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Monday, Oct. 14, 2024
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Today’s Klamath Falls Headlines
Voters in Klamath County should get their ballots today.
Every household should have received an Oregon voters’ pamphlet today, Friday. The voters’ pamphlet is optional for candidates.
NOT every candidate is in the voters’ pamphlet.
On page 26 of the voters’ pamphlet is a list of candidates who chose not to submit a statement. They will have a * next to their name.
Testimony got underway last week at the federal courthouse in Medford for the trial of Negasi Zuberi.
Zuberi is accused of kidnapping two different women at two different times from two different places. One was from Seattle which happened in July 2023, before she was finally able to escape.
Klamath Falls Police Department Sergeant Trayhern Fox said when he searched the rented house, “There was police patches … darker boots … a holster … a baton … handcuffs,” typical of people who work in uniform, such as police, and an upper receiver for an AR-15 as a barrel assembly for an AR-15. The trial continues this week.
Klamath Falls Mayor Carol Westfall testified at the trial and said Thursday she didn’t know about the makeshift cell built inside the garage of the home she rented to a man now accused of imprisoning a woman inside the cinder block box.
But after the arrest of her tenant, Negasi Zuberi, she got a good look in the garage. Westfall called it “shocking”.
After renting the house to Zuberi in February 2023, she had driven by the home at least once when the garage door was open but couldn’t see anything inside, she said. She later learned that blue sheet or blanket hanging inside the garage apparently obscured her view, she said.
Zuberi is charged with kidnapping a woman in Seattle last year and driving her to Klamath Falls, where he is accused of locking her in the cell. The woman testified Wednesday that Zuberi sexually assaulted her on the drive to Oregon while her she was in handcuffs and leg irons.
Zuberi’s trial began last week in the James A. Redden U.S. Courthouse in Medford. He has pleaded not guilty to kidnapping the Seattle woman and a second woman from Klamath Falls.
Westfall said she rented the two-story home on North Eldorado Avenue on Feb. 1, 2023, to Zuberi for $2,000 a month. Zuberi said he was going to live there with his two children, she testified.
He had no permission to sublease the home, which she later learned he did, the mayor said. Two other men who subleased rooms in the home from Zuberi testified that they hardly spoke to him and never went in the home’s garage.
Zuberi faces two counts of kidnapping, one count of transportation for criminal sexual activity and gun charges. The trial is estimated to last three weeks.
The Klamath Falls Police Department has received several complaints regarding an individual calling and posing as a police officer with the Klamath Falls City Police Department.
This individual is advising he has arrest warrants and is requesting payment through Venmo. At no time will an officer ask for any type of payment over the phone or in person.
The phone number consistently used in each complaint is 541-287-6243, and the name provided each time is Officer Justin Ferrel.
This person is not employed by the City of Klamath Falls and the number is not associated with the Klamath Falls Police Department.
If you receive a call of this nature, please report the incident to the Klamath Falls Police Department at 541-883-5336 during normal business hours or you can call the 911 non-emergency number at 541-884-4876.
Friday, an unlikely coalition of Tribes and agricultural representatives announced mutual support for 19 restoration and water efficiency projects to address water and environmental problems in the Klamath Basin.
The 15,000-square-mile Klamath River Basin spans the Oregon/California border. It remains the third most productive salmon fishery on the West Coast, yet poor returns of salmon have led to coast-wide fishing closures for the past two years. Irrigators in the basin’s upper reaches have not seen a full water delivery in years.
The catastrophe affects agricultural and tribal communities dependent on the watershed for subsistence, culture, and economic opportunity. Precipitation patterns have changed dramatically over the years. The average annual rainfall has decreased 30 percent since the 1980s. Fish kills, and agricultural water curtailments have become the norm. Tempers and temperatures run high.
The groups decided to put their heads together and come up with projects that help us all. The group has proposed 19 restoration projects, including irrigation infrastructure improvements, wetland restoration to improve water quality and quantity, fish habitat restoration on key Klamath tributaries, and more.
The total estimated cost of these projects is $105.5 million, but these projects may be a down payment on salvaging a fishery and agricultural economy valued at over a billion dollars.This effort seeks to build upon efforts already underway in the Klamath.
Four dams that were not used to provide agricultural water diversions are now nearly removed, to improve the salmon habitat.
Funding from the Inflation Reduction Act and Bipartisan Infrastructure Law are already hitting the ground, funding water efficiency projects, new fish hatcheries for suckers, and habitat improvements for salmon.
Much of the additional funding will likely come from the United States Department of Interior’s Klamath Basin Drought Resilience Keystone Initiative.
This initiative is a new effort to steward investments from President Biden’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Law and Inflation Reduction Act and support a wide range of restoration activities that will help recover listed species, create new habitat for fish and birds, and rethink the way water moves across the Klamath Basin to better align agriculture with ecosystem function.
The KCC Foundation has been around for just about as long as the college, nearly 30 years. It celebrated the support of its donors on Sept. 26 during the first State of the Foundation gathering.
The event was sponsored by the KCC Foundation board. Donors sipped a variety of wines and sampled various dishes from charcuterie boards while KCC President Dr. Roberto Gutierrez, KCC Foundation Board Chair Kathleen Walker-Henderson, and KCC Foundation Executive Director Charles Massie reported on campus progress.
Dr. Gutierrez spoke to the progress of the Childcare Learning Center, a planned 30,000-square-foot facility just northeast of the campus at South Sixth Street and Hilyard Avenue, that will offer childcare for 120 children, and classrooms for KCC students earning their early childhood education certificates and degrees.
The foundation started the same year as the college, in 1997. The initial focus was on helping academic students stay in school and reach their educational goals. The KCC Foundation now raises funding for scholarships, as well as equipment and capital construction projects that support KCC students and educational programming.
Over the past 27 years, the foundation has expanded its focus to include supporting students seeking non-credit and career technical education credentials, those in need of emergency assistance or technology to stay in school, capital construction to support new programming and services, organizing the KCC Alumni Association and assistance for the on-campus food pantry.
A full report on KCC Foundation activities, “State of the Foundation 2024,” is available to view at: www.klamathcc.edu/en-US/foundation/state-of-the-foundation.html
Klamath County Fire District 1 Board of Directors Regular Meeting Agenda
4:00 p.m., Tuesday, October 15, 2024, at Central Fire Station, 143 N. Broad Street, Klamath Falls, OR 97601
Virtual Attendance Information:
Please register to join the meeting from a computer, tablet or smartphone
by contacting our administrative office at 541-885-2056 by Monday, October 14, 2024.
Klamath County Public Works Department road work projects this week OF OCTOBER 14, 2024
Klamath County will have work crews at the following locations. Please use caution when in
these areas and watch for flaggers. If you are able to avoid the work zones, please use an
alternate route for your safety and the safety of Klamath County employees and our contractors.
Patterson Street – Sidewalk Repairs
Expect daytime travel lane closures with Flaggers
Arthur Street (between Shasta Way and S. 6th St) – Waterline Replacement
Expect daytime travel lane closures with Flaggers
Utility Work with Intermittent Shoulder Closure
Old Fort Road – End of Pavement to ¾ mile north
In general, flagging stations will be set up at the end of the work zone and delays will be 0 to 20
minutes for the motoring public. Our goal is to minimize the delay to the motoring public. Other
minor work is occurring through the County but we are only listing the major items in this
announcement. There may be adjustments of work schedules due to weather or other items
outside of the County’s control (breakdown of equipment, material/resource availability, etc.)
Please do not contact the County if you do not see work occurring, it could be finished already
or will be rescheduled.
Klamath County Public Works and the Board of County Commissioners appreciate the motoring
publics’ patience during the repair season for our local roads and bridges. If you have any
questions regarding work, please contact the Public Works Department at (541) 883-4696.
BLM preparing for fall prescribed burning.
Fuels specialists may begin ignitions as early as October 15, if conditions are favorable. The Klamath Falls Field Office hopes to accomplish up to 750 acres of pile burning.
Ignitions are expected to continue over the next several months as weather conditions allow.
Prescribed burn projects are planned throughout the region. Prescribed burning reduces hazardous fuels which can burn during wildfires. The piles are concentrations of leftover materials from previous thinning projects. Where possible, material was first offered for firewood, commercial sale, or biomass use. Some material was also scattered to rehabilitate sites and close user-created routes. Each project can take several days or several weeks to complete, depending on the size.
Crews will move between each project area based on site-specific weather. Main roads within the project areas will be signed to inform residents and the public of planned prescribed fire activity. No road closures or delays are expected.
All prescribed burning is highly dependent on favorable temperature, moisture, and wind conditions. Each of these prescribed burns will only be implemented if the conditions are right to meet the objectives of the burn. All prescribed burn areas will be patrolled during and following ignitions. Prescribed burns are completed in cooperation with the Oregon Department of Forestry smoke management plan.
Piles may smolder, burn, and produce smoke for several days after ignition. Efforts will be made to minimize smoke impacts to nearby communities.
For more information on prescribed burning or for information specific to the BLM Klamath Falls Field Office, call 541-883-6916.
The Klamath County Veterans Service Office will accept nominations for Klamath County’s Oldest Living Veteran.
The Nomination form will be open through October 31, 2024. To nominate a veteran stop by the Veterans Service Office, 3328 Vandenberg Rd. or call 541-883-4274.
The chosen Veteran will be honored on Monday, November 11, 2024 during the Veteran’s Day Ceremony at Veterans Memorial Park.
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Around the State of Oregon
LINN COUNTY, Ore. 11 Oct. 2024 – An Oregon State Police K-9 team seized a large quantity of crystal methamphetamine earlier this week.
On Oct. 8, 2024, at about 5:00 p.m., an Oregon State Trooper stopped a vehicle on Interstate 5 in Linn County for a traffic violation. During the stop, the trooper recognized signs of possible drug trafficking and deployed his drug detection K-9.
A search of the vehicle revealed 40 pounds of crystal methamphetamine in the trunk. The driver, Sheyla Jesmely Serrano Lopez (27) of Shafter (CA), was arrested and lodged in jail.
No additional information is available for release at this time.
A $300 million lawsuit against Medford-based Asante is growing.
More clients are signing on and as a result the suit has grown to $340 million. The medical malpractice and wrongful death lawsuit was field by Medford-based law firm Shlesinger & deVilleneuve on behalf of both patients who survived and those who passed away.
At least one of those patients was a Klamath Falls resident.
The law firm says there are 20 victims involved in the suit. It’s still evaluating whether to include about a dozen additional potential cases in the suit. The lawsuit alleges Asante didn’t follow safety protocols and prevent a nurse from replacing fentanyl, meant for patients, with tap water.
Former Asante nurse, Dani Marie Schofield, is now facing 44 counts of second-degree assault in connection with the alleged drug diversion case at Asante’s Rogue Regional Medical Center.
According to Medford Police, Schofield diverted patients’ liquid fentanyl for her personal use and replaced it with tap water causing serious infections. After her arrest this summer, Schofield is out on bail and awaiting trial in the criminal case. Two other civil lawsuits were filed against Asante earlier this year.
Last week, the Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office initiated a death investigation east of Highway 97 north of State Recreation Road in a wooded area, after suspected human remains were located north of La Pine.
Together with the Deschutes County District Attorney’s Office, and Oregon State Police Forensic Unit, the Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office Detectives Unit was able to positively identify the deceased subject as Daniel Richard Phillips, according to the Deschutes County Sheriff’s office.
Phillips, 44, of Oregon City, had been missing for 15 months from the Crescent area. Crescent is in northern Klamath County. Currently, based on the evidence and investigation thus far, foul play is not suspected. The investigation is ongoing.
The Shoe Fire burning in Shasta County has grown to 1,853 acres. It is still 0% contained. The fire is burning on the Shasta-Trinity National Forest northeast of Shasta Lake.
According to InciWeb, several structures, campgrounds, and power infrastructures are threatened. Currently firefighters have limited access to the perimeter of the fire because of snags.
The Shasta County Sheriff’s Office has issued a mandatory evacuation in zone LKH-1448-B. More information on evacuations can be found on Genasys Protect.
Road closures include the westbound side of Fenders Ferry Road at the Pit River 7 Bridge and the eastside of Fenders Ferry Road at McCloud River Bridge.
The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) is proposing a new management plan for the Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument.
The monument spans across around 113,500 acres of protected land in Southcentral Oregon and Northern California. It’s currently managed under three separate management plans, but with the draft plan, management of the monument will be more consistent.
A 30-day protest period for the proposed resource management plan begins October 11, ending November 12.
BLM Oregon/Washington State Director Barry Bushue says this plan is a combined effort of communities, tribes, local governments and other partners. BLM held public meetings for a draft plan back in May.
Great Oregon Shakeout is October 17th
Governor Tina Kotek and the Oregon Department of Emergency Management (OEM) staff invite all Oregonians to join the statewide and national earthquake drill, OEM shared in a press release on Thursday. This drill will simulate the response to an earthquake with the “Drop, Cover, and Hold On” method for 60 seconds.
The Great Oregon ShakeOut is part of a global earthquake drill taking place at 10:21 a.m. on Thursday, October 17, which will involve more than 500,000 Oregonians, including individuals, families, schools, and businesses. Participants pledge to drop, cover, and hold on, wherever they are and whatever they’re doing. Learn more about the Great Oregon ShakeOut and register to participate by visiting ShakeOut.org/Oregon.
The value of Oregon’s agricultural products soared 35% in five years ending in 2022, a big jump that highlights farms’ economic role in just about every county in the state.
In 2022, according to results, Oregon produced nearly $6.8 billion of nursery plants, beef, hay, berries, potatoes, beans, milk, eggs and Christmas trees, among other products.
That’s according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s latest census of the nation’s agricultural output, conducted every five years. Farms operate in all corners of the state. The biggest output is concentrated in the upper Willamette Valley and northeast Oregon. Plants, trees, shrubs, flowers and grass are Oregon’s most valuable farm products, the census found. They’re grown most in the damp, fertile soil of Marion and Clackamas counties.
Marion County’s farm products had the most market value of any county in the state, $874 million — about 13% of Oregon’s total. Cattle are Oregon’s second-most valuable agricultural good. The state’s cattle trade is concentrated in Morrow County, whose farm products are just behind Marion County’s in terms of total market value. Oregon farming is far less important to the state’s economy than it was 50 years ago, when agricultural accounted for about 1 in every 18 jobs. But Oregon’s economy is about twice as dependent on farming as the average state’s.
Oregon Housing and Community Services’ Homeowner Assistance Fund accepting final applications online
—Oregon Housing and Community Services (OHCS) is reopening the Homeowner Assistance Fund (HAF) online application portal to accept final applications directly from homeowners. Applications must be submitted by Oct. 31, 2024. New applications will be put on a waitlist and prioritized for homeowners most at risk of foreclosure or loss.
Homeowners can now review application criteria and apply directly online using a link on the HAF website: oregonhomeownerassistance.org. If homeowners need or would like assistance with an application, they can contact a HAF intake partner. A list of intake partners can be found at https://www.oregon.gov/ohcs/homeownership/Pages/Homeownership-Assistance-Fund.aspx.
“OHCS is reopening the online application portal through Oct. 31, 2024, to ensure we help as many Oregon families as possible,” said Ryan Vanden Brink, assistant director of Homeowner Assistance Programs. “With our average award of $26,500, we can assist approximately 250 additional households. Any further applications will be placed on a waitlist pending the availability of funds.”
HAF offers federal temporary COVID-19 pandemic relief to help homeowners who experienced financial hardship due to the pandemic. HAF can help homeowners become current on their mortgages, county taxes, homeowners’ (HOA) or condo associations, land sale contracts, secured manufactured home or floating home loans, and lot rent or moorage fees associated with homeowners in manufactured home parks or marinas. Financial hardship includes a reduction in income or an increase in housing costs resulting from the pandemic.
Homeowners are eligible to apply if they meet the program’s general eligibility criteria and are facing foreclosure, involved in a court case that threatens their home, in property tax foreclosure, in collections with their HOA, or in other high-risk situations identified by a housing counselor. Homeowners in foreclosure may have already received outreach letters from OHCS or their county assessor.
OHCS will make its final HAF payments in February 2025, limiting total assistance available to new applicants.OHCS encourages homeowners to explore all other options with their servicer or a housing counselor before applying for HAF. Applying for HAF does not guarantee approval or that a foreclosure will be postponed. HAF is administered by the U.S. Department of Treasury.
Snap Benefits provided through the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program are set to increase this week.
The Cost of Living Adjustment impacts the maximum allotments for those who receive SNAP, commonly known as food stamps. The changes will take effect on Oct. 1 and last until Sept. 30, 2025. SNAP eligibility depends on household income and assets and is adjusted yearly.
Some 42.1 million people – roughly 12.6% of people in the U.S. – benefited from SNAP each month in 2023, according to data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The average benefit was $211.93 per month. State-by-state participation rate ranges from a low of 4.6% in Utah to 23.1% in New Mexico.
The cost of camping is going up in Oregon. The Oregon Parks and Recreation Department is increasing camping, parking and reservation fees to keep pace with inflation.
Most of the increases range from two to five dollars. On October 15th, base camping fees will increase. On January 1st, reservation fees increase from eight to ten dollars. Parking fees will increase from five to ten dollars. On July 1st, the out-of-state 25 percent surcharge on RV campsites will be expanded to all camping.
Utility costs for example have increased by 28% over the last 4 years, but most fees have remained the same. Depending on the fee, the last increase was anywhere from seven to 15 years ago for base fees.
OPRD will increase its base camping fees for the first time since 2017. The increase applies to all camping reservations for 2025. Starting on October 15, 2024, all reservations made for 2025 stays will include the fee increase. OPRD has three main sources of funding: a little less than half comes from constitutionally dedicated lottery funds, about 15% comes from recreational vehicle license plate fees and roughly 35% comes from park fees from visitors. OPRD is not funded by taxes.
Drop and give me… 1,000?
Maj. Tommy Vu of the Oregon National Guard is once again a world champ as of Friday after completing a jaw-dropping 1,027 chest-to-ground burpees in just an hour’s time. A burpee is a full-body exercise that combines a squat, plank, push-up, and jump to burn calories, improve cardio health, and build strength and endurance. And it’s a mean, tough competitive event as well.
Vu previously sweated his way into the record books in March 2023, when he completed 1,003 reps of burpees in an hour.
Habtamu Franke, a personal trainer in The Netherlands, stole Vu’s title later that year by performing 1,010 burpees in 60 minutes flat. The 37-year-old citizen soldier reclaimed his crown last week at Lancaster Physiq Fitness in Salem, working out in front of a countdown clock and rolling camera as family and friends cheered him on.
While the feat awaits certification from the Guinness World Records organization, Vu said he’s already mulling how to master the eight, 12- and 24-hour burpee world records (which, for the record, is 9,119 burpees in 24 hours).
Simulating Response to a Cascadia Subduction Zone Earthquake
SALEM, Ore. – The Oregon Department of Emergency Management (OEM) is preparing to host IronOR 24, a statewide emergency exercise taking place October 28-31, 2024. This four-day exercise is designed to test Oregon’s capabilities and readiness in responding to a catastrophic Cascadia Subduction Zone (CSZ) Earthquake.
Building upon the Cascadia Rising 2016 exercise, which simulated the immediate response to a Cascadia up to day 3. IronOR 24 will focus on continued operations Day 4 through Day 7 of the disaster response. The exercise will evaluate the state’s ability to maintain operational coordination, ensure critical communication systems remain functional, and develop a strategy for human impacts during these critical days of response.
IronOR 24 Exercise Schedule:
- Monday, October 28: Event Preparation and Scene Setting
- Tuesday, October 29: Exercise Play
- Wednesday, October 30: Exercise Play
- Thursday, October 31: Exercise Play and Review
The 12-month planning process for IronOR 24 involved a review of lessons learned from Cascadia Rising, and further development of critical statewide response. Key goals of the exercise include:
- Operational coordination: ensuring the Oregon Emergency Coordination Center (ECC) can prioritize and coordinate response actions, sharing critical incident information throughout the simulated response.
- Redundant communications: testing the establishment and maintenance of communications systems to mitigate the impacts of disrupted communications following the earthquake.
- Human impacts strategy: addressing the human needs of those affected by the earthquake, including sheltering, healthcare, and mass care, through Emergency Support Function (ESF) #6.
“IO24 is a collaborative opportunity to practice a unified Cascadia Earthquake response that will include participation from 18 state agencies, 17 county governments, 9 Oregon recognized Tribal governments, and 10+ federal agencies participating at varying levels over three days.” said Robert Quinn, Exercise Officer at the Oregon Department of Emergency Management. ” This exercise enables our statewide partners to assess their current capabilities and readiness for this significant hazard.”
OEM has developed a dedicated online storyboard for IronOR 24, which serves as a central hub for exercise planning, updates and resources. This tool supports participating agencies and provides non-participating organizations with critical context about the exercise.
The Pacific Northwest is, probably, headed into a La Niña winter this year, which isn’t exactly a shock.
While last winter had a strong El Niño pattern, La Niña is quite common. While the latest update on winter outlook and the chances of La Niña doesn’t come out until next week, NOAA currently suggests there is a 60% chance of another La Niña this winter.
Right now, the NOAA outlooks published in September show a more than 33% chance that the northern edge of Oregon will have below-average temperatures from December through February and a more than 33% chance that a good portion of the state will have more precipitation than average. A more up-to-date outlook is expected next week, but the chance for a La Niña winter is likely to hold.
The La Niña this winter is expected to be weak. According to Larry O’Neill, Oregon’s state climatologist, since 1950 nine out of 15 weak La Niñas have been cooler than normal and only seven out of 15 had more precipitation than normal.
The Crater Lake newt, found only in the waters of Crater Lake, might be warranted for listing under the Endangered Species Act.
In a news release, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced the completion of a 90-day finding on a petition to list the Crater Lake newt under the ESA.
“The Fish and Wildlife Service’s review found the petition presented credible information indicating listing as the newt threatened or endangered may be warranted, and in-depth status reviews will be initiated,” according to the release.
Populations of the Crater Lake newt, also known as Mazama newt, have sharply declined in recent years because of signal crayfish, which feed on the newts, along with warming lake temperatures from climate changes.
The Crater Lake newt is described as a distinct darker-colored subspecies of the rough-skinned newt that is widely distributed throughout the Pacific Northwest.
The petition included credible information that habitat and food web alteration by signal crayfish, climate change, reduced effective population size, and range restriction, may be threats to the newt. A substantial 90-day finding is the first step in the petition process and does not indicate the species will be listed as threatened or endangered. The finding indicates only that an in-depth review is warranted and that a full status review should occur.
Crater Lake newts are a characterized by unusually dark ventral pigmentation that, according to genetic analyses, are “morphologically and physiologically distinct from populations of newts outside of the lake. The Crater Lake newt is adapted to being at the top of the lake’s aquatic food chain and lacks any predator defense mechanisms.
FALL BACK ONE HOUR…starts Sunday, Nov. 3, 2024.
In a little less than a month, it will be time to set your clocks back to standard time.
Daylight saving time will end at 2 a.m. Sunday, Nov. 3, 2024. Most devices these days will adjust automatically to the time change, but don’t forget to set any traditional clocks back by one hour.
Despite several efforts to end seasonal time changes, we will be falling back in November and springing forward in March for the foreseeable future. Oregon, Washington and California have all made multiple attempts to permanently switch to either standard or daylight saving time — but none of the efforts have stuck.
Changing to daylight saving time requires congressional approval — and that approval doesn’t appear to be likely, despite bipartisan efforts to allow states to make the change.
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