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Klamath Basin News, Thursday, Aug. 3 – FBI Captures Suspected Violent Sexual Assault Offender; Klamath County Fair Begins Today

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The latest and most comprehensive coverage of local News, Sports, Business, and Community News stories in the Klamath Basin, Southern Oregon and around the state of Oregon from Wynne Broadcasting’s KFLS News/Talk 1450AM / 102.5FM, The Herald and News, and BasinLife.com, and powered by Mick Insuranceyour local health and Medicare agents.

Thursday, August 3, 2023

Klamath Basin Weather

Air Quality Alert Today

Red Flag Warning in effect on Friday, August 4, 11:00AM to 11:00PM

Today
Some showers and thunderstorms after 11am, plus widespread haze after 2pm, otherwise will change to mostly sunny, with a high near 91. Calm winds becoming west to 5pm in the afternoon. Chance of precipitation is 20%. Overnight, more showers and possible thundershowers, with a low around 56.
 
Friday
Isolated showers and thunderstorms after 11am. Patchy smoke before 8am. Mostly sunny, with a high near 89. Northwest wind 5 to 10 mph. Chance of precipitation is 20%. More scattered showers and thunderstorms overnight, low of 56. Winds gusty to 25 mph possible. Chance of precipitation is 30%.
Saturday
Sunny, with a high near 90. Low overnight around 55.
Sunday
Sunny, with a high near 92.
Monday
Sunny and hot, with a high near 95.
 

Today’s Headlines

Negasi Zuberi (aka Sakima, Justin Hyche and Justin Kouassi)

The Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Portland Field Office is asking for the public’s help in identifying potential victims of a violent sex assault offender who has lived in at least 10 states, including Oregon, and as recently as last month, in Klamath Falls.

The man, 29-year-old, Negasi Zuberi (aka Sakima, Justin Hyche and Justin Kouassi), is now in federal custody for interstate kidnapping after a Washington woman escaped his home in Klamath Falls, claiming she was kidnapped, sexually assaulted and locked in a cinderblock cell. 

According to court records, on Saturday, July 15th, Zuberi traveled from his home in Klamath Falls, OR, to Seattle, WA, where he solicited the services of a prostitute, he then posed as an undercover police officer.

The victim told investigators that he pointed a taser at her and placed her in handcuffs, leg irons and put her in the back seat of his car. He then traveled roughly 450 miles with the woman, sexually assaulting her during the trip.

According to the victim, once he arrived at his home in Klamath Falls, Zuberi moved her into a makeshift cell that he had constructed in his garage. The cell was made of cinder blocks and a metal door installed in reverse so it could not be opened from the inside. 

Once Zuberi left the house, the victim says she repeatedly banged on the door and was able to break the door open and escape the room. She was able to flag down a passing motorist who called 9-1-1.

The Klamath Falls Police Department obtained a search warrant for Zuberi’s residence and found the makeshift cell described by the victim. Zuberi fled and was located in Reno, NV where he was taken into custody after a brief standoff with local police. 

The FBI says through quick law enforcement action they were able to get Zuberi in custody the next day. While she may have helped protect future victims, sadly they have now linked Zuberi to additional violent sexual assaults in at least four states and there could be more.

Zuberi has lived in ten states over the last ten years and FBI investigators have reason to believe there could be additional sexual assault victims. 

The FBI’s investigation has extended to multiple states where Zuberi previously resided between August of 2016 and today. Those states could include: California, Washington, Oregon, Colorado, Utah, Florida, New York, New Jersey, Alabama, and Nevada.

Victims may know Zuberi by the name “Sakima” and it is believed he may have used several different methods to gain control of his victims; including by drugging their drinks and impersonating a police officer.  

The victims are often threatened with retaliation if they notify the police.

If you believe you have been a victim or have any information concerning Zuberi (aka Sakima) visit the website: fbi.gov/SakimaVictims or call 1-800-CALL-FBI. You can also contact the FBI Portland Field Office at (503) 224-4181, your local FBI office, the nearest American Embassy or Consulate, or you can submit a tip online at tips.fbi.gov.

The FBI would like to acknowledge our partners assisting in this investigation including the United States Attorney’s Office – District of Oregon, Klamath Falls Police Department, Oregon Department of Justice, Oregon State Police, Reno Police Department, Nevada State Police and the FBI Las Vegas Field Office, Reno Resident Agency. 

(FBI press release)

 

Klamath County Fair

The Klamath County Fair starts today at the fairgrounds on So. 6th Street!

          SEE MORE HERE!

Residents of the Klamath Basin are raring to go for the annual Klamath County Fair this week with a lineup of top performers and events.

The annual fair runs Thursday through Sunday with a long list of events in store for all who attend.

Highlights include performances from Clay Walker, .38 Special,  Warren Zeiders, the Demo Derby, 4-H & FFA Events of all kinds, food court, the carnival rides and much more!

The family friendly event promises fun for all ages, with free admission to anyone who comes before 3 p.m. Thursday and Friday.

Regular admission is $6 for ages 13 and up with discounts for military, seniors and season-pass holders. Admission is free for children under 12 years old.

Fair Hours:
Thursday: Noon-Midnight
Friday: Noon-Midnight
Saturday: 10am-Midnight
Sunday: 10am-8pm

Carnival Hours:
Thursday: 4pm-11pm
Friday: 4pm-11pm
Saturday: Noon-11pm
Sunday: Noon-6pm

Supporting local businesses has never been easier than at this year’s Klamath County Fair.

More than 40 local and regional businesses will be on site both indoors and outside at the Klamath County Fair, including a smorgasbord of eateries and dining options.

World Amusement’s World of Family Entertainment returns this year to offer folks all the fun and thrills of carnival rides and games. Carnival operating hours will be from 4 p.m. to 11 p.m. Thursday and Friday, noon to 11 p.m. Saturday and noon to 6 p.m. Sunday.

Presale wristbands are $30 apiece and can be found at klamathcountyfair.com/carnival. Wristbands will be $40 at the door.  Klamath County Rotary returns to host the annual 4-H/FFA livestock showing and auction Sunday at the 2023 Klamath County Fair  (Herald and News/KC Fair board)

 

The Board of Klamath County Commissioners have chosen to increase Solid Waste Fees by 13% during their weekly business meeting on Tuesday, Aug. 1.

Not since 2014 has the county made a fee increase to the dumping at outlying transfer stations, and further back still in 2009 was the last time it was decided to increase the “per ton” fee.

Community development coordinator Stephanie Brown said simply, “it’s time”.  Brown said last fiscal year (June 1, 2022-June 1, 2023) the county saw a disparity of $900,000 between revenues and expenses attributed to personal and contract services, material services and internal services. She said there’s been a 124% increase of cost over the past nine years since the last time fees were increased.

Commissioner Derrick DeGroot said the Klamath County Solid Waste Division is an enterprise department and is not funded by county tax dollars.

Commissioner Dave Henslee said when the board was approached about increasing the fees, conversations were had about reducing services and even closing the dump an extra day.

Klamath County’s new Solid Waste Division’s complete fee schedule is available on the county website and takes effect Sept. 1.  (Herald and News)

The Board of Klamath County Commissioners also declared a state of emergency in Klamath County for the Golden Fire.

Decided during an emergency meeting held on July 26, 2023, the resolution comes after all local and regional emergency and recovery services have been exhausted and 166 total structures, half of which are residences, have burned.

Commissioner Derrick DeGroot said He said a meeting was held Monday with emergency management staff, the county’s building department, the county assessor’s office, code enforcement and a “multitude” of other agencies to ensure that the “best possible” program will be available to help with the recovery of the Golden Fire. (Herald and News)

 

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services will welcome 26 new citizens during a naturalization ceremony Thursday (today) at Crater Lake National Park.

USCIS Portland Field Office Director Margaret Rosenast will administer the Oath of Allegiance and Crater Lake National Parks Service Superintendent Craig Ackerman will offer welcoming remarks.

The 26 citizenship candidates, originate from the following 13 countries: Australia, Bolivia, Canada, China, Colombia, Hungary, India, Ireland, Mexico, Philippines, Poland, Russia and United Kingdom.

USCIS often participates in naturalization ceremonies at museums, schools, libraries and other notable locations to celebrate the conclusion of an immigrant’s journey to citizenship and honor their commitment to U.S. democracy and America’s future.

USCIS encourages new citizens and guests to share their naturalization ceremony experiences and photos through social media, USCIS and NPS have a signed Memorandum of Understanding that advances the meaning and stature of citizenship by building connections between new citizens and America’s parks. Signed in 2006, and renewed in 2021, the agreement has led to special naturalization ceremonies held at many of the 400 places safeguarded by NPS, including Ellis Island, Yosemite National Park, Cesar Chavez National Monument, Acadia National Park and numerous Memorial Parks on the National Mall. (USCS press release)

 

The largest dam removal project in United States history is underway along the California-Oregon border, out Highway 66 — a process that won’t conclude until the end of 2025, with the help of heavy machinery and explosives.

But in some ways, removing the dams is the easy part. The hard part will come over the next decade as workers, partnering with Native American tribes, plant and monitor nearly 17 billion seeds as they try to restore the Klamath River and the surrounding land to what it looked like before the dams started to go up more than a century ago.

The demolition is part of a national movement to return the natural flow of the nation’s rivers and restore habitat for fish and the ecosystems that sustain other wildlife. More than 2,000 dams have been removed in the U.S. as of February, with the bulk of those having come down within the last 25 years, according to the advocacy group American Rivers.

When demolition is completed by the end of next year, more than 400 miles of river will have opened for threatened species of fish and other wildlife. By comparison, the 65 dams removed in the U.S. last year combined to reconnect 430 miles of river.

Along the Klamath, the dam removals won’t be a major hit to the power supply; they produced less than 2% of power company PacifiCorp’s energy generation when they were running at full capacity — enough to power about 70,000 homes. Though the hydroelectric power produced by dams is considered a clean, renewable source of energy, many larger dams in the U.S. West have become a target for environmental groups and tribes because of the harm they cause to fish and river ecosystems.

The project will empty three reservoirs over about 3.5 square miles near the California-Oregon border, exposing soil to sunlight in some places for the first time in more than a century.

For the past five years, Native American tribes have gathered seeds by hand and sent them to nurseries with plans to sow the seeds along the banks of the newly wild river. Helicopters will bring in hundreds of thousands of trees and shrubs to plant along the banks, including wads of tree roots to create habitat for fish.  (Herald and News)

 
A ban on wood and charcoal fires, fireworks and smoking goes into effect this Friday at Crater Lake National Park.

Crater Lake Park officials said that with the increase in fire danger in southern Oregon, the park will go into a full fire ban. According to Fire Management Officer Phil Heitzke, “The outlook is for above normal significant wildland fire potential for the next several months, To ensure public safety and to provide the highest degree of protection to park resources, the following fire ban will be implemented effective at 12:01 a.m. Friday.”

Under the restrictions, wood fires and charcoal fires are not allowed. Liquid fuel and propane camp stoves and gas grills are permitted in campgrounds, picnic areas, backcountry areas and residential areas.

Smoking is permitted only in vehicles — “provided that an ashtray is used for ashes and butts,” or “while stopped in an area at least three feet in diameter that is barren or free of all flammable materials. Ashes and butts must be disposed of safely and may not be discarded on the ground.”

Fireworks are prohibited in the park at all times.

“The purpose of these restrictions is to ensure the safety of park visitors and employees, and for the protection of the park’s natural and cultural resources,” Heitzke said in the statement. “These restrictions are dependent upon fire activity and weather conditions and will remain in effect until conditions improve. … Our goal is voluntary compliance; however, persons who fail to comply with these restrictions may be cited or arrested.” (CLNP/Herald and News)

 

EagleRidge HS MEETING NOTICE 
The Board of Directors of EagleRidge High School, an Oregon Nonprofit Corporation, will hold a Board Meeting on Tuesday, August 8, 2023, at 4:00 pm at EagleRidge High School, 677 South Seventh Street, Klamath Falls, Oregon.  The meeting is In-person and available on Teams.  The meeting agenda is attached in PDF File Format.   

EagleRidge High School was established to create and implement an autonomous, high achieving and equitable small high school in collaboration with the Klamath Falls City School District pursuant to the Oregon Charter School law. 

The meeting will be conducted in accordance with the Oregon Public Meetings law. 

 

Coming to The Ragland Theater, Klamath Falls…. Disney’s THE LION KING!

 

Around the state of Oregon

Oregon House Republican lawmakers want Gov. Tina Kotek to review her predecessor’s commutations of sentences of former inmates.

The House Republican Caucus sent the request to Kotek on Friday. It stems from former Gov. Kate Brown’s commutation of the 50-month sentence against Jesse Lee Calhoun, a 38-year-old who police say is “a person of interest” in the killings of four Portland-area women.

Brown commuted Calhoun’s prison sentence for theft and burglary in 2021, and he was released nearly a year early. He was part of a group of 41 inmates granted commuted sentences and early releases because they fought wildfires in 2020. While in office, Brown commuted sentences and granted clemency to more than 1,000 people, more than other governors.

Republican Reps. Cliff Bentz and Lori Chavez-DeRemer sent a letter to Kotek on July 20, asking her to review Brown’s commutations and develop a clear and transparent clemency procedure that gives Oregonians a voice in the process. (Herald and News)

 

Fire crews are increasing containment of the roaring Flat Fire in western Oregon.

Local Forest Service River Ranger, Stephen DiCicco is helping boat firefighters across the Illinois River to access the Flat Fire
Local Forest Service River Ranger, Stephen DiCicco is helping boat firefighters across the Illinois River to access the Flat Fire

Current Situation:  Yesterday, In the southwest corner of the fire area, firefighters used Unstaffed Aerial Systems (UAS/drones) aerial ignitions to increase the burnout to about 200 feet interior from the fire line.  Helicopters also used a Plastic Spherical Dispenser (PSD) for aerial firing operations further interior, bringing the main fire southwest towards the fire line. This strategy moves the main fire toward the prepared fire line under more favorable and controlled conditions.  Fuels consumption is varied due to the existing vegetation mosaic on the landscape (brush, grass and timber).  Aburn-out operation along the dozer line heading east from Game Lake was completed with about 150 feet of depth interior of the line to the main unburned area.

Structure protection resources continue scouting for and identifying additional homes and buildings and are collecting data to aid firefighters in protecting structures if there is a future need.  The alternate control line on Forest Service Road (FSR) 3313, 1503, and 3680 is planned for completion on Tuesday.

A community meeting was held in Brookings-Harbor last night and was live streamed on Facebook.  A recording can be viewed at https://fb.watch/m8b1R2JtRk/ .

Todays activities:  Firefighters will use aerial resources to achieve additional fireline depth between the western and eastern portions of FSR 3680 in the southwestern corner of the fire.  Aerial interior burning will also start in the Game Lake area.  Fuels removal will begin today from vegetation cut in preparing fireline along the western containment lines. The northern containment line, from Wildhorse Lookout east to FSR 3577, is being actively mopped up and patrolled.  The northeastern corner of the fire, using FSR 2308 and 150, has been prepared for firing operations if the need arises due to changes in weather conditions and/or fire activity.

With fire traffic on Bear Camp Road, all motorists on Bear Camp Road are asked to slow down, use headlights and proceed with caution.

Resources no longer needed for remaining suppressions efforts are being released to return home, get rest and be ready for future assignments as we head into the remaining fire season.

Evacuations:  As of July 31, all remaining evacuation levels were reduced to Level 1 “Get Ready” evacuation status for all areas in the vicinity of the Flat Fire.

The Curry County Sheriff’s Office will continue to coordinate with the Fire Incident Management Team and will notify all residents affected by the fire of any reasons to change evacuation levels. Curry County is using Everbridge to send evacuation notices.  You can sign up for notifications herehttps://www.co.curry.or.us/departments/emergency_management/index.php.

 

Two More Illegal Grow Busts in Josephine County
Press Release from Josephine Co. Sheriff’s Office 

 

INCIDENT DATE: July 31, 2023

REPORTING DEPUTY: Josephine Marijuana Enforcement Team (JMET)

ARRESTED: Jesus Ayala-Farras, 29 years-old

Gerardo Gutierrez Calderon, 21 years-old

CHARGES: 1- Unlawful Manufacturing of Marijuana

2- Unlawful Appropriation of Water

DETAILS:

On July 31, 2023, the Josephine Marijuana Enforcement Team (JMET) with the assistance of Josephine County Public Health & Building Safety, executed a search warrant in the 200 Block of Beaver Meadows Road, Cave Junction, regarding an illegal marijuana grow site.

During the execution of the warrant, over 3,450 marijuana plants were seized and destroyed.

The property also had multiple water and solid waste code violations. These violations could result in the criminal forfeiture of the property.

Jesus Ayala-Farras and Gerardo Gutierrez Calderon were both taken into custody and lodged in the Josephine County Jail for Unlawful Manufacturing of Marijuana and Unlawful Appropriation of Water.

At the time of this press release the investigation is ongoing and no further details are being released.

Josephine County Marijuana Search Warrant 07/27/23 

 

INCIDENT DATE: July 27, 2023

REPORTING DEPUTY: Josephine Marijuana Enforcement Team (JMET)

CHARGES: 1- Unlawful Possession of Marijuana

2- Unlawful Appropriation of Water

DETAILS:

On July 27, 2023, the Josephine Marijuana Enforcement Team (JMET) with the assistance of Josephine County Public Health & Building Safety, executed a search warrant off Bill Creek Road, Williams, regarding an illegal marijuana grow site.

During the execution of the warrant, over 4,300 marijuana plants were seized and destroyed.

The property also had multiple water and solid waste code violations. These violations could result in the criminal forfeiture of the property.

The primary suspect was not at the location during the search. They will be charged with Unlawful Possession of Marijuana and Unlawful Appropriation of Water if located.

At the time of this press release the investigation is ongoing and no further details are being released.

 

$10.7 million coming to Oregon to protect forest land

A historic investment from the Forest Legacy Program will help protect more than 11,000 acres of working forest in Oregon

SALEM, Ore. – Two working forests in Oregon received a major investment from the US Dept. of Agriculture’s Forest Legacy program, which protects environmentally and ecologically important private forest lands across the country. The Minam Conservation and Connectivity Project in northeast Oregon and the Tualatin Mountain Forest Project in northwest Oregon are among 34 projects nationwide that will receive funds from the program to protect working forests for wildlife, people, and climate resilience.

Some 3,111 acres of the Tualatin Mountain Forest in northwest Oregon will be secured as a working research forest�to be�owned�and managed�by Oregon State University thanks to grants from the US Dept. of Agriculture’s Forest Legacy program, administered in Oregon by the Oregon Dept. of Forestry.

 

These investments were made possible by the Land and Water Conservation Fund and the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), which provided a historic $700 million over 10 years to permanently conserve state and privately-owned forestlands through the Forest Legacy program. The program is administered in Oregon by the Oregon Dept. of Forestry (ODF).

Josh Barnard, Chief of ODF’s Forest Resources Division, said, “The Forest Legacy program’s investments ensure that working forests that are vital to the fabric of local economies remain working forests. They also maintain the ecological benefits of working forests, including natural watershed functions, maintaining habitat for at-risk species and mitigating climate change.”

Kelley Beamer, Executive Director of the Coalition of Oregon Land Trusts, agrees with Barnard. “The Forest Legacy Program is a critical tool to keep working forests working while protecting important habitat for fish, wildlife, and people,” she said. “This is the largest investment in Oregon’s working lands in the Forest Legacy program’s history and land trusts are poised to leverage these funds to protect even more of these ecologically and economically important lands.”

The Minam Conservation Connectivity Project phase II will acquire 10,964 acres of working forestland and a corridor along the Minam River in Union and Wallowa counties. Spearheaded by the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation, this project will conserve scenic viewsheds on over 2.4 million acres of adjacent public lands. This property has been managed as a working forest since the early 1900s and will continue to generate timber and support jobs in the local area.

“This commitment of Forest Legacy funding is a vital step toward completion of a landmark conservation project that will conserve and protect habitat for elk, mule deer, fish, birds and other wildlife, while also providing access by hunters, anglers and others,” said Kyle Weaver, Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation president and CEO. “We would like to recognize our partners at Manulife, Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, and the U.S. Forest Service as well as support from elected officials, both locally and in Congress, for making this conservation victory possible.”

The Tualatin Mountain Forest project will secure a 3,111-acre forest near Scappoose as a working research forest to be owned and managed by Oregon State University. The project will serve as a national model for an actively managed forest, mitigate climate change, and create public access and recreation opportunities..

“The Tualatin Mountain Forest project has great potential to develop a research and demonstration forest with expanded community benefits,” says Kristin Kovalik, Oregon program director for the Trust for Public Land, who is acquiring the land. “Projects like this require diverse partners and we are grateful for the Oregon Department of Forestry and US Forest Service ongoing commitment to the Forest Legacy Program, and Senators Merkley and Wyden for supporting the Inflation Reduction act and the Great American Outdoors Act which help fund projects like the Tualatin Mountain Forest.”

About the Coalition for Oregon Land Trusts – The Coalition of Oregon Land Trusts (COLT) serves and strengthens the land trust community in Oregon. At COLT, we build connections and advance policies that help protect our natural world—our water, wildlife and open space—for all people, forever. This work helps our coalition members—30 conservation organizations around the state—do what they do best: protect wildlife and wild places, defend working farms and forests, provide recreation and parks, drive climate solutions and science, champion clean water for all and engage communities to protect our natural world.

About ODF – The Oregon Department of Forestry protects some 16 million acres of Oregon’s forest lands from wildfire, and regulates timber harvests to protect soil, water quality and threatened and endangered species. The head of the agency – the Oregon State Forester – approves a Forest Stewardship Plan developed by ODF staff for each project approved for funding under the Forest Legacy Program. Through Oregon Department of Forestry,  the Forest Legacy Program seeks projects that strengthen local communities across Oregon, through state, local and private partnerships in conservation.

If you’re planning to recreate around or near Bear Creek in the Rogue Valley, be aware of this.

Authorities are urging residents to exercise caution after high levels of bacteria were detected in parts of the Bear Creek watershed in Medford, Ashland, Phoenix, Talent, Jacksonville and Central Point.

Residents are asked to use caution when in contact with any waterways and especially to avoid ingestion (which may cause illness) and contact with open wounds (which may cause infection),” the release said. “Very young children should be fully supervised when playing in the water to avoid swallowing the water. It is important to note that contact with any water body – creeks, rivers, lakes, or swimming pools – carries some level of risk.”

The release did not say why these creeks have high levels of bacteria, but noted that it could be because of several reasons including pet waste, livestock waste, wild animals or illegal dumping of portable toilets or RVs. (KDRV 12)

 

Investigators in Josephine County are trying to find two runaway teens who were reported missing.

The Josephine County Sheriff’s Office said 17-year-old Kamryn Davis and 17-year-old Karson Davis were last seen in an older, faded black Honda with three other unknown females.

Kamryn is described as a 5’8” tall female, 120 pounds with brown hair and brown eyes.

JCSO described Karson as a 5’7” tall male, 135 pounds with brown hair and hazel eyes.

Anyone with information about this case is asked to call JCSO at 541-474-5123. The sheriff’s office provided no further information. (JoCo SO)

 

The United States Geological Survey (USGS) reported a magnitude 4.0 earthquake Tuesday morning off the southern Oregon coast, about 117 miles southwest of Coos Bay. The earthquake happened around 11:26 a.m. It had a recorded depth of about 8.6 miles.

On the USGS web page for the quake, nobody had reported feeling the quake as of about 1 p.m. Tuesday. There were no reported injuries.

Earthquakes in the Pacific Ocean off the Oregon coast are very common. Since July 14, there have been 15 recorded earthquakes within a 155-mile radius of Tuesday’s earthquake.

Tuesday’s quake registered as the third strongest during that time frame, behind a magnitude 4.6 earthquake on July 14 and a magnitude 4.4 earthquake on July 29. Both of those earthquakes were located about 143 miles west of Bandon. (USGS)

 

More locally produced meat will be available because of a nine-million-dollar program approved by the Legislature. Oregon is the first state on the West Coast to have its own meat inspection program approved by the federal government.

Oregon Ranchers were facing 18-month wait times to process livestock and the local inspection program reduces that delay. The Meating Place in Hillsboro is the state’s first slaughter facility under Oregon’s State Meat Inspection Program. It processes farm-to-fork meat within a 20-mile radius. (Oregon News)

 

A new report says extreme weather and poor air quality may be impacting mental health.

A climate health report by Washington, Multnomah and Clackamas counties found that during the 2020 wildfires and 2021 heat dome people had difficulty reaching mental health services. They interviewed first responders to get the information. The lack of mental health providers in the first place was compounded by smoke from the wildfires affecting travel and hot temperatures from the heat dome causing people to seek cooling centers instead of mental health support. A lack of information in languages other than English was also a problem. (Oregon News)

 

A former priest who was accused of molesting boys in Pennsylvania and later convicted of sexually abusing a young disabled man in Oregon died at a Salem hospital this week, state corrections officials disclosed Tuesday.

Roger Alan Sinclair, 75, was in “comfort care,” the Department of Corrections said in a statement, but a spokesperson would not say why Sinclair was in the hospital or what caused his death Sunday, citing health privacy rules.

Sinclair pleaded guilty to charges of first-degree attempted sodomy and first-degree sexual abuse in March 2018 in Deschutes County, according to court records.

He was arrested in 2017 for repeatedly molesting a young disabled man in Bend, but allegations of sexual abuse against Sinclair dated back as far 1981, according to an Associated Press investigation.

Sinclair served as a board member and volunteer at a Bend senior center and passed a background check because he hadn’t faced criminal charges in the other cases, according to the AP investigation.  (Oregon News)

 

The Perseid Meteor Shower, an annual event in August over Oregon, looks like it may offer clear skies for the mid-August sky watch fun as it peaks the mights of August 12th and 13th.

Technically active from July 14 to Sept. 1, the meteor shower typically produces an average of 50 to 75 meteors per hour at peak, according to the American Meteor Society, making it one of the biggest astronomical events of the year.

Meteor showers are best seen under the darkest skies possible, since the quick flashes of meteors can be drowned out by city lights or the light of the moon. Anyone in a rural location should be in good shape this year, with a moon that will pose very little threat to seeing the show.

The Perseid meteor shower occurs as the Earth moves through a debris path left behind by the Swift-Tuttle comet during its last trip past the sun in 1992. (Oregon News)

 

You can start pumping your own gas this Saturday.  Despite strong opposition from many Oregonians, Gov. Tina Kotek will allow a bill allowing self-serve gasoline across Oregon to become law, ending a 72-year ban on most drivers pumping their own gas.

Oregon will join 48 other states allowing Americans to pump their own gas, leaving only New Jersey out.

Announcing a slate of potential vetoes Friday, as required by the Oregon Constitution, Kotek did not include House Bill 2426, which will permit Oregon gas stations to open up to half of their pumps for self-serve gas. The law will still require gas stations to staff at least half their pumps for people who can’t, or don’t want to, pump their own gas.

The new law will simplify Oregon’s patchwork of self-serve gas regulations. Since 2015, some rural counties have permitted self-serve gas at night. And each summer since 2020, the state fire marshal has permitted self-serve gas statewide during wildfire season and heat waves, when smoke or extreme temperatures make it dangerous to be outside. (Oregon News sources)

 

BLM celebrates Great American Outdoors Day with free day-use access on 8/4/23.

PORTLAND, Ore, — The Bureau of Land Management is waiving recreation day-use fees for visitors on August 4, 2023, in celebration of the third annual Great American Outdoors Day. The BLM is inviting all communities to explore the unique and diverse natural landscapes and recreation facilities available on their public lands throughout Oregon and Washington.

Within Oregon and Washington, the BLM’s standard amenity day-use fees will be waived at the following:

The standard amenity fee waiver does not guarantee admission to some busy recreation areas where reservations for day-use, group sites, and overnight camping are recommended. Please contact the local BLM office if you have any questions about a recreation site you are interested in visiting.

“Providing outdoor recreation opportunities to all communities is a top priority,” said Anita Bilbao, BLM Oregon/Washington Associate State Director. “We invite everyone to enjoy the spectacular beauty of your public lands firsthand.”

The Great American Outdoors Day was established to celebrate the signing of the Great American Outdoors Act into law on August 4, 2020, which invests in the protection and sustainment of public lands. With GAOA funding, the BLM is addressing deferred maintenance needs and improving public access to numerous popular outdoor recreation destinations throughout Oregon and Washington, including the Lower Deschutes Wild and Scenic River, Loon Lake Recreation Site, Yaquina Head Outstanding Natural Area, and Hyatt Lake Campground. You can comprehensively search all available BLM recreation opportunities to explore on your public lands here.

Know before you go:
• Be fire aware. Check for local fire restrictions and active fire closures.
• Practice Leave No Trace principles and leave your public lands cleaner than you found them.
• The fee waiver only applies to standard amenity fees for day-use at the recreation sites listed. The waiver does not apply to any expanded amenity fees for overnight camping, group day-use, and cabin rentals or individual Special Recreation Permit fees along permitted rivers.

Fee-free days occur each year in celebration of Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, Washington’s Birthday, Juneteenth National Independence Day, Great American Outdoors Day, National Public Lands Day, and Veterans Day.

The remaining fee-free days in 2023 are:
• September 30 (National Public Lands Day)
• November 11 (Veterans Day)

For more information about the BLM’s recreation fee program, please visit https://www.blm.gov/programs/recreation/permits-and-fees.

 

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