Current Listing

FREE 10′ Folding Tables plywood tops

Submitted By: mikieli@nehalemtel.net – Click to email about this post
Need a 10′ plywood-top folding table? You’re in luck because that’s what we have to offer! There are 7 tables available. These tables have been used at the Library Book Sale and are no longer needed. Pick up your FREE folding table between noon and 1pm on Friday, April 15th at the Pine Grove, 225 Laneda Ave., Manzanita. Those not taken will be recycled so don’t be late. Contact Kim at <mikieli@nehalemtel.net> to reserve your FREE folding table.

Nehalem Bay Food Pantry

Submitted By: nbumcpantry@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
Nehalem Bay Food Pantry is located in the basement of Nehalem Bay United Methodist Church on 10th Street. The Pantry is open 4 days each week, Monday, Friday, Saturday 10 to 2 and Wednesday 2 to 6. Masks are still required.
The Pantry is open to anyone needing a little assistance in putting food on the table. Most of the items we stock are provided by the Tillamook Food Bank. Things not available through there are donated or purchased with $ donations. We try to make sure that we not only have the food you may need but also hygiene and cleaning products.
You will also find a clothing bank. Many of the items are on racks that get pushed outside on nice days. You can select what you need. Also, we often have bedding and bath linens along with a few small appliances and other kitchen items.
Animal Haven is part of the Pantry and well stocked so your pets have food, too.
Please feel free to come by and see what is available.
Direct questions to Bobbie at nbumcpantry@gmail.com

VOTE YES TO SUPPORT OUR LIBRARY

Submitted By: gailmyoung@mac.com – Click to email about this post
VOTE YES TO SUPPORT OUR LIBRARY

Twenty years ago, scouting the Oregon Coast for our retirement town, my husband and I turned from Highway 101 onto Laneda Avenue. Within two blocks we’d made our decision! “I want to live in a town with a library like that,” one of us said to the other. That was even before we knew about our library’s impressive public/private ownership or that the library in Manzanita is North County’s branch of Tillamook County Library system with its six locations and bookmobile.

Having served as Membership Chair on the Library Friends Board for two terms, I know the value of our Library as reflected in this community’s dollar donations and volunteer hours which maintain the Library’s building and grounds. Co-ordinating Magazine Sales for eight years, we witnessed the love and support for the Library from visitors and tourists as well as community residents. Our Library is a Tillamook Treasure – with books, movies, reading and learning programs, Wifi services, kits for book groups, online and curbside service, a children’s room and the Bookmobile.

To keep our Library and the Tillamook County Library system open, vote YES on the upcoming Library Levy. Remarkably, the tax levy will remain unchanged, at 65 cents per $1,000 of assessed value. It’s up to all of us in Tillamook County to keep our libraries alive and vibrant.

Please join us in voting YES for the Library Levy.
Gail and Richard Young
PO Box 183
Manzanita, OR 97130
503-830-3759

Measure Twice, Cut Once

Submitted By: ben.killen.rosenberg@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
Posting on behalf of Kim Rosenberg. loretta.kim.rosenberg@gmail.com

Measure Twice, Cut Once

My dad taught me to read a tape measure when I was a kid. He and my mom lived through the Depression and they didn’t waste a thing. Daddy worked as a bartender but he liked to make stuff when he had free time. He was careful with his tools and his materials. He didn’t rush through a project or skip steps in order to finish up. Measure twice, cut once was his motto and I’ve found it applies to more than just carpentry.

Remember when we stopped the dune grading a little while ago? In addition to public opposition, part of the reason it was denied was the age of the last Fore Dune Management Plan, which is part of our Comprehensive Plan and equally ancient.

Dune grading has been halted until there’s an update. But if the Comp Plan and Dune Management Plan are out of date, then what about the Ordinances? Amendments have been made but how well do they reflect the Plan?

Last updated in 1996 when Beck, the Spice Girls and Tupac were on the radio, Tom Cruise was Jerry Maguire, and Seinfeld was on TV Thursday nights, the planning horizon for our Comp Plan ended in 2010. I was fifty. Oofta.

The stuff that doesn’t get done when it’s supposed to get done doesn’t go anywhere, right? What we put off is always waiting for us like that nasty unknown goop in the yogurt container at the back of your fridge. You can’t remember what’s in there but it’s not going away on its own and it’s going to stink to high heaven when you pop that top.

The Planning Commission has tools they use when approving or denying applications–the City’s Comprehensive Plan, which is the primary land use document and the Ordinances, which are the rules that create the vision the plan describes.

But what if the tools no longer work well together? How does the Planning Commission make critical decisions regarding development when the tools they have are an out of date Comprehensive Plan and its amended Ordinances?

At the last Planning Commission meeting there was a brief discussion of the Plan as it relates to open green space and the development of a hotel at Dorcas and Classic. The City Planner spoke a little about the vagaries of the Plan and the legality of the ordinances. One of the Commissioners said something I’ve thought a lot about–just because we can do something doesn’t mean we should do something. Amen.

When the Ordinances are clearly not in compliance with the Plan, what’s a Commissioner supposed to do?

During the meeting the City Planner said that in making their decisions the Planning Commission should rely on Ordinances. Ordinances are law but so is the Plan.
I’ve italicized wording from the first two pages of the Comp Plan. The Plan has the force of law and overrides other city ordinances, such as zoning, subdivision or other ordinances when there is a conflict and is the means by which conflicts are resolved.

I hope when faced with difficult decisions the Planning Commission will use all the tools available when something comes up they’re unsure of.

I don’t think all development is bad but I do think development without a plan that reflects a community’s vision is shortsighted and unwise. Buildings are permanent structures. They change the land and once they’re up, there’s no easy way to undo any damage done. Isn’t it better to slow down and take the time to do things right? Measure twice, cut once.

Kim Rosenberg. loretta.kim.rosenberg@gmail.com

Brazilian Jazz at Bay City Arts Center April 15th, 7PM

Submitted By: baycityartscenter@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
The Bay City Arts Center (BCAC) is pleased to announce the next in its 2022 Performing Arts Series with a Brazilian-themed concert by the jazz duo, Beléza!, Friday, April 15th. Beléza! (pronounced be‧lé‧zah) is made up of master jazz guitarist John Stowell and the celebrated flugelhorn virtuoso Dmitri Matheny. Taking its name from the Portuguese word for “beauty,” it’s a duo that formed from the two artists’ shared passion for bossa nova, samba, and the timeless music of Antônio Carlos Jobim. Dmitri Matheny is one of a handful of modern jazz masters specializing in the flugelhorn, and he is widely acclaimed for his “brilliantly imaginative” and “irresistibly pretty” playing.

“People think of [the flugelhorn] as a double for the trumpet,” says Matheny. “It’s a bigger instrument, you have to fill it with more air. To my ear, it’s just a better sound… Flugelhorn is to the trumpet like the viola is to the violin. The violinists get all the love, but the viola players really expand the sound.*”

John Stowell is one of the world’s great jazz-guitar masters, specializing in the intricate “chord-melody” style, which is perfectly adapted to Brazilian Jazz. Stowell has performed and taught in over 20 countries in his 45-year career, and has been hosting and performing jazz concerts at the BCAC for over 20 years.

Doors open at 6:30PM, with the concert starting at 7:00PM. Tickets are by donation–pay what you can–$20 suggested. Reserve your tickets via email (baycityartscenter@gmail.com) and pay for them at the door. Covid protocols officially lifted April 1st—masks are now optional.

Jazz in Bay City is made possible by the generous support of sponsors including our performers, the City of Bay City, and the BCAC Board of Directors. If you would like to make a donation or become a sponsor of the BCAC’s Performing Arts Series, send us an email at: baycityartscenter@gmail.com.

The Bay City Arts Center is a community gathering space featuring art galleries, an art school, an auditorium, a dining hall, a recording studio, and a radio station, all wrapped up in one historic building in downtown Bay City. It’s also a collection of volunteers and friends who come together in the name of community, art, expression, and reverence for the beauty of the coast.

To reserve tickets or for more information email us at: baycityartcenter@gmail.com or call Rob at 503-523-8387.
* Excerpt from All About Jazz interview, September 1, 2016.
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ARCTIC AND SEA ADVENTURE BOOKS $25.00

Submitted By: tim4surf@yahoo.com – Click to email about this post
Five world class Adventure books and one free as well:

SAILING ALONE AROUND THE WORLD – JOSHUA SLOCUM
First solo navigator to sail around the world

THE ICE MASTER :VOYAGE OF THE KARLUK
Story of polar explorers stuck in the ice and their rescue!

COMING BACK ALIVE – SPIKE WALKER
Coast Guard rescue in wild Alaskan seas

LOCKED IN ICE – PETER LOURIE
Polar explorer Nansen stuck in the ice..

THE IMPOSSIBLE RESCUE – MARTIN SANDLER
Amazing Arctic adventure!

FREE BOOK: TOP DECK 20- WEST COAST SEA STORIES

retail value of $94
Buy all for $25.00

Call 503-368-3214
Thanks!

Oregon Cultural Trust

Submitted By: tillamookccc@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
2022 ‘CONVERSATIONS WITH FUNDERS AND PARTNERS’ GOES VIRTUAL APRIL 12-21! (PHOTO)

News Release from Oregon Cultural Trust
Posted on FlashAlert: March 31st, 2022 9:26 AM

Salem, Ore. – Grant makers offering more than $5 million in funding for FY2023 will gather virtually with the Oregon Cultural Trust for four regional 2022 “Conversations with Funders and Partners” events from 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. on April 12 (Southern Oregon), April 14 (Portland Metro/Willamette Valley), April 19 (Central/Eastern Oregon) and April 21 (Oregon Coast).

The free online interactive events will enable grant seekers to learn about funding programs available and will include breakout rooms where they can discuss their projects and programming with specific funders. NOTE: Capacity is limited, so early registration is encouraged: bit.ly/3uKuQ3X

Participating with the Cultural Trust will be representatives from three of its Statewide Partners – the Oregon Arts Commission, Oregon Heritage and Oregon Humanities – as well as colleagues from the James F. and Marion L. Miller Foundation and Travel Oregon.

Organizations encouraged to attend “Conversations with Funders and Partners” include community development organizations, libraries, arts organizations, museums, cultural and community centers, parks and trails groups, historical societies, arts alliances, literary groups and heritage organizations. All cultural nonprofit organizations that are planning cultural projects are welcome.

“There are more than 1,500 cultural nonprofits serving Oregonians,” said Aili Schreiner, Cultural Trust manager. “We want to make sure they know about the significant funding and programming resources that are available to support them.”

Oregon Cultural Trust Cultural Development Program

Among the funding opportunities discussed at the online Conversations event will be the Cultural Trust’s FY2023 Cultural Development Program (funds to be awarded summer of 2022).

The Cultural Development Program recognizes and supports significant projects through four program funded categories: Access; Preservation; Creativity; and Capacity.

In 2021 the Cultural Trust awarded more than $3.2 million in statewide grants. Cultural Development Program grants represent one third of the annual funding the Cultural Trust provides to Oregon’s cultural nonprofits. Other funding includes grants to the Trust’s five statewide partners – to support their mission goals and respective funding programs – and to 45 county and tribal cultural coalitions that fund local initiatives, projects and programs.

FY2023 Cultural Development Program grants are for projects and activities that will occur between Sept. 1, 2022, and Aug. 31, 2023.

Grant guidelines are now posted for a Friday, May 6, application deadline.

For more information contact Schreiner at aili.schreiner@biz.oregon.gov or 503- 428-0963.

Workshop focuses on how to audition for community theatre

Submitted By: nmccarthy1276@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
​ Auditioning for a role in a play may be an exciting, yet daunting idea. But with an active live theatre community on the North Coast, the opportunities to be on stage are numerous.
A theatre orientation and audition workshop for those new to theatre or who want to brush up on their skills will be offered from 1 to 2:30 p.m. Saturday, April 9 at the Coaster Theatre Playhouse, 108 N. Hemlock St., Cannon Beach.
Anyone 12 years and older can participate in the free workshop.
Participants will explore the audition process, including warm-up, cold readings, monologues, songs and movement/dance. Resumes and headshots also will be discussed.
For more information or to pre-register, call 503-436-0609 or email info@coastertheatre.com
Masks (regardless of vaccination status) and proof of full vaccination against COVID-19 are required. Please bring proof of vaccination (original vaccination card, legible photocopy or legible digital copy) to the workshop.

North County Food Bank and Clothing Bank Building Reopens

Submitted By: northtillamookcountyfoodbank@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
The North County Food Bank and Clothing Bank is excited to announce that we will be welcoming our neighbors back inside the Food Bank building starting Tuesday, April 5. In addition to shelter from wind and rain, you’ll find our free racks stocked with extra goodies for Food Bank clients as well as children’s books and information about community resources.

The Clothing Bank will also be open for browsing. Full racks of clothing, linens, and other miscellaneous items await you. You do not need to be a Food Bank client to access the Clothing Bank. It’s a community resource for all who need clothing.

The Food Bank also offers free at-home Covid tests and masks if you need them. We do ask that folks wear masks while in the building to protect our volunteers, most of whom are over 65. Clients not wishing to mask can have their orders taken outside and we’ll bring the food out.

A special thanks to our community for its ongoing support of the Food Bank during the pandemic. We really appreciated all the coats and warm clothing donated during our February coat drive.

Hours are 12 pm – 3 pm on Tuesdays. We can also take donations of food, clothing, or hygiene items during those hours. We are located at 278 Rowe Street in Wheeler, across the parking lot from the Nehalem Bay Health Center and Pharmacy (Rinehart Clinic).