Current Listing

Nehalem Bay Health District Board Meeting

Submitted By: nbhdistrict@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
PUBLIC NOTICE

Nehalem Bay Health District
Regular Meeting
7:00 PM, Wednesday, October 12, 2022
Location: Zoom Remote Video Conferencing

This Meeting is open to the public.
The Zoom link is below for members of the public who wish to attend
us02web.zoom.us/j/83517178834
For general questions or to request a meeting packet contact:
nbhdistrict@gmail.com

Agenda

7:00 PM NBHD Regular Meeting Agenda

I. Call to order

II. Nehalem Bay Health District’s DEI Statement

III. Consent Agenda:
A. Approval of NBHD September minutes
B. CEO’s September financial report

IV. Public comment

V. New Business
A. Board administrative items
B. CEO project update

VI. Old Business
A. Website buildout and content update
B. General update on Land use project, upper and lower properties
C. Discussion of board expansion and consideration of proposed resolution 2022-06
D. Proposed CEO salary increase
E. Discussion and approval of Material and Service budget revision resolution 2022-08

Adjournment

Ms Tinnin Truth Matters

Submitted By: rkinor@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
Ms Tinnin, seeking information through legal Public Records requests is a citizen’s right to assess legal compliance with State voter registration laws. The State Legislature says so and created specific criteria and processes to review registration compliance because people do not have the right to create their own subjective standards for determining where they get to vote.

You falsely claim in your October 7 BBQ post that somehow through a PUD public records request “(I) was asking for personal account information to show that we didn’t live in Manzanita.” and “I possess Mr. Kugler’s correspondence asking for my personal account details.”

No information of any kind was requested from DMV because these records are not available to the public so I have no idea why you would include those irrelevant statements. You have my permission to publicly share any correspondence that you claim to have in your possession between me and the County Elections Clerk and the Oregon State Elections Office to support your various claims.

Below is a copy of the correspondence with the PUD referenced by Ms. Tinnin in her post which clearly shows no personal account information was being requested nor was any received.

From:Tillamook People’s Utility District <tpud@sendmail.websiteformemail.com>
Sent:Tuesday, November 17, 2020 4:58 PM
To:Marissa Durrer <mdurrer@tpud.org>
Subject:New submission from Tillamook PUD Public Records Request Form:

I would request the City only to which your PUD billing is sent for the following physical addresses in Manzanita. I do not seek any personal identification information such as customer names, driver’s license or SS number, street numbers for mailing addresses, phone numbers etc. that would be prohibited under ORS 192.345 to 192.355. that would be connected to these physical addresses.
Thank you

Nine of the property owners in this inquiry with second homes here who registered just before the 2020 election and still own their Manzanita homes that they then claimed were their primary residence have decided that Manzanita is no longer their home and are not currently registered to vote here. Maybe the inquiry by the County Elections Clerk did some good and caused them to rethink where their primary residence is. If that is the case, then I think we all would agree that this inquiry by Manzanita residents in 2020 was worthwhile and in the interests of fostering voter registration integrity in both the upcoming and future elections.

Ms Tinnin, you are not a victim here but rather a citizen subject to the same laws that we all have to follow. If you do not believe that those laws are just, then work through our Legislature to amend them to better reflect your personal viewpoints. And please, can we all just acknowledge the worst kept secret in town from 2020, that being that second homeowners were actively being encouraged to change their voter registration?

Rather than waste any more time on this matter from the last election, let’s get back to what prompted your response, that being Mr. Keustner’s public record of comments on various City issues and qualifications as a City Councilor for the upcoming election.

Randy Kugler

Grange Hall Dance

Submitted By: qulwater@msn.com – Click to email about this post
North Coast Music Project is honored to be hosting an all star band of honky tonk musicians from Santa Cruz, Edge of the West. While not a household name they are a group of a-list musicians who have links to the New Riders of the Purple Sage, Todd Snider, Jefferson Starship ,
Freddy Fender and Big Brother and the Holding Company.

Only 100 tickets are available and they are going fast. Tickets are available at tickettomato.com.

The show is being held at the White Clover Grange Hall on Hwy 53 which has a great wood floor made for dancing.
Doors at 6, music starts at 8.

Here is a clip of lead singer and guitar player Jim Lewin playing with Todd Snider a few years ago (Todd will not be appearing at this show):

https://youtu.be/9YeGDYlBWso

North Coast Music Project
“Keeping live music alive on the north Oregon coast”

Trashoween Costume Workshop

Submitted By: Jessi@heartofcartm.org – Click to email about this post
Sunday, October 9th our Spooky Workshop is open and creative minds are ready to help you and the kiddos make the best Halloween costumes ever. Because what could be better than upcycled, lovingly crafted with friends trashion?! Bring last year’s costume for repurposing or sharing with others.
Happy Full Mooooooon BBQ’ers!

Trashoween starts at 1:00, Sunday Oct 9th in the Heart of Cartm Workshop in downtown Wheeler. The Refindery will be open Noon-6 that day. Yes! We have Fall and Halloween decorations for sale.

NW Authors Series Hosts Callum Angus

Submitted By: info@cannonbeachlibrary.org – Click to email about this post
NW Authors Series Hosts Callum Angus
Join us at the Cannon Beach Library on Saturday Oct. 15 at 2 p.m. for the NW Authors Series featuring Callum Angus. This is a hybrid event, blending in-person with live streaming. Come to the library on the day of the event, 131 N Hemlock St, or watch online – at www.cannonbeachlibrary.org.

Angus is the author of “A Natural History of Transition.” This short story collection challenges notions of transformation, as characters turn into mountains, unravel hometown mysteries and give birth to cocoons. His work is infused with a rich variety of alternative history, horror and fantasy. The book was a finalist for a Lambda Literary Award in Transgender Fiction, the Edmund White Award for Debut Fiction, and an Oregon Book Award/Ken Kesey Award in Fiction.

Callum Angus is a trans writer and editor living in Portland, Oregon. He holds an MFA in fiction from the University of Massachusetts Amherst, a BA in geography from Mount Holyoke College and has taught writing at Smith College, UMass Amherst and Clark College.

Angus has worked as a bookseller, fishmonger, barista, reporter, and an advocate helping transgender youth and their families navigate the world. He’s also worked in publicity and edits the literary journal smoke + mold.

The library’s NW Authors Series showcases writers of the Pacific Northwest. Authors read from their works and participate in discussions. These events are free and open to the public.

Wheeler “Looking Back”

Submitted By: Wheelervisionadvocates@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
Looking Back
In 1776 a group of visionaries put into law, a document to guide a republic.
Just over two centuries later, in a small coastal town, another group were formulating their own important vision for the government of their community. They were looking for ways to preserve the special character of the town that past generations had come to cherish. They called their work The Wheeler Vision.
For those who have forgotten what the Wheeler Vision Plan is, (or perhaps never knew?) here’s a reminder….
Wheeler citizens felt that they needed to find a way to incorporate important priorities into our city’s governing documents in order to preserve the beauty and livability of the town and prevent the sort of aesthetic and environmental decline that had taken place in so many coastal communities. It took two years of citizens involvement and community surveys to accumulate the data and finalize the document, which was called the Wheeler Vision Plan. The work that had begun in 2001 was finally incorporated and adopted into laws in 2012. Some of the provisions in the plan include:
i) Preserve Small Town Atmosphere
ii) No high density development – Limit number of units in any multi-dwelling to 10 or less iii) Protect natural beauty
Existing view of bay must be considered to be of real economic value to citizens and community iv) Improve Livability
v) 24 ft Height Limit on all buildings
It ensured that future developments be in proportion to the size of the town.
We are, after all, a town of just over 450 people. A large building that might be entirely appropriate for the commercial environment of another town, would not necessarily be a good fit for Wheeler.
Four years ago a proposal for a three story 44-room hotel and a 110-seat restaurant was brought before the community. This proposed development caused quite a stir in Wheeler not only because it far exceeded the city laws, but also because the property’s location happened to be the focal point of our little town and whatever development happens there will have a huge impact on the community. The spectacular waterfront view is why Wheeler has been dubbed “The Little Town with the Million Dollar View”. In 2019, the significant majority of community testimony confirmed that we citizens wanted to see development in our town which conformed to the provisions specified in our Wheeler Vision Document and is in alignment with the character of Wheeler.
Although the previous council of that time, discounted the authority of the Vision Plan and gave the developer the go-ahead, (the height of the hotel was reduced and the number of rooms to 28) Oregon’s Land Use Board of Appeals overturned their decision precisely because they had ignored the Vision Plan as a governing document.
An easy solution would have been for the developer to adjust his plan to fit within the parameters of the city’s governing documents. Unfortunately, this was not the case.
Over the past two years, Mayor Honeycutt and the present council have repeatedly met with the developer to discuss the requirements for an acceptable application that would conform to the laws of our town. Sadly his application for the 28 -room hotel and fish processing plant with apartments and a 110 seat restaurant remain to this day exactly the same … even though his application has been submitted to and rejected by LUBA twice and is currently in review for a 3rd time.
Our little town retains a uniqueness that isn’t found in many other places. And yes, we know that development must happen …. Indeed, it is necessary for our economy, but how we go about it is the deciding factor on whether we improve on or denigrate what we have. We only get one chance to do it right for future generations.
Just under 4 years ago, it is possible that you or your neighbor were one of the 140 people who signed a petition requesting that the city representatives follow the Wheeler Vision Plan. If you still support the Vision Plan or have an interest in wanting to keep the benefits of small town livability for all citizens and businesses, please vote for those candidates who support development that conforms to, and honors the letter and spirit of the Vision Plan.

WHEELER VISION ADVOCATES September 2022

Vision Advocates is a group of citizens committed to seeing the Vision of the people of Wheeler used to guide our town forward as the people of Wheeler intended when this plan was established and written into law.

BBQ GRILL

Submitted By: onesmartwoman99@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
FREE: BBQ Grill. Two sided: left side for charcoal, right side for gas. Heavy, has wheels on one end. Is rusty, and the left grilling barrel is rusted through. However, we have a new one (needs installing) and will include that with the grill. You will need a truck or light trailer to haul this and a few people to load/unload. We can help load it into your truck or trailer. We are in Nehalem. Email onesmartwoman99@gmail.com if interested.

MANZANITA LIBRARY MAGAZINE SALE – SATURDAY

Submitted By: jenna.edginton@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
If you like reading recent magazines, you will find great bargains at the North Tillamook Library monthly magazine sale. All magazines are less than one year old (many are much more recent) and are for sale at 50 cents each. All sale proceeds are used by North Tillamook Library Friends to maintain the Library building and grounds. Here are the particulars:

Saturday, October 8, 10 am to 1 pm

North Tillamook Library
571 Laneda Ave., Manzanita

Note that a smaller selection of very recent magazines are on sale in the Library whenever the Library is open. The monthly sale offers a much larger selection of magazines.

WE WELCOME MAGAZINE DONATIONS

If you would like to donate magazines for future sales, we will gladly accept magazines published within one year of the date of donation. Please drop your donated magazines in the book drop outside the Library.

Questions for Mary Leverette running for City Council in Wheeler

Submitted By: peggy@coastconstruction.biz – Click to email about this post
This is from the Headlight Herald dated October 22, 2021
Recently, an article was posted on the Oregon Coast Alliance (ORCA) website under the “News” and “Victories” tabs. The title of the article was “Wheeler: The End of the Ulbricht Project and the Beginning of a Brighter Future.” The article was about, once again, stopping a developer from building on waterfront property. However, the title of the article is misleading because the project is not at an end.
For years, a small group of Wheeler citizens has vocally opposed a potential development in our small village. In the face of this opposition, other voices and other opinions have been drowned out. Has yours?
Will Wheeler have a “brighter future” if development is stifled? Probably not. Do you really want to sit back and let only one small group determine the future for Wheeler? We urge our neighbors to become acquainted with all sides of the current, proposed development plans and any future plans. Take time to learn about the options and make your voices heard about what you believe to be in the best interests of Wheeler.
We encourage our fellow citizens to join us at City Council and Planning Commission meetings. Become informed. Get involved. Make your voices known.
-Mary Leverette, Cynthia Simmons and Jane Geason, Wheeler
Just so people can catch up, here’s the article of reference
Wheeler: The End of the Ulbricht Project and the Beginning of a Brighter Future
Wheeler is a tiny town of about 400 residents, which borders the Nehalem River estuary in Tillamook County. It is a picturesque place, and that is one of its great assets. But Wheeler’s waterfront happens to have a fairly large, undeveloped parcel, owned until 2016 by Tillamook County residents Vern Scovell and John Jelineo. The town is on a hill, so views from its houses, across the vacant property and into the Bay, are magnificent. Scovell and Jelineo also owned Botts Marsh, an important saltwater marsh lying next to the shore. Scovell long ago tried to build a marina there, and Tillamook County granted an exception for the project in 1985 — but it was never built. Later, the two owners tried twice for an Oregon Parks and Recreation grant to make the Marsh and much of the upland a park. Unfortunately, OPRD twice denied the grant, the second time in June 2014.
Wheeler’s residents know what their town should look like. The Wheeler Vision Report, completed in 2011, makes it clear that residents want several things: a Planned Development Ordinance that protects the small town atmosphere; a waterfront plan that emphasizes low key buildings, natural resources protection and limits on large-scale development; and a focus on green space that enhances the City. Whether or not these things happen depends on the town’s political will. In November 2012, City Council directed that the Vision Report be made a part of the Comprehensive Plan as an essential background document. This was a very positive step.
The Fight for Wheeler’s Future: The Ulbricht Project
In 2016 the entire property, both Botts Marsh and the upland, were sold to Ken Ulbricht, a developer from Seaside. Ulbricht eventually sold the Marsh to the Lower Nehalem Community Trust, and it is protected. But after a long anticipated wait, Ulbricht in 2019 unveiled his plans for the upland property, to residents’ dismay: he proposed a large “boutique” hotel and a commercial building for fish processing that would also contain a restaurant, employee housing and other uses. It was called “The Village on Nehalem Bay.” Cottages were to be added later, in a subsequent phase of the development.
The project was controversial from the outset, at the initial planning commission hearings. The issues included traffic, water and sewer availability, the property’s geological stability, and soil contamination from previous use as a millsite. But the central issue was whether such a massive project aligned with the Vision Plan, which is a mandatory criterion for development approval. Residents, and Oregon Coast Alliance, were adamant that it did not. Nevertheless, the planning commission, and then City Council, approved the project in 2020. ORCA and concerned residents appealed the approval to the Land Use Board of Appeals.
LUBA remanded the city’s decision, principally on grounds that the city had failed to show how the project aligned with the Vision Plan. At a remand hearing in May 2021, Ulbricht tried again to show how his Village on Nehalem Bay fit the tenets of Wheeler residents’ vision for their future. But this time City Council disagreed, and voted against reinstating the project. Wheeler residents have good cause to be proud of their defense of a future for their town, which they laid out a decade before the Ulbricht project tested the strength of their vision. Wheeler, and the Nehalem Bay waterfront, will remain as picturesque as they always have been.
Will you recuse yourself on voting issues regarding Mr Ulbricht because of your comments?
peggy@coastconstruction.biz

Mark Kuestner Community Matters Hoffman Center Wonder Garden

Submitted By: MarkForCouncil2022@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
Mark’s Community Matters: Hoffman Center’s Wonder Garden

The Hoffman Center for the Arts Wonder Garden has given me the perfect outlet to combine my passions for gardening and community service.

Watch my video at https://youtu.be/8FLVeAc-0mQ to hear my thoughts on volunteerism.

I’m proud to work on this public garden with director Ketzel Levine and am even more proud to share her endorsement with you.

Please visit my website www.MarkForCouncil2022.com to learn more about me and to submit your own endorsement. I ask for your vote on November 8.

Why I Support Brad Mayerle for Manzanita City Council

Submitted By: lynn.joy.steinberg@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
Why I Support Brad Mayerle for Manzanita City Council

Some days, after reading the morning news, the words of the poet Amanda Gorman ring especially true: “It is a hard time to be alive,” she wrote, in a piece called Hymn for the Hurting.
Indeed. We live in troubled and divisive times.
So in this election season, I am looking more closely at candidates for office. Of course, it’s important to get a sense of how they’ll perform in the job they are seeking, and whether they are qualified to hold it. Can they effectively lead the city, state, or nation they are hoping to represent?
But for me, there needs to be something more. I want to see how candidates have conducted themselves in the public sphere. Are their words gracious and kind or angry and sharp? Do they lift people up or put them down? Do they invite views different from their own or ridicule the people sharing them? And do they speak the truth, however unpopular, and attempt to bridge divides in pursuit of the common good?
After carefully weighing these questions, and more, I am supporting Brad Mayerle for the Manzanita City Council.
-Lynn Steinberg

Energy Healing Event

Submitted By: andrea@myessentialcollection.com – Click to email about this post
Less than a month away! My Essential Collection will be putting on the Energy Healing Event November 5th & 6th at the Old Mill RV Center in Garibaldi. Come join us it’s FREE to the public. You can come to the classes all day both days AND enjoy the Vendors – you’ll be able to shop with them, enjoy a card reading, sip some tea, play a singing bowl, chat with a Shaman or Life Coach. SO much to enjoy – you’re not going to want to miss it. Use the QR Code on our poster and it will link you to the event on Facebook where you can see the vendors and speakers. I will soon have a list of who the speakers will be and at what time so you can play your days!
Make sure you come and kick off the day Saturday with some Yoga and then be ready for one amazing weekend! 9-5 Saturday and 10-4 Sunday. Hope to see you there!

Looking for Home to Rent

Submitted By: corduroydory@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
Howdy,
This is a preemptive mission to find a place to live for my gal, our two dogs, and myself somewhere in or near Astoria (Astoria being best case). This is a sort of prospecting post as we are willing to wait for the right spot (6months, a year, etc).
About us:
We’re all housebroken and gainfully employed. My gal and I are both creative-types originally from the North Atlantic coast. I’m very handy and have spent a lot of my life working on boats or houses or cars, etc. It has been an advantage for previous landlords to have a guy willing to fix something when (or ideally before) something breaks. We like a good laugh, sailing, cooking, outdoor things.
Anyway, if you have any insights or leads for a place to live that will be available in six months or beyond, please don’t hesitate to get in touch.
Thanks v much!

Free Event:

Submitted By: april.nccwp@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
“Reclaiming Our Public Trust Rights” A Zoom Forum with Professor Mary Wood

The extractive practices of industrial forestry (clearcutting followed by pesticide spraying) have already wreaked havoc on waters, wildlife and the health of too many community members. On October 17, Professor Mary Wood will discuss how natural resources that forests provide—including clean drinking water and breathable air— belong to the public trust.

Dr. Wood is a professor of law and Faculty Director of the Environmental and Natural Resources Law Center at the University of Oregon. She has published extensively on the climate crisis, natural resources and native law issues.

We are honored to have her speak with North Coast Communities for Watershed Protection!

When: October 17, 6:00pm
Where: Zoom – Register on our website: www.healthywatershed.org.

For more information email: rockawaycitizen.water@gmail.com

Webinar on the Public Trust and Watersheds

Submitted By: phillip@oregonshores.org – Click to email about this post
Two coastal conservation groups are joining forces to host a webinar which will explore a fundamental concept in resource protection: the nature of the public trust. North Coast Communities for Watershed Protection and Oregon Shores Conservation Coalition are teaming up to host a virtual talk by Mary Wood, a professor at the University of Oregon School of Law and author of “Nature’s Trust: Environmental Law for a New Ecological Age.” She will speak on the concept of the public trust as it relates to coastal watersheds. This event takes place on Monday, Oct. 17, at 6 p.m. It is free and open to all.

Professor Wood will discuss how natural resources that forests provide—including clean drinking water and breathable air—belong to the public trust. She will relate this concept to the way in which extractive practices of industrial forestry (such as clearcutting followed by pesticide spraying) have grave impacts to water, wildlife, and the public health of many communities on the coast and elsewhere in Oregon.

Mary Christina Wood is the Philip H. Knight Professor of Law at the University of Oregon and the Faculty Director of the law school’s nationally acclaimed Environmental and Natural Resources Law Center. She is an award-winning professor and the co-author of leading textbooks on public trust law and natural resources law. Her book, “Nature’s Trust,” sets forth a new paradigm of global ecological responsibility.

Prof. Wood originated the legal approach called Atmospheric Trust Litigation, now being used in cases brought on behalf of youth throughout the world who are seeking to hold governments accountable to reduce carbon pollution within their jurisdictions. She has developed a corresponding approach called Atmospheric Recovery Litigation which would hold fossil fuel companies responsible for funding an Atmospheric Recovery Plan to draw down excess carbon dioxide in the atmosphere using natural climate solutions. Professor Wood is a frequent speaker on climate issues and has received national and international attention for her sovereign trust approach to global climate policy.

To register, for this event, go to: us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZ0sceitpj4jGt1JEjtK1Rz9wjjpwo7P-7y1. Registration links can also be found on the websites of the sponsoring organizations, www.healthywatershed.org or www.oregonshores.org.

For more information, contact Nancy Webster, (971) 386-3788, rockawaycitizen.water@gmail.com.

Orion SkyQuest Dobsonian Reflector Telescope For Sale

Submitted By: cpu442@protonmail.com – Click to email about this post
Ever wanted to see fine details of craters on the moon, the rings around Saturn, or Jupiter and her moons? Well this is the telescope for you. This Celestron Dobsonian reflector telescope is in perfect working order. It has truly seen it all and has been put to good use at backyard gatherings for almost 20 years. You can be eyewitness to some of the most spectacular events and places in the galaxy. Comes with sight/star target and set of additional lenses and filters. I would be more than happy to show to any interested Mon-Sat. Asking price: $250. Open to offers