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West Klickitat Regional Fire Authority Goes Into Effect September 30

The voter approved West Klickitat Regional Fire Authority officially goes into effect next Monday.  A planning committee consisting of members of what will be the inaugural governing board for the authority has been developing the formation documents for the district for most of this year, and they will presented for approval at the authority’s first meeting net Monday evening at 6:30 in the White Salmon Fire Hall.  That’s the next step toward putting the Fire Authority into full operation at the start of 2025.  White Salmon and Klickitat County Fire District 3 voters approved the WKRFA Plan in November of last year, creating the new entity and a dedicated funding stream to sufficiently fund fire and emergency response and preparedness.  The White Salmon Fire Hall will become the main fire station of the WKRFA.The inaugural Governing Board Members will be White Salmon City Council Members Ben Giant, David Lindley and Jason Hartmann and Fire District 3 Commissioners Thomas Montag, Robert Connors and Charles Virts, Jr.

Veterans Stand Down To Be Held Wednesday

Wasco County Veterans’ Services will host its “Veterans Stand Down” with a number of other agencies on Wednesday at The Dalles Civic Auditorium.  Wasco County Veterans’ Services Officer Chelsea Perritt says in a military terms a stand down is a reprieve, but in this case it is a resource fair for Veterans and their families.  There will be housing, employment, mental health, and substance use resources on hand.  Perritt emphasizes the event is free to all Veterans and their families.  It will be open from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Wednesday at The Dalles Civic Auditorium.

City Of Hood River Embarks On SDC Review

The City of Hood River is embarking on a review of its Systems Development Charges next month.  SDC’s play a big role in how the City pays for infrastructure like roads and stormwater and wastewater systems, using the charges assessed when property is developed.  But City Manager Abigail Elder it has been a number of years since a complete review of SDC’s has been done.  Elder says a report is available on the City’s website, cityofhoodriver.gov.  A public hearing is planned for October 15.

14-Year-Old Taken To NORCOR Juvenile After Irrigon School Shooting Threat

A fourteen-year-old male student from Irrigon was arrested and lodged in NORCOR’s Juvenile Facility on Sunday after a school shooting threat made on social media.   The Morrow County Sheriff’s Office says the investigation is on-going.  The Sheriff’s Office says it is working in conjunction with the Morrow County Juvenile Department, the FBI and the Morrow County School District.  In a statement, the Sheriff’s Office added that although there are no safety concerns at this time, there will be law enforcement presence at the school as extra precautions and to help ease any concerns.  Morrow County Sheriff John Bowles says they take these kind of situations very seriously and will investigate fully, noting safety is the primary objective.

Driver Charged With DUII After Car Plunges Down Ravine

A driver was taken to hospital and cited for impaired driving after a vehicle went off of westbound Interstate 84 and went down a ravine.  The Hood River Police Department says officers on Saturday went to I-84 near milepost 63.  They found the vehicle had traveled about 530 feet off the interstate and crashed down the ravine.  The HRPD said the vehicle ended up on its top at the bottom of the ravine, going down about 150 feet.  It took about an hour for the Hood River Police, Hood River Fire Department paramedics, Hood River area fire personnel, the Oregon State Police, and the Crag Rats to successfully rescue the entrapped individual, while Forest Service personnel cleared out a path to get the driver out safely.  The HRPD says it was determined the driver was believed to be impaired, and while in the Providence Hood River Hospital emergency room was criminally cited for DUII-Alcohol and Reckless Driving.

 

Fire Training Exchange Starts In Trout Lake

The second annual Columbia Gorge Prescribed Fire Training Exchange is underway in Trout Lake.  The Columbia Gorge TREX is a collaborative interagency training program that aims to grow prescribed fire workforce capacity while reducing wildfire risk.  The event will bring over 30 fire practitioners and trainees from across the region to the Trout Lake area to engage in peer-to-peer learning and hands-on prescribed fire training.  It’s hosted by Mt. Adams Resource Stewards of Glenwood.  The first week of the event, from September 22 to 28, will largely include classroom training sessions on prescribed fire operations, smoke management, fire behavior and ecology, and other relevant topics.  Later in the week and throughout October, participants will perform prescribed fires on lands owned by the Forest Service, Mt. Adams Resource Stewards, Washington DNR and Columbia Land Trust, as conditions allow.  Program officials say they will be providing updates intermittently over the next few weeks, and will particularly focus our outreach on days that we intend to burn. 

Translation Work On Yasui Papers Completed

The Oregon Historical Society has completed work to translate a large selection of the Japanese material in the Yasui family papers, a manuscript collection preserved in OHS’s research library.  Dating from 1873 to 2023 and crossing five generations, the Yasui family papers consists of over 20 linear feet of personal correspondence, original family documents and diaries, research files and historical writings, advocacy records, and photographs — about one-fifth of which is written in pre–World War II Japanese that is no longer widely spoken or written.  Homer Yasui donated the family papers to the Oregon Historical Society in late 2022.  OHS also cares for the Yasui Brothers business records, a large manuscript collection also donated by Homer Yasui.  Together, the collections document the experiences and contributions of Hood River businessman and noted community leader Masuo Yasui, Homer’s father, and his family during the first four decades of the twentieth century.  Over the coming years, OHS plans to digitize additional English-language documents and photographs from the Yasui family papers.  An exhibition focused on the Yasui collections at OHS is in development and will open in June 2025.  

September 20-21 Prep Sports Scoreboard

Football

Hood River Valley 39, Aloha 14

LaCenter 61, Columbia 0

Stevenson 47, Fort Vancouver 14

DeSales Catholic (Walla Walla) 60, Sherman 36

Waitsburg 44, Lyle-Wishram-Klickitat 36 (4 OT)

South Wasco 40, Spray-Mitchell-Wheeler 6

Goldendale 48, River View 7

Dufur 80, Chiloquin 36

 

Cross Country

The Dalles won the boys’ title in the Class 4A to 1A race at the Northwest Classic in Eugene.  Caleb Caldwell, Tyson Long, and Aiden Preston all finished in the top twenty individually.  Alana Casady’s fifth place finish paced The Dalles girls to a fourth place finish in the girls 4A to 1A run.

 

Volleyball

The Dalles def. Newport and Baker, and lost to Burns at the North Marion Tournament

North Clackamas Christian def. Dufur 25-18, 25-10, 25-9

Dufur def. Falls City 25-22, 25-23, 25-20

 

Boys Soccer

Grandview Christian Academy 3, Trout Lake-Glenwood 0

 

Girls Soccer

Columbia 3, LaCenter 2

Mountain View (WA) 8, Columbia 0

Goldendale 3, Mabton 3

 

Committee In Place To Develop Federal Street Plaza

A committee has been established to discuss and develop a plaza on Federal Street between 1st and 2nd Streets.  It would be right next to the former Tony’s Town and Country property.  The plaza has been one of Mayor Rich Mays’ goals for a number of years, and he hopes it can move forward quickly.  The committee is tasked with making recommendations to the City Council on the project’s design, construction, and costs.  Additionally, the committee will identify and collaborate with City staff on related grant opportunities to support the project’s funding and implementation.

Sherman County Fire Brought Under Control

Emergency responders and farmers brought a fire that originated at the Nish gravel pit east of Wasco in Sherman County on Thursday evening under control before it could cross Highway 206.   The Sherman County Sheriff’s Office says high winds caused the fire to spread rapidly from Highway 206 milepost 4 at Nish to milepost 7 at Hay Canyon.  The Sheriff’s Office indicates the fire appears to have been caused by a spark from individuals shooting at the gravel pit.  Those people tried to put out the fire and called 9-1-1 for help.  The Sheriff’s Office added the individuals met with law enforcement and have cooperated fully.  Once the investigation is complete, it will go to the Sherman County District Attorney for review.

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