath Falls, OR, claiming she was kidnapped, sexually assaulted and locked in a cinderblock cell. 

According to court records, on Saturday, July 15, 2023, Zuberi traveled from his home in Klamath Falls, OR, to Seattle, WA, where he solicited the services of a prostitute, he then posed as an undercover police officer. The victim told investigators that he pointed a taser at her and placed her in handcuffs, leg irons and put her in the back seat of his car. He then traveled roughly 450 miles with the woman, sexually assaulting her during the trip.

According to the victim, once he arrived at his home in Klamath Falls, OR, Zuberi moved her into a makeshift cell that he had constructed in his garage. The cell was made of cinder blocks and a metal door installed in reverse so it could not be opened from the inside. Once Zuberi left, the victim says she repeatedly banged on the door and was able to break the door open and escape the room. She was able to flag down a passing motorist who called 9-1-1.

Klamath Falls Police Department obtained a search warrant for Zuberi’s residence and found the makeshift cell described by the victim. Zuberi fled and was located in Reno, NV where he was taken into custody after a brief standoff with local police. 

“According to the complaint, this woman was kidnapped, chained, sexually assaulted, and locked in a cinderblock cell. Police say, she beat the door with her hands until they were bloody in order to break free. Her quick thinking and will to survive may have saved other women from a similar nightmare,” says Assistant Special Agent in Charge, Stephanie Shark with the FBI Portland Field Office. “We are fortunate that this brave woman escaped and alerted authorities. Through quick law enforcement action we were able to get Zuberi in custody the next day. While she may have helped protect future victims, sadly we have now linked Zuberi to additional violent sexual assaults in at least four states and there could be more.”

Zuberi has lived in ten states over the last ten years and FBI investigators have reason to believe there could be additional sexual assault victims. 

The FBI’s investigation has extended to multiple states where Zuberi previously resided between August of 2016 and today. Those states could include: California, Washington, Oregon, Colorado, Utah, Florida, New York, New Jersey, Alabama, and Nevada.

Victims may know Zuberi by the name “Sakima” and it is believed he may have used several different methods to gain control of his victims; including by drugging their drinks and impersonating a police officer.  

The victims are often threatened with retaliation if they notify the police.

If you believe you have been a victim or have any information concerning Zuberi (aka Sakima) visit the website: fbi.gov/SakimaVictims or call 1-800-CALL-FBI. You can also contact the FBI Portland Field Office at (503) 224-4181, your local FBI office, the nearest American Embassy or Consulate, or you can submit a tip online at tips.fbi.gov.

The FBI would like to acknowledge our partners assisting in this investigation including the United States Attorney’s Office – District of Oregon, Klamath Falls Police Department, Oregon Department of Justice, Oregon State Police, Reno Police Department, Nevada State Police and the FBI Las Vegas Field Office, Reno Resident Agency.

A criminal complaint is only an accusation of a crime, and a defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.

Fire crews are increasing containment of the roaring Flat Fire in western Oregon.

Local Forest Service River Ranger, Stephen DiCicco is helping boat firefighters across the Illinois River to access the Flat Fire
Local Forest Service River Ranger, Stephen DiCicco is helping boat firefighters across the Illinois River to access the Flat Fire

Current Situation:  Yesterday, In the southwest corner of the fire area, firefighters used Unstaffed Aerial Systems (UAS/drones) aerial ignitions to increase the burnout to about 200 feet interior from the fire line.  Helicopters also used a Plastic Spherical Dispenser (PSD) for aerial firing operations further interior, bringing the main fire southwest towards the fire line. This strategy moves the main fire toward the prepared fire line under more favorable and controlled conditions.  Fuels consumption is varied due to the existing vegetation mosaic on the landscape (brush, grass and timber).  Aburn-out operation along the dozer line heading east from Game Lake was completed with about 150 feet of depth interior of the line to the main unburned area. 

Structure protection resources continue scouting for and identifying additional homes and buildings and are collecting data to aid firefighters in protecting structures if there is a future need.  The alternate control line on Forest Service Road (FSR) 3313, 1503, and 3680 is planned for completion on Tuesday.

A community meeting was held in Brookings-Harbor last night and was live streamed on Facebook.  A recording can be viewed at https://fb.watch/m8b1R2JtRk/ .

Todays activities:  Firefighters willuse aerial resources to achieve additional fireline depth between the western and eastern portions of FSR 3680 in the southwestern corner of the fire.  Aerial interior burning will also start in the Game Lake area.  Fuels removal will begin today from vegetation cut in preparing fireline along the western containment lines. The northern containment line, from Wildhorse Lookout east to FSR 3577, is being actively mopped up and patrolled.  The northeastern corner of the fire, using FSR 2308 and 150, has been prepared for firing operations if the need arises due to changes in weather conditions and/or fire activity.

With fire traffic on Bear Camp Road, all motorists on Bear Camp Road are asked to slow down, use headlights and proceed with caution.

Resources no longer needed for remaining suppressions efforts are being released to return home, get rest and be ready for future assignments as we head into the remaining fire season.

Evacuations:  As of yesterday, July 31, all remaining evacuation levels were reduced to Level 1 “Get Ready” evacuation status for all areas in the vicinity of the Flat Fire. 

The Curry County Sheriff’s Office will continue to coordinate with the Fire Incident Management Team and will notify all residents affected by the fire of any reasons to change evacuation levels. 

Curry County is using Everbridge to send evacuation notices.  You can sign up for notifications here: https://www.co.curry.or.us/departments/emergency_management/index.php.

Weather: Today’sforecast calls for slightly warmer temperatures (up 3-5 degrees) and lower relative humidity (down 3-5%). Today has the potential to be the warmest day on the Flat Fire so far.

Smoke:  TheSmoke Outlook is available at: https://outlooks.airfire.org/outlook/en/b74901f7

Closures:The Rogue River-Siskiyou National Forest has issued a closure order for the fire area including trails, roads and a portion of the Illinois River. Oak Flat Campground, Game Lake Campground, Wild Horse Campground and Snow Camp Lookout Recreation Rentals are all closed as part of the area closure.  The Chetco River Road (FSR 1376) and Chetco/Pistol River Road (FSR 1407) are now closed.  The updated closure allows for public access to the Big Rock swimming hole on the Illinois River.  More information can be found here: https://tinyurl.com/bdzbae69

Restrictions: Fire Restrictions are in place, to learn more visit:fs.usda.gov/rogue-siskiyou

The Klamath County Sheriff’s Office has lifted all evacuations levels for the Golden Fire.

The Red Cross evacuation shelter at Bonanza High School has been closed.

Please be mindful while traveling in the area. Fire crews will remain within the fire perimeter over the next several days, also repair crews from Pacific Power and Lumen will continue to repair damage caused by the Golden Fire.
The cause of the fire remains under investigation.

The fire has covered just over 2,137 acres about 9 miles from Bonanza. Oregon Governor Tina Kotek ended the Conflagration Act on 7 /27 /23 for the Golden Fire. OSFM ended their delegations of authority from both Klamath County Fire District #5 and the County of Klamath.  OSFM costs to date are $1,338,829.  Nearly 50 homes and overe 60 outbuildings were destroyed by the fire.

Bend Police Seek Assistance As Homicide Victim’s SUV Left In Klamath Falls

Bend police investigating the homicide of a 28-year-old woman at her northwest Bend home released new details and blurry security photos Friday of where her SUV was found on a Klamath Falls street and someone getting out and walking away, as they seek videos and help from the public.

Last Monday, officers responded to a call around 11:20 a.m. from a Bend man who went to the home to check on Weaver and found her unresponsive.

Evelyn Jeanette Weaver’s silver 2004 Honda CR-V was found Thursday at the corner of Shasta Way and Division Street in Klamath Falls, but surveillance video showed it had been there since early last Saturday, two days before the woman’s body was found at her NW Hill Street home, police Communications Manager Sheila Miller said.

Police located surveillance video showing the SUV stopping at the location in the early morning of Saturday, July 15, Miller said.

Police released four low-quality photos showing the vehicle at that location and a person who got out and walked away. Miller said she has no reason to believe the person returned to the SUV. A male is seen on surveillance video walking away from the vehicle. The male is wearing khaki pants and a black or dark colored long sleeve top. Investigators are now seeking video from businesses or residents in the area of Mills Addition – between the
rail lines on the west and Washburn Way on the east, and Crater Lake Parkway to the north and South Sixth Street to the south. 

“Bend residents are asked to look through any surveillance video between July 8-14 for a person whose description and clothing may match” the released images, Miller said.

Businesses and residents along Highway 97 between Bend and Klamath Falls were asked to review any surveillance video they have from between 3:30 p.m. Friday, July 14 and 3:30 a.m. the next day, to look for the SUV or person in the images.

Also, anyone who traveled between Bend and Klamath Falls during those hours and who may have encountered the SUV or its occupant also is asked to contact non-emergency dispatch at 541-693-6911.

An autopsy was conducted Thursday, but Miller said the “results will take some time.” She also said investigators are not describing the SUV as “stolen” at this time; they had only said her SUV was missing from the address, then found by a member of the public.

Miller also said Friday that investigators have completed forensics and evidence collection at the home and released it to its owners.

According to her LinkedIn account, Evelyn Weaver worked as a scientist at Lonza in Bend. Weaver attended the University of Oregon, where she graduated with a masters of science in 2019.

Weaver lived alone and was renting the home on Northwest Hill Street. Caution tape was still wrapped around an entire block along the street on Thursday morning. Investigators could be seen removing items from the home, most of them in boxes.

If you live or work in these areas and have residential or business video between 7 p.m. on July 14 and 8 a.m. on July 20, we’d like to take a look at it. You can contact Det. T.J. Knea at tknea@bendoregon.gov or 541-948-0980 or Detective Sergeant Tommy Russell at trussell@bendoregon.gov or 541-408-8776.

Hundreds Of Seasonal Workers Sought For Oregon State Fair – Job Fair on Saturday

A job fair will be held on Aug. 5 to immediately fill hundreds of seasonal positions needed for the 2023 Oregon State Fair.

The job fair will be held at the Oregon State Fair and Exposition Center located at 2330 17th Street in Salem. The job fair will begin at 9 a.m. and on-site interviews will be performed until “all the positions are filled.” Workers are currently needed for fair admissions, parking, administration, carnival, security and concessions.

“Job seekers aged 16 or older can apply for carnival games and concession positions, while carnival ride positions require applicants to be 18 or older,” the Oregon State Fair announced on July 31. MORE INFO: https://oregonstatefair.org/careers/

The largest dam removal project in United States history is underway along the California-Oregon border — a process that won’t conclude until the end of next year with the help of heavy machinery and explosives.

FILE - The Iron Gate Dam powerhouse and spillway are seen on the lower Klamath River near Hornbrook, Calif., on March 2, 2020. This dam, along with three others on the Klamath River, are scheduled to be removed by the end of 2024. Crews will work to restore the river and surrounding land.
The Iron Gate Dam powerhouse and spillway are seen on the lower Klamath River near Hornbrook, Calif., on March 2, 2020. This dam, along with three others on the Klamath River, are scheduled to be removed by the end of 2024. Crews will work to restore the river and surrounding land.
Gillian Flaccus / AP

But in some ways, removing the dams is the easy part. The hard part will come over the next decade as workers, partnering with Native American tribes, plant and monitor nearly 17 billion seeds as they try to restore the Klamath River and the surrounding land to what it looked like before the dams started to go up more than a century ago.

The demolition is part of a national movement to return the natural flow of the nation’s rivers and restore habitat for fish and the ecosystems that sustain other wildlife. More than 2,000 dams have been removed in the U.S. as of February, with the bulk of those having come down within the last 25 years, according to the advocacy group American Rivers.

When demolition is completed by the end of next year, more than 400 miles of river will have opened for threatened species of fish and other wildlife. By comparison, the 65 dams removed in the U.S. last year combined to reconnect 430 miles of river.

Along the Klamath, the dam removals won’t be a major hit to the power supply; they produced less than 2% of power company PacifiCorp’s energy generation when they were running at full capacity — enough to power about 70,000 homes. Though the hydroelectric power produced by dams is considered a clean, renewable source of energy, many larger dams in the U.S. West have become a target for environmental groups and tribes because of the harm they cause to fish and river ecosystems.

The project will empty three reservoirs over about 3.5 square miles near the California-Oregon border, exposing soil to sunlight in some places for the first time in more than a century.

For the past five years, Native American tribes have gathered seeds by hand and sent them to nurseries with plans to sow the seeds along the banks of the newly wild river. Helicopters will bring in hundreds of thousands of trees and shrubs to plant along the banks, including wads of tree roots to create habitat for fish.

This growth usually takes decades to happen naturally. But officials are pressing nature’s fast-forward button because they hope to repel an invasion of foreign plants, such as starthistle, which dominate the landscape at the expense of native plants.

PacifiCorp built the dams starting in 1918 to generate electricity. The dams halted the natural flow of the river and disrupted the lifecycle of salmon, a fish that spends most of its life in the Pacific Ocean but returns to the chilly mountain streams to lay eggs. The fish are culturally and spiritually significant to a number of Native American tribes, who historically survived by fishing the massive runs of salmon that would come back to the rivers each year.

A combination of low water levels and warm temperatures in 2002 led to a bacterial outbreak that killed more than 34,000 fish, mostly Chinook salmon. The loss jumpstarted decades of advocacy from Native American tribes and environmental groups, culminating last year when federal regulators approved a plan to remove the dams.

The project will cost $500 million, paid for by taxpayers and PacifiCorps ratepayers. Crews have mostly removed the smallest of the four dams, known as Copco No. 2. The other three dams are expected to come down next year. That will leave some homeowners in the area without the picturesque lake they have lived on for years.

The Siskiyou County Water Users Association, which formed about a decade ago to stop the dam removal project, filed a federal lawsuit. But so far they have been unable to stop the demolition.

“Unfortunately it’s a mistake you can’t turn back from,” association President Richard Marshall said.

The water level in the lakes will drop between 3 feet and 5 feet per day over the first few months of next year. Crews will follow that water line, taking advantage of the moisture in the soil to plant seeds from more than 98 native plant species including wooly sunflower, Idaho fescue and Blue bunch wheat grass.

Tribes have been invested in the process from the start. Resource Environmental Solutions hired tribal members to gather seeds from native plants by hand. The Yurok Tribe even hired a restoration botanist.

Each species has a role to play. Some, like lupine, grow quickly and prepare the soil for other plants. Others, like oak trees, take years to fully mature and provide shade for other plants.

“It’s a wonderful marriage of tribal traditional ecological knowledge and western science,” said Mark Bransom, CEO of the Klamath River Renewal Corporation, the nonprofit entity created to oversee the project.

The previous largest dam removal project was on Washington state’s Elwha River, which flows out of Olympic National Park into the Strait of Juan de Fuca. Congress in 1992 approved the demolition of the two dams on the river constructed in the early 1900s. After two decades of planning, workers finished removing them in 2014, opening about 70 miles of habitat for salmon and steelhead.

Biologists say it will take at least a generation for the river to recover, but within months of the dams being removed, salmon were already recolonizing sections of the river they had not accessed in more than a century. The Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe, which has been closely involved in restoration work, is opening a limited subsistence fishery this fall for coho salmon, its first since the dams came down. (SOURCE)

BLM celebrates Great American Outdoors Day with free day-use access 8/4

PORTLAND, Ore, — The Bureau of Land Management is waiving recreation day-use fees for visitors on August 4, 2023, in celebration of the third annual Great American Outdoors Day. The BLM is inviting all communities to explore the unique and diverse natural landscapes and recreation facilities available on their public lands throughout Oregon and Washington.

Within Oregon and Washington, the BLM’s standard amenity day-use fees will be waived at the following:

The standard amenity fee waiver does not guarantee admission to some busy recreation areas where reservations for day-use, group sites, and overnight camping are recommended. Please contact the local BLM office if you have any questions about a recreation site you are interested in visiting.

“Providing outdoor recreation opportunities to all communities is a top priority,” said Anita Bilbao, BLM Oregon/Washington Associate State Director. “We invite everyone to enjoy the spectacular beauty of your public lands firsthand.”

The Great American Outdoors Day was established to celebrate the signing of the Great American Outdoors Act into law on August 4, 2020, which invests in the protection and sustainment of public lands. With GAOA funding, the BLM is addressing deferred maintenance needs and improving public access to numerous popular outdoor recreation destinations throughout Oregon and Washington, including the Lower Deschutes Wild and Scenic River, Loon Lake Recreation Site, Yaquina Head Outstanding Natural Area, and Hyatt Lake Campground. You can comprehensively search all available BLM recreation opportunities to explore on your public lands here.

Know before you go:
• Be fire aware. Check for local fire restrictions and active fire closures. 
• Practice Leave No Trace principles and leave your public lands cleaner than you found them.  
• The fee waiver only applies to standard amenity fees for day-use at the recreation sites listed. The waiver does not apply to any expanded amenity fees for overnight camping, group day-use, and cabin rentals or individual Special Recreation Permit fees along permitted rivers.

Fee-free days occur each year in celebration of Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, Washington’s Birthday, Juneteenth National Independence Day, Great American Outdoors Day, National Public Lands Day, and Veterans Day.

The remaining fee-free days in 2023 are: 
• September 30 (National Public Lands Day)
• November 11 (Veterans Day)

For more information about the BLM’s recreation fee program, please visit https://www.blm.gov/programs/recreation/permits-and-fees.

-BLM-
The BLM manages more than 245 million acres of public land located primarily in 12 western states, including Alaska, on behalf of the American people. The BLM also administers 700 million acres of sub-surface mineral estate throughout the nation. Our mission is to sustain the health, diversity, and productivity of America’s public lands for the use and enjoyment of present and future generations.

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.

May be an image of 4 people and text

Contact us: Info@OregonBeachMagazine.com

Related posts

Oregon Beach News, Wednesday 2/9 – Reedsport Regains Status as a Tree City USA, Dunes City Mayor Passes Away

Renee Shaw

Oregon Beach News, Thursday 1/28 – 321 Years Since The Big One hit PNW has Coastal Concerns, Oregon Discloses Virus Outbreak at Columbia Memorial Hospital in Astoria

Renee Shaw

Oregon Beach News, Friday 5/28 – Health Advisory For D River Beach In Lincoln County, New Youngs Bay Bridge Will Close at Night for Two Weeks

Renee Shaw