

Sunday 11/12
12-3pm behind Wolfmoon Bakery in Nehalem
Thanks

Dec. 1st-17th at the NCRD Performing Arts Center
Tickets and more details at www.RiverbendPlayers.org
$25, $20, and $10 (12 and under)
Oliver Arnold as Ralphie:
Oliver Finch Arnold has had a passion for drama since he could talk! He loves wolves, Zelda, playing soccer, baseball, reading, and art. This is his 2nd performance with Riverbend Players after making his debut as the Young George Bailey in the holiday classic IT’S A WONDERFUL LIFE. Oliver lives in Manzanita with his parents, his pup Saoirse, and his wolf Wander.
A CHRISTMAS STORY:
Humorist Jean Shepherd’s memoir of growing up in the Midwest in the late 1930s follows 9-year-old Ralphie Parker in his quest to get a genuine Red Ryder BB gun under the tree for Christmas.
Ralphie pleads his case before his mother, his teacher, and even Santa Claus himself at Higbee’s Department Store.
The consistent response: “You’ll shoot your eye out!”
All the elements from the beloved motion picture are here, including the family’s temperamental exploding furnace; Scut Farkas, the school bully; the boys’ experiment with a wet tongue on a cold lamppost; the Little Orphan Annie decoder pin; Ralphie’s father winning a lamp shaped like a woman’s leg in a net stocking; Ralphie’s fantasy scenarios and more.
A Christmas Story, a theatrical holiday treat!
Tickets at www.RiverbendPlayers.org
$25, $20, and $10 (12 and under)
–



We’ll come together by the great crop, eat, talk and share. Zoe Swain is cooking up a “Decolonized Fry Bread,” Cliff Talyor will offer poems, and Marisol Quintana will share stories.
This event, the final of Gathering, takes place at Tolovana Hall (3779 S Hemlock). It’s FREE! (Even the food!)
Donations are accepted and appreciated.

If you want a text reminder, text “Christmas Carols” to 503-440-7861
NOVEMBER 14TH
5-6 Christmas Carols Practice
@ St. Catherine’s Church
DECEMBER 12TH
5-6 Christmas Carols Practice
@ St. Catherine’s Church
DECEMBER 15TH (school Christmas break begins)
5-7 Christmas Caroling on Laneda, Manzanita
(meet at Visitor Center at 4:45)
DECEMBER 24TH (Christmas Eve)
3:30-4:00 Christmas Carols before Candlelight Service @ St. Catharine’s Church (meet at 3:15)
We gather and sing to heal ourselves and our community…we train to sing for those at the thresholds of life and death.
Whatever level you feel called to participate, we welcome your quiet energy…your resounding spirit…your soothing voice.
For more information:
Email: oquinnhomestead@gmail.com
Text/call: 503-440-7861
We currently gather (in person) once per month on 2nd Tuesdays, 6:00-6:45pm to practice giving/receiving healing through song, learning from the Threshold Choir Repertoire (in both English and Spanish).
For those who wish to stay later to sing with the St. Catherine’s Community *Song Circle*, they begin at 7pm, and all are welcome.
Let us Sing!
2nd Tuesdays 6-8pm
St. Catherine’s Church in Nehalem, Oregon
The church is located at 36050 10th St, near the Nehalem Post Office and is open Fri, Sat, Monday from 10-2 and Wed 12-4. Thank you for your continued support and assistance and if you have some free time, we would enjoy having you volunteer with us!
Kathleen Larson
volunteer

Our friend and neighbor, and vital member of our community, Sharla Smith, has unexpectedly lost her home. It literally fell apart, just as winter is starting. She needs help to build temporary shelter for herself, while she works to find solutions for permanent housing. Please donate to this GO FUND me set up for her- to raise funds for building materials, but also, please, let’s go above and beyond, and try and provide her with funds for a new home. She has had many trials, trauma, and struggles to overcome within her life, but always continues to give love and support to others. Let’s do the same for her now.
Please help, if you can.
Thank you!
Link to Go Fund Me for Sharla needs Shelter:
gofund.me/96fd8aa0
Blessings,
Christy Kay
(503) 800-1092


Dec. 1st-17th at the NCRD Performing Arts Center
Tickets and more details at www.RiverbendPlayers.org
$25, $20, and $10 (12 and under)
Dawson Carter as The Old Man (Ralphie’s father):
Dawson, making his Riverbend Players debut, is a sneakerhead, basketball card collector, evening lap swimmer, and sunny-day real estate listener. Partner to Jacqui, dad to Quincy, Brody, Weston, Velvet the Beta Fish, and Honey the German Shepherd. Grateful to Jacqui for the comeback opportunity 15 years later and to Quincy for sharing his light. #WholeHeart
A CHRISTMAS STORY:
Humorist Jean Shepherd’s memoir of growing up in the Midwest in the late 1930s follows 9-year-old Ralphie Parker in his quest to get a genuine Red Ryder BB gun under the tree for Christmas.
Ralphie pleads his case before his mother, his teacher, and even Santa Claus himself at Higbee’s Department Store.
The consistent response: “You’ll shoot your eye out!”
All the elements from the beloved motion picture are here, including the family’s temperamental exploding furnace; Scut Farkas, the school bully; the boys’ experiment with a wet tongue on a cold lamppost; the Little Orphan Annie decoder pin; Ralphie’s father winning a lamp shaped like a woman’s leg in a net stocking; Ralphie’s fantasy scenarios and more.
A Christmas Story, a theatrical holiday treat!
Tickets at www.RiverbendPlayers.org
$25, $20, and $10 (12 and under)
–



Muslim & Jewish Mothers’ Prayer
A Prayer for Life and Peace
by Rabbi Tamar Elad-Appelbaum of Jerusalem & Sheikha Ibtisam,Palestinian in Israel
God of Life
Who heals the broken-hearted and binds up their wounds
May it be your will to hear the prayer of mothers
For you did not create us to kill each other
Nor to live in fear, anger or hatred in your world
But rather you have created us so we can grant permission to one another
to sanctify Your name of Life, your name of Peace in this world.
Yoga is good for you, so everyone should take advantage of it. Also it’s free.
First there’s Yoga with Molly.
Day – Monday
Time. – 11:15 PST
Place – Tillamook YMCA
If you can’t join in person, you can still zoom in via the following link:
us06web.zoom.us/j/84115365249?pwd=Y1ZETEp1ZEtoS1JDTG9Sdmg3cGoyQT09
Next there’s Yoga with April.
Day – Tuesday
Time – 10:30 PST
Place – NCRD in Nehalem
If you can’t join in person, you can still zoom in via the following link:
us02web.zoom.us/j/87338175282
Brian
Please text me at 2069305401 and we can schedule a meeting or open a line of communication so that I can help you get ready for the Holidays and winter.
Lots of experience with all sorts of home maintenance from decks to siding/ trim, kitchens and bathrooms, shelving and storage, windows and doors, you name it.
looking forward to helping out however I’m able.
Yours,
SWR

Check out my stripper movie! Lots of Oregon in it!
Tempest Storm opens it and when we filmed her in Vegas I gave her a kiss on the cheek. I’m now two kisses away from JFK and Elvis! She dated both…
I asked her a few things about John. She said Jackie didn’t care that she was screwing John. Fun anecdotes.
Have a great night brother!
Here is The Dancer Diaries, I wrote the book during the production of the Iran film. Needed to de-stress after a days work on the film, a strip club down the street accomplished that objective:
tubitv.com/movies/575933/the-dancer-diaries
Andy
🙂
Mayor’s Residency Discussion Fact Check
To clarify both the information and timeline presented during the discussion on the mayor’s residency, I watched and transcribed the November 8 regular session at hour 1:38 to the end at 2:06 several times.
Since the emails to council from the mayor on October 3 (in which she quotes Councilor Spegman’s September 23 email) and from Luke Belant at the Secretary of State’s office in response to Councilor Spegman query had been made part of the public record, I was able to access those emails along with information about the sale of the mayor’s house from the County. All this information is public. To understand how we got to where we are now, a timeline of how it unfolded is helpful.
Simmons said that her home sold in September. However, the property is listed in the Tillamook County property database (document number 2023-003467) as sold August 7, 2023. She and her husband bought a home in Wilsonville on August 10, 2023 (Clackamas County property database document number 2023-028696).
Simmons gave the address of a friend’s home on Dorcas where she now stays when in town.
Simmons said she shared her situation with two neighborhood groups and at a Mayor Monday but she didn’t contact any of her colleagues on Council until October 3 after her residency was put on the agenda.
On September 23, Councilor Spegman emailed Simmons:
hi, Deb – I have asked Leila to place the question of your residency on the agenda for the October 4 meeting so that the council can determine, under ORS 236.010 and Charter sections 12(3) and 32, if you should remain in office.
Like others, I was expecting you to clarify your situation at either the September
meeting or work session, if not sooner. We cannot wait any longer as we will soon have
the results of the investigation and we’ll have to decide as a council how much, if any,
we should share with the public, and then determine next steps in that process
I regret that we have to deal with this in such a formal and perhaps adversarial manner.
You may well have facts to share which could warrant a different approach and/or
outcome, but you have not been forthcoming to date. Let me know if you would like to
discuss this prior to the October meeting. Jerry
At the November meeting when Spegman asked Simmons why she didn’t speak with anyone on council earlier, she said she was moving and had a personal health crisis with her husband. She said she believed that as a volunteer she had a right to keep private her situation. The private reasons for her move were not the subject of concern, but her residency is. Simmons moved in August but it wasn’t until her residency was put on the agenda that she alerted council with the October 3 email.
Simmons states in that email and in her remarks at the November meeting that she spoke with several authorities to confirm her residency—the county elections clerk, Luke Belant in the Secretary of State’s office and with her personal attorney, who then contacted the city attorney. Simmons said at the meeting and in the email of October 3 to council that she was assured by these authorities that she was resident of Manzanita in good standing.
Her October 3 email reads:
When I moved .3 of a mile from Treasure Cove Lane to Dorcas Lane in Manzanita, I registered my new residence with the City Hall as to the advice from our city manager.
In addition, I spoke with the Secretary of State Election’s Division, Deputy Director, Luke Belant. He was familiar with the prior research, reviewed my questions on residency and felt my residency was valid. Further, my attorney notified the facts of my move to the city attorney, James Walker. Mr. Walker said there is no issue with my residency as long as I registered it with the City Hall, and added he would advise the city council of his opinion.
Completing my process, I maintain the same mailing address at the Post Office, notified the DMV of my change of address who, they informed me, notified the election clerk of Tillamook County. I am, without question, a resident of Manzanita in good standing.
Here is Luke Belant’s email response to Councilor Spegman’s query about Simmons email. Following a phone conversation Spegman sent Belant Simmons email and he responded:
From: BELANT Luke * SOS <luke.belant@sos.oregon.gov> Sent: Thursday, October 5, 2023 1:11:58 PM To: Jerry Spegman <jspegman@ci.manzanita.or.us> Subject: FW: ATTENTION: Luke Belant
Thank you for providing a copy of this statement after our phone conversation. After reading the statement, I want to clarify a few things that may have been misconstrued.
The Elections Division does not provide formal validation of residence for voters via verbal communication or otherwise. It is not our role to do so.
The Tillamook County Clerk is responsible for Investigating the registration of a voter and making a determination of residency.
If an individual believes a violation of election law has occurred, they are encouraged to report a violation to the Elections Division. To view information about the types of investigations conducted by the Elections Division, and to submit a report, please visit:
sos.oregon.gov/elections/Pages/election-law-violation.aspx
At hour 1:53 when discussing the mayor’s residency James Walker, the city attorney, stated, “I want to be clear, that the question that was presented to me with respect to the mayor’s residency was a narrow question, about conceptually if someone moves from one location within a city to another location within the city, does that sole fact on its face impact that person’s residency and the answer is no…”
But there are two separate issues concerning residency. The first is residency as it pertains to voting. I’ve included the rule which most applies here.
ORS 247.035 Rules to consider in determining residence of person for voting purposes.
(c) A person shall not be considered to have gained residence in any location in this state into which the person comes for temporary purposes only, without the intention of making it a person’s home.
Besides a current driver’s license and post office box an elections official may also consider where utilities are paid and, “Where any immediate family members of the person resides.”
Simmons said that her husband is living in the Portland area to be close to medical facilities.
The second issue regarding residency is as it pertains to members of an existing governing body. Under the Charter a vacancy can occur in a few self-executing ways—death, committing a felony and loss of residency. The action creates the vacancy.
Spegman pointed out that until now, no member of the governing body has tried to remain in office after moving. He pointed out that Councilor Mayerle resigned when he moved out of town and his seat was filled by a resident. Council has a duty under the Charter to resolve the issue, if they find that a vacancy has occurred.
At the 1:52 mark, Walker says the Charter supports council’s ability to be the final judge of the qualifications of its members and that includes residency. When pressed to weigh in, he made clear that it’s not the city attorney’s role to determine what the qualifications of members of the governing body are or the residency of its members.
When asked if there are any ramifications by ignoring the residency of the mayor Walker said, “Well, I would say that one item the council should be mindful of in looking at the residency question—it’s important to carry out that responsibility because it can impact the effectiveness of certain decisions that the governing body makes. It’s important that every member of council is a resident for voting purposes. If there are votes conducted for example that have non-residents it could impact the efficacy of the vote, if it’s a close split and concerns the underlying efficacy of decisions made by council.”
What that means is if a councilor or mayor becomes a non-resident and votes on something contentious like the Manzanita Lofts and the decision is a close split, the city could face legal trouble.
Allowing a non-resident to hold a seat on Council also sets a precedent for the future. What would the ramifications be for the City?
At the end of the meeting, it was decided that Council will meet in executive session to receive legal analysis and advice from Walker. Simmons is out of the state until December 4.
The next Council meeting is December 6.
If you weren’t able to watch the meeting, I encourage you to do so.
https://youtu.be/cEWAkDSTeCE
(you might need to cut and paste)
Kim Rosenberg loretta.kim.rosenberg@gmail.com
Visit Heart of Cartm’s Refindery in downtown Wheeler, Thursday – Monday, 12-6 to find your treasure!


Sign up for our WaSH class. Two 2 1/2 hour sessions are being offered on Saturday, December 2. One from 9:30 am – 12:00 pm, the other from 12:30 pm – 3:00 pm.
Register for the class that fits your schedule the best.

Admission for adults is $10; youth 18 and under are free, but those 12 and under must be accompanied by an adult. Tickets will be sold at the door for the St. Catherine concert (cash or personal check only). Tickets for the Larsen Center concert will be sold online at LarsenCenter.org or by phone at 503 338 9132.
The programs will feature two soloists. Diane Amos will play the Andante movement from Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 21, made famous in the 1967 movie Elvira Madigan. Jude Matulich-Hall will play the spooky violin solo inviting the skeletons to dance in Saint-Saëns’s Danse Macabre.
Other selections will include Mendelssohn’s Wedding March, Strauss’s Blue Danube Waltz, Berlioz’s March Troyenne, Sibelius’s Finlandia, and Rimsky-Karsakov’s Procession of the Nobles.
This non-profit ensemble, under the direction of conductor Cory Pederson, brings together musicians from the north Oregon and south Washington coast to keep classical music alive and affordable for local audiences. For more information, please visit our website: nocsymphony.org.
Might also have a used, clean, comfortable queen mattress available if you want it.
Text or Call 503-812-2022

Join Friends of North County Recreation District (NCRD) at NCRD lobby on this coming Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday to buy some spring blooming bulbs. Yes! The bulbs have arrived, and we have LOTS! We have seven kinds of alliums, nine types of daffodils-including two all-white, three distinct colors of those sweet-smelling hyacinths and paperwhites for your holiday table. Friends will be at NCRD selling bulbs from 10-noon-Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday. Last chance to help Friends with this Fundraiser. To get a catalog with color pictures of the flowers these bulbs will become contact Gail, gailmyoung@me.com. Or call Patty at 503-368-6081 and leave a message. Thanks to all who have already supported this project!
Friends of NCRD is a 501(C)(3) non-profit organization. Friends focus is on providing scholarships for the programs run by NCRD. This includes the Youth Program, Fitness Program, and Aquatics Program. Friends support these programs with fundraisers (like our bulb sales), individual donations, and memberships. We need help now and then with our work and would love to have you join us. If interested, please contact Gail and gailmyoung@me.com and she can get you some information about our projects.



Hoping the pictures make it on with the post, if they don’t please text me and I’ll send you them.
I need to make room for the new couch so I’m only asking for $300. I will consider all offers though because I need it gone before Monday!
Couch is in clean condition, no pets or smoking.
Text or call 503-739-3181
Email morgancmagras@icloud.com



I can tow with my vehicle if you have a trailer I can rent or if you have a truck with a flatbed and an hour to help, I can pay for your time.
Or, are you strong and want to part of the lifting team? 3 strong people can easily move this tub.
Please call or text: 503-568-5632
Or email: lisa@digitalpour.com
Thank you!