Class C LazyDaze Motorhome For Sale

Submitted By: mmurf10@yahoo.com – Click to email about this post
This beautiful self-contained Class C Motor home was bought new from the Lazy Daze factory in California in November 2005 by the sellers. The pride of ownership shines through and this coach has appeared in a national motor home magazine. No smoking and no pets. Ready for vacations or full time living.
The Ford E-450 chassis is powered by the optional 6.8L V-10 gas engine with a K&N Air Filter system. The original engine, overdrive transmission (with the tow/haul option) and drive train have been regularly maintained with service records available. The towing capacity is 5000 pounds.
Winterized holding tanks. 280 Watts of roof solar to maintain the house batteries for extended dry camping. SeeLevel Tank monitoring system. Road Master tow system for pulling a vehicle with 4 wheels down. Many more upgrades and features.
Located in Nehalem & asking $44,900.
Call/text Rod at 971-704-1913.

Looking to buy land or fixer for primary home

Submitted By: Ddozbaba@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
We’re a young couple living and renting in Nehalem, but looking to settle down and build or buy a home. Maybe you have some land you want to sell or a fixer upper? Super interested in Nehalem or Wheeler in particular. Would love to do this off market if possible, we’ve seen everything currently available on Zillow.

I know this is a long shot, but we’ve been looking for over a year so I figured I’d give it a go!

Email works best. Thanks so much.

Hoffman Center for the Arts Artist Studio Tour

Submitted By: i.downes-leguin@hoffmanarts.org – Click to email about this post
Hoffman Center for the Arts is pleased to announce our first ever Artist Studio Tour! On July 15th, from 10 am-5 pm, 12 local artists from Manzanita, Nehalem, and Wheeler will open their studios to showcase and sell their work. Selected works by the featured artists may be available for purchase in their studios. 100% of the ticket sales go towards supporting our not-for-profit organization.

The Artist Studio Tour is self-guided and begins by picking up your wristband at Hoffman on July 15th, where you will receive a booklet with studio directions and information about each artist. From there, you can visit the studios at your leisure and in whichever order you want. The Hoffman Gallery will also be open that day for you to start your art viewing experience.

Tickets are $30 for adults, and $10 for students (10-18 years). If cost is prohibitive, please reach out, and we will be happy to prorate or waive the fee.

The artists participating this year are:

Allan Olson-Nehalem Bay Pottery: including Kopali Serna, Carl Vandervoort, Kathleen Larson, Janice Gaines-Ehlan, and more
Ben Killen Rosenberg
Cathi Howell
Chuck Winkelman
Deborah DeWit
Laura Ross-Paul
Levering Thomas
Liza Jones & Paul Miller
Lloyd & Judy Lindley: including HiiH Lights
M.J. Anderson
Pam Greene
Rae & Mark Mahaffey

More info and tickets here: hoffmanarts.org/events/artist-studio-tour/

VBS at Calvary Bible Church

Submitted By: calvarymanzanita@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
Join us for VBS at Calvary Bible Church

July 17-21, 9am-12noon

All elementary aged kids (4-12) are welcome to participate. There will be snacks, games, Bible study, puppets, music, and loads of memories.

Registration forms are available on our website or in the morning before each day starts.

Check us out at: calvarymanzanita.org
Contact us at: calvarymanzanita@gmail.com
Or call us at: 368-5202

Fire Mountain School Open House July 28 for Preschool and Elementary

Submitted By: firemountainschool@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
Dear Community,

Please join Fire Mountain School for an Enrollment Open House on July 28th from 3-6pm. Now enrolling preschool through 5th Grade and we look forward to meeting you!

Nestled amongst the spruce trees on the hillside above the Cape Falcon Marine Reserve in Arch Cape, Fire Mountain School provides a model for quality independent place-based education on the North Coast. A collaborative, community-centered vision has guided the school in nurturing the next generations of stewards and innovators for over forty years. Small class sizes, ample time in nature and the outdoors, and caring and engaged teachers and families create a unique atmosphere where students are supported in their curiosity, confidence building, academic pursuits, social-emotional development, and creative problem solving around shared goals. Through experiential hands-on learning, Fire Mountain nurtures competent life-long learners and stewards of our home place. Fire Mountain serves preschool through 5th Grade in two mixed-age classrooms.

Where:
Fire Mountain School
6505 Elk Flat Road, Arch Cape, OR 97102

When:
Friday, July 28th 3pm-6pm

For more information contact Emily Akdedian at firemountainschool@gmail.com or visit us at www.firemountainschool.org

All welcome!

Car camping bundle $75

Submitted By: Kirby.voos@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
$75 Car camping Bundle: 3 Rei bowls, 4 plates, 2 salad plates, 2 Klean Kanteen stainless steel pint glasses, 2 coffee cups, large citronella candle, camp candle with extra candles, silverware, 2 five gallon blue water jugs, battery powered lantern, GSI cook set, 2 biodegradable liquid soaps, ground sheet with stakes, etc.
Located in Wheeler. Contact Kirby (203)623-3019 call/text for faster response or email

For Sale Homedics massagers Artic Air Coolers

Submitted By: dott@nehalemtel.net – Click to email about this post
For Sale: Homedics 5 motor seat massager. Fits on chairs and also has a car adapter to use in the car and has heat. $25.00
Homedics Shiatsu massager with heat for feet, back neck
and legs. $20.00
Artic Air Coolers, I have 2 and are great to use on your nightstand / desk/ end table etc. any personal area.
$15.00 each.

Call Gail at 503-368-6517
Can be seen in Manzanita

YEAR END REPORT ON OREGON LEG. FROM CYRUS JAVADI

Submitted By: dixiegainer@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
As always, please don’t hesitate to contact me with comments, questions, or concerns at 503-986-1432 or Rep.CyrusJavadi@oregonlegislature.gov.
Talk soon, 

Representative Cyrus Javadi
House District 32

2023 Legislative Session Recap
Local Wins
Part of representing you at the Capitol is advocating for the taxes that we pay to the state actually come back to benefit us. As part of the budget bills that ultimately passed, several line items will benefit our North Coast communities.
• $225,000 for Bay City’s Earthquake Isolation Valves for Water Reservoirs.
• $1,267,000 for Tillamook County Shilo Levee Rehabilitation project
• $570,000 for Clatsop Community Action’s Food Bank Warehouse Renovations and Equipment Upgrades
Policy Wins
While the bad legislation gets the majority of the headlines, I was able to help pass some good bipartisan peices of legislation this session.
• SB 406 – Establishes a housing pilot project in Tillamook County to encourage more affordable housing developments.
• HB 3201 – Allows state and local governments to better leverage Federal money in investments into rural broadband expansion.
• HB 2645 – Gives law enforcement more tools to protect communities from fentanyl.
• HB 3584 – Requires schools to notify parents electronically in the case of a security threat at their child’s school.
• HJR 16 – Refers measure to voters to ask if Oregonians want the Legislature to have the power to impeach statewide elected officials.
• HB 3204 – Increases access to virtual charter schools.
• HB 2725 – Lowers prescription drug costs by limiting the power of pharmacy benefit managers.

ODOT Data Breach
Several weeks ago, a massive data breach occured at the Oregon DMV that included unauthorized access to up to 90% of Oregonian’s data, including driver’s license information. ODOT confirmed that some DMV data had been copied and taken while transferring data through a software vendor. The broad-based attack impacted over 2,000 organizations worldwide.
Individuals with active credentials through the DMV (driver’s license, permit, ID card, etc.) SHOULD ASSUME information related to that credential is part of the breach. To protect yourself, regularly monitor your credit and consider freezing your credit. Here is the contact information for the three major credit monitoring agencies:
• Equifax: equifax.com/personal/credit-report-services or 1-800-685-1111
• Experian: experian.com/help or 1-888-397-23742
• TransUnion: transunion.com/credit-help or 1-888-909-8872
Find more information here.

Other Notable New Laws
2024: Impeachment on the Ballot
In the final days of the Legislative session, on unanimous votes in both the House and Senate, House Joint Resolution 16 passed, which will ask voters in 2024 if they want the legislature to have the power to impeach a sitting statewide elected official. No matter your party, impeachment is an important accountability measure. Oregon is the only state in the nation without an impeachment process.
Pumping Gas: You Can Now Do It Yourself! 
Tillamook and Clatsop Counties has some experience with pumping our own gas. For several years now, state law allowed local stations to be open for self-serve between 6pm and 6am. 
But soon, even during the day you’ll be able to pump your own gas. HB 2426 passed this session, allowing Oregonians to pump their own gas. In Columbia County, gas stations may open up to 50% of their pumps to self serve, while the rest will be full-sersvice. But in Tillamook and Clatsop Counties, they may have self-serve at all hours.

Tax Relief for Farmers: HB 2073 and SB 498
Another set of bills that passed in the last hours of the 2023 session were two bills to help family farms.
HB 2073 will put certain agricultural processors on the same playing field as others for purposes of paying the corporate activities tax (CAT).
SB 498 increases the estate tax credit for generational farms, ranches, fisheries, and forests. The estate tax is an unfair double tax imposed after someone’s death. Over 96 percent of our state’s farms and ranches are family owned and operated. Oregon’s tax law should not punish an industry that feeds Oregon and provides essential jobs. Nor should our estate tax policy be in direct conflict with the desire to preserve and protect our family-owned farms and ranches. While I believe the estate tax is a cruel and unfair tax on everyone, this is what we could get passed this session.
Increase Access to Justice for Sex Abuse Survivors
I proudly supported HB 3632 to increase the statute of limitations for first-degree sex crimes from 12 years to 20 years after the crime. Minors will also benefit from this extended timeline by allowing them to come forward before they are 30.

Capitol Phone: 503-986-1432
Capitol Address: 900 Court St. NE, H-373, Salem, Oregon 97301
Email: Rep.CyrusJavadi@oregonlegislature.gov
Website: https://www.oregonlegislature.gov/javadi

YEAR END REPORT ON OREGON LEG. FROM CYRUS JAVADI

Submitted By: dixiegainer@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
As always, please don’t hesitate to contact me with comments, questions, or concerns at 503-986-1432 or Rep.CyrusJavadi@oregonlegislature.gov.
Talk soon, 

Representative Cyrus Javadi
House District 32

2023 Legislative Session Recap
Local Wins
Part of representing you at the Capitol is advocating for the taxes that we pay to the state actually come back to benefit us. As part of the budget bills that ultimately passed, several line items will benefit our North Coast communities.
• $225,000 for Bay City’s Earthquake Isolation Valves for Water Reservoirs.
• $1,267,000 for Tillamook County Shilo Levee Rehabilitation project
• $570,000 for Clatsop Community Action’s Food Bank Warehouse Renovations and Equipment Upgrades
Policy Wins
While the bad legislation gets the majority of the headlines, I was able to help pass some good bipartisan peices of legislation this session.
• SB 406 – Establishes a housing pilot project in Tillamook County to encourage more affordable housing developments.
• HB 3201 – Allows state and local governments to better leverage Federal money in investments into rural broadband expansion.
• HB 2645 – Gives law enforcement more tools to protect communities from fentanyl.
• HB 3584 – Requires schools to notify parents electronically in the case of a security threat at their child’s school.
• HJR 16 – Refers measure to voters to ask if Oregonians want the Legislature to have the power to impeach statewide elected officials.
• HB 3204 – Increases access to virtual charter schools.
• HB 2725 – Lowers prescription drug costs by limiting the power of pharmacy benefit managers.

ODOT Data Breach
Several weeks ago, a massive data breach occured at the Oregon DMV that included unauthorized access to up to 90% of Oregonian’s data, including driver’s license information. ODOT confirmed that some DMV data had been copied and taken while transferring data through a software vendor. The broad-based attack impacted over 2,000 organizations worldwide.
Individuals with active credentials through the DMV (driver’s license, permit, ID card, etc.) SHOULD ASSUME information related to that credential is part of the breach. To protect yourself, regularly monitor your credit and consider freezing your credit. Here is the contact information for the three major credit monitoring agencies:
• Equifax: equifax.com/personal/credit-report-services or 1-800-685-1111
• Experian: experian.com/help or 1-888-397-23742
• TransUnion: transunion.com/credit-help or 1-888-909-8872
Find more information here.

Other Notable New Laws
2024: Impeachment on the Ballot
In the final days of the Legislative session, on unanimous votes in both the House and Senate, House Joint Resolution 16 passed, which will ask voters in 2024 if they want the legislature to have the power to impeach a sitting statewide elected official. No matter your party, impeachment is an important accountability measure. Oregon is the only state in the nation without an impeachment process.
Pumping Gas: You Can Now Do It Yourself! 
Tillamook and Clatsop Counties has some experience with pumping our own gas. For several years now, state law allowed local stations to be open for self-serve between 6pm and 6am. 
But soon, even during the day you’ll be able to pump your own gas. HB 2426 passed this session, allowing Oregonians to pump their own gas. In Columbia County, gas stations may open up to 50% of their pumps to self serve, while the rest will be full-sersvice. But in Tillamook and Clatsop Counties, they may have self-serve at all hours.

Tax Relief for Farmers: HB 2073 and SB 498
Another set of bills that passed in the last hours of the 2023 session were two bills to help family farms.
HB 2073 will put certain agricultural processors on the same playing field as others for purposes of paying the corporate activities tax (CAT).
SB 498 increases the estate tax credit for generational farms, ranches, fisheries, and forests. The estate tax is an unfair double tax imposed after someone’s death. Over 96 percent of our state’s farms and ranches are family owned and operated. Oregon’s tax law should not punish an industry that feeds Oregon and provides essential jobs. Nor should our estate tax policy be in direct conflict with the desire to preserve and protect our family-owned farms and ranches. While I believe the estate tax is a cruel and unfair tax on everyone, this is what we could get passed this session.
Increase Access to Justice for Sex Abuse Survivors
I proudly supported HB 3632 to increase the statute of limitations for first-degree sex crimes from 12 years to 20 years after the crime. Minors will also benefit from this extended timeline by allowing them to come forward before they are 30.

Capitol Phone: 503-986-1432
Capitol Address: 900 Court St. NE, H-373, Salem, Oregon 97301
Email: Rep.CyrusJavadi@oregonlegislature.gov
Website: https://www.oregonlegislature.gov/javadi

Wheeler Ice Cream Social Sunday, July 16, 2023 2:00 PM 4:00 PM

Submitted By: brad.hart@evcnb.org – Click to email about this post
evcnb.org/events-and-training/wheeler-social/071620223
Wheeler Ice Cream Social
Sunday, July 16, 2023
2:00 PM 4:00 PM

The event is an opportunity for local residents to get to know one another better while offering useful, interesting information to help people understand what the City can (and can’t) do to help in large-scale emergencies caused by road closures, weather, tsunami, fire, or earthquake. Information will be available to support families in becoming better prepared. Topics include ‘Emergency Camping’ at Home, How to Create an Emergency ‘Grab and Go’ Bag, Caring for Pets, Where to Go, How to Get Official Information, Finding Safe Shelter, Emergency Water and Sanitation. Attendees will be able to inspect the City’s new emergency InStove, the new “AquaMundo” emergency water purification system, and the contents of the new Neighborhood Blue Barrels. Tours will also be given for the new emergency storage and communications facility now located in Upper Park.

Organized by the Wheeler Citizen Emergency Preparedness Planning Group in partnership with the City of Wheeler, the Emergency Volunteer Corps of Nehalem Bay, and the Tillamook Creamery Association, the event will highlight the value of working together to prepare for the inevitable weather events and natural disasters that can affect our rural area.

Join us there!

Why I’m attending the Transformating Marine Debris kickoff event this Friday

Submitted By: vivi@nehalemtel.net – Click to email about this post
Heart of Cart’m is hosting a workshop this weekend, titled Transforming Marine Debris, but truly, this event is relevant to any local environmental concern. There is a talented slate of advocate/presenters who will lead an exploration of how to harness creativity, spark effective action, and address the stress that arises in working on behalf of our environment.
Check out this description: www.heartofcartm.org/marinedebris
The entire workshop starts at 3pm on Friday and runs through Sunday at 12:30. For those who can’t do the whole weekend, there is also the option to only attend the Friday 3-6pm kick off. That’s what I’m doing.
I hope to see you there! Vivi Tallman vivi@nehalemtel.net

Your Extra Clothes!

Submitted By: northtillamookcountyfoodbank@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
Do you have some extra clothes? We had nearly 160 visits to the Clothing Bank at North County Food Bank in Wheeler during June. The Clothing Bank especially needs men’s casual and outside work clothing and sturdy shoes and work boots. We can also use women’s and children’s clothing as well as children’s books and toys.

You can drop off clothing on Tuesdays between 12 and 3 p.m. at the Food Bank: 278 Rowe St. in Wheeler (across from the Nehalem Bay/Rinehart Clinic). If you have a large donation or the time doesn’t work for you, please contact us through our website or send us an email at northtillamookcountyfoodbank@gmail.com and we will arrange a pick up.

Clothes are a resource! Let’s keep them circulating in our community.
www.northtillamookcountyfoodbank.org

Inspiring Lecture This Friday at Heart of Cartm

Submitted By: Jessi@heartofcartm.org – Click to email about this post
Will you please join us?
Friday, July 14th, 3:00-6:00pm
Transforming Marine Debris Lecture: Meet the Leaders
$20
Appetizers catered by Buttercup in the Heart of Cartm workshop downtown Wheeler, OR.
GET TICKETS HERE
secure.givelively.org/event/cartm/transforming-marine-debris-july-14-16-2023

Steve Fisher is a freelance investigative reporter focused on the Mexican criminal justice system, human rights and the environment . Fisher is traveling all the way from Mexico City.
Addie Boswell is an artist and writer based in Portland, Oregon.
Jesse Jones is a lifelong Oregonian and the CoastWatch Program Manager based in Astoria.
Wendy Jackson, a local psychotherapist, will present simple methods to relieve the anxiety and stress that often accompanies working for environmental justice.
This lecture will be an enriching experience that we hope will leave you inspired!

THERE ARE JUST A FEW TICKETS LEFT FOR THE FULL WEEKEND RETREAT.
secure.givelively.org/event/cartm/transforming-marine-debris-july-14-16-2023

Transforming Marine Debris: A Creative Retreat
A weekend immersed in playful and creative environmental advocacy.
Friday, July 14 – Sunday, July 16

Friday, 3:00-6:00pm (Appetizers and beverages included.)
Saturday, 8:30am – 5:30pm (Breakfast, Lunch and snacks provided.)
Sunday, 8:30am – 12:30pm (Breakfast, Lunch and snacks provided.)
All materials and tools will be provided for art creations.