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

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

Wednesday, February 9, 2022

Oregon Beach Weather

Today– Patchy fog before noon. Otherwise, sunny, with a high near 59. North wind 5 to 8 mph.

Thursday– Sunny, with a high near 61. North wind 6 to 10 mph.

Friday– Sunny, with a high near 61. East northeast wind around 8 mph.

Saturday– Sunny, with a high near 62.

Sunday– Partly sunny, with a high near 56.

Dunes City Mayor Passes Away

Dunes City officials confirm that Mayor Robert Forsythe died on Monday.

“Our thoughts and prayers are with his wife, Cindy, and their family,” the city’s statement said.

Dunes City will lower the flags at city hall through the end of the month in honor of Forsythe, officials said. The next city council meeting will also be canceled.

Council President Sheldon Meyer will take over the duties of the mayor in Forsythe’s place. “To honor the family, the City will continue functioning in the manner that Mayor Forsythe would have wanted. I am ready to assume the mayoral duties to make sure his legacy continues,” Meyer said.

Forsythe had been serving as mayor since 2017. He was selected to replace Mayor Rebecca Ruede when she died, and he was elected to continue serving in 2018 and 2020.

Toledo Renters Being Evicted by IRS After Oregon Man Convicted of Stealing Pandemic Relief Loans

The federal government notified tenants they have 30 days to move out of their homes after Lebanon man’s conviction for stealing millions in pandemic relief loans resulted in the forfeiture of his rental property in Toledo, as well as millions of dollars in stocks and two dozen other properties in Oregon and California.

A Jan. 21 letter from Bret Kressin, a special agent in charge at the Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation division, to occupants of five rental units on Northwest Sixth Street in Toledo reads, “The property … was forfeited to the United States on Jan. 18, 2022 … As a result of this action, you are required to vacate the property no later than 30 days from the receipt of this notice … ”

The letter warns that any personal property left on the premises after that date “will be considered abandoned property, without value, and will be disposed of according to law,” and advises residents they will soon be contacted by a contracted property manager responsible for inspections until the government disposes of it, presumably through sale.

“Please cooperate with the property manager, who is not an employee of IRS-Criminal Investigation but is contracted to perform a service,” the letter reads.

The forfeiture of the property follows the conviction and sentencing of Andrew Aaron Lloyd, 51, of Lebanon, for fraudulently obtaining six Paycheck Protection Program loans and an Economic Injury Disaster Loan, amounting to $3.4 million and $160,000, respectively.

According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Oregon, Lloyd began submitting loan applications for programs set up through the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act shortly after it was passed in late March 2020. Lloyd applied for the loans under numerous business names and used the personal information of relatives and associates without their consent, claiming corporate entities he controlled paid wages of as much as $4.7 million.

Instead of using the loans to maintain payroll, the purpose of those programs, Lloyd purchased 25 real estate properties in California and Oregon, as well as securities including more than 15,000 shares in the automaker Tesla.

Lloyd was arrested in January of last year and in June pleaded guilty to bank fraud, money laundering and aggravated identity theft. Early last month, a federal judge sentenced him to four years in prison.

He was ordered to pay more than $4 million in restitution and forfeit the 25 real estate properties, as well as the Tesla shares and other securities. That automaker’s stock price has skyrocketed since mid-2020. On July 1, 2020, 15,000 shares were worth $3.34 million. At the market’s close on Monday, they were valued at more than $13.5 million.

Lloyd’s forfeit real estate elsewhere in Oregon includes properties in Bly, Klamath Falls, Coos Bay, Coquille, Myrtle Point, Roseburg and Sutherlin, among others, as well as addresses in Toledo on East Slope Road, Sixth Street and on Business Highway 20.

It’s not clear if the residential properties on East Slope Road and Highway 20 have tenants. Evans said there are five households at the Sixth Street property, two of which are families with two adults and four children each.

The final order signed Jan. 18 by U.S. District Judge Michael McShane said a forfeiture notice was first published on an IRS website on Sept. 1, 2020, and notices were sent to all third parties who might assert a legal interest of the government’s intent to sell them and of their right to request a hearing. Rentals tenants were not among those served notice.

With as many as 18 people affected, the potential eviction would be the second large-scale displacement in Toledo since the first of the year, following emergency closure of Yaquina Bay Hotel Jan. 31 and evacuations of dozens of long-term residents.

Reedsport Regains Status as a Tree City USA

Reedsport has regained its status as a Tree City USA, a program of the National Arbor Day Foundation. Tree City USA communities show higher levels of tree care and community engagement with their urban forestry programs and activities.

There are 69 Oregon towns and cities that are currently qualified as Tree City USA communities.

“For more than two decades, the city of Reedsport achieved the standards to be recognized as a Tree City USA. Through personnel changes in our leadership, that goal was lost,” said Reedsport’s Deputy City Recorder Courteney Davis. “We are truly thrilled to be called a Tree City USA once again.”

The Oregon Department of Forestry administers the Tree City USA program in Oregon on behalf of the Arbor Day Foundation. ODF Urban and Community Forestry Assistance Program Manager Kristin Ramstad said she is very happy to see Reedsport rejoining the program.

“We are glad to welcome back Reedsport as a Tree City USA and applaud its investment in its trees,” said Ramstad. “Tree City USA communities understand that being recognized as a Tree City USA not only reflects an investment in local trees but also an investment in the well-being of residents.”

Oregon reports 3,248 new confirmed and presumptive COVID-19 cases, 21 new deaths

PORTLAND, Ore. — There are 21 new COVID-19-related deaths in Oregon, raising the state’s death toll to 6,265, the Oregon Health Authority (OHA) reported at 12:01 a.m. today.

OHA reported 3,248 new confirmed and presumptive cases of COVID-19 as of 12:01 a.m. today, bringing the state total to 665,486.

The new confirmed and presumptive COVID-19 cases reported today are in the following counties: Baker (3), Benton (93), Clackamas (261), Clatsop (18), Columbia (57), Coos (49), Crook (40), Curry (14), Deschutes (178), Douglas (161), Gilliam (6), Grant (13), Harney (12), Hood River (22), Jackson (201), Jefferson (21), Josephine (89), Klamath (48), Lake (16), Lane (317), Lincoln (53), Linn (111), Malheur (49), Marion (337), Morrow (7), Multnomah (382), Polk (88), Sherman (1), Tillamook (22), Umatilla (67), Union (34), Wallowa (10), Wasco (29), Washington (349), Wheeler (10) and Yamhill (80).

Arrows show that cases have increased and hospitalizations have decreased over the previous day. The 7 Day Moving Average shows a decrease.

Oregon’s indoor mask mandate will be lifted no later than March 31, the Oregon Health Authority announced on Monday. The news was accompanied by an announcement that OHA has filed for a permanent mask mandate with the Secretary of State’s office, replacing the temporary rule that expires February 8.

State health officials have maintained that a “permanent” rule was the only way to extend the mask mandate for
the near future, as the temporary rule extensions have nearly reached their expiration date. Permanent rules can be repealed by state agencies at their discretion. At the end of January, the OHA began filing permanent rules for a number of COVID-19 measures, including mask and vaccine mandates for school and healthcare settings. The agency said at the time that it was still sorting through public comment on the statewide mask mandate.

COVID-19 cases have dropped about 40% in Oregon over the past week, though hospitalizations have yet to drop below the 1,000 mark. As of Monday, Oregon’s seven-day total in COVID-19 hospitalizations inched down another 1%, with 1,072 people reported hospitalized with COVID-19. More than 9 in 10 intensive care unit (ICU) and acute care beds in Oregon were occupied by a patient — continuing to strain nurses, doctors and other medical staff at hospitals.

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Common School Fund will send $64.2 million to Oregon schools in 2022

STATEWIDE – Oregon’s K-12 public schools will receive $64.2 million from Common School Fund in 2022, officials announced during today’s State Land Board meeting. 

Every one of Oregon’s 197 public school districts receives money from the Common School Fund every year. How much each district receives depends on the number of students served. In 2022, Portland Public Schools, the state’s largest district, will receive $5.7 million. Lincoln County School District will receive about $600,000. Rogue River School District will receive just over $100,000. See 2022 distributions for all Oregon school districts.

The average 2022 district distribution is approximately $326,000. Pendleton School District, with about 2,900 students, will receive $326,897 in 2022. 

“Every dollar that the district receives is important,” said Michelle Jones, Pendleton School District’s director of business services. “We count on these resources to make sure we can keep class sizes small and provide needed technology and facilities for students.” 

The Common School Fund has supported Oregon schools since statehood, when the federal government granted our new state nearly 3.4 million acres “for the use of schools.” The State Land Board was established to oversee these school lands, which generate revenue for the Common School Fund. 

Now valued at $2.2 billion, the Common School Fund is invested by the State Treasurer and the Oregon Investment Council. The Fund earned an average 13.53 percent rate of return over the three-year period ending in 2021. 

“Strong returns from the Common School Fund in recent years are allowing schools around the state to invest in our most precious resource — our children,” said Mary Paulson, deputy executive director of the Oregon School Boards Association.

Annually, 3.5 percent of the Fund is distributed to schools. The 2022 distribution of $64.2 million is $4.1 million more than the 2021 distribution of $60.1 million and $9.2 million more than the 2020 distribution of $55 million.

The 775,000 acres of school lands in state ownership today are managed by the Department of State Lands on behalf of the Land Board. $22.8 million in net income from school land leases, sales, and other land management activities was added to the Fund in fiscal year 2021. 

“School lands have helped support generations of Oregon students,” said DSL Director Vicki Walker. “The $22.8 million school lands generated last year for the Common School Fund directly benefits my grandchildren, just as the past millions generated by school lands directly benefitted my children and me.” 

About the State Land Board and the Department of State Lands: The State Land Board consists of Governor Kate Brown, Secretary of State Shemia Fagan and State Treasurer Tobias Read. Established by the Oregon Constitution in 1859, the Land Board oversees the state’s Common School Fund. The Department of State Lands is the Land Board’s administrative agency, managing the lands and resources that help fund Oregon’s public schools and protecting the state’s waterways and wetlands for the many benefits they provide. https://www.oregon.gov/dsl/About/Pages/AboutCSF.aspx

New health insurance survey data show record-high health coverage for people in Oregon

Federal rule changes for Medicaid stabilize health coverage for households struggling to make ends meet  

Today the Oregon Health Authority (OHA) announced that its biannual Oregon Health Insurance Survey data showed a record-high 95.4% of people in Oregon had health coverage in 2021, up from 94% in 2019. This was the first year since the ACA expansion that insurance coverage increased significantly. The gains were driven largely by federal pandemic rule changes for Medicaid[1], which ensured that people enrolled in Medicaid coverage stayed covered. The largest coverage gains were among low-income adults as far fewer people reported being uninsured due to loss of Medicaid coverage. In fact, people reporting Medicaid coverage jumped to 29% in 2021 from 25% in 2019. At the same time, employer-based insurance coverage continued its slow multi-year decline while Medicare and Individual remained steady.

One of the key factors in the improved coverage rate was the near elimination of Medicaid population “churn” – people returning to Medicaid coverage after less than a year. In September 2019, the “high churn” population made up 34% of new enrollees that month. With continuous enrollment policies during the Public Health Emergency (PHE), only 8% of new enrollees were returning after less than a year. The number of people entering Medicaid per month who have never been on Medicaid before has stayed stable before and during the pandemic at about 9,000 people per month.

“We know that keeping people enrolled in health insurance – whether it is a public program or their job-based coverage – is key to lowering our rate of uninsurance so people can access critical health care services,” said Jeremy Vandehey, Director of Health Policy and Analytics at OHA. “Specifically, this two-year period shows that people cycling on-and-off insurance means they eventually lose coverage. Therefore, its deeply important to break those cycles and keep people continuously enrolled. For low income families, we know that incomes fluctuate, but access to the health care should not.””

Oregon made progress in reducing disparities in health coverage caused by health inequities and structural racism during this period.  Notably, the uninsured rate for Black/African American individuals dropped from 8.2% to 5% between 2019 and 2021. In other communities the improvement was less pronounced: Uninsured rates among Hispanic/Latinx communities dropped slightly, as it did among American Indian/Alaska Native communities. Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander communities showed an increase in uninsurance, which OHA will seek to understand and to address.

“With our goal of ending health inequities by 2030, OHA is committed to enacting policies that continue our progress,” added Vandehey. “One key area we look to sustain this improvement is through our upcoming Medicaid waiver, where we are asking the federal government’s permission to implement policies like continuous Medicaid enrollment for children until their sixth birthday, and two-year continuous enrollment for people age 6 and up. We now have proof that such policies will make a significant difference for Oregon families – particularly those harmed by historic and contemporary racism.”

Meanwhile, OHP coverage also increased in rural and frontier regions of the state. Although insurance coverage lags from the statewide average, coverage did increase to 92.3% from 91.0% in frontier and to 94.6% from 93.8%  in rural parts of the state. In some rural and frontier counties, such as Jefferson, Josephine, Malheur, and Klamath, 2 in 5 residents receive health coverage through OHP, far higher than the state average. And in frontier regions of the state overall, about 2 in 5 people who remain uninsured are eligible for Medicaid.

“OHA’s goal is to ensure that at the end of the Public Health Emergency, we work systematically to keep people covered,” said Vandehey. “For those who are no longer eligible for OHP, we will be working to make sure they access a Marketplace plan or connect to other programs. This handoff is critical, as the data show, because we cannot lose people as they exit Medicaid. If we do, much of this hard-won coverage gain will be lost.”

OHA’s current plan for transition includes:

  • Implementing a robust outreach and communication plan to let Medicaid members know what to expect and encourage them to update their contact information so that their coverage can be renewed.
  • Creating ongoing coordination between Medicaid and the Marketplace to ensure that members who lose Medicaid coverage are supported in their transition to a private plan.
  • Maximizing the existing automated renewal process to reduce the burden on members. If coverage cannot be automatically renewed, members receive a pre-populated renewal notice that they must sign and return.
  • Engaging community partners to help connect people leaving OHP to other sources of health coverage, such as through a job.

[1] In March of 2020, Congress passed the Family First Coronavirus Recovery Act which:

1) Provided 6.2% enhanced federal Medicaid funding for states to maintain continuous Medicaid coverage and not disenroll Medicaid enrollees for the duration of the federal public health emergency (PHE).  

2) Removed administrative barriers to enrollment, such as

  • Allowing applicants to attest to most eligibility criteria
  • Expanding presumptive eligibility and options for remote assistance

Not terminating coverage for people who are found ineligible during annual renewals.

Oregon Court of Appeals and the Supreme Court have ruled that a wrongful death case filed by a Grants Pass widow against the Oregon State Police should go to trial

The 2015 case of a Josephine County man who was shot and killed by two Oregon State Police officers will go to trial, the result of an Oregon Court of Appeals decision last year.

According to contemporary reports, two Oregon State Police troopers responded to the property of 55-year-old Robert Box on Fir Canyon Road in May of 2015, after Box’s daughter called to report that she’d been injured by her father in a domestic assault.

OSP’s news release said that the two troopers made contact with Box, but soon reported that “shots had been fired,” and Box was down. He was pronounced dead at the hospital. Neither trooper was harmed in the shooting.

Bernadette Box, Robert Box’s widow, filed a $6 million wrongful death suit against OSP in April of 2016 — alleging that the troopers had illegally trespassed on the family property, hailed him from the darkness, then shot him when he emerged with a handgun in his pocket. Robert Box had been on the phone with his wife when he was shot that
night, the suit says.

In 2018, a Josephine County Circuit Court judge tossed out Bernadette Box’s lawsuit, concluding that the troopers had not done anything wrong. According to Bernadette Box’s attorneys, the judge also sealed “hundreds of pages of
evidence” in the court record.

Most businesses in Oregon would be required to accept cash as payment under a bill being considered in Salem.

Senate Bill 1565 would mean that stores would have to take cash or coins. Supporters say doing so is a matter of fairness for people who don’t use traditional banking, either by choice or because they can’t get an account.

“Some people do not have them, meaning plastic and credit cards, because they may not qualify,” said Sen. Floyd Prozanski, D-Eugene, who is one of the bill’s sponsors. “Or they just choose not to have that type of transaction. They want to pay with US currency.”

Prozanski testified during a Tuesday meeting of the Senate Committee on Labor and Business.

The bill would exempt some types of businesses including farmers markets or roadside stands, which could continue to accept credit or debit cards only. The measure also wouldn’t apply to online transactions.

Some business groups testified against the measure.

“Cash is a labor intensive process,” said Anthony Smith, a lobbyist for the National Federation of Independent Business. “As more and more customers pay electronically, employees would still have to make bank deposits, count out cash registers before and after each shift, accounting for every transaction down to the last penny, even if the business makes very few or even no cash sales on an average day.”

Smith said having cash on hand makes a business more vulnerable to theft.

The Oregon House approved a similar measure in 2020. The bill died in the Senate when Republicans denied majority Democrats a quorum in a dispute over a climate change bill.

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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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