Donations being accepted

Submitted By: hopkinsj@nknsd.org – Click to email about this post
My name is Jen Hopkins and I am the Family Resource Coordinator for Neah Kah Nie Middle and High Schools. We operate on donations from our wonderful Community Members and Local Businesses. Our job is to help students and their families who are in need. Wether it is during the Holiday season, or an athlete in need of shoes, we supply it all. Currently we distribute 80 bags of food to students every Friday in hopes of relieving their food insecurities over the weekend. We provide students with coats, backpacks, hygiene product, extra clothes, shoes, socks and school supplies. If you would like to be a part of helping our students be successful by donating items or by making a monetary donation, please contact myself at (503)355-3607 or by email at hopkinsj@nknsd.org

Because of People like you, our students are successful and moving toward a bright future.

DELUXE Outdoor Chair

Submitted By: johnfreethy@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
Stop sitting in chairs at the beach or campsite that will leave you with back pain! This baby has all kind of back and butt support. No sagging. It’s a life saver.

If you’re over 200 pounds and cheap chairs creak when you sit in them, this one is rated for 350 pounds. Or maybe even 425 pounds, it’s listed two different ways in the product description online. Maybe you like to have a kid in your lap, no worries.

Essential cup holder right within reach for putting in long hours at the beach or around the campfire.

Would be great for a patio too.

Folds up for easy storage.

This one is more on the tan side than the green in the amazon screenshot.

Future you is going to thank current you for buying this chair!

Asking $40, only used on one camping trip, about 7 days.
johnfreethy@gmail.com

Swivel Sweeper Max Rechargeable Sweeper

Submitted By: brendabliss22@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
This rechargeable sweeper is ultra-light (it’s only 2 pounds!). 360 degree swiveling ability and a low profile makes it easy to clean under and around tight spaces-works great under couches and other furniture.

Removable bristles allow for easy cleaning.

Works great on all types of floors and throw rugs, but not for thick carpet.

Sells new for $40, I’m asking $15.

Located in Nehalem. Please email brendabliss22@gmail.com if interested

Reminder – Jeff’s honey/syrup booth back in Wheeler this TUESDAY (3/15)

Submitted By: jwmerc@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
Just around the corner – the JW Merc roadside “pop-up” booth will be back in WHEELER this coming TUESDAY March 15th – in front of the building you find Pelican & Piper (corner of Hwy 101/Rector St) – from at least 1-5 pm. Raw honey jars from SO many plant varieties near and far – from $5 to $85 – real Vermont maple syrup too! Reach out to Jeff ASAP if you want to pre-order or do curbside pickup (e-mail: jwmerc@gmail.com – text: 208-424-0042 – or visit the JW Merc Facebook page to send and instant message while you’re scrolling back through the recent posts). Queen Bee jars are back in stock – and we still have quarts of raw Oregon Raspberry Flower honey as well (Oregon Maple Blossom pre-ordering is now closed). See you this coming TUESDAY in Wheeler!!! JW

House Cleaner

Submitted By: koleagirl@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
I am looking to lighten my load of houses that I clean. I am helping the homeowners find a back up cleaner with the potential to completely take over.

They are looking for an experienced house cleaner that is licensed to work in Manzanita. There are approx 3 houses that are rentals, and one family house. These houses are each owned by different people so the cleaner will probably have to meet with each owner.

Please email me at koleagirl@gmail.com if interested in all or maybe one some of them.

Thanks
CC

St. Patty’s Day Special from Buttercup

Submitted By: juliebuttercup22@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
We’re curing Lance’s Farm Vittle’s beef brisket this week then plan on braising with potatoes, cabbage & carrots; serving it with fresh horseradish crema, grain mustard, Irish soda bread w/Irish Whiskey butter and for dessert Irish Cream Pot de Creme’s w/Irish butter shortbread ready for you to pick up on Thursday, March 17th!
Cost is $40 per person
Call 503-368-2469 or email us for reservations
Deadline to order is this Sunday the 13th so don’t wait!
Pickup time between 11:30 a.m. – 5 p.m. only

Short Term Rentals: Time to Pause

Submitted By: pelksorensen@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
Thank you for your post. I agree 100% that STRs have gotten out of hand. We had our own experience with them:
A new house was built behind us. When it was sold, we met the neighbor, a nice woman who said she would be living their full time. A couple of weeks later, a hot tub was installed. After that, the STR sign went in the window. Then, the parties started because you can’t rent a house with a hot tub and not have a party, right? Loud music, doors slamming, people yelling at all hours of the night. It got so bad that the owners of the house next door quickly moved out and made their house an STR as well. We called the management company multiple times. We entered complaints with the county. We called the Sheriff regularly. We had a meeting with the county and the management company showed up but not the owner. Seems she didn’t want to get involved. Nothing helped. Every two days or so, a new group would show up and the process would start again. We were miserable.
I relate our experience not for pity, we ended up building another house in an area with better rules about STRs, but to relate what can happen. From our experience, the county’s authority is limited, the management company doesn’t care as long as they get paid and the owner doesn’t care because she making money and doesn’t have to live next to it. Since we were outside Manzanita, they didn’t care either. It’s all about a few people making money at the expense of the community.
I would like the city to explain:
• Why is commercial activity allowed in residential areas?
• Why is it not supportive of the motels in the area that are zoned for rentals? Seems like allowing STRs is taking business away from them.
• Why doesn’t the city create STR zones like Lincoln City, Newport, etc. where they are allowed and make the rest of the community STR free? If bigger cities can do it, why can’t we?
I look forward to hearing what the city has to say at the meeting tomorrow. People with opinions one way or the other are encouraged to attend.
Paul.

More Free Items

Submitted By: jill@nehalemtel.net – Click to email about this post
Spring Cleaning: the following are available for free pick up in Wheeler. Please let me know which you are interested in by emailing jill@nehalemtel.net

Baby bottle warmer
Disposable Pads for under a draining wound/kittens, or something lightly messy
5 lightweight plastic organizer bins
2-40 volt rechargeable batteries with charger
Outlet adapters

Massage and Wood Fired Sauna At North Fork 53 Communitea Wellness

Submitted By: revolutionginger@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
Did you know that you have a community farm spa right in your neighborhood?

We are excited to be re-opened at North Fork 53 Communitea Wellness this spring for massage therapy, wood fired sauna packages, reflexology and more.

All located on our historic tea and herb farm overlooking the North Fork of the Nehalem river on Hwy 53.

Open 10am-6pm Thursday through Saturday.
Book your appointment online at
www.northfork53.com/book-wellness

Short Term Rentals: Time to Pause

Submitted By: daslunas@icloud.com – Click to email about this post
Short Term Rentals in Manzanita: Time to Pause

Guest Column – Deb Simmons

My husband and I are long-time residents of Manzanita, drawn to this incredible place by its natural beauty, sense of community, and quality of life. For 13 years, I taught at Nehalem Elementary School, and no doubt have had many of your children in my classroom. I have good friends and neighbors here, and we are invested in this town. It is our home.

So it pains me to say that the character of our community is being threatened by the city’s dependence on income from short-term rentals (STRs).

Of course, we should welcome visitors, but there needs to be a better balance; the city, first and foremost, must serve the needs of the people who live here.

We have a comprehensive plan that is law, but is not being honored. It states that:

“Manzanita’s primary asset is its residential character.”

That Manzanita should “foster housing and living environments to meet the needs of families of different size, income, age, taste and life style.”

That the Comprehensive Plan is not to be used for the benefit of a few property owners or special interests, but for the city as a whole.”

Let me ask you: Are short-term rental homes that accommodate 21 people in harmony with existing homes? Where do 21 people park their cars in a neighborhood? A house with 21 visitors is not a neighbor, it’s a business.

Short-term rentals used to help second homeowners cover some of their bills. But they’ve become big business, operating in the heart of our residential neighborhoods. The owner of an average short-term rental collected $30,000 or more in rent in 2019-2020, compared to $7,500 in 1994-95.

Homes used to be rented primarily in the summer. Now they’re leased year-round. In 15 years, the STR usage has increased nearly 400% in our residential neighborhoods. Larger houses have replaced small beach cottages, bringing more visitors. Although there are seven companies in town to manage all the rentals, the oversight still falls mostly to local residents.

They are the ones who call, time and again, when six or eight cars show up at a rental house, when the limit is half that.

They are the ones who have to ask renters, time and again, to please take the party indoors after 10 p.m.

They are the ones who endure the constant stream of cleaners, repairmen, and visitors in neighborhoods of single-family homes.

Sure, you need a permit to operate a short-term rental, and yes, the city caps, and enforces, the number allowed at 17.5 percent of existing homes. But that cap is citywide and misleading. In areas close to the beach and town, where most visitors want to rent, the concentration of rentals can top 50 percent. Many of our friends have STRs on two or three sides of their home – new people every time a car pulls in. Does that sound like a neighborhood to you?

The explosion in short-term rentals has virtually eliminated long-term rentals for families and workers. It’s just not as lucrative for the landlords. The result is fewer young people and families can afford to call Manzanita home and our local businesses can’t find the help they need.

So I’m gratified to see that the city is holding a work session on Wednesday, from 3-5 p.m. to discuss the future of short-term rentals. It is long overdue. I hope you’ll turn out to share your experience – and a vision for the future of Manzanita — because our current path is not sustainable.

We need to take back our city. Put a pause on short-term rentals until we find a sensible way to regulate them. Look for other sources of revenue to fund the services we need. Update and honor the comprehensive plan – and adhere to the principals it lays out.

Forward-looking cities have gotten smart and are acting to preserve their communities. We need to do likewise.