Oregon Beach News, Tuesday 5/10 – Search For Missing Woman Around Yachats, Marine Heatwaves and Effects on Coastal Fishes Presentation

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

Tuesday, May 10, 2022

Oregon Beach Weather

Search For Missing Woman Around Yachats

A woman who has spent the past year living in her car in and around Yachats abandoned the vehicle nearly three weeks ago, worrying family and friends concerned for her well-being. A Missing Person’s Report has been issued.

Ronnie Deleski, 42, was a common sight around the central coast living in her small, blue Toyota Scion stuffed with her personal belongings.

She apparently ran out of gas April 21, left her car and belongings in front of the Yachats Cannabis Co. and told someone at the dispensary she’d be back. A security video from the cannabis store showed her walking north the next day wearing a red backpack and carrying a red sleeping bag.

Now, her brother Ed Deleski, a realtor from San Francisco, is in the area chasing down leads, and handing out fliers with her picture and his contact information. He’s also filed a missing persons report with the Lincoln County Sheriff’s Office.

Deleski asked the sheriff’s office to do a welfare check on his sister and last week a deputy called Deleski to report her car was parked in front of the dispensary. The next day, Deleski filed a missing person report, caught a flight to Oregon and started his search.

So Deleski drives between Florence and Lincoln City, chasing leads and combing areas where homeless people camp. “I just want to find my sister,” he said. Ed Deleski can be reached at 415-350-9083 or at edeleski@gmail.com.

Marine Heatwaves and Effects on Coastal Fishes Presentation

Jessica Miller, OSU professor of fisheries, wildlife, and conservation sciences, will talk about a very pertinent issue, marine heatwaves. Marine heatwaves are increasing in frequency and intensity around the world oOn May 12th .

From 2014 to 2016, anomalous atmospheric conditions resulted in the largest known marine heatwave in the northeast Pacific Ocean, and another heatwave occurred in 2019. These extreme ocean warming events impacted all levels of the food web, resulting in reduced condition of many marine species. The abundance of Pacific Cod in the Gulf of Alaska declined by more than 75%, leading to the closure of the fishery and a disaster declaration.

Jessica Miller and her colleagues are documenting how this heatwave affected the growth and condition of Columbia River Spring Chinook salmon and the growth and phenology – or timing of life history events – of Pacific Cod in the Gulf of Alaska. They combine field studies with laboratory analysis of fish ear stones, which are balance and orientation structures that lay down daily growth rings, to age fish, determine their hatch date, and reconstruct their growth and migratory history. Miller will provide an overview of what we are learning about how these ecologically and economically important species responded to these extreme ocean temperatures, which are predicted to occur regularly under future climate change scenarios.

Jessica Miller is a professor in fisheries, wildlife, and conservation sciences at Oregon State University. She is also a member of the Coastal Oregon Marine Experiment Station and leads the Marine and Anadromous Fisheries Ecology Lab in Newport. Her research focuses on ecology of marine and anadromous fishes, with an emphasis on how environmental and climate variation affect their growth and survival. She received a BA in Zoology from the University of Montana, a MS in Fisheries from University of Washington, and a PhD in Biology from the University of Oregon.

The talk will be at 7 p.m. May 12, hosted on Zoom, and is free to the public. The zoom link is https://us02web.zoom.us/j/83353175742 or on the Facebook event at www.facebook.com/lnwc1. You can also contact the watershed council at info@nehalemwatershed.org.

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 May 6 to May 8, 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. For more information, including COVID-19 data by county, visit our dashboard: http://ow.ly/sP3n50J3ct3

Screen shot of inked dashboard shows an increase trend in cases, test positivity and hospitalizations. Vaccinations have plateaued. Please visit healthoregon.org/coronavirus for more information.
This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is AROUND-OR.png

Oregon is receiving an additional 16-million dollars in emergency rental assistance funds from the federal government.

The money comes from states that didn’t use their funds. Oregon Housing and Community Services won’t reopen the website to new applicants. They will distribute the funds to current tenants who need additional support. Those tenants will be contacted starting this week.

Oregon State Hospital to submit corrective action plan to state, federal regulators

Response follows CMS report on deficiencies at OSH’s Junction City campus

PORTLAND, Ore. – Administrators at the Oregon State Hospital (OSH) have 10 days to submit a corrective action plan or risk losing certification to be reimbursed for federal Medicare payments after state regulators filed a report that identified a range of supervision and reporting deficiencies at the hospital’s Junction City campus. 

The findings stem from an inquiry into the supervision of a patient who went on unauthorized leave, known as “elopement,” during an outing in the community late last year. However, the investigation’s scope broadened after the initial incident uncovered additional deficiencies.

OSH provides psychiatric treatment for adults from throughout the state who need hospital-level mental health treatment. The hospital provides care at two campuses: a main campus in Salem and a second campus at Junction City. The state hospital is eligible to receive federal Medicare and Medicaid payments under Conditions of Participation issued by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) and, like other health care facilities, must remain in compliance with federal requirements – including meeting state licensing obligations – to continue to receive federal reimbursement. 

The federal inquiry focused on operations at the Oregon State Hospital’s Junction City location in December 2021 and January 2022. The review was conducted by surveyors in the Health Facility Survey and Certification Program in the Health Care Regulation and Quality Improvement (HRQI) Section, which is part of the Oregon Health Authority’s Public Health Division. One of HRQI’s primary roles is to conduct reviews of complaints at hospitals and other health care facilities in Oregon on behalf of federal regulators.

The hospital is also a division of OHA. HCRQI regulators conducted the review following standard processes and protocols used in similar investigations into complaints at other psychiatric hospitals and programs in the state. 

In their investigation report, HCRQI surveyors identified federal and state compliance issues in several categories reflecting deficiencies under CMS Conditions of Participation. Oregon State Hospital is making the CMS report✎ EditSign available to the public as part of its commitment to transparency and ensuring accountability to its patients and their families.

Surveyors cited issues ranging from the lack of a permanent, onsite administrator to manage the Junction City campus on a daily basis, to episodes in which Junction City staff lost visual contact with patients while on outings, to shortcomings in documenting follow-up reviews after patient-to-patient altercations.

Administrators at OSH must submit a corrective action plan to CMS (through state regulators in the HRQI program), by May 15, which marks the 10-day deadline from the date of the federal agency’s notification.

State hospital Superintendent Dolly Matteucci said, “Our staff at the Oregon State Hospital want to provide the highest quality care to our patients so they can recover and return to live healthy and productive lives in their communities. We look forward to addressing each of the administrative, documentation and supervision issues highlighted in this report.”

OHA Director Patrick Allen said, “I appreciate the rigor and thoroughness of our state health care regulatory surveyors, who in their role of acting on behalf of CMS, took the opportunity to conduct a broad review of state hospital administrative structures and procedures. The state hospital will act promptly and transparently to fix these gaps.”

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Natural Resources Conservation Service awarded NRCS Oregon $6,765,000 for the Agricultural Conservation Easement Program – Agricultural Land Easements (ACEP-ALE). The program helps landowners protect their working lands.

In 2022, four entities representing eight landowners applied to the ACEP-ALE program. After seeing this significant interest, NRCS Oregon requested additional funds over their initial request of $590,060 to meet the high demand. These funds will allow landowners to protect 14,917 acres of farm and ranch land across the state. This federal funding matches newly appropriated state funds from the Oregon Agricultural Heritage Program (OAHP), multiplying conservation benefits resulting from agricultural land easements.

The OAHP program provides voluntary incentives to farmers and ranchers to support practices that maintain or enhance both agriculture and natural resources such as fish and wildlife on agricultural lands. The Agricultural
Conservation Easement Program (ACEP) helps landowners, land trusts and other entities protect, restore, and enhance wetlands, grasslands, and working farms andranches through conservation easements. These programs benefit participants and the American public by creating cleaner air, water and open  American public by spaces.

The May Primary is the first statewide election since implementation of a new Oregon law allowing ballots received after 8 p.m. on Election Day to be counted, if they’re postmarked by Election Day. 

A new campaign by the Secretary of State’s Office reminds Oregonians last-minute voters now have the option to mail their ballot:

“Drop it in your mailbox or a USPS collection box. Just make sure it’s postmarked on or
before Election Day,”
 the new ad says, “Some mail-in ballots will arrive after Election
Day, even if they were cast on time.”

Ben Morris, with the Secretary of State’s Office, says the goal is to combat the misinformation seen in other states, where people thought late ballot increases were evidence of fraud. “We’re going to see the total number of votes go up on Wednesday and Thursday and Friday following Election Day.

Those are valid votes that were cast on time, and they’ll count.” There is still a deadline mailed ballots postmarked on time must be received within seven days of Election Day. There’s more information at the state’s Elections website.  Oregon’s Primary is May 17th.

The countdown is underway for Oregon residents to meet national Real ID requirements for domestic air travel.

The Real ID deadline arrives one year from this week.  Starting May 3, 2023, travelers need more than a standard state driver’s license or identification card at airport security checkpoints to board flights within the U.S.  That’s the day people need a Real ID-compliant driver’s license or ID card, or a passport or other federally acceptable identification.

The federal Transportation Security Administration (TSA) has a full list of identity documents it will accept for air travel at TSA.gov. Oregon Driver and Motor Vehicle Services (DMV) Administrator Amy Joyce says, “A year may
sound like a long time, but it isn’t when it comes to issuing secure identification such as driver licenses, ID cards and passports.  It can take weeks to gather the documents you need to qualify for a type of ID that the TSA will accept at airports.”

DMV says its offices in Oregon and across the country are busy, and the U.S. Department of State has a backlog for passport applications and renewals.  That’s why the DMV insists people get the Oregon Real ID option or a passport now.

Oregon State Fair Tickets Now on Sale

Tickets for the Oregon State Fair are now on sale. That includes General Admission, Carnival Ride, FairLift, and the Columbia Bank Concert Series tickets. Some of the performers this year include Shaggy, Nelly, and The Beach Boys. Concert tickets range from 40 to 100 dollars. The Fair runs August 26th through September 5th.

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is missing-in-oregon-tab.png
This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is image-57.png
This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is image-111.png
This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is missing-toni-grants-pass7-22.png
This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is shane.png

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/

Related posts

Oregon Beach News, Monday 11/29 – Sea Lion Found Wandering Around Lincoln City, ODFW Gets Grant to Study Ecosystem Changes on the Oregon Coast

Renee Shaw

Oregon Beach News, Friday 11/12 – Port of Coos Bay to Develop Shipping Terminal, 51st Anniversary Celebration of ‘The Exploding Whale’ Takes Place in Florence this Weekend

Renee Shaw

Oregon Beach News, Tuesday 11/8 – New Roller Skating Rink In Brookings, Seizure Of Fentanyl and Other Narcotics In Lincoln City

Renee Shaw