Oregon Beach News, Wednesday, Sept 23 – Group of Businesses To Sue Gov. Brown Over Continued Excessive Covid-19 Business Restrictions

The latest news stories and stories of interest for the Oregon Beach cities from Astoria to Brookings and around the state of Oregon from the online digital home of the valley, OregonBeachMagazine.com.

Wednesday, September 23, 2020

Oregon Beach Weather

Today Rain at times. The rain could be heavy at times. High near 66. Very windy, with a south wind 21 to 30 mph, with gusts as high as 46 mph. Chance of precipitation is 100%. New precipitation amounts between three quarters and one inch possible. Wednesday Night Rain before 11pm, then showers after 11pm. The rain could be heavy at times. Low around 57. Windy, with a south southwest wind 20 to 25 mph decreasing to 14 to 19 mph after midnight. Winds could gust as high as 45 mph. Chance of precipitation is 100%. New precipitation amounts between a half and three quarters of an inch possible.

Thursday Showers. High near 63. Chance of precipitation is 80%.

Friday Night A chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 55. Breezy.

Saturday A chance of showers, mainly before 11am. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 66.

Today’s Headlines

Several Oregon businesses have threatened a class-action lawsuit against the state over COVID-19 restrictions implemented by Gov. Kate Brown to slow the spread of the virus.

Reports to the media say a lawyer representing the businesses argues that Oregon officials should create a plan to compensate small business owners for financial hardship caused by those restrictions. The demand letter was filed on behalf of a Linn County salon, a Coos County bowling alley and the Wilsonville Family Fun Center, better known as Bullwinkle’s.

Brown’s office said Monday it doesn’t comment on pending or potential litigation.

Around the state of Oregon

The Holiday Farm fire near Springfield sits at 20% containment, according to the Oregon Department of Forestry.

Decisions and options are being made this week as evacuees are still waiting here at the hotels in Eugene. Some are wondering when they can go home, and some don’t have a home to go home to.

If you’ve been evacuated and wondering when you go back, or wondering about the status of your home, call the Holiday Farm non-emergency line at: 541-682-3977.

Structural damage assessments inside the Holiday Farm Fire perimeter found 431 homes and 24 other structures were destroyed by the fire.

The Oregon Department of Transportation said Highway 126 remains closed between Leaburg Dam Road and Blue River Drive.

“Hazard tree removal continues throughout the closure area,” ODOT said. “Residents accessing reopened areas are asked to avoid barricaded locations for their own safety.”

Officials also urge residents returning to the fire zone to use caution near damaged structures.

“Fire-damaged structures can be extremely hazardous and residents are encouraged to have professionals assess and deal with damaged areas once those areas open for return,” the county and state cautioned. “Serious hazards can include unstable and falling debris, toxic substance exposure including asbestos and eye/lung/skin impact from ash and other irritants.”You can find the database and more resources on the county website. A non-emergency call center for Holiday Farm Fire questions is also available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at 541-682-3977.

The list of missing and unaccounted for people thus far in the Holiday Farm Fire now stands at zero, the Lane County Sheriff’s Office said yesterday.   More than 200 people were reported missingafter the fire broke out late on Labor Day.  One person was found dead inside the fire perimeter.

“The list of missing or unaccounted for persons related to the Holiday Farm fire is at ZERO thanks to the hard work of the Lane County Sheriff’s Office Missing Persons Specialist, Detectives, and retired Detectives who worked tirelessly with families and friends of loved ones tracking down folks who were reported as missing from within the fire perimeter,” the sheriff’s office said.

OREGON SNAP RECIPIENTS WHO LOST FOOD DUE TO WILDFIRES MAY BE ELIGIBLE FOR REPLACEMENT BENEFITS

The Oregon Department of Human Services (ODHS) is currently processing replacement benefit requests for individuals who receive Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) and who suffered loss of food due to the wildfires.

SNAP recipients who lost or disposed of food that was unsafe to eat, can request SNAP replacement benefits. Current SNAP recipients should contact their local ODHS office as soon as possible to find out if they are eligible.

Replacement benefits are available to existing SNAP recipients who:

  • Lost food due to a power outage
  • Lost food due to home damage
  • Request replacement benefits within 10 calendar days of experiencing food loss

Replacement benefits are not automatic. The amount of replacement benefits each SNAP recipient will receive is based on their monthly issuance.

Learn more at https://www.oregon.gov/dhs/assistance/food-benefits/pages/replacement%20-benefits.aspx.

SNAP customers can contact their local ODHS SSP, APD or AAA office for more information. Find a local office at: oregon.gov/DHS/Offices/Pages/index.aspx.

For other ways to connect with DHS, contact 211info:

The U.S. Department of Justice announced Monday that it has identified Portland, Seattle, and New York City as jurisdictions that have permitted violence and destruction of property and that have refused to undertake reasonable measures to counteract criminal activities.

The declaration comes in response to President Donald Trump’s memorandum from Sept. 2, 2020. The memorandum is titled “Memorandum on Reviewing Funding to State and Local Government Recipients That Are Permitting Anarchy, Violence, and Destruction in American Cities.”

In a statement regarding the announcement, U.S. Attorney General William Barr said, “When state and local leaders impede their own law enforcement officers and agencies from doing their jobs, it endangers innocent citizens who deserve to be protected, including those who are trying to peacefully assemble and protest… We cannot allow federal tax dollars to be wasted when the safety of the citizenry hangs in the balance. It is my hope that the cities identified by the Department of Justice today will reverse course and become serious about performing the basic function of government and start protecting their own citizens.”

Brenden Rex Stansell

Jackson County Sheriff’s Office Arrests Murder Suspect

On September 18, 2020 at 1924 hours, Jackson County Sheriff’s Office deputies responded to a report of a fatal stabbing in the Elderberry Flats area of outside of Wimer,  OR. The reporting party was at the scene during the incident. On arrival, deputies found one male adult deceased. The suspect was contacted later after he left the scene.

The investigation lead to the arrest of Brenden Rex Stansell, birth date 07/24/2000, he is an Eagle Point area transient. The arrest was made on 092120. Stansell has been lodged at Jackson County Jail on charges of Murder Second Degree and Assault First Degree. The Murder II charge is no bail.

Identity of the victim is not being released pending notification of next of kin.

Umpqua Bank has announced a package of relief and support for communities of $750,000 to customers and associates impacted by the devastating wildfires raging across the West Coast.

“The personal loss experienced by so many people from these historic wildfires is truly incalculable. As a bank, we’ve experienced the devastation firsthand, including the complete loss of one of our stores in Phoenix, Oregon,” said Umpqua Bank CEO Cort O’Haver. “The road to recovery will take time, but Umpqua is committed to doing all we can to help our communities rebuild what’s been lost.”

Today’s announcement comes as wildfires in Oregon, Washington and California have already consumed more than five million acres and resulted in at least 36 deaths. In response to the devastation, Umpqua has activated relief programs for community, customers and associates to support both immediate needs and longer-term recovery efforts.

Community Relief
Umpqua has committed $750,000 in relief funding for impacted communities. This includes $100,000 for both response and recovery efforts in the coming weeks. An additional $650,000 is allocated for community organizations helping small businesses and local economies recover. The bank has also activated a 3:1 corporate match for associates donating to nonprofits supporting those impacted by the wildfires, as well as expanded its Virtual Volunteer program to support the many Umpqua associates currently volunteering time and resources to recovery efforts.

Customer Relief
The bank has activated its Disaster Relief Loan Program to provide impacted customers quick access to cash as needed, as well as to help them recover financially. Mortgage relief options for homeowners impacted by natural disasters are also being actively made available, and the bank will work with all impacted customers to defer or waive any costs associated with their Umpqua accounts incurred as a direct result of the wildfires.

Associate Relief
For the many Umpqua associates directly impacted by the wildfires, the bank has initiated an emergency assistance fund. In addition to providing direct financial support to these associates, the  bank is also providing impacted associates access to a wide variety of services to meet their immediate and long-term needs.

“Especially in moments like this, we want our communities and people to know they’re not alone,” said O’Haver. “In addition to this initial relief, Umpqua will continue partnering closely with local leaders and organizations to help those we serve recover and move forward.”

At least half a dozen men are facing accusations of intentionally starting fires in Oregon. The Oregonian reports there’s no evidence the suspects were motivated by politics, as conspiracy theories claim.  The newspaper reports one suspect was found setting fires in late July because a member of a local forest protection group wouldn’t give him a ride.  Police arrested another suspect late last month after he allegedly threatened to burn down a small town if his girlfriend broke up with him.  A homeless man is accused of setting a string of brush fires along an Interstate in the Portland area earlier this month.

Protests are getting back underway in Portland following a week-long hiatus due to wildfire smoke.  The Oregonian reports between 100 and 200 angry protesters gathered downtown Saturday night to demonstrate against racial injustice.  Police say no arrests were made.  The previous night, protesters gathered near the ICE facility in South Portland.

The Marion County Sheriff’s Office said late Saturday that it had recovered human remains on the North Fork Road property of legendary environmentalist George Atiyeh.

The agency said it is still waiting for positive identification from the Marion County Medical Examiner’s Office.

The remains were recovered Thursday. Atiyeh, 72, who played a central role in saving Opal Creek from clear-cutters, would be the state’s ninth fatality from wildfires.

Today the Oregon Health Authority (OHA) provided the agency’s first look at how COVID-19 has impacted hospital revenue during this public health crisis. Hospital revenue and operating margins suffered steep drops at the end of March, likely due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

For the first time OHA is releasing its quarterly hospital financial reports as an interactive online dashboard. The dashboard allows users to interact with hospital financial data from 2007 to 2020, displayed monthly or quarterly.

“The broad health and economic impacts of COVID-19 highlight why we need a sustainable health care system that ensures everyone has access to quality, affordable care when they need it,” said Jeremy Vandehey, OHA’s director of health policy and analytics.

Hospitals ended 2019 in a strong financial position, with revenue outpacing expenses. Net patient revenue increased 7.3% compared with the fourth quarter of 2018, while operating expenses increased only 1.2%. Uncompensated care remained essentially flat during that period. Hospitals closed out 2019 with a robust median operating margin of 4.2%.

However, the strong fourth quarter of 2019 stands in stark contrast to the first quarter of 2020. Oregon’s first COVID-19 case was identified on February 28, 2020. To conserve hospital capacity and preserve personal protective equipment (PPE) for the COVID-19 emergency, on March 19, 2020, Governor Kate Brown issued executive order 20-10, prohibiting elective and non-urgent medical procedures.

Decreases in hospital utilization in March led to a drop in patient revenue. At the same time, hospital expenses continued to increase, leading to large drops in operating margins in the first quarter of 2020. A drop in hospital stocks exacerbated the losses.

Key findings from the report include:

  • Statewide total margin fell from 9.3% in the first quarter of 2019 to -8.8% in the first quarter of 2020, a decrease of 19.4 percentage points.
  • Median statewide total margin fell 11.3 percentage points, from 6.7% to -4.6% in the same time period.
  • Statewide net patient revenue was down slightly, $22.7 million or -0.6%, when compared with the first quarter of 2019.
  • Total operating expenses remained on trend, increasing $215 million, 6.3%, when compared with the first quarter of 2019.

The first quarter financial reports don’t reflect financial assistance that was provided to the health system in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. The second quarter hospital financial reports, released later this fall, will reflect federal and state grants or other assistance that was provided to hospitals to stabilize and support the health system.

Several Oregon businesses have threatened a class action lawsuit against the state over COVID-19 restrictions implemented by Gov. Kate Brown to slow the pandemic. A lawyer representing the businesses argues that Oregon officials should draft a plan to compensate small business owners for financial hardship caused by those restrictions, The Oregonian/OregonianLive reported yesterday.

The demand letter was filed on behalf of a Linn County salon, a Coos County bowling alley and the Wilsonville Family Fun Center, better known as Bullwinkle’s.

“As a result of your orders, my clients and many other businesses like theirs closed as ordered and thousands of workers found themselves without employment,” attorney John DiLorenzo wrote in a tort claim letter to the state Friday.

Brown’s office said Monday it doesn’t comment on pending or potential litigation.  DiLorenzo is one of the state’s most high-profile attorneys, having most recently won a $1 billion jury verdict against the state for failing to maximize timber harvests. The state has appealed.

Firefighters continue to make progress on several wildfires burning across the state of Oregon.  Fire officials say the Riverside Fire burning in Clackamas County is now 25-percent contained at 137-thousand-971 acres.  

The deadly Beachie Creek fire in the Santiam Canyon is now 38-percent contained at 192-thousand-736 acres.  And, the Lionshead Fire is now 13-percent contained at nearly 199-thousand acres.  The National Interagency Coordination Center says only three fires grew more than one-thousand acres from Sunday into Monday, while six of the state’s largest fires didn’t grow at all.

The sudden wildfires that torched more than 1 million acres across Oregon this month completely destroyed at least seven marijuana businesses and damaged at least dozen more, according to preliminary state survey data.

Marijuana has rapidly grown into a major Oregon industry, with sales topping $100 million a month during the pandemic. Oregon sales were up 41% through August and are on track to top $1 billion for the first time.

The wildfires appear to have directly affected a tiny percentage of the state’s 2,300 licensees but it’s too soon to know whether that destruction and other indirect impacts might have a broader effect on this year’s crop.

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