North Coast
Citizen Serving North Tillamook County since 1996
NORTHCOASTCITIZEN.COM
DECEMBER 14, 2023
$1.50 VOLUME 30, NO. 25
Rockaway Renaissance Artists paint the town
Rockaway Renaissance Artists were commissioned by the Rockaway Beach Chamber of Commerce to paint fall scenes in the windows of requested downtown businesses. PHOTO BY CHELSEA YARNELL By CHELSEA YARNELL Guest Contributor
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aintings of fall scenes with pumpkins and gnomes popped up in the windows of Rockaway Beach
businesses beginning in October. Behind the paintbrushes: the Rockaway Renaissance Artists. As a subcommittee of the Rockaway Beach Chamber of Commerce, the group was
formed by the late Cindy Kay Gregory a year and half ago. “She had a vision to have a group of artists support each other,” member Jill Collar said. “A place to meet and encourage one another.”
The group now has 93 members with 10 members meeting on a weekly basis. Artists in different mediums: painters, crafters, sketchers and photographers are found amongst them.
“We come together with other artists and bounce ideas off one another,” Collar said. After Gregory’s passing in February 2023, Collar took over more and more leadership responsibility.
As pineapple express drenches Tillamook, county commissioners declare state of emergency
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PHOTO COURTESY TILLAMOOK COUNTY PUBLIC WORKS
WILL CHAPPELL Citizen Editor
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large storm system battered Tillamook County beginning December 1, dropping more than five inches in one day on Tuesday, December 5, and causing widespread areal flooding across the county. By December 7, water had mostly subsided as rain
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showers became intermittent and isolated but by that point the atmospheric river had caused serious damage to several roads across the county, with the most extensive occurring on Miami Foley Road and Sand Lake Road. And with the weekend approaching forecasters were predicting another three to five inches on Saturday and Sunday, triggering another flood watch. With rain still falling, the mounting damages led the Tillamook Board of County Commissioners to declare a state of emergency on December 6, to expedite recovery efforts and the reception of state and federal funding.
Tillamook County Public Works Director Chris Laity appeared at the commissioners’ meeting for a rundown of issues facing the county and to discuss the need for the emergency declaration. At the beginning of the meeting, the most significant damage to county infrastructure was a 30-foot washout on Miami Foley Road, 8.8 miles north of its intersection with Highway 101. The washout was caused when the Miami River rose four feet on December 5, overwhelming the capacity of a 36-inch culvert in Crystal Creek. Laity said that the culvert had been previously damaged in a 2015 storm and the
county had already been in the final stages of designing its replacement, with work planned for the summer of 2024. The design called for a 50-foot span with a budget of $2.4 million, with HB Civil contracted to complete the work. That preparation came in handy for the county, as they were able to use the existing plans and forego a lengthy design process to get work started by December 7. Laity said that the construction team had been in touch with him since the washout on the 5th, and that they had found 60-foot, used beams available in Salem that allowed the quick commencement of work. SEE PINEAPPLE EXPRESS PAGE A2
SEE PAINT THE TOWN PAGE A2
Updated modeling projects increased timber harvests in Tillamook County WILL CHAPPELL Citizen Editor
A 30-foot section of Miami Foley Road was washed out when Crystal Creek overwhelmed a culvert.
“She devotes a lot of time to the stuff that needs it,” member Chris Williams said. For some, the weekly gatherings are a time to work and
pdated harvest projections for Oregon’s State Forests accounting for a proposed habitat conservation plan were presented to the Forest Trust Lands Advisory Committee by Oregon Department of Forestry staff on December 8. The projections showed harvest levels across all state forests slightly decreasing or staying steady compared to those under a transitional implementation plan in effect this year and next. Tillamook County saw an improvement in its projected situation, with a significantly higher level of harvest forecast, increasing from 49 million board feet currently to between 62 and 74 million board feet on average over the course of the plan. Other counties, particularly Clatsop and Washington, were projected to maintain current levels or see a slight decrease, with the variation coming from different harvest scenarios that will be selected between by the board of forestry. The harvest projections presented to the Forest Trust Lands Advisory Committee (FTLAC) were part of a larger update on an in-development forest management plan (FMP) that will govern forest policy for the next 70 years. The new FMP is being developed in conjunction with and to adhere to the standards of a habitat conservation plan (HCP) that has been created concurrently. The HCP is an overarching conservation plan agreed to with federal agencies to limit damage to the habitats of endangered species and decrease the
Oregon Department of Forestry’s (ODF) risk of lawsuits challenging its impact on endangered species. To achieve those goals, the HCP will designate certain zones as habitat conservation areas, greatly restricting forestry activities therein and remove other areas from harvest rotations completely. Early projections in 2020 and 2021 predicted that the HCP would have negligible impact on harvest levels across state forests, which have averaged between 225 and 250 million board feet (mmbf) over the past decade. However, in December of 2022, more refined modeling completed for the transitional implementation plan that is governing forests this year and next year before the adoption of the FMP showed a drastic cut in harvest levels to 182.5 mmbf. Those cuts drew widespread concern in the forest trust land counties that rely heavily on state forest revenues to finance their budget. FTLAC members called on the board of forestry to halt the development of the HCP and restart with a greater focus on the economic stability of their counties. The board of forestry voted down a resolution to do just that at its February meeting 4-3, with the majority saying they preferred to wait for final numbers before making such a decision. Updated modeling was initially expected in September but due to delays was not completed until December. At the December meeting, ODF staff said that they had completed modeling for the FMP based on four different scenarios, to present SEE TIMBER HARVESTS PAGE A3