Gently Used $30.00




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
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 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.
If interested please respond to my email and we can speak further. No experience necessary.
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 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.
I’m wondering if there’s a mobile groomer that services Manzanita to come help trim our kitties nails? Anyone know of a service like this?
Thanks!



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.



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.



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





$20 obo
Kyle
5034844440

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

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.


