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Living and Doing Business Guide 2014


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Newport A Great place to Live and Work Welcome to Newport, the Friendliest! Perched on the edge of the magnificent Pacific Ocean, Newport is a dynamic, warm community of 9,900 with active fishing, tourism, scientific, and arts communities. It is a perfect place to live, play, work, raise a family, and do business. It is home to Oregon’s largest fishing fleet, miles of sandy beaches, Oregon State University’s Hatfield Marine Science Center, the Oregon Coast Aquarium, and the West Coast home port of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. We welcome you to explore what Newport has to offer through this publication as well as by visiting or moving your home, business, or family here. City of Newport Fact Sheet • Named one of the top ten Best Small Towns in America 2002 – Making Your Move to One of America’s Best Small Towns, Norm Crampton • Named one of the 100 Best Small Art Towns in America – 100 Best Small Art Towns in America, John Villani • Oregon Coast Aquarium named one of the top ten in the country by Parents Magazine, Forbes Traveler, USA Today, 10Best.com and Coastal Living • Nye Beach named by Sunset Magazine the West Coast’s most romantic beach • Historic Bayfront named by Sunset Magazine the West’s best waterfront (1999) • SelectCity.com awarded Newport its Smart Choice Seal of Approval for those wanting to find a perfect place to live • Named outstanding community by Searchers, Inc., an independent organization providing information to those contemplating retirement or the purchase of a second home • Miles of beautiful sandy beaches for kite flying, sandcastles, beachcombing and sunsets • Year round charters available for whale watching, fishing, bay, river and ocean tours and sunset cruises • Newport’s annual Seafood & Wine Festival, held in late February, is the largest event of its kind, drawing nearly 20,000 visitors a year • The largest commercial fishing fleet on the Oregon coast • Yaquina Head Outstanding Natural Area • Year-round population of great gray whales • Home to two century-old lighthouses (one the tallest working lighthouse in Oregon; the other reputedly haunted) • More than 1,700 lodging rooms • First attracted settlers in 1862; incorporated in 1882 • Located on the Oregon coast 118 miles from Portland, Oregon; 130 miles from Portland International Airport • One of 12 Coast Guard Cities, USA Directions: Travel on I-5 south to Corvallis; take exit 228 to Highway 34, then head west on Highway 20 to Newport For further information about Newport, contact the Greater Newport Chamber of Commerce, 1-800-262-7844 or visit www.DiscoverNewport.com Note: High-resolution photography can be downloaded from: www.DiscoverNewport.com by clicking on Press Room-Photo Gallery

Photos: Johanna Wienert

www.newportchamber.org -3


Chamber Leadership Letter From Executive Director The Greater Newport Chamber of Commerce has a diverse program of work. The economic health, vitality, livability and sustainability of our community are the foundation of our values. We provide a number of services that are a direct benefit to members and to the community as a whole, including programs such as Beautification, Young-Professionals, Ambassadors, Visitor Services, Tourism Promotion, and Hospitality. Our weekly luncheon programs provide a venue for members to network with one another while receiving information valuable to their business. Our collaborative partnerships help shape and create a sustainable community and leverage our member’s investment, bringing added value to every membership. Our community is full of caring, creative and hard-working citizens who dedicate much time and energy volunteering with the Chamber and scores of other local non-profit organizations. We embrace and encourage these efforts and have a deep appreciation for all who serve on committees and at events-whether they are Chamber related or not. I am grateful to be part of an organization which is such a positive force in our community, and am humbled to work with those who give their efforts to make Newport a wonderful place to live, work and play.

Lorna Davis

Executive Director Greater Newport Chamber of Commerce

Chamber Staff Assistant DirectorMembership Services & Events Sheena Scarberry

Tourism Services & Festival Coordinator Bobbi Price

Visitor Services & Leadership Lincoln Coordinator Mike Yost

Accounting & Visitor Services Carol Adams

PR & Sponsorship Coordinator Courtney Rand

4- www.newportchamber.org

Chamber Board Board of Directors EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE President Don Mann, Port of Newport 1st Vice President Judy Kuhl, Best Western Plus Agate Beach Inn 2nd Vice President Patti Ferry, OSU Federal Credit Union Secretary Rich Evans, E2 Electric Treasurer Doug Hunt, Lincoln County Commissioner Past President Don Lindly Past President-at-Large Susan Ernst, Farmers Insurance - Beck/Ernst Ins. Board of Directors John Baker, NW Management Lauren Craven, Friends of Yaquina Lighthouses Daniella Crowder, Bike Newport Danielle Emerick, Oregon Coast Event Rentals Lisa Ely, Samaritan Communities Hospital Al Fitzpatrick, Coast Guard Community College Mark Hanrahan, Oregon Coast Aquarium Doug Orr, Ocean Tire Factory Jim Protiva, City of Newport Parks and Recreation James Rand, News-Times Catherine Rickbone, OCCA/PAC/VAC Randy Teich, Newport Gentle Dentistry Ex-Officio Directors Sandra Roumagoux City of Newport Mayor Tom Rinearson, Lincoln County School District Chamber Contact Info Greater Newport Chamber of Commerce 555 SW Coast Highway Newport, OR 97365 Tel: (541) 265-8801 or (800) COAST44 – Fax: (541) 265-5589 Email: info@newportchamber.org www.newportchamber.org Photos: Cohen & Park


About the Chamber The Greater Newport Chamber of Commerce is one of the most progressive and dynamic organizations on the Oregon Coast. Boasting over 600 member businesses and individuals, the Chamber consistently has between 15 and 20 active volunteer committees working to enhance the community and our business climate. Its mission is “to unite the efforts of the citizens in promoting civic, commercial, agricultural, tourist, marine and industrial welfare of the City of Newport and its surrounding economic area.” In short, we strive to create an environment in which our members can succeed. In so doing, we also build a stronger and healthier community. During an average month the Greater Newport Chamber answers thousands of phone calls, greets about the same number of visitors in our office, mails out hundreds of visitor and relocation packets, responds to hundreds more via fax and e-mail, logs close to 1.5 million visits to our website, and passes along countless referrals to Chamber member businesses. All of these contacts add up to increased profits for each of our members. Although the times are constantly changing and technological advances are continually altering the way we conduct business, the essentials of doing business will forever be the same. Face-to-face contact with your business associates and customers, developing relationships, networking with peers, and supporting those with whom you conduct commerce is precisely what doing business is all about. That’s why we sponsor a range of events, from weekly to annually, that foster fact-to-face networking and socializing, the cornerstones of collaboration and business development. Chamber Luncheons and Ambassador Showcases occur on a weekly basis, providing venues for associating with fellow members. Members are encouraged to participate in a variety of committees, including Governmental Affairs, Seafood & Wine Festival, Ambassadors, Hospitality, Beautification and many more. Committee meetings occur monthly and are excellent ways to get involved with the community. A Business After Hours reception is held every month with the primary goal of fostering networking and socializing. Annual events that occur throughout the year include the annual Awards Banquet, Know Your Newport, the Banquet and Balloon Auction, ScaryOkie, and of course, the Seafood & Wine Festival. “Doing Business” is what we at the Chamber are proud to promote within our membership and community!

The Chamber’s Young Professionals The Newport Chamber’s Young Professionals, or Yo-Pros, is a group of earlier-career Chamber members who come together for civic projects, social networking events, and support of local Chamber businesses through monthly Lunch Mobs. The mission of the Young Professionals is to improve the quality of life for this group and to maintain the age demographic of Yo-Pros residing in Lincoln County. Yo-Pros events have included an 80s Prom, a barbecue and bonfire event at Agate Beach, and trivia at the Rogue Ales Public House. The Yo-Pros also lent a hand to Lincoln County School District’s H.E.L.P (Homeless Education & Literacy Project) by baking goods for the bake sale portion of their fundraiser “Art of the Heart,” which successfully raised over $1,500 to assist homeless youth of Lincoln County. The Yo-Pros teamed up with the City of Newport, ABATE, and the local Girl Scouts to serve many of our community’s senior citizens their Thanksgiving meal. And they had a ton of fun “Bowling for Hunger,” where they knocked down pins while collecting canned goods for the local food pantry. One of the most popular Yo-Pros events is the annual “Amazing Race,” modeled after the television show. Teams of two solve a series of clues that lead from one Newport location to another, completing challenges along the way in a race to the finish line. Past challenges have included donning an ocean survival suit (and swimming in it!), gutting fish, and slaloming on skateboards. Many more projects and events are in store for the group. If you are interested in participating in this group please contact the Newport Chamber of Commerce at 541-265-8801, or visit our Facebook page, Young Professionals- Newport Chamber of Commerce for updates. More information about all Chamber programs can be found at www.newportchamber.org.

Photos: Courtesy Greater Newportt Chamber of Commerce

www.newportchamber.org -5


Credits Letter from the Editor I consider myself a lucky woman. I live in Newport. I work in Newport. My son goes to school here, I do business here, and I am surrounded by this extraordinary community every day. When it came time to produce this publication, I hoped to transmit to its readers what those of us who live and work here already know: Newport is a special place, with a magic all its own. Where else can you walk on a spectacular beach bookended by two dramatic lighthouses, hear a symphony concert, learn about the biology of an octopus, and have the best fish & chips of your life, all in a single day? Even on a typical work day, when I am too busy to go to the beach and I eat a peanut butter sandwich sitting at my computer rather than fresh fish at a local restaurant, I feel lucky to live and work here. I hope this guide to living and doing business in Newport will entice you to consider a visit or a move here. But what’s not in this guide is just as important as what is: the warmth, creativity, energy, and compassion of the people here. You’ll have to experience those things first hand, and when you do, I’m sure you’ll want to be one of the lucky ones, too. Enjoy!

Nancy Steinberg Editor

Cover Photo

Jo Wienert jofotos.com

News-Times Staff Publisher Jamie Rand

Advertising Manager Barbara Moore A Publication of the

Advertising Consultant Teresa Barnes

Advertising Consultant John Anderson

The cover photo by JoHanna Wienert is a picture of the intersection at NW 3rd Street and NW Coast street in the Nye Beach district. We chose this photo to illustrate the growth and development of the Nye Beach area. The buildings provide business owners with excellent retail space below while beautiful condos sit above. Contact Us:

831 NE Avery • Newport Or, 97365 541-265-8571

Advertising Consultant Krisstina Borton

6- www.newportchamber.org

The Living and Doing Business Guide is published annually for The Greater Newport Chamber of Commerce by the News Times. All rights reserved, material may not be reprinted without written consent from the Publisher. The News Times made every effort to maintain the accuracy of information presented in the magazine, but assumes no responsibility for errors, changes or omissions. Photos: Johanna Wienert


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www.newportchamber.org -7


Contents 3 • Welcome to Newport Fact sheet and directions

4 • Chamber Leadership

Letter from executive director, chamber staff and board

5 • Credits

Letter from editor, News-Times staff and cover photo newport

8 • Geography and Climate 9 • History 10 • Governance Meet the city manager, Spencer Nebel and the mayor, Sandy Roumagoux community

12 • Community Events

Dungeness crab pots on Newport's bay fornt - Dungeness crab was the highest value species harvested, averaging $11,798,048 per year. The ex-vessel dollars are multiplied into the community several times over. In 2006 Dungeness crab was the top species landed in Oregon by value. 13-15 • Featured Events

Newport Seafood and Wine Festival, Oregon Coast Jazz Party, Lighted Boat Parade, Oyster Cloyster, Newport Symphony Orchestra’s Summerfest, Newport Marathon

living

12 • Community Events

16 • Newport by District

Agate beach, Nye Beach, South Beach, Deco, and Bayfront

18-19 • Featured Districts Nye Beach and the Bayfornt

16 • Newport by District

Agate beach, Nye Beach, South Beach, Deco, and Bayfront

Photos: Johanna Wienert

www.newportchamber.org -8


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Newport A Great place to Live and Work Geography and Climate: Ten beautiful square miles and mild temperatures year-round Newport encompasses 10.59 square miles of historic neighborhoods, scenic vistas, a deep-water port, and magnificent coastline. Of that area, 9.05 square miles is land and the rest is water, including Yaquina Bay. Newport’s share of Oregon’s 363-mile coastline is approximately 10 miles, which spans sandy beaches, rocky headlands and tide pools, and dramatic sandstone cliffs. By state law, all of this incredible coastline is in the public domain and is accessible along its entire length. Yaquina Head, at the northern end of town, is home to a majestic lighthouse, fascinating tide pools, and some of the largest summertime bird colonies in the state. This area, a major tourist draw, is managed by the federal Bureau of Land Management. Sandy and scenic Nye Beach is easily accessible and close to the shopping and restaurants of the Nye Beach neighborhood. South Beach State Park provides opportunities for surfing and long beach walks. For more details about Newport’s beaches, see page XX. Yaquina Bay, the estuary formed where the Yaquina River meets the Pacific Ocean, is a productive ecosystem, a scenic treasure, and a critical port for fishing, tourism, and shipping. It provides a sheltered deepwater port for an active and successful commercial and recreational fishing fleet, commercial ships docking at the Port of Newport (which is working on establishing a new log exporting operation from its recently rebuilt International Terminal), NOAA and Oregon State University research vessels, and hundreds of private pleasure craft. Newport is accessed from the north and south by U. S. Route 101, and from the east by U. S. Route 20. Communities to the north of Newport include Depoe Bay and Lincoln City; to the south are Seal Rock, Waldport, and Yachats. Toledo, OR, is 7 miles to the east of Newport on Hwy 101. Newport is 50 miles from Corvallis, 135 miles from Portland, 84 miles from Salem, and 98 miles from Eugene. You can’t discuss Newport’s climate without discussing rainfall. It might as well be stated up front: It rains a lot. Average annual precipitation is 67.77 inches, the majority of which falls in the winter months. Because of the climate-moderating influence of the ocean, it never gets tremendously hot or cold: Summer temperatures are typically in the 60s, with rare and welcome warmer days up to about 80 degrees. In the winter it rarely freezes, and temperatures tend to bottom out in the 40s. Snow is extremely rare. Summer winds often pick up mid-day, and the beach can get breezy or foggy around that time. However, there are microclimates throughout Newport where summer temperatures are generally warmer and the blanket of fog does not penetrate. Just a few blocks inland the weather can be much different than the beach. When summer winds blow from the north, it is often warm and still on Agate Beach directly to the south of Yaquina Head. Breaks in the winter weather are frequent, and, mysteriously, we usually end up with a few gorgeous, summery days in February. Locals know that Vivian Greene got it right when she said, “Life isn't about waiting for the storm to pass; it's about learning to dance in the rain.” We dance, and walk, and run, and hike, and play sports in the rain here and because the temperatures are mild, we don’t mind at all.

10- www.newportchamber.org

Photo: Johanna Wienert


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Newport A Great place to Live and Work Governance: What makes Newport tick The City of Newport operates under a Council-Manager form of government, a common approach to governance for smaller cities like ours. Under this structure, the City Council, elected by the citizens of the city, appoints a professional City Manager to serve as the administrative head of the city. The City Manager is like the city’s CEO; he or she is responsible for implementing policies and statutes decided on by the Council. The Newport City Council includes the Mayor and six councilors, all uncompensated volunteers, elected from the city at large. Mayoral terms are two years while Council terms are six years. At the first Council meeting of the year, the Council elects a Council President from among its membership, who presides over Council meetings (and performs other Mayoral duties) in the absence of the Mayor. Volunteer committees appointed by the Mayor advise the Council on a number of key topics. Committees include: Planning Commission, Budget Committee, Retirement Board, Airport Committee, Library Board, Parks and Recreation Committee, Senior Advisory Committee, Destination Newport Committee, and the Pedestrian/Bicycle Committee. From time to time, the Mayor may appoint task forces or other groups to work on specific issues. The City Council meets on the first and third Mondays of each month. Work sessions are usually held at noon, and the regular meeting is held at 6:00 P.M. City Council packets and audio files of Council meetings are posted on the city's website (newportoregon.gov/citygov/comm/cc.asp). Videotapes of City Council meetings are shown on Charter Channel 4 at 6:00 am on Tuesdays and 10:00 am on Thursdays during the second and fourth weeks of the month. City departments and functions include Administration, Finance, Community Development, Police, Fire, Public Works, Parks and Recreation, Airport, Library, and Municipal Court. The City of Newport also owns and operates a number of community facilities, including the Public Library, Recreation Center, Municipal Pool, and the 60+ Activity Center. The city-owned Visual Arts Center and Performing Arts Center are operated by the Oregon Coast Council on the Arts. Newport is the County Seat of Lincoln County (population: 46,151). Lincoln County is governed by a three-member paid Board of Commissioners, who are elected at-large to four-year terms. Until the November 2013 election, the position of County Commissioner was partisan, but it will now be nonpartisan in accordance with most other counties in Oregon. The Commissioners meet every Wednesday at 9:30 am at the Lincoln County Courthouse (agendas and minutes are all online at www.co.lincoln.or.us/board/). The County government structure includes the County Clerk’s office (responsible for running elections, issuing marriage licenses, and maintaining records), Public Works, District Attorney’s office, Health and Human Services, Parks, and more.

Meet the City Manager Spencer Nebel is brand new to his job as City Manager of Newport, having started in December of 2013, but he brings a wealth of city government experience to his new-found home. For the past 21 years, he has been City Manager in the town of Sault Sainte Marie, Michigan, and served in the same capacity for two other Michigan towns for a total of ten years before that. Nebel has a Master’s Degree in Public Administration from Northern Michigan University. He is an International City/County Management Association (ICMA) Credentialed Manager, and received the “Excellence in Service Award” from the Michigan Municipal League in 2003 and 2012. Nebel is excited to make the big move from the Mid-west to Newport, as he has two sisters living in Oregon, and he and his wife have vacationed in our fair state. His successful leadership in a town not dissimilar to Newport – a port town with a large tourist economy – bodes well for his tenure here. Newport is excited to welcome him, and for him to get to work!

Meet the Mayor To many it might seem that art and politics have little in common. Sandra Roumagoux, painter and current Mayor of Newport, would disagree. Her artist’s statement on her web site says, in part, “I don’t know how to separate politics from art. Both ask something of us, something that challenges us to a responsibility. Painter or politician, we come as candidates. We want our message to resonate with the body politic, with the voters. We make promises.” Roumagoux was born in Yakima, WA, and raised on a farm in the Willamette Valley. After earning her BA and MFA at the University of Arkansas, she returned to Oregon, settling in Newport in 1985. Her work has been exhibited in a wide range of galleries and shows throughout the Pacific Northwest, and her paintings are held in the collections of Microsoft in Redmond, WA, Oregon Health Sciences University in Portland, and a range of other institutions, as well as in private collections. Roumagoux has taught painting and other art classes at institutions ranging from Portland Community College to the Massachusetts College of Art, and she held the position of Dean of Instruction at Oregon Coast Community College from 1987 (when the college was founded) until 1991. She also served on the college’s board, an elected position. Roumagoux was elected to a two-year term as Mayor in November of 2012.

12- www.newportchamber.org

Photos: Courtesy City of Newport


Newport: A City Rich in History If all the world’s an oyster, the City of Newport is definitely a pearl. In fact, it was the Yaquina Bay oyster beds that first attracted settlers to Newport in 1862. Great profits were made by exporting the delicacy to San Francisco and elsewhere, and those settlers were the first to experience all the treasures the area had to offer. Yaquina Bay was opened to white settlement in 1864. Newport’s first tourist destination resort was built in 1866 by a forward-thinking pioneer named Sam Case. It was Sam who named the town “Newport,” after his favorite town in Rhode Island. More resorts soon followed, paving the way for Newport’s incorporation in 1882 and establishing the community as a premier tourist destination along the Oregon coast. Newport’s subsequent development centered around three distinct areas: The Bayfront, Nye Beach, and the Highway 101 Corridor. The tourism industry has enjoyed a long, successful history in Newport. In the early 1900s, Nye Beach was the number one tourist attraction on the Oregon coast, offering salt-water taffy stores, concessions, agate shops and penny arcades, as well as rooming houses and resorts. Newport’s seafood industry boomed in 1908 when electricity (and refrigeration) became available. Construction of the Yaquina Head Lighthouse helped make Yaquina Bay a favorite shipping port. The seafood industry still thrives today – Newport’s Bayfront is home to Oregon’s largest commercial fishing fleet. The timber industry also carved a niche in Newport’s history. The area was the location of the world’s largest spruce mill built by the U.S. government to supply the airplane industry in World War I. In fact, the mill provided all the wood that went into Howard Hughes’ famous Spruce Goose aircraft. Completed in 1936, the Yaquina Bay Bridge is perhaps the most recognizable landmark in Newport. The bridge helped the city become more cohesive and fostered growth along the Highway 101 corridor. Today, Newport’s history is still being made. The city is a well-balanced mix of industries, including tourism, fishing, forestry and marine science. By blending the best of new and old businesses, landmarks and attractions, Newport is preserving the treasures of the Oregon coast – now and for the future. Get to know Newport!

Oystermen on the barges. These types of barges were used for harvest oyster around 1890s .

Same Case leaning on the lower level pillar of Ocean House.

CD Johnson’s lumber ship passing under the bridge, this photo was taken March 10, 1936 Photos: Courtesy Newport Historical Society

www.newportchamber.org -13


Community

Community Events

Community Events There’s always something special happening in Newport – here are some of the premier annual events that help make our town such a vibrant place to live and a desirable travel destination! January Crab Krack Chocolate Classic Robert Burns Supper February Newport Children’s Festival BeJeweled jewelry sale Newport Seafood and Wine Festival March Historic Nye Beach Mystery Weekend Blessing of the Fleet Whale Watch Week - Spring Migration April Easter Egg Hunt in Newport Newport Paper Arts Festival at the Newport Visual Arts Center Chamber Banquet & Balloon Auction Marine Science Day, Hatfield Marine Science Center May Newport Loyalty Days Coast Hills Classic Mountain Bike Race 2014 “Know Your Newport” Hospitality Training Seminar Brewer’s Memorial Ale Fest at the Rogue Brewery Newport Home & Garden Show June Newport Marathon Newport Celtic Festival & Highland Games Annual Gem & Mineral Show

14- www.newportchamber.org

July Yaquina Bay Fireworks Newport Symphony Orchestra free community pops concert Dog Agility Show Lincoln County Fair Barrel to Keg Relay Historic Nye Beach Bead Festival Yo-Pros Amazing Race August Oregon Coast Quilters Guild Quilt Show Cruisin’ the Bay Car Show Buccaneer Rampage Race September Newport Wild Seafood Weekend Newport Half Marathon SOLV Beach & Riverside Cleanup The Gathering: Annual Longboard Classic October Oregon Coast Jazz Party (formerly Jazz at Newport) Free Flight Run 5K/10K Creatures of the Night at the Oregon Coast Aquarium “Trick or Treat in Nye Beach” Bayfront Safe Halloween Trick-or-Treat “Deco”-ween Trick or Treat November Oyster Cloyster Newport Turkey Trot Santa Claus comes to Newport to Ring in the Holiday Season! December Oregon Coast Aquarium’s “Sea of Lights” Yaquina Bay Lighted Boat Parade Whale Watch Week - Winter Migration at the Hatfield Marine Science Center

Photo: Johanna Wienert


The Newport Seafood and Wine Festival You’re Invited to Newport’s Biggest Party The population of Newport is not quite 10,000, but on the last full weekend in February it can swell to triple that number. What brings people from far and wide to the coast in the throes of winter’s darkest days and sometimes roughest weather? The promise of great food and drink, and the biggest party Newport throws. The annual Newport Seafood and Wine Festival is a four-day signature event with a festival atmosphere where more than 150 vendors, including purveyors of seafood, craftspeople, and some 80 Northwest wineries offer their goods in a gigantic tent in South Beach adjacent to the Rogue brewery. The event is a fund-raiser for the Greater Newport Chamber of Commerce. For most visitors, the heart of the weekend is the opportunity to sample and purchase a wide range of top-notch Northwest wines. Associated with the event is the longest continuous wine competition in the Northwest, judged by a panel of five regional wine experts. As the Northwest has grown as a wine-producing region, so has the competition. Each Seafood & Wine Festival wine vendor may enter up to three wines in the prestigious commercial competition, judging of which happens before the festival so the winners can be announced and sold at the event. An amateur competition is also held. Paired with the excellent festival wines are unparalleled seafood offerings. Newport is proud to be able to showcase the bounty of the Pacific that comes through its port every year. You’ll find crab, bay shrimp, oysters, salmon, albacore, and other local delicacies in abundance, as well as other types of food. Even outside of the festival’s 50,000 ft2 tent there is plenty of fun to be found that weekend in Newport. The festival atmosphere spreads throughout the community, as many local businesses and organizations plan special events on the same weekend to take advantage of the crowds. Restaurants often have special menus and live music, shops will have wine sales featuring medal winners, and the local running club sponsors a 5K road race. For more information, see www.seafoodandwine.com. Photo: Johanna Wienert

Oregon Coast Jazz Party Newport’s music scene heats up on the first weekend in October As the weather in Newport cools, the Newport Performing Arts Center sizzles as some of the hottest names in jazz come to jam at the Oregon Coast Jazz Party the first weekend in October. This premiere event, which celebrated its tenth birthday in 2013, regularly sells out multiple concerts at the Newport Performing Arts Center, and infuses the whole town with the strains of jazz throughout the weekend. As the name implies, the event is held in a “jazz party” format, in which a pool of musicians performs in different combinations in sets throughout the weekend. The principal sets are held at the Newport Performing Arts Center, with a late-night “Nightcap,” an after-party of sorts, on Friday and Saturday nights at the nearby Shilo Inn. Performers have included Jeff Hamilton (drums), Terrell Stafford (trumpet), the Clayton Brothers (John (bass), Jeff (sax) and Gerald (piano)), Dave Captein (bass), Ken Peplowski (clarinet and sax), the Mel Brown quintet (featuring legendary drummer Mel Brown), Halie Loren (vocalist), and Holly Hofmann (flute), who also serves as the event’s Music Director. All of these participants are world-class musicians, who have appeared from Portland to New York to the international jazz scene; Grammy awards decorate their shelves, and headliners from the jazz, blues, and pops worlds clamor for them to play gigs. The Oregon Coast Jazz Party was born ten years ago as Jazz at Newport, the successor to a number of other jazz festivals held in Newport over the years. A number of satellite events are held in addition to the programs at the PAC, including jazz clinics at Newport High School and the Performing Arts Center and, in 2013, an interactive panel discussion moderated by Holly Hofmann. The festival is a feast for the eyes as well as the ears: each year, a compelling image created by a local or regional artist is chosen to be highlighted in the marketing materials. Artists Connie Williams, Bill Kucha, Nancy Jane Reid (also the official Oregon Coast Jazz Party photographer), and Juergen Eckstein are among those whose works have served as the face of the festival. The lineup of musicians for a given year is typically announced in early summer for the following fall. For more information about the Oregon Coast Jazz Party, go to www.coastarts.org/event-types/oregon-coast-jazz-party/. www.newportchamber.org -15


Community

Community Events

Red Light! Green Light! (And Every Other Color of the Rainbow) The Annual Lighted Boat Parade Sets Yaquina Bay Aglow It’s human nature to light a candle, or a bonfire, or a string of LED lights, against the darkness in the depths of winter. Here in Newport, we have literally boatloads of winter lights. On the first Saturday of December every year, Yaquina Bay is transformed into a sparkling sea of lights at dusk, as the annual Lighted Boat Parade gets underway, kicking off the season of illumination and celebration. About 15 boats participate every year, decking out their decks (and rails and masts and every other boat part) with thousands of lights. As dusk falls at 5 pm, the colorful boats make a grand sweep of the lower bay, circling from the Coast Guard station to the Embarcadero resort. Participants include every type of vessel, from kayaks to sailboats to fishing boats to Coast Guard vessels. Spectators can either find an indoor or outdoor spot on the Bayfront from which to ooh and aah, or can make a reservation on one of many charter boats that will take passengers that evening to get up close to the action. One of the best views is aboard the Marine Discovery Tours boat, which will sell passenger tickets but also be part of the parade. All paying passengers on this and other charter boats will be treated to cocoa and cookies, courtesy of some of the event sponsors. Proceeds from the event, including all passenger boat ticket sales and boat entry fees, are donated to CAN Cancer, a charity that provides assistance to central coast residents diagnosed with cancer in paying non-medical expenses. For more information about passenger ticket sales for the parade, contact Marine Discovery Tours at (541) 265-6200 or (800) 903-BOAT or Newport Tradewinds at (541) 265-2101. To enter a vessel in the parade or for other information, contact the Yaquina Bay Yacht Club at (541) 265-9206 or ybyc.email@gmail.com. Photo: Johanna Wienert

Shellfish Pleasure: The Oyster Cloyster provides gourmet treats and supports good causes Forget the pearl: the real treasure is the oyster itself, a briny, creamy morsel that instantly evokes the sea for those that consume it. At the annual Oyster Cloyster at the Oregon Coast Aquarium, attendees can sample the best creations of celebrated regional chefs using the delectable bivalve and support important local programs at the same time. This premier event is a fundraiser for two beneficiaries: The Aquarium Science degree program at Oregon Coast Community College and the Oregon Coast Aquarium. The heart of the Oyster Cloyster is a cooking competition among the cream of the crop of local and regional chefs, typically 15 of them. They prepare the oysters however they’d like, raw or cooked, fresh or smoked, in appetizers, main dishes, or desserts (yes, really!). For visitors who don’t have time to visit every top restaurant in the area, the Oyster Cloyster offers the opportunity to sample the styles and creations of many of them at once. Past dishes have included Smoked Oyster, Wild Mushroom & White Cheddar Empanada with Tomato Gravy (from the Starfish Grill), Raw Oyster with Horseradish Sour Cream Vinaigrette (Rogue Ales), and Silverspot Ale Smoked Oysters (Pelican Pub). The dishes are evaluated by professional judges, as well as by event attendees who sample the offerings and vote on a People’s Choice Award. While the oyster is front and center, there is plenty of food for those that don’t care for the briny bivalve, and liquid refreshments are equally outstanding. Attendees can choose among local Rogue Ales or wines specially chosen for the event. The fabulous food and drinks are consumed in an equally fabulous venue. Attendees will get to see more of the aquarium than most visitors, as behindthe-scenes tours are always offered. Rounding out the evening will be live music provided by local ensembles stationed throughout the aquarium, as well as an educational station at which microscopes are set up for attendees to observe the various life stages of oysters. More information can be found at www.oystercloyster.org. 16- www.newportchamber.org

Photo: Ric Beasley


Newport Symphony Orchestra’s Summerfest Pops to classical, the NSO delights summer crowds The Newport Symphony Orchestra, now in its 25th season, is a true jewel in the crown of this coastal town. It is the only full-season professional symphony on the Oregon coast, and regularly plays to sold-out audiences in its home venue of the Newport Performing Arts Center. When the final note rings out at the last concert of the regular season in March, rather than resting on their laurels, the musicians and conductor will begin preparing for the annual Summerfest concert series in July. The centerpiece of Summerfest is the annual Fourth of July pops concert, which has attracted nearly a thousand spectators to the Newport High School gymnasium each July 4 for ten years. Thanks to the sponsorship of a number of local businesses, including Mo’s Restaurants and Oregon Coast Bank, the concert is offered free of charge. The program, conducted by NSO Music Director Adam Flatt, includes pops and patriotic favorites, with a focus on American composers. Past programs have included Broadway show tunes, American anthems, Sousa marches, and light, familiar classical offerings. Soloists have included Oregon legend Norman Leyden, Conductor Emeritus of the Oregon Symphony; Miss America Katie Harman; opera stars Erica Brookhyser and Robert Hale, both of whom have local ties; and appearances as both conductor and narrator by NSO Resident Conductor, renowned actor David Ogden Stiers. The concert is at the high school at 4 pm on July 4, and is broadcast on 102.7 KYTE FM radio. Surrounding the July 4 concert is a selection of other concerts and events, some featuring guest artists, and always including a concert performed by a pared down Newport Symphony. These events are often performed at the First Presbyterian Church in Newport, whose sanctuary provides spectacular acoustics for classical music. Because this venue is smaller and more intimate than the Performing Arts Center, the concert features music to be performed by a smaller symphony, such as the string section of the NSO only. Featured artists have frequently come from the Corvallis-based Chintimini Chamber Music Festival, a summer series that features musicians that grew up in the Corvallis area who have gone on to perform professionally all over the country. Some of the programs have been particularly family-friendly, such as the 2013 concert at which Stiers narrated orchestrations of “Ferdinand the Bull” and “Casey at the Bat.” A convivial (and delicious) component of Summerfest is the Conductors’ Dinner, a fundraising event that has rotated among local restaurants, most recently at the Inn at Otter Crest in Otter Rock just north of Newport. Symphony musicians provide background music for these feasts, and a raffle of fine wines is always part of the festivities. For more information about Summerfest, and all of the Newport Symphony Orchestra’s spectacular offerings, go to their web site at www. newportsymphony.org.

Photo: Courtesy Newport Symphony Orchestra

26.2 Spectacular Miles Newport Marathon attracts hundreds of runners If you’re going to run more than 26 miles over a span of three hours or more, battling fatigue, thirst, and muscle cramps, it helps to have something pretty to look at along the way. The gorgeous, flat, and fast course of the Newport Marathon has been attracting hundreds of runners from far and near since its inception in 1999. The course begins at Yaquina Bay State Park, home to one of our two lighthouses, and then wends its way through some of Newport’s most scenic neighborhoods, including oceanfront Nye Beach and the Bayfront. It continues on the Bay Road on a flat, well-paved, wide road that runs along the edge of gorgeous Yaquina Bay. Runners will be treated to vistas of the Yaquina Bay Bridge and the bay itself, home to a wide variety of birds and other wildlife. Fishing boats and gorgeous, forested scenery complete the view. Because the course is nearly all flat, many PRs are earned here, a plus considering that the marathon is a qualifying race for the Boston Marathon. One world record was earned on the course as well: Herb Phillips of Burnaby B.C., Canada ran it in 2:47:28 in 2004, breaking the single age world record for 63 year old males. Of course, there are other scenic, flat, and friendly marathons in the U.S. But there probably isn’t one that offers runners oyster shooters. At mile 11 and again at mile 19 (out and back on the Bay Road), runners are offered the opportunity to slurp down locally raised raw oysters at Oregon Oyster Farms. The record for oyster shooter consumption at the marathon was 80 oysters in one race, consumed by a runner in 2009! If sucking down raw oysters in the middle of a race is not for you, other great local food is offered at the finish line party, including Rogue beer and Mo’s clam chowder, two local favorites. The event has been growing nearly every year, and registration is capped at 1,000; as many as 750 have entered in recent years. Last year’s entrants came from 29 states and Canada. For more information, see the marathon’s web site: www. newportmarathon.org. www.newportchamber.org -17


Community

Newport by District Neighborhoods of Newport Newport’s neighborhoods each harbor unique treasures Agate Beach explodes with natural beauty: Catch a wave, go clamming, watch spouting whales, take a long walk on a beautiful sandy beach, or visit the Yaquina Head Lighthouse. This district is also home to the Ernest Bloch House, where this well-known composer lived from 1941 to 1959. Historic Nye Beach is Newport’s original oceanfront resort district and artists’ colony. Today, Nye Beach is a mix of historic cottages, new architecture, and eclectic shops, lodging, and restaurants. The historic heart of the city, the Deco District contains many buildings featuring the Art Deco style. Hugging both sides of Highway 101, the Deco District is the mid-point on the ribbon of U.S. Highway 101 that connects four of Newport’s distinct districts. Newport’s historic Bayfront is a shoreline boulevard where you’ll want to stroll along an authentic slice of the coast. The Port of Newport services Yaquina Bay, a bustling harbor, and home to one of the largest commercial fishing fleets in Oregon. The South Beach district is filled with all things marine – the Oregon Coast Aquarium, one of the top ten aquariums in the U.S., is a favorite with all ages. South Beach is also home to the Hatfield Marine Science Center and homeport of NOAA’s Pacific fleet of research vessels.

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Photo: Johanna Wienert



Community

Newport by District

Forever Funky: Nye Beach Offers Great Food and Shopping Locals and visitors alike love the historic Newport neighborhood of Nye Beach, with its scrumptious restaurants, stunning art galleries, and fascinating shops. Add in the amazing namesake beach, the Newport Performing Arts Center, and an endlessly fun playground at Coast Park, and there’s something in this oceanfront neighborhood for everyone. Located on the ocean’s edge with lighthouses defining its North and South ends, Nye Beach was once a separate smaller community removed from the Bayfront. When Newport began to outgrow the Bayfront in the 1890s a wood plank road was constructed connecting the two. In the early 1900s this area was the number one tourist attraction on the coast – salt water taffy stores, concessions, agate shops and penny arcades all thrived on Nye Beach. It was also the home of many well known rooming houses and resorts. When Herbert Hoover’s stepfather, Dr. Henry J. Minthorn, built a large “sanitarium” in the area, tourists flocked in large numbers to soak in heated sea water or bask in the sun on the glassenclosed veranda. While some chose to stay at the large resorts, others stayed in small cottages or tents. Often the women and children would spend their summers here and the men would visit by train on the weekends. Much of the ambiance, the cottages and resorts which attracted the summer people to Nye Beach remain. And one must not forget the most wondrous and enduring attraction, the beach! While you can spend far more than a day exploring Nye Beach, here are some suggestions for some must-do Nye Beach activities. A great way to start your Nye Beach day is by indulging in a steaming latte and mouthwatering pastry at Panini Bakery on Coast Street. A perennial favorite is their cinnamon roll, enormous and packed with cinnamony, sugary, sticky goodness. They make a variety of crumbly, delicious scones, also big enough to share, most with seasonal fruit. You can eat in if you can snag a table, or get your breakfast to go and head to the beach. Whether you’re searching for a vacation souvenir, a wedding gift, or just a little something for yourself, you’re bound to find what you’re looking for in the shops of Nye Beach. The explosion of color that emanates from The Dapper Frog might lure 20- www.newportchamber.org

you in just after your beach walk. One of five Dapper Frog locations in Oregon, the shop carries a dizzying array of high-quality art, decorative items, jewelry, ceramics, and more. Nye Beach Wine Cellar is packed with wines at every price point and from every corner of the world. In addition to wines hailing from the Willamette Valley to Argentina to Italy and beyond, the shop carries mouth-watering specialty foods such as cheeses, chocolates, Italian pastas, and mustards. A great lunch choice is the casual, friendly Nye Beach Cafe, where you can find soups, sandwiches, burritos, and other lunchtime fare made fresh, often with local ingredients. They offer a selection of burritos, including the delicious Johnny Wrap, a vegetarian option with no cheese and homemade salsa. If you want to continue shopping after lunch, head up Coast Street to Jovi, right next door to Panini. This stunning shop is packed with treasures from around the globe, from housewares to perfume to jewelry to art. Walking into Jovi is like wandering into an exotic international bazaar. French soaps that smell good enough to nibble, Haitian metal wall hangings, Mexican and Balinese silver, fine Polish tableware, vintage Turkish oil jars – all these treasures and more are displayed artfully in every nook and cranny of the store If your strength is flagging and you’d like a quick treat and a caffeine infusion, head toward the beach once more and stop by Carl’s Coffee, a new addition to the Nye Beach scene. Carl’s serves Stumptown Coffee, an exquisite bean roasted in Portland and familiar across the Pacific Northwest. An absolute Newport institution for locals and hip visitors alike is Café Mundo, where the food and the live music are equally fantastic and satisfying (and in both cases mostly local). The vibe is casual and funky, inside and out: décor includes individually painted tables, local artists’ works, flowing silky wall hangings, a surfboard or two, Tibetan prayer flags, a furry bicycle, and a terrific climbing tree in the middle of the outdoor seating area. Music at Mundo includes Open-Mic Night on Thursdays, and often local and regional favorites like the June Rushing Band or Rick Bartow and the Backseat Drivers, with traveling musicians often making appearances as well. Every summer locals mount a Shakespearean production in the outdoor stage and seating area, an event termed Teatro Mundo. Photos: Johanna Wienert


Newport’s Historic Bayfront Food, Fun, and the Fishing Fleet Probably no coastal community in the U.S. integrates a working waterfront with a tourist destination better than Newport, where each neighborhood function flourishes and reinforces the other. The Historic Bayfront is Newport’s main working waterfront, where most of the substantial fishing fleet ties up, bringing much of their catch to the fish processing plants that line the bay side of the street. At the same time, this neighborhood is also bursting with excellent restaurants, eclectic treasure-filled shops, and engaging attractions. Constructed in 1866, the Ocean House on Yaquina Bay was Newport’s first tourist destination resort. Sam Case, its proprietor, named the Ocean House for a resort in Newport, Rhode Island, and it is no coincidence that Case also named Newport for his favorite town in Rhode Island. At the time of its incorporation, Newport was a small hamlet nestled in the area around the Ocean House. Near the Ocean House were several smaller resorts which attracted visitors to Yaquina Bay. Tourists, or “summer people,” most commonly traveled to Newport by train from the Willamette Valley to Yaquina City approximately three miles East of Newport on Yaquina Bay. From Yaquina City, travelers took a ferry that navigated down the Yaquina to Newport. Large scale development of a seafood industry, which thrives to this day, did not begin until 1908 when electricity (essential for refrigeration) became available. Jetty construction and dredging, complemented by Newport’s already famous Yaquina Bay Lighthouse, made Yaquina Bay an attractive shipping port. The Bayfront remains an active “working” part of the community and is home to Oregon’s largest commercial fishing fleet. The Bayfront is also sought out by local residents and visitors alike for its fine restaurants, hotels, galleries, shops, family attractions, sports fishing and whale watching charters. Today a drive up the scenic Yaquina Bay Road is a journey back in time. The site of the early settlements of Oysterville and Yaquina City can be seen. Also located along this road is the site of the home of Daniel Boone’s great grandson (Daniel came here in 1852). Yaquina Bay Road ends at Toledo, once the location of the world’s largest spruce mill, built by the U.S. Government to provide spruce for airplane manufacture in World War I (and which later provided all the wood that went into Howard Hughes’ infamous “Spruce Goose”). Today’s Bayfront provides locals and tourists with great meals, views of sea lions hauled out on rocks and docks, and a range of shopping options. Here are a few highlights to help you scratch the surface of this diverse and exciting area, but behind every shop door are more surprises, so feel free to explore! The diverse flavors of the Bayfront pose a diner’s dilemma for every meal. Where to eat? A range of Asian flavors as well as a spectacular bay view can be found at the Noodle Café. You can choose from main dishes originating in a range of Asian countries: curries, stir fries, noodle dishes, kimchee, and pho, among others. On a cool day the pho or spicy seafood broth called jung bong both particularly hit the spot. At the opposite end of the street is the charming and cozy Coffee House, open for breakfast and lunch. While you wait for your superb coffee to brew or for your hangover-the-plate pancake or fluffy omelet to come off the griddle, you can watch the fishing fleet come and go right across the street. If you’d like your meal to be accompanied by wildlife viewing, check out Port Dock One, where the whole restaurant, but particularly the upstairs dining and lounge area (limited to those over 21), has one of the best dining views in Newport. Port Dock One’s steaks, seafood, salads, burgers, and sandwiches nearly always come with a side show of barking sea lions, who hang out on the floating docks just below. There’s something for everyone in the shops of the Bayfront. Inscapes

Gallery carries a wide range of art, decorative items, furniture, jewelry, and other goods, all handmade. Some especially wonderful treasures here include turned wooden bowls, kaleidoscopes, musical instruments, art prints, and gorgeous rocking chairs. Those with a sweet tooth have multiple options, including Newport Candy Shoppe and Aunt Belinda’s Candies. At both there is a dazzling selection of creative flavors of saltwater taffy made with real egg whites rather than oil. Another gallery with a gorgeous selection of items is Oceanic Arts, which features works of local and regional artists, much of it inspired by the sea around us. Finally, don’t miss the sights and smells of Newport Bay Candle Company. This local business pours its candles at a separate facility near the Safeway on Rte. 101, but their Bayfront retail shop shows off the best of their handmade wares, as well as soaps, jewelry, and gift items. Down at the far end of the Bayfront you can see the vessels of Newport’s fishing fleet tied up. Interpretive signs along the Port Dock marinas explain the differences among the kinds of boats in port and tell a bit of the story of our proud fishing fleet and the types of quarry they pursue. In the summer months you can often buy fish right off the boats here, including albacore tuna, salmon, crabs, rockfish, and lingcod. Even if you’re not in the market for something for dinner, it’s fun to walk along all of the docks and dream of the seafaring life. If you’re not content to let the commercial fishing fleet do the work for you, you can hop on a charter fishing boat, a number of which are headquartered along the Bayfront, and do the catching yourself. Finally, a few words about those immense and loud marine mammals you can hear from all along the Bayfront, and see on the docks near Port Dock One. These are male California sea lions hauled out to take a break from their normal activities of stalking fish (or mooching fish guts from the boats and processing plants). While more of them hang around in the late fall and winter after the breeding season is over, you can find the older bulls here pretty much year-round. Follow the racket to the Undersea Gardens and you can look down onto the decrepit pier where these guys hang out. Local businesses have banded together to try to refurbish the haul-out sites so these local celebrities have a more permanent place to crash.

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Living Newport Public Library

Photo: Courtesy Newport Public library

A library is a critical institution in any community. Newport Public Library serves the community as a center for information, recreation, culture, and education. From toddlers to retirees, students to business owners, people from all segments of the community come to Newport Public Library to find practical answers, to develop talents, to stretch the imagination, and simply to enjoy the beautiful facility and its collection of local artists’ work. Newport Public Library is one of the best used libraries in Oregon. Current technology and professional staff make the library the community gateway to a wealth of regional, national, and international information resources. In addition to a fine book collection, the library also offers video, DVDs, CDs, audio books, magazines, newspapers, large print books, and access to the internet and other electronic information sources. Through the internet the library provides catalog and full-text magazine databases wherever you are. A full range of children’s programs, flourishing adult programs, outreach services to the elderly and homebound, and a vital volunteer program all make it clear that the library is a place for everyone. Story times for toddlers and preschoolers are offered weekly in English and Spanish. In addition, the children’s librarian conducts extensive outreach to local preschools and elementary classrooms. A summer reading program encourages kids to continue reading when school is out, offering rewards for participation as well as a weekly outdoor performance for families related to that summer’s theme. Teenagers are drawn to the monthly teen programs at the library, and adults love the regular “Literary Flicks” series of movies and the library’s book club. A critical center of community life, the library hosts meetings and community events throughout the year, from writing workshops to book lectures to computer classes. Newport Public Library is a department of the City of Newport, an equal partner of Oceanbooks network, and an affiliate of the Lincoln County Library District. Library board members are appointed by the Mayor and City Council to advise in matters of library policy. The Newport Public Library Foundation is an independent, non-profit organization promoting private donations to enhance and enrich Newport Public Library's resources and services. The Newport Public Library is at 35 NW Nye St and newportoregon. gov/dept/lib/.

Retirement and Senior Services Newport is a wonderful and popular retirement destination, offering retirees a unique blend of outdoor activities, volunteer opportunities, support services, and health care. Whether you envision retirement as entailing fishing, yoga, golf, card games with friends, or using your skills as a volunteer, you will be at home in Newport. Here are some of the support services Newport offers for our seniors and retirees through our 60+ Activity Center. The 60+ Activity Center, operated by the City of Newport, provides classes, social gatherings, and meals for those aged 60 and over. On any given day, activities at the Center can include pinochle, Wii bowling, knitting classes, table tennis, book club meetings, and, on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, hot lunch at noon. Lunches can also be delivered to the homebound through our Meals on Wheels program; call 541-574-0669 for prices and more information. Special events, such as seminars, festivals, and health clinics, are scheduled throughout the year. The 60+ Center has a variety of facility rentals to meet your needs. Rental fees are available by request. The Center also has equipment to loan. Wheelchairs, walkers, crutches, shower chairs, and toilet lifts are available to seniors who need them. For more information, call a Host of Hostess at 541-265-9617. Hours of the 60+ Activity Center are Monday - Friday 9am-5pm and Saturday 12pm-3pm. The Center is located at 20 SE 2nd Street near the Rec Center. For more information, give us the Center a call at 541-265-9617, or find more information and the complete schedule of events at www.newportoregon.gov/sc. 22- www.newportchamber.org

Photo: Courtesy Newport 60+ Center


Education Newport offers a range of educational opportunities for students from preschool-age through college and beyond. Preschools There are a number of excellent preschools in Newport, some of which include kindergarten and early primary grades as well. Mouse Factory Cooperative Preschool, the only cooperative preschool in town, is operated out of the First Presbyterian Church. They offer morning sessions either two or four days a week for children ages 3-5. Two Montessori schools, Newport Montessori and Nye Beach Montessori, offer preschool programs as well as kindergarten. Newport Montessori students can attend through grade 3. ABC Preschool, Coastal Kids, and Cubby Preschool (located at Newport High School and partially staffed by childhood education NHS students) are also excellent options. Finally, there is a federal Head Start program in Newport. Grades K-12 Newport is a part of the Lincoln County School District (LCSD). LCSD serves about 5,200 students in kindergarten through 12th grade from all areas of the county along a 55-mile strip of the central Oregon coast. The district is comprised of 10 regular schools and four public charter schools, with a total of 500 employees, all dedicated to providing a comprehensive education for every single student. Kindergarten through third grade students in Newport may attend Sam Case Primary School. Fourth through sixth grade students attend Newport Intermediate School. For grades seven and eight there are two options: Newport Prep Academy, on campus (but mostly in a separate building) with Newport High School, or Isaac Newton Magnet School, located within the NIS building. All Newport schools place an emphasis on technology, and many teachers incorporate it into their daily instruction. Students in Newport are fortunate to have a wealth of natural resources to study as an extension of their classrooms. The Pacific Ocean, Yaquina Bay, and Siuslaw National Forest are only a few of the natural resources that are used by the school district to explore marine science, forestry, tourism, fisheries, and other related subjects. In addition, the Hatfield Marine Science Center, the Oregon Coast Aquarium, and the home port of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s West Coast research vessels offer “living classrooms” that contribute to the district’s goal of producing the most ocean-literate students in the nation. Newport High School offers the prestigious and challenging International Baccalaureate (IB) program, one of the smallest schools in the nation to do so. IB is a rigorous and comprehensive pre-university course of study for high school juniors and seniors. IB diploma graduates are welcomed by the world's leading universities, and are often offered exemptions from required classes. Students can choose individual IB classes, or complete the demanding IB diploma program. Our Living School Our Living School is a small, alternative private school offering elementary education (perhaps expanding in the future beyond primary years). At Our Living School, children learn the intricacies of working within a community, the value of environmental stewardship, and the power of their own mind. Through a solid grasp of scientific thinking and compassionate reasoning, Our Living School cultivates and nourishes life-long learners, creative problem-solvers, and empathetic citizens.

Photo: Dani Palmer

Volunteerism in Newport One of the main energy sources that powers Newport is the spirit of volunteerism that pervades the city. City committees that advise the City Council on everything from development of bike trails to reviewing city audits to developing library policies are comprised of 100% volunteers. In addition, volunteers apply their skills and energy to guiding visitors through the Oregon Coast Aquarium’s exhibits, raising funds for high school sports teams, operating the Newport Symphony Orchestra, driving Meals on Wheels routes, and every other type of community service you can think of. Any amount of time you have to offer, whether it’s an hour a month or multiple days every week, will be most appreciated at most community institutions. Lincoln County schools, the Newport Public Library, the Performing Arts Center, Samaritan Pacific Communities Hospital, and the Newport Police Department will all be happy to put volunteers to work. One great way to find out who needs volunteers is by going to the web site of the Retired & Senior Volunteer Program (RSVP) of Linn, Benton, and Lincoln Counties (rsvpoflbl.org) and reviewing their list; most of these volunteer opportunities are not just for those of retirement age.

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Living Higher Learning Oregon Coast Community College providing Lincoln County with oceans of opportunities Since 1987, Oregon Coast Community College has contributed to the can enroll in community education courses, which can cover a variety richness of Lincoln County. The college has grown into three permanent of topics, ranging from backyard beekeeping, to foreign languages and facilities along Oregon’s central coast in the communities of Lincoln City, mussel harvesting. Waldport and Newport, home of the main campus. “Oregon Coast Community College reflects a commitment to excellence Oregon Coast Community College offers a wide array of educational in serving the people of Lincoln County through quality instruction, opportunities and student that residents supporting the student endeavor “Oregon and creating great learning Coast aCommunity ColNursing,resources Medical so Assistant, Emer- ration. ince 1987, Oregon service Coast support of Lincoln County can fulfill their aspirations of earning degrees and environment, ” said Interim President Bruce Koike. “The facilities are to excelThe college’s Small Business Devel- lege reflects a commitment Community College has con- gency Medical Technician (EMT), certificates. Besides offering lower-division courses that transfer to four- fantastic, but what’s truly special about Oregon Coast are the human tributed to the richness of Lin- Certified Nurse Assistant and Aquar- opment Center provides entrepre- lence in serving the people of Lincoln year institutions, OCCC also provides specific training in the disciplines resources of the staff, faculty and volunteers (college foundation and ium Science. TheTechnician college hosts the neurs and coln County. college has grown of Nursing, The Medical Assistant, Emergency Medical (EMT), tutors). ” business owners insights County through quality instruction, supporting endeavor and nation’s only Aquaridifffrom erentacademia strate- for into three permanent facilities along Certified Nurse Assistant and Aquarium Science. The college hosts the “Having beeninto away so long, I the wasstudent not sure how I would creating a great learning environum Science Program, gies, resources and Oregon’s central coast in the communation’s only Aquarium Science Program, which offers students an react,” said Shiloh Lillith, a current student. “This school has exceeded my “This school has practices Ithat which offers students nities of Lincoln City, Science Waldportdegree and in Associate of Applied Aquarium Science or a one-year highest expectations. loveenhance it here.” ment,” said Interim President Bruce “ThCoast e facilities are fantastic, the vitality of their op- Koike. Newport, home of the main campus. an Associate of ApCertificate of Completion. In the assessment of another student, Oregon Community College exceeded my Still other students are supported enrolling classes in English as is a “sweet college. ” Come sample some that truly sweetness visiting one butofwhat’s specialby about Oregon erations. Community plied Sciencein degree Oregon Coast Community College by highest aoffSecond Adult Basic General Educational of the campuses servingwho Lincoln Coast are the human resources of the members wishCounty: in courses AquariumorScience ers a wideLanguage, array of educational op-Skills Development preparation. Lincoln City to – 3788 SE High staff, faculty and volunteers (college enrich their School lives Drive portunities and(GED) student service sup- or a one-year Certifiexpectations. The college’s Business Development provides entrepreneurs Newport – 400 SE College Way through continuous foundation and tutors).” Completion. port resourcesSmall so that residents of cate ofCenter and business into different strategies, and it here. Waldport Crestline Drivein I love ” – 3120 learning can enroll “Having been away from acaStill other studentsresources Lincoln Countyowners can fulfiinsights ll their aspipractices that enhance the vitality of their operations. Community Call 541-265-2283 or visit www.oregoncoastcc.org for more details, community educa- demia for so long, I was not sure rations of earning degrees and certifi- are supported by enmembers who wish to enrich their lives through continuous learning including class schedules and specific program information. tion courses, which how I would react,” said Shiloh Lilcates. Besides offering lower-division rolling in classes in courses that transfer to four-year English as a Second Language, Adult can cover a variety of topics, ranging lith, a current student. “This school institutions, OCCC also provides Basic Skills courses or General Edu- from backyard beekeeping, to foreign has exceeded my highest expectations. I love it here.” specific training in the disciplines of cational Development (GED) prepa- languages and mussel harvesting.

Oregon Coast Community College providing oceans of opportunities

S

Achieve your dreams at

Oregon Coast Community College! • Affordable • High Quality Education • Accessible Instructors • Personable Atmosphere

541-265-2283 400 SE College Way, Newport, OR 97366 Campuses also in Waldport & Lincoln City

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Transportation Perched on the edge of the beautiful Pacific, Newport is served by U.S. Highway 101, which runs north and south along the entire U.S. coast, and U.S. Highway 20, which runs east and west across the whole country, terminating in Newport (the eastern terminus is in Boston, MA!). Newport is a key western portal to Oregon's Central Coast, located 60 miles from Interstate 5. There are many ways to get around within Newport, and in and out of the city. More information about Newport transportation can be found at www.newportchamber.og/transportation.htm. Newport Shuttle Bus The Newport City Loop bus runs from 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p. m., seven days a week, including all holidays except Thanksgiving & Christmas Day. The cost is $1 per ride. Free passes are available for visitors via their lodging. The bus is wheelchair accessible and has a bike rack. Schedules are available online, on any bus, and at the transit office: 410 NE Harney St. Call 541-265-4900 or go to www.co.lincoln.or.us for more information. Newport Municipal Airport Newport has a public airport (airport code: KONP) situated on 800 acres, three miles south of Yaquina Bay. The airport’s Master Plan states, “The airport was originally constructed by the Civil Aeronautics Administration (the FAA predecessor) in 1943 with a land grant from the City of Newport. The airport was returned to the City of Newport ownership in 1947. Since that time, the airport has continued to grow into an important general aviation and commuter service facility.” For more information about the airport, call 541-867-7422 or visit newportoregon.gov/dept/onp/default. asp. Port of Newport The Port of Newport in Yaquina Bay, incorporated in 1910, serves a 59-square mile area. Constructed as a deep-water port to provide shipping services to local, regional, and international vessels, major recent redevelopment at the International Terminal is underway. Operations at Port facilities include the International Shipping Terminal, a commercial fishing marina, a recreational marina, and vehicle parks. For more information, call 541-265-7758 or go to www.portofnewport.com. Rail Daily freight fail service is furnished to the Yaquina Bay area, terminating in Toledo, located six miles east of Newport. Surface Transit Newport has a local taxi service, limousine companies, and commercial trucking businesses. Centrally located on Oregon’s beautiful coastline, Newport is an easy drive from all of Oregon’s major highways. Driving distances and times from Newport are:

Mileage

Drive Time

City

65 Miles

1 hour

Albany

109 Miles

2 hours

Beaverton

180 Miles

3 hours

Bend

53 Miles

1 hour

Corvallis

95 Miles

1 and 3/4 hours

Eugene

240 Miles

4 hours

Medford

114 Miles

2 hours

Portland

144 Miles

3 hours

Roseburg

83 Miles

1 and 1/2 hours

Salem Photo: Johanna Wienert www.newportchamber.org -25


Living Good Medicine: Health Care in Newport One important measure of a community is how well it takes care of its citizens, in sickness and in health. Newport is lucky to have not only an excellent hospital, but a range of other health care facilities and options to choose from. Samaritan Pacific Communities Hospital is the major health care center in the city. Located just off Highway 101 overlooking the Yaquina Bay Bridge, SPCH Hospital has been meeting the health care needs of area residents since 1952. Currently, the hospital is a 25-bed critical access hospital, with 380 employees, 110 of whom are nurses, and 120 volunteers. SPCH is fully accredited by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Health Care Organizations (JCAHO). The hospital offers a complete range of health and medical services including 24-hour, physicianstaffed emergency care, a full-service medical laboratory, physical therapy and rehabilitation, outpatient surgery and single-room maternity care. Of significant benefit to area residents are the more than 82 practitioners and 8 outlying clinics comprising the medical staff at Samaritan Pacific Communities Hospital. This group of physicians represents a variety of medical specialties to help meet the health care needs of the diverse Oregon Coast population. Hospital staff and physicians work hard to deliver their services in an environment of human sensitivity, technical excellence and fiscal responsibility. SPCH offers comprehensive medical imaging and laboratory testing services, as well as units focused on diabetes education, hospice services, nutritional counseling, and respiratory services. Samaritan clinics in Newport provide specialized care in the areas of obstetrics and gynecology, hematology and oncology, kidney conditions, occupational medicine, orthopedics, ENT and allergy specialists, internal medicine, and surgery. The hospital provides emergency care round the clock, and an urgent care walk-in clinic is located in the building as well (hours are M-F 9:00 am to 6:30 pm and Saturday 10 am to 4 pm). Some major health care functions in Newport are provided outside of the Samaritan umbrella. For example, the main pediatric practice in town, Coastal Pediatrics, is operated independently of SPCH, although it is located right next door to the hospital and the clinic’s doctors have SPCH privileges.

There are approximately 25 dental clinics in Newport, including denturists and orthodontists. For eye care, residents have about a halfdozen practices from which to choose. Patients in need of physical therapy or rehabilitation will find many options in town. In addition to Samaritan-based practices, there are about a half-dozen physical and occupational therapists in Newport, and many more in the surrounding Lincoln County towns. About a dozen chiropractic offices can also be found in Newport. Those seeking alternative medicine approaches will also find many options in Newport. There are four clinics that provide acupuncture services and three naturopaths practicing in town. A wide selection of massage therapists also practice here, including at a number of small day spas. Mental health care is also available, some through Samaritan, some through the Lincoln County Health Department, and some in private practice. These services include addiction counseling; individual, group, and family counseling; and treatment and support for those with persistent and severe mental illness. The county health department is an excellent clearinghouse for all of the counseling and social support services available in Newport and the rest of Lincoln County. The Lincoln County Health Department provides a number of other health-related services that contribute significantly to wellness in the community. These services include a comprehensive public health program including flu vaccinations, a communicable diseases unit, care for those with HIV/AIDS, and family home visits for first-time parents. The county also provides a number of education programs, including a tobacco prevention program. The Portland VA Medical Center maintains a small clinic in Newport, providing primary care, laboratory services, and tele-mental health services for those eligible for veterans’ benefits. Finally, we have ample access to pharmacies, including large outlets like Fred Meyer and Walgreens, as well as multiple options for the purchase of medical equipment and supplies. Of course, prevention is often the best medicine, and Newport provides all of the components necessary to live as healthy a lifestyle as possible: great trails for walking, hiking, and biking; mild weather allowing outdoor activities for most of the year; the city Recreation Center, municipal pool, and two private gyms for workouts of all kinds; access to a range of primary care physicians; and healthy food options at our many grocery stores and the local Farmers’ Market. For more information about health care in Newport, please go to: Samaritan Pacific Communities Hospital: www.samhealth.org/ locations/samaritanpacificcommunitieshospital Samaritan Health Services: www.samhealth.org Lincoln County Health Department: www.lincolncountyhealth.com Newport Recreation Center: newportoregon.gov/dept/par/RecCenter.asp Newport Municipal Pool: newportoregon.gov/dept/par/pool/default.asp

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Photo: Courtesy Samaritan Health Services


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United States Coast Guard Story and Photo: Phillip Swett

While Newport’s maritime industries and heritage are almost taken as a matter of course today, it took considerable effort to make small Yaquina Bay a safe haven for seafarers. First came the Yaquina Bay lighthouse to mark the narrow entrance in 1871, then construction of the substantial north and south jetties in the late 1880s and early 1890s to establish a better channel. Those improved the ability of fishermen and sailors to leave and return to port safely, but could provide no succor in times of maritime distress. That took the establishment of the U.S. Lifesaving Service (a founding component of the U.S. Coast Guard) station in South Beach in 1896. Ever since then, the Coast Guard Station Yaquina Bay has played a key role in assisting those in need along this stretch of the central Oregon coast. To keep that in perspective, Bosun’s Mate 1st Class Adam Johnson said the Yaquina Bay bar (the natural deposition of materials at the mouth of the river) is considered the second worst for vessels in the United States, after that off the mouth of the much larger Columbia River. If you need proof, buy a copy of the fundraising video available at the station; you’ll be impressed. Under the current command of Chief Warrant Officer Phil Jackson, the

roughly 50 regulars and 12 reservists of the station conduct about 200 search and rescue and/or towing operations annually, from vessels that are lost in fog, out of power or fuel, taking on water, on fire, or that have medical emergencies. In addition, the men and women of the station also conduct marine law enforcement boardings and watch for marine environmental problems. The station coordinates its activities with USCG helicopters stationed out of North Bend, 50 miles to the south, which are regularly seen around the Newport area. To perform its duties, Station Yaquina Bay is homeport to two 47’ motor life boats, both a decade old and capable of speeds in excess of 20 knots, with a towing capacity of 150 tons, and a range of 50 nautical miles; a 25 foot Response Boat Small for harbor and river work; and the aging (1956) but still valuable, 9 knot, 52’ Special Heavy Weather Boat Victory. She has a range of 150 nautical miles, the ability to tow vessels up to 750 tons, and can still handle 35’ seas and 30’ breaking surf, with the best of the lot. All but the smallest vessels are self-righting, with everyone aboard strapped in when underway in heavy seas. USCG Station Yaquina Bay is an important part of Newport’s maritime heritage and is open for tours Monday to Friday from 1-3 p.m.

Half Page

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Outdoors Recreation, Indoor & Outdoor Recreational Fishing: A Reel Adventure in Newport If you’re a real DIY kind of person, you’d rather catch your own fish than buy it at the market or order it in a restaurant. In Newport you can catch your own salmon, crabs, clams, tuna, rockfish, and many other tasty treats. No boat? No problem. It’s easy to reserve yourself a spot on one of Newport’s many charter boats, and chase after delicious quarry from rockfish to salmon to tuna. While charter fishing trips go out year-round, summer weather is usually a bit more calm and comfortable for heading out to sea. Depending on the target species, trips can range from three hours for bay crabbing trips to more than 24 hours for offshore tuna in midsummer and fall. No experience is required; in fact, beginners are sometimes the captain’s favorite clients. Here are some basics to keep in mind. There are seasons and limited windows to fish for some species, so not every fish is available for the taking all the time. For all of the details on the types and lengths of trips available at a given time, be sure to call the charter company. Bottomfishing trips, which focus on rockfish and lingcod, generally leave the dock year-round. Most outfits run five-hour and tenhour bottomfish trips, depending on the time of year and how far offshore you’re interested in venturing. The five-hour bottomfishing trips in particular are extremely family-friendly. In season, you can often find 8- or 10-hour combination trips that will take you fishing for both bottomfish and salmon. One-day licenses that will cover you for the trip are generally available from the charter companies; boats will inform you of limits on various species. Salmon is the Pacific Northwest’s iconic fish, and by many accounts they are bouncing back from some tough years. Summer salmon trips target either coho (mid-June to mid-August) or Chinook (June – October). You will need licenses and tags for salmon fishing, but both are available from the charter companies (usually annual licenses are not available for purchase, though). Halibut “openers,” short windows of time during which anglers are allowed to fish for these giant flatfish, are scattered throughout the year, and vary depending on assessments of how many fish there are. They are fished until a set total quota is reached, so later halibut dates might not be fished at all. Albacore tuna usually show up in June or July and stick around close enough to shore to catch until mid-fall. These gorgeous and delicious fighting fish are caught with either rod and reel or a hand-line. Albacore is a delicacy, whether barbecued, canned, or eaten raw, sushi-style. Newport Tradewinds runs a marathon tuna trip: 33 hours at sea to cover multiple bouts of fishing. Finally, if it’s crab you’re after, you can catch them, too, either on a dedicated bay crabbing trip (for example, Captain’s Reel offers a three-hour crabbing trip) or by adding on ocean crabbing with most of the other types of trips mentioned here, for an extra fee. An Oregon shellfish license is required for crabbing (available from the charter companies), and again, note there are fishery restrictions that the boats will enforce onboard. Weather can be stunningly variable at sea. Even the rare warm summer day at the beach can translate into cool temperatures offshore, so dress in layers and in appropriate footwear. Coffee is usually part of most charter deals, but bring your own food and drink. Most charters offer fish cleaning and crab cooking services back at the dock (for a fee). For prices and more specifics, get in touch with the charter companies directly – they’re happy to help find a trip that’s right for you. Always remember, while Newport-based charter boats are usually highly successful, it’s called “fishing,” not “catching.” Just being out on the ocean can be treat enough. Charter captains can’t wait to share the experience with passengers.

All Aboard! Charter Companies in Newport

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Newport Tradewinds 653 SW Bay Blvd. 541-265-2101 http://www.newporttradewinds.com/

Yaquina Bay Charters 1000 SE Bay Blvd. (near Embarcadero Resort) 541-265-6800 yaquinabaycharters.com

Captains Reel Deep Sea Fishing 343 SW Bay Blvd. 541-265-7441 http://www.captainsreel.com/

Newport Marine Store & Charters 2128 SE Marine Science Drive, South Beach 541-867-4470 www.nmscharters.com Photos: Johanna Wienert


Take a Hike! Lace Up Your Boots and Get onto the Beaten Path Newport is a beautiful place to hike, especially for families – the terrain is varied and generally not too challenging, the views are spectacular, and a latte or ice cream cone is never very far away. Just to the north and south of the city (see listings) are some more challenging, longer hikes that would appeal to more serious trekkers. Here are some short hikes within city limits Yaquina Head Outstanding Natural Area The federal Bureau of Land Management operates the Yaquina Head Outstanding Natural Area, a spit of land at the north end of town that juts out dramatically into the Pacific, punctuated at the end by the stately and beautiful Yaquina Head Lighthouse. There are a number of short walks and hikes that can be strung together for a complete tour of the headland. A hike up Communications Hill (so-called because the Coast Guard maintains communications equipment at the top of the hill) affords some of the best views in Newport. The trail is less than a mile long, moderately steep in places, and traverses a typical shore pine and Sitka spruce forest. The views to the north and south are stunning, and wildlife sightings – grey whales, bald eagles, gorgeous formations of pelicans – are common. Hikers can use the series of paved and well-maintained pedestrian paths to connect to the other short hikes and walks at Yaquina Head. Salal Hill, further out the headland, is a shorter but steeper trail, which also affords outstanding views from the peak. Spring wildflowers can be spectacular here. While descending stairs doesn’t usually count as taking a hike, the staircases down to Cobble Beach are a bit steep, with a great beach as the payoff at the bottom. The large offshore rock islands often provide haulout areas for harbor seals, and at low tide the tide pools here are some of the best (and most accessible) around. Yaquina Bay Beach Trail This short and scenic trail leaves from Naterlin Drive right near the Coast Guard Station. It follows the north shore of Yaquina Bay and leads onto the north jetty at the mouth of the bay, and from there to the beach in Yaquina Bay State Park. Mike Miller Park and Connected Trails Mike Miller Park in South Beach is a gorgeous one-mile loop trail that traverses a range of habitats, from an old spruce/fir forest of towering trees to freshwater wetlands. In recent years the Mike Miller loop has been linked to new trails near the Newport campus of Oregon Coast Community College; the trail system can be accessed either from the playground at the Wilder community abutting the college campus or from the Mike Miller trailhead. If you park at the Mike Miller trailhead off of Rte. 101, you can pick up an

Photos: Johanna Wienert

interpretive brochure and follow the numbered markers along the trail to learn more about this iconic Pacific Northwest ecosystem. In spring, wild rhododendrons tower overhead and salmonberries and other typical native vegetation in every shade of green crowd the view. In most years ospreys nest in snags in the park’s 40 acres, and other bird life is abundant as well. An observation deck at the park’s wetland area brings hikers closer to the newts, turtles, and ducks that are often found in the water. Terrain is mostly dirt with some gravel and a few small bridges crossing over creeks or particularly wet areas. About half-way around the loop you will come to signs indicating side trails to the community college and the Emery Trail, named after the generous landowner who allows the use of some of his property for the extensions of these trails. The community college trail links up to the campus, emerging at a lovely playground maintained jointly by the Wilder housing development and the City of Newport. The City’s longterm plans are to extend these trails even further through South Beach, eventually hooking into a trail planned to run all the way from Corvallis to the coast. South Beach State Park South Beach State Park maintains a range of trails, from a flat, paved bike trail perfect for bikes, scooters, strollers, and rollerblades, to wooded trails that can provide quite a workout. Skirting the edge of the park’s campground is the Cooper Ridge Nature Trail, a 1.75-mile loop through forest and meadow habitats. Terrain is dirt and sand, and there are a few moderately challenging hills. The South Jetty Trail, a paved ADA-accessible path, is a one-mile link between the park and the South Jetty recreation area. The Old Jetty Trail is another wooded alternative, which basically parallels the paved trail but goes through the shore pine forest and dune habitats of the park. Wildlife is abundant in South Beach, especially in the early morning hours – keep your eyes open for deer, birds, and even the occasional coyote. Beaver Creek State Natural Area Eight miles south of Newport is the relatively new Beaver Creek State Natural Area, which is laced with gorgeous upland meadow trails. Trails start from the Visitor Center, or from a less well-marked parking area on South Beaver Creek Road (ask at the Visitor Center for directions). Because much of the park is in low-lying wetlands, trail access can be limited, or covered in mud and water, during some months so the southern access point allows for a less mucky start to your hike. Hikers will almost surely see evidence of the elk herds that frequent the park, and perhaps signs of other wildlife – bears, raptors, deer, river otters, and even cougar and bobcat – as well.

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Outdoors

Recreation, Indoor & Outdoor

Beachy Keen: The beaches are the main event in Newport Visitors come to Newport for many reasons – restaurants, attractions like the Oregon Coast Aquarium, fishing opportunities, the shops of the Bayfront and Nye Beach – but everyone knows that the main attraction is the beach. Locals love it. Visitors love it. We all walk and surf and fly kites and romp and picnic and dig and beachcomb and escape there. But which beach to choose for a given outing? Here’s an insider’s guide to the beaches of Newport, each a bit different from the next, and each absolutely stunning. Beverly Beach Access: from the Beverly Beach State Park Day Use Area, easy access over mostly level ground and a few rocks Amenities: Campground, bathrooms, picnic tables, water fountain, nature center (at state park)

Don’t Miss: Fossils! At the northern end of Newport is Beverly Beach, accessed easily at the day use area of Beverly Beach State Park at 123rd Street. The entrance to the beach is right next to Spencer Creek, which winds through the state park and empties onto the sand here. What really sets Beverly Beach apart is its rich trove of fossils that erodes out of the cliffs lining the beach. Winter storms eat away at the cliffs and then deposit these ancient treasures on the beach. You can find clams and other shellfish from the Astoria formation, about 18 million years old, as well as rarer finds like whale vertebrae, crabs, and shark teeth. Moolack Beach Access: Multiple fairly steep trails from the official parking area can be slippery – take care scrambling down Amenities: None Don’t Miss: The opportunity for a long walk with a view to Yaquina Head Just south of Beverly Beach and north of Yaquina Head is Moolack Beach. Moolack is also a good place for fossil- and agate-hunting, and a surfing destination. The best thing about this beach is that it is typically uncrowded, yet provides a wide, flat beach for kite flying, sand castle building, Frisbee tossing, and other typical beach activities. Cobble Beach at Yaquina Head Access: Stairs, stairs, stairs Amenities: Bathrooms at the Visitor Center and near the lighthouse, interpretive displays and small gift shop at the Visitor Center Don’t Miss: Tide pools Among the treasures of the Yaquina Head Outstanding Natural Area is Cobble Beach, where the beach consists of largish volcanic black stones rather than sand. Past the cobbles are some of the best tide pools in the area, accessible at low tide and home to a near-infinite variety of sea anemones, sea stars, urchins, nudibranchs, crabs, mussels, and other critters. The towering offshore rocks here provide habitat for nesting birds in the summer time, and seals frequently haul out and rest on the smaller offshore rocks and also on the shore at the north end of the beach. Agate Beach Access: Three access points along the length of the beach: the Agate Beach Wayside on Oceanview Drive, the Lucky Gap trail with parking at the south end of the Roby’s Furniture parking lot on Hwy 101, and down a very steep and sometimes-slippery trail near the north end of the beach – park in the small lot across from the Lighthouse Diner or on the road and walk down toward the beach. At all access points a creek usually needs to be crossed to get to the surf line – usually at the Wayside it’s either small enough to jump across or someone has laid wood across it. Amenities: Bathrooms and picnic tables at the Agate Beach Wayside; none at other access points Don’t Miss: Surfers near Yaquina Head While it’s actually not easy to find an agate on Agate Beach these days, the delights of this beach are innumerable. When the summer wind comes from the north, Yaquina Head provides a wind break at the north end of the beach, allowing it to really heat up at that spot even when people are shivering in their fleeces a short distance to the south. One of the most popular activities at this beach is surfing, particularly at the north end of the beach. The rocks near the headland, exposed at low tide, hide crabs and other animals seemingly placed there just to delight children with buckets. Nye Beach Access: The main access to Nye Beach is at the Nye Beach Turnaround in

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Photos: Johanna Wienert


the neighborhood of Nye Beach. Access is very easy – just a very short ramp from the parking lot and you’re on the sand. Amenities: Bathrooms and picnic tables at the Turnaround, as well as a foot wash. Don’t Miss: Jumpoff Joe Nye Beach is probably the most visited beach in Newport, as it is easily accessible, adjacent to the funky neighborhood of Nye Beach, and wide and lovely. To the north of the turnaround is the remains of Jumpoff Joe, what used to be a sandstone sea stack that has eroded away. One great thing about Nye Beach is its proximity to the shops and restaurants of Nye Beach. Coffee, pastries, ice cream, and more can all be purchased and snacked on at the beach. Yaquina Bay State Park Access: Stairs, some paved walkway, and trails through the dunes Amenities: Bathrooms and picnic area near the parking lot, Yaquina Bay Lighthouse, Fishermen’s Memorial Sanctuary Don’t Miss: Walking through the dunes The next beach access as you head south is at Yaquina Bay State Park, home of the Yaquina Bay Lighthouse. From the main parking area you can look down on the entrance to Yaquina Bay and watch the boats come and go, and get a great view of the Yaquina Bay Bridge as well. Unique to this beach is the walk through the dunes behind the beach that you can take in order to access the shore. You can also walk part of the way out onto the rock jetty on the north side of the bay entrance. The bay entrance itself is a constant source of entertainment, with boats coming and going, seals and sea lions foraging, and a wide array of marine birds diving, swimming, and swooping. South Beach Access: Easy access over a dune trail at the day use area of South Beach State Park south of the bridge Amenities: Bathrooms and picnic tables, campground, paved and unpaved nature trails behind the dunes Don’t Miss: Walking and biking trails South Beach is perfect for walking, surfing, boogie boarding, and just about any other beach activity you like. To the north of the beach access is the south jetty at the entrance to Yaquina Bay. The special bonus at South Beach is the set of trails, both paved and unpaved, that parallels the shore just behind the dunes. These trails, which include a great paved path perfect for family bike rides and the Cooper Ridge hiking trail, connect South Beach State Park with the South Jetty recreation area, as well as with the campground within the park. One side trail is an ADA-accessible interpretive boardwalk trail that provides information about the natural history of the area. Ona Beach Access: Short walk from parking lot (8 miles south of Newport) over the bridge spanning Beaver Creek, easy footing to get onto the beach Amenities: Bathrooms and picnic tables near the parking area, boat launch across Rte. 101 Don’t Miss: Beaver Creek Ona Beach State Park, now called Brian Booth State Park, is the gateway to activities of both salt and freshwater. From the park’s beach access you can walk far to the south. When winter storms scour sand off the beach, gorgeous rock formations are revealed. Beaver Creek spills out onto the beach here, flowing under a picturesque bridge and over rocks to empty into the ocean. Slightly further upstream the creek provides excellent opportunities for canoeing and kayaking through productive and spectacular wetlands teeming with life. Photos: Johanna Wienert

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Outdoors

Recreation, Indoor & Outdoor

Paddlers’ Paradise Kayak tour explores Beaver Creek wetlands By Larry Coonrod

Editor’s Note: Paddling enthusiasts can kayak locally in Yaquina Bay, in the ocean, and in local rivers. The most popular spot for canoeing and kayaking is Beaver Creek, which empties into the ocean at Brian Booth State Park (also called Ona Beach State Park) south of Newport. Enjoy Larry Coonrod’s description of a South Beach State Park ranger-led Beaver Creek paddle. For information about current kayaking tours, make sure to navigate to the Brian Booth State Park web site via the Oregon State Parks web site at www.oregonstateparks.org. The bald eagle perched a top a fog-enshrouded snag overlooking Beaver Creek gave the eight would-be kayakers their first indication that they were about to leave the ordinary behind. If the noble bird had a sense a humor, he was no doubt enjoying the sight of the novices nervously milling about trying to adjust foot pegs and absorb a three-minute course in kayaking from tour guides Ray and Joann Fowels. "The cardinal rule of kayaking is to stay centered," Ray advised. If any of the adults were having second thoughts about paddling the narrow craft away from the safety of the boat launch, the sight of a grinning 10-yearold Lauren Markley of Salem - eager to get started - made them reconsider. Sponsored by South Beach State Park, the kayak tour program uses relatively stable recreational kayaks manufactured by the Old Town Canoe Company in Maine. And while an experienced kayaker might find them a bit tame, they're perfect for novices. "These are very safe and easy to keep upright. They're like a boat on the bottom," Ray assured the group. “Nobody’s going to get wet." According to Joanne, in the couple's six-years of guiding tours on Beaver Creek, they've only had a handful of clients find themselves sans kayak and swimming, most the result of horseplay. "We went three years without anyone falling out," Joanne said. With the preliminary instructions out of the way, the cavalcade of sleek bright red, yellow, and blue craft began their journey upstream with Joanne in the lead and Ray trailing behind, like a couple of geese keeping watch over their young flock. "You're in a true sanctuary here," Joanne said as the tour group headed upstream. The Wetland Conservancy owns and manages 80 acres along Beaver Creek wetland complex (designated one of Oregon's greatest wetlands) upstream of Ona Beach State Park. In 2007, the Oregon Parks and Recreation Department purchased an additional 318 acres, establishing the Beaver Creek State Natural Area. The OPRD plans to open the area up for recreational use in 2010. Beaver Creek is home to coho salmon, cutthroat trout, steelhead, beaver, river otters, bears, bald eagles, blue and green herons, and numerous migratory birds.

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"A coastal marsh is like a biological supermarket," Joanne tells the group. "It's a virtual smorgasbord for these animals." The marsh acts much like a human kidney in filtering out pollution. Its muddy bottom is a giant sponge. True to its name, the creek is home to a thriving colony of beavers, although at one time they were nearly wiped out by trapping, Joanne said. With all the kayaks, "logged up" in a tight cluster along the sedge grass covered bank, she pointed out a beaver lodge and explained how the beavers build a multilevel structure by first surveying the site and then gathering the building materials, much like a human construction crew might. Another resident of Beaver Creek, nutria, are more recent transplants. After trapping nearly depleted the beaver population in the late 1800s and early 1900s, fur traders brought the quick-breeding nutria from South America to replace beaver pelts. Nutria's feeding habits and burrowing cause erosion, and can devastate marshland. "I like to tell people that beavers are nature's engineers, and nutria are the demolition experts," Joanne said. They might be considered a "large rat" by some; nevertheless, an adult nutria and its offspring thrilled the kayakers by staying put in a canopy of grass as they took turns paddling to within a few feet and taking pictures. The park's Thursday evening tours produce more sightings of the nocturnal beavers, Joanne said. Before moving along on the tour, Joanne elicited some good-natured groans with a few corny wildlife jokes told in her soft Texan accent. "How can you tell a bald eagle in the wild? It combs its hair over to one side (Get it?)," and "Why do seagulls live on the sea and not the bay? Otherwise they'd be Baygulls." By the time the tour group turned around about a mile from the starting point, the novice kayakers looked like veterans, feeling confident enough to spread out and explore along the banks by themselves. Before ending the tour, the Smiths had one final exercise for the group: closing their eyes and drifting along for one minute just listening. Nature is anything but quiet along Beaver Creek. The call of a blue heron, the chirping of song birds, and the sound of raindrops splattering on the water made it easy to forget that just around the corner cars and trucks were whizzing by on Highway 101. Before they departed on that same highway back to the less serene sounds of modern civilization, Ray left everyone with a bit of wisdom about the future of wild lands: "The Lord created the world for us, but he also made us the stewards."

Photos: Johanna Wienert


Finding Feathered Friends Birding in Newport Thanks to its large range of habitats, from coastal forests to beaches to wetlands, Newport is a birders’ paradise. Here is a brief guide to some of the prime birding spots around town and what you can find at each. Beverly Beach State Park Great examples of shorebirds and other marine species can be observed at the expansive beach here (and at Newport’s other beaches as well). Look for Western and Hermann’s Gulls, Common Loons, and Brown Pelicans flying by, and sanderling, whimbrel, and Western Sandpiper on the sand. In the park and campground, you can find Pileated Woodpecker, Band-tailed Pigeon, Swainson’s Thrush, Pacific Slope Flycatchers, Brown Creepers, and Wilson’s Warbler. Yaquina Head This site has been designated a Globally Important Bird Area. From April through July, thousands of Common Murres and many cormorants, both Brandts and Pelagic, will be seen on nearby offshore rocks. On the cliffs gulls, Pigeon Guillemots, and Pelagic Cormorants maintain precarious nests. Bald Eagles are a common summertime sight, as they prey on the young seabirds on the offshore rocks. Other summer birds include Black Oystercatchers, Western Gulls, and Brown Pelicans. Winter birds include Red-necked and Western Grebe and Common Loon. If you’re very lucky, you could spot an occasional Marbled Murrelet or Peregrine Falcon. Bay Road Yaquina Bay Road, extending from the Bayfront neighborhood to Toledo, is a great place to spot a range of birds year-round. According to the web site of the Oregon Coast Birding Trail (www.oregoncoastbirding.com), “…birding is very good along the entire length of Yaquina Bay Road and best from fall to spring. Stop at pullouts along the way to view loons, grebes, ducks and gulls.” Other species that frequent the bay here include brandt, Great Blue Heron, Great Egret, Green Heron, and Snowy Egret. Winter birds include Dunlin, Western and Least Sandpiper, and Black Turnstones. One must-stop spot on the road is Sally’s Bend, near the LNG tanks (1702 Yaquina Bay Road). “Walk west of the road to view terrestrial birds like Western Meadowlark, Northern Shrike, Killdeer, and Wilson’s Snipe, American Pipit and Western Kingbird in spring,” advises the Oregon Coast Birding Trail web site. Other likelies are Bald Eagles and a range of waterbirds in spring (Canvasback, American Wigeon, scoters, mergansers, and grebes among them). Belted Kingfishers are often found on the powerlines along the bay side of the road. Estuary Trail The Estuary Trail traverses the edge of Yaquina Bay on the campus of the Hatfield Marine Science Center in South Beach. Over 3,000 feet of trail offer year-round public access to the estuary, and interpretive signs are placed along the trail, with an observation shelter provided approximately midway. Parts of the trail and facilities are accessible to the physically challenged. This trail is a feast at any time of year. In winter, “check bushes and pines for Palm Warbler and the fields for Savannah Sparrow. Fall brings Western Meadowlark. These grounds are well known for vagrants during migration like Sage Thrasher, Mountain Bluebird, and Say’s Phoebe. On the mudflats in fall, waterfowl are abundant… Peak shorebird migration is late April; expect Dunlin, Western and Least Sandpiper, Semipalmated Plover, Whimbrel, and Long-billed Curlew,” advises the Oregon Coast Birding Trail. Birds of prey, including Bald Eagle, Merlin, and White-tailed Kite are seen here as well. South Jetty Many habitats come together at the South Jetty at the mouth of Yaquina Bay and the trails that extend from there south to South Beach State Park. Along the South Jetty Road, look for loons, cormorants, Pigeon Guillemots, and Harlequin Ducks. The coastal dunes along the paved walking trail offer the opportunity to spy a range of species, including swallows, flycatchers, and Cedar Waxwing. Some winters, Snowy Owls have been found in the dunes. For more detailed information about birding spots and species, go to the Oregon Coast Birding Trail web site at www.oregoncoastbirding.com. Photos: Johanna Wienert

Pedal-Pushing Paradise Biking Around Newport Whether you’ve got a sleek, speedy road bike, a tricked-out mountain bike, or a touring bike with a tinkly bell and a wicker basket on the handlebars, there’s a bike ride for you in and around Newport. Bike rides in the Newport area include road rides with and without killer hills, beautiful paved bike paths, and gnarly trails that include everything from gravel road to single track. A lovely, flat, family-friendly ride is found at South Beach State Park, where a one-mile paved trail runs from the day use area parking lot to the South Jetty parking area. The trail is protected from the summer wind, but the ocean is always nearby: multiple beach access points and an interpretive boardwalk along the trail can make for great side trips. This ride can hook up to the paved trails along the south side of Yaquina Bay all the way to the NOAA facility, and even out to Idaho Point on flat, wide roads along the bay and King Slough. If you want to get out into the woods on mountain bike trails, there are a number of options. A gravel and dirt road extends from Big Creek Park along the shore of Newport’s drinking water reservoir, an out-and-back ride of a little less than 4 miles (please respect private property, which begins at the yellow gate at the end of the road). You can add about 1.5 miles on to this ride by riding on dirt, gravel, and boardwalks on the Ocean to Bay trail from Big Creek Park to Agate Beach and back. More serious mountain bikers can apply for a free permit to ride a web of trails accessible behind Oregon Coast Community College in South Beach. These trails are the site of the annual Coast Hills Classic mountain bike race that takes place in muddy May. There are also extensive trails at Olalla Lake in nearby Toledo. Road riders will enjoy the Lighthouse to Lighthouse ride, which follows a significant stretch of oceanfront, punctuated at either end by a spectacular lighthouse. This moderately challenging route runs the length of the Nye Beach neighborhood, offering a good workout along with its gorgeous views. A short stretch of Highway 101 is necessary on this ride. Keep in mind that the Lighthouse Drive piece of the ride, which extends from Highway 101 to the Yaquina Head Lighthouse, is only accessible during the operating hours of the Yaquina Head Outstanding Natural Area. Another great road option is the Bay Road between Newport’s Bayfront and the city of Toledo. Wide, flat, and low-traffic for most of the ride, this trek takes riders from the scent of salt-water taffy and the bustle of the Bayfront’s restaurants and shops, through the quiet stillness of Yaquina Bay’s backwaters, to the industrial waterfront of Toledo. In need of a bike rental, gear, or repairs? Head to Bike Newport, Newport’s excellent full-service bike shop, on 6th Street (see p. XX for more about Bike Newport). www.newportchamber.org -35


Outdoors

Recreation, Indoor & Outdoor

Newport Recreation Center The City of Newport maintains the 45,000-square-foot municipal Recreation Center to provide opportunities for fitness, recreation, and wellness activities to the community. The facility features:

White boards, 24” TV/DVD/VCR, and other equipment available Rental times available (full or ½ room) Capacity 132 people

Full Size Gym Drop-in basketball, volleyball, and more Rental times available Capacity 638 people Multi-purpose Gym Drop-in soccer, hockey, tennis, & recreational skating Martial arts, gymnastics, indoor park and more Rental times available Capacity 366 people

Aerobics/Dance Room (divisible) Shock-absorbing wood floor Ballet bar and mirrored walls Access to outdoor patio and garden Rental times available (full or ½ room) Capacity 40

Cardio/Strength Training Area Forty-nine strength training and cardio machines including elliptical machines, treadmills, recumbent bikes, upright bikes, stair climber, rowing machine, strength-training machines, cable-cross machines, and a large selection of free weights, dumbbells, bars, benches, and equipment. All of our Cardio Attendants are at your service. Certified Personal Trainer available upon request. Shannon Rackowski, our Lead Fitness Attendant with over 25 years of training experience and education is available for private consultations. Circuit Training Room Eight-man universal machine, punching bag, and speed bags plus additional equipment Stretching/Exercise Area overlooking the gyms. Pilates balls, medicine balls, bosu balls, stretching bands, jump ropes, weight belts, aerobic steps, ab rollers and exercise mats

Secondary Aerobics/Dance Room and Meeting Room Carpeted floor Mirrored wall Rental times available Capacity 35 people Classroom and Meeting Room (divisible) Perfect for trainings, meetings, parties, baby showers, etc. Rental available (full or ½ room) Capacity 36 people with tables Child Center for our “School’s Out” program and Friday Night Date Night program Low counter tops and child-sized furnishings Individual restroom Lots of games, toys, and dedicated staff members to care for our most precious patrons Family changing room (designed for parents with young children) Single-use dressing room for special needs

Indoor Track Two lanes for walking or running Shock-absorbing surface

Individual shower

Large Multi-Purpose Room (divisible) Large outdoor patio with gardens and pathway Available for wedding receptions and special events Catering kitchen and culinary equipment available

Daily lockers free (bring a padlock); monthly lockers with key are available for rent

Locker/shower Rooms

Fitness and exercise classes

New Pool on the Horizon The City of Newport maintains a municipal swimming pool, where locals and visitors can swim laps, conduct water therapy, take aqua aerobics classes, and splash during open rec swims. The Newport Swim Team and the Newport High School Swim Team also practice here and host meets. As busy and critical as this facility is, it is aging, and not likely to last much longer. In November of 2013, residents of Newport approved a bond measure that will collect funds for the construction of a brand new municipal pool to be constructed adjacent to the Newport Rec Center. The new facility will include an eightlane lap pool, a warm-water therapy pool, a shallow toddler play area, and a therapeutic hot tub. Construction will be complete some time in 2016. 36- www.newportchamber.org

Photos: Courtesy Newport Recreation Center


Parks Newport offers a large range of parks and open space ranging from sports fields to undeveloped forest lands for hiking to coastal State Parks providing access to our gorgeous beaches. The City of Newport maintains a number of city parks, described here. Agate Beach Neighborhood Park and Dog Park (1 acre) 185 NW 60th Street Features a dog park, covered picnic shelter, small playing field, picnic tables, BBQ grill, play structure and restrooms Betty Wheeler Memorial Field (2.8 acres) 852 NW Nye St. between NW 8th and 10th Two ball fields, restrooms, and concession stand (in-season)

Features a kids’ play area with a covered picnic table and trailhead to wooded trails, as well as a Frisbee golf course across the street Wilder Dog Park (.7 acre) 40th St close to Community College Campus The Wilder dog park features a transitional entry and exit corral and a water spigot for animals. Coast Park (2 acres) 100 SW Coast Street next to the Performing Arts Center State of the art play equipment, a magnificently detailed shipwreck, a wetland garden and more

Big Creek Park (2.5 acres) 2510 NE Big Creek Road (near City Reservoir) Picnic and playground facilities include slides, swings, climbing structure, picnic tables, volleyball net, BBQ grills, and covered picnic shelter. The shelter is reservable; reservations are recommended May November. Don Davis Park (2 acres) 832 W. Olive (Restroom) 840 W. Olive (Gazebo) Vietnam Veterans Memorial, gazebo, cobblestone pathway with beach access and sitting areas Founding Rock (0.7 acre) 511 SW Coast Highway Historic downtown sitting area Frank V. Wade Memorial Park (8.8 acres) 1445 NE Big Creek Road Baseball and softball fields, four tennis courts, playground equipment, community garden, Summer Activity Club Headquarters, restrooms, landscaped walkways, and picnic tables Literacy Park (1 acre) 370 W. Olive Street, behind the Newport Public Library Amphitheater and recreation area Mombetsu Sister City Park (0.6 acre) 620 SW Neff Way Japanese garden park dedicated to Newport’s Sister City, Mombetsu, Japan Nye Beach Turnaround (.46 acre) NW Beach Drive Beach access, parking, picnic tables and central to Nye Beach business district Ocean to Bay Trail (.67 mile) Trail runs from Big Creek Park west through the Agate Beach Wayside tunnel and on to Agate Beach. Includes boardwalks and bridges, and winds through forested areas and over creek. State Park restrooms located at Agate Beach Wayside. Sam Moore Parkway (5.73 acres) 656 NW High St. (between Betty Wheeler & NW High Street) Natural canyon with walking trail, play structure, picnic area, and sports park bowls Wilder Twin Park 625 SE 43rd St. www.newportchamber.org -37


Economy

Doing Business in Newport

Doing Business Still as alluring as ever, Newport, Oregon is not only a great place to live and raise a family, it's a fertile ground for business growth and prosperity. The beauty of the Pacific Ocean and the scenic coastal beaches naturally attracts people to the port city of Newport. Newport has been named as one of the "Paradise Found: 12 Great Towns You Could Call Home" in Pacific Northwest Magazine. The City is located in Lincoln County, along Oregon's Central Coast, at the confluence of the Yaquina River and the Pacific Ocean. The Pacific Ocean, award winning sandy ocean beaches, wilderness areas and national forests are a few of the amenities that the area offers. The 992 square miles of Lincoln County also encompass mountainous, wooded terrain, steep ridges, and winding inland valleys along with level river flood plains and ocean beaches. The elevation of Newport ranges from sea level to 300 feet, with a mean elevation of 75 feet. Newport is situated in the central region of Lincoln County which consists of the cities of Depoe Bay, Lincoln City, Newport, Siletz, Toledo, Waldport and Yachats, and the communities of Chitwood, Seal Rock and Tidewater. Newport, the county seat of Lincoln County, is the business center of

the county. Most commercial/retail development is on the bayfront and along Highway 101, which bisects the city. Newport is a transportation hub, with state highway routes to the north, south, and east, an airport, and an excellent port. The city is a progressively growing community committed to preserving the treasures of the Oregon coast while creating a successful business environment, keeping businesses viable, and on their competitive toes. The steady population growth, breathtaking environment, great quality of life and continued economic vitality of the Newport area has made it an ideal location for business to thrive. Profiles of three highly successful local businesses here – Mo’s Restaurants, Bike Newport, and Advanced Research Corporation – show just how well Newport supports business. This publication is intended to provide an overview of the business and economic climate of Newport and Lincoln County. All available information is Lincoln County data, unless Newport specific numbers were available. While the information is reviewed annually, monthly or quarterly information on specific areas may be obtained from the Greater Newport Chamber of Commerce, 555 SW Coast Hwy, Newport OR 97365, 1-800-262-7844.

Photo: Johanna Wienert

38- www.newportchamber.org

Photo: Johanna Wienert


Mo’s Restaurants

Doing Business in Newport - Business Profiles

No visit to Newport is complete without a steaming bowl of Mo’s Restaurant’s world-famous clam chowder. This family-owned business has been operating on the Newport Bayfront for more than 65 years, first as “Freddie and Mo’s” and shortly thereafter as Mo’s. Mohava Marie Niemi and a friend started the business after Mo owned, and sold, the Bay Haven Inn on the Bayfront. The “little joint on the waterfront” with the wonderful, creamy clam chowder grew and expanded, until it was necessary to open “Mo’s Annex” across the street to accommodate the enthusiastic crowds. Patrons have included everyone from local fishermen to visiting luminaries such as Senator Robert Kennedy and Paul Newman. In the mid-70s the restaurant began packaging and freezing chowder base to sell in retail outlets. It can now be ordered online and shipped just about anywhere. Around the same time, the operation expanded to include restaurants in Otter Rock, Lincoln City, Florence, and Cannon Beach. The Mo’s Chowder Factory, still on the Newport Bayfront, produces about 500,000 pounds of clam chowder a year, some packaged and shipped to grocery stores and the rest delivered fresh to all the Mo’s Restaurants. As the reputation of the restaurant grew, it received national attention, including write-ups in a range of national publications and the honor of being served at the first luncheon ever held in the Smithsonian Institute, which celebrated “Best American Regional Foods.” Today Mo’s is owned by Mo’s granddaughter, Cindy McEntee, and Cindy’s son, Dylan, operated with help from Dylan’s sister, Gabrielle. For her “outstanding development of her business and her contributions to the community” Cindy was awarded the 2001 First Runner Up, National Small Business Person of the Year by President George W. Bush. The current generation continues the Mo’s traditions of excellent food, a relaxed and friendly atmosphere, and also of service to the community. More about Mo’s can be found at www.moschowder.com. Photo: Johanna Wienert

Advanced Research Corporation

Bike Newport

When John Lavrakas, owner of Advanced Research Corporation, was looking to relocate his small, Colorado Springs-based tech company in 2007, he sought a community with a collaborative spirit poised for growth, one that would provide the support and work force needed for his firm, and one providing a high quality of life, preferably with a rich arts scene. He found all of this and more in Newport, and he and his family happily relocated. He and his wife, Melody, were particularly impressed with the offerings of the Newport Performing Arts Center, amazed at the high-quality music, dance, and theater performances they could take in on any given weekend. Both John and Melody now serve on the board of the Newport Symphony Orchestra. In fact, one personal value that John has infused into his company is an emphasis on community service; John serves on a number of boards and committees in town, as do his other employees. ARC provides R&D, consulting, and testing for air, marine, space, and land technology projects, particularly those with a positioning or satellite telemetry component. ARC's Yaquina Technologies division, headed by Wil Black, creates innovative mobile and web based applications for scientific, educational, and marketing purposes. John Lavrakas serves as a subject matter expert on GPS for the U.S. Department of Transportation. Since moving to the Oregon coast, the company has developed a particular expertise in fishery information systems which help consumers track exactly where the fish they buy came from. In 2008-2009, the company developed the Pacific Fish Trax kiosk, subsequently piloted at two Portland-area News Seasons grocery stores. This product allows consumers to scan a bar code on frozen fish to connect to information about the fisherman and vessel that caught the fish. A Fish Trax system was also developed for Gulf Coast fisheries to reassure consumers about the safety of Gulf seafood in the wake of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. This project has now developed into a nationally branded seafood trace system, Fish Trax Marketplace, developed in cooperation with OSU and the Oregon fishing industry. Advanced Research Corporation currently has four employees and a number of local and national contracts. In 2011, John Lavrakas was recognized as the Oregon Small Business Person of the Year by the U.S. Small Business Administration. More about Advanced Research Corporation can be found at oregonarc.com.

Bike Newport loves Newport, and Newport loves this small business right back. This full-service bike shop opened its doors in December of 2005. Beyond providing bikes of all kinds, bike accessories, parts and gear, and service and repairs, Bike Newport serves as the heart of the large and growing cycling community in town. The staff organizes road and mountain bike rides throughout the year, from “Mellow Monday” road rides in the summer to gnarly nighttime mountain bike rides in the winter to the very popular Coast Hills Classic mountain bike race in the spring. They also offer classes at the shop, including bike repair clinics, yoga for cyclists, and kickboxing. Hailing from Santa Cruz but living inland in Grants Pass, Elliott and Daniella Crowder longed to return to the coast, so when an opportunity arose to purchase an existing bike shop in Newport, they took the leap. They and their young son, Elliott (junior and senior are often referred to as Little Elliott and Big Elliott), left the restaurant business and followed their passion to open Bike Newport. They soon moved to a new location, and business grew and grew. “We take great joy in getting people on bikes, from a child's first bike to Grandma's three-wheeler!” Daniella Crowder said. “We love doing business and raising our son in Newport as it is such a wonderful community. We are very active in this community and believe that is a big reason that customers are loyal and supportive of our business,” she reflected. The Crowders won’t rest until Newport is the biking capital of the Oregon coast. They’ve made incredible progress toward that goal using a combination of effective advocacy and partnerships with everyone from local landowners to the city of Newport. They secured access to an amazing web of mountain biking trails on private property in South Beach, and they revitalized a local cycling club which meets regularly at their shop. More about Bike Newport can be found at www.bikenewport.com.

Photo: Johanna Wienert

www.newportchamber.org -39


Economy

Doing Business in Newport Commercial Fishing A Major Newport Industry

Photo: Johanna Wienert

Information courtesy of Fishermen Involved in Natural Energy (FINE), finecommittee.org Commercial fishing in Oregon is a significant contributor to Oregon’s coastal and state economy. Approximately 248 commercial fishing vessels are home-ported in Lincoln County, the majority of which are based in Newport (some are also based in Depoe Bay and Toledo). There are at least double that number of commercial fishing vessels in the county, representing vessels that are home-ported elsewhere but spend time fishing off of Lincoln County. Vessels range in size from 18 to 126 ft, and are valued at $5000 to $3 million. A few of these vessels are distant water vessels that spend the majority of their fishing year in Alaska, returning to Lincoln County for maintenance and repairs and, in some cases, to participate in the Dungeness crab and whiting fisheries. Most of the commercial fishing fleet fishes locally and sells their catch to buyers in this area. While the majority of their fishing effort and subsequent harvest occurs outside of state waters, significant production in crab, salmon, and groundfish occurs within three miles of the coast (state waters) in some years. The majority of the sport-fishing activities also take place within three miles. During the 2003-2006 time period, the ex-vessel value (price paid to fishermen) for commercial landings of fish and shellfish in Lincoln County totaled $113,219,443, or an average of $28,304,861 per year. Dungeness crab was the highest value species harvested, averaging $11,798,048 per year. The ex-vessel dollars are multiplied into the community several times over. In 2006 Dungeness crab was the top species landed in Oregon by value. Whiting was the top volume species averaging 72,772,189 pounds per year. Distant water commercial fishing vessels, from 75-126 ft in length, fishing primarily in Alaska, contribute an additional $32 million per year to the Lincoln County Economy. In 2006 Newport, Oregon ranked 13th in the nation for seafood landings.

Newport’s Marine Science Economy: Economic growth through studying the sea Newport residents have always made a living from the sea. Fishing is in our history and in our blood, and our tourism economy relies heavily on our gorgeous beaches. Another ocean-related economic engine here is marine science, a major and growing sector of our economy. From cutting-edge research to ocean monitoring to innovative educational approaches, we make it our business to learn about the ocean and educate children and adults about its mysteries. Oregon State University’s (OSU) Hatfield Marine Science Center (HMSC) is the centerpiece of this sector. Celebrating its 50th anniversary in 2015, HMSC employs about 300 scientists, educators, students, and support staff. In addition to OSU faculty members based at HMSC, many government agencies are co-located on the South Beach campus, including personnel from the federal National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the U. S. Environmental Protection Agency, the U. S. Fish & Wildlife Service, the U. S. Department of Agriculture, the U. S. Geological Survey, and the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife. The overall budget of the center, including both OSU and agency budgets, is approximately $46 million. One of the center’s greatest strengths is collaborative research, facilitated by the co-location of so many agencies. The cutting-edge research at HMSC includes studies of salmon genetics, impacts of ocean acidification on fish and shellfish, underwater volcanoes, oyster nutrition, marine mammal migrations, and more. The center operates two research vessels: The 54-foot Elakha, used for coastal work, and the 177-foot Oceanus for work offshore. OSU’s Marine Mammal Institute also operates the R/V Pacific Storm, a retrofitted trawler. OSU was recently awarded a contract to lead the development of the next series of federal research vessels; one of the first to be produced will operate out of Newport, replacing the aging Oceanus. OSU is planning an extensive expansion of the HMSC facility, mission, and programs. The goal of the initiative is to integrate all of OSU’s ocean-related offerings and expand the Newport campus to accommodate 500 students in residence per year (currently there are about 50 students in residence at 40- www.newportchamber.org

HMSC at any given time). Plans call for expanded facilities, including extensive classroom, office, and laboratory space. OSU is also a major player in the development of marine renewable energy, wave energy in particular, on the Oregon coast. The Northwest National Marine Renewable Energy Center (NNMREC), a partnership between OSU and the University of Washington, operates the Pacific Marine Energy Center (PMEC) offshore of Newport. PMEC consists of two offshore test sites – one autonomous and one grid-connected – where wave energy devices can be tested. A new addition to the marine science cluster in Newport is the NOAA Marine Operations Center – Pacific (MOC-P), the headquarters of the entire Pacific fleet of NOAA research vessels, also in South Beach close to HMSC. After a highly competitive bidding process, Newport was successful in attracting the facility here. Construction was completed by the Port of Newport in 2011. Five research vessels dock in at the Newport facility, which is staffed by 175 people (not all of whom are residents of Lincoln County). These vessels map the ocean floor to create nautical charts, conduct fisheries surveys, and serve as platforms for government and university research. The Ocean Observatories Initiative of the National Science Foundation is a networked system of cutting-edge sensors that will monitor the chemistry and biology of the ocean and seafloor. One set of these instruments, part of the so-called “Endurance Array,” will be located offshore of Newport, including cabled arrays of sensors and standalone buoys; autonomous research gliders will also ply the waters as part of the OOI. The array will have a life span of 25 years, with an NSF investment of approximately $60 million per year. While coordination and management of the OOI program locally (and, in part, regionally) is being conducted by faculty at Oregon State University in Corvallis, a Newport presence is planned, and local contractors and businesses could be utilized for tasks such as buoy maintenance, storage, and repair. Another ocean observing system that has a local component is the Northwest Association of Networked Ocean Observing Systems (NANOOS), which is the Regional Association of the national Integrated Ocean Observing


System (IOOS) in the Pacific Northwest, primarily Washington and Oregon. NANOOS is a partnership of over 40 entities, including industry, state agencies, local governments, tribes, non-government organizations, and educational institutions, which work together to provide intensive monitoring of the marine environment. The Port of Newport and personnel from the Newport office of the Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries are partners in this initiative. Thanks in part to the concentration of marine science being conducted in Newport, an equally impressive array of marine education programs is also clustered here. Hatfield is a critical center of marine education, providing undergraduate and graduate education through OSU and HMSC’s partner agencies, as well as public education via its Oregon Sea Grant-run Visitor Center. The Visitor Center is also a laboratory where exciting new research is being conducted by OSU faculty and graduate students on how people learn in informal learning environments like museums. Finally, Sea Grant personnel provide hands-on classes to visiting students from classrooms all over the state. The Oregon Coast Aquarium, located close to HMSC in South Beach, attracts visitors from around the globe – in fact, it is one of the top tourist attractions in Oregon. It is a critical educational resource for the state as well: more than 40,000 students come through its doors every year. Parents Magazine, Forbes Traveler, USA Today, 10Best.com and Coastal Living named the Oregon Coast Aquarium among the top ten in the nation. The Portland Business Journal listed the Aquarium as one of the top five education-based nonprofits in the state and Spirit Magazine called Passages of the Deep “The coolest 50 yards on the Oregon Coast.” The Aquarium also has an active outreach program, which brings their education program to students around the state. The Oregon Museum of Science and Industry recently purchased a parcel in South Beach where they intend to build a facility to accommodate a summer residential marine science camp

O N YSTER O G E R O FARMS

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What is the economic impact of all of this marine science activity? A 2011 analysis estimated that the overall indirect spending resulting from the marine science and education sector was $55 million, creating a total of 1200 jobs in the region. The sector represents 6% of the county’s economy (as of 2013). Seeing the potential for major economic growth based on the marine research sector, local economic development interests, businesses, scientists, and community leaders have developed a group to help address this issue proactively. The Yaquina Bay Ocean Observing Initiative (YBOOI) is committed to pursuing collaborative economic development opportunities for Newport and Lincoln County related to ocean observing activities. They have conducted multiple strategic planning events and an ocean observing conference in Newport in recent years, and a steering committee is spearheading efforts to capitalize on these opportunities. The room for growth in this sector is enormous. YBOOI, the Chamber of Commerce, the City of Newport, Lincoln County, and the Port of Newport are all committed to encouraging businesses to relocate or grow in Newport and on the central coast in general. There isn’t a better place in the Pacific Northwest to build a marine-related business. For more information about the entities described here, please see: Hatfield Marine Science Center: hmsc.oregonstate.edu Ocean Observatories Initiative: oceanobservatories.org NANOOS: www.nanoos.org NOAA MOC-P: www.moc.noaa.gov/MOC-P/mop.html Oregon Sea Grant/HMSC Visitor Center: hmsc.oregonstate.edu/visitor/ Oregon Coast Aquarium: aquarium.org Oregon Museum of Science and Industry: www.omsi.edu Yaquina Bay Ocean Observing Initiative: ybooi.org

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www.newportchamber.org -41


Economy

Doing Business in Newport

Financial Sector The financial needs of Newport residents and businesses are well served by a variety of financial institutions. The city has eight bank branches located downtown and in other commercial areas of town. Two of these are Oregon-based institutions, catering to the business and consumer needs of Oregonians. There are also three large national institutions, including U.S. Bank, Bank of America and JPMorgan Chase Bank. Newport also has OSU Federal Credit Union and TLC Federal Credit Union, both Newport Chamber members. The broad range of banking options assures borrowing need, including mortgage and business borrowing that can be met without leaving town.

Banks Oregon Coast Bank Columbia Bank U.S. Bank Umpqua Bank Bank of America Washington Federal JP Morgan Chase Bank Bank of the West

91,143 77,530 64,553 35,345 33,487 32,810 22,024 18,982

Local Market Share 24.25% 20.63% 17.17% 9.40% 8.91% 8.73% 5.86% 5.05%

Newport Chamber Member NO YES YES YES NO YES YES NO

375,874

State HQ

# Offices in US

National Deposits (000’s)

# Local Offices

Local Deposits (000’s)

OR WA OH OR NC WA OH CA

4 157 3,139 193 5,398 185 5,693 625

60,028 5,762,491 235,275,110 9,002,443 1,019,050,513 9,069,888 916,520,976 45,877,824

1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1

2,240,619,273

9

TOTALS:

Source: FDIC.gov – June 30, 2013

These areare thethe banks andand where theythey are headquartered These banks where are headquartered:

To serve our growing population, Newport has many talented and well qualified Financial Planners and CPAs who combine top notch professional expertise with small town service. Whether you are relocating your business, thinking of a start-up, buying a vacation home or looking to retire to Newport, make sure to visit these categories in our Membership Listing to find that special person to handle all of your financial questions.

Retail Newport’s retail landscape includes everything from “big box” stores like Wal-Mart and Fred Meyer to small outlets selling everything from used books to upscale clothing to wine. We have four major grocery stores (Fred Meyer, Safeway, Thriftway, and Cash and Carry; Wal-Mart carries extensive grocery offerings as well), as well as an Asian market (Mai’s Asian Market), natural foods co-op (Oceana Natural Foods), and many smaller grocery and convenience stores. Retail sales in Newport in 2007 (the most recent year for which data are available) totaled $281,503,000. Retail sales per capita in the same year were $28,409. Retail trade comprises 13% of our industry; 4% of our work force is engaged in retail sales work (excluding cashiers), according to data from www.city-data.com.

42- www.newportchamber.org

Photos: Rockne Roll



Economy

Doing Business in Newport Newport Housing and Real Estate U.S. Census Bureau, 2008-2012 American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates Newport, Oregon Data Set: Selected Social Characteristics & Selected Housing Characteristics

HOUSEHOLDS AND FAMILIES: In 2008-2012 there were an estimated 4,455 households in Newport. The average estimated household size was 2.17 people. Families made up 56.94 percent of the households in Newport. This figure includes married-couple families (48.31 percent). Nonfamily households made up 36.57 percent of all households in Newport.

HOUSING CHARACTERISTICS: In 2008-2012, Newport had an estimated total of 5,597 housing units, 20.4 percent of which were vacant. Of the total housing units, 54.7 percent was in single-unit structures with 1-unit detached, 34.5 percent was in 1-unit attached and multi-unit structures, and 9.8vpercent were mobile homes. 30.13 percent of the housing units were built since 1990. OCCUPIED HOUSING UNIT CHARACTERISTICS: In 2008-2012, Newport had an estimated 4,455 occupied housing units – 2,485 (55.8 percent) owner occupied and 1,970 (44.2 percent) renter occupied. 2.9 percent of the households did not have telephone service and 6 percent of the households did not have access to a car, truck, or van for private use. 46.4 percent had access to one vehicle, 31.7 percent had two vehicles available and 15.8 percent had three or more.

HOUSING COSTS: In 2008-2012, the median monthly estimated housing costs for mortgaged owners was $1,564, non-mortgage owners $471, and renters $778. 61.2 percent of owner occupied units have owners with mortgages and 38.8 percent of owners without mortgages. 27.7 percent of owners and 50.4 percent of renters in Newport spend 30 percent or more of their household income (excluding units where SMOCAPI and GRAPI cannot be computed.

44- www.newportchamber.org

Photos: News-Times


Mike Robinson said he likes to work

website at alseabaygranite.com.

ProBuild meeting Step back in time at the needs of builders the Ester Lee Motel Alsea Bay Granite

W

"Interiors"

hen it comes to meeting Hwy in Newport. ProBuild also has a the needs of residential cabinet, window and door showroom. and commercial builders, “There are a whole slew of departas well as the do-it-yourselfers, Proments in our business. Some are big Build in Newport gets the job done. enough to be stand-alone businesses,” “I think what is unique about our Williams said. “But we have them all business is we are a contractor lumber together. ” yard, but we also cater to the consumer ProBuild employs 20 full-time When buy flooring from CarpetsPlus ColorTile, you canpeople by offering theyou same quality of products with more be assured that you’re getting a top quality product atthan thehalf the to the general public,” workforce on the job reasonable said assistant general most“There are aprice. for at least 20 years. manager Gary Wil100's of choices of flooring and more! The company utilizes whole slew of liams. Cabinets, Countertops, & Plumbing Fixtures. a fleet of eight trucks to That is a big reason departments Over 450 stores nationwide within buying power to make job-site deliveries why ProBuild also carallow you to have your dream design. to customers in Lincoln our business. ” ries paint, hardware, FREE ESTIMATES County and to outlying plumbing, electrical, areas.9 ProBuild is part HOURS: Monday-Friday, 8 am and Saturday, am - 2 pm cabinets, doors and windows. ad- - 5 pm gentle as possible on the with land”more while f it’s an energy efficientInhome of a nationwide company (or available by appointment) dition,with ProBuild carries insulation, building, she said Landwaves, Inc. a “real sense of community” 435 locations. roofing, weatherproofi ng than wanted to provide housing that was youcement want, and Wilder Development in Newport is open Monday 710 Mill Street,ProBuild Waldport products. more attainable to Newport residents is the place for you. through Friday from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. 541-563-5040 • 541-961-3594 And in order to display prodby sticking close to $200,000. The Bonnie Serkin, from those Landwaves, and Saturday from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Call mpcgranite@peak.org ucts, company utilizes an industrial Inc.,thethe developer behind Wilder, only high-end homes available before 541-265-2221 for more information or size sales floor on Wilder cost around $500,000. said10,000-square-foot it was designedwww.alseabaygranite.com around sustainvisit www.probuild.com itsable roughly 1.5-acre siteasata615 Coast While home prices did fall for a bit principals, such rainNgarden, with the economy, she added, Wilder for example, that collects water. She and partner Will Emery wanted really started to take off in 2012. Serkin said 2014 is to go with an ecolooking to be the best friendly village con“We want Wilder to year yet. Three houses cept when approached by Oregon Coast grow organically.” were under construction before the new Community College year, with three more and the City of Newport in 2005 regarding annexing acres scheduled to begin construction of their timberland in South Beach to shortly after. As of the end of 2013, there were 14 build a new campus and additional occupied houses. The first house went residential housing. Those who’ve since bought lots and up in 2010; the college the year before. “When people look at Wilder, they’re had homes built by contractors Landwaves partners with, many local, like not getting just a house, they’re getting a whole community,” Serkin said. “We to gather and love to be outdoors. With property surrounded by want Wilder to grow organically.” Next in the works is a coffee shop for woods, there’s plenty of places to walk and bicycle, including a trail to Mike residents, OCCC students and faculty Miller Park and one planned for Hat- and other South Beach residents to field Marine Science Center. There’s enjoy. There’s also talk of building accesalso Wilder Twin Park, a playground for kids, Wilder Dog Park and a disc sory dwelling units and apartments one day, along with an industrial park, golf course. “It’s appealed to a variety of people, she added. Wilder’s sales office is located at which is what we were hoping for,” Serkin said, adding they have families 440 SE 43rd St. and is open Wednesfrom out of state, retired couples, ac- day through Sunday from 10 a.m. tive professors, NOAA employees and to 3 p.m. or by appointment. Its real others living in Wilder. The goal is to estate agents can also be reached at 541-867-7578 or by emailing hello@ one day expand to 250-acres. In addition to wanting to be “as wildernewport.com

Inspire Yourself... CCB#188607

Wilder offers a sense of community

I

42

T

he Ester Lee Motel, perched 53 non-smoking cottage or motel on a bluff overlooking the rooms. Despite its homage to retocean at 303 Southwest ro style, contemporary amenities Highway 101 in Lincoln City, is an abound: full modern kitchens, free iconic establishment whose 1940s Wi-Fi and Internet, TV and DVD in ambiance is carefully preserved to every room with cinemas, shopping the delight of its multi-generational and dining nearby. Another tribute to customers. CCB License #199347 CRHAC@qwestoffice.net old-fashioned busi“We get people all ness values is the the time whoRefrigeration, came Coastal Heating & Air Conditioning, which you have “Nearly 70 percent pricing, here as kids, and grown to love for over 35 years, is now owned andseasonal operated by Mike set reliably at the beginnow as guest andadults Susanthey’re Taylor. Mikeofisour the the son ofbase formerisowners, Tom and Jackie ning of each year. bringingTaylor, theirandchilbrings a new level ofbusiness. expertise to”the company with over But repeat dren,” said manager 20 years of HVAC/R knowledge.one of the biggest attractions is the openMark Baete. “Nearly Coastal Refrigeration offers services for residential and commercial cusarmed, pet-friendly 70 percent of our andainstallation. policy, nod to the guesttomers base including is repeatpreventative maintenance, replacement Call us anytime! business, people who like our homi- beloved four-legged members of the ness and enjoy stepping back into vacationing family. We appreciate the continued loyalty of our and The Ester Lee’scustomers website, EsterLee. time.” forward to serving to come. com, offersfora years 360-degree virtual Thlook e loving care and cordialityour of neighbors tour of every unit, rates and availthe Ester Lee’s family owners and MIKE TAYLOR <>SUSAN TAYLOR <> RICHARD COPUS ability of rooms. For more informatheir experienced staff is apparent BRENT RODDA <> BRAD PARKER <> JANET PAYNE in a spotless facility that includes tion, call 1-888-996-3606.

Coastal Refrigeration: Meet Lincoln County | 2014

the focus is on service

N

ewport business owners Mike day through integrity, reliability and and Susan Taylor believe in employee knowledge. It has more employees than any building a good relationship with customers, fellow business own- other similar business on the central coast, so it’s able to provide a quicker ers and the community they serve. “We don’t just try to sell products,” turnaround, Susan added. They “love Susan said. “We find out what prob- to employ other families.” Having moved from Texas to take lem they (customers) have and work the business over with with them.” two teens and a 1-yearThe Taylors took “We don’t just try old, the Taylors are over the family business, Coastal Refriger- to sell products, we excited to serve those on the central Oregon ation, 730 NE Third St. find out what coast, especially Mike, #B, from Thomas Taywas born in Orlor in January 2013. problem they have who egon. He had served in the “As the little one Navy during Vietnam and work with grows up in the comand picked up the them.” munity, we want to beskills needed before come more involved,” opening shop in 1978 as a “one man show,” Susan said. Son Susan said. Coastal Refrigeration sells, installs Mike, who is now in the Navy Reserve, started learning the trade at 19. and provides service for an array of Coastal Refrigeration eventually HVAC products and can be reached grew to the five employees it has to- at 541-265-7275.


Tourism

Things to Do and See in Newport Tourism It’s a well-known fact that people come to Newport to visit because there is so much to do and see here. Approximately two to three million people a year come for the beach, the scenery, the attractions, the activities, the culinary opportunities, the beer, or just to get away. Newport appeals to “kids” of all ages. Tourism is a major driver of Newport’s economic engine. With over 1700 lodging rooms throughout the city, one can certainly find a range of accomodations that meet every need. The Greater Newport Chamber of Commerce is dedicated to increasing the frequency and duration of stay for convention, leisure, and group travelers. While there may be competition with other coastal markets for visitor business, Newport is clearly a great choice. The town is an authentic “boots-on” kind of community, offering one hundred percent Newport – the real deal! If you have questions related to tourism, or are interested in finding a location in Newport for an event or meeting, please contact Bobbi Price, Festival & Tourism Coordinator at the Newport Chamber of Commerce at (541) 2658801 or bobbi@newportchamber.org.

Travel Impacts,2006-2012 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 Total Direct Travel Spending ($Million)

2012p

Destination Spending Other Travel' Total Direct Spending

115.2 1.6 116.7

118.8 1.7 120.5

1214 1. 9 123.2

120.5 1.3 121.8

121.5 1. 5 122.9

1244 1.7 126.2

125.9 1.7 12 7.7

27.7 28.3 16.2 7.7 20.3 20.3 120.5

284 284 15.8 8.9 19.8 20.2 121.5

28.6 28.8 16.3 10.6 19.8 20.3 1244

28.0 30.0 16.7 10.6 20.1 20.6 125.9

21.3 5.7 4.6 0.2 31.9

21.8 5.6 4.7 0.2 32.2

23.1 5.9

990 320 210 10 1,540

1,010 320 220 10 1,550

1,000 340

2.3 2.7 5.0

2.3 3.0 5.3

2.3 3.0 54

Visitor Spending by Commodity Purchased ($Million) Accommodations Food Service Food Stores Local Tran. & Gas Arts, Ent. & Rec. Retai I Sales Destination Spending

27.8 24.9 14.5 84 19.7 19.9 115.2

294 25.7 1 5. 1 9.0 19.8 19.8 118.8

27.7 27.1 16.0 10.5 20.1 19.9 1214

Industry Earnings Generated by Travel Spending ($Million) Accom. & Food Serv. Arts, Ent. & Rec. Retai I*** 4.3 Other Travel'' Total Direct Earnings

19.3 5.2 4.5 0.3 29.2

20.9 5.8 4.7 0.3 31.5

21.2 6.1 4.7 0.3 32.3

21.8 6.0 4.6 0.3 32.8

0.3 34.0

Industry Employment Generated by Travel Spending (Jobs) Accom. & Food Serv. Arts, Ent. & Rec. Retai I*** 220 Other Travel'' Total Direct Employment

930 310 220 10 1,470

1,010 330 230 10 1,580

1 ,010 320 230 10 1,570

1,000 340 220 10 1,580

10 1,560

Government Revenue Generated by Travel Spending ($Million) Local Tax Receipts 2.3 24 State Tax Receipts 2.5 2.6 Total Local & State 4.8 5.0 Details may not add to totals due to rounding.

2.2 2.7 4.9

2.2 2.7 4.9

*Other Travel spending includes ground transportation spending and related impacts for travel to other Oregon visitor destinations, and travel agencies. **Other Travel employment and earnings includes all ground transportation, except motor fuel, and travel agencies. * * * RetaiI includes gasoline. 46- www.newportchamber.org

Photos: Jo Wienert


h yeah! Whether you’re coming on business, pleasure or just to play in the sand. The Holiday Inn Express & Suites is the perfect place to relax. Come and enjoy our complimentary “Express Start” Hot Breakfast Buffet featuring our signature warm cinnamon rolls, free high speed internet, indoor heated pool & hot tub, business center, fitness center and guest laundry. Included are: • Free high speed wireless internet • Complimentary full hot breakfast buffet daily • Coin operated guest laundry • Indoor heated pool & hot tub •All guest rooms include microwave, • Well equipped fitness center refrigerator coffee maker, iron, ironing board, • 24 hour business center hair dryer & in-room safe.

135 SE 32nd Street Newport, Or 97365 Phone: 541.867.3377 Fax: 541.867.3378

www.hiexpress.com/newportcoast • www.newportcoasthotel.com


Tourism

Things to Do and See in Newport

Oregon Coast Aquarium

Pacific Maritime & Heritage Center:

Sea Lions, Sharks, and Otters Await Your Visit

A new home for local history opens to great acclaim

No visit to Newport is complete without a stop at the Oregon Coast Aquarium. This worldclass marine attraction overlooks scenic Yaquina Bay just south of the Yaquina Bay Bridge. The Aquarium strives to be a center of excellence for ocean literacy and plays an active role in conservation, education and animal rehabilitation efforts. As one of Oregon’s most popular attractions, the Aquarium hosts an estimated 450,000 visitors annually. The 501(c)3 nonprofit is funded through ticket sales, grants, and the support of Aquarium members. The 39-acre facility features indoor and outdoor exhibits that repeatedly earned the Aquarium a ranking as one of the top ten aquariums in the nation. Visitors can immerse themselves in the Aquarium with a wander through a range of permanent exhibits and one rotating temporary exhibit. Passages of the Deep, named “The coolest 50 yards on the Oregon Coast!” by Spirit Magazine, is a 1.32 million-gallon exhibit displaying a diverse array of marine animals including sharks up to 10 feet long. The series of tunnels feature a 360 degree view of three different kinds of underwater landscapes characteristic of our ocean off the Oregon Coast. The current rotating exhibit is The Sea & Me, an interactive exhibit designed for children ages 4-10. Kids will enjoy the half a dozen interactive play areas while teens and adults will see seahorses, cichlids, and a wide array of colorful tropical fish. The Aquarium also boasts one of the largest outdoor seabird aviaries in the United States. Tufted puffins, common murres, rhinoceros auklets, pigeon guillemots and black oystercatchers all call the craggy cliffs and clear ponds home. Daily feedings delight visitors of all ages as each bird larks about to get the fishes of their choice. In addition to the seabird aviary, the Aquarium houses two turkey vultures. Guests are often surprised by the size of the brother and sister pair, Ichabod and Olive, who busy themselves with toys and other enrichment items. A nearby underwater cave is inhabited by a Giant Pacific Octopus. Viewers sometimes need to stretch their powers of observation to spot the creature, which can camouflage itself and squeeze its soft body into dark crags. Guests can book an octopus encounter to feed and shake hands with one of these intelligent, seemingly alien animals. The Aquarium’s sea otter exhibit is home to the largest population of sea otters in Oregon today. The all-male raft is comprised of rescued otters from the California and Alaska coasts. Judge, Mojo and Schuster’s playful antics make them a popular attraction at the Aquarium. The Aquarium is open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. during the summer travel season and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the winter months. To check for discounts, purchase tickets and learn more, visit www.aquarium.org.

It is fitting that a building housing a history museum should have a colorful history itself. Such is the case for the newly-opened Pacific Maritime & Heritage Center on the Bayfront in Newport. The stately green-grey building overlooking the fishing fleet has been a private estate, a nightclub, a restaurant, a decidedly unofficial hangout for local teens, and even the home of an off-track betting facility and Chippendale’s dancers. When the Lincoln County Historical Society acquired the old Smuggler’s Cove nightclub, the property was, in a word, a mess. Luckily for locals and visitors alike, the Historical Society made the risky decision to forge ahead and fix it up. After more than eight years of slow fundraising and countless hours of volunteer time to keep the restoration going through the recession, the Pacific Maritime & Heritage Center opened in June 2013. It is stunningly gorgeous inside, open and light, a fitting home in which to house and explore Lincoln County’s maritime history. Many of the artifacts currently on display were donated by the local community. The result is a somewhat eclectic but beautifully curated and displayed set of items that span Lincoln County’s fishing, surfing, shipping, and tourism heritage. Every item on display comes with a fascinating story. One compelling local maritime story told through artifacts on display is of the wreck of the Blue Magpie, a 321-foot cargo ship that ran aground against the jetty at the entrance to Yaquina Bay and sank. A local diver contributed artifacts from the wreck that he retrieved, including a massive binnacle containing the ship’s compass. Fluttering above one gallery is a series of colorful Japanese fishing flags, called “tairyouki,” that are traditionally flown by the Japanese fleet to express wishes for safety and a bountiful harvest. The flags were a gift from fishermen and a fishing company in Mombetsu, Japan, Newport’s sister city. Below the flags is a guide to their symbolism. The museum will host traveling exhibits as well. For example, in fall 2013 the museum installed an exhibit about a unique partnership between West Coast and Soviet fishermen during the Cold War, and the role that Newport boats and fishermen played in that program. One of the best treasures of the center is the view from its enormous bay windows and outdoor deck. Visitors will be mesmerized by the expansive vista encompassing the bustling Bayfront, the fishing fleet, and the bridge. At each vantage point, historical photos of similar views are displayed so visitors can see how that particular view has changed. The building is much bigger than it appears from the street, with nooks and crannies and sections that seem to go on forever. Current exhibits are limited to the central floor of the three-story building, but the Historical Society won’t stop there. The next step will be installation of a theater and event and conference center on the lower level of the building. As resources come in, they will add more gallery space downstairs and upstairs. And so the history of the building continues to be made, one artifact at a time.

48- www.newportchamber.org

Photo: Johanna Wienert


Mysteries of the Deep Revealed at the Hatfield Marine Science Center Ever watch an octopus devour a live crab? Want to try your hand at generating electricity with a wave? Have questions about invasive species, underwater earthquakes, deep-sea hydrothermal vents, or local fish species? You can do all this and more at the Visitor Center of the Mark O. Hatfield Marine Science Center in South Beach. HMSC is a facility of Oregon State University, but its campus is home to scientists from a wide variety of institutions, including OSU, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the Oregon Department of Fish & Wildlife, the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, and others. All told, approximately 300 scientists, educators, and support staff work at the center, conducting research, outreach, and education programs focused on our watery world. The topics studied there are as diverse as the inhabitants of the sea themselves: salmon genetics, the environmental impacts of wave energy, whale migration patterns, eruptions at undersea volcanoes, effects of ocean acidification on fish, and much more. Some of the most high-profile, cutting edge marine science in the world is carried out at Hatfield and by Hatfield-associated researchers. When an enormous dock ripped from its moorings by the March 2011 Japanese tsunami landed on a Newport beach in June 2012, Hatfield scientists Jessica Miller and John Chapman were the ones who took the lead on examining the potentially invasive species on the dock. A piece of that dock now stands as a sentinel and reminder outside the front door of the Visitor Center. Marine Mammal Institute Associate Director Scott Baker has made headlines with his genetics work demonstrating that endangered whale meat was being served in sushi restaurants in Seoul and Los Angeles. His pioneering work was featured in the eco-thriller/documentary “The Cove,” released to great acclaim in 2009. The best way to learn about what goes on at HMSC is by checking out the Visitor Center, where most of the exhibits are related to HMSC faculty research. One particularly hot topic is wave energy – how to extract it and what the environmental impacts of wave energy devices in the ocean might be. The wave energy exhibit at the Visitor Center covers these topics with hands-on activities. Another exhibit covers the threat of invasive species, a very real problem for the local coastal ecosystems. The VC also features touch tanks where visitors can be embraced by a sea anemone or stroke a tide pool fish. And of course, there’s the octopus, the mascot of the center that greets visitors as they enter. Check the schedule for her feeding times – it’s quite a show. HMSC doesn’t like to let any data escape, and so even the Visitor Center is a laboratory. Here a team of researchers focused on “free-choice learning,” education that takes place outside of a formal classroom setting and under the student’s own initiative, studies the behaviors and interactions of visitors with the exhibits and with each other. Cameras and other high-tech equipment installed throughout the center aid in those studies, and a cadre of researchers works behind the scenes to learn how we learn. The Visitor Center (2030 SE Marine Science Drive) is open 10 am to 5 pm seven days a week from Memorial Day to Labor Day. Admission is by donation ($5 per person/$20 per family is suggested). For more information, go to hmsc.oregonstate.edu.

Marine Discovery Tours: Up close and personal with whales, sea lions, crabs, and more One of the greatest adventures visitors can have in Newport is a trip aboard the 65-foot Discovery, the tour boat operated by Marine Discovery Tours. This award-winning family-owned business was started in 1992 by a West Coast fisherman, captain Don Mathews, and his wife, Fran, a marine journalist. The Mathewses and their fun team of naturalists love sharing their “back yard” – Yaquina Bay and River and the nearshore Pacific – and its abundant resident sea life. Their team’s mission statement says it all: “Deliver great activities and information that lead to connections with the aquatic world. Have fun. Repeat the process!” Every year they welcome aboard 7,000 students on field trips, motor coach groups from across North America, and families from local to international. Berthed conveniently on the Bayfront, the Discovery is the largest passenger vessel on the coast. It is loaded with comfortable seating for all in a heated cabin, the latest in safety equipment, computer monitors to watch the radar and GPS, and always, great coffee, Rogue Ales, and Oregon wines. The cruise route is determined daily by the captain – if the ocean is calm and safe, the Discovery heads out to sea. If the conditions are rough, the captain will take you only to the edge of the jetties at the mouth of the bay, then calmly cruise through 4,000 acres of salt water bay and freshwater river systems where there are plenty of sights to see, from sea lions to oyster farms. Expeditions often find gray whales, seals, sea lions, porpoises, and sea birds while enjoying the beauty of the rugged Oregon coastline. From time to time more exotic animals are spotted, including orcas and sharks. Guests are always entertained with stories about the historic coastal community from the early lighthouse keepers to modern day fishermen with satellite-driven navigation systems. Endorsed by the Oregon Coast Aquarium as a “Floating Adventure,” hands-on activities onboard include pulling up authentic West Coast crab pots from sparkling Bay waters filled with Dungeness crab – Oregon’s official State Crustacean. Passengers help tow plankton nets to see the microscopic critters at the base of all ocean food chains. Yep – your favorite seafood is courtesy of these mighty microscopic wonders. Need some new shots for your Facebook album? Navigation lessons are a favorite feature with the captain – picture your kids driving the boat … really! Special event cruises are available for brunches, dinner parties, family reunions, weddings, and the scattering of ashes at sea. Make reservations for a unique must-do Newport experience that’s available from March through October. For more information about Marine Discovery Tours, go to www.marinediscovery.com. Photo: Courtesy Marine Discovery Tours

www.newportchamber.org -49


Newport by the Numbers Demographics All data comes from censusviewer.com. Population in 2012: 10,017 (99% urban, 1% rural). Population change since 2000: +5.1% Males: 4,919 Females: 5,098

(49.1%) (50.9%)

Median resident age: Oregon median age:

43.1 years 47.4 years

Newport, Oregon - Overview 2010 Census 2000 Census 2000-2010 Change Counts Percentages Counts Percentages Change Percentages Total Population 9,989 100.00% 9,532 100.00% 457 4.79% Population by Race American Indian and Alaska native alone Asian alone Black or African American alone Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific native alone Some other race alone Two or more races White alone

205 164 63 15 751 393 8,398

2.05% 1.64% 0.63% 0.15% 7.52% 3.93% 84.07%

205 164 43 20 368 290 8,442

2.15% 1.72% 0.45% 0.21% 3.86% 3.04% 88.56%

0 0 20 -5 383 103 -44

0% 0% 46.51% -25.00% 104.08% 35.52% -0.52%

Population by Hispanic or Latino Origin (of any race) Persons of Hispanic or Latino Origin 1,525 Persons Not of Hispanic or Latino Origin 8,464

15.27% 84.73%

854 8,678

8.96% 91.04%

671 -214

78.57% -2.47%

Population by Gender Male Female

4,906 5,083

49.11% 50.89%

4,658 4,874

48.87% 51.13%

248 209

5.32% 4.29%

Population by Age Persons 0 to 4 years Persons 5 to 17 years Persons 18 to 64 years Persons 65 years and over

631 1,362 6,104 1,892

6.32% 13.63% 61.11% 18.94%

533 1,590 5,770 1,639

5.59% 16.68% 60.53% 17.19%

98 -228 334 253

18.39% -14.34% 5.79% 15.44%

Household Income The estimated median household income in Newport in 2011 was $41,297, up from $31,996 in 2000. Estmated per capita income in 2011 was $25,338. All data from www.city-data.com. Household income distribution is broken down as follows:

50- www.newportchamber.org

Income level Less than $10,000 $10,000 to $14,999 $15,000 to $19,999 $20,000 to $24,999 $25,000 to $29,999 $30,000 to $34,999 $35,000 to $39,999 $40,000 to $44,999 $45,000 to $49,999 $50,000 to $59,999 $60,000 to $74,999 $75,000 to $99,999 $100,000 to $124,999 $125,000 to $149,999 $150,000 to $199,999 $200,000 or more

Number of households 428 407 418 337 322 395 265 220 154 245 282 345 150 29 70 86

Percent 10.3 9.8 10.0 8.1 7.8 9.5 6.4 5.3 3.7 5.9 6.8 8.3 3.6 0.7 1.7 2.1


Employment Data In 2008, the estimated leading industries in Newport were Leisure and Hospitality; Educational and Health Services; and Trade, Transportation and Utilities. Data source: Worksource Solutions

Educational and Health Services 20% Professional and Business Services 7% Financial Activities 4% Information 1% Trade, Transportation, and Utilities 20%

Leisure and Hospitality 22% Other Services 4% Government 11% Natural Resources and Mining 1% Construction 5% Manufacturing 5%

www.newportchamber.org -51


Membership Directory Greater Newport Chamber of Commerce Alphabetical Member Listing A GATHERING PLACE 7858 Surfland St. Newport, OR 97365 (206) 935-7921 Ande Thollander www.beachvacationgetaway.com A HIDEAWAY AT BEVERLY BEACH 11511 NE Avery St. Newport, OR 97365 (206) 999-4906 Tracy & Bev Schakohl

www.hideawaybb.com

A POSTO PERSONAL CHEF SERVICES LLC P.O BOX 1471 Newport, OR 97365-4934 (971) 506-6695 PATI D'ELISEO www.apostochefs.com ABBEY FLOOR & MORE 345 SW Coast Highway Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-6167 Kelly Smith www.abbeycarpet.com ABBY'S PIZZA INN 932 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-3143 (541) 265-9336 Eric Dagel abbyspizza.com ABEL INSURANCE AGENCY 324 SW 7th St. Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 264-8426 Harry Abel www.abelinsuranceagency.com ADOBE RESORT MOTEL, INC. 1555 Hwy 101 N Yachats, OR 97498 (541) 547-3141 800-522-3623 Ed Pfannmuller www.adoberesort.com ADVANCED RESEARCH CORP. 111 SE Douglas St. Suite A Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-9690 John Lavrakas www.oregonarc.com ADVANTAGE REAL ESTATE 205 E Olive Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-2200 877-605-3515 Bonnie Saxton www.advantagerealestate.com AFFORDABLE BURIAL & CREMATION CO. 505 NE 1st St. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-7111 Hector De Los Santos AGATE BEACH GOLF COURSE 4100 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-1422 (541) 265-7331 Liz & Terry Martin www.agatebeachgolf.net AGATE BEACH MOTEL 175 NW Gilbert Way Newport, OR 97365-1315 (541) 265-8746 800-755-5674 Maggie White www.agatebeachmotel.com AGATE BEACH SUPPLY CO. 4860 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-1340 (541) 265-7773 Don Pettis AGATE BEACH TRAILER & RV PARK 6138 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-2123 (541) 265-7670 Shirley Gordon AGING WISELY WITH HEARTFELT HANDS 1007 SW Abbey St. Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 265-8530 Kath Schonau agingwiselyoregon.org AIRROW HEATING & SHEET METAL, LLC 3503 S. Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-8000 Garret Bush www.airrowheating.com AL FITZPATRICK 1080 NE 7th Dr. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-7741 Al Fitzpatrick ALAN BROWN TIRE CENTER 1155 SW Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-5222 (541) 265-6604 Ken Brown ALL HEART TREE SERVICE (541) 265-8733 (TREE) Sean Phillips www.hearttree.com ALL-STORAGE INC. 6041 Hwy 20 Toledo, OR 97391 (541) 336-0500 Steve & Rochelle Davenport www.allstoragetoledo.com ALLEN & SONS TOTAL LOT MAINTENANCE, INC. 443 SW Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365 (541) 574-8257 Steve & Christine Allen www.allenandsons.com ALLSTART AUTO ELECTRIC, INC. 121 E Olive St. Newport, OR 97365-3052 (541) 265-9192 Jerry Kieffer

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ALLSTATE INSURANCE 131 NW 20th St., Suite D Newport, OR 97365-2103 (541) 265-5492 800-645-8676 Candi Oldenburg www.allstateagencies.com/coldenburg ALSEA BAY POWER PRODUCTS, INC. 2470 E Alsea Hwy Waldport, OR 97394 (541) 563-4266 Dave Brooks www.alseabaypower.com ALSI RESORT 902 NW Bayshore Dr. Waldport, OR 97394 (541) 563-7700 Michael Phillips alsiresort.com ALTRUSA INTERNATIONAL OF YAQUINA BAY (541) 265-8953 Dee Nebert www.altrusa.org AMERICA'S BEST VALUE INN & SUITES 710 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-6631 Charlene Voorhees www.americainnandsuites.com AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY (541) 961-3842 Jenny Black www.cancer.org AMERICAN EXPRESS GLOBAL CORPORATE PAYMENTS (212) 640-2000 Leigh Nolan business.americanexpress.com/us AMERICAN EXPRESS OPEN SMALL BUSINESS CREDIT CARDS 200 Vesey St New York, NY 10285 (212) 640-0088 Alice Wong www.americanexpress.com/us/small-business/credit-cards/ AMERICAN LEGION #116 424 W Olive St. Newport, OR 97365-3717 (541) 265-9017 Ralph AMERICAN PACIFIC MORTGAGE dba INNOVA MORTGAGE SERVICES (541) 272-7054 Anna Heflin www.innovamtg.com AMERICAN RED CROSS - WILLAMETTE CHPT. LINCOLN DISTRICT 308 SW Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-4928 (541) 265-7182 Ceci Pratt oregonredcross.org ANCHOR PIER BAYFRONT LODGING 345 SW Bay Blvd Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-STAY (7829) Fran and Don Mathews www.AnchorPier.com ANGELL JOB CORPS 335 NE Blodgett Rd Yachats, OR 97498 (541) 547-3137 Susan Garner www.hsanfrancisoregion.jobcorps.gov/ ANIMAL MEDICAL CARE 162 NE 10th St Newport, OR 97365-3104 (541) 265-6671 Eric Brown animalmedicalcarenewport.com APOLLOS NIGHT CLUB 836 SW Bay Blvd Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 265-9307 Brian Timme APRIL'S AT NYE BEACH 749 NW 3rd St Newport, OR 97365-3601 (541) 265-6855 April & Kent Wolcott aprilsatnyebeach.com AQUARIUM VILLAGE 2925 SE Ferry Slip Rd. #52 Newport, OR 97365 (541) 867-6531 Peggy Zachary www.aquariumvillage.org ARCTIC CIRCLE 340 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-3125 (541) 265-7822 David & Ellen Turner www.acburgers.com ASSOCIATED CLEANING SERVICES 4909 S. Coast Hwy Ste. 140 South Beach, OR 97366 (541) 867-7879 (800) 500-5909 Levi Kittel www.associatedcleaning.net AT THE SEA 7037 SW Abalone St. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 961-6186 Heidi Rogers www.atthesea.com AUNT BELINDA'S CANDIES 640 SW Bay Blvd. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-2075 Ruby Dickerson B & F MARINE ELECTRONICS, INC. 403 B NE 1st St. Newport, OR 97365-4534 (541) 265-8839 Dennis & Cheryl Fisher


BATEMAN FUNERAL HOME 915 NE Yaquina Heights Dr Newport, OR 97365-2519 (541) 265-2751 Jayson Watkins batemanpacificview.com BAY LATTE 663 SW Bay Blvd Newport, OR 97365-4509 (541) 265-2208 Fran & Don Mathews BAYSCAPES GALLERY & COFFEE HOUSE 333 SW Bay Blvd. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-4017 (888) 310-4017 Stan Pickens BAYSHORE RENTALS 2214 NW Bayshore Drive Waldport, OR 97394 (541) 563-3162 800-752-6321 Susan Kelly www.bayshore-rentals.com BAYSIDE AT SOUTH BEACH 411 SE 35th South Beach, OR 97366-9700 (541) 867-7400 Marsha White www.alcco.com BAYVIEW COTTAGE Idaho Point (South Beach) Newport, OR 97366 (541) 265-8553 Jeff & Louise Waarvick www.waarvick.com/cottage BBSI, A HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT COMPANY 644 SW Coast Hwy Suite A Newport, OR 97365-5051 (541) 574-9892 Randy Getman www.barrettbusiness.com BEACH RETREAT 423 SW Elizabeth St Newport, OR 97365 (541) 487-4966 (877) 820-6132 Scottie Jones www.beachretreatoregon.com BEACHCOMBERS HAVEN 7045 NW Glen Gleneden Beach, OR 97388 (541) 764-2252 800-428-5533 Alyce Thomson www.beachcombershaven.com BEACHCONNECTION.NET 6111 SW Beaverton/Hillsdale Hwy #8 Portland, OR 97221 (503) 384-9617 Andre Hagestedt www.beachconnection.net BEAUTIFUL SHORELINE RIDGE W/ LIGHTHOUSE VIEW 1125 NW Spring St. # A103 Newport, OR 97365-4934 (916) 515-8004 Karin Stevens www.vrbo.com/175801 BEST POTS, INC. 541-574-7976 800-540-7687 Ray Eastman www.bestpots.com BEST ROOFING CO. 1424 SE 9th Lincoln City, OR 97367 (541) 994-7663 Don Shuflin bestroofinglincolncounty.com BEST WESTERN PLUS AGATE BEACH INN 3019 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-1707 (541) 265-9411 800-547-3310 Judy Kuhl www.agatebeachinn.com BETTER BARK & MORE 5441 W Hwy 20 Toledo, OR 97391 (541) 270-9480 Zack Kriz dahldisposalservice.com BEVENS' MARKET & DELI 960 SW Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-2722 Dick & Vickie Bevens BIER ONE 424 SW Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 265-4630 Luke Simonsen bier-one.com BIGFOOT BEVERAGES 303 NW 22nd St Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-8871 Art Ballhorn wwww.bigfootbeverage.com BIKE NEWPORT 150 Nw 6th St Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-9917 Daniella Crowder www.bikenewport.net BOBBIE LIPPMAN 1135 NW Alika Lane Seal Rock, OR 97376 (541) 563-2444 Bobbie & Burt Lippman BODY IN MOTION, LLC 255 Coast Hwy Ste. 201 Newport, OR 97365 (541) 961-8170 Heather Lohman www.bodyinmotionnewport.com BPO ELKS #2105 45 S.E Moore Dr. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-2105 BREACH THE MOON GALLERY 434 SW Bay Blvd Newport, OR 97365-4508 (541) 265-9698 Jon Burke www.breachthemoon.com BREWER'S ON THE BAY 2320 OSU Drive Newport, OR 97365-5261 (541) 867-3660 Brad Letsom www.rogue.com

BRIDGEVIEW KUM-YONS RESTAURANT 1006 SW Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-5219 (541) 265-5330 Jenny Chung BRIGHT HORIZON THERAPUETIC RIDING CENTER 1925 E Logsden Rd Siletz, OR 97380 (541) 961-4156 Amy Cline brighthorizonsriding.org BULLOCK'S CORNER 1008 NE Benton St Newport, OR 97365-2929 (541) 265-9566 Wes Bullock BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT 750 Lighthouse Drive Newport, OR 97365 (541) 574-3100 John Moeller BUY LOCAL LINCOLN COUNTY ASSOCIATION 3788 SE High School Drive Lincoln City, OR 97367 (541) 867-8574 Guy Faust buylocallincolncounty.org CAFE MUNDO 711 NW 2nd Ct. Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 574-8134 Greg & Laurie Card www.cafemundo.us CAFE STEPHANIE 411 NW Coast St Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-8082 Scott Doll CANYON WAY BOOKSTORE & RESTAURANT 1216 SW Canyon Way Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 265-8319 Roguey Doyle CAPTAIN'S REEL DEEP SEA FISHING 343 SW Bay Blvd Newport, OR 97365-4509 (541) 265-7441 800-865-7441 Jerry & Barbara Powell www.captainsreel.com CARDINAL EMPLOYMENT SERVICES 914 SW Coast Hwy Suite #209 Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-5090 (800) 233-0387 Manager www.cardinal-services.com CARPET ONE FLOOR & HOME 350 E Olive St. Newport, OR 97365-2947 (541) 265-3530 Rich Keller www.carpetone.com CASA OF LINCOLN COUNTY 644 SW Coast Hwy Suite I Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-3116 Betsy Henderson www.casalincolncounty.org CASH & CARRY 156 NE 7th St Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-7571 Tyler Clegg CAVALIER BEACHFRONT CONDOMINIUMS 325 NW Lancer St. Gleneden Beach, OR 97388 (541) 764-2352 Bill Hander www.cavaliercondos.com CECIL'S DIRTY APRON 912 N. Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365 (541) 264-8360 Alona Benson CEDAR CREEK QUARRIES 121 NE Harney Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-9441 Bob Wienert CELTIC HERITAGE ALLIANCE dba NEWPORT CELTIC FESTIVAL & HIGHLAND G a 501(c)3 Non-Profit Organization (541) 574-9366 Belinda Goody www.newportcelticfestival.com CENTRAL COAST CHEM-DRY 446 NE 8th St Newport, OR 97365-2810 (541) 961-4603 Dan & Sheila Hagan CENTRAL COAST CHORALE 1081 SE Harmony Lane Waldport, OR 97394 (541) 637-6422 Sue Woodruff centralcoastchorale.com/ CENTRAL COAST DENTAL CLINIC / JAMES D WINDELL, DMD 135 NW 15th St Newport, OR 97365-2348 (541) 265-2261 James Windell www.newportccdc.com CENTRAL COAST KIWANIS 255 SW Coast Hwy #100 C/O Western Title Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-2288 Luci Diaz CENTRAL LINCOLN PUD 2129 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-1705 (541) 265-3211 Debra Smith www.clpud.com CENTRAL OREGON COAST ASSOCIATION 137 NE 1st St Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-2064 800-767-2064 Gayle Hart www.CoastVisitor.com CENTURY LINK 926 SW Alder St Newport, OR 97365 (541) 967-3500 Scott Adolf centurylink.com CHALET RESTAURANT & BAKERY 2026 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-1702 (541) 265-6900 David & Barbara Schmaltz

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CHAMBERMASTER 24400 Smiley Rd, Suite 4 Nisswa, MN 56468 (218) 825-9200 (800) 825-9171 Gena Buchite chambermaster.com CHARLES & PATTI LITTLEHALES Newport, OR (541) 270-1496 Charles Littlehales courts.oregon.gov/lincoln CHARTER COMMUNICATIONS 355 NE 1st Newport, OR 97365 (866) 731-5420 Dara Bebee www.charter.com CHERI'S GALLERY 536 SW 11th St. Newport, OR 97365-4743 (541) 265-5456 Joe & Cheri Aldrich CHINOOK RV PARK 3299 E Alsea Hwy Waldport, OR 97394 (541) 563-3485 Gillian Rampley www.chinookrvpark.com CHINOOK WINDS CASINO RESORT 1777 NW 44th St Lincoln City, OR 97367-5094 (541) 996-5825 www.chinookwindscasino.com CHOWDER BOWL AT NYE BEACH 728 NW Beach Drive Newport, OR 97365-3561 (541) 265-7477 877 433 9881 Liz Franklin www.newportchowderbowl.com CHRIS WAUGH 165 3rd St. Otter Rock, OR 97369 (541) 270-0399 Chris Waugh www.ChrisWaugh.com CITY CENTER NEWPORT ASSOCIATION (541) 265-5300 Michelle Harris www.citycenternewport.com CITY OF NEWPORT 169 SW Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 574-0603 Jim Voetberg newportoregon.gov CLIFF COLLARD, ATTORNEY 380 SW 2nd St. Newport, OR 97365-4502 (541) 265-5400 Cliff Collard www.bartolduslaw.com CLIFF HOUSE BED & BREAKFAST 1450 Adahi Rd. Yaquina John Point Waldport, OR 97394-9064 (541) 563-2506 Sharon Robinson www.cliffhouseoregon.com COAST CLEAR INC. (541) 265-5474 Mike Wilson COAST GUARD STATION YAQUINA BAY 925 SW Naterlin Dr. Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 265-5381 Rob Ornelas COAST HEARING SERVICES 1217 N. Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-4850 (541) 265-6273 Jeff Gardner www.coasthearingservices.com COAST HEARTH & HOME 633 East Olive Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-8390 Robin Comstock www.coasthearthandhome.com COAST St. DRY CLEANING 501 NW Coast St. Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 265-5366 Susie Clement COASTAL ACCOUNTING & CONSULTING 625 SW Hurbert St. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 574-0837 Victoria Clear COASTCOM, INC. 151 E Olive St Newport, OR 97365 (541) 574-6117 Greg Palser www.coastcom.net COLUMBIA BANK 506 SW Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-4935 (541) 265-6666 Julie Hanrahan www.wcb.com COLUMBIA DISTRIBUTING 3601 NW Yeon Portland, OR 97210 (503) 274-9990 Brian Rockholt COMCAST SPOTLIGHT (541) 206-8325 Gale Hart COMFORT INN 531 SW Fall St Newport, OR 97365-5045 541) 265-6203 Mr. Rai www.newportorhotel.com COMMON CENTS BOOKEEPING SERVICE Newport, OR (541) 270-0785 Lurlyn Patrick commoncentsbookkeepingservice.com COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION 7450 NE Avery St. Suite A Newport, OR 97365-2702 (541) 574-0320 David Huntington www.LincolnCDC.org

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CONNECTIONS PUBLICATIONS LLC 225 W 6th Ave Junction City, OR 97448 (541) 234-4904 Kyle Krenik connectionspublications.com COPELAND LUMBER YARDS 345 E Olive St. Newport, OR 97365-2948 (541) 265-6640 Grant Forrest COTTAGE AT NYE BEACH 406 NW High St. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 921-3101 (888) 755-7783 Michele Franck www.cottageatnyebeach.net COZY COVE BEACH FRONT RESORT 515 NW Inlet Ave Lincoln City, OR 97367-3140 (541) 994-2950 800-553-2683 Scott & Elizabeth Cho www.cozycovebeachresort.com CREATIVE LANDSCAPE & MAINTENANCE #900 NW Business Plaza South Beach, OR 97366 (541) 336-1912 ROBERT TAYLOR www.mycreativelandscape.com CRESTVIEW GOLF CLUB 1680 Crestline Drive Waldport, OR 97394 (541) 563-3020 Mark Cambell www.crestviewgolfclub.com CROSS TOWN MOVERS / BEKINS VAN LINES 4809 South Coast Hwy South Beach, OR 97366 (541) 265-9074 Brendan Kulleck www.crosstownmover.net CURRY GUIDE SERVICE, LLC, OR (541) 914-3899 Curt Currey www.curreyguideservice.com CUSTOM CARPET CLEANING 12 Olalla Pl. Toledo, OR 97391 (541) 265-8407 Bob Abbott DAVID BICE, MD 1010 SW Bay St Newport, OR 97365-4807 (541) 265-6681 David Bice DAVID N. ALLEN (541) 265-4568 David Allen DAY WIRELESS SYSTEMS 940 SW 10th St Newport, OR 97365-4831 (541) 265-6201 Greg Murray DAYS INN 544 SW Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-4937 (541) 265-5767 800-999-3068 G. Rai www.daysinn.com/DaysInn/control/Booking/property_info?propertyId=14010 DECORATING DEN INTERIORS 1610 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-9633 (541) 265-3315 Jane & Leland Jincks www.decdens.com/JaneJ DENNIS BARTOLDUS 380 SW 2nd Newport, OR 97365-4409 (541) 265-5400 Dennis Bartoldus www.bartolduslaw.com DENNIS MCMANUS 411 NE Avery St Suite C Newport, OR 97365-3027 (541) 265-9484 Dennis McManus DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE 119 NE 4th St # 4 Newport, OR 97365 (541) 574-9502 Sandy Semanko www.dor.state.or.us/tax DEPOE BAY BEACON / NP & TV (541) 764-5011 Rick Beasley DEPOE BAY WINERY 22 SE Hwy 101 Depoe Bay, OR 97341 (541) 765-3311 Ray Shackleford www.nehalembaywinery.com DH GOEBEL, ARCHITECT 147 NE Golf Course Dr Newport, OR 97365-1400 (541) 265-5665 Dietmar Goebel www.dhgoebel.com DIAMONDS BY THE SEA 2250 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-1708 (541) 265-7755 Kathryn Heater DIANE HENKELS, ATTORNEY AT LAW 6228 SW Hood Ave Portland, OR 97239 (541) 270-6001 Diane Henkels henkelslaw.com DICK BEEMER (541) 265-7419 Dick Beemer DIGBY COOK (623) 523-4321 Digby Cook DIGITAL STUDIO, LLC 3439 NE Sandy Blvd. #284 Portland, OR 97232 (503) 702-7895 Jon Olsen www.pdxposed.com DOCKSIDE CHARTERS 270 Coast Guard Pl Depoe Bay, OR 97341 (541) 765-2545 800-733-8915 Loren & Dorinda Goddard www.docksidedepoebay.com


DOLPHIN CONSTRUCTION 319 SW 10th St Newport, OR 97365-4641 (541) 265-6275 Jim Patrick DOLPHIN REAL ESTATE LLC 547 SW 7th St Newport, OR 97365-4966 (541) 265-6638 800-365-6638 Patricia Patrick-Joling www.dolphinrealtynewport.com DON LINDLY (541) 270-4811 Don Lindy DOUG HUNT (541) 265-4100 Doug Hunt DOUG'S ELECTRIC 1116 SW 9th St Newport, OR 97365-5202 (541) 265-8630 Dick Holland DR. KENNETH BISHOP, DC. 1111 SW 10th St. Ste ! Newport, OR 97365 (541) 264-8558 Dr. Ken Bishop www.yaquinachiropractic.com DUTCH BROS. COFFEE 822 SW Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-4009 Michael Bojarski www.dutchbros.com E2 ELECTRIC INC. 2308 N. COAST HWY SUITE B+C Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 574-6315 RICH EVANS EARTHBOUND BEAUTY DAY SPA, INC 613 NW 3rd St. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-4232 Alisha Fulton www.earthboundbeauty.com ECON. DEVELOPMENT ALLIANCE OF LINCOLN CO 255 SW Coast Hwy #202 Newport, OR 97365 (541) 961-3837 Caroline Bauman www.coastbusiness.info ECONO LODGE 606 SW Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 265-7724 Dawn Cuevas econolodge.com ED SIMON 6225 NE Evergreen Lane Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-9124 Ed Simon EDGEWATER COTTAGES 3978 SW Pacific Coast Hwy Waldport, OR 97394 (541) 563-2240 Cathy Sorensen www.edgewatercottages.com EDWARD D. JONES & CO. - PETER HEISLER 131 NW 20th St Suite A Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 265-4528 Peter Heisler edwardjones.com ELECTRONIC SUPER STORE - RADIO SHACK DEALER 800 SE Hwy 101 Lincoln City, OR 97367-2755 (541) 996-2288 Bruce Polvi ELIZABETH St. INN 232 SW Elizabeth Newport, OR 97365-5033 (541) 265-9400 1-877-265-9400 Lela Walker www.elizabeth St.inn.com ELLEN WALKE - CHASE BANK 150 NE 20th St Newport, OR 97365 (541) 574-7865 Ellen Walke EMBARCADERO RESORT HOTEL 1000 SE Bay Blvd Newport, OR 97365-4299 (541) 265-8521 800-547-4779 Jeffrey Venture www.embarcadero-resort.com EMERALD COAST REALTY, INC. 255 E Olive St Newport, OR 97365-3040 (541) 265-8875 Pamela Mugleston www.emeraldcoastrealty.com EMERALD SPRINGS BOTTLED WATER, INC. (541) 563-7419 866-574-6922 Timothy Tramp www.emeraldspringsbottledwater.com ENGLUND MARINE 880 SE Bay Blvd Newport, OR 97365-4838 (541) 265-9275 Dean Fleck www.englundmarine.com ENTERPRISE RENT A CAR 533 E Olive St Newport, OR 97365 (541) 574-1999 800-736-8222 Shawn EUREKA CEMETERY 917 NE Yaquina HTS. Dr. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-7282 Sharon Salazar EYE CARE CENTER 14 SW Nye St Newport, OR 97365-3821 (541) 265-8828 Rick Letherer F/V TRAILBLAZER 411 NE Avery Newport, OR 97365-3052 (541) 574-0256 Gary Painter FACTORY MATTRESS & FURNITURE OUTLET 256 East Olive St. #C Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-4460 www.newportmattress.com

FAIRHAVEN VACATION RENTALS 29 SW Coast St Newport, Or 97365 541-574-0951 888-523-4179 Norm Ferber www.fairhavenvacationrentals.com FAMILY DENTAL GROUP 123 SE Douglas St Newport, OR 97365-4426 (541) 265-4221 Dr. Mark Builder FAMILY FARM ENTERPRISES, INC. 873 S. Low Rd. Seal Rock, OR 97376 (541) 563-2395 Brian Price FARMERS INSURANCE - BECK/ERNST INSURANCE SERVICES 525 E Olive ST #1 Newport, OR 97365 541-265-2802 800-421-9001 Susan Ernst www.farmersagent.com/sernst/ FARMERS INSURANCE - TC DUTY INSURANCE 165 NE Hwy 20 Toledo, OR 97391 (541) 336-5749 TC Duty www.farmersagent.com/tduty/ FERRIS LANDSCAPING 5640 NW Biggs St Newport, OR 97365 (541) 270-3786 Rennie Ferris business.newportchamber.org/list/Member/ferris-landscaping-newport.htm FIGARO'S OF NEWPORT 2035 N. Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-2061 Gary Lane www.figaros.com FINANCIAL FREEDOM WEALTH MANAGEMENT GROUP, LLC 1007 SW Bayley St Newport, OR 97365 (541) 574-6464 Julia Carlson www.carlsonwealthmgmt.com FIRESIDE MOTEL 1881 Hwy 101 N Yachats, OR 97498 (541) 547-3636 800-336-3573 Drew Roslund www.firesidemotel.com FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INS, CO. OF OR 1605 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-3122 (541) 265-8591 Rhonda Bentley www.firstam.com FISH PEDDLER'S MARKET & RESTAURANT 617 SW Bay Blvd Newport, OR 97365-4718 (541) 265-7057 Mark Clay FISH TAILS CAFÉ 3103 Ferry Slip Road South Beach, OR 97366 (541) 867-6002 Barbara Abshire FLIPKEY.COM 179 Lincoln St, Ste 405 Boston, MA 02111 (617) 849-8883 Danielle Carroll www.flipkey.com/newport-vacation-rentals/g51992/ FLYING DUTCHMAN WINERY 915 W 1st Otter Rock, OR 97369 541) 765-2553 Dick Cutler www.dutchmanwinery.com FOOD SHARE OF LINCOLN COUNTY 535 NE 1st Newport, OR 97365-2702 (541) 265-8578 800-939-3663 Nancy Smith www.foodsharelincolncounty.com FORINASH GALLERY 856 SW Bay Blvd Newport, OR 97365-4889 (541) 867-3430 Chuck Forinash www.forinashgallery.com FRED MEYER 150 NE 20th St Newport, OR 97365-1807 (541) 265-4581 Kyle Wilson www.fredmeyer.com FRIENDS OF LINCOLN COUNTY ANIMALS / PICK OF THE LITTER Newport, OR 97365 (541) 961-5852 Emily DeHuff www.folcas.com FRIENDS OF YAQUINA LIGHTHOUSES 750 Lighthouse Drive Newport, OR 97365 (541) 574-3125 Lauren Craven www.yaquinalights.org FULLHART INSURANCE OF WALDPORT 680 NW Hemlock Waldport, OR 97394 (541) 563-3241 800-332-5794 Sue Kirby GALLERY MICHAEL GIBBONS 140 NE Alder St Toledo, OR 97391 (541) 336-2797 Judy & Michael Gibbons www.michaelgibbons.net GEORGE PLANT 1183 SE Harbor Crescent Dr Newport, OR 97365-4200 (541) 574-1031 George Plant GEORGIA-PACIFIC TOLEDO LLC 1400 SE Butler Bridge Road Toledo, OR 97391 (541) 336-8202 Sharon Kananeff gp.com GEORGIE'S BEACHSIDE GRILL 744 SW Elizabeth St Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-9800 Ric Rabourn www.georgiesbeachsidegrill.com

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GLASS TECH OF OREGON, INC. 21255 NW Huffman St., Suite 100 Hillsboro, OR 97124 (503) 646-3989 888-284-7934 Dirk Foss www.glasstechweb.com GOLD CHEVROLET - BUICK - GMC - CADILLAC 1422 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-2498 (541) 265-7731 Mike Henneman goldmotors.com GOMBERG KITE PRODUCTIONS INT'L INC. / NORTHWEST WINDS STORES 130 SE Hwy 101 Lincoln City, OR 97368 (541) 996-3083 Susan Gomberg www.NWwinds.biz GRACELAND CARE HOMES INC. 1147 NE Newport Heights Dr. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 264-8218 Ricci Brown gracelandcarehomes.com GRAY'S WEB DESIGN 1845 NE Crestview Place Newport, OR 97365 (541) 574-4432 Lisa Gray grayswebdesign.com GREATER NEWPORT CHAMBER OF COMMERCE 555 SW Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-4976 (541) 265-8801 (800) 262-7844 Lorna Davis www.newportchamber.org GREEN GABLES ITALIAN CAFE AND LODGING 156 SW Coast St. Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 574-0986 Yolanda Tremblay www.greengablesbb.com GREG WELLS INSURANCE 1061 NE Avery Newport, OR 97365 541-265-3224 Greg Wells GRIMSTAD & ASSOCIATES 530 NW 3rd St, Suite E Newport, OR 97365-3643 (541) 265-5411 Patty Landsiedel www.grimstad-assoc.com GROTH-GATES SHEET METAL, INC. 218 NW 12th St Newport, OR 97365-3210 (541) 265-8636 Ryan Gates GROVE VETERINARY CLINIC 448 E Olive St Newport, OR 97365-2838 (541) 265-2381 Charles Hurty www.grovevet.com GUY B. GRECO ATTORNEY AT LAW 111 SE Douglas St, Suite C Newport, OR 97365-4400 (541) 265-2801 Guy Greco H&R BLOCK 1217 N. Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 264-7270 Karen Butler hrblock.com HABITAT FOR HUMANITY OF LINCOLN COUNTY 227 NE 12th St. Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 574-4437 Sally Bovett www.hfhlc.org HALLMARK RESORT 744 SW Elizabeth St Newport, OR 97365-5197 (541) 265-2600 888-448-4449 Ric Rabourn www.hallmarkinns.com HANDY HAVEN RV PARK & CAR WASH 625 Starr St. Waldport, OR 97394 (541) 563-4591 Elaine Correia HARBOR VILLAGE RV PARK 923 SE Bay Blvd Newport, OR 97365-4101 (541) 265-5088 (888) 818-0002 Michael Smith www.harborvillagervpark.com HASTING COASTAL WOODWORKS 3333 SE Ferry Slip Rd South Beach, OR 97366 (541) 867-2992 Tom Hasting hastingcoastalwoodworks.com HATFIELD MARINE SCIENCE CENTER 2030 SE Marine Science Dr Newport, OR 97365-5296 (541) 867-0100 Robert Cowen hmsc.oregonstate.edu HATTIE'S 452 SW Bay Blvd Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 264-8563 Leslie Ruska HAUER OF THE DAUEN, INC. WINERY 16425 S.E. Webfoot Rd Dayton, Or 97114-8644 (503) 868-7359 Carl & Lores Dauenhauer HOLIDAY INN EXPRESS & SUITES 135 SE 32nd Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 867-3377 Elizabeth Driebergen www.hiexpress.com/newportcoast HOLISTIC COUNSELING CENTER 306 SW Coast Hwy, Suite A Newport, OR 97365-4928 (541) 265-5500 Twylah Olson HOLY CAKES....A LIL SLICE OF HEAVEN Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 961-6665 Maggie White

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HOME MEDICAL EQUIPMENT & SUPPLIES 825 SW Abbey St Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-5581 Barb Mantha www.homemedicalcentral.com HONEYWOOD WINERY 1350 Hines St. SE Salem, OR 97302 (503) 362-4111 Lesley Gallick www.honeywoodwinery.com HOUSING AUTHORITY OF LINCOLN COUNTY 1039 NW Nye St Newport, OR 97365-3298 (541) 265-5326 Joanne Troy www.halc.info HOWARD ADAMS - CPA 833 SW Government St Newport, OR 97365-5124 (541) 265-6959 Howard Adams HUMMINGBIRD AUTO GLASS 3916 SW Coast Hwy South Beach, OR 97366 (541) 265-5141 Ryan Bledsoe www.hummingbirdautoglass.com IDEA PRINT WORKS, INC. 1218 NW Grove Newport, OR 97365-2434 (541) 265-8277 Brad Benner IKON OFFICE SOLUTIONS 200 Hawthorne Ave. Ste D-400 Salem, OR 97301 (503) 409-5666 Mike Wilcox www.ikon.com ILLINGWORTH'S GIFTS 735 NW Beach Dr Newport, OR 97365-3565 (541) 265-5094 Linda Gall INDUSTRIAL CREDIT SERVICE (541) 368-5166 (800) 462-0678 Wanda Henning INN AT NYE BEACH 729 NW Coast St Newport, OR 97365-3410 (541) 265-2477 800-480-2477 Stephen Davis www.innatnyebeach.com INN AT SPANISH HEAD 4009 SW US-101 Lincoln City, OR 97367-1547 (541) 996-2161 800-452-8127 Susan Burr www.spanishhead.com INN AT YAQUINA BAY 2633 S Pacific Way Newport, OR 97365 (541) 867-7055 888-867-3100 Scott & Elizabeth Cho www.innatyaquinabay.com INNER WISDOM / H&K SERVICES, INC. Waldport, OR 97394-0840 (541) 270-5601 Elaine Correia www.lovesoultosoul.com IZZY'S 5251 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-1313 (541) 265-3636 Max Alatriste www.izzy'spizza.com J & J COASTAL ELECTRIC 348 SE 1st St Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-2988 Gail Jefferson jjcoastalelectric.com J.C. MARKET 107 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-3163 (541) 265-6641 Diane Mattson www.jcmarket.net JARED CORCORAN DESIGN 5198 Nashville Rd. Eddyville, OR 97343 (541) 224-7907 Jared Corcoran jaredcorcoran.com JEFFERY SHIRLEY DESIGNS 461 NE Brubaker St. Yachats, OR 97498 (541) 264-5903 Jeffery Shirley jefferyshirley.com JERILYN AND COMPANY HAIR COLOR AND DESIGN 145 N Coast Hwy #F Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-7792 Russell & Jerilyn Guiss www.jerilynandcompany.com JERRY & OPAL WHITE 914 SW 12th St Newport, OR 97365-4812 (541) 265-8440 Jerry White JO-FOTOS / OREGON PHOTOS BY JO WIENERT 1173 SE Harbor Crescent Drive Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 270-6321 Jo-Hanna Wienert www.jofotos.com JOHN L. SCOTT REALTY 306 E OLIVE Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 265-2345 (800) 866-2988 JON LYNCH www.mycoasthome.com JOSEPH SWAFFORD 272 NE 69th Place Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-3076 Joseph Swafford KAM MENG CHINESE RESTAURANT 4424 N Coast Highway Newport, OR 97365-1585 (541) 574-9450 Huiya Chen www.kammengchineserestaurant.com


KAREN VAN NATTA 615 SW Hurbert St. Ste. C Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 265-3261 Karen Van Natta KENT & RUTH KRONEMAN (541) 961-9704 Kent Kroneman KEY COMMUNICATIONS 811 SW 5th St. 13A Newport, OR 97365 (541) 270-7116 Debra Griffin www.keycommunications.acnrep.com KNIGHTS INN NEWPORT 1823 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-4533 Linda Lien knightsinn.com/hotels/oregon/newport/knights-inn-newport/hotel-overview KNPT/KYTE/KCRF/KBCH/U92 RADIO AND OREGONCOASTDAILYNEWS.COM 906 SW Alder Newport, OR 97365-4712 (541) 265-2266 Dave Miller www.ybcradio.com KRUSE CABINET MAKING 275 Hwy 20 Ste #6 Toledo, OR 97391 (541) 351-1386 Stan Kruse KSHL RADIO 131 NE 15th Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-3000 Stephanie Linn kshl.com LA MAISON 315 SW 9th St. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-8812 Kate Brown www.lamaisoncafe.com LA QUINTA INN & SUITES 45 SE 32nd St. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 867-7727 800-531-5900 Pam Menzies www.lq.com LARIMEE WARD Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 574-3381 Larimee Ward LE'ANNE MCEACHERN, AU.D. 1460 N. Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365 (541) 272-5015 Le'Anne McEachern, Au.D. LEE RITZMAN 727 NW Lee St. Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 265-7108 Lee Ritzman LIFE CYCLE FINANCIAL PLANNING (541) 265-2100 Claire Little, CFP, CPA, CLU www.lcfp.biz LIGGETTS FLOORING 2266 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-6290 Larry & Kathy Liggett liggettsflooring.com LINCOLN COUNTY CHILDREN'S ADVOCACY CENTER 122 NE 47th St Newport, OR 97365-1302 (541) 574-0841 Pam Salisbury www.co.lincoln.or.us LINCOLN COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT 225 W. Olive St. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-4236 ext. 234 Bonnie Savage LINCOLN COUNTY COMMISSIONERS 225 W Olive St, Room 110 Newport, OR 97365-3868 (541) 265-4100 Doug Hunt www.co.lincoln.or.us LINCOLN COUNTY DISTRICT ATTORNEY 225 W Olive St, Room 100 Newport, OR 97365-3871 (541) 265-4145 Rob Bovett www.co.lincoln.or.us/da/ LINCOLN COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY 545 SW 9th St Newport, OR 97365-4726 (541) 265-7509 Steve Wyatt www.oregoncoasthistory.org LINCOLN COUNTY SCHOOL DISTRICT 459 SW Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-4978 (541) 265-9211 Tom Rinearson www.lincoln.k12.or.us LINCOLN COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE 225 W Olive St Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-0652 Dennis Dotson www.lincolncountysheriff.net LINCOLN COUNTY TRANSIT 410 NE Harney St Newport, OR 97365-2504 (541) 574-1292 Fred Callazo LINCOLN GLASS COMPANY 147 NE 1st Newport, OR 97365-3042 (541) 265-8836 Dan Mason www.lincolnglassnewport.com LINCOLN OSU EXTENSION 29 SE 2nd St. Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 574-6534 Sam Angima extension.oregonstate.edu/lincoln LINCOLN PLUMBING INC 7945 NE Avery Suite B Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 265-7576 Anita Kosydar www.lincolnplumbing.biz

LINCOLN STORAGE @ SOUTH BEACH 4809 S Coast Hwy South Beach, OR 97366 (541) 867-6550 Stephanie Foster lincoln-storage.com LINDA KILBRIDE 1212 SE 1ST St. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-3555 LINDA KILBRIDE LITTLE CREEK APARTMENTS LLC 365 NE 36th St Newport, OR 97365-1585 (541) 265-2663 Judy Odle www.apartments.com LITTLE CREEK COVE 3641 NW Oceanview Dr Newport, OR 97365-1539 (541) 265-8587 800-294-8025 www.littlecreekcove.com LOCAL FAVORITES 12045 NW Marshall Portland, OR 97229 (503) 970-7630 Terry Williams www.oregoncoastfavorites.com LOCAL OCEAN SEAFOODS 213 SE Bay Blvd Newport, OR 97365 (541) 574-7959 Laura Anderson www.localocean.net LONGVIEW HILLS MFG. HOUSING COMM. 450 NE 58th St Newport, OR 97365-1063 (541) 265-3576 Larry & Nancy Henson www.lvhpark.blogspot.com LOOKOUT GIFT SHOP Otter Crest Wayside, Hwy 101 MP 131.5 Cape Foulweather, OR 97341 (541) 765-2270 Heidi Peyton www.lookoutgiftshop.com LOON LAKE LODGE & RV RESORT 9011 Loon Lake Road Reedsport, OR 97467 541.599.2244 Julie Celeste www.loonlakerv.com LOTUS HEALING WATERS 1642 N. Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365 (503) 593-1111 Patricia Quick www.lotushealingwaters.com M & K BARK /FLOWERS BY MOO 27 SE Coos St Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-3440 (800) 419-3440 Tonja Mitchell M&P AUTHENTIC THAI CUISINE 836 SW Bay Blvd Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 264-8388 Day Chay newportthaifood.com MACPHERSON, GINTNER & DIAZ 423 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-3193 (541) 265-8881 Richard Diaz www.mggdlaw.com MAI'S ASIAN MARKET 256 E Olive St, #A Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-5868 Mai Shearer MAIN AUTO BODY 4350 S Coast Hwy South Beach, OR 97366-9600 (541) 867-6721 Angie Knox MAINSTREAM MUSIC 102 N. Main St. Toledo, OR 97391 (541) 336-1334 800-984-1334 Tom Roeser mainstreamjg.wix.com/mainstreammusic MARCHMOBILE 8331 Chestnut Court Victoria, MN 55386 (612) 709-9276 Chaz Kleinsteuber marchmobile.com MARIAH NELSON, LMT #13202 1600 N Coast . Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 961-4890 Mariah Nelson mariah.massagetherapy.com MARINE DISCOVERY TOURS 345 SW Bay Blvd Newport, OR 97365-4509 (541) 265-6200 800-903-2628 Fran & Don Mathews www.marinediscovery.com MARK HANRAHAN CONSTRUCTION 2401 NE Douglas Newport, OR 97365 (541) 270-1122 Mark Hanrahan www.markhanrahanconstruction.com MARK MCCONNELL 4915 NW Woody Way Newport, OR 97365-1327 (541) 270-1313 Mark McConnell MAZATLAN MEXICAN RESTAURANT 404 SW Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-4930 (541) 265-8595 Salvador Fuentes MCDONALD'S #5678 1300 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-2445 (541) 265-9866 Roger Snelling ME FITNESS CENTER 1111 SW 10th St. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 574-9062 Dr Ken Bishop www.mefit2.com

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MINOR, BANDONIS, & HAGGERTY, P.C. 236 W Olive Newport, OR 97365-3879 (541) 265-8888 Brian Haggerty www.newportlaw.com MISHEY REAL ESTATE 433 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-3100 (541) 265-2281 Woody Ouderkirk www.misheyrealestate.com MO'S RESTAURANT & ANNEX 657 SW Bay Blvd Newport, OR 97365-4719 (541) 265-7512 Gabrielle McEntee-Wilson www.moschowder.com MOBY DICK'S SEAFOOD & SPIRITS 448 SW Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-4930 (541) 265-7847 Glen Terriere www.mobydicksseafood.com/ MONEY SAVER MOTEL 861 SW Coast Hwy 101 Newport, OR 97365-5142 (541) 265-2277 888-461-4033 Bhupen/Kokila Khalasi www.newportoregonmotel.com MOOLACK SHORES MOTEL 8835 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-9514 (541) 265-2326 Patrick Hazard www.moolackshores.com MOORE ACCOUNTING SOLUTIONS, LLC 191 NW 70th St. Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 265-2951 Helen Moore www.onemooresolution.com MR. WIZARD 1310 SW Corona Ct Waldport, OR 97394 (541) 283-5987 (877) 646-7949 Erich Knudson www.mr-wizards.com MULDER SHEET METAL, INC. 155 NE 10th St Newport, OR 97365-3104 (541) 265-4269 Bill & Margaret Mulder www.powrfab.com MY SISTERS' PLACE 934 SW 8th St. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 574-9424 Karen Shores www.mysistersplace.us MYSTHAVEN 162 SW 86th Court South Beach, OR 97366 (503) 799-3311 Luanna Corder www.mysthaven.net NANA'S IRISH PUB 613 NW 3rd St. Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 574-8787 Philomena O'Brien www.nanasirishpub.com NANCY LYNNE PHOTOGRAPHY OR (541) 336-7807 Nancy Lynne www.nancylynne.com NEW DIMENSIONS FINE WOODWORKING 4926 S. Hwy 101 #910 South Beach, OR 97366 (541) 961-5091 Dennis Fry NEWPORT BAY CANDLE CO. 2310 North Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-6111 Jody Malloy www.newportbaycandle.com NEWPORT BAY COFFEE CO (541) 265-4090 Kelly Garrett newportbaycoffeeco.com NEWPORT BAY MOTEL 754 SW Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-5018 (541) 265-2241 Linda Lien newportbaymotel.com NEWPORT BELLE B & B South Beach Marina 'H' Dock South Beach, OR 97366 (541) 867-6290 800-348-1922 Nancy Sims www.newportbelle.com NEWPORT BOOSTER CLUB (MEET @ ELKS CLUB) 2020 NE 22ND Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 265-7249 Rob Thompson WWW.NEWPORTMARATHON.ORG NEWPORT BPO ELKS #2105 PO Box 966 Newport, OR 97365 265-2105 Rich Evans NEWPORT BUSINESS PLAZA 4909 South Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-5262 (541) 867-6531 John Tharp www.aquariumvillage.net NEWPORT CAFE 534 N. COAST HWY Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 574-6847 DAVID SEE Www.newportcafe.biz NEWPORT CHEVRON 1517 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-2356 (541) 574-6336 Craig Kelson

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NEWPORT CHIROPRACTIC 344 SW 7th St Suite D Newport, OR 97365-4915 (541) 265-9218 Rachael Whitman newporthealthcare.com NEWPORT CITY CENTER MOTEL 538 SW Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-4977 (541) 265-7381 800-687-9099 Incho Chang www.newportcitycentermotel.com NEWPORT CROSSROADS SHOPS 355 SW Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-5300 FRANK GELTNER newportcrossroads.com NEWPORT DENTAL 612 SW 9th St. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-8501 Scott Loiselle www.newportoregondental.com NEWPORT DIGITAL CITY GUIDE (541) 971-1069 Brian Brooks www.oregoncityguides.com NEWPORT EXPRESS/YAQUINA CAB CO. (541) 265-9552 Bill Trope NEWPORT FARMERS' MARKET Hwy 101 & Angle St. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 961-8236 Carrie Corson www.newportfarmersmarket.org NEWPORT FISHERMEN'S WIVES INC. 936 SW Hurbert Newport, OR 97365 (541) 961-1588 Sara Skamser www.newportfishermenswives.com NEWPORT FLORIST AND GIFTS, LLC 1329 N. Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-8262 (877) 409-8262 Carla Williams newportfloral.com NEWPORT FOOD PANTRY 227 NE 12th St. Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 270-0842 Jim Myers newportfoodpantry.org NEWPORT FOURSQUARE CHURCH 215 NW 15th St. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 351-8141 Cameron Martin newportfoursquare.org NEWPORT GENTLE DENTISTRY PC/ RANDALL TEICH DDS 911 Ne Avery St. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-7900 Randall Teich, DDS www.gentledentist.com NEWPORT GLASS CO INC. 152 NE 11th St Newport, OR 97365-3109 (541) 265-2226 Don Hamilton NEWPORT HIGH SCHOOL 322 NE Eads Newport, OR 97365-2894 (541) 265-9281 Jon Zagel www.lincoln.k12.or.us/ NEWPORT LAZERQUICK 145 N Coast Hwy Suite C Newport, OR 97365-3165 (541) 265-6425 Rose Reed www.lazerrose.com NEWPORT LIONS CLUB PO Box 457 Newport, OR 97365 (541) 574-4070 President newportlions.org NEWPORT LIQUOR STORE 2019 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365 541) 265-5621 Richard Grady NEWPORT LOYALTY DAYS ASSOCIATION (541) 961-0041 Robin McRoberts NEWPORT MARINA STORE & CHARTERS, INC 2128 SE Marine Science Drive Newport, OR 97365 (541) 867-4470 877-867-4470 Chris Olson www.nmscharters.com NEWPORT MARINE & RV SERVICE 4354 S Coast Hwy 101 South Beach, OR 97366-9600 (541) 867-3704 Dale Webster www.newportmarinerv.com NEWPORT MASONIC FAMILY 435 SW 9th St. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 961-4640 Milton Preisz NEWPORT NATIONAL GUARD ARMORY 541 SW Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-2761 NEWPORT NEWS TIMES 831 NE Avery Newport, OR 97365-3033 (541) 265-8571 Jamie Rand www.newportnewstimes.com NEWPORT PHYSICAL THERAPY 1010 SW Coast Hwy Suite 102 Newport, OR 97365-5233 (541) 265-4252 Eugene Moe NEWPORT PLUMBING, INC. 129 NW 16th Newport, OR 97365-2358 (541) 265-7030 Debbie Reniker newportplumbing.com


NEWPORT POLICE DEPARTMENT 169 SW Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365 (541) 574-3348 Mark Miranda www.newportpolice.net NEWPORT REHABILITATION CENTER & SPECIALTY CARE 835 SW 11th St Newport, OR 97365-4802 (541) 265-5356 Bob Swinea NEWPORT RENTAL SERVICE 435 E Olive St Newport, OR 97365-2897 (541) 265-5721 Steve Lawrence NEWPORT SIGNS 4909 S. Pacific Coast Hwy Suite 105 South Beach, OR 97366 (541) 867-7600 Ken Spencer www.newportsignshop.com NEWPORT STEAK & SEAFOOD 1019 SW Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-5218 (541) 265-8283 Gloria Huguley NEWPORT SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 777 W Olive St Newport, OR 97365 (541) 574-0614 Michael Dalton newportsymphony.org NEWPORT TRADEWINDS 653 SW Bay Blvd Newport, OR 97365-4718 (541) 265-2101 800-676-7819 Helen Waddel www.newporttradewinds.com NEWSLINCOLNCOUNTY.COM 717 SW 6th St.; #11 Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 251-1408 David Morgan newslincolncounty.com NOODLE CAFE 837 SW BAY BLVD Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 574-6688 HANN CHENG NORTHGATE STORAGE 105 NE 73rd St Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-7890 Erika Corette www.northgateministorage.net NORTHWEST HOMES 3414 NE Highway 101 Depoe Bay, OR 97341 (541) 764-5055 Dan James NWhomes.biz NORTHWEST MANAGEMENT SPECIALISTS 2014 NE Crestview Dr Newport, OR 97365-1821 (541) 265-2525 John Baker NORTHWEST RELIABLE, LLC. (541) 961-2744 Paul Dunphy reliablehandyman.co NW NATURAL 1405 SW Hwy 101 Lincoln City, OR 97367-2358 (541) 994-2111 ext 8530 800-831-9194 Lynn Nelson www.nwnatural.com NYE BEACH MERCHANT ASSOCIATION Newport, OR 97365 (541) 574-0545 Linda Neigebauer www.nyebeach.org NYE BEACH SWEETS 526 NW Coast St. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 574-1963 Rebecah Lutz www.nyebeachsweets.com NYE BEACH VACATION RENTALS 407 NW High St. 580 NW 6th St Newport, OR 97365 (541) 231-4899 Kevin & Janet Cornelius www.nyebeachvacationrentals.com NYE COTTAGE BEADS 208 NW Coast St. #1 Newport, OR 97365 (866) 592-5556 TOLL FREE Linda Neigebauer www.nyecottage.com NYE COTTAGE VACATION RENTALS 208 NW Coast St. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-6262 866-592-5556 toll free Linda Neigebauer www.nyecottage.com O'CONNELL INVESTMENT & INSURANCE SERVICES 1600 N. Coast Hwy Ste 1602 Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-7771 Kenny Easter OC EYE CARE LLC 411 NE Avery St Suite B Newport, OR 97365 (541) 264-7726 Sky Schroeder oc-eyecare.com OCCA/PAC/VAC 777 W Olive St Newport, OR 97365-3725 (541) 265-2787 Catherine Rickbone www.coastarts.org OCCC FOUNDATION 400 SE College Way Newport, OR 97366 (541) 867-8531 A.T. Ronan oystercloysterfestival.com OCEAN HOUSE BED & BREAKFAST 4920 NW Woody Way Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-3888 866.495.3888 Craig Lodge www.oceanhouse.com

OCEAN ODYSSEY VACATION RENTALS 251 Hwy 101 Yachats, OR 97498 (541) 547-3637 (800) 800-1915 Cheryl LaRiccia www.ocean-odyssey.com OCEAN TIRE & AUTO SERVICE 1114 N Coast Highway Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-5075 Doug Orr OCEAN UNITY CHURCH 834 SW Lee St. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 574-6560 Reverand Donna Little www.oceanunity.org OCEAN18 MEDIA SERVICES (541) 961-1627 Casey Miller www.ocean18.net OCEANA NATURAL FOODS CO-OP 159 SE 2nd St. Newport, OR 97365-4497 (541) 265-8285 Rhonda Fry www.oceanafoods.org OCEANIC ARTS 444 SW Bay Blvd Newport, OR 97365-4508 (541) 265-5963 Jon Burke OCEANVIEW SENIOR LIVING 525 NE 71st St Newport, OR 97365(541) 574-0550 Amy Taylor www.oceanviewseniorliving.com OLALLA VALLEY GOLF COURSE 1022 Olalla RD Toledo, OR 97391 (541) 336-2121 Troy Jewkes OREGON BEACH VACATIONS 9020 SE Washington Sq. Rd Ste. 450 Portland, OR 97223 (503) 528-7491 (800) 723-2383 David McElveen www.oregonbeachvacations.com OREGON COAST APPRAISAL SERVICE 4910 NW Woody Way Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-3012 Bill Bain OREGON COAST AQUARIUM 2820 SE Ferry Slip Rd Newport, OR 97365-5269 (541) 867-3474 Carrie Lewis www.aquarium.org OREGON COAST COMMUNITY COLLEGE 400 SE College Way Newport, OR 97366 265-2283 Bruce Koike www.oregoncoastcc.org OREGON COAST EVENT RENTALS, LLC 730 NE 3rd St. Suite B Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 264-8491 Danielle Emerick oregoncoasteventrentals.com OREGON COAST GLASSWORKS 616 E. Olive St (corner of Hwy 20 and Fogarty St.) Newport, OR 97365 (541) 574-8226 Robin Dennis www.oregoncoastglassworks.com OREGON COAST HISTORY CENTER 545 SW 9th St Newport, OR 97365 265-7509 Steve Wyatt OREGON COAST MAGAZINE 4969 Hwy 101 #2 Florence, OR 97439 (541) 997-8401 ext 140 (800) 348-8401 ext 140 Robert Spooner www.northwestmagazines.com OREGON COAST TECHNOLOGY 760 Range Drive Waldport, OR 97394 (541) 351-8947 Bill Fleenor www.orcotech.com OREGON COAST TODAY 248 Bear Creek Rd Otis, OR 97368 (541) 921-2306 Dave Price www.oregoncoasttoday.com OREGON EYES VISION CENTER 111 SE Douglas St. Ste D Newport, OR 97365-0107 (541) 265-9458 Gilbert LeCren OREGON MUSEUM OF SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY 1945 SE Water Ave. Portland, OR 97214 (503) 797-4618 Jamie Hurd www.omsi.edu OREGON OYSTER FARMS 6878 Yaquina Bay Rd Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 265-5078 Xin Lee www.oregonoyster.com OREGON SHORES VACATION RENTALS 1116 SW 51st St. Lincoln City, OR 97367 (800) 800-7108 (800) 800-7108 Aren Bolles www.orshores.com OREGON STATE PARKS & RECREATION DEPT. 5580 S Coast Hwy South Beach, OR 97366-9601 (541) 867-7451 Dennis Comfort www.prd.state.or.us OREGON'S CHOICE GOURMET ALBACORE (541) 765-2193 Herb & Ginny Goblirsch www.oregonschoice.com

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OREGONSHEARWATER VACATION HOMES Seagull Way Seal Rock, OR 97376 (503) 245-5969 Debi Hertert oregonshearwater.com OSSIES SURF SHOP 4860 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 574-4634 (866) 510-0828 Dan Hasselschwert ossiessurfshop.com OSU FEDERAL CREDIT UNION 1923 N. Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365 800-732-0173 Patti Ferry www.osufederal.com OUDERKIRK & HOLLEN, ATTORNEYS AT LAW 615 SW Hurbert St., Suite A Newport, OR 97365 (541) 574-1630 Jeff Ouderkirk www.ouderkirkhollen.com OVERLEAF LODGE 280 Overleaf Lodge Lane Yachats, OR 97498 (541) 547-4880 800-338-0507 David Locke www.overleaflodge.com OZONE FINE ART 669 Bay Blvd Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 265-9500 Karen Candelario www.ozonefineart.com PAADA (PARTNERSHIP AGAINST ALCOHOL AND DRUG ABUSE) 351 SE HARNEY ST ROOM C Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 574-7890 Debra Spoelstra www.PAADA.org PACIFIC BOAT BROKERS 923 SE Bay Blvd. #53 Newport, OR 97365 (541) 264-8306 Margaret Harris pacificboatbrokers.com PACIFIC BOAT SALES 714 SW Bay St Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 264-7164 Joe Bailor pacificboatbrokers.com PACIFIC COMM. HEALTH DISTRICT FOUNDATION 140 NE 4th St Newport, OR 97365-4820 (541) 574-4745 Ursula Marinelli www.samhealth.org/pchdf PACIFIC EYE ASSOCIATES 775 SW 9th Newport, OR 97365-4850 (541) 265-6582 800-888-2020 Chrysti McCallum PACIFIC HORTICA (541) 528-7841 David Getner PACIFIC NORTHWEST COUNSELING, LLC. 407 N Coast Hwy Ste 100D Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 270-6466 Ishah Roads-Pultz pacificnwcounseling.com PACIFIC SHORES RV OWNERS ASSOCIATION 6225 N Coast Hwy 101 Newport, OR 97365-1100 (541) 265-3750 800-333-1583 Ernest Thompson pacificshoresmotorcoachresort.com PACIFIC SHRIMP COMPANY 213 SW Bay Blvd Newport, OR 97365 541) 265-4215 Kelly Allard PACIFIC SOURDOUGH 125 Ruble St Waldport, OR 97394 (541) 563-3044 Katrin McNeil PACIFIC TIRE & BRAKE 1027 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-3141 (541) 265-8896 Mark R. & Roly Kalez PACIFIC WEST AMBULANCE 609 NW Coast St Newport, OR 97365-4634 (541) 265-3175 Cheryle Robbins PAUL DAVIS EMERGENCY SERVICES 4066 N Hwy 101 Lincoln City, OR 97367 (541) 992-6653 Bobb Fostveit www.restorationcoast.com PAVENTY & MAY ORTHODONTICS 127 NE Eads St Newport, OR 97365-2896 (541) 265-9466 Brent May DMD MSD, pc www.oregoncoastortho.com PAYNE WEST INSURANCE 811 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-3140 (541) 265-7768 (800) 336-7715 John Russell www.wsi-insurance.com PEAK INTERNET, LLC 1600 SW Western Blvd Corvallis, OR 97333 (800) 731-4871 www.peakinternet.com PEERLESS PUFFIN 742 NW Beach Drive Newport, OR 97365-3561 (541) 265-3153 Liz Franklin PELICAN PRODUCTIONS (503) 717-1122 888-609-6051 Gary Hayes coastexplorermagazine.com

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PETER CORVALLIS PRODUCTIONS 2204 N Clark Ave Portland, OR 97227 (503) 222-1664 Athena Paskill petercorvallis.com PFLAG OF THE O.C.C. 3815 Yaquina Bay Rd. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-7194 Jeannie St. John PHAGANS COSMETOLOGY COLLEGE 158 E Olive Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 265-3083 Trena Ingram www.phagans-schools.com PIG N PANCAKE 810 SW Alder Suite A Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 265-9065 Zachary Poole www.pignpancake.com PIONEER PRINTING INC. 231 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-3111 (541) 265-5242 Dave & Carol Shank www.pioneerprinting.net PIONEER TELEPHONE COOPERATIVE 575 W. Willow St. Waldport, OR 97394 (541) 563-3135 (888) 929-1014 Shannon Morgan www.pioneer.net PIZZA ME 328 W/ Hwy 20 Toledo, OR 97391 (541) 336-9999 Andrea Rosser PORT OF NEWPORT 600 SE Bay Blvd Newport, OR 97365-4338 (541) 265-7758 Don Mann www.portofnewport.com PORTHOLE PLAYERS, LTD. (541) 265-9269 Vickie Steen www.portholeplayers.org POWER OF NEWPORT 1107 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-3144 (541) 265-4601 Robert Sudeith www.powerford.com PRIDGEON, BJORNSEN & McCRUM, LLC 515 W Olive St Newport, OR 97365-3718 (541) 265-2217 1-877-931-4357 Jeff Pridgeon www.oregoncoastlawyers.com ProBuild 615 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-3149 (541) 265-2221 Lee Van Hess www.lumbermens.net/ PUMPKIN RIDE PRODUCTIONS 748 Darcy Ave Siletz, OR 97380 (541) 270-3346 Mark Cummiskey pumpkinrideproductions.com QUADE COMMERCIAL CONSTRUCTION CORP. 1990 SE Devils Rd Lincoln City, OR 97367-2628 (541) 994-5829 Neil Quade RAINDANCE AT NYE BEACH 316 NW Coast St. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-9629 Denver Barclay RC EXTERIORS (541) 270-6094 Blain Cunningham REACH MEDICAL AIR TRANSPORT (541) 840-7449 Lillian Bowen www.reachair.com RED OCTOPUS THEATRE COMPANY 626 NW HURBERT Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 574-1950 RON MILLER RENEE MCCASLIN PHOTOGRAPHY 2114 NW Viewridge Dr. Waldport, OR 97394 (503) 984-3604 Renee McCaslin RHONDA HAM St. 201 S.E. View Dr. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-5195 Rhonda Ham St. RICARDO ALCOCER 125 First St Otter Rock, OR 97369 (541) 765-2388 Ricardo Alcocer RIPLEY'S BELIEVE IT OR NOT! 250 SW Bay Blvd. Newport, OR 97365-4500 (541) 265-2206 Neal Henning www.marinersquare.com ROBBEN INC. 3244 NE Hwy 101 Lincoln City, OR 97367 (541) 994-5530 800-305-5530 www.robbeninc.com ROBERT W. SMITH PH.D. 1590 NW Spring St. Newport, OR 97365-2345 (541) 574-0170 Robert Smith www.uscgnewportvu.info ROBY'S FURNITURE 5111 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-1314 (541) 265-9520 Andrea Langeliers


RODEWAY INN & LEE'S WOK RESTAURANT 206 North Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 265-5321 Toby Lee ROGUE ALES PUBLIC HOUSE 748 Bay Blvd Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-3188 Brad Letsom www.rogue.com ROGUE BED & BEER 748 SW Bay Blvd Newport, OR 97365 (541) 961-0142 Stacey Maier www.rogue.com ROGUE CREAMERY 311 N. Front St. Central Point, OR 97502 (541) 665-1155 Maureen Battistella www.roguecreamery.com ROGUE HOUSE OF SPIRITS 2122 MARINE SCIENCE DRIVE Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 867-3670 Brad Letsom www.rogue.com ROTARY OF NEWPORT (541) 270-2678 Mark Miranda www.newportrotaryclub.org ROWLEY'S TOWING 4822 S Coast Hwy South Beach, OR 97366-9700 (541) 265-2322 Bill Rowley RSVP OF LINCOLN COUNTY 203 N. Main St. Toledo, OR 97391 (541) 574-2684 Tamara Rosser rsvpoflincolncounty.org S & W Real Estate 2466 N. Coast Hwy. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 270-6758 (800) 676-7710 Barbara Le Pine www.sw-realestate.com S & W REAL ESTATE 2466 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-1701 (541) 265-2251 800-676-7710 Rick Wright www.sw-realestate.com SADA'S SUSHI BAR 250 SW Bay Blvd Newport, OR 97365-4500 (541) 574-8890 Jason Gonzolas www.sadasushibar.com SAFE LOCK STORAGE 3639 SE Ash South Beach, OR 97366-9758 (541) 867-4607 Craig Hansen SAFEWAY INC. 2220 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-1708 (541) 265-2930 Josie Bissell SAFFRON SALMON 859 SW Bay Blvd Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-8921 Stacy Schellinger SAIL INN 134 SW Bay Blvd Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 444-7111 David Hallinger www.vrbo.com/246291 SALISHAN SPA & GOLF RESORT 7760 N Hwy 101 Gleneden Beach, OR 97388 (541) 764-2371 800-452-2300 Jason Connor www.salishan.com SALON ETHOS 434 SW Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365 (541) 574-4445 Liz Rose salon-ethos.com SALVATION ARMY BAY COMMUNITIES 124 SE 1st St. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-6814 800-858-3556 Manager SAMARITAN PACIFIC COMMUNITIES HOSPITAL 930 SW Abbey Newport, OR 97365-4844 (541) 265-2244 Lisa Ely www.samhealth.org SANDCASTLE TOYS 255 SW 9th St Newport, OR 97365-4633 (541) 574-1901 800-605-1901 Bill & Sue Taylor www.sandcastletoys.com SARAH MYRICK 1813 NE Crestview Pl Newport, OR 97365-2008 (541) 265-3684 Sarah Myrick www.acrevista.com SAVORY CAFE & PIZZERIA 526 NW COAST St. Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 574-9365 Mike Bowers www.savorynyebeach.com SAWYER'S LANDING 4098 Yaquina Bay Rd Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 265-3907 Dion Blake SCHOONER LANDING 201 NW 66th Drive Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-4293 Manager www.schoonerlanding.com

SEA STAR ENTERPRISE - F/V OCEAN LADY ''M'' Port Dock 5 Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 961-1246 Murielle Moore SEA TOWNE SHOPPING CENTER 1600 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365 (503) 245-1177 Robin Rudd SEAL ROCKS RV COVE 1276 NW Cross St. Seal Rock, OR 97376 (541) 563-3955 Ray Johnson www.sealrocksrv.com SENIOR SONGFEST (541) 961-1482 Frank Geltner seniorsongfest.com SERVPRO OF LINCOLN & POLK CO. 2226 N. Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 265-7777 Steve Yerger servproofsalemwest.com SHANGRI - LA CORPORATION 141 W 11th St. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 867-6883 Manager www.shangrilacorp.org SHEAR SENSATIONS DAY SPA & HAIR SALON 5220 N.E. SHELLWORLD PLACE Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-4247 SHERI LIGHTNER shearsensationsspa.com SHERWIN-WILLIAMS CO. 121 NE Harney St #D Newport, OR 97365-2508 (541) 574-0774 Mike Walker www.sherwin-williams.com SHILO INN SUITES OCEANFRONT HOTEL 536 SW Elizabeth St Newport, OR 97365-5012 (541) 265-7701 800-222-2244 Mike Willock www.shiloinns.com SIZZLER 2426 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-1701 (541) 265-7055 Shirley Siebens SOLALUNA STUDIOS 750 NW Forestry Rd. Toledo, OR 97391 (541) 336-2117 Sarah Gayle Plourde solalunastudios.com SOUTH BEACH FISH MARKET 3640 S. Coast Hwy South Beach, OR 97366 (541) 867-6800 Steve Halsey www.southbeachfishmarket.com SPINDRIFT CELLARS 810 Applegate Philomath, OR 97370 (541) 929-6555 Tabitha Compton www.spindriftcellars.com STAPLES #1145 721 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365 (541) 574-8100 Jim Palmer www.staples.com STARBUCKS COFFEE COMPANY 122 N. Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-8610 Erica Goodyear STARFISH POINT 140 NW 48th St. Newport, OR 97365-1334 (541) 265-3751 800-870-7795 www.starfishpoint.com STATE FARM INSURANCE 313 SW 2nd St Suite A Newport, OR 97365-3800 (541) 265-2011 Jeff Schrantz www.statefarm.com STEWART TITLE COMPANY - LINCOLN COUNTY DIVISION 407 N. Coast Hwy Ste 200 Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 574-3334 Melanie Sarazin stewart.com STONE CREST CELLARS B&B 9556 S Coast HWY South Beach, OR 97366 (541) 867-6621 Judy Joubert www.stonecrestbb.com STONE DENTAL LAB 1164 SW COAST HWY Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 270-9944 RHONDA STONE WWW.STONEDENTALLAB.NET SUNWEST MOTORS 1030 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-3162 (541) 265-8547 Mike Schulz sunwesthonda.com SWANSON'S PEST MANAGEMENT (541) 688-2323 (800) 622-8993 Millie Swanson WWW.SWANSONPM.COM SYLVIA BEACH HOTEL 267 NW Cliff Newport, OR 97365-3706 (541) 265-5428 888-795-8422 Dick Clarey www.sylviabeachhotel.com SYNERGY SECURITY SOLUTIONS 5995 NE Elliott Circle Corvallis, OR 97330 (541) 745-7233 (888) 444-9098 Mike Braaten www.synergy-security.com

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SYSTEMAX NORTHWEST INC. 155 E Olive St, Ste 6 Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-9599 (866) 265-9599 Marty Runyon www.systemax.biz SZABO'S STEAKHOUSE & SEAFOOD Hwy 101 & 52nd St. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 574-0100 Mark Szabo www.szabossteakandseafood.net TAPANEN GROUP, INC. 12277 NE Benton Ave Newport, OR 97365 (503) 220-0078 Larry Tapanen www.tapanengroup.com TCB MANAGEMENT GROUP INC. 437 NE 1st St. Newport, OR 97365-2916 (541) 265-5265 Mike Goff THE BARTON LAW FIRM 214 SW Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-4927 (541) 265-5377 Bill Barton thebartonlawfirm.com THE CHANNEL HOUSE 35 Ellingson Ave Depoe Bay, OR 97341 (541) 765-2140 Carl Finseth www.channelhouse.com THE COASTHOUSE 14440 South Coast Hwy South Beach, OR 97366 (253) 631-3915 Doug Blyth www.vacationhomes.com/15318 THE COFFEE HOUSE 156 SW Bay Blvd Newport, OR 97365-4534 (541) 265-6263 Judy Lingham THE EDGE GLASS BLOWING 3916 S. Coast Hwy South Beach, OR 97366 (541) 867-4198 Ryan Bledsoe www.theedgeartgallery.com THE GRAND VICTORIAN B&B / VINTAGE COTTAGE RENTAL 105 NW Coast St. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-4490 800-784-9936 Terry or Eileen Obteshka www.grandvictorianor.com THE KILLERS 5040 N. Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365 (503) 267-4969 Michelle Glines www.thekillers.net THE LANDING AT NEWPORT 890 SE Bay Blvd. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 574-6777 800-749-4993 Deanne Shannon www.thelandingatnewport.com THE LIGHTKEEPER'S INN 811 SW 12th ST. Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 265-5642 CHERYL LALACK www.thelightkeepersinnbb.com THE LOCAL PAGES 4910 W. Amelia Earheart Way Ste #1 Salt Lake City, UT 84116 (888) 249-6920 ext. 119 Kim Bogden thelocalpages.net THE LODGE AT OTTER CREST 301 Otter Crest Dr Otter Rock, OR 97369 (541) 270-5526 Chris Garrett thelodgeatottercrest.com THE NEWS GUARD 930 SE Hwy 101 Lincoln City, OR 97367 (541) 994-2178 Georgia Newton www.thenewsguard.com THE ORIGINAL SHRIMP & CRAB MELTS OR (503) 440-7941 Mark Person THE WAX WORKS 250 SW Bay Blvd. Newport, OR 97365-4500 (541) 265-2206 Neal Henning www.marinersquare.com THE WHALER MOTEL 155 SW Elizabeth Newport, OR 97365-3943 (541) 265-9261 800-433-9444 John Clark www.whalernewport.com THE WORD CRAFTER 2749 NE Iler St Newport, OR 97365-1903 (541) 265-7875 Beth Johnston www.inward-eye.com THETECHPORT.COM 530 SW Fall St. Unit G Newport, OR 97365 (503) 703-5503 Zac Schmidt thetechport.com THOMPSON SANITARY SERVICE, INC. 7450 NE Avery Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-7249 Bob/Rob Thompson www.thompsonsanitary.com TLC FEDERAL CREDIT UNION 1625 N. Coast Highway Newport, OR 97365-3098 (541) 265-8182 Stacy Minner www.tlcfcu.org

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TLC PHOTOGRAPHY (541) 336-1541 Tawny Culver tlcweddingphotographer.com TOUJOURS BOUTIQUE 704 NW Beach Dr Newport, OR 97365-3561 (541) 574-6404 Kathy Cleary toujoursboutique.com/ TRAVELODGE 1311 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-8516 Mr. Rai www.newportmotorinn.net TRI AGG INC. PO Box 975 Waldport, OR 97394-0975 (541) 563-3127 Pat Tryon TRIDENT SEAFOODS CORP. 623 SW Bay Blvd Newport, OR 97365-4718 (541) 265-7279 Sharon Snow www.PMR, do not list 04/09/2001 TRUE-CUT ENGRAVING 403 SW 10th Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-9326 Stephanie Brown TYEE LODGE BED & BREAKFAST OCEAN FRONT INN 4925 NW Woody Way Newport, OR 97365-1327 (541) 265-8953 888-553-8933 Doug Nebert www.tyeelodge.com U.S. BANK 400 E Olive Newport, OR 97365-2895 (541) 265-9422 Michael Smith ULTRASONIC, INC 135 NE 10th St. Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 574-6400 Brian Timme ultrasonicevents.com UMPQUA BANK 1250 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-2441 (541) 574-6223 Amy Petersen www.umpquabank.com UNDERSEA GARDENS 250 SW Bay Blvd Newport, OR 97365-4500 (541) 265-2206 Neal Henning www.marinersquare.com UNITED WAY OF BENTON & LINCOLN COUNTIES 2330 NW Professional Dr. Ste. 101 Corvallis, OR 97339 (541) 265-5812 Alan Searle www.unitedwayblc.org Vacasa Rentals of Newport 2865 NE Vine Maple Loop Yachats, OR 97498 (541) 547-5177 Donna Rudd www.vacasarentals.com/usa/Oregon-Coast/Newport/ VACATION INTERNATIONALE 256 E Olive St. Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 574-7743 Kevin Winters www.viresorts.com VALLEY RETRIEVER 956 SW 10th St Newport, OR 97365-4831 (541) 265-2253 Dennis Dick VISITOR'S CHOICE 63025 O B Riley Rd Ste 15 Bend, OR 97702 (541) 312-8072 Ted Bainbridge www.visitorschoiceusa.com VOCATIONAL REHABLITATION DIV. 119 NE 4th St #1 Newport, OR 97365-3133 (541) 265-7843 John Anderson www.myworkweb.biz W.W. CONSTRUCTION 7945 NE Avery St. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-7090 Beth Wheeler www.wwconstruction.org WAARVICK & WAARVICK ATTORNEYS AT LAW 924 SW Hurbert St Newport, OR 97365-4715 (541) 265-8553 Jeff Waarvick www.waarvick.com WAL-MART 160 NW 25th St Newport, OR 97365-1637 (541) 265-6560 Stacey Mitchell WALGREENS 27 S Coast Highway Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 574-4405 Larry Oshanick walgreens.com WASHINGTON FED. SAVINGS AND LOAN 505 N. Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-2269 Nicole Cory www.washingtonfederal.com WASSON BROTHERS WINERY 17020 Ruben Ln Sandy, OR 97055-9276 (503) 668-3124 Jim Wasson WAVES & MORE 344 SW 7th Suite A Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-7337 Corie Eastburn


WAVES OF NEWPORT MOTEL & VACATION RENTALS 820 NW Coast St Newport, OR 97365-3302 (541) 265-4661 (800) 282-6993 Billy & Shanna Lamere www.wavesofnewport.com WEDDINGS BY-THE-SEA 1092 OCEAN VIEW DR. YACHATS, OR 97498 (541) 547-4547 (866) 363-0041 MARY CLAIRE CROOK WWW.FREEWEBZ.COM/WEDSEA WELLS FARGO INSURANCE SERVICES OF OREGON, MARINE DEPARTMENT 1231-A SE Bay Blvd Newport, OR 97365-4227 (541) 265-4500 Jon McKnight WESLEY'S TRADING POST 136 SE 1ST St. Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 265-4556 WESLEY BULLOCK WEST COAST LINEN 426 NW Coast St Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-5318 Bruce Flaming www.westcoastlinen.com WESTERN BEVERAGE CO 130 SE 32nd Newport, OR 97365 (541) 867-7811 Rocky Huston WESTERN STATES ELECTRICAL CONSTRUCTION 235 NE Iron Mountain RD Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-8067 Stephanie Hensley westernstatesonline.com WESTERN TITLE & ESCROW COMPANY 255 SW Coast Hwy, Suite 100 Newport, OR 97365-4997 (541) 265-2288 Anji Mitchell www.westerntitle.com WHALE COVE INN 2345 SW Coast Hwy Depoe Bay, OR 97341 (541) 765-4300 Carl Finseth www.whalecoveinn.com WHALE MUSEUM 234 S. Hwy 101 Depoe Bay, OR 97341 (541) 912-6734 Carrie Newell oregonwhales.com WHALERS REST RV RESORT 50 SE 123rd St. South Beach, OR 97366 (541) 867-3100 800-371-1572 Shari Paulsen www.rvonthego.com WIGGINS TUG & BARG 655 E. Collins Depoe Bay, OR 97341 (541) 270-6527 Grant Snyder www.wigginstugandbarge.com WILDER 2712 SE 20th Ave Portland, OR 97212 (541) 867-7875 Bonnie Serkin www.wildernewport.com WILDLIFE TRADING COMPANY 2820 SE Ferry Slip RD Newport, OR 97365 (541) 867-3474 ext 5431 Candy Torney WILES CONSTRUCTION, INC. 1570 NE Yaquina Heights Dr Newport, OR 97365-9567 (541) 265-3716 Ed Wiles WILLIAM S. TROPE, CPA P.C. 8 SW Lee Newport, OR 97365-3826 (541) 265-5646 William Trope WIND DRIFT GALLERY 2 414 SW Bay Blvd Newport, OR 97365-4518 (541) 265-7454 Susan Armstrong winddriftgallery.com WINDERMERE WEST COAST PROPERTIES 567 N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-0114 (541) 265-5455 888-814-2963 www.winwcp.com WINDRUSH BY THE SEA 1566 James St. Seal Rock, OR 97376 (541) 953-4033 John Crowder www.windrushbythesea.com WINDS OF PRAISE BROADCASTING 1628-E N Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365 (541) 574-1892 Scott Albright www.windsofpraise.com WINTER HAWK SEAFOOD, LLC Port Dock 7 Newport, OR 97365 (541) 270-0791 Bob & Shelly Aue www.winterhawkseafood.com WORK SOURCE OREGON EMPLOYMENT DEPT. 120 NE Avery Newport, OR 97365-3116 (541) 265-8891 ext 347 Judith Fontanini www.workinginoregon.org YACHATS AREA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE (541) 547-3530 800-929-0477 Julith Sink www.yachats.org YAQUINA ART ASSOCIATION 789 NW Beach Drive Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-5133 Ken Hartwell www.yaquinaart.org

YAQUINA BAY CHARTERS 1000 SE Bay Blvd Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-6800 Jack Craven yaquinabaycharters.com YAQUINA BAY FRUIT PROCESSING 2000 A Marine Science Dr. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 867-3314 Harry Noah YAQUINA BAY PROPERTY MANAGEMENT, INC. 146 SE 1st Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-3537 800-895-7170 Lee Hardy www.yaquinabayproperties.com YAQUINA BAY YACHT CLUB 750 SE Bay Blvd Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-9206 www.yaquinabayyachtclub.org YAQUINA HEAD OUTSTANDING NATURAL AREA 750 Lighthouse Dr Newport, OR 97365-1321 (541) 574-3100 Tim Fisher www.or.blm.gov/salem/html/yaquina/ YAQUINA NATUROPATHIC CLINIC, INC. 344 SW 7th St Suite B Newport, OR 97365-4915 (541) 265-6378 K. E. Edmisten YARD BIRDS DESIGN AND MAINTENANCE (541) 272-7168 Robin Miller YELLOW BOOK 8625 SW Cascade Ave Ste. 220 Beaverton, OR 97008 (503) 718-5800 Jackie Miller yellowbook.com YUMMY BOWL 554 SW Coast Hwy Newport, OR 97365-4934 (541) 265-8783 Yanyi Zhen yummybowl.org YUZEN JAPANESE CUISINE 10111 NW Pacific Coast Hwy Seal Rock, OR 97376 (541) 563-4766 Kazunori Bessho ZACH'S BISTRO 614 W. Olive St. Newport, OR 97365 (541) 265-2929 Zachary Wellman ZIP LOCAL 3000 Market St. Place NE #110 Salem, OR 97301 (503) 365-9941 (800) 443-0810 Jeandre Atchley www.myphonedirectory.com

Chamber Contact Info Greater Newport Chamber of Commerce 555 SW Coast Highway Newport, OR 97365 Tel: (541) 265-8801 or (800) COAST44 – Fax: (541) 265-5589 Email: info@newportchamber.org www.newportchamber.org www.newportchamber.org -63


Membership Directory Greater Newport Chamber of Commerce Catagorical Member Listing Accountants

COASTAL ACCOUNTING & CONSULTING (541) 574-0837 COMMON CENTS BOOKEEPING SERVICE (541) 270-0785 DENNIS MCMANUS (541) 265-9484 GRIMSTAD & ASSOCIATES (541) 265-5411 HOWARD ADAMS - CPA (541) 265-6959 MOORE ACCOUNTING SOLUTIONS, LLC (541) 265-2951 WILLIAM S. TROPE, CPA P.C. (541) 265-5646

Acupuncture

BODY IN MOTION, LLC (541) 961-8170 BEACHCONNECTION.NET (503) 384-9617 CHAMBERMASTER (218) 825-9200 OCEAN18 MEDIA SERVICES 541) 961-1627

Advertising Agency

THETECHPORT.COM (503) 703-5503

Air Ambulance

REACH MEDICAL AIR TRANSPORT

(541) 840-7449

Answering Service

TCB MANAGEMENT GROUP INC. (541) 265-5265 AT THE SEA (541) 961-6186 DOLPHIN REAL ESTATE LLC (541) 265-6638

Apartments

LITTLE CREEK APARTMENTS LLC

(541) 265-2663

Appliances

NEWPORT CROSSROADS SHOPS (541) 265-5300 ROBY'S FURNITURE (541) 265-9520

Architects

DH GOEBEL, ARCHITECT (541) 265-5665

Art Galleries/Artists

BAYSCAPES GALLERY & COFFEE HOUSE (541) 265-4017 BREACH THE MOON GALLERY (541) 265-9698 FORINASH GALLERY (541) 867-3430 GALLERY MICHAEL GIBBONS (541) 336-2797 HASTING COASTAL WOODWORKS (541) 867-2992 NANCY LYNNE PHOTOGRAPHY (541) 336-7807 OCCA/PAC/VAC (541) 265-2787 OCEANIC ARTS (541) 265-5963 OREGON COAST GLASSWORKS (541) 574-8226 OZONE FINE ART (541) 265-9500 SOLALUNA STUDIOS (541) 336-2117 THE EDGE GLASS BLOWING (541) 867-4198 WIND DRIFT GALLERY 2 (541) 265-7454 YAQUINA ART ASSOCIATION (541) 265-5133

Arts Organizations

OCCA/PAC/VAC (541) 265-2787 RED OCTOPUS THEATRE COMPANY (541) 574-1950 SENIOR SONGFEST (541) 961-1482 YAQUINA ART ASSOCIATION (541) 265-5133

Assisted Living

BAYSIDE AT SOUTH BEACH (541) 867-7400 GRACELAND CARE HOMES INC. (541) 264-8218 OCEANVIEW SENIOR LIVING (541) 574-0550 SENIOR SONGFEST (541) 961-1482

Associate/Individuals

AL FITZPATRICK (541) 265-7741 BOBBIE LIPPMAN (541) 563-2444 CHARLES & PATTI LITTLEHALES (541) 270-1496 COAST CLEAR INC. (541) 265-5474 DAVID N. ALLEN (541) 265-4568 DICK BEEMER (541) 265-7419 DIGBY COOK (623) 523-4321 DON LINDLY (541) 270-4811 DOUG HUNT (541) 265-4100 ED SIMON (541) 265-9124 ELLEN WALKE - CHASE BANK (541) 574-7865 GEORGE PLANT (541) 574-1031 JERRY & OPAL WHITE (541) 265-8440 JOSEPH SWAFFORD (541) 265-3076 KENT & RUTH KRONEMAN (541) 961-9704 LARIMEE WARD (541) 574-3381 LEE RITZMAN (541) 265-7108

64- www.newportchamber.org

LINDA KILBRIDE (541) 265-3555 MARK MCCONNELL (541) 270-1313 RHONDA HAMSTREET (541) 265-5195 RICARDO ALCOCER (541) 765-2388 ROBERT W. SMITH PH.D. (541) 574-0170 SARAH MYRICK (541) 265-3684

Attorneys

CLIFF COLLARD, ATTORNEY (541) 265-5400 DENNIS BARTOLDUS (541) 265-5400 DIANE HENKELS, ATTORNEY AT LAW (541) 270-6001 GUY B. GRECO ATTORNEY AT LAW (541) 265-2801 LINCOLN COUNTY DISTRICT ATTORNEY (541) 265-4145 MACPHERSON, GINTNER & DIAZ (541) 265-8881 MINOR, BANDONIS, & HAGGERTY, P.C. (541) 265-8888 OUDERKIRK & HOLLEN, ATTORNEYS AT LAW (541) 574-1630 PRIDGEON, BJORNSEN & McCRUM, LLC (541) 265-2217 THE BARTON LAW FIRM (541) 265-5377 WAARVICK & WAARVICK ATTORNEYS AT LAW (541) 265-8553

Attractions

APOLLOS NIGHT CLUB (541) 265-9307 CRESTVIEW GOLF CLUB (541) 563-3020 FRIENDS OF YAQUINA LIGHTHOUSES (541) 574-3125 HASTING COASTAL WOODWORKS (541) 867-2992 HATFIELD MARINE SCIENCE CENTER (541) 867-0100 LINCOLN COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY (541) 265-7509 MARINE DISCOVERY TOURS (541) 265-6200 OCCC FOUNDATION (541) 867-8531 OREGON COAST AQUARIUM (541) 867-3474 OREGON COAST GLASSWORKS (541) 574-8226 OREGON COAST HISTORY CENTER 265-7509 OREGON MUSEUM OF SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY (503) 797-4618 OREGON OYSTER FARMS (541) 265-5078 RIPLEY'S BELIEVE IT OR NOT! (541) 265-2206 SOLALUNA STUDIOS (541) 336-2117 SPINDRIFT CELLARS (541) 929-6555

Attractions

THE EDGE GLASS BLOWING (541) 867-4198 THE WAX WORKS (541) 265-2206 UNDERSEA GARDENS (541) 265-2206 WHALE MUSEUM (541) 912-6734 YAQUINA BAY CHARTERS (541) 265-6800

Auto Rentals

ENTERPRISE RENT A CAR ROBBEN INC. (541) 994-5530

(541) 574-1999

Automobile Dealers

GOLD CHEVROLET - BUICK - GMC - CADILLAC (541) 265-7731 POWER OF NEWPORT (541) 265-4601 SUNWEST MOTORS (541) 265-8547

Automotive Repair/Services

ALAN BROWN TIRE CENTER (541) 265-6604 ALLSTART AUTO ELECTRIC, INC. (541) 265-9192 HUMMINGBIRD AUTO GLASS (541) 265-5141 MAIN AUTO BODY (541) 867-6721 OCEAN TIRE & AUTO SERVICE (541) 265-5075 PACIFIC TIRE & BRAKE (541) 265-8896

Bakery

A POSTO PERSONAL CHEF SERVICES LLC (971) 506-6695 HOLY CAKES....A LIL SLICE OF HEAVEN (541) 961-6665 LA MAISON (541) 265-8812 PACIFIC SOURDOUGH (541) 563-3044

Banks & Credit Unions

AMERICAN EXPRESS GLOBAL CORPORATE PAYMENTS (212) 640-2000 AMERICAN EXPRESS OPEN SMALL BUSINESS CREDIT CARDS (212) 640-0088 COLUMBIA BANK (541) 265-6666 ELLEN WALKE - CHASE BANK (541) 574-7865 OSU FEDERAL CREDIT UNION TLC FEDERAL CREDIT UNION (541) 265-8182 U.S. BANK (541) 265-9422 UMPQUA BANK (541) 574-6223 WASHINGTON FED. SAVINGS AND LOAN (541) 265-2269

Barbers, Beauticians & Salons

EARTHBOUND BEAUTY DAY SPA, INC

(541) 265-4232


JERILYN AND COMPANY HAIR COLOR AND DESIGN (541) 265-7792 KAREN VAN NATTA (541) 265-3261 PHAGANS COSMETOLOGY COLLEGE (541) 265-3083 SALON ETHOS (541) 574-4445 SHEAR SENSATIONS DAY SPA & HAIR SALON (541) 265-4247 WAVES & MORE (541) 265-7337

Carpet Cleaners

Bed & Breakfast

ABBEY FLOOR & MORE (541) 265-6167 CARPET ONE FLOOR & HOME (541) 265-3530 LIGGETTS FLOORING (541) 265-6290

ANCHOR PIER BAYFRONT LODGING (541) 265-STAY (7829) CLIFF HOUSE BED & BREAKFAST (541) 563-2506 GREEN GABLES ITALIAN CAFE AND LODGING (541) 574-0986 NEWPORT BELLE B & B (541) 867-6290 OCEAN HOUSE BED & BREAKFAST (541) 265-3888 ROGUE BED & BEER (541) 961-0142 STONE CREST CELLARS B&B (541) 867-6621 SYLVIA BEACH HOTEL (541) 265-5428 THE GRAND VICTORIAN B&B / VINTAGE COTTAGE RENTAL (541) 265-4490 THE LIGHTKEEPER'S INN (541) 265-5642 TYEE LODGE BED & BREAKFAST OCEAN FRONT INN (541) 265-8953

Beer, WIne & Ale Sales

BIER ONE (541) 265-4630 HONEYWOOD WINERY (503) 362-4111 SPINDRIFT CELLARS (541) 929-6555

Beverage Distributors

BIGFOOT BEVERAGES (541) 265-8871 COLUMBIA DISTRIBUTING (503) 274-9990 EMERALD SPRINGS BOTTLED WATER, INC. (541) 563-7419 WESTERN BEVERAGE CO 541) 867-7811

Bicycle Dealers

BIKE NEWPORT (541) 265-9917

Books

CANYON WAY BOOKSTORE & RESTAURANT 541) 265-8319 SENIOR SONGFEST (541) 961-1482

Breweries/Wineries

BREWER'S ON THE BAY (541) 867-3660 DEPOE BAY WINERY (541) 765-3311 FLYING DUTCHMAN WINERY (541) 765-2553 HAUER OF THE DAUEN, INC. WINERY (503) 868-7359 HONEYWOOD WINERY (503) 362-4111 SPINDRIFT CELLARS (541) 929-6555 WASSON BROTHERS WINERY (503) 668-3124

Building Consultant

NORTHWEST HOMES (541) 764-5055 RC EXTERIORS (541) 270-6094

Building Contractors/General Contractors

BEST ROOFING CO. (541) 994-7663 DOLPHIN CONSTRUCTION (541) 265-6275 MARK HANRAHAN CONSTRUCTION (541) 270-1122 NORTHWEST HOMES (541) 764-5055 QUADE COMMERCIAL CONSTRUCTION CORP. (541) 994-5829 RC EXTERIORS (541) 270-6094 W.W. CONSTRUCTION (541) 265-7090 WILES CONSTRUCTION, INC. (541) 265-3716

Building Materials

COPELAND LUMBER YARDS (541) 265-6640 ProBuild (541) 265-2221

Business Park

NEWPORT BUSINESS PLAZA (541) 867-6531

Cabinet Makers - Woodworking

HASTING COASTAL WOODWORKS (541) 867-2992 KRUSE CABINET MAKING (541) 351-1386 NEW DIMENSIONS FINE WOODWORKING (541) 961-5091

Campgrounds/RV Parks

AGATE BEACH TRAILER & RV PARK (541) 265-7670 CHINOOK RV PARK (541) 563-3485 HANDY HAVEN RV PARK & CAR WASH (541) 563-4591 HARBOR VILLAGE RV PARK (541) 265-5088 LOON LAKE LODGE & RV RESORT 541.599.2244 OREGON STATE PARKS & RECREATION DEPT. (541) 867-7451 PACIFIC SHORES RV OWNERS ASSOCIATION (541) 265-3750 PORT OF NEWPORT (541) 265-7758 SAWYER'S LANDING (541) 265-3907 SEAL ROCKS RV COVE (541) 563-3955 WHALERS REST RV RESORT (541) 867-3100

Candy/Confectionery

AUNT BELINDA'S CANDIES (541) 265-2075 NYE BEACH SWEETS (541) 574-1963

Car Wash

HANDY HAVEN RV PARK & CAR WASH

(541) 563-4591

CENTRAL COAST CHEM-DRY (541) 961-4603 CUSTOM CARPET CLEANING (541) 265-8407 MR. WIZARD (541) 283-5987 SERVPRO OF LINCOLN & POLK CO. (541) 265-7777

Carpet/Floor Coverings

Casinos

CHINOOK WINDS CASINO RESORT

(541) 996-5825

Catering

A POSTO PERSONAL CHEF SERVICES LLC (971) 506-6695 ALSI RESORT (541) 563-7700 BREWER'S ON THE BAY (541) 867-3660 KAM MENG CHINESE RESTAURANT (541) 574-9450 LA MAISON (541) 265-8812 LOCAL OCEAN SEAFOODS (541) 574-7959 MO'S RESTAURANT & ANNEX (541) 265-7512 THE ORIGINAL SHRIMP & CRAB MELTS (503) 440-7941

Cemetery

EUREKA CEMETERY (541) 265-7282

Charter Services

CAPTAIN'S REEL DEEP SEA FISHING (541) 265-7441 CURRY GUIDE SERVICE, LLC (541) 914-3899 DOCKSIDE CHARTERS (541) 765-2545 MARINE DISCOVERY TOURS (541) 265-6200 NEWPORT MARINA STORE & CHARTERS, INC (541) 867-4470 NEWPORT TRADEWINDS (541) 265-2101 WHALE MUSEUM (541) 912-6734 YAQUINA BAY CHARTERS (541) 265-6800

Chiropractic Physicians

DR. KENNETH BISHOP, DC. (541) 264-8558 NEWPORT CHIROPRACTIC (541) 265-9218

Churches

NEWPORT FOURSQUARE CHURCH (541) 351-8141 OCEAN UNITY CHURCH (541) 574-6560 SALVATION ARMY BAY COMMUNITIES (541) 265-6814

Civic Organizations

FRIENDS OF LINCOLN COUNTY ANIMALS / PICK OF THE LITTER (541) 961-5852 HABITAT FOR HUMANITY OF LINCOLN COUNTY (541) 574-4437 LINCOLN OSU EXTENSION (541) 574-6534 PFLAG OF THE O.C.C. (541) 265-7194

Clothing/Accessories

NEWPORT CROSSROADS SHOPS (541) 265-5300 TOUJOURS BOUTIQUE (541) 574-6404

Clubs/Organizations/Associations

ALTRUSA INTERNATIONAL OF YAQUINA BAY (541) 265-8953 AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY (541) 961-3842 AMERICAN LEGION #116 (541) 265-9017 BPO ELKS #2105 (541) 265-2105 BUY LOCAL LINCOLN COUNTY ASSOCIATION (541) 867-8574 CELTIC HERITAGE ALLIANCE (541) 574-9366 CENTRAL COAST KIWANIS (541) 265-2288 CITY CENTER NEWPORT ASSOCIATION (541) 265-5300 GREATER NEWPORT CHAMBER OF COMMERCE (541) 265-8801 NEWPORT BOOSTER CLUB (541) 265-7249 NEWPORT FARMERS' MARKET (541) 961-8236 NEWPORT FISHERMEN'S WIVES INC. (541) 961-1588 NEWPORT LIONS CLUB (541) 574-4070 NEWPORT LOYALTY DAYS ASSOCIATION (541) 961-0041 NEWPORT MASONIC FAMILY (541) 961-4640 NYE BEACH MERCHANT ASSOCIATION (541) 574-0545 PFLAG OF THE O.C.C. (541) 265-7194 PORTHOLE PLAYERS, LTD. (541) 265-9269 ROTARY OF NEWPORT (541) 270-2678 RSVP OF LINCOLN COUNTY (541) 574-2684 SENIOR SONGFEST (541) 961-1482 YACHATS AREA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE (541) 547-3530 YAQUINA BAY YACHT CLUB (541) 265-9206

Coffee/Tea/Espresso/Ice Cream

BAY LATTE (541) 265-2208 BAYSCAPES GALLERY & COFFEE HOUSE (541) 265-4017 DUTCH BROS. COFFEE (541) 265-4009 NEWPORT BAY COFFEE CO (541) 265-4090 STARBUCKS COFFEE COMPANY (541) 265-8610

Collection Agencies

INDUSTRIAL CREDIT SERVICE (541) 368-5166

www.newportchamber.org -65


Commercial Fishing

Electronics Equipment/Service/Consultants

Communications Equipment

Emergency Services

PACIFIC BOAT BROKERS (541) 264-8306 PACIFIC BOAT SALES (541) 264-7164 CENTURY LINK (541) 967-3500 DAY WIRELESS SYSTEMS (541) 265-6201

Computer Services

CENTURY LINK (541) 967-3500 CHAMBERMASTER (218) 825-9200 COASTCOM, INC. (541) 574-6117 GRAY'S WEB DESIGN (541) 574-4432 JARED CORCORAN DESIGN (541) 224-7907 MARCHMOBILE (612) 709-9276 NEWPORT CROSSROADS SHOPS (541) 265-5300 OREGON COAST TECHNOLOGY (541) 351-8947 PEAK INTERNET, LLC (800) 731-4871 THETECHPORT.COM (503) 703-5503

Concrete

TRI AGG INC. (541) 563-3127

Consultants

CHRIS WAUGH (541) 270-0399 COASTAL ACCOUNTING & CONSULTING (541) 574-0837 MOORE ACCOUNTING SOLUTIONS, LLC (541) 265-2951 NORTHWEST MANAGEMENT SPECIALISTS (541) 265-2525 TAPANEN GROUP, INC. (503) 220-0078

Counselors

HOLISTIC COUNSELING CENTER PACIFIC NORTHWEST COUNSELING, LLC.

(541) 265-5500 (541) 270-6466

Creamery

ROGUE CREAMERY (541) 665-1155

Crime & Trauma Scene Clean-Up

PAUL DAVIS EMERGENCY SERVICES SERVPRO OF LINCOLN & POLK CO.

(541) 992-6653 (541) 265-7777

ELECTRONIC SUPER STORE - RADIO SHACK DEALER (541) 996-2288 MARCHMOBILE (612) 709-9276 NEWPORT POLICE DEPARTMENT (541) 574-3348 PACIFIC WEST AMBULANCE (541) 265-3175 PAUL DAVIS EMERGENCY SERVICES (541) 992-6653 REACH MEDICAL AIR TRANSPORT (541) 840-7449

Employment Services

BBSI, A HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT COMPANY CARDINAL EMPLOYMENT SERVICES VOCATIONAL REHABLITATION DIV. WORK SOURCE OREGON EMPLOYMENT DEPT.

(541) 574-9892 (541) 265-5090 (541) 265-7843 (541) 265-8891 ext 347

Engraving

TRUE-CUT ENGRAVING (541) 265-9326

Equipment & Supplies - Medical

HOME MEDICAL EQUIPMENT & SUPPLIES

(541) 265-5581

Event Planning/Decorating/Supplies

ALSI RESORT (541) 563-7700 OREGON COAST EVENT RENTALS, LLC (541) 264-8491 PETER CORVALLIS PRODUCTIONS (503) 222-1664 PUMPKIN RIDE PRODUCTIONS (541) 270-3346 STONE CREST CELLARS B&B (541) 867-6621 ULTRASONIC, INC (541) 574-6400

Exterminators/Pest Control Services

SWANSON'S PEST MANAGEMENT (541) 688-2323 THE KILLERS (503) 267-4969

Facility Rentals

NEWPORT NATIONAL GUARD ARMORY (541) 265-2761 YAQUINA BAY YACHT CLUB (541) 265-9206

Financial Planners

CEDAR CREEK QUARRIES (541) 265-9441

EDWARD D. JONES & CO. - PETER HEISLER (541) 265-4528 FINANCIAL FREEDOM WEALTH MANAGEMENT GROUP, LLC (541) 574-6464 H&R BLOCK (541) 264-7270 LIFE CYCLE FINANCIAL PLANNING (541) 265-2100

Dairy Products/Cheese

Fishing Vessels

Crushed Rock

ROGUE CREAMERY (541) 665-1155

Dance Clubs

APOLLOS NIGHT CLUB (541) 265-9307

Dental Lab

STONE DENTAL LAB (541) 270-9944

Dentists/Orthodontists

CENTRAL COAST DENTAL CLINIC / JAMES D WINDELL, DMD (541) 265-2261 FAMILY DENTAL GROUP (541) 265-4221 NEWPORT DENTAL (541) 265-8501 NEWPORT GENTLE DENTISTRY PC/ RANDALL TEICH DDS (541) 265-7900 PAVENTY & MAY ORTHODONTICS (541) 265-9466

Department Stores

FRED MEYER (541) 265-4581 WAL-MART (541) 265-6560

Developer

WILDER (541) 867-7875

Distillery

ROGUE HOUSE OF SPIRITS

Dry Cleaners

COAST STREET DRY CLEANING

F/V TRAILBLAZER (541) 574-0256 PACIFIC BOAT BROKERS (541) 264-8306 PACIFIC BOAT SALES (541) 264-7164 SEA STAR ENTERPRISE - F/V OCEAN LADY ''M'' (541) 961-1246 YAQUINA BAY CHARTERS (541) 265-6800

Fitness Centers & Products

ME FITNESS CENTER (541) 574-9062 NEWPORT CROSSROADS SHOPS (541) 265-5300

Florist

M & K BARK /FLOWERS BY MOO NEWPORT FLORIST AND GIFTS, LLC

(541) 265-3440 (541) 265-8262

Food Pantry

NEWPORT FOOD PANTRY (541) 270-0842

Foundations

OCCC FOUNDATION (541) 867-8531 PACIFIC COMM. HEALTH DISTRICT FOUNDATION (541) 574-4745

Fruit Processors

(541) 867-3670

(541) 265-5366

AFFORDABLE BURIAL & CREMATION CO. (541) 265-7111 BATEMAN FUNERAL HOME (541) 265-2751

DVD, Video & TV Productions

DIGITAL STUDIO, LLC (503) 702-7895 OCEAN18 MEDIA SERVICES (541) 961-1627

YAQUINA BAY FRUIT PROCESSING

(541) 867-3314

Funeral Homes Furniture

Economic Development

FACTORY MATTRESS & FURNITURE OUTLET (541) 265-4460 KRUSE CABINET MAKING (541) 351-1386 NEW DIMENSIONS FINE WOODWORKING (541) 961-5091 ROBY'S FURNITURE (541) 265-9520

Educational Services

Garbage Collections - Recycling

COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION (541) 574-0320 ECON. DEVELOPMENT ALLIANCE OF LINCOLN CO (541) 961-3837

ANGELL JOB CORPS (541) 547-3137 LINCOLN COUNTY SCHOOL DISTRICT (541) 265-9211 LINCOLN OSU EXTENSION (541) 574-6534 NEWPORT HIGH SCHOOL (541) 265-9281 OCCC FOUNDATION (541) 867-8531 OREGON COAST COMMUNITY COLLEGE 265-2283 OREGON MUSEUM OF SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY (503) 797-4618 PHAGANS COSMETOLOGY COLLEGE (541) 265-3083

Electrical Contractors

AGING WISELY WITH HEARTFELT HANDS (541) 265-8530 BAYSIDE AT SOUTH BEACH (541) 867-7400 GRACELAND CARE HOMES INC. (541) 264-8218 LE'ANNE MCEACHERN, AU.D. (541) 272-5015 OCEANVIEW SENIOR LIVING (541) 574-0550 SENIOR SONGFEST (541) 961-1482

DOUG'S ELECTRIC (541) 265-8630 E2 ELECTRIC INC. (541) 574-6315 J & J COASTAL ELECTRIC (541) 265-2988 WESTERN STATES ELECTRICAL CONSTRUCTION (541) 265-8067

66- www.newportchamber.org

THOMPSON SANITARY SERVICE, INC.

(541) 265-7249

Gas Stations

BEVENS' MARKET & DELI (541) 265-2722 NEWPORT CHEVRON (541) 574-6336

General Contractors

FAMILY FARM ENTERPRISES, INC. (541) 563-2395 RC EXTERIORS (541) 270-6094

Geriatrics


Gift Shops

BAYSCAPES GALLERY & COFFEE HOUSE (541) 265-4017 CHERI'S GALLERY (541) 265-5456 ILLINGWORTH'S GIFTS (541) 265-5094 LOOKOUT GIFT SHOP (541) 765-2270 MARINE DISCOVERY TOURS (541) 265-6200 NEWPORT BAY CANDLE CO. (541) 265-6111 NYE COTTAGE BEADS (866) 592-5556 PEERLESS PUFFIN (541) 265-3153 RAINDANCE AT NYE BEACH (541) 265-9629

Gift Shops

WILDLIFE TRADING COMPANY

(541) 867-3474 ext 5431

Glass

LINCOLN GLASS COMPANY (541) 265-8836 NEWPORT GLASS CO INC. (541) 265-2226 OREGON COAST GLASSWORKS (541) 574-8226

Global Positioning System Technology

ADVANCED RESEARCH CORP. (541) 265-9690

Golf Course

AGATE BEACH GOLF COURSE (541) 265-7331 CRESTVIEW GOLF CLUB (541) 563-3020 OLALLA VALLEY GOLF COURSE (541) 336-2121 SALISHAN SPA & GOLF RESORT (541) 764-2371

Government

BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT (541) 574-3100 CITY OF NEWPORT (541) 574-0603 LINCOLN COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT (541) 265-4236 ext. 234

Graphic Artists/Designers

JARED CORCORAN DESIGN (541) 224-7907 JEFFERY SHIRLEY DESIGNS (541) 264-5903 NEWPORT LAZERQUICK (541) 265-6425

Grocers

BEVENS' MARKET & DELI (541) 265-2722 CASH & CARRY (541) 265-7571 FRED MEYER (541) 265-4581 J.C. MARKET (541) 265-6641 MAI'S ASIAN MARKET (541) 265-5868 OCEANA NATURAL FOODS CO-OP (541) 265-8285 SAFEWAY INC. (541) 265-2930

LOON LAKE LODGE & RV RESORT 541.599.2244 MONEY SAVER MOTEL (541) 265-2277 MOOLACK SHORES MOTEL (541) 265-2326 NEWPORT BAY MOTEL (541) 265-2241 NEWPORT CITY CENTER MOTEL (541) 265-7381 OVERLEAF LODGE (541) 547-4880 RODEWAY INN & LEE'S WOK RESTAURANT (541) 265-5321 SAIL INN (541) 444-7111 SALISHAN SPA & GOLF RESORT (541) 764-2371 SCHOONER LANDING (541) 265-4293 SHILO INN SUITES OCEANFRONT HOTEL (541) 265-7701 STARFISH POINT (541) 265-3751 SYLVIA BEACH HOTEL (541) 265-5428 THE CHANNEL HOUSE (541) 765-2140 THE LANDING AT NEWPORT (541) 574-6777 THE WHALER MOTEL (541) 265-9261 TRAVELODGE (541) 265-8516 VACATION INTERNATIONALE (541) 574-7743 WAVES OF NEWPORT MOTEL & VACATION RENTALS (541) 265-4661 WHALE COVE INN (541) 765-4300

Insurance

ABEL INSURANCE AGENCY (541) 264-8426 ALLSTATE INSURANCE (541) 265-5492 FARMERS INSURANCE - BECK/ERNST INSURANCE SERVICES 541-265-2802 FARMERS INSURANCE - TC DUTY INSURANCE (541) 336-5749 FULLHART INSURANCE OF WALDPORT (541) 563-3241 GREG WELLS INSURANCE 541-265-3224 O'CONNELL INVESTMENT & INSURANCE SERVICES (541) 265-7771 PAYNE WEST INSURANCE (541) 265-7768 STATE FARM INSURANCE (541) 265-2011 WELLS FARGO INSURANCE SERVICES OF OREGON,MARINE DEPARTMENT (541) 265-4500

Interior Decorators

ABBEY FLOOR & MORE (541) 265-6167 CARPET ONE FLOOR & HOME (541) 265-3530 DECORATING DEN INTERIORS (541) 265-3315

Investment Brokers

WESLEY'S TRADING POST (541) 265-4556

Health & Wellness Consultant

Jewelry

Hearing Services

Kayaks

Guns & Ammo

LOTUS HEALING WATERS (503) 593-1111 COAST HEARING SERVICES (541) 265-6273 LE'ANNE MCEACHERN, AU.D. (541) 272-5015

Heating & Sheet Metal

AIRROW HEATING & SHEET METAL, LLC (541) 265-8000 GROTH-GATES SHEET METAL, INC. (541) 265-8636 MULDER SHEET METAL, INC. (541) 265-4269 ROBBEN INC. (541) 994-5530

Home Medical Equipment & Supplies

Hospital

HOME MEDICAL EQUIPMENT & SUPPLIES

(541) 265-5581

SAMARITAN PACIFIC COMMUNITIES HOSPITAL

(541) 265-2244

Hotels/Motels/Condominiums

ADOBE RESORT MOTEL, INC. (541) 547-3141 AGATE BEACH MOTEL (541) 265-8746 ALSI RESORT (541) 563-7700 AMERICA'S BEST VALUE INN & SUITES (541) 265-6631 ANCHOR PIER BAYFRONT LODGING (541) 265-STAY (7829) BEACHCOMBERS HAVEN (541) 764-2252 BEST WESTERN PLUS AGATE BEACH INN (541) 265-9411 COMFORT INN (541) 265-6203 COZY COVE BEACH FRONT RESORT (541) 994-2950 DAYS INN (541) 265-5767 ECONO LODGE (541) 265-7724 EDGEWATER COTTAGES (541) 563-2240 ELIZABETH STREET INN (541) 265-9400 EMBARCADERO RESORT HOTEL (541) 265-8521 FIRESIDE MOTEL (541) 547-3636 HALLMARK RESORT (541) 265-2600 HOLIDAY INN EXPRESS & SUITES (541) 867-3377 INN AT NYE BEACH (541) 265-2477 INN AT SPANISH HEAD (541) 996-2161 INN AT YAQUINA BAY (541) 867-7055 KNIGHTS INN NEWPORT (541) 265-4533 LA QUINTA INN & SUITES (541) 867-7727 LITTLE CREEK COVE (541) 265-8587

EDWARD D. JONES & CO. - PETER HEISLER

Janitorial Services/House Cleaning Services

ASSOCIATED CLEANING SERVICES MR. WIZARD (541) 283-5987 PAUL DAVIS EMERGENCY SERVICES SERVPRO OF LINCOLN & POLK CO.

(541) 265-4528 (541) 867-7879 (541) 992-6653 (541) 265-7777

DIAMONDS BY THE SEA (541) 265-7755 OSSIES SURF SHOP (541) 574-4634

Landscape Contractors

BETTER BARK & MORE (541) 270-9480 CREATIVE LANDSCAPE & MAINTENANCE (541) 336-1912 FAMILY FARM ENTERPRISES, INC. (541) 563-2395 FERRIS LANDSCAPING (541) 270-3786 M & K BARK /FLOWERS BY MOO (541) 265-3440 NORTHWEST RELIABLE, LLC. (541) 961-2744 YARD BIRDS DESIGN AND MAINTENANCE (541) 272-7168

Lawn & Garden

ALSEA BAY POWER PRODUCTS, INC. (541) 563-4266 CREATIVE LANDSCAPE & MAINTENANCE (541) 336-1912 FAMILY FARM ENTERPRISES, INC. (541) 563-2395 NORTHWEST RELIABLE, LLC. (541) 961-2744 YARD BIRDS DESIGN AND MAINTENANCE (541) 272-7168

Lighting Fixtures & Supplies

ULTRASONIC, INC (541) 574-6400

Limousine, Taxi & Shuttles

NEWPORT EXPRESS/YAQUINA CAB CO.

(541) 265-9552

Linen Rentals - Commercial

WEST COAST LINEN (541) 265-5318

Liquor Stores

NEWPORT LIQUOR STORE (541) 265-5621

Lot Sweeping - Maintenance

ALLEN & SONS TOTAL LOT MAINTENANCE, INC.

(541) 574-8257

Manufactured Homes & Parks

LONGVIEW HILLS MFG. HOUSING COMM. (541) 265-3576 NORTHWEST HOMES (541) 764-5055

Marine & RV Services

NEWPORT MARINE & RV SERVICE (541) 867-3704 PACIFIC BOAT SALES (541) 264-7164

Marine Electronics/Equipment/Supplies

ALSEA BAY POWER PRODUCTS, INC. B & F MARINE ELECTRONICS, INC.

(541) 563-4266 (541) 265-8839

www.newportchamber.org -67


ENGLUND MARINE (541) 265-9275 BEACHCONNECTION.NET (503) 384-9617 COMCAST SPOTLIGHT (541) 206-8325

Massage

Military

Pharmacy

WALGREENS (541) 574-4405

Marketing

BODY IN MOTION, LLC EARTHBOUND BEAUTY DAY SPA, INC INNER WISDOM / H&K SERVICES, INC. MARIAH NELSON, LMT #13202

(541) 961-8170 (541) 265-4232 (541) 270-5601 (541) 961-4890

COAST GUARD STATION YAQUINA BAY NEWPORT NATIONAL GUARD ARMORY

(541) 265-5381 (541) 265-2761

Mortgage Loans

Photocopying - Duplicating - Equipment & Supplies

IKON OFFICE SOLUTIONS (503) 409-5666 NEWPORT LAZERQUICK (541) 265-6425 PIONEER PRINTING INC. 541) 265-5242

Photography

FORINASH GALLERY (541) 867-3430 JO-FOTOS / OREGON PHOTOS BY JO WIENERT (541) 270-6321 NANCY LYNNE PHOTOGRAPHY (541) 336-7807 NEWPORT CROSSROADS SHOPS (541) 265-5300 RENEE MCCASLIN PHOTOGRAPHY (503) 984-3604 TLC PHOTOGRAPHY (541) 336-1541

AMERICAN PACIFIC MORTGAGE dba INNOVA MORTGAGE SERVICES (541) 272-7054 COLUMBIA BANK (541) 265-6666 OSU FEDERAL CREDIT UNION / TLC FEDERAL CREDIT UNION (541) 265-8182 U.S. BANK (541) 265-9422 UMPQUA BANK (541) 574-6223 WASHINGTON FED. SAVINGS AND LOAN (541) 265-2269

Physical Therapy

Movers

Plumbing

CROSS TOWN MOVERS / BEKINS VAN LINES

(541) 265-9074

Music Organizations

CENTRAL COAST CHORALE (541) 637-6422 NEWPORT SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (541) 574-0614 SENIOR SONGFEST (541) 961-1482

Music Services

MAINSTREAM MUSIC (541) 336-1334 PUMPKIN RIDE PRODUCTIONS (541) 270-3346 SENIOR SONGFEST (541) 961-1482 ULTRASONIC, INC (541) 574-6400

Naturopathic Physicians

LOTUS HEALING WATERS (503) 593-1111 YAQUINA NATUROPATHIC CLINIC, INC. (541) 265-6378

News Media

BEACHCONNECTION.NET (503) 384-9617 DEPOE BAY BEACON / NP & TV ( 541) 764-5011 DIGITAL STUDIO, LLC (503) 702-7895 KNPT/KYTE/KCRF/KBCH/U92 RADIO AND OREGONCOASTDAILYNEWS.COM (541) 265-2266 NEWPORT NEWS TIMES (541) 265-8571 NEWSLINCOLNCOUNTY.COM 541) 251-1408 WINDS OF PRAISE BROADCASTING (541) 574-1892

Newspapers/Magazines/Publications

CONNECTIONS PUBLICATIONS LLC (541) 234-4904 DEPOE BAY BEACON / NP & TV (541) 764-5011 KEY COMMUNICATIONS (541) 270-7116 NEWPORT NEWS TIMES (541) 265-8571 OREGON COAST MAGAZINE (541) 997-8401 ext 140 OREGON COAST TODAY (541) 921-2306 THE NEWS GUARD (541) 994-2178

Nursing Home & Rehabilitation

NEWPORT REHABILITATION CENTER & SPECIALTY CARE (541) 265-5356

Nutritional & Health Supplements

LOTUS HEALING WATERS (503) 593-1111 OCEANA NATURAL FOODS CO-OP (541) 265-8285

Office Equipment/Furniture/Supplies

BULLOCK'S CORNER (541) 265-9566 IKON OFFICE SOLUTIONS (503) 409-5666 STAPLES #1145 (541) 574-8100

Optometrists

EYE CARE CENTER (541) 265-8828 OREGON EYES VISION CENTER (541) 265-9458 PACIFIC EYE ASSOCIATES (541) 265-6582

Oyster Farms

OREGON OYSTER FARMS (541) 265-5078

Paint/Wallcoverings

AGATE BEACH SUPPLY CO. (541) 265-7773 SHERWIN-WILLIAMS CO. (541) 574-0774

Paper-Lumber-Manufactures & Wholesale

GEORGIA-PACIFIC TOLEDO LLC (541) 336-8202

Pawn Shop - New & Used

WESLEY'S TRADING POST (541) 265-4556

Personal Chef

A POSTO PERSONAL CHEF SERVICES LLC

Pet Services

FRIENDS OF LINCOLN COUNTY ANIMALS / PICK OF THE LITTER

68- www.newportchamber.org

(971) 506-6695 (541) 961-5852

NEWPORT PHYSICAL THERAPY (541) 265-4252

Physicians

DAVID BICE, MD (541) 265-6681 PACIFIC EYE ASSOCIATES (541) 265-6582

Plant Maintenance

PACIFIC HORTICA (541) 528-7841 LINCOLN PLUMBING INC (541) 265-7576 NEWPORT PLUMBING, INC. (541) 265-7030

Portable Toilet Rentals

BEST POTS, INC. 541-574-7976

Printers

NEWPORT LAZERQUICK (541) 265-6425 PIONEER PRINTING INC. (541) 265-5242 STAPLES #1145 (541) 574-8100

Promotional Products

IDEA PRINT WORKS, INC. (541) 265-8277

Property Maintenance & Handyman Services

SERVPRO OF LINCOLN & POLK CO.

Property Management

DOLPHIN REAL ESTATE LLC Vacasa Rentals of Newport YAQUINA BAY PROPERTY MANAGEMENT, INC.

(541) 265-7777 (541) 265-6638 (541) 547-5177 (541) 265-3537

Public Service Organizations

AMERICAN RED CROSS - WILLAMETTE CHPT. LINCOLN DISTRICT FRIENDS OF LINCOLN COUNTY ANIMALS / PICK OF THE LITTER LINCOLN COUNTY COMMISSIONERS LINCOLN COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE NEWPORT POLICE DEPARTMENT YAQUINA HEAD OUTSTANDING NATURAL AREA

(541) 265-7182 (541) 961-5852 (541) 265-4100 (541) 265-0652 (541) 574-3348 (541) 574-3100

Public Transportation

LINCOLN COUNTY TRANSIT (541) 574-1292

Publication Distributors

CONNECTIONS PUBLICATIONS LLC (541) 234-4904 KEY COMMUNICATIONS (541) 270-7116 LOCAL FAVORITES (503) 970-7630 NEWPORT DIGITAL CITY GUIDE (541) 971-1069 OREGON COAST MAGAZINE (541) 997-8401 ext 140 PELICAN PRODUCTIONS (503) 717-1122 THE LOCAL PAGES VISITOR'S CHOICE (541) 312-8072 YELLOW BOOK (503) 718-5800 ZIP LOCAL (503) 365-9941

Quarries

CEDAR CREEK QUARRIES (541) 265-9441

Radio Stations

KNPT/KYTE/KCRF/KBCH/U92 RADIO AND OREGONCOASTDAILYNEWS.COM (541) 265-2266 KSHL RADIO (541) 265-3000 WINDS OF PRAISE BROADCASTING (541) 574-1892

Real Estate

ADVANTAGE REAL ESTATE (541) 265-2200 AMERICAN PACIFIC MORTGAGE dba INNOVA MORTGAGE SERVICES (541) 272-7054 AT THE SEA (541) 961-6186 DOLPHIN REAL ESTATE LLC (541) 265-6638 EMERALD COAST REALTY, INC. (541) 265-8875 JOHN L. SCOTT REALTY (541) 265-2345 MISHEY REAL ESTATE (541) 265-2281 NORTHWEST HOMES (541) 764-5055 S & W REAL ESTATE (541) 265-2251 S & W Real Estate (541) 270-6758 WINDERMERE WEST COAST PROPERTIES (541) 265-5455


Real Estate Appraisers

OREGON COAST APPRAISAL SERVICE

(541) 265-3012

Seafood Retail/Wholesale

Real Estate Loans

AMERICAN PACIFIC MORTGAGE dba INNOVA MORTGAGE SERVICES

TRIDENT SEAFOODS CORP. (541) 265-7279 WINTER HAWK SEAFOOD, LLC (541) 270-0791

(541) 272-7054

Rental Equipment

ALSEA BAY POWER PRODUCTS, INC. (541) 563-4266 NEWPORT RENTAL SERVICE (541) 265-5721 OREGON COAST EVENT RENTALS, LLC (541) 264-8491

Restaurants/Café/Deli

OREGON'S CHOICE GOURMET ALBACORE SEA STAR ENTERPRISE - F/V OCEAN LADY ''M''

Secretarial Services/Office Support

THE WORD CRAFTER (541) 265-7875

Security & Patrol Services

SYNERGY SECURITY SOLUTIONS TCB MANAGEMENT GROUP INC.

ABBY'S PIZZA INN (541) 265-9336 ADOBE RESORT MOTEL, INC. (541) 547-3141 AGATE BEACH GOLF COURSE (541) 265-7331 ALSI RESORT (541) 563-7700 APOLLOS NIGHT CLUB (541) 265-9307 APRIL'S AT NYE BEACH (541) 265-6855 ARCTIC CIRCLE (541) 265-7822 BEST WESTERN PLUS AGATE BEACH INN (541) 265-9411 BREWER'S ON THE BAY (541) 867-3660 BRIDGEVIEW KUM-YONS RESTAURANT (541) 265-5330 CAFE MUNDO (541) 574-8134 CAFE STEPHANIE (541) 265-8082 CANYON WAY BOOKSTORE & RESTAURANT (541) 265-8319 CECIL'S DIRTY APRON (541) 264-8360 CHALET RESTAURANT & BAKERY (541) 265-6900 CHINOOK WINDS CASINO RESORT (541) 996-5825 CHOWDER BOWL AT NYE BEACH (541) 265-7477 CRESTVIEW GOLF CLUB (541) 563-3020 FIGARO'S OF NEWPORT (541) 265-2061 FISH PEDDLER'S MARKET & RESTAURANT (541) 265-7057 FISH TAILS CAFÉ (541) 867-6002 GEORGIE'S BEACHSIDE GRILL (541) 265-9800 GREEN GABLES ITALIAN CAFE AND LODGING (541) 574-0986 HATTIE'S (541) 264-8563 INN AT SPANISH HEAD (541) 996-2161 IZZY'S (541) 265-3636 KAM MENG CHINESE RESTAURANT (541) 574-9450 LA MAISON (541) 265-8812 LOCAL OCEAN SEAFOODS 541) 574-7959 M&P AUTHENTIC THAI CUISINE (541) 264-8388 MAZATLAN MEXICAN RESTAURANT (541) 265-8595 MCDONALD'S #5678 (541) 265-9866 MO'S RESTAURANT & ANNEX (541) 265-7512 MOBY DICK'S SEAFOOD & SPIRITS (541) 265-7847 NANA'S IRISH PUB (541) 574-8787 NEWPORT CAFE (541) 574-6847 NEWPORT STEAK & SEAFOOD 541) 265-8283 NOODLE CAFE (541) 574-6688 NYE BEACH SWEETS (541) 574-1963 OCEANA NATURAL FOODS CO-OP (541) 265-8285 PIG N PANCAKE (541) 265-9065 PIZZA ME (541) 336-9999 RODEWAY INN & LEE'S WOK RESTAURANT (541) 265-5321 ROGUE ALES PUBLIC HOUSE (541) 265-3188 ROGUE CREAMERY (541) 665-1155 ROGUE HOUSE OF SPIRITS (541) 867-3670 SADA'S SUSHI BAR (541) 574-8890 SAFFRON SALMON (541) 265-8921 SALISHAN SPA & GOLF RESORT (541) 764-2371 SAVORY CAFE & PIZZERIA (541) 574-9365 SHILO INN SUITES OCEANFRONT HOTEL (541) 265-7701 SIZZLER (541) 265-7055 SOUTH BEACH FISH MARKET (541) 867-6800 SYLVIA BEACH HOTEL (541) 265-5428 SZABO'S STEAKHOUSE & SEAFOOD (541) 574-0100 THE COFFEE HOUSE (541) 265-6263 THE LODGE AT OTTER CREST (541) 270-5526 THE ORIGINAL SHRIMP & CRAB MELTS (503) 440-7941 YUMMY BOWL (541) 265-8783 YUZEN JAPANESE CUISINE (541) 563-4766 ZACH'S BISTRO (541) 265-2929

Shopping Centers

Restorations

Title Insurance - Escrow Services

JO-FOTOS / OREGON PHOTOS BY JO WIENERT (541) 270-6321 RC EXTERIORS (541) 270-6094 SERVPRO OF LINCOLN & POLK CO. (541) 265-7777

Screen Printing

GLASS TECH OF OREGON, INC (503) 646-3989 IDEA PRINT WORKS, INC. (541) 265-8277

Seafood Processors

PACIFIC SHRIMP COMPANY (541) 265-4215 SEA STAR ENTERPRISE - F/V OCEAN LADY ''M'' (541) 961-1246

(541) 765-2193 (541) 961-1246

(541) 745-7233 (541) 265-5265

AQUARIUM VILLAGE (541) 867-6531 NEWPORT BUSINESS PLAZA (541) 867-6531 NEWPORT CROSSROADS SHOPS (541) 265-5300 SEA TOWNE SHOPPING CENTER (503) 245-1177

Signs

JEFFERY SHIRLEY DESIGNS (541) 264-5903 NEWPORT SIGNS (541) 867-7600

Social Service Organizations

ALTRUSA INTERNATIONAL OF YAQUINA BAY (541) 265-8953 BRIGHT HORIZON THERAPUETIC RIDING CENTER (541) 961-4156 CASA OF LINCOLN COUNTY (541) 265-3116 FOOD SHARE OF LINCOLN COUNTY (541) 265-8578 HABITAT FOR HUMANITY OF LINCOLN COUNTY (541) 574-4437 HOUSING AUTHORITY OF LINCOLN COUNTY (541) 265-5326 LINCOLN COUNTY CHILDREN'S ADVOCACY CENTER (541) 574-0841 LINCOLN OSU EXTENSION (541) 574-6534 MY SISTERS' PLACE (541) 574-9424 NEWPORT FOOD PANTRY (541) 270-0842 PAADA (PARTNERSHIP AGAINS ALCOHOL AND DRUG ABUSE) (541) 574-7890 RSVP OF LINCOLN COUNTY (541) 574-2684 SALVATION ARMY BAY COMMUNITIES (541) 265-6814 SHANGRI - LA CORPORATION (541) 867-6883 UNITED WAY OF BENTON & LINCOLN COUNTIES (541) 265-5812

Speakers

CHRIS WAUGH (541) 270-0399 NORTHWEST MANAGEMENT SPECIALISTS (541) 265-2525

Sports/Fitness/Camping

CURRY GUIDE SERVICE, LLC (541) 914-3899 NEWPORT CROSSROADS SHOPS (541) 265-5300 OSSIES SURF SHOP (541) 574-4634

Storage & Warehousing

ALL-STORAGE INC. (541) 336-0500 LINCOLN STORAGE @ SOUTH BEACH (541) 867-6550 NORTHGATE STORAGE (541) 265-7890 SAFE LOCK STORAGE (541) 867-4607 SAWYER'S LANDING (541) 265-3907

Stoves, Fireplaces and Accessories

COAST HEARTH & HOME

(541) 265-8390

Surf Shops/Dive Shops

OSSIES SURF SHOP (541) 574-4634

Tanning Salon/Beauty, Skin Care & Makeup

EARTHBOUND BEAUTY DAY SPA, INC (541) 265-4232 SALON ETHOS (541) 574-4445 SHEAR SENSATIONS DAY SPA & HAIR SALON (541) 265-4247

Tax Return Preparation

DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE (541) 574-9502 H&R BLOCK (541) 264-7270

Telecommunications Consultants

KEY COMMUNICATIONS (541) 270-7116

Telephone Equipment & Repair

SYSTEMAX NORTHWEST INC. (541) 265-9599

Telephone System Installation & Repair

SYSTEMAX NORTHWEST INC.

(541) 265-9599

Thrift Stores

FRIENDS OF LINCOLN COUNTY ANIMALS/ PICK OF THE LITTER SALVATION ARMY BAY COMMUNITIES FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INS, CO. OF OR STEWART TITLE COMPANY - LINCOLN COUNTY DIVISION WESTERN TITLE & ESCROW COMPANY

Title Services

FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INS, CO. OF OR STEWART TITLE COMPANY - LINCOLN COUNTY DIVISION WESTERN TITLE & ESCROW COMPANY

(541) 961-5852 (541) 265-6814 (541) 265-8591 (541) 574-3334 (541) 265-2288 (541) 265-8591 (541) 574-3334 (541) 265-2288

www.newportchamber.org -69


Tour Bus - Group Transportation - Charter

MARINE DISCOVERY TOURS (541) 265-6200

VALLEY RETRIEVER (541) 265-2253 Tourism Development

CENTRAL OREGON COAST ASSOCIATION

(541) 265-2064

Towing

ROWLEY'S TOWING (541) 265-2322

Toys & Collectibles

GOMBERG KITE PRODUCTIONS INT'L INC. / NORTHWEST WINDS STORES (541) 996-3083 SANDCASTLE TOYS (541) 574-1901

Training & Development

CHRIS WAUGH (541) 270-0399 Tree Services ALL HEART TREE SERVICE (541) 265-8733 (TREE)

Tugboats & Barges

WIGGINS TUG & BARGE (541) 270-6527

Utilities - Electric

CENTRAL LINCOLN PUD (541) 265-3211

Utilities - Gas

NW NATURAL (541) 994-2111 ext 8530

Utilities - Telephone

CENTURY LINK (541) 967-3500 PIONEER TELEPHONE COOPERATIVE (541) 563-3135

Utilities - Television

CENTURY LINK (541) 967-3500 CHARTER COMMUNICATIONS (866) 731-5420

Vacation Rentals

A GATHERING PLACE (206) 935-7921 A HIDEAWAY AT BEVERLY BEACH (206) 999-4906 ANCHOR PIER BAYFRONT LODGING (541) 265-STAY (7829) AT THE SEA (541) 961-6186 BAYSHORE RENTALS (541) 563-3162 BAYVIEW COTTAGE (541) 265-8553 BEACH RETREAT (541) 487-4966 BEACHCOMBERS HAVEN (541) 764-2252 BEAUTIFUL SHORELINE RIDGE W/ LIGHTHOUSE VIEW (916) 515-8004 CAVALIER BEACHFRONT CONDOMINIUMS (541) 764-2352 COTTAGE AT NYE BEACH (541) 921-3101 DOLPHIN REAL ESTATE LLC (541) 265-6638 EDGEWATER COTTAGES (541) 563-2240 FAIRHAVEN VACATION RENTALS 541-574-0951 FLIPKEY.COM (617) 849-8883

INN AT NYE BEACH (541) 265-2477 LOON LAKE LODGE & RV RESORT 541.599.2244 MYSTHAVEN (503) 799-3311 NYE BEACH VACATION RENTALS (541) 231-4899 NYE COTTAGE VACATION RENTALS (541) 265-6262 OCEAN ODYSSEY VACATION RENTALS (541) 547-3637 OREGON BEACH VACATIONS (503) 528-7491 OREGON SHORES VACATION RENTALS (800) 800-7108 OREGONSHEARWATER VACATION HOMES (503) 245-5969 SAIL INN (541) 444-7111 SCHOONER LANDING (541) 265-4293 THE COASTHOUSE (253) 631-3915 THE WHALER MOTEL (541) 265-9261 Vacasa Rentals of Newport (541) 547-5177 WAVES OF NEWPORT MOTEL & VACATION RENTALS (541) 265-4661 WINDRUSH BY THE SEA (541) 953-4033 YAQUINA BAY PROPERTY MANAGEMENT, INC. (541) 265-3537

Veterinarians

ANIMAL MEDICAL CARE (541) 265-6671 GROVE VETERINARY CLINIC (541) 265-2381

Website Design

CONNECTIONS PUBLICATIONS LLC (541) 234-4904 GRAY'S WEB DESIGN (541) 574-4432 JEFFERY SHIRLEY DESIGNS (541) 264-5903 MARCHMOBILE (612) 709-9276 NEWPORT CROSSROADS SHOPS (541) 265-5300 THETECHPORT.COM (503) 703-5503

Weddings

A POSTO PERSONAL CHEF SERVICES LLC (971) 506-6695 MARINE DISCOVERY TOURS (541) 265-6200 OREGON COAST EVENT RENTALS, LLC (541) 264-8491 RENEE MCCASLIN PHOTOGRAPHY (503) 984-3604 WEDDINGS BY-THE-SEA (541) 547-4547

Window Cleaning

ASSOCIATED CLEANING SERVICES

(541) 867-7879

Wine Consultant

HONEYWOOD WINERY (503) 362-4111 JOSEPH SWAFFORD (541) 265-3076 SPINDRIFT CELLARS (541) 929-6555

Wireless Retailer

DAY WIRELESS SYSTEMS (541) 265-6201

Public Safety Numbers Alcohol & Drugs Alanon and Alateen Alcoholics Anonymous Narcotics Anonymous

541-765-3130 541-265-1953 877-233-4287

Police Department Non-emergency Public Works emergency night and weekends Street Maintenance

541-265-4231 541-574-3366 541-265-4231 541-574-5871

Sewer Maintenance emergency night and weekends

541-265-4231

Crisis Hotlines: Crisis Hotline Mental Health (Emergency) Mental Health Hotline Coast Guard (Newport) District Attorneys’ Office Family Shelter Samaritan House Fire Department-Newport 70- www.newportchamber.org

541-574-5960 888-232-7192 541-265-4362 541-265-5381 541-265-4145 541-574-8898 541-265-9461

Substation South Beach Gambler Addiction

541-867-3614 800-233-2479

Lincoln County Health & Human Services Newport Lincoln County Sheriff general information Road Conditions Inside Oregon

541-265-4112 541-265-4231 541-265-4277 800-977-6368

Tsunami Lincoln County Emergency Service 541-265-4199 Victim Assistance 541-265-3462

Weather Conditions Newport Coast Guard

541-265-5511

EMERGENCY

DIAL 911


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