Oregon
Help Out on Oregon Coast with Marine Debris Survey, Black Oystercatcher Monitoring

Assist Out on Oregon Coast with Marine Particles Survey, Black Oystercatcher Monitoring
Printed 04/16/22 at 5:32 PM PST
By Oregon Coast Seaside Connection workers
(Oregon Coast) – A method to actually get down deep into the Oregon coast is one thing referred to as voluntourism – a hybrid of being a customer right here whereas serving to out in a method that allows you to actually benefit from the open air in a complete new method. You are doing a little good for Oregon coast science or within the environmental sense, however you are studying and being hands-on whereas seeing new sights alongside the seashores. (Above: a black oystercatcher, courtesy Seaside Aquarium)
There are quite a few such actions occurring continually, and two of the extra attention-grabbing initiatives are the Black Oystercatcher Undertaking up and down all the size of the coast and the Maine Particles Survey on the Clatsop Spit between Warrenton and Seaside. Each have put out calls not too long ago for volunteers – and it is a worthy trigger but a chance for enjoyable.
Volunteer group CoastWatch conducts quite a few marine particles surveys alongside these shores, and one of many giant ones is at Fort Stevens State Park, simply south of the Columbia’s South Jetty.
Courtesy Seaside Aquarium
“Extra volunteers are wanted to fill out the crew, headed by Oregon Shores board member Ed Joyce, which handles the month-to-month survey at this website,” mentioned CoastWatch. “We search to prepare a big sufficient crew that some members will be there each month, with none one individual having to be there every time.”
Upcoming dates for shoreline marine particles coaching are April 20, Could 18 and June 22. This isn’t simply apply, although – the precise survey will probably be performed. Meet at 10 a.m. at Parking Lot B, about three-quarters of a mile south of the Columbia on Jetty Rd. in Fort Stevens State Park.
As with all CoastWatch’s marine particles survey websites, the survey is performed month-to-month, to produce constant information. Everyone seems to be welcome to take part on this citizen science challenge, CoastWatchers and non-CoastWatchers alike. Whereas the objective is to recruit volunteers who will take part at this website, anybody is welcome to affix in.
That is critical citizen science, using a protocol developed by the Nationwide Ocean and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), and producing information utilized by scientists learning the marine particles drawback.
For extra info on the upcoming survey occasion or plans for the Fort Stevens survey website, contact Ed Joyce, (503) 468-0995, edjoyce1@verizon.web. RSVPs can be useful, so Ed can present some background info prematurely and can know who to search for on the day.
Courtesy Seaside Aquarium
For all the Oregon coast – from Brookings to Seaside – the Portland Audubon is hoping to seek out extra volunteers to help with the monitoring of black oystercatchers.
Should you’re all in favour of taking part on this upcoming challenge, join the digital coaching from 6:30 to eight p.m. Thursday, April 28. The coaching will cowl the life historical past of this species, conservation challenges they face, and directions on how you can take part within the nest monitoring program this summer season. To enroll, e mail aanholt@audubonportland.org.
The concept is to find out if nests are profitable, indicated by eggs hatching and the younger leaving the nests. Nest monitoring is performed from Could by means of August at 75 websites up and down the coast, from Brookings to Seaside. See the Audobon hyperlink right here.
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Oregon
Crash in Clackamas County kills Oregon City motorcyclist

A crash on Highway 224 in Clackamas County killed an Oregon City man on Monday.
Oregon State Police responded to a two-vehicle crash near milepost 45 at 5:16 p.m. Preliminary investigation revealed that Niko Daniel Harpham, 28, of Oregon City, was riding an eastbound Harley Davidson motorcycle when he failed to negotiate a corner.
Harpham slid into the westbound lane and struck a Kia Forte head-on. The Kia was driven by Gabriela Camacho, 21, of Molalla.
Harpham was transported by Life Flight to an area hospital, where he was pronounced dead. Camacho suffered minor injuries.
The highway was closed for approximately five hours during the investigation.
This story was drafted with the assistance of generative AI based on data from Oregon State Police and reviewed by Oregonian editorial staff.
Oregon
Lawmakers Call for Oregon to Stick to Its Education Accountability Commitment

As calls for stronger education accountability continue to grow from the upper echelons of Oregon’s government, the Joint Subcommittee on Education approved Senate Bill 141 on Wednesday afternoon by a 7-1 vote. The approval means the bill will now advance to the broader Joint Committee on Ways and Means.
SB 141 is part of Gov. Tina Kotek’s effort this session to improve the state’s dismal education outcomes. It gives more power to the Oregon Department of Education to coach and intervene in struggling school districts, and establishes more metrics to track, specifically around early chronic absenteeism and eighth grade mathematics. It will also streamline grant reporting processes for school districts and improve ODE’s data transparency.
Kotek’s focus on education accountability came amid dueling reports presented to the Oregon legislature this cycle. A report from the American Institutes for Research studied the state’s Quality Education Model (that projects the cost to adequately educate students statewide), and found it would cost Oregon billions more to help its students achieve proficiency in mathematics and reading, while reducing chronic absenteeism. Another presentation, from the Edunomics Lab at Georgetown University, mapped increased education funding since 2013 against declining student outcomes.
As she unveiled her bill in March, Kotek told reporters she didn’t “believe in writing a blank check.” SB 141 accompanies the state government’s largest-yet investment in the State School Fund, though many district leaders say many of those costs will be offset by the Public Employees Retirement System, inflation and other rising costs, alongside declining enrollment. (In the same hearing Wednesday, the subcommittee approved $11.36 billion for schools in the upcoming biennium.)
The majority of legislators expressed optimism that Kotek’s bill was a step in the right direction to building a system of shared accountability between school districts and the state for student outcomes, which are in the bottom nationwide for both reading and mathematics.
But many of them emphasized that the bill must be implemented properly. Sen. Suzanne Weber (R-Tillamook) said Oregon tends to fall for “shiny tricks,” where legislators are attracted to new policies but fail to follow through. “If we start this program, we have to commit to it,” she said.
Rep. Dwayne Yunker (R-Grants Pass) was the sole no vote for the accountability package in the subcommittee. He says many of the problems school districts face are not ones that can be addressed from the top down. For example, he says it’s hard to blame a school when a parent doesn’t send their child to attend.
“I think what’s going to work is changing what we’re doing…more class time, more time in school,” Yunker says. “We’re not changing any of that, and I think there’s other things we could’ve done that would’ve been more productive to change outcomes.”
Sen. Janeen Sollman (D-Hillsboro) told Yunker the bill is not about imposing a top-down authority on schools, but rather setting the state up to provide school districts with resources and tools to help students succeed. It’s meant to foster collaboration, she said, and emphasized that a streamlined grant process will also give schools more time to focus on improving outcomes.
Sen. Lew Frederick (D-Portland) added that until everyone in the education system and the broader community all put in the work to make student outcomes a priority, the bill’s text is just “rhetorical posturing.” He says it’s the conversation this bill will spark that may be its most powerful effect.
“I’m hoping that what will happen as a result of this is that people will begin to actually step forward and say ‘Alright, what do I need to do?’” Frederick says. “I don’t want to see yet another document that tells me we believe in education but we aren’t actually getting everyone involved in making changes. I hope this begins a process of accountability not just for the schools…but for everybody.”
Oregon
3 Oregon women’s golfers earn All-American honors

Three Oregon women’s golfers were named All-Americans by the Women’s Golf Coaches Association.
Kiara Romero was named a WGCA first team All-American, her second straight year received such distinction. Suvichaya Vinijchaitham was named to the second team and Karen Tsuru received honorable mention.
It is the second time in program history Oregon has had multiple All-Americans in the same season, joining the 2021-22 team. UO has nine players combine for 13 All-American honors, including seven players who combined for 10 selections since 2018-19 under coach Derek Radley.
Romero is the first two-time first team All-American in program history and just the fourth UO player to receive multiple All-American honors.
She broke her own Oregon single-season record for scoring average (69.91), the first UO athlete to average sub-70 in a season. Romero is the third Oregon golfer to win an individual conference championship. She also shot the lowest round in program history (10-under 62) at the NCAA Gold Canyon Regional, which she also won individually, and tied for eighth at the NCAA Championships.
The No. 2 player in the country and No. 3 amateur in the world, Vinijchaitham had a 71.46 season scoring average that ranks third in UO single-season history. She toed for 10th at the NCAA Championships, won the Alice & John Wallace Classic in the spring, and had eight top-10 finishes on the season.
Tsuru had a 72.62 scoring average in 26 rounds, won the Juli Inkster Invitational and had four top-10 finishes.
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