Oregon Beach News, Monday 3/7 – Legislature Preserves Elliott State Forest near Coos Bay For Research And Public Use, UPDATE: Tillamook County Sheriff’s Officer-Involved Shooting

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

Monday, March 7, 2022

Oregon Beach Weather

Today– Mostly sunny, with a high near 55. Calm wind becoming north northwest 5 to 9 mph in the afternoon.

Tuesday– Rain likely, mainly after 4pm. Patchy fog before 10am. Snow level 3000 feet lowering to 2500 feet in the afternoon . Otherwise, mostly cloudy, with a high near 52. Calm wind becoming west northwest 5 to 7 mph in the morning. Chance of precipitation is 60%.

Wednesday– A 40 percent chance of showers, mainly before 10am. Snow level 2000 feet lowering to 1500 feet in the afternoon . Mostly sunny, with a high near 52. North wind 5 to 9 mph.

Thursday– Sunny, with a high near 52.

Friday– Mostly sunny, with a high near 57.

Legislature Preserves Elliott State Forest near Coos Bay For Research And Public Use

Oregon lawmakers approved a bill that establishes the Elliott State Research Forest on more than 82,000 acres in the coast range near Coos Bay this past week.

The Elliott State Research Forest is a unique tract of coastal forest originally meant to generate logging revenue for Oregon’s K-12 schools. Conservation groups and others long worked to halt that practice and keep the forest intact.

Josh Laughlin, Executive Director of Cascadia Wildlands in Eugene said Senate Bill 1546 preserves the forest for education and research

“Which will have these incredible benefits for clean water and carbon storage and habitat for imperiled species,” he said. “But most important it delinks school funding from clear cutting old growth forests. That was the goal that we set out to achieve about 20 years ago.”

Oregon State University will lead research on climate, species, and forestry. There will be some logging in designated areas. The forest will remain in public ownership with public access.

The bill was approved by the house Thursday after being passed in the Senate on Tuesday.

At a press briefing following the legislature’s adjournment Friday, Gov. Kate Brown hailed the bill as one of the top accomplishments of the 2022 session. “For Oregonians to come together and develop a plan for the forest that I think will serve the needs of Oregonians, and for research for science for decades to come, to get this done and to invest the resources we need is extraordinary,” she said.

UPDATE: Tillamook County Sheriff’s Officer-Involved Shooting

The Tillamook County Sheriff’s Office confirmed officers shot and killed a suspect after a chase turned into a standoff.

Deputies said the shooting happened Thursday night just before 9 p.m. on Highway 101 south of the Winema Viewpoint in southern Tillamook County. Tillamook County deputies said the incident started in Lincoln County where officers were involved in a slow-speed chase of a Gold Chrysler 300.

Authorities said the suspect allegedly had an explosive device in his car.

After a two-hour standoff, the suspect was killed after reportedly threatening to detonate that device, and assaulting a woman in his car.

Members of the Oregon State Police SWAT team shot and killed 44-year-old Alfred Calvin Moss III of Lincoln County as they tried to rescue the woman, the sheriff’s office said.

The four troopers that were involved in the shooting were placed on leave, which is standard procedure. Major crime investigators were at the scene.

Yachats City Hall Will Be Closed To The Public Except By Appointment Until April 

A sign on the drive-through window at Yachats city hall
explains the hours people can drop off bills.

Yachats city manager Heide Lambert is again asking for patience from the public when it comes to dealing with city hall an limited services due to being short staffed.

Lambert, who started as city manager on Feb. 14, closed city hall at the end of February and plans to keep it closed for the month of March except for scheduled appointments or transactions via the drive-up window on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays.

The issue is staffing – just 3-4 people working there, the inability to quickly hire a receptionist, and the recent illness of a new employee who had been learning to send out utility bills.

“I cannot convey enough how short-staffed we are,” Lambert said during a city council meeting Thursday. “When I look out at city hall there’s not one person who was here a year ago.”

Lambert said when she came to work Thursday “there were 100 messages on our voicemail …”

Lambert has been looking for office help, but several people said at least two candidates interviewed declined the job.

Lambert told council members that she hopes to have more staff by April but “until then, I appreciate your patience.”

“We’re all wearing different hats and it’s all hands on deck right now,” she said. “There have been as many as six people at city hall (previously) and now we have three. I’m asking for your support. We’re not out of the woods yet.”

  • The drive through on the north side of city hall is intended to be open 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays;
  • Appointments to meet with Lambert or Guenther are available from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Thursday by calling 541-547-3565.
  • The email for Lambert is citymanager@YachatsMail.org; the email for Guenther is planner@YachatsMail.org; the email for Capron is admin@YachatsMail.org, and the email for Morphis is citycoordinator@YachatsMail.org

Oregon reports 741 new confirmed and presumptive COVID-19 cases, 23 new deaths

PORTLAND, Ore. — There are 23 new COVID-19-related deaths in Oregon, raising the state’s death toll to 6,709, Oregon Health Authority (OHA) reported Friday afternoon.

OHA reported 741 new confirmed and presumptive cases of COVID-19 as of 12:01 a.m. today, bringing the state total to 696,717.

The new confirmed and presumptive COVID-19 cases reported today are in the following counties: Benton (25), Clackamas (36), Clatsop (1), Columbia (8), Coos (12), Crook (8), Curry (5), Deschutes (48), Douglas (21), Grant (3), Harney (3), Hood River (4), Jackson (67), Jefferson (5), Josephine (12), Klamath (19), Lake (1), Lane (77), Lincoln (8), Linn (42), Malheur (2), Marion (41), Multnomah (169), Polk (13), Sherman (2), Tillamook (2), Umatilla (14), Union (3), Wasco (4), Washington (75) and Yamhill (11).

High-volume vaccine, testing sites continue

CDC data shows that during the emergence of the Omicron variant in December 2021, adults who were unvaccinated had more than 41 times the risk of COVID-19-associated death, compared with adults who were fully vaccinated and had received a booster.

The data are clear: get vaccinated, and get boosted when eligible. To everyone who has gotten vaccinated, thank you. Because so many people in Oregon have done their part, Oregon has high rates of immunity to severe illness.

Rates of COVID-19 Deaths by Vaccination Status and Booster Dose. Unvaccinated people had a higher incidence of death per 100,000 than people vaccinated with primary series or people who received primary series and booster. Unvaccinated adults aged 18 years and older had 3.2x risk of testing positive for COVID-19 and 41x risk of COVID-19-associated deaths in December, and 3.2x risk of testing positive for COVID-19 in January, compared to people vaccinated with a primary series and a booster dose.

People in Oregon can continue to receive a free COVID-19 vaccine or boosters at provider sites statewide. Check for updates for all OHA-run high-volume sites on the Oregon Vaccine News website before your visit.

Some sites have recently ended or will be ending service. Hours of operations and days of service continue to be updated as well. Other nearby vaccination providers can be found by using the Get Vaccinated Oregon locator map.

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Entire News Staff at Klamath Falls Newspaper Walk Out

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The entire news staff of the Herald and News, a newspaper in Klamath Falls walked out and left their jobs last week.

The paper’s editor, Tim Trainor, and three reporters all resigned this week. One of the reporters said that once Trainor announced his departure, the others knew it was time for them to go as well:  “Tim resigned first and then the rest of us were just sort of like, that’s kind of it for us,” he said. “I don’t want it to seem like it was like a loyalty thing — that we left because he left — but we just knew that it would just get worse after he left.” 

Reportedly there has been longtime issues over reporter pay and workload with the paper’s corporate owners, Adams Publishing Group, which came to a head in the past year. 

Two positions with the Herald and News were partially funded through Report for America, a nonprofit that places journalists into local newsrooms to report on under-covered issues and communities. 

Journalists at large and small outlets across the country say they struggle to be able to afford to live in the areas they cover. A job posting for a general assignment reporter at the Herald and News listed the starting wage at $14 an hour, just above minimum wage.

After Jefferson Public Radio reported on the newspaper losing its staff, the wage offer increased to $16 an hour to start. The starting salary for the editor, who is in charge of the entire news department, is $45,000 a year, according to its job posting. No journalist goes into the job for the money, but trying to pay rapidly-increasing rent, student loans, child care and other necessities in a job where the hours are long and often fluid, many are finding it difficult to justify.

According to a report from the University of North Carolina, the United States has lost almost 1,800 papers since 2004, including more than 60 dailies and 1,700 weeklies. The vast majority cover small communities and rural areas. According to the report, almost 200 counties in the U.S. don’t have a newspaper, and 1,449 counties have only one, usually weekly paper. The residents of news deserts are generally poorer, older and less educated. 

Losing local journalists means that a community loses the people willing to sit in meetings, read hundreds of pages of documents, spend hours doing research and ask questions of elected leaders and people in positions of power on behalf of people in the community who are affected by decisions made by those leaders.

Research shows that losing local journalism ends up costing communities money. According to Bloomberg CityLab, cities that lost newspapers and local journalists saw a rise in government spending and higher long-term borrowing costs. It also creates a situation ripe for government abuse, misinformation and extremism, according to the Center for Information, Technology, and Public Life, as people start getting their news from social media only.

Quick Look at Bills That Passed or Failed as Legislative Session Ends

A quick look at items that Oregon lawmakers acted on during their 32-day session that closed Friday, March 4:

Bills that Passed:

• Worker payments: People who claimed the state’s earned-income tax credit on their 2020 returns — or amend their returns by April 15 — will be eligible for a one-time payment of $600 from federal funds of $147 million. The Department of Revenue will start the first payments to an eventual total of 245,000 households by early summer. (House Bill 4179)

• Traffic stops: Police will be barred from stopping drivers for primary violations of five vehicle equipment defects as of Jan. 1, 2023: Single broken headlight, tail light or brake light; tail light emitting a color other than red; lighting of registration plates. Police can issue tickets for these violations if there is a separate traffic violation or other offense. (Senate Bill 1510)

• Farmworker overtime: The exemption in state law will be phased out in five years — the new maximums are 55 hours in 2023 and 2024, 48 hours in 2025 and 2026, and 40 hours starting in 2027 — and time-and-a-half rates will apply. Washington state started overtime on Jan. 1; California started overtime in 2019 for larger operations, and Jan. 1 for farms with 25 or fewer workers. A tax credit, subtracted directly from taxes owed, is available. (HB 4002)

• School replacement: $120 million is set aside for the relocation of Harriet Tubman Middle School as part of the widening of Interstate 5 in Portland. Vehicle pollution affects the site in North Portland. (HB 5202, budget bill)

• Elliott State Forest: The 91,000-acre tract on the south coast will be converted to a research forest overseen by Oregon State University under legislation that severs its link to timber production for the Common School Fund. (SB 1546)

• Election workers: County election workers may have their home addresses shielded from disclosure under legislation intended to deter harassment. (HB 4144)

Bills that Failed:

• Self-serve gasoline: HB 4151, which would have allow motorists to pump their own fuels as an option to full service by attendants, died after a Feb. 8 public hearing by the Joint Committee on Transportation. The bill died in the budget panel. Oregon and New Jersey still do not allow full self-service, though under a law that took effect in 2018, it is allowed in counties with less than 40,000 people. Oregon’s ban goes back to 1951.

• Non-unanimous juries: SB 1511, which would have set up a legal process for criminal defendants who were convicted by less-than-unanimous juries, died in the budget panel after it cleared the Senate Judiciary Committee. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in a Louisiana case in 2020 that such verdicts were unconstitutional; Oregon was the only state doing so. The court left it to states to decide whether its ruling applies retroactively.

• Hospital workers: HB 4142, which would have classified assaults on hospital workers as felonies instead of misdemeanors, died in the Senate after it passed the House on March 1. Senate President Peter Courtney had not assigned it to a committee, and ruled out of order a motion by Republicans on the final day to bring it to a vote of the full Senate. Republicans failed in an attempt to override Courtney’s decision.

Gasoline Prices Hit Record Highs

Gasoline prices hit record highs in Oregon and California on Saturday, according to AAA. Nationally, rising gasoline prices are also approaching record levels as Russia’s war in Ukraine and growing support for U.S. sanctions on Russian energy exports put upward pressures on prices.

The statewide average price for gas in Oregon is now $4.38 per gallon, according to AAA’s Fuel Gauge Report. That is higher than the previous record of $4.30 per gallon in 2008. U.S. gas prices also hit an average price of $4 per gallon on Saturday, March 5, according to GasBuddy.com.

It is the first time U.S. prices at the pump have hit $4 per gallon since 2008. That was in the early stages of the Great Recession and financial and real estate downturn. Nationally, prices are nearing an all-time record high of $4.10 per gallon, according to GasBuddy. That was also set in Russia’s war in Ukraine has increased crude oil and gas prices for U.S. consumers and businesses. Crude oil closed at $118 per barrel Friday — up more than 81% from a year ago.

Police Ask for Public’s Help in Search For Victim’s Roommate In Albany Homicide

 A 42-year-old woman, the roommate of a 75-year-old man whose death was ruled a homicide, is wanted for questioning in the case, Albany police officials said.

Elvin “Al” Pierce was found dead by officers around 9:10 p.m. Friday after a 911 caller reported a man was unconscious and not breathing. Investigators at that time said the circumstances surrounding his death were suspicious.

APD said Pierce’s roommate, 42-year-old Elizabeth Nicole Tyler Jimenez, wasn’t there at the home when officers found Pierce dead and they don’t know where she is. Authorities did not specifically state whether Jimenez is a suspect or if there are any charges against her.

Pierce’s car, a tan 2004 Buick Park Avenue with Oregon license plate 081FAX, is also missing.

Jimenez, who investigators believe is currently without a job, is described as often visiting local soup kitchens. She also has skills as a masseuse and a seamstress, officials said.

Anyone with information is urged to contact APD at 541-917-7680 or APD Lt. Buck Pearce at 541-917-3209.

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Jackson County Sheriff’s Office is seeking the public’s help in locating a missing person, Richard R. Walzer.

JCSO received a call Thursday regarding a vehicle that had been left in the parking lot north of the Gold Hill Sports Park, according to a JCSO press release. Upon arrival, deputies discovered that the vehicle was rented by Walzer. JCSO Search and Rescue responded and completed a search of this area along the Rogue River. Neither Walzer nor any additional clues were located.

This is a busy recreational area which leads authorities to believe Walzer was most likely seen or contacted by someone.
“Walzer was in a silver Nissan pickup truck and most likely had a full-size camera,” the press release reads. “Investigation indicates Walzer may have left his vehicle over a week ago on Friday February 18.”


Walzer is 6’2” 220 lbs with brown hair and brown eyes. He was last seen waring a blueish-gray button up shirt and blue jeans.
If you have any information or have seen Walzer, please contact Sgt. Shawn Richards at 541-774-6800.
May be an image of 2 people and text that says 'MISSING PERSON VINTAGE 1940 Donald Stockwell Donald Stockwell 80 yrs old, grey hair and beard. Weight 240, height 6 Vehicle: White 2019 GMC door crew cab. Oregon License no, 851LVC Missing from Grants pass Oregon. Last seen in Goldhill Oregon February 3, 2022 If seen contact josephine County Sheriffs Office at (541)474-5123 X3'
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Klamath County Sheriff’s Office Asks for Public’s Help in Search For Trucker Suspect

The first real clue to come in on all the missing person cases in the area. Help Klamath Falls Oregon Sheriff Office ID this trucker. He was the last to see this woman alive and could be the key to not only solving this woman’s disappearance but a number of the hundred other women missing in PNW. IF you have any information, please call (541) 883-5130

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A 17-year-old was reported missing in Salem and detectives say the teen might be the victim of an online catfishing scheme.

Ezra Mayhugh, 17, was last seen on October 15, 2021 after being dropped off in downtown Salem by a friend, the Marion County Sheriff’s Office said. He was reported as a runaway the following day when he did not return home.

Investigators say he might be in Washington or California. They hope to reunite Ezra safely with family members.

He’s described as about 5-foot 11-inches tall, weighing 130 pounds, with blonde hair and brown eyes.

If you have had contact with Mayhugh since October 15 or have other helpful information on his whereabouts, the sheriff’s office asks you to contact Detective M.J. Sphoon at 503-588-6808 or to submit a tip by texting TIPMCSO and your tip to 847411.

https://www.facebook.com/pg/Have-You-Seen-Me-Southern-Oregons-Missing-People-161249961222839/posts/

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