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HR Council Doesn’t Take Action Toward Transportation Code Changes

The Hood River City Council decided not to take any action at this time towards code changes that would allow ride-share companies to operate in the City.  Most of the discussion centered on increases in DUII activity in the community, and whether the options for people to get a ride when they are impaired and not get behind the wheel of a car are available.  Councilor Mark Zanmiller said he would like the solutions to come from the local level.  Local taxi company representatives told the Council they want to be a part of developing more awareness of the rides that are available during the late night hours.

 

TD Council Gets Update On Housing Needs Analysis

The Dalles City Council received an update on work being done on a housing needs analysis and buildable land inventory update required by state land use planning laws.  Councilors did ask consultants working on the update to compile the number of lots over five acres in the City and how many are in different density zones.  Mayor Rich Mays says this update faces the same issues those that were done for commercial and industrial lands a few years ago, most notably that they don’t account for lands not being available for development.  The update will be going back through the municipal planning commission before returning to City Council later in the fall to be adopted.

Klickitat County Officials Develop 2024 Budget

Klickitat County officials have been working on their budget for 2024.  County Commission Chair Dan Christopher says for the most part it is a status quo plan, and very bare bones.  He thinks people would be pleased with what they’ve done, but does acknowledge rising costs are becoming a challenge that property tax increases can’t keep up with.  He said they did not have to do much in the way of cuts, adding some budgets went down slightly but others went up in the same way.

The Dalles Man Victim In Fatal Car Accident

A man from The Dalles died in a motor vehicle accident in Clackamas County early Saturday morning.  The Clackamas County Sheriff’s Office says 21-year-old Giovanny Alberto Avila of The Dalles was found unresponsive in the passenger seat of a car that crashed into dense vegetation shortly before 12:15 Saturday morning in Happy Valley.  Avila was pronounced deceased at the scene.  The driver of the car, 21-year-old Gavin Elliott Wallis was taken to a hospital and later arrested and booked into the Clackamas County Jail on charges of second degree manslaughter and DUII.  The Sheriff’s Office said he was being held without bail, and the case referred to the Clackamas County District Attorney’s office for prosecution.

 

Extension Of 780 Rand Road Purchase Option Expected

There will likely be an extension of the purchase option for Community Development Partners and Columbia Cascade Housing Corporation to acquire the 780 Rand Road property from the City of Hood River for 129 units of affordable housing.  City Manager Abigail Elder says the current option expires at the end of this year, and it will likely take another year to assemble all the financing elements required for the project.  CDP expects to apply to the state this fall for low income housing tax credits and private activity bonds.  In July the project was approved for over $15 million in Local Innovation and Fast Track funding.

Motorcycle Accident Injures Two

Two motorcyclists were injured Sunday afternoon in an accident on Washington Highway 14 east of the Highway 97 junction.  According to the Washington State Patrol, the two motorcyclists, both from Kennewick, were traveling eastbound side-by-side when the motorcycle operated by 72-year-old Curtis Frye lost control, cut in front of the other driven by 64-year-old Donald Murphy, and went into the westbound ditch.  The WSP says Frye was taken by ambulance to Mid-Columbia Medical Center in The Dalles, and Murphy to Legacy Emanuel Medical Center in Portland.  The accident occurred just before 4:30 Sunday afternoon.

Sheriff’s Office Reports Man Attempting To Lure Pre-Teen Into Car

The Hood River County Sheriff’s Office says it responded on Friday evening to a report of a man in the Odell area who had attempted to lure a pre-teen into a car with him.  The Sheriff’s Office says the pre-teen responded appropriately, saying no and immediately running to a place of safety.  The male subject left the area prior to the arrival of deputies and has not yet been identified, though the Sheriff’s Office says it is working to do so.  The Sheriff’s Office adds it was sharing this information not to cause fear or paranoia, but to let parents know so that they can have good conversations with their kids about how to respond appropriately to strangers.  They encourage kids to play in groups, not be out after dark, and talk to them about what they should do if they find themselves around a stranger who is trying to interact with them.

Klickitat County Developing STR Code

Klickitat County is working on developing code to legalize short-term rentals in unincorporated areas.  County Commission Chair Dan Christopher says STR’s have never actually been legalized in the County, even though they estimate about 490 are currently in operation outside of incorporated cities…but they don’t know where they area.  Christopher says they aren’t looking at limits on STR’s at this point, noting they need to actually know how many there are before moving in that direction.  Christopher says the STR’s will be required to be in a properly permitted residential structure and have a 14-foot wide driveway for emergency vehicle access.  Public hearings will be held on the subject.

Lamprey Returns Increase

Pacific lamprey, an ancient, eel-like fish species, are seeing returns 170 percent higher than the 10-year average at Bonneville Lock and Dam this year.  U.S. Army Corps of Engineers biologists say Lamprey numbers are also 252 percent higher than the four-year average.  So far, fish counters have tallied 63,863 lampreys moving through the fish ladders during the daytime at Bonneville as of last Monday.  The 10-year average daytime fish ladder count total is 41,414.  Corps biologists are optimistic about the numbers they’re seeing, crediting ongoing efforts to modify fishways to make them more “lamprey friendly.”  Lamprey are also very active at night and pass via special ramp-like lamprey passage structures, so daytime counts are just minimum estimates, and tribal biologists collect many lampreys at Bonneville for upstream transport to tributaries such as the Umatilla, Clearwater and Yakama rivers.  So far, most of the Corps’ work has focused on fixing adult lamprey passage at the dams, but agency biologists are also now studying downstream passage of juvenile and larval lamprey at the dams so they can better understand how operations and structures may affect passage and survival of these life stages.

 

         

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