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Rogue Valley News, Monday, 5/1 – Josephine County Missing Person Project Plans Rally, KTVL Plans To Lay Off Its Entire News Staff In Mid-May

Rogue Valley News, Monday, 5/1 – Josephine County Missing Person Project Plans Rally, KTVL Plans To Lay Off Its Entire News Staff In Mid-May

The latest news stories of interest in the Rogue Valley and the state of Oregon from the digital home of Southern Oregon, Wynne Broadcasting’s RogueValleyMagazine.com

Monday, May 1, 2023

Rogue Valley Weather

Today
A 30 percent chance of showers, mainly after 11am. Cloudy, with a high near 56. Northwest wind 5 to 7 mph.
Tonight
A 50 percent chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 46. Northwest wind around 6 mph becoming calm in the evening.
Tuesday
Showers likely, mainly before 11am. Cloudy through mid morning, then gradual clearing, with a high near 65. South southeast wind around 5 mph becoming north northwest in the afternoon. Chance of precipitation is 70%. New precipitation amounts of less than a tenth of an inch possible.
Tuesday Night
A 20 percent chance of showers before 11pm. Partly cloudy, with a low around 48. West southwest wind 5 to 7 mph becoming light and variable after midnight.
Wednesday
A 20 percent chance of showers after 11am. Partly sunny, with a high near 68. Calm wind becoming northwest around 6 mph in the afternoon.
Wednesday Night
A 20 percent chance of showers before 11pm. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 50.
Thursday
A 30 percent chance of showers after 11am. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 66.
Thursday Night
A chance of showers before 11pm. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 49.
Friday
A chance of showers, mainly after 11am. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 67.

Josephine County Missing Person Project

There are 50 missing people from Josephine County in the Oregon State Police Missing Person list.
There are 25 missing people in Josephine County with available photographs.
The Josephine County Missing Person Project Rally, organized by JoCo MPP
The Josephine County Missing Person Project, JoCoMPP, needs YOUR help in order to call attention to these 25 people, to keep their names, faces, and stories in the public eye. With your help, we will be able to hold an event in June outside of the Josephine County Courthouse to show people that we have not forgotten our missing. The number, and therefore the price, may adjust as we find more available photographs of missing people who are on the Oregon State Police list.
We understand that not everybody can attend this event, and so we’d like to offer community members the opportunity to donate a set amount that will either go towards a sign or stack of 50 flyers to be used during this demonstration. Bigfoot Print and Copy of Cave Junction has offered us a reduced pricing package.
A large, waterproof sign that will be held by an in-person participant is $25. As we already have one sign, the rest tally up to $600
A stack of 50 color flyers is $20. For 25 stacks, the cost will be $500 in total.
these prices include the anticipated fee that GoFundMe will take from the donations.
If we exceed the requested amount, any and all proceeds will go towards amenities for participants like water, snacks, and seating. If there is more than we need for that, we will use the leftover donations to fund investigative and promotional efforts by way of more flyers and potential advertising spots in local press. Anything helps, now is your chance to help some of these families find the closure they have been seeking for years.
Here is the list of missing persons that we need signs and flyers for. It will be updated accordingly.
1. Cindy King
2. Teresa Peroni
3. Kevin Hill
4. Toby Anderson
5. Catherine Wallace
6. Katrina Sweaney
7. Stanley Shelton
8. Kim Roache
9. Steven Frick
10. Kenneth Greth
11. Victoria Soderberg
12. Ronald Lyles
13. Domingo Ramirez
14. Russell Sturm
15. Patrick Mahurin
16. Patricia Watts
17. Wilson Walstrom
18. Dennis Smith
19. Kimberly Mericle
20. Ian McFarland
21. Archie Flores
22. Ericka Hogg- we have her sign, but a flyer donation is still needed.
23. Lisa Cronin
24. Fauna Frey
25. Donald Johnson
Follow on Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/JoCoMPP

KTVL Plans To Lay Off Its Entire News Staff In Mid-May

Taylar Ansures is a digital content producer at the Medford station, which is owned by the telecommunications conglomerate Sinclair Broadcast Group. Ansures said that on Thursday morning, their general manager informed the newsroom that the station will cease operations after Friday, May 12.

“They were planning to keep the entire community, all of Southern Oregon in the dark, all of our viewers in the dark, until our last day, until our last broadcast,” she said.

According to Ansures, the closure will affect all 17 people on their news staff, including managers.

According to a statement from Sinclair Broadcast Group, the network’s national news desk will take over starting Monday, May 15.

“The National Desk, which provides real-time national and regional news from Sinclair’s television stations across the US, will air during KTVL’s regularly scheduled news time periods, with an opportunity for local news cut-ins in the newscast,” the statement reads.

A Sinclair spokesperson did not provide further detail about local content or new programming. KTVL News Director Chad Hypes could not be reached for more information.

Ansures said she started working at KTVL in November, after moving from another Sinclair-owned station in Redding, California to be closer to family. While she had seen similar downsizing at other Northern California TV stations, she said this was more dramatic.

“It’s happening in other markets, but I’ve never seen it happen quite like this where it was so blindsided and unexpected. Even our management was left in the dark until [Thursday],” she said.

KTVL shared a newsroom with the Medford Mail Tribune until the Rogue Valley’s longest-running newspaper closed operations in early 2023. During that time, questions swirled about the nature of the relationship between the two media companies.

Ansures said managers told staff the KTVL closure was separate from the Mail Tribune ceasing operations. She said staff did not receive an explanation from Sinclair’s corporate representatives for why the layoffs were occurring.

Additional layoffs and downsizing have happened across the national media industry in recent months. In March, NPR laid off 10% of its workforce. In mid April, Buzzfeed announced it was closing its news division, Buzzfeed News. On April 27, Vice announced it would close its news division, Vice News Tonight.

ODF Southwest Responds To Wildfire Near Merlin

Hog Creek County Fire 1.jpg

Update:  ODF Southwest says the Hog Creek Fire is 100% lined and 95% mopped up.

The fire was mapped at a total of 2.75 acres.


MERLIN, Ore. – 4/29, the Oregon Department of Forestry (ODF) Southwest Oregon District is responding to a fire near Hog Creek County Park.

ODF said the fire is estimated to be four acres and is burning on steep terrain, just three miles north of the county park. They said no homes are threatened.

Rural Metro Fire is also assisting on the scene. The cause of the fire is under investigation.

An open burn fire in Jacksonville that got out of control has left one resident with burns.

On Friday night, the Applegate Valley Fire District was sent to an escaped open burn fire on the 8200 block of Highway 238. When they arrived, crews found the fire was burning about a tenth of an acre on the hillside, and no structures were threatened.Jacksonville fire 1.jpg

Fire officials were also told there was a potential burn victim.

Applegate Valley Fire District says that when they found the burn victim, they initially asked for a Mercy Flights helicopter to be dispatched. The patient was ultimately taken to a local hospital via ambulance

4/28/2023 Vegetation Fire in the Illinois Valley 
Illinois Valley Fire District – 04/28/23 7:43 PM

2023-04/6947/163086/20230428_152316.jpg

2023-04/6947/163086/20230428_152316.jpg

4/28/2023 14:46:47; Grass Fire; 67xx WEST SIDE RD, Cave Junction;
PROTTSMAN WAY / TURNER RD.

Illinois Valley Fire District, Rural Metro Fire – Josephine County and Oregon Department of Forestry are on scene of a second alarm grass fire.

Fire is contained and being mopped up. Fire is under investigation.

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Oregon Public Universities Ask State For More Funding As Students Pay Record Tuition

Officials from Oregon’s seven public universities say they need more than $1 billion over the next two years to maintain services amid inflation and to avoid deep cuts and layoffs.

That’s more than $100 million more than the $900 million the state’s seven universities received in the last biennium for general support.

At a public hearing of the Joint Subcommittee on Education on Wednesday, Southern Oregon University President Rick Bailey told lawmakers that the current funding level will not be sufficient for the schools in the next biennium given inflation.

“This means that students will have to fund inflation on the majority of our budgets,” he said.

University administrators have begun restructuring and considering layoffs amid an expected $5 million deficit for the coming school year.

All seven of Oregon’s public universities have announced tuition increases for the next school year, in a regular pattern of annual increases in tuition during the last two decades. None in the upcoming school year is raising tuition above 5%, which would require approval from the Higher Education Coordinating Commission.

Oregon has more than 78,000 full-time students at its seven public universities – Eastern Oregon University, Oregon Institute of Technology, Oregon State University, Portland State University, Southern Oregon University, University of Oregon and Western Oregon University.

Their tuition covers 50% or more of university costs, one of the highest proportions in the nation, according to a recent report commissioned by lawmakers from the National Center for Higher Education Management Systems, a nonprofit think tank in Colorado. About 25 years ago, the state paid for up to 75% of the cost of each full-time employee at a university. Now, it pays for about 50% or less, researchers found.

The state’s per-pupil funding for full-time college students is about $5,600 annually, around  $3,000 less than what California and Washington provide.

Lawmakers heard from a Southern Oregon University student working three jobs to pay for her tuition and living expenses. Annual tuition for Oregon residents attending the university full-time this year topped $9,400 dollars.

“I have good friends that have dropped out because they fell too far behind on their account, or took out as many loans as they possibly could, and still could not afford it,” she said.

Rob Fullmer, an information technology specialist at Portland State University, said if funding isn’t increased, tuition hikes will push Oregon youth further away from choosing college over joining the workforce after high school.

“Prospective students of Oregon’s higher education system are cost conscious. For the past decade, they’ve had to carefully weigh the price of college against any potential future earnings they expect they’ll enjoy – if they manage to get the degree – versus the lost wages and time they spend earning one,” he told lawmakers. “It’s been a close call. But more and more of them have decided to forgo that degree.”

Lawmakers are also facing other higher education requests.

The Oregon Council of Presidents, an advocacy group comprised of the seven university presidents and the president of Oregon Health & Science University, is asking the Legislature to double the budget for the Oregon Opportunity Grant for the biennium, from $200 million to $400 million. The grant is the largest state-funded, need-based grant program for Oregon residents. The council is also calling on the state to allocate $40 million to the Oregon Student Tribal Grant in the next two-year budget, which will start July 1 and run through June 2025. The program was launched in 2022 with $19 million for the 2022-23 school year.

Megan Van Pelt, a student at the University of Oregon and a member of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation, is one of 450 Native students who received the grant last year. At the hearing she said it had been instrumental in alleviating the financial burden of attending a four-year college, and allowed her to get involved on campus and to serve as co-director of the Native American Student Union.

“This grant has not only enabled me to pursue my academic goals, but this grant has allowed me to be a normal student,” she said.

The post Oregon public universities ask state for more funding as students pay record tuition appeared first on Oregon Capital Chronicle.

Communities Sign Contracts On Funding For Governor’s Homelessness State Of Emergency

Six of the seven multi-agency coordination groups representing regions across Oregon affected by governor Tina Kotek’s declaration of a homelessness state of emergency have signed contracts that will grant them funds to deal with the problem, with the seventh expected to sign in early May.

On her first full day in office in January, Gov. Kotek declared a homelessness state of emergency which the Oregon legislature later supported with a multi-million dollar response packaged passed in March. February saw the creation of infrastructure to handle the homelessness response including seven regional multi-agency coordination groups that would be tasked with distributing those emergency funds. The governor announced which of those groups would get certain portions of the funding on April 10, contingent on the groups’ signing of contracts to receive the funding to execute the governor’s order.

“The housing crisis demands urgent action on an unprecedented timeline. I am grateful to the providers, local and county leaders who quickly assembled to form the MACs, the legislature for passing the package early with bipartisan support and broad stakeholder input, and to communities across Oregon embracing this call to action,” Governor Kotek said. “I look forward to the work ahead to help ensure these investments yield visible, measurable results across our state by the end of the year.”

According to the governor’s office, six of the seven multi-agency coordination groups have signed contracts to receive the funding to carry out the governor’s order. This funding will be used to prevent nearly 9,000 people from becoming homeless, rehouse more than 1,200 households, and create over 600 new shelter beds by January 2024. The seventh group, which will handle Clackamas County’s response, is expected to sign their contract in the first week of May due to a local policy that requires county commissioners to approve the contract before it is signed.

The Oregon legislature is sending Governor Kotek two bills that would limit single-use food containers.

One bill bans styrofoam food containers and the other allows customers to bring their own containers for leftover food at restaurants. The Oregon Health Authority would be required to develop guidelines for personal containers and customers could still request non-styrofoam containers from restaurants.

The Oregon state House passed two bills with bipartisan support on Wednesday to address the growing environmental and public health impacts of single-use plastics. Both bills now head to Gov. Tina Kotek’s desk for her signature.

Senate Bill 543 will phase out polystyrene foam foodware, packing peanuts and coolers and prohibit the use of PFAS, the toxic substances nicknamed “forever chemicals” because of their longevity, in food packaging starting January 1, 2025. The legislation passed the House by a vote of 40-18.

Eugene Marathon Brings Out Thousands

Thousands of people turned out to the 2023 Eugene Marathon on Sunday, with hundreds of others backing them up with hydration, medical, and moral support.

Around 8,000 people participated in the half and full marathon races at the Eugene Marathon on April 30, according to race officials. The field included runners with a variety of athletic backgrounds. While many Oregonians came out to the weekend’s festivities, a number of people made the trip to Eugene.

Results of the full and half marathons, and the other events from the 2023 race weekend, can be found on the Eugene Marathon website.

Cottage Grove School Board Candidate Forum Ends In Brawl Fight

The City of Cottage Grove is in shock after a School Board Candidate Forum erupted into a fight.

As the Chronicle reported earlier this week, the fight happened on Tuesday, April 25, at the Cottage Grove Public Library. The forum was set to end at 8:00 p.m. The event was hosted by the Kids for Success PAC.

According to people who were in attendance as the event was ending, a question was raised to the School Board candidates in regards to transgender kids and their use of pronouns. The candidate for position 3, Duane Taddei proceeded to answer the question. His comments were met with exception by Venice Mason, a local activist.

Mason said Taddei began to spread lies, inflammatory rhetoric, and misinformation about trans kids. She stood up and gestured her thumbs down in protest. As she was protesting two men, who were in the back of the room and are believed to be acting as security for the event, moved to confront her.

Mason said, “They grabbed me and wrenched my arms behind my back and pushed me into my seat. And then began to attack women, one after the other, who tried to stand between me and them.”

Video footage from the Cottage Grove Public Library shows the situation escalated there was a lot of pushing and shoving. More women became involved trying to separate Mason and the two men. Jan Ogsbury was one of these women, she also said she was assaulted by the two men.

Ogsbury said, “Anytime I see a women getting attacked, I just become very angry and I want to defend them and I have done this most of my adult life.”

Duane Taddei said he doesn’t recall seeing an assault take place.

Taddei said, “There was something going on but to call it an assault and to say that I saw an assault is absolutely wrong.”

Taddei also doesn’t consider himself to be a bigoted against trans people. According to him he has trans family. He also wishes the night would have gone differently. In the future he hopes people will do more to deescalate situations before they get out of hand.

Taddei said, “Just be a little more cautious of your surroundings. And maybe have a job — at work we have job briefings. And maybe have a job briefing at the beginning if I’m going to be apart of this, I’m going to need your guys’s commitment if anything erupts like this we call the police. Unless there is an immediate threat. We just call the police, we shut it down.”

Many Cottage Grove residents called the incident a disappointment. Bruce Kelsh, a longtime resident and active community member, calls it an embarrassment. He hopes in the future a better example can be set for the children who go to school in this community.

Kelsh said, “People can express their opinions in many ways but when you add intimidation and in this case physical violence to the discussion than that really doesn’t work anymore. You’ve lost the path.”

The incident also made Kelsh reflect on the importance of school board elections. He hopes people will get out and vote. Venice Mason said she does plan to press charges against the two men who allegedly assaulted her. She also said the men who were involved in this incident have a history of intimidation.

A Police Officer was eventually called in to resolve the situation. Both the City of Cottage Grove’s government and the Cottage Grove Police Department have declined to comment at this time. There is an ongoing investigation into this incident.

Cargo Containers At Tillamook Airport To Store Supplies To Help In A Disaster

The City of Tillamook has received two large cargo containers that will be used to store emergency supplies for a major earthquake and tsunami. The containers will be located at the Tillamook Airport and will hold enough food, water, tents and medical supplies to support 100 people for two weeks.

The containers were purchased by the state Office of Resilience and Emergency Management. These containers, called Conex boxes, were delivered in April and are part of an emergency preparedness partnership between ODHS, Tillamook County, Tillamook Municipal Airport and Near Space Corporation.

10th Annual Art of Survival Century Bike Ride Returns to Klamath Basin

The 10th Annual Art of Survival Century Bicycle Ride and Gravel Grinder event isn’t just about pedaling a road or mountain bike through beautiful stretches of the countryside. It’s also an opportunity to learn about a region that includes Southern Oregon’s Klamath Basin and Northern California’s Tulelake Basin and Butte Valley area.

What is unique about this event—which is a ride, not a race—is that at each rest stop offers educational components and/or ranger or historian-led talks highlighting the cultural history, geography, environmental issues and geology of the area. Along with providing fluids and nutritious snacks at the rest stops, riders will have opportunities to learn about the areas they’re passing through.

This year enjoy a breathtaking ride through American History. 150 years ago, along the banks of Lost River, sharp cracks of rifles broke the restful silence of the Klamath Basin igniting a tragic war between the Modoc Indians and U.S. Army.  This Memorial Day weekend we invite you to join us in “Remembering the Modoc War”.  Cycle along the uncrowded backroads of our beautiful Basin in the shadow of majestic Mount Shasta. Witness first-hand where the war started and where many of the battles took place.

Explore Captain Jack’s Stronghold, a natural fortress where 55 Modoc warriors held off a U.S. Army force of several hundred troops for six months.  Ride along roads where Army soldiers were marched into battle.  Talk to historians about the land and cattle barons and their relentless efforts to remove the Modoc from the Basin, the Modoc’s desire to stay in their homeland since time immemorial and the plight of the soldiers and settlers friendly to the Modoc caught in the middle.

Day 1, Saturday, May 27:  Choose from four routes that begin and end at the Malin Community Park in Malin, OR – 100-mile Century, 62-mile Metric Century, 38-mile and family friendly 14-mile road routes plus a 22-mile mountain gravel grinder route in the Medicine Lake Highlands.

Day 2, Sunday, May 28, is a Gravel Grinder Mix covering distances of 74 and 54 miles and a family friendly 13-mile route.  All gravel routes begin and end at the Butte Valley Community Center in Dorris, CA. Participants will ride along the flatlands of Butte Valley, including the Butte Valley Wildlife Area, farms, ranches and for the long rides to Juanita Lake. Views of snow-capped Mount Shasta and Goosenest Mountain are plentiful.

Registration Fees for Saturday, May 27:  Rides are $75 for the Century and Metric Century, $55 for the 38-miler and $25 for both the mountain bike and family friendly events. The cost for Sunday, May 28 rides are $75 for the 74 and 54-mile and $25 for the 13-mile ride.  However, if riders register for both days they will receive a discount. The cost for all routes will increase $10 after May 20. Fees include rest stop food and beverages, SAG, delicious post-ride meal both days and SWAG.

Whether riding a bicycle or not there will be plenty of activities during the weekend. The ride committee, along with Rural Klamath Connects, is planning to offer a bus tour of the audio tour  “Modoc War: A Homeland Lost” on Friday morning, May 26.  For more details and to sign up email aoscentury@gmail.com.

A pre-ride reception will be held Friday, May 26 from 4:00-6:30 p.m. at the Malin Broadway Theater in Malin, OR for cyclists to pick up their ride packets, enjoy refreshments, discover new area activities and learn about the Modoc War history, plus tour our restored historic theater and visit with the locals. The committee welcomes anyone interested to attend this reception.

Post-ride meals will be offered both days and are included in the registration fees. The cost for non-riders is $15 both days. The Malin meal will likely feature locally grown, load-your-own baked potatoes while Dorris will offer yummy lasagna.

For images, see here. For more information and to register visit the website at https://survivalcentury.com/

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Call us at 541-690-8806.  Or email us at Info@RogueValleyMagazine.com

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