Oregon Beach News, Tuesday 4/26 – Commercial Fishermen Urge Fish And Wildlife Commission To Revisit Regulations, Haystack Rock Awareness Program “Welcome Home Puffins” This Weekend

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

Tuesday, April 26, 2022

Oregon Beach Weather

Today– Showers likely, mainly before 11am. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 53. West southwest wind 7 to 13 mph, with gusts as high as 21 mph. Chance of precipitation is 60%.

Wednesday– A 20 percent chance of showers after 11am. Partly sunny, with a high near 55. Light and variable wind becoming northwest 5 to 10 mph in the afternoon.

Thursday– Showers likely, mainly after 11am. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 53. Light west wind becoming southwest 5 to 10 mph in the afternoon. Chance of precipitation is 70%. New precipitation amounts of less than a tenth of an inch possible.

Friday– A 20 percent chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 56.

Saturday– Rain likely before 11am, then a chance of showers after 11am. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 55.

Commercial Fishermen Urge Fish And Wildlife Commission To Revisit Regulations

At a public forum in Astoria, several local commercial fishermen have asked the Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission to reconsider Columbia River fishing regulations.

During the public forum section of the commission’s meeting in Astoria on Friday, commercial fishermen and those connected with the industry asked the commission to revisit gillnetting regulations and salmon buyback options.

Jim Coleman, a fisherman from St. Helens, asked commissioners to add gillnetting to a future agenda or to work with Washington state to ensure the option of a 6-inch gillnet in the fall.

“The gillnet-caught Copper River King salmon is flown from Alaska to Seattle on a chartered jet with great fanfare, demanding $70 to $80 a pound, while commercial fishing on the Columbia River is a political football,” Coleman said.

Jim Wells, the president of Salmon for All, said he was disappointed that the commission met in Astoria but did not discuss fishing issues on the river.

Wells asked the commission to align with Washington state regulations, allowing for fall coho fishing with traditional gear and said that pound net fishing is not economically viable for fishermen.

“I don’t know any gillnetter that’s interested, at this point, in moving forward with that gear type. I haven’t talked to anybody that is. It’s a loser, and we’re not here to lose money,” Wells said.

Bruce Buckmaster, the co-chairman of the Oregon Watershed Enhancement Board’s water and climate committee and a former fish and wildlife commissioner, said legislation has failed to balance environmental sustainability and the needs of non-sport fishermen.

He requested that the commission initiate an agenda to consider a Columbia River policy that includes a clear mandate for social justice.

“Two things are clear: One, there are fewer of us. Two, there will continue to be fewer of us unless something changes,” Buckmaster said. “We do not want to be lost and then forgotten.”

At the meeting, the Fish and Wildlife Commission adopted federal ocean salmon fishing regulations, based on the Pacific Fishery Management Council’s adopted seasons. The move meant the updated federal guidelines for fishing in federal waters now apply to state waters within 3 miles of the shore.

The adopted season aimed to meet conservation goals and protect weak salmon stocks, according to the Pacific Fishery Management Council.

North of Cape Falcon, the overall allowable catch is 54,000 Chinook, 4,000 fewer than last year, split between commercial and sport fisheries.

The total quota of marked hatchery coho is 200,000, compared to 75,000 last year. Of that, the ocean sport fishery quota for marked coho is 168,000.

In that region, the tribal ocean fishery quotas are 40,000 Chinook salmon, unchanged from last year, and 52,000 coho, an increase from last year’s 26,500. The council adopted seasons as proposed by tribes on the Oregon and Washington coasts.

In setting commercial and recreational halibut seasons, the Fish and Wildlife Commission slightly lowered this year’s fishery catch limit, keeping with the International Pacific Halibut Commission’s recommendations.

Join the Haystack Rock Awareness Program in welcoming the Tufted Puffins back to their summer nesting home during the weekend of April 30th.

The event is free, fun and engaging for learners of all ages. It features spotting scopes, tide pool tours, and a wide variety of interpretive stations, educational games, a labyrinth, art projects, and more.

The event also spotlights Cannon Beach’s iconic Tufted Puffin as a species in peril. Since 1980, the number of Tufted Puffins at Haystack Rock has dropped from 600 to just 96.

Over the weekend there will be opportunities to learn more about ongoing efforts towards Tufted Puffin conservation. FOR MORE INFO: https://www.haystackrockawareness.com/welcome-home-puffins

Today Is Voter Registration Deadline For May Primary In Oregon

Tuesday is the voter registration and party choice deadline for Oregon’s May 17 primary election.

New Oregon voters with a valid state driver license, driving permit, or ID can register online at oregonvotes.gov until 11:59 Tuesday night – marking three weeks until election day.

If you do not have a valid oregon driver’s license or ID, you will need to fill out a paper voter registration card.

The cards are available at the post office, county libraries, or county elections buildings. Those must be mailed with a USPS postmark of April 26.

We want to keep you informed about COVID-19 in Oregon. Data are provisional and change frequently. This report covers the three-day period from April 22 to April 24, 2022. Visit our dashboard, linked below, and hover over the new cases graph to view new presumptive and confirmed case numbers reported to OHA by date.

Note: The summary tables for some of our COVID-19 dashboards will be temporarily unavailable today from 5 to 6 p.m. while Tableau engineers perform routine maintenance. We appreciate your patience. For more information, including COVID-19 data by county, visit our dashboard: http://ow.ly/zLvz50IRGwt

Screen shot of linked dashboard shows an increase trend in cases, test positivity and hospitalizations. Vaccinations have plateaued. Please visit healthoregon.org/coronavirus for more information.

The number of identified coronavirus cases increased in Oregon for a fourth consecutive week, according to state data released Monday.

The 48% increase in weekly confirmed or presumed infections marked the second consecutive week with nearly 50% growth, pushing identified cases to their highest levels since late February.

But Oregon remains far below the case and hospitalization numbers seen during late 2020, summer 2021 and this year’s omicron surge. And the current rise in infections isn’t expected to have the kind of dire consequences as the delta and omicron waves did.

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OHA partners with 147 community organizations across Oregon to advance public health equity

PORTLAND, Ore. — Oregon Health Authority (OHA) is launching a new program to fund work by community-based organizations to help them focus on local priorities while meeting their health equity goals.

OHA’s Public Health Division recognizes the essential role of community-based organizations in partnership with local public health authorities and other community partners to implement community-led and culturally and linguistically responsive programs.

Today’s start of this new initiative reflects coordination of eight public health programs coming together to center health equity and community priorities in one centralized funding opportunity.

OHA’s commitment to eliminating health inequities by 2030 relies on building trusting relationships with community-based organizations that collectively serve every county, and on supporting their efforts to uplift community health priorities that are grounded in equity and accessibility. 

OHA acknowledges that racism, settler colonialism, and historic and contemporary injustices have created policies and programs that led to unfair and unjust health inequities over time. In centering community strengths and wisdom for health, this grant opportunity supports community-based organizations as partners in Oregon’s public health system, working toward equity in: communities of color; nine Federally Recognized Tribes of Oregon and tribal communities; people with disabilities; immigrant and refugee communities; undocumented communities; migrant and seasonal farmworkers; LGBTQIA+ communities; faith communities; older adults; houseless communities; and others.

Public Health Director Rachael Banks explained that “Building a more equitable public health future requires deep and meaningful collaboration with community-based organizations, and uplifting and centering health priorities that are important to communities across the state. This funding opportunity is an important part of OHA’s commitment to eliminating health inequities by 2030.”

Community-based organizations applied for and were awarded funds to carry out work in one or more of the following program areas:

  • Adolescent and school health
  • Commercial tobacco prevention
  • Communicable disease prevention
  • Emergency preparedness
  • Environmental public health and climate change
  • HIV/sexually transmitted infection education, outreach and community needs assessment
  • ScreenWise: Breast and cervical cancer prevention
  • Overdose prevention

OHA has awarded 147 community-based organizations a total of about $31 million across all eight program areas between April 1, 2022, and June 30, 2023. Within the program areas, community-based organizations have agreed to focus on work aligned with their community’s priorities in one or more of the following categories of funding:

  • Health education and communication
  • Identifying and assessing community priorities
  • Supporting prevention activities
  • Policy development

Dolly England, the Public Health Division’s Community Engagement Program manager, said, “This is important equity work, and it cannot be done without the strength and support of community-based organizations.”

For more information, visit the Public Health Funding for Community-based Organizations page.

Oregon PUC Approves Three Utility Wildfire Mitigation Plans, One with Conditions

SALEM, Ore. – The Oregon Public Utility Commission (PUC) approved the 2022 Wildfire Mitigation Plans (WMPs) for PacifiCorp, Portland General Electric (PGE), and Idaho Power and recommended the utilities collaborate with PUC staff to improve the information to be included in their 2023 plans. Idaho Power’s 2022 plan was approved with conditions, requiring a compliance filing to address identified deficiencies in their plan by June 28, 2022. The WMPs are the first to be filed since Senate Bill 762 passed during the 2021 legislative session. 

Senate Bill 762 established formal standards for electric utility wildfire mitigation plans, including the information utilities are required to include in their plans. Plans must include identification of high-risk areas within the utility’s service territory and actions to minimize those risks, as well as protocols for implementing public safety power shutoffs. Utilities also need to describe how they determined which risk reduction strategies to pursue. The bill required the three investor-owned utilities to submit their plans to the PUC by the end of 2021 and the PUC to approve them within 180 days after their submission. 

PacifiCorp, PGE and Idaho Power all filed their WMPs on December 30, 2021, as required by the bill. PUC staff and an independent evaluator reviewed each plan to ensure they met the statutory requirements established in the bill and to make recommendations to continue evolving the plans to further address future risk. 

Both PacifiCorp and PGE’s plans met the requirements, leading to an approval by all three Commissioners of their WMPs and instruction to work with the PUC and interested stakeholders to address recommendations made by the PUC in their 2023 plans. Plans must be updated and filed annually with the PUC no later than December 15, going forward.

Idaho Power’s WMP was also approved, but with conditions by Commissioners. Idaho Power was directed to resubmit their WMP by June 28, 2022 with an explanation of their cost/risk mitigation assumptions and analysis that was completed but not described in their 2022 plan, their strategy to address these gaps in their 2023 plan, additional data relating to specific risk areas in their Oregon service territory, as well as projects to be pursued in Oregon, and the costs associated with those projects. Idaho Power was also instructed to work with the PUC and interested stakeholders to ensure they address recommendations made by the PUC in their 2023 plans due December 15. 

“Although some of Oregon’s regulated utilities have been developing wildfire mitigation plans for years and reporting to the PUC informally, this is the first formal filing to the Oregon PUC,” said Megan Decker, PUC Chair. “We recognize the enormous progress Oregon utilities have made and largely approved the plans, but also acknowledge that they need to continue to improve and adapt to meet the needs of communities and keep pace with the changing risks.”

Prior to the passage of Senate Bill 762, Governor Brown’s Executive Order 20-04 directed the PUC to formally evaluate wildfire protection plans and activities of regulated electric utilities to improve safety, reduce risks, and promote electric system resilience. 

“The PUC launched the Oregon Wildfire and Electric Collaborative to facilitate conversations between all electric utilities across the state, experts, and government leadership from various agencies to share perspectives and approaches to the changing wildfire risk and its impacts on the utilities, their customers, and the communities they serve,” added Letha Tawney, PUC Commissioner. “That collaboration complements these written plans, enabling rapid peer-to-peer learning across Oregon between planning cycles.”

The 2022 Wildfire Mitigation Plans for PacifiCorp, PGE✎ EditSign✎ EditSign✎ EditSign, and Idaho Power✎ EditSign✎ EditSign✎ EditSign are available online. 

The PUC regulates customer rates and services of the state’s investor-owned electric and natural gas utilities, including PGE, Idaho Power, Pacific Power, Avista, Cascade Natural, and NW Natural. The PUC also regulates landline telephone providers and select water companies. The PUC’s mission is to ensure Oregon utility customers have access to safe, reliable, and high quality utility services at just and reasonable rates. For more information about the PUC, visit oregon.gov/puc

Gov. Brown Signs Drought Declaration for Four More Oregon Counties

Even though we’ve seen quite a bit of rain in parts of the state, we’re still in drought conditions in many places. Gov. Brown signed an executive order Monday that declared “a state of drought emergency” for Deschutes, Grant, Lake and Malheur counties, bringing to 11 the number of Oregon counties that have sought and received such orders for access to federal and state assistance.

“It’s forecasted to be a difficult drought year, and I am committed to bringing state agency resources to everyone impacted by low water and precipitation levels,” the governor said.

In the order, the governor said that based on recommendations from the Drought Readiness Council and a water supply panel, “I find the low snowpack, reservoir levels and low streamflow have caused or will cause natural and economic disaster conditions” in the four counties.

Other, similar drought declarations were issued earlier by the governor for Klamath, Crook, Jefferson, Morrow, Gilliam, Harney and Jackson counties.

A rainy, snowy early spring has buoyed hopes of a less severe curtailment of water supplies for agriculture and other uses this summer, as current, automated SNOTEL readings shows the snow-water content is back up to normal for the Upper Deschutes-Crooked River Basin, though water year-to-date precipitation is still 11% below the median for this point in the year.

But much of the area remains in severe drought after several drier-then-normal years in a row, dropping many reservoir levels and putting the squeeze on irrigation districts and agricultural interests, among others.

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Grants Pass Missing Person

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The Grants Pass Police Department is seeking assistance from the public in locating 30 year old Noah Baker.  Baker was despondent after an argument and left his residence in Grants Pass driving a silver Ford Fiesta with Oregon Plate 671MUR.  

Baker is described as a white male adult, 5’09”, 170 lbs, brown hair and blue eyes and was last seen wearing black sweats, black shirt, black shoes and a black hat.  

If anyone knows of his whereabouts or sees Baker, please call your local law enforcement agency or the Grants Pass Police at 541-450-6260. Reference case #2022-14203 Grants Pass Police Department 

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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

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

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