Klamath Basin News, Monday, 3/20 – Local Man’s Threat at H&R Block Office Thwarted by KF Police, Arrest Made

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Monday, March 20, 2023

Klamath Basin Weather

Today A 20% chance of snow showers before noon. Partly sunny, with a high near 43. West southwest wind 11 to 14 mph, with gusts to 21 mph. Overnight partly cloudy, with a low around 23.

Tuesday Mostly sunny, with a high near 49. Northeast wind 6 to 15 mph, with gusts as high as 23 mph. Overnight, mostly cloudy, with a low around 26. East northeast wind 6 to 15 mph becoming north northwest after midnight. Winds could gust as high as 23 mph.
Wednesday A slight chance of snow after noon, mixing with rain after 3pm. Mostly sunny, with a high near 48. Light northwest wind becoming west northwest 5 to 10 mph in the afternoon. Chance of precipitation is 20%. Overnight, mostly cloudy, with a low around 29.
Thursday A slight chance of snow after noon, mixing with rain after 3pm. Partly sunny, with a high near 46. Chance of precipitation is 20%.
Friday A chance of snow, mainly after noon. Partly sunny, with a high near 40.
Saturday A slight chance of snow. Partly sunny, with a high near 39.

See Road Camera Views

Lake of the Woods   
Doak Mtn.   
Hiway 97 at Chemult   
Hiway 140 at  Bly       
Hiway 97 at GreenSprings Dr.            
Hiway 97 at LaPine

Today’s Headlines

The Klamath Falls City Police responded Friday to a 911 call coming in at about 11:30 in the morning, notifying them of a gunman in H&R Block on South Sixth Street. 

Multiple police units responded proceeded and then began evacuating people in the H&R office and adjacent buildings. H&R Block is less than two blocks from the KFPD’s headquarters on Shasta Way.

Police say a man was apprehended after barricading himself in a bathroom.  As it turns out, the person apprehended was also the one that made the initial call to Klamath County 911.  He was identified as Jerry Regis, 30 years of age, and charged with a probation violation and lodged in the Klamath County jail.

Connecting local producers with area commercial buyers is an important way to support the local agricultural community.

To that end, Healthy Klamath has been creating connections through the Find Your Farmer events for the past six years. These events have given producers a venue in which to showcase their products, learn about growth and development opportunities, and get connected with businesses.

Producing food at any scale is no easy task in the high desert of southcentral Oregon, according to a press release.

“Agriculture producers must persist against increasing environmental pressures, and often must consider taking significant risks to scale-up or diversify their operations,” the press release states. “This arid region has a short growing season — about 100 days (about 3 and a half months) — and receives an average of 13 inches of precipitation annually. Finding ways to support our food system and our local producers is a priority for Healthy Klamath.”

This year, Healthy Klamath is teaming up with OSU extension and Klamath Grown to host the sixth annual Find Your Farmer Event, according to the press release. This event will have two educational panels: One with local buyers and processors, and one with producers that sell their products locally, according to the release.

Any local producers, processors, or commercial buyers interested in attending are asked to reach out to Kelsey Mueller-Wendt, policy manager for Healthy Klamath. Mueller-Wendt can be called at 541-827-9442.

Willing, supportive, flexible, understanding and curious — these are the qualities Child Welfare is looking for in its search for more foster care providers.

And the search is on, according to Resource Parent Recruitment and Retention Champion Bridget King, as there is currently a shortage of resource parents in the area and throughout the state. She said that there is a need for at least 10 additional resource homes in Klamath and Lake counties at this time, preferably more.

The duties of a resource parent are the same as those of a biological or adoptive parent.  This includes everyday routines such as helping with homework, going to therapy, medical and dental appointments and, most importantly, providing love and support.

Fostered children often have some additional needs to meet as well, such as attending visitations with the birth parent(s) and/or other relatives.

Not being able to provide consistent transportation is not a “deal breaker” King said. Social services assistants can generally accommodate families and provide transportation.

King said Child Welfare also is seeking community members who would be willing to serve as volunteer drives on behalf of resource families. A news release from DHS Child Welfare noted there is often confusion regarding qualifying and disqualifying attributes of potential resource parents.

Eagle Ridge High School has been putting its best foot forward, according to the board of directors and members of the teaching staff.

The charter school has been taking steps to improve the quality of the educational environment and increase enrollment to pre-pandemic levels.

At the regular school board meeting Thursday, March 16, board members, administrative staff and teachers discussed some of the success stories that have come from recent events and projects. Executive Director Kim Cappel spoke about the recently developed internship database program organized through Klamath Promise.

The database, which is provided by East Cascade Works — the workforce provider for the Klamath Basin area — creates a network for local businesses and high schools to share internship opportunities. The database launched March 3.

Also during the meeting, the construction contract for an additional building on site was announced to have been awarded to Diversified Contractors, Inc.

In previous meetings, it was noted that students interested in careers in the field of construction will be able to participate in some aspects of erecting the new structure. What will be offered in the new addition has not been made concrete yet as the board intends to involve the community in making those decisions.

As for enrollment, it was reported in the Eagle Ridge board meeting agenda in February that enrollment was down to 137 students. This leaves the school 18 students short of what is needed to make the budget.

Whether you’re working through grief or making end-of-life arrangements, conversations about death and dying are very important — and, often, awkward to have.

Local death doula Marci McEnroe is hosting a monthly gathering at the downtown Klamath County Library to help people get comfortable with these topics.

This series of conversations begins at 6 p.m. Wednesday, March 22.
(Future Conversations On Death & Dying events will take place at 6 p.m. the fourth Wednesday of the month at the library.)

McEnroe specializes in end of life planning and in holding a vigil, as well as educating and empowering those and their loved ones at the end of life. Before becoming a doula, McEnroe spent more than a decade in the medical profession in the Klamath Basin. She was born and raised in Klamath Basin and serves Klamath Falls and surrounding areas. For more information, call 541-882-8894.

VFW Auxiliary Post 1383 is seeking new members to make a difference in the lives of Klamath Falls veterans, service members and their families.

The Auxiliary is hosting an information session Saturday, March 18 for anyone who wants to learn about the organization and its work in the community.

The informational session is scheduled from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at 515 Klamath Ave. in Klamath Falls. Refreshments will be served. Those interested in learning more about the VFW Auxiliary are welcome to come and learn how they can help make an impact on the lives of veterans in Klamath Falls.

To learn more about the information session, the Auxiliary or its service projects, call Carol Pinner at 541-273-5472, email cjc1021c@charter.net or go to the VFW Auxillary’s Facebook page.

During the months of April and May, more than 900 third-graders throughout Klamath County will receive free, potentially life-saving swim lessons through the Everyone Swims program at Ella Redkey Pool.

Ella Redkey Pool is looking for Volunteer Swim Lesson Instructors. The Everyone Swims program has been a huge success in the past years, according to a press release.

The press release states that “recovering from COVID-19 regulations has been a long journey, but with the huge support from Sky Lakes Medical Center and the City of Klamath Falls, the Ella Redkey Pool is able to host the program again.”

Volunteer as much or as little as you’d like. All help is appreciated. All volunteers are required to pass a background check with the City of Klamath Falls.

Prior registration is required. As you register, you will be able to select the week(s) you’d like to volunteer along with the morning and/or afternoon timeslot. Register online EllaRedkeyPool.com.

Open Burning for the Spring period is now open, according to Klamath County Air Quality office, giving residents the opportunity to burn yard waste.

Burning is allowed now through 5 p.m. on Sunday, April 2nd, 2023.

In communities outside the Air Quality Zone, residents must contact their local fire district before open burning.

Burn conditions vary greatly throughout Klamath County and open burn periods are determined locally based on current risk.

Public Health officials have set the following guidelines for the open burning window:

1. The air quality advisory must be green. The daily advisory is available at 541-882-2876.

2. Only residential yard waste, such as tree limbs, brush and leaves may be burned.

3. All burning must occur between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. and be fully extinguished by 7 p.m.

4. No trash, plastic, rubber, tar, petroleum products, or treated or painted wood may be burned.

5. The use of burn barrels is prohibited.

6. The burning of commercial, construction, demolition or industrial waste is not included in this burn window. Burning for these purposes requires a special permit from the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality; contact the DEQ office in Bend at 541-633-2016.

7. Agricultural burning inside the Air Quality Zone is prohibited without a certificate of variance issued by KCPH.

Fire District guidelines for public safety are:

1. The wind must be no greater than 10 mph. For wind speed, call 541-883-8127.

2. An appropriate means to extinguish the fire needs to be present (charged hose or extinguisher).

3. A responsible adult must be present at the fire from the first flame until the fire is extinguished.

4. The burn pile shall be no larger than 6 feet in diameter and 4-feet high.

5. There must be a 6-foot clear area down to mineral soil around the burn pile, and the pile must be at least 20 feet from combustible fences and buildings.

6. The person conducting any burning is responsible for damage and the cost of an out-of-control burn, traffic problems and other hazards caused by the smoke. Any escaped fire, burning of unauthorized material, traffic problems or other hazards not mentioned could result in violations and fines.

7. Smoke creating a nuisance (even if burning authorized materials), may result in a request to extinguish the fire. Planning an open burn according to where other neighbors live and monitoring wind directions will reduce the chance of smoke creating a nuisance.

The open burn window may be canceled at any time due to air quality or fire hazard conditions. KCPH reminds people that the smoke from burning yard debris is equally as harmful to lungs as cigarette smoke.

To see a map of the Air Quality Zone, go to tinyurl.com/HN-Air-Quality-Zone.

During the open burn window, residents should check with their local Fire District or the City of Klamath Falls (inside the city limits) for additional restrictions.

Phone numbers for these agencies include: Klamath County Fire District No. 1 541-885-2056; Klamath County Fire District No. 4 541-884-1670; Klamath County Public Health 541-883-1122; City of Klamath Falls Code Enforcement 541-883-5358.

Around the state of Oregon

Home Share Could Help Oregon’s Housing Crisis 

Oregon’s housing crisis is a huge problem that Governor Tina Kotek and legislators are working to tackle. It has been front and center during this year’s legislative session as the crisis grows worse each month around the state.

The scale of the shortage makes it difficult for even aggressive solutions to produce quick improvements; it will take a long time to build the hundreds of thousands of housing units Oregon will need to not only make up for the exsiting shortfall but stay ahead of future population growth.

But there is one creative approach that can produce additional housing much faster, and without having to build anything at all: home sharing, in which existing homeowners rent out their unused rooms to tenants in search of affordable housing.

HomeShare Oregon

Tess Fields, executive director of Home Share Oregon, and Margaret Van Vliet, former director of Oregon Housing and Community services, were guests on this week’s episode of Straight Talk to discuss the state of Oregon’s housing crisis and the immediate impact that home sharing can have.

They were joined by James Dirksen, an Oregon homeowner who has rented out a portion of his house for more than 20 years, hosting a variety of tenants, to talk about his experience as a home sharing participant. The conversation also touched on Oregon House Bill 3032, which would create tax incentives for homeowners who rent out rooms long-term at affordable rates.

A mix of problems have caused Oregon to fall behind on housing production over the years and fail to keep up with population growth, Van Vliet explained.

“One thing that stands out for me is that lots of industries have evolved and changed and seen a lot of innovation, but home building and home construction really has not changed much in many decades. So that’s one piece — the pace of construction really hasn’t changed much,” she said.

Local governments also need to be able to plan, zone and issue permits for building, she said, and that can often become a bottleneck. Financing for affordable housing can also become very complicated. It’s also not just a question of affordable housing availability, she added. The shortage is more concentrated at lower levels, but Oregon is short on housing stock at all income levels. 

The housing shortage has negative impacts on the state’s economy, she said, because it leaves employers struggling to recruit workers as those workers can’t find affordable housing nearby. First responders and public employees can also struggle to find housing.

Construction costs for affordable housing currently runs about $400,000 per unit, Van Vliet said. Apartment buildings will often use several sources of public money for financing, she said, creating added legal costs, and there are tough requirements for things like energy efficiency and quality building materials.

Home Share Oregon is a relatively new nonprofit that matches people who have unused rooms in their homes with people in need of affordable housing. The group just surpassed 900 homeowners signed up, Fields said.

“There’s about 1.5 million owner-occupied homes across the state of Oregon that have a spare bedroom available, and one out of every three homeowners are mortgage-burdened,” she said. “Our seniors specifically — 40% of our seniors are reporting that they’re at risk of foreclosure.”

Matching those homeowners with housemates could potentially house another 30,000 people, Fields said, without having to build any new infrastructure and while giving homeowners more financial resilience at the same time.

Home Share Oregon’s most common clients are women over the age of 50, many of whom have experienced the death of a spouse or a divorce, Fields said. The average homesharing agreement tends to be about $750 per month, but the agreements can vary significantly, with room for bargaining and negotiations.

The organization provides free screening technology to find compatible housemates and homeowners, she said, as well as free background checks and home sharing agreements, plus case management services for senior clients. Those components are all important, she said, because the organization does get a lot of questions about safety. The screening process works both ways, making sure housemates feel comfortable too.

“Homesharing isn’t for everyone, and it’s absolutely not a decision that should be made impulsively,” she said.

Dirksen said he and his wife jumped into the home sharing world two decades ago, and they’ve hosted a wide range of housemates in that time.

“Right after the pandemic (began) I think we had 14 people in our home,” he said. “We had four college students, two high school students, a young family plus our own family, all living in various places in our big house.”

And a few years ago, during a summer of intense wildfires, the couple hosted a 75-year-old man who had been homeless in their neighborhood. The thick smoke made it unsafe for him to be outside, Dirksen said, so they initially hosted him for a few days, but he ended up staying with them for about two years until he found his own housing.

Safety concerns are important in the home sharing world, Dirksen said, so the background checks and home sharing agreements are important, and homeowners do need to be conscious of who exactly they want to invite into their homes.

“There’s a large demand for affordable housing right now, so homeowners are in a great situation to be kind of picky about who they want to come in, and make sure it’s a really good fit for them, for their lifestyle and for political choices, dietary choices, do they want dogs, do they not want dogs, do they want sponges or dish towels, those kind of things,” he said.  (SOURCE)

Interior Secretary Haaland Announces Wildfire Risk Money on Visit to Southern Oregon

Deb Haaland, U.S. Secretary of the Interior, visited Southern Oregon on Sunday. She announced $21 million was on its way to Oregon to help reduce the risk of wildfires.

The secretary spoke at a media event in the Oregon Department of Forestry’s log cabin crew house at the department’s command center in Central Point.

Alongside her were U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Oregon, and Mike Shaw, chief of fire protection at ODF. Merkley sits on the Senate Appropriations Committee and chairs the Subcommittee on the Interior, Environment and Related Agencies. Haaland said the money will go toward completing fuels management work on more than 170,000 acres in the state.

The funds come from the 2021 Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, which contains $1.5 billion over five years to combat the wildfire threat on several fronts, from prevention and mitigation to firefighter response.

Since December, $278 million has been allocated. This includes a $50 million allocation announced Friday that will, among other things, pay for remote sensing equipment that detects wildfires; provide communities with slip-on water tanks that turn trucks into fire rigs; and boost the pay of federal wildland firefighters, whose fire seasons, year after year, begin earlier and end later.

“We’re like fire years instead of fire seasons anymore,” Haaland said. “I know that Oregon, unfortunately, knows this all too well, with so little room for error.”

Oregon is also among 13 states that will benefit from a pilot program supporting projects aimed at fuel reduction — that is, reducing vegetation that can fuel fires — on private lands.

“We must remain steadfast in our commitment to wildland fire preparedness, mitigation and resilience,” she said. “We at the Department of the Interior are doing everything we can to work with the states, Tribes, local governments to reduce these risks and support the firefighting workforce.”

Sunday’s event took place on day three of Haaland’s three-day trip to Oregon. She visited Bend Friday to discuss the Interior Department’s investments in the state’s outdoor recreation economy.

In Central Point, Shaw, the ODF chief, spoke first. Though snowpack in Southern Oregon is higher than in recent years, he said, “I do project that we’re going to have another challenging fire season.”

Climate change has become inescapable in Southern Oregon, where drought conditions have persisted since 2019 and wildfires have become commonplace.

“‘All hands on deck’ is the approach that we’re taking, and all wildland fire agencies are working together,” he said.

In recent years, wildfire smoke has often covered the region in an orange-gray haze, forcing residents to stay indoors for days and choking off business and tourism.

The 2020 Almeda and South Obenchain fires that displaced thousands of people brought home the risks that wildfires and a warming climate pose.

Last summer’s Rum Creek Fire, sparked by lightning, torched more than 21,000 acres near Galice.

Haaland, the first Native American to serve in a presidential cabinet, had come from a briefing with fire response coordinators, state leaders and others who confront the wildfire threat. “‘Collaboration’ is the word that was most used in that briefing,” she said.

“One thing from our conversation is profoundly clear, that climate change will continue to make fires in the West larger and that we must continue to invest in conservation of our ecosystems. Nature is our best ally in the fight against climate change.”

Will it be possible to tell if the investment in combating wildfire is working when the climate itself is in flux? How will policy makers track progress?

In an interview afterward, Merkley said people can look at such markers as the number of acres that have been treated through prescribed burning, thinning or mowing. They can also look at the number of wildfires that erupt in Oregon, or to the amount of wildland fire personnel dispatched, along with their equipment, to the incidents.

“There are ways of measuring it, even with the ups and downs of fire season,” the Oregon Democrat said.

The public conversation around climate change has evolved in the time Merkley has been in office. Years ago, in the town halls the senator conducts every year in every Oregon county, the subject produced consternation, he said. People would ask, “‘Is that really real?’ Because there (was) a lot of messaging coming out of the fossil fuel world saying it’s not real,” he recalled.

“But now I don’t get that reaction at all,” he continued. “In those forums, generally the conversation is about the impact that we see on our farming, on our fishing and on our forests. And people who live in rural Oregon see those impacts every single day. They see it through the drought. They see it through the fires. They see it through the beetles attacking our trees. Over on the coast, we’re seeing very significant changes in the warmth and the acidity of the ocean affecting our ocean ecosystem. So it’s everywhere we look.”

Haaland said, “The science is such in 2023 that it’s very difficult to deny that climate change is happening. And people who do deny it aren’t really looking at the science and the reality of the situation.” (SOURCE)

The Jackson County Expo is adding more musical artists to complete its summer 2023 Rogue Music Fest two-day concert line-up.

The Expo says the upcoming Father’s Day weekend music festival includes performers Dillon Carmichael on Friday, June 16. It also includes Tenille Townes and Frank Ray on Saturday, June 17, 2023 at the Expo.

They join a Friday list of performers including Chris Janson and the Cadillac Three with headliner Eric Church at the Expo before Saturday’s concerts offer Sawyer Brown and Brothers Osborne with headliner Carrie Underwood.

The opening artist Friday, June 16, for the two-day music festival is Dillon Carmichael, whom Rolling Stone called, “country music’s most convincing young star since Stapleton.” The Kentucky native rose to fame in 2018 with his critically acclaimed Riser House debut, leaving New York Times to declare that his voice moves “with the heft and certainty of a tractor trailer.”

On Saturday, Oregon’s largest Tesla supercharging center opened in Sutherlin, around 13 miles north of Roseburg. 

Courtesy: @TeslaCharging

The location at 116 Clover Leaf Loop includes 51 superchargers, also making it the largest center in North America outside of California (which boasts a 100-stall supercharging center in the Mojave Desert). 

The chargers are now available for around-the-clock service. The Sutherlin Chamber of Commerce celebrated the grant opening on its Facebook page. 

The supercharger station, which was selected as the site due to the city being located at the approximate halfway point between Seattle and the Bay Area in California, is the largest in Oregon.

“I think it’s a wonderful addition to our city,” said Sutherlin mayor Michelle Sumner. “We’ve been working really hard to enhance our downtown area…so that people from outside the area know we’re here. This is a place that people can stop and see what we have to offer here.”

2023 National Earthquake Program Managers meeting in Portland strengthens earthquake preparedness and collaboration

2023-03/3986/162053/OEMLogo_2022_FullColor_NoBackground_PNG.png

PORTLAND, Ore. – March 20, 2023 – The 2023 National Earthquake Program Managers (NEPM) meeting will take place March 21-23 at the Duniway Hotel at 545 SW Taylor St. The event aims to provide information sharing and capacity-building opportunities for state, federal, non-profit and private sector members of the National Earthquake Hazards Reduction Program (NEHRP).

This year’s NEPM meeting is co-hosted by the Oregon Department of Emergency Management (OEM) and the Cascadia Region Earthquake Workgroup (CREW). OEM Geological Hazards Program Coordinator and 2023 NEPM Chair Althea Rizzo will lead the meeting, alongside 2023 NEPM Vice-Chair Scott Gauvin, who also serves as manager of strategic operations and preparedness with the Illinois Emergency Management Agency.

“It’s a privilege to work with people from across the country so passionate about improving earthquake safety,” said Rizzo. “Earthquake preparedness and mitigation is a vital investment in our collective resilience, safeguarding our communities and securing the future against nature’s unpredictable upheavals.”

The NEPM group is primarily composed of state emergency management agency representatives who actively plan and prepare to reduce earthquake-related losses in their states. While some states have a dedicated earthquake program manager, in others, the responsibility is shared. Collectively known as the National Earthquake Program Managers, the group holds annual meetings to develop programs, share best practices and foster relationships.

The NEPM group first began holding annual meetings in the early 1990s, and after a brief hiatus, resumed meeting in 2004 at the National Earthquake Conference in St. Louis, Missouri. Since then, the group has met yearly to continue building resilience against the high-consequence hazard of earthquakes.

For more information, visit EQProgram.net.

Scaled Down Permit System This Summer Will Focus On Congestion At Multnomah Falls Lot

Timed use permits will focus on the Multnomah Falls parking lot and not the Waterfall Corridor for summer 2023 in the Columbia River Gorge.

From Friday, May 26 through Monday, Sept. 4, 2023, from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., a timed use permit will be required for each personal vehicle accessing Multnomah Falls from Interstate 84 Exit 31. 

Project partners will target congestion at Multnomah Falls. The effort will help reduce congestion by:

  • Reducing safety concerns and backups on I-84 with required timed use permits at Exit 31, the Multnomah Falls parking lot on Interstate 84. 
  • Using a flagger to direct traffic at the Historic Columbia River Highway/U.S. 30 crosswalk at Multnomah Falls.
  • Using a private concessionaire to manage the small parking lot along the Historic Highway/U.S. 30 at Multnomah Falls. The concessionaire will operate this lot on a first come, first-served basis. There are six ADA parking spots at this lot for those with valid ADA placards. When the parking lot is full, vehicles will not be allowed to stop or wait for an open space. 

Multnomah Falls (I-84) timed use permits will be available online at recreation.gov for a $2 transaction fee per vehicle up to two weeks in advance of your visit. A limited number of permits will also be available for pickup without a fee at the Gateway to the Gorge Visitor Center in Troutdale and the Cascade Locks Historical Museum.   

Unlike last year, permits will not be required on the Historic Columbia River Highway/U.S. 30 Waterfall Corridor in 2023. Last year’s 2022 Waterfall Corridor timed use permit pilot was successful in providing a safer, more reliable, enjoyable experience for visitors within the corridor. However, without a dedicated funding source, partners cannot staff and operate the full system and will instead focus our limited resources on the main sources of congestion and safety concerns at the most visited site in the corridor: Multnomah Falls.

“We learned a lot in 2022 about visitor practices and that information will help us as we plan for the future,” said Multnomah County Commissioner Lori Stegmann. “Multnomah County, ODOT, Oregon State Parks, the Forest Service, and all our partners are continuing to look for ways we can reduce congestion and improve the visitor experience to this wonderful treasure.”

The most reliable way to see Multnomah Falls continues to be transit, by bicycle or by tour/shuttle. Avoid the congestion by planning your trip in advance. Permits are only needed if you arrive by personal vehicle at I-84 Exit 31 for Multnomah Falls. 

If you want to visit Multnomah Falls by personal vehicle, the best way is to get a permit and take I-84 to Exit 31. 

For more information on the program go to www.WaterfallCorridorPermits.org. — https://content.govdelivery.com/accounts/ORDOT/bulletins/34eb59d

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