AGENDA & Notice of Regular Destination Newport Committee Meeting The Destination Newport Committee of the City of Newport will hold a regular meeting, beginning at 2:00 p.m., Thursday, October 16, 2014, Conference Room A, City Hall,169 SW Coast Hwy., Newport, 97365. A copy of the meeting agenda follows.

The meeting location is accessible to persons with disabilities. A request for an interpreter for the hearing impaired, or for other accommodations for persons with disabilities, should be made at least 48 hours in advance of the meeting to Peggy Hawker, City Recorder (541) 574-0613.

The Committee reserves the right to add or delete items as needed and to discuss any other business deemed necessary at the time of the meeting.

DESTINATION NEWPORT COMMITTEE Thursday, October 16, 2014, 2:00 P.M. A G E N D A I. Call to Order II. Additions/Deletions to the Agenda III. Consent Calendar a. Minutes –September 25, 2014 meeting minutes review and approve b. Review of Accts., September 2014 IV. Media Consideration a. Seattle Magazine – Frankie O’Rourke b. Coast Explorer Magazine– Kari Petersen c. KMTR Newssource Radio – Kurt Winchell d. - Ian Monihan V. Other a. Meeting Schedule for December VI. Discussion and Action VII. Public Comment VIII. Adjournment

Draft Destination Newport Committee September 25, 2014 2:08 P.M. Newport, Oregon

CALL TO ORDER

The September 25, 2014, regular meeting of the Destination Newport Committee was called to order at approximately 2:08 P.M. In attendance were John Clark, Carrie Lewis, Judy Kuhl, Ric Rabourn, and Lorna Davis. Also in attendance were Cindy Breves, Executive Assistant, Frankie O’Rourke, Seattle Magazine by Phone, Leigh Deinert, CBS Outdoor, and Josh Logon, Comcast.

INTRODUCTIONS

None needed.

CONSENT CALENDAR

The consent calendar consisted of the following items: A. Minutes of the August 14, 2014, meeting; B. Review of Account, August 2014

MOTION was made by Clark, seconded by Lewis, to approve the consent calendar, as presented. The motion carried unanimously in a voice vote.

MEDIA CONSIDERATIONS Seattle Magazine proposal was review by the committee. Frankie O’Rourke highlighted some of the key points of the proposal for the committee by phone. She explained that their issue for June is a coast focus issue and they are focusing on travel in both the May and June issues. The deadline for the June issue is April. A full page ad would be $6,950 for the one issue and a ½ page ad would be $4,670 for the one issue. This magazine based on the demographics information provided hit the DNC target audience. The committee had a brief conversation regarding the numbers of visitors Newport receives from the Seattle area.

Josh Logan from Comcast presented highlights from his proposal and shared an idea of a TV spot that he felt would speak to the DNC demographic target audience. He provided a list of stations that he felt would match with the DNC target demographic. For $120 a week Comcast could provide coverage from Vancouver to Roseburg.

CBS Outdoor-Leigh Deinert presented some new last minute poster program opportunities now available to the committee for November. DNC could get 41 posters in the Eugene and Corvallis area for the month of November for about $10,000 including production and for an additional 9,800 it could be extended through December.

The committee review the Visitor’s choice proposal.

All Classic Radio is proposal was review and the committee decided to pass.

The deadline for the OSU Visitors Guide has passed this will be reconsidered for next year.

The committee had a discussion on using phone numbers to track the effectiveness of some of the ads in specific areas. This would give the committee better information in which to decide if the methods they are currently marketing is effective. Davis is going to have someone provide the committee with a proposal to do this type of tracking.

OTHER

Committee reviewed the one application for the open committee position. They need clarification on residence issue and if the business they represent must be in the Newport City Limits. Breves will check the ordinance and get back to the committee. The committee would like to wait until they have additional applications. The Committee also discussed the recommending to the Council to move Judy Kuhl to a committee position for lodging instead of retail.

Davis shared a booklet promotion the Chamber is currently doing.

The committee reviewed the artwork for the new campaign. Several minor changes were discussed that Davis will share with Rand.

Upcoming publishing deadlines were discussed and artwork was selected. Here are the selections: for 1859 Surfer ad, Hospitality Vision will be sent to all three so they may be routed, and COCA will be the senior ad.

DISCUSSION AND ACTION

Seattle Magazine, the committee would like to revisit in January.

Comcast, the committee would like 3 sample commercial productions provided with pricing for possible airing in spring.

CBS Outdoors, pass for now but are interested in future promotions of this type.

Next meeting will be October 16, 2014.

ADJOURNMENT

Having no further business, the meeting adjourned at approximately 3:15 P.M.

magazine &

ORIEGON

The eOA r YOU .REMEMBER. Suggested campaigns:

Full page in 8 issues: issues- • Total cost $32,000 (reg. $55,600) • Per issue $4,000 (reg. $6,950) November - published October 23 December - TRAVEL - published Nov 20 Half page in 8 issues: January - published December 26 • Total cost $22,400 (reg. 37,360) February - published January 23 • Per issue $2,800 (reg. $4.670) March - published Feb 20 April - published Mar 20 Full page in 2 issues May & June: May - TRAVEL - published April 24 • Total cost $9,000 (reg. $13,900) • ADS DUE MARCH 21 • Per issue $4,500 (reg. $6,950) June - published May 22 (special Coast Travel section) • ADS DUE APRIL 24 Half page in 2 issues May & June: July - Published June 19 • Total cost $6,200 (reg. $9,340) August - TRAVEL - published July 24 • Per issue $3,1 00 (reg. $4,670) September - published August 21 October - published September 18

Banners at seattlemag.com Frequency!!!! • $1,000 per100,000 impressions • 728x90 or 300x250 above-the-fold For an effective campaign... 1. Deliver a good message (Visit Newport) 2. To a relevant audience BONUS with 8x campaign: (Seattle travelers with a high • WIN It! Giveaway (extra promotion in print, online HHI) in Enews and on social media. Must supply prize. 3. OVER TIME (every month, or • 50,000 web impressions below-the-fold 3 times every year Our readers: THE 24 BEST MEXICAN RESTAURANTS 47% are 35-54 years old 74% are female 26% are male

$240K average household income SMART. SAVVY. ESSENTIAL. MAY 2014 159M average net worth

CIU ISI\G TilE CO \ST. E\STER\ 50% of our readers visit a website after seeing an \\ \SII L\eTO\ S: ORECO\ +BEST ROUTES, ROADSIDE CAFES & PLACES TO STAY ad in the magazine 70% of our audience say advertising has influenced where they dine and shop

92% own homes 22% own a secondary or vacation home 63% of our readers enjoy vacation travel annually 93% of our audience took a domestic trip in the last 12 months Readers travel ax/year in Washington State

The most subscribed-to city publication in Washington! Seattle Magazine Circulation: 47,370 Readership: 190,000

Seattlemag.com Unique Visitors: 200,000+/month Page Views: 1 million+/month

62% increase in subscriptions since 2012 Must List Enewsletter Seattle magazine has seen growth in net circulation and Subscribers: 9,400 subscriptions year over year: Open rate: 36-41% Subscription Growth Over Time: Time/Period PAID Subscriptions March 2012 22,227 Social Media March 2013 29,965 March 2014 35,602* Twitter: 50,000+ Source: eve Audit Statement, 2072 -2074 Facebook: 10,300+ *47,370 Total 2074 Circulation including newsstands & waiting rooms & hotels Build your own campaign: Rates & Issues Rates for Newport:

Full page (Ix) $6,950 (2-4x) $4,500 (5-8x) $4,000 (9-12x) $3,600 2/3 page (Ix) $6,320 (2-4x) $3,800 (5-8x) $3,500 (9-12x) $3,200 1/2 page (Ix) $4,670 (2-4x) $3,100 (5-8x) $2,800 (9-12x) $2,400 1/3 page (Ix) 3,115 (2-4x) $2,000 (5-8x) $1,600 (9-12x) $1,400

Issues:

November - published October 23 December - TRAVEL - published Nov 20 January - published Dec 26 February - published Jan 23 March - published Feb 20 April - published Mar 20 May - TRAVEL - published April 24 June - published May 22 July - published June 19 August - TRAVEL - published July 24 (Coast Travel section) September - published August 21 October - TRAVEL - published September 18 Frankie O'Rourke 206.452.2993 413.775.3843 (cell) [email protected] 1417 Fourth Avenue, Suite 600 Seattle, WA 98101

COAST EXPLORER the destination marketing resource

Contact: Kari Petersen, Account Executive [email protected] cell: (503) 717-1122

Coast Explorer Magazine Reaches a Half Million Experienced Coastal Travelers Most Targeted Package of Print and Online Advertising for Coastal Destinations

500,000 Qualified Prospects Free Distribution, Over 400 Coastal Locations 150 Targeted Locations in Portland, Seattle and other NW Metropolitan Areas All AAA Travel Centers in Oregon, Washington and Idaho Visitors use Coast Explorer Magazine to Plan their Next Trip

Seasonal Specific Engaging Editorial Three Issues a Year, Seasonal Editorial Coverage Promotes Coastal Tourism and Seasonal Attractions

Advertisers are Invited to Submit News and Events Before Each Publication

Coast Explorer is as Beautiful & Effective Online as in Print

Coast Explorer's Web Site has more than 1.3 Million Page Views Per Year

Coast Explorer Magazine is also available as a Page Turning Virtual Magazine, at www.coastexplorermagazine.com

Destination Newport A Featured Destination on the Coast Explorer Home Page

Web Packages Range From $495 - $895

Includes Destination Newport as a Sponsored Link, rotating on the home pages and throughout the site

Individual Business Pages with Web Site or Facebook Link

Newport Events on our Calendar of Events

Pelican Productions, Inc. Publishers of: Coast Explorer Magazine - Seaside Visitor Guide – Cannon Beach Magazine PO Box 278 • Cannon Beach, Oregon 97110 • www.CoastExplorerMagazine.com Office (503) 717-1122 (888) 609-6051 Fax (503) 717-1124

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IJ~ COAST fXPlORfR R[J\D I VISIT DfSTINATIONS I CALfNDAR

Oregon Coast Aquarium Welcomes Newport Oregon Coast Lodging Specials New Sea Otter Pup Playful and photogenic Nuka makes a splashy With an active bayfront, long stretches ofsandy Coast Explorer's collection of current lodging debut. Say hello to Nuka, an adorable new addition beach, two lighthouses, nearby natural areas and specials and packages On the Coast. Whether you in the Sea Otter Exhibit at the Oregon Coast popular visitor attractions, Newport is a favorite are looking for a great rate on a spectacular room, a -Aquarium in Newport. This northern... [read more] destination for families and sightseers. Its bayfront mid-week getaway deal, Or other... [read more] is... [read more)

SPONSORED UNKS

Georgie's Beachslde Grill Shllo Inn Suites Oceanfront Fish Peddler Discover Newport Hotel Enjoy a spectacular oceanfront view Located at Padfic Shrimp Company Newport has been a playground for with fresh Northwest roast cuisine. Begin your Oregon Coast excursion on the historic Bay Front in Newpor~ visitors sina> the late 1800's. Nestled Family-friendly menus for breakfil5~ with a stay at the full servia> ShlIo we offer a... [read morel between the Coa;;tal... [read more) lunch... (read more] InnSuites... [read more) ADVERTISING RATES THE DESTINATION Save 20% with an Annual Contract! MARKETING RESOURCE

Single Annual ANNUAL Monthly Rate FOR THE COAST Issue Contract TOTAL Based on SIZE WIDTH HEIGHT Rates (PER ISSUE) (3 ISSUES) Annual Contract

Basic Online Ad Package n/a n/a $295 n/a

FALL 2014/WINTER 20'5 I FREE Featured Online Ad Package n/a n/a $495 n/a

Showcase Online Ad Package n/a n/a $895 n/a Additional Directory Listing n/a n/a $167 n/a (up to 35 words) Small Box 2.375 X 2.375 $439 $366 $1098 $91.50

Sixth Page / Wide 5 X 2.375 $703 $586 $1758 $146.50

Sixth Page / Tall 2.375 X 4.875 $703 $586 $1758 $146.50

Third Page 5 X 4.875 $1125 $937 $2811 $234.42 travel & lifestyle for the northwest coast

Half Page / Tall 5 X 7.4375 $1399 $1166 $3498 $291.50

Half Page / Wide 7.625 X 4.875 $1399 $1166 $3498 $291.50

Two-Thirds Page 5 X 10 $1800 $1500 $4500 $375.00

Full Page 7.625 X 10* $2238 $1865 $5595 $466.42

Annual advertising rate includes one-time basic ad design with up to one hour production. * Bleed available (ask for specifi cations). PAYMENT TERMS & DISCOUNTS: Prices shown above are based on payment in advance per issue. A discount of fi ve percent is off ered for all annual contracts paid in full at time of space reservation. Monthly payment plans and six-time per year payment plans available.

SPRING (February - May) This issue promotes the important Spring Break season and includes holiday weekends including Presidents Day, Valentine’s Day, Mother’s Day and Memorial Day. DEADLINE: December 1

SUMMER (June - August) This issue covers the heart of the Summer travel season including Father’s Day and the Fourth of July. DEADLINE: April 1

FALL/WINTER (September - January) This issue covers the important Fall shoulder season through year’s end including Labor Day, Thanksgiving, Veteran’s Day, Christmas, New Year’s and Martin Luther King, Jr holiday. DEADLINE: July 1

PO Box 278, Cannon Beach, OR 97110 (503) 717-1122 • fax (503) 717-1124 e-mail: [email protected] Coast Explorer Magazine • CoastExplorerMagazine.com coastexplorermagazine.com Coast Explorer e-Newsletter • Coast Explorer on Facebook 9 / 15 / 2014 The most comprehensive and targeted package of print and online advertising for coastal destination & hospitality marketing.

FALL 2014/WINTER 2015 I FREE Reach over a half million qualifi ed prospects Coast Explorer reaches over 500,000 readers annually through guaranteed free distribution of the traditional print magazine, website and our online virtual magazine. Coastal & Northwest metropolitan area distribution Our targeted distribution reaches qualifi ed coastal travelers with distribution at over 400 coastal locations and those planning a trip with distribution at approximately 150 targeted travel & lifestyle for the northwest coast locations in Portland, Seattle and other Northwest metropolitan areas including all AAA travel centers in Oregon, Washington & Idaho. Visitors use Coast Explorer to plan their next trip. Print & online advertising packages Coast Explorer offers both print and online advertising giving our customers the prestige and effectiveness of print and online exposure through our virtual magazine and CoastExplorerMagazine.com web packages. Seasonally specifi c engaging editorial With three issues per year, our engaging editorial coverage promotes coastal tourism, seasonal attractions, coastal businesses and inspired travelers. Readers keep past issues for reference, so your ad can work for years

PROVEN RESULTS FOR OVER 15 YEARS Call Coast Explorer to reserve your space today: (503) 717-1122 or toll-free (888) 609-6051 Coast Explorer BELLINGHAM Distribution has the EVERETT Northwest Covered COEUR D’ ALENE SEATTLE • Approximately 400 locations all along the SPOKANE coast reach proven coastal travelers looking TACOMA WASHINGTON for information on attractions, dining, OLYMPIA WENATCHEE shopping and planning their next trip. SOUTH BEND • Approximately 150 Northwest LONG BEACH YAKIMA LEWISTON metropolitan area distibution sites including Portland, Seattle and the KENNEWICK WALLA WALLA SEASIDE Willamette Valley reach travelers planning VANCOVER their trip.

PORTLAND PENDLETON • Found in all AAA Auto Travel Centers in Oregon, Washington & Idaho. SALEM n DALLAS • 120,000 copies annually CORVALLIS distributed free and by BEND Hells Canyo subscription. NEWPORT EUGENE IDAHO OREGON MERIDIAN • An estimated half FLORENCE BOISE million print readers ROSEBURG with extensive hotel and in-room POCATELLO COOS BAY distribution throughout MEDFORD the coast. GOLD BEACH TWIN FALLS BROOKINGS • Another 110,00 online readers visit over 1.3 million pages annually on CoastExplorerMagazine.com.

PO Box 278, Cannon Beach, OR 97110 (503) 717-1122 • fax (503) 717-1124 Proven Results e-mail: [email protected] www.coastexplorermagazine.com for Over 15 Years

6 /13 Coast Explorer is as Beautiful & Effective Online as in Print

Nobody promotes the Coast or coastal businesses like Coast Explorer. We know the coast and promote it beautifully, in print and online, 365 days a year... now with over 1.3 million page views per year on CoastExplorerMagazine.com.

We offer engaging and inspiring content coastal travelers use to plan their trip Over 1.3 million page views per year (10,000+ visitors per month with 10+ pages per visit!) 61% of traffic from potential travelers in Oregon & Washington • 64% of traffic from web searches

All Online Advertising STANDARD ONLINE PACKAGE ($295/year) Includes Individual Business Page, Sponsored Links and Business Directory described at left, plus: Packages Include: ••Option to add an additional business (of equal or lesser level package) at 25% discount. FEATURED ONLINE PACKAGE ($495/year) Individual Business Page Includes Individual Business Page, Sponsored Links and Business Directory described at left, plus: Your own Individual Business Page including photo, ••Your business directory rotates through the “Featured” listings (frequency depends on competition for five available business description, link to your website, link to your spaces). location on Google Maps and list of amenities (for ••Your submitted lodging offers appear in the Coast Explorer monthly lodging offers posting that has a link from our home lodging and dining). page, monthly e-newsletter and appears on lodging directory pages for all communities. ••Option to add an additional business (of equal or lesser level package) at 30% discount. Sponsored Links Your business appears on dozens of pages related to SHOWCASE ONLINE PACKAGE ($895/year) Includes Individual Business Page, Sponsored Links and Business Directory described at left, plus: your region throughout CoastExplorerMagazine.com ••Your business directory always appears in the “Showcase” listings above the Featured listings and alphabetical listings. Business Directory Listing ••Your submitted lodging offers appear in the Coast Explorer monthly lodging offers posting that has a link from our home Alphabetical business directory (in your community page, monthly e-newsletter and appears on lodging directory pages for all communities. ••Your submitted lodging offers are also posted individually and appear as Regional Highlights on your community’s lodging under categories including Attractions, Art Galleries, page and other related pages throughout the site. Dining, Shopping, Lodging, Services or Home & Garden). ••Option to add an additional business (of equal or lesser level package) at 35% discount

PO Box 278, Cannon Beach, OR 97110 (503) 717-1122 • fax (503) 717-1124 e-mail: [email protected]

www.coastexplorermagazine.com 9/ 30 / 2014 Coast Explorer Home 111.11 ' '-+...... 1,_..._c_o_a_st_ex_p~l_o_re_r_m_a,;;,ga_z_i_ne_._co_m ~;..!'-==-' ~

Coast Explorer Home: +

IJ~ COAST fXPlORfR R[J\D I VISIT DfSTINATIONS I CALfNDAR

Oregon Coast Aquarium Welcomes Newport Oregon Coast Lodging Specials New Sea Otter Pup Playful and photogenic Nuka makes a splashy With an active bayfront, long stretches ofsandy Coast Explorer's collection of current lodging debut. Say hello to Nuka, an adorable new addition beach, two lighthouses, nearby natural areas and specials and packages On the Coast. Whether you in the Sea Otter Exhibit at the Oregon Coast popular visitor attractions, Newport is a favorite are looking for a great rate on a spectacular room, a -Aquarium in Newport. This northern... [read more] destination for families and Sightseers. Its bayfront mid-week getaway deal, Or other... [read more] is... [read more)

SPONSORED UNKS

Georgie's Beachslde Grill Shllo Inn Suites Oceanfront Fish Peddler City of Newport Enjoy a spectacular oceanfront view Hotel Located at Padfic Shrimp Company Newport has been a playground for with fresh Northwest roast cuisine. Begin your Oregon Coast excursion on the hisloric Bay Front in Newpor~ visitors since the laic 1800's. Nestled Family-friendly menus for breakfas~ with a stay at the full servia> ShlIo we offer a... [read morel between the Coa.>taL.. (read more) lunch... (read more] InnSuites... [read more) Newport Oregon Lodging, Dining, Shopping, Art Galleries, Events, Attractions ,-+~~_~_c_o_as_te_x,;,p_lo_re_r_m..;ag;;.a_Z_in_e._co_m ~~---'--' 00

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Newport including South Beach & Otter Rock

Newport Links Sponsored Links

Activities & Attractions Art Galleries Dining Shopping Lodging Services Home & Garden

More about Newport Calendar of Events Feature Stories Hallmark Resort Oceanfront, Traditional and Limited Edition guest rooms with spectacular views, balconies, fireplaces, two­ person spas and ... [read more] COAST ith an active bayfront, long stretches of sandy beach, two lighthouses, nearby natural areas and popular visitor W attractions, Newport is a favorite destination for families and sightseers. Its bayfront is home to attractions including Ripley's Believe it or Not, a wax museum and Undersea Gardens. You can browse shops and galleries, book a charter fishing trip, buy fresh seafood and watch sea lions on the docks. Just south of downtown Newport, the Oregon Coast Aquarium is a world-class attraction and home to more than 15,000 marine animals. The picturesque Yaquina Head Lighthouse, Oregon's tallest, is only minutes away at The Yaquina Head Outstanding Natural Area where you will enjoy panoramic views and wildlife watching. A stairway leads to Shllo Restaurant accessible tide pools below. Just north of Newport, Otter Rock is situated on the southern side of Cape Foulweather, where Oceanfront dining. Traditional and Subscribe you can visit the dramatic Devil's Punchbowl State Natural savory breakfast selections, delicious Area. hamburgers, your favorite fish and to Coast Explorer chips, warm... [read more]

Subscribe 10 Coast Explorer Top Sights & Recreation: Magazine now and don~ miss another issue featuring our Vaquina Bay State Recreation Site beautiful pholography and design, Visit the historic and restored Yaquina Bay Lighthouse, interesting fealure stories and open to the public. Walking trail. picnicking, fishing and guides to coastal allractions, beach access are also available. events, dining. shopping. arts and lodging. Annual subscriplions (3 issues) are only S15 Beverly Beach State Park Take the walkway under Highway 101 to lhe vast expanse of sandy beach. This easily accessible park City of Newport offers hiking, fishing, picnicking and camping. A nature center with interpretive programs makes this a perfecl ewport has been a playground for destination for the whole family. more info visitors since the late 1800's. Nestled between the Coastal... [read morel

Vaquina Head Outstanding Natural Area The scenic headland reaches a mile into the Pacific offering panoramic views, Oregon's tallest Iighlhouse and access to a beautiful intertidal area. Small offshore islands offer habitat for seabirds and Harbor Seals while Gray ~ha~es are often spoiled in the waters, even dur!n? Coast Explorer E-Newsletter https://ui.constantcontact.com/visualeditor/visual_editor_preview.j...

April 2014

COAST fXPlORfR f-N WSlfTTfR

Central Oregon Coast Near Yachats

Photographing Oregon's Lighthouses

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Tillamook Rock Lighthouse Publisher Gary Hayes offers a few ps on geng the best shot. Read More

See Other Lighthouse Features »

Astoria's Adventures in History

Peter Iredale Shipwreck, Ft. Stevens State Park Astoria's historical aracons shine a beacon on the events and characters that shaped this important West Coast seaport founded in 1811. Read More

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Other North Coast Aracons »

Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner in Newport

Can't miss spots for a day of dining out in Newport. Read More

Other Dining Feature Stories » See Other Features About Newport »

Find Great Lodging Offers on the Coast

Whether you are looking for a great rate on a room with a view or a mid-week getaway check Coast Explorer Magazine for special offers and packages on the Oregon Coast.

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View Current Lodging Specials »

Visit Coast Explorer On Line

Explore Online Resources for the NW Coastal Traveler

Visit Coast Explorer Online »

Events Calendar »

Virtual Magazine »

Follow Coast Explorer on Facebook

Visit our Inspiring Facebook Page Here you will find breathtaking images taken from the best viewpoints up and down the Oregon Coast.

Click here to like us on Facebook »

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July 2014

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View from Seal Rock State Recreaon Site

Wet & Wild Coastal Adventures

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Touring the scenic Rogue River near Gold Beach Oregon's coastline holds the essenal ingredients for those seeking acon and adventure, whether on the waves, in the dunes or in the sky. Read More

Find Other Coastal Sightseeing Adventures »

Oregon Coast Aquarium Welcomes New Sea Oer Pup

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-- . .. .. - ._..;..~ .~- ~ ...-,: - ~ --- '--.. - - :.-'-.- ~ Nuka fishes shrimp out of a ball at the Oregon Coast Aquarium Visit the playful and photogenic sea oers at the Oregon Coast Aquarium. Read more about Nuka's splashy debut

See Other Aracon Features »

Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner

Blackbird Restaurant in Manzanita Can't miss spots for a day of dining out in Manzanita. Read More

See Other Dining Features »

Doggie Desnaons That Will Knock Their Spots Off

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Gracie gets a treat at Woof's Dog Bakery Whether Susiesplendiferous needs a new tutu or Spoydog wants home-baked treats, here are six places on the Coast that get drool endorsements, tail thumps and four enthusiasc paws up. Read More

See Other Shopping Features on the Coast »

Find Great Lodging Offers on the Coast

Whether you are looking for a great rate on a room with a view or a mid-week getaway, check Coast Explorer Magazine for special offers and packages on the Oregon Coast.

View Current Lodging Specials »

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Explore Online Resources ...... 10...... for the NW Coastal Traveler COAST Visit Coast Explorer Online »

Events Calendar »

Virtual Magazine »

Follow Coast Explorer on Facebook

Visit our inspiring Facebook page for breathtaking images taken from the best viewpoints up and down the Oregon Coast.

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6 of 6 Discover Newport, Newport, Oregon ,---!._"'_co_a_st_e_xp~l_or_e_rm_a..;g;.,a_Z_in_e._co_m ~~'---~...J 00

Savor Cannon Beach T SavorNW T Gmail Digimarc Apogee Portal Discover Newport, Newpon, Oregon +

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NEWPORT ACTIVITIES AND ATTRACTIONS Discover Newport Newport has been a playground for visitors since the late 1800's. Nestled between the Coastal Mountains, Pacific Ocean and Yaquina Bay, the natural beauty of the area draws those seeking a unique and exciting experience.

169 SW Coast Hwy Newport, Oregon 541.574.0603

discovernewport.com [find on Google Maps)

« RETURN TO NEWPORT ACTIVITIES AND ATTRACTIONS

ABOUT I CONTACT US I SUBSCRIBE I ADVERTISE I RECEIVE OUR E·NEWSLETTER ~ Pelican Productions, Inc. I The Destinalion Markeling Resource I (888) 609·6051 I [email protected]

All materials on !his website are copyrighted and may not be reproduced in any form without written consent of Pelican COAST fXPlORfR Productions,lnc.@2014 PELICAN PRODUCTIONS, INC. Newport Oregon Lodging, Dining, Shopping, Art Galleries, Events, Attractions ,-+~~_~_c_o_as_te_x,;,p_lo_re_r_m..;ag;;.a_Z_in_e._co_m ~~---'--' 00

Newport Oregon lodging, Dining, Shopping, Art Galleries, Events, Attrac.tions +

IJ~ COAST fXPlORfR tAD I VISIT fSTINA I SI AlrNDAR

Newport including South Beach & Otter Rock

Newport Wnks Sponsored Links

Activities & Attractions Art Galleries Dining Shopping Lodging Services Home & Garden

More about Newport Calendar of Events Feature Stories Discover Newport Newport has been a playground for visitors since the late 1800's. Nestled between the Coastal... [read more]

COAS ith an active bayfront, long stretches of sandy beach, two lighthouses, nearby natural areas and popular visitor W attractions, Newport is a favorite destination for families and sightseers. Its bayfront is home to attractions including Ripley's Believe it or Not, a wax museum and Undersea Gardens. You can browse shops and galleries, book a charter fishing trip, buy fresh seafood and watch sea lions on the docks. Just south of downtown Newport, the Oregon Coast Aquarium is a world-class attraction and home to more than 15,000 marine animals. The picturesque Yaquina Head Lighthouse, Oregon's tallest, is only minutes away at The Yaquina Head Outstanding Natural Area where you will enjoy Hallmark Resort panoramic views and wildlife watching. A stairway leads to accessible tide pools below. Just north of Newport, Otter Rock Oceanfront, Traditional and Limited is situated on the southern side of Cape Fou(weather, where Edition guesl rooms with spectacular Subscribe you can visit the dramatic Devil's Punchbowl State Natural views, balconies, fireplaces, two· person spas and... [read morel to Coast Explorer Area.

Subscribe to Coast Explorer Top Sights & Recreation: Magazine now and don't miss another issue featuring our Beverly Beach State Park beautiful photography and design, Take the walkway under Highway 101 to the vast interesting feature stories and expanse of sandy beach. This easily accessible park guides to coastal attractions, offers hiking, fishing, picnicking and camping. A nature events, dining, shopping, arts and center with interpretive programs makes this a perfect destination for the whole family. more info lodging. Annual subscriptions (3 issues) are only 815 Yaquina Bay State Recreation Site Visit the historic and restored Yaquina Bay Lighthouse, Shllo Inn Suites Oceanfront open to the public. Walking trail, picnicking, fishing and Hotel beach access are also available. Begin your Oregon Coast excursion with a stay at the full service Shilo Inn Suites... [read more]

Yaquina Head Outstanding Natural Area The scenic headland reaches a mile into the Pacific offering panoramic views, Oregon's tallest lighthouse and access to a beautiful intertidal area. Small offshore jc:.I::lInnc:. nff~r n::llhit:::at fnr c:.1P;::thirti~ :::ann ~;::arhnr !=:~;::tlc:: whillP

From: Kurt Winchell Sent: Monday, September 15, 2014 3:51 PM To: '[email protected]' Subject: KMTR Newssource 16 All in a Day's Drive

Hi Lorna, Thanks for taking my call today regarding our promotion All In a Day’s Drive. This sponsorship opportunity will work in two ways. The first element of this sponsorship are the TV promotional announcements that include your logo, Newport video clips and audio mention of your organization.(sample AIADD attached above with Les Schwab as title sponsor and Thistledown as Associate sponsor ) The second portion is the promotion of your discovernewport.com website. We will include Banner advertising on KMTR.com with a link that sends them directly to discovernewport.com web site. This campaign offers TV exposure, information on KMTR.com and an incentive of a $100 Weekly Gas Card Giveaway to motivate families to take a winter adventure to Newport and of course spend the night!! There are 2 versions of this sponsorship attached above, A Title Sponsor or Associate Sponsor, with the difference being in the total number of promotional spots that run in one month. I also think this sponsorship could tie in very nicely with the promotion of your Newport Seafood & Wine Festival in February. Please let me know if you have any question and or concerns. I would be more than happy to pay you a visit if you preferred, just let me know.

Best regards,

Kurt Winchell [email protected] Account Executive KMTR NewsSource 16, NBC Affiliate, Eugene Western Oregon CW, Eugene 3825 International Court Springfield, OR 97477 (541) 953-9878- Cell (541) 988-4520- Direct

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THURSDAY, AUGUST 1, 2013 • THE LAKE OSWEGO LEADER IN NEWS FOR 93 YEARS • LAKEOSWEGOREVIEW.COM • VOLUME 100, NO. 31 • 75 CENTS

The store will continue to sell wine and liquor until the building is torn down in July 2014, and there will be a Wizer’s specialty food and wine store when the new retail section is built, hopefully by 2016. But the Wizer’s closing after 65 yearschange is still mo- “Ever since the - mentous, and longtime Wizer’s city announced The Lake Oswego customers are the taking the news redevelopment institution will return hard. A big chapter “Some were in that is in smaller form in of Lake tears. Some were supposed to Oswego’s upset,” Wizer history will end happen our new development said. “They like when Wizer’s our selection.” sales have Oswego The general re- By CLIFF NEWELL Market closes action has been decreased. Now The Review its doors in disbelief. seemed the about three “It’s hard to best time to When Wizer’s Oswego Market weeks. But imagine down- closes its doors it will also close an owner Gene town Lake Oswe- close rather era in Lake Oswego history. Wizer is go without the than later.” The supermarket that has been as already looking Wizer’s store,” — Gene Wizer closely associated with this city as any toward the said Chuck business is fi nally shutting down after future. O’Leary, chief ex- 65 years, and it won’t be the same in REVIEW PHOTO: ecutive offi cer of Lake Oswego. Owner Gene Wizer said VERN UYETAKE the Lake Oswego Chamber of Com- the market on First Street and A Ave- merce. “The Wizer family has been a nue is starting a liquidation sale today cherished and integral part of our com- and will close in three weeks. Wizer, calling for building 242 upper- munity, and their generosity in support- Customers have been going there for end apartments, retail spaces on the ing virtually every local organization generations, and many kids had their would have still kept his store going if street level and underground parking, See WIZER’S / Page A4 fi rst jobs at Wizer’s. Founder Jim Wizer the city had not announced its redevel- plus a courtyard and public walkway. and later his son Gene were stalwarts of “Now seemed the best time to close opment plan for the area. Wizer will continue to have a strong the community, the type of people who rather than later.” In May developers and city staffers presence on First Street and A Avenue. have made Lake Oswego a good place to Twice before developers were on the presented a redevelopment plan for live. Closing the store was not an easy verge of buying Wizer’s property and Lake Oswego’s Block 137, owned by decision for Gene Wizer. starting a new project, but the deals ul- “Ever since the city announced the timately fell through. Wizer said he redevelopment that is supposed to hap- pen our sales have decreased,” he said. A daughter of encouragement Mary Libby Boatwright leaves legacy of compassion at Lake Grovefeet of Jesus Presbyterian Christ; she really is.” By CLIFF NEWELL “Libby is one of those high- The Review energy people,” Eric Rey said. the common saying “She has always got her hand about successful into something. She can do so people leaving a po- many things and do them suc- sition is “they leave cessfully.” A Obviously, Boatwrightwoman isof a ma- big shoes to fi ll.” In the case of the Rev. Libby ny talents. guide Boatwright, And, she said, she is practi- “In all my cally leaving work as a behind a shoe minister, God store at Lake has used ev- Grove Presby- erything I’ve dog ever done.” terian Church. Strangely SUBMITTED PHOTOS: SARAH DEMERRITT Boatwright has worked on enough, it is so many proj- highly unusu- Forest Grove Hillsboro Beaverton Tigard & Tualatin Lake Oswego al that Boat- West Linn ects with such energy, talent wright be- dies Mary, the German shepherd guide dog, was a big part of Lake Oswego for years. came a minis- and commit- ment that her ter of the Gos- pel. She has associates sad- SUBMITTED PHOTO ly say, “She lived many can’t be re- lives and ■ Remembered as the loyal and friendly companion The Rev. Libby Boatwright is ready earned many placed.” for the next phase of her Boatwright high academic Wednesdays Fridays Thursdays Thursdays Thursdays remarkable life. After 10 years of degrees, but Thursdays has left her of local resident Patrick Bloedorn, she died last week service, she is leaving Lake Grove in her early congregation Presbyterian Church. in this dilem- By EMILY HOARD life it seemed she would be any- ma because, The Review thing but a minister. Boatwright after 10 years here, she is leav- started out in Rockville Center, ary, a German shepherd ing to become the head chap- N.Y., then hopscotched along guide dog, was a loyal work- lain for the Stanford University with her parents across the er as well as a loving com- Clinic in Palo Alto, Calif. But country to Pennsylvania, to panion to Lake Oswego resi- she is leaving for the best of New York again, and arrived in M reasons. God is leading her that dent Patrick Bloedorn for eight and a California at the same time as way. the Brooklyn Dodgers. She half years. “God told me, ‘It’s time to She passed away July 24 and will be re- earned three degrees in drama Patrick go,’” Boatwright said. “Every- membered as a big part of the downtown and was even a professional Bloedorn thing worked out so that my Lake Oswego neighborhood. She was very mime for many years. One of 12,000 24,000 16,800 12,600 17,400and Mary husband, Frank, and I could 9,360 active and loyal to Bloedorn, who is blind, her most interesting positions enjoyed move to California. We put our and she always wanted to work. hiking all was her seven years as stage “Mary was a confi dent and powerful dog house here up for sale and it manager for the San Francisco over the sold in two hours. I really want and everyone in town knew her,” Bloedorn Opera in its golden age, hosting country. to do hospice work and this will said. the greatest opera singers of Whenever Bloedorn and Mary were out be a great opportunity to do it.” their day — Placido Domingo, Still, Lake Grove Presbyteri- walking, people going by would say hello Joan Sutherland, Beverly Sills. an will not be the same place or honk their horns as they drove by. She training. Boatwright supported all of without her. Just ask some of accompanied Bloedorn everywhere he bered as a great dog Over the years, Patrick has had several these golden voices with her al- Weekly Readers Weekly Readers Weekly Readers Weekly Readers Weeklywho loved her workReaders guide dogs, including Augie, Stewart and her parishioners. most heroic versatility. The best Weekly Readers went, from fundraisers at Safeway to talks “Libby is a dynamo,” said Jan about his blindness and helped Patrick Lyon. After Patrick retired Lyon, he example was the time when Pearce. “She has done so many with children, and live the life he wanted. brought Mary from San Rafael, Calif., and there were no understudies to “Mary needs to be wonderful things. She has em- from adventures at the We will miss her so was able to do the training here in Lake be found to go in for the opera powered other people and beach to explorations remembered as a great dog much.” Oswego with Lori Brown, a trainer of “Romeo and Juliet.” Desperate, Before he was blind, guide dogs. Bloedorn had become very ex- found places for them to serve.” Boatwright got the only person through caves. Mary who loved her work and helped “Libby is invaluable,” said was a lovable dog who Patrick was a ship- perienced and knowledgeable about guide available: herself. She tossed on Laurel Mousakis. “She has such was at times goofy and Patrick live the life he wanted. ment foreman at the dogs and how to work with them, so the fancy gown of her character, compassion, especially for el- liked to play. She espe- We will miss her so much.” cement plant in Lake Brown left when she felt the training was — Sarah DeMerritt derly people. She’s an angel. See LIBBY / Page A4 cially loved romping Oswego. He became suffi cient. She will be really, really hard to 5,000 Circulation 10,000 Circulation 7,000 Circulation 5,250 Circulation through the7,250 water CirculationBloedorn said he was very in tune with 3,900 Circulation blind in 1985 and had to go through train- Mary and he could understand her. Mary replace. Libby is the hands and fountain at Millennium See MARY / Page A4 Plaza Park and she ing for a dog at the California Guide Dogs loved to be petted and hugged. for the Blind campus, which specializes in “Pamplin Media Group’s pledge is to Sarah DeMerritt, who works at the A German shepherds and usually requires deliver balanced news that re ects the stories of our communities. Thank” you the blind person to live at the school for Avenue Safeway, lives with Patrick and for reading our newspapers. was very attached to Mary as well. — DR. ROBERT B. PAMPLIN JR. She said, “Mary needs to be remem- OWNER & NEIGHBOR By email: [email protected] CONTACT US By website: lakeoswegoreview.com A22 By mail: P. O. Box 548, Lake Oswego, 97034 In person: 400 Second St., Lake Oswego INDEX Sports ...... B6 By telephone: 503-636-1281 A7 By fax: 503-635-8817 Opinion ...... A16 Entertainment .... B8 Police ...... Business ...... Education...... A18

Lotsa Hugs YOUR ONLINE LOCAL Portland band has the tonic for winter blues New and improved? DAILY NEWS — LIFE, B3 Revamped Blazers’ lineup www.portlandtribune.com sparks optimism for West race— SPORTS, B8

TribuneNONDAILY PAPER • WWW.PORTLANDTRIBUNE.COM • PUBLISHED THURSDAY Portland• TICE CHOSEN THE NATION’S BEST THURSDAY, DECEMBER 22, 2011

Will Levenson (left) and Travis Williams, executive director of Willamette Riverkeeper, organized July 31’s Big Float event on the Willamette River. They hope to change the way Portlanders relate to the river, which is safer for swimming now that the city’s Big Pipe sewage overflow project is completed. TRIBUNE FILE PHOTO: CHRISTOPHER ONSTOTT County shelves library district More2011 – PAGE 2 & 3 Supporters still THAT’S SO PORTLAND hope to convince ■ Portland stays weird Streetcar 'concierge' commission for ■ The Rose City made a few unusual waves as ■ Top 5 stories May vote on plan moves on Look closer and you’ll agree that ■ Top 5 non-stories it floated through a turbulent and eventfulPortland is still weirder 2011 than even The By STEVE LAW New York Times — which seems ob- Sam isn't running The Tribune STORY BY sessed with us as the “New Brooklyn” ■ Trib makes a difference — understands. And the number and Cracking down on Crack Alley With new polls showing TRIBUNE STAFF variety of stories we covered in the ■ History repeats itself local voters are resistant past year makes it clear that the city to any property tax in- Blazers head for the exits n the surface, 2011 was the cannot be easily classified. creases right now, Mult- See if you don’t agree after reading nomah County Chair Jeff year that Portland went mainstream, thanks in our year-end roundup. Cogen has decidedputting against a li- large part to two network Portland stays weird code violations are only investigated brary dis- O once a citizen complaint is filed. Turns trict on the TV series. ■ Inner tube party on the river out, more than a few people have be- May pri- “Portlandia” on IFC pokes gentle Hundreds of Portlanders grabbed gun using the complaint-driven system mary bal- fun at our foodies, bike fanatics, old- inner tubes and paddled across the to carry out personal grudges and — lot. school feminists and even Mayor Sam Willamette River on July 31, in an who would have thought that? — gain Cogen’s Adams — or a reggae bass-playin’ ver- event billed by organizers as The Big a little business advantage, as the Tri- bow to politi- sion of Sam Adams. Float. Organizers Will Levenson and bune showed in its Snitch City series cal reality is NBC’s fantasy/cop drama “Grimm” Travis Williams, both leaders of the this fall. causing a gut showcases the region’s breathtaking Willamette Riverkeeper group, want- Nothing says Portland better than scenery, older buildings and Crafts- SUMRALL check for li- ed Portlanders to think of the once- food carts, and complaints against food brary boost-Portlandman-style houses we almost take for heavily polluted river as a place to cart operators and the properties on Gresham Sandy Estacada Clackamas / Oregon City Scappoose granted. swim again. which the carts sit have become ers, who had high hopes of Our fame is now so great that ■ Not-so-happy meals See 2011 / Page 2 gaining a permanent and “Leverage,” the TNT series filmed Short of revenue for its inspection dedicated source of property here for several seasons but set in TRIBUNE PHOTO: CHRISTOPHER ONSTOTT teams, Portland, like many cities, re- taxes for the county library Boston, is officially moving its fiction- lies on a complaint-driven system. City system. Protesters held their ground Nov. 13 as al crew of lovable grifters to Portland Cogen wants to ask voters police tried to evict between 200 and 400 next season. to renew the temporary li- Occupy Portland campers at Chapman and Tuesdaybrary levy that expires June & Thursdays Tuesdays & Fridays Wednesdays Thursdays Wednesdays Fridays Lownsdale squares near City Hall. 30, at the current rate of 89 cents per $1,000 in assessed property value, so it won’t be considered a tax increase. That leaves the heavily used library system without mon- ey to cover inflation and the costs of servingbranches new library for the next three years, likely Metro caught in natural tangle ary in Beaverton. Metro pur- causing re- “People chased the property in 2009 for duced branch $6.6 million, then received au- are feeling hours and Regional agency has 200,000thorization to spend about $3 24,000 9,600 5,400 40,800 10,800 broke, and staffing. thousands of acres but “It’s a big million more to build a nature center building, gardens, park- they’re shift for us to few bucks for projects ing, a children’s playground, be thinking of feeling bike racks and 3.5 miles of grav- supporting an By JIM REDDEN scared. el trails. 89-cent levy The Tribune The park is visited by thou- Bottom with staffing Metro owns a tree farm. sands of people a year. line, I don’t cuts and serv- Both properties were bought ice reduc- The regional government did Weekly withReaders bond money approved by Weekly Readers Weekly Readers Weekly Readers Weekly Readers Weekly Readers think this tions, com- not buy the farm to sell the voters in Multnomah, Washing- pared to what trees. It is a large part of is the right ton and Clackamas counties. we had our Chehalem Ridge, a 1,143-acre Voters authorized a $136 million time.” sights focused piece of property Metro bought bond sale in 1995 to protect nat- — , on,” says Mer- in 2010 for $6.1 million to pre- ural areas and complete trails. County chair ris Sumrall, serve as a natural area. A $227 million bond measure to chief execu- But there is little natural continue the work was ap- about the neat rows of identical- proved by voters in 2006. Metro TRIBUNE FILE PHOTO: JAIME VALDEZ tive officer of The sized trees that cover much of has so far purchased around Library Foundation. The the land in Washington County. 80,000 Circulation11,000 acres of property 10,000 Circulation 4,000 Circulation 2,250 Circulation 17,000 Circulation 4,500 Circulation foundation, which already Restoring it to natural condition throughout the region. Nearly has raised more than will take millions of dollars, $70 million was set aside for lo- $230,000 to run the library money that Metro currently Metro authorized a controlled burn in Cooper Mountain Nature Park in September to kill invasive plants district campaign, has sought cal governments. does not have. But the measures did not and encourage the return of native species. The property was bought and developed by Metro, which does stable library funding for The benefits of preserving not have enough money to do the same on all of the other natural lands it owns. many years. and enhancing natural areas See METRO / Page 7 Sumrall called an emer- can be seen at Cooper Mountain See LIBRARY / Page 8 Nature Park, a 231-acre sanctu-

— See page 8 — Canby’s annual 3-on-3 basketball tournament, Rise and fall Newberg native Coleman sisters— Graduated athletes leave key Inside this edition: The Buckeroo final standings YOUR ONLINE SOURCE FOR A publication of voids at Wilsonville return to town for performance Place your ad by calling (503) 620-SELL (7355) www.Community-Classifieds.com Nothing but Net, filled up the streets around Wait Park Saturday. Inside this edition: WS — See SPORtS, Page 14 See stories and photos on page 12, 13 and 15 LOCAL NE Classically trained and accomplished musi- Call 911 wilsonvillespokesman.com Critter Cabana rebuilding—  North Willamette News cians will perform together at Newbergre, Pag eMusic A13

New monitoring devices help effort is ‘coming together’ Arts & Leisu Make One Call Molalla victims on the scene and Reach them All! 442439.022614.class — See PAGe 3 Center next week —

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Local government — WOODBURN issues get only. purposes illustration for are Pictures publication. A 19-year-old Molalla man this DC-3 was Newberg mayor endorses following hours 48 expire Prices details. for dealer See fees. and DMV plus Price injured Sunday, June 30, sheriff restored by Canby Ford Discount $635 while trying to rescue his Aerometal online survey described as drowning friend on the International, a Factory Rebate $1,000 exposure company confidential and voluntary, STK#1395 Molalla River is asking for Bill Bell gets visit from dedicated to BY RAY HUGHEY help to find his backpack that rebuilding but ‘highly valued’ floated away on an innertube police K-9 unit, ride-along [email protected] vintage aircraft TYLER FRANCKEReporter during the ordeal. to FAA Newberg Graphic Kyle Sauvageau had a with Wilsonville police standards. [email protected] Members of the Canby business standard black backpack community met July 23 as the “When the strapped to his By JOSH KULLA The city of Newberg is con- rebate $1,500 additional an Receive The Spokesman Downtown Parking Task Force to boys tube when he ducting what it hopes will be- address parking issues in the city’s realized it left it behind to Back in 1971, law enforcement technology come an annual “citizens’ sur- core. was try to rescue did not include much, if anything, that could vey,” polling local residents on without. $52,247 Credit. Ford thru finance you if “We invited downtown business impossible his drowning remotely be considered digital. their opinions about everything *Add’l $500 Rebate if Financed with Ford Credit

owners and managers to come together to save friend, 19-year- That’s of policing inhabited by Bill from the way government offi- cials spend constituents’ tax dol- 50,747 to discuss some potential parking Andrew, old Andrew Bell, who served as sheriff of Wasco County from 1968 to 1971. Today, Bell is retired and lives in Wil- lars to the quality of the city’s _

Jason Moats of _

they each Aurora airport becoming an _

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as long as Sauvageau and way for continued business “The city is not tracking who 2010 Explorer Limited AWD $13,643 PARKING, Page 18 if it worked at all, and now we have two radio chan- uietly, underneath the READ: they a third friend, growth at the airport. They’ve submits survey responses,” a let- Photo by Cory Mimms nels, cellphones, computers, automatic license radar, so to speak, the done this not only through re- could.” 18-year-old Aurora State Airport ter from Mayor Bob Andrews ex- One Owner, V-8, leather interior, navigation,. moonroof, -Stepanie plate readers, data bases, it’s amazing.” cruitment, but continued public Travis Carney Bell joined the city of The Dalles Police Depart- Qhas been busy expand- outreach that has helped quell plaining the survey said. “Only 2011 Explorer Limited AWD Sauvageau of Aurora. ment in 1957 and worked for the city until he was ing its economic infl uence in the louder voices that once ex- raw data in order to ensure confi- running boards and only 24,000 miles Sauvageau appointed sheriff in 1968. He resigned from that Wilsonville and the surround- pressed trepidation at the pros- dentiality and certainty in the sur- One Owner fully loaded SUV, navigation, moonroof, 20 inch Traffic committee post in 1971 to take a position with the Board on ing area. pects of increased air traffi c at veying techniques. Participation STK#9352G BUSINESS received lacerations to his Police Standards and Training, the forerunner of It’s a far cry from several Oregon’s fi fth-busiest airport. in this survey wheels, leather interior and immaculate. face when he was caught in today’s Department of Public Safety Standards years ago, when public skepti- “I think the leadership is voluntary up and running Canby High School was the scene of highly the same roots during the A bareback bronc throws his rider during July 4’s day performance of the 2013 Molalla Buckeroo PRCA rodeo. This year, $145,032 was awarded across seven events. and Training. cism over proposed future change in the chamber of com- Seth Gordon / Newberg Graphic but highly val- We’re pretty

attempted rescue. On Aug. 27, Bell got a fi rsthand look at today’s merce has helped to educate ued.” STK#9351G “ rebate $1,250 additional an Receive The Canby Traffic Safety Commission specialized training that brought about 165 much asking law enforcement thanks to the collaboration of the the Wilsonville community,” The survey is up and running after an absence of sev- ement READ: RIVER, Page 2 STORY AND PHOTOS BY the citizens rian Hodson and City area law enforcement officials toforc the area Clackamas County Sheriff’s Offi ce and Marquis said Oregon Aviation Depart- consists of six The law en Care Wilsonville, the assisted living facility where what they eral years. MayorGreg B Ellis say they hope UGHEY JOSH KULLA ment Director Mitch Swecker. m u l t i p a r t

AY H without. $25,997 Credit. Ford with finance you if Administrator BY R .com response to an active shooter he lives. “The communication has al- ns t hat think about canbyherald “It’s called the New Chapters program,” said — Kendra Gooding (No. 12) celebrates with CheyAnn Lang after drawing a game-winning walk with two outs in the sixth and final inning of a questio rhughey@ situation has changed greatly See SHeRIFF / Page A7 ways been there in my mind. sk respon- $31,000 this commission will help address some of a the services since the 1999 Columbine plans for the airport were at PAAM (Positive Aurora Airport Once in a lifetime moment

the city’s traffic issues, research the prob- their height. Now, state offi cials A new Cessna owned by Aurora Aviation is displayed at the Aurora State Management) and Charbon- nd three other players from Newberg Little League, finish pool play with a 2-2 record. dents to rate the city is ass shootings. thrilling 6-5 comeback win over Puerto Rico in the Little League Softball World Series Sunday at Alpenrose Stadium in Portland. The win helped the Tualatin City Major All-Stars, a 24,747 lem areas, gather input and make recom- High School massacre, said Woman say, the construction of a new Airport during a recent open house. neau have been involved in ev- their satisfac- Tragedies that team which includes Gooding, Lang a providing. _

Canby Police Sgt. Doug when Newberg’s tion of various _ Brittney $

mendations. air traffi c control tower is on erything the whole time I’ve $36,000 2006 Freestar Limited Van _

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track to start before the end of been here.” Maddie DeVerna GREAT PRE-OWNED BUYS! _

The commission consists of Jack Kitzmiller, training officer Jeffries, city Stk#C2780 _

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often, in a the year, and businesses are Nonetheless, Swecker said, scored in the bot- city or New- _ PARADE $35,585 Pendleton, chairman; Dan Leischner, vice for his department and the I This year’s event celebrates public affairs _ Colorado movie thriving in a way not seen the past resistance to airport Tualatin City team, which includes four playersmy first from base Newberg, rallies for a dramatictom of the first, 6-5 berg govern- officer DEAL OF THE seating and more. _ interagency workshop. n for a I thought we were just _ chairman; Bob Backstrom, secretary; since before the recent reces- expansion and the public in- coach told me it ment, includ- _

theater, a but notched runs 2005 Tahoe LT 4x4 WEEK! STK#9335 _

_ Before Columbine, police Hwy 213 100 years for the city of Molalla “ MSRP

sion. volvement it generated actually to bring home the winning ru was over, and going to keep going. Then VIN# 1FAHP2F90DG167493 VIN# _ Leonard Walker, member; Clint Coleman, victory over Puerto Rico and will face the Philippines in the seventh-place gamein theWednesday top of the ing quality of More! Lots & Sensors

Connecticut ele- “There are in the vicinity of 6-5 victory over Puerto Rico at _ would lock down the shoot- has had a productive outcome. SETH GORDON everyone just at- _

city council liaison; Greg Ellis,ublic city works n July 4 Molalla’s downtown streets were my first base coach told me second and third life; city serv- Very nice SUV, learher interior, MyFordTouch, with Sync

M _ Reporter

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Canbying site and call in special Molalla Wilsonville Woodburn ewberg Newberg ices such as police, fire, library,” Rebate Factory mentary school and as close it was over, and everyone to go up $10,838 administrator; Jerry Nelzen, p crash lined with people for the annual Giant Street they’re all making good money, added, the Federal Aviation Ad- It was the final play in a two-in- full power. and Jeremy Holstad, [email protected] ran to the other North WillametteAuto 6-Speed Engine, Ecoboost 2.0 Puerto Rico transportation, code enforcement representative; to home as a Clackamas units he said. But that gave just attacked me. Parade. This year’s theme, “Riding High for most of them,” said James ministration even adopted new ning rally that saw Tualatin City girls that were and planning and zoning; govern- STK#1411A shopping mall. the shooter more time to Peggy Savage Like most ball players, Kendra Player Kendra Gooding scored three more Canby police officer. Hand, a local real estate broker rules requiring pilots to turn to erase a 5-1 deficit and while that running at me. I’m ment performance and city em- $11,000 O runs in the top of harm more people. 100 Years,” marks Molalla’s 100th birthday. and private pilot. “The multipli- the east or west after liftoff to Gooding has dreamed about the sit- The commission meets at 8:30 a.m. the It’s something law officers scenario had played out in Good- usually not in the ployees. The Molalla High School band marched, candy er effect of those dollars in a avoid overfl ying Charbonneau first Friday of each month in the confer- hope never happens, but if it Now small teams of offi- uation: two outs, with the score tied ing’s mind, when she reached first middle of the the fifth inning” to surge ahead 5-1, “We’re pretty much asking the 2002 Chevy S-10 Ext Cab 2WD community can be four or fi ve in the final inning of an important does, they must be prepared cers go in as quickly as possi- was tossed to kids from the floats, and horses, trac- See AIRPORt / Page A6 base, she didn’t realize the game group hugs, I’m citizens what they think about the ence room of the Public Works times what the transaction was game and a full count with the sold 4 cylinder, automatic, canopy. ble to hunt the shooter down A Milwaukie woman is was actually over. usually on the outside.” Please see WORLD SERIES, pg. A2 services the city is providing,”e c ity’s Department on North Redwood Street. to deal with it. tors, log trucks and the Buckeroo Stage Coach kept on its face. Then that goes out bases loaded. $14,000 “I thought we were just going to Representing the Latin America Very clean. The public is welcome. WednesdaysAnd more officers are and stop further violence. facing charges following a Wednesdays people entertained. The Kiddies Parade on July 3 WednesdaysSPOKeSMAN PHOtO: JOSH KULLA and buys apartments, houses, Wednesdays Gooding, a member of the Tu- Wednesdays said Brittney Jeffries, th the Aurora Jet Center is a hub of activity for those traveling in and out of keep going,” said Gooding, who is region, Puerto Rico fell behind 1-0 new public affairs officer. “Essen- STK#1258A1 being trained for that situa- The new training quickly crash on Oregon 213 north of food, automobiles, everything.” alatin City Major All-Stars, was put 2006 Escape XLT was also a huge success. Hand helped host a recent the Willamette Valley. one of five Newbergll-star players team. “Then on the tially, the citizens are our bosses, 2009 Toyota Camry LE puts small teams of trained Molalla Wednesdaytwo that people sent SEE: PARADE Photos, Page 10 Retired Wasco County Sheriff Bill Bell served as the top in that very position Sunday at the tion through programs like tour of the Aurora Airport cooperative a and we want to be able to serve V-6, leather interior, moonroof, CD the interagency active shoot- first responding officers into to the hos- lawman in that county from 1968 to 1971 before taking a Little League Softball World Series 4 cylinder, automatic, full power job with the state police academy. He rode on a patrol them as best we can.” Newsplayer. Classifieds er response training conduct- quick action, using adapta- pital. and came through, drawing a walk The survey also calls on re- equipment, only Fire district Berenice with Wilsonville police last week as part of Marquis Care STK#1184A ed over 2 ½ weeks recently in tion of tested military tactics. Wilsonville’s “New Chapters” program for its residents. spondents to rank city services on 41,000 miles. $10,000 Marin- Canby and Oregon City. They no longer clump their perceived level of impor- STK#1444A $16,000 imposes burn ban About 165 area law together in the center of the Avilez, 26, must have made tance and asks which actions they was an impact be- 2007 F-150 Crew Cab Lariat hall, easy targets. They hug would be more likely to support Canby Fire District 62 has enacted enforcement officers went arraigned Creator of the ‘CON’cause ticket sales 5.4, automatic, leather interior, CD, to address possible funding short- 2006 Chevrolet Aveo

through the program initiat- the walls, leapfrogging each By JOHN BAKeR for this year have F150s 7 And $9,000 This Miss Don’t a burn ban due to dry hot conditions in really think that being counselors is what we do. falls, including reducing the level excellent condition. other as they advance on the n Canby Pamplin Media Group already sur- The ban includes: ed by Clackamas County Clackamas NDPD officers make their mark at CampAnd when Rosenbaum they see us in uniform on Friday, of city services or raising taxes or Wednesdays4 cylinder, passed last year’s STK#1220A Criminal Justice Training shooter. They move in fluid County man is their eyes just get huge.” user fees. 2009 Ranger Super Cab 4x4 1. Backyard burning. Few people know that one of the total attendance. survey also asks how resi- 5 speed.

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Council, comprised of com- brainchild “This year, I 4.0 V-6, automatic, power windows and Fusion 1 Explorers 2 2. Agricultural burning. ones. largest pop culture events in Oregon Unique camp for disadvantaged and at-risk youth features police, fire and military personnel as its covert counselors Focus 1 Edges 2

e b een previously dents would prefer to receive in- STK#9220A overlapping z think we could TYLER FRANCKE their families, police, fire, military and housing Delivery Immediate for Ready 3. Land clearing or slash burning. munity police chiefs. of Rose City was created, developed and is run out Reporter locks, only 25,000 miles. The interagency training Court on charges of driving be north of 15,000 Newberg Graphic authority personnel may hav formation from the city (email, The Ban DOES NOT include: Nine agencies were repre- Comic Con of small-town Canby. with unpleasant memories. Johns said under the influence of intoxi- Long-time Canby resident Ron Brister with perhaps as [email protected] associated social media, phone calls, texts, STK#9256A1 1. Recreational burning (e.g., cook- sented – Oregon State Police, allows officers from different the city wants your help many as 22,000 at etc.) and includes eight basic de- $15,980 cants, reckless driving, knows, though. He’s the driving force be- a week at Camp Rosenbaum can and does often

the Clackamas County agencies to all get on the MODELS 2013 REMAINING 19 ing fires, backyard pits.) Use extreme fourth-degree assault and hind Rose City Comic Con, a pop culture the top end,” More than a decade ago, Newberg-Dundee go a long way toward changing those para- mographic questions regarding Sheriff’s Office and police same page as far as tactics, delight that highlights words, art and cre- Brister said. $5,000 2007 Edge SEL Plus FWD caution. Recreational fires should be recklessly endangering the Wilsonville seeks Police Department Sgt. Gwen Johns was asked digms. respondents’ living arrangements, supervised and fully extin- More than 165 police officers Kitzmiller said. ativity in one fun, family-oriented pack- Why the constantly departments from Canby, life of another. She is being by then Deputy Chief Brian Casey if she would “I think it really helps us build that level of employment status, age group, in- Leather interior, panorama roof, CD age. growth in a con- Weekly2008 Civic Hybrid Readers Weeklyunderwent specialized train-ReadersOregon City, Milwaukie, held in Weeklythe Clackamas Readers volunteersWeekly to help Readers RON BRISteR Weekly Readers Weekly Readerstrust and respect that they may not have had be- come level, marital status, gender POLICE, Page 18 be interested in participating in Camp Rosen- $19.980 player and more. guished before leaving. READ: It’s about comics, man. But it’s about vention that, to and ethnicity. 96,000 ing at Canby High School Gladstone, Molalla, West County Jail. baum, a weeklong camp for at-risk youth livingn. fore,” she said. “They’ve seen us invest in them Automatic, navigation, leather, 2. Ceremonial fires or small fires , simulating an with pedestrian and more than that. And yes, dressing up as a “We tried to cover as much as STK#9299A recently Linn and Sandy. The two victims were hos- in public housing each year at the Oregon Na- and their future, and they realize that we care 2007 Honda Civic EX Coupe used for religious or ceremonial pur- on a school building. super hero or comic book fi gure is just the outsider, seems to be nothing more possible without it being too very nice car. assault pitalized after suffering non- bike counting survey fi ne. That’s the way this “con” rolls. than comic books, T-shirts and memora- tional Guard’s Camp Rilea near Warrento about them and.” just want to give back to our 4 cylinder, 5 speed, moonroof, CD player poses that have a permit issued by the Not sure exactly what to expect of the expe- communities lengthy,” Jeffries said.ay be found on- STK#1237A life-threatening injuries, Created in 2012, this year’s second edi- bilia? Because it covers so much more y m 2013 Ken Howell, also an NDPD officer, is anoth- The surve and more. Low miles! Canby Fire District. Photos by Ray Hughey police said. By JOSH KULLA tion will be Sept. 21-22 at the Oregon Con- than Conan, Wolverine and the latest in- rience, Johns agreed to give it a try. And she’s The Spokesman line at the city’s website, If conditions worsen, Canby Fire Games ...... 8 Marin-Avilez was driving a vention Center and is expected to see a carnation of Superman. And people like been back almost every year since. er Rosenbaum regular, who volunteered at the STK#9328

Submitted photo / Newberg Graphic $16,000 Year Model Clearance! camp earlier this summer for his eighth year. www.newbergoregon.gov. For may ban all burning. Toyota pickup on South dramatic increase in attendance from last that. “I was hooked,” she said. Obituaries...... 9 Rogge. Photo by Cindy Fama The city of Wilsonville “Comic cons are interesting because Howell subbed in for Johns the one year she was more information, contact Jeffries The Arts ...... 2 Union Mills Road at about Left: TEAM Director Jenifer Hood (left) and “gun totin’ Mayor” Debbie year. A 42-year-old nonprofit organization, Camp Community...... 11 wants your help. “Last year we were in a smaller space you have a group of people that feel se- To protect, serve and make camp awe- unable to participate, and he became just as at 503-537-1201 or brittney. $13,000 Rosenbaum draws its counselors each summer 37,500 Circulation 5,400 CirculationThe Voice ...... 4 6:383,500 p.m. when she drove Circulation The3,500 city is looking for volun- Circulation 3,500 Circulation 4,960 CirculationSgt. Gwen Johns, also known as “Pelé,” Photo by Eddie Hartrampf and it was our fi rst year, so we were hop- cure in a large cluster of people,” Bris- from the ranks of the Oregon National Guard as some — “hooked” as she. Please see CAMP, pg. A2 [email protected]. The Buzz...... 8 445029.072413 through a stop sign at the Patriotic girls, including the Miss Clackamas County Queen USA. teers to assist with an upcom- Above: ing for 1,000 people,” Brister said. “We See COMIC CON / Page A7 well as police and fire agencies and housing au- poses with one of her campers at the conclusion of this $13,000 INSIDE intersection with Oregon 213. ing bicycle and pedestrian ended up with 4,100 that fi rst weekend.” year’s Camp Rosenbaum, which was held the last week thorities across the state.nerally But d theon’t campers find out don’t what The pickup she was driving count that ultimately is aimed The formula Brister and his army of of July at the Oregon National Guard’s Camp Rilea near at helping the city develop SPOKeSMAN PHOtO: JOSH KULLA know that; they ge 2002 SVT Lightning crashed into a Ford SUV friends, family and volunteers are using counselors “really” do for a living until the Warrenton. more effective bicycle and pe- their Very nice Lightning, low miles and in 454508.022614 driven by Alfredo Mendoza destrian amenities through last day of camp, when they appear in uniform. INDEX “Pamplin Media Group’s pledge is to deliver balanced Quintero, 51, of Canby. the city. The count will be held Bicycles use roads, sure, but they also utilize the city’s network of ” “The kids are so funny,” Johns said. “They Serving Newberg, Dundee, St. Paul and excellent condition. news that refl ects the stories of our communities. Eastern Yamhill County since 1888 CRASH, Page 2 during the week of Sept. 10-15 trails and parks, such as the trail that runs across Boeckman Creek. The St. Paul, Dundee and Newberg LEADER in news PUBLIC SAFETY A8 A9 READ: Thank you for readingDR. our ROBERT newspapers. B. PAMPLIN JR. RELIGION A14 STK#9226A See COUNt / Page A10 — OWNER & NEIGHBOR A & L A13A5 Night of the Moon exhibit to BUSINESS SPORTS Milestones —7 12 CLASSIFIED ADS B1 VIEWPOINT A4 Subscribe today! COMMUNITY BRIEFS A10 What’s Up —3 Sports —8 4 Schools & Kids ...... 14 CALL 503-266-6831 feature Japanese artworks Voices & Opinion ...... 9 Sports ...... 18 Opinion — 4 Communities —9 Business ...... 11 The Big to-do ...... “Pamplin Media Group’s Copper kimonos and fine-art prints from two artists $18,000 Senior Life— 5 Classifi eds ...... pledge is to deliver balanced age A13 news that reflects the stories will highlight different aspects of the— LandP of the INSIDE ommunities. Thank INSIDE of our c 24315 S. 99E • Canby • 503-266-2097 • www.canbyford.com you for reading our Rising Sun at the cultural center newspapers.”

DR. ROBERT B. PAMPLIN JR. OWNER AND NEIGHBOR

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Y K $1.00 CentralOregonian Page 12 Wednesday,August 14, 2013 Crash critically VOL. CXXXI — NO. 71 Vol. 108 No. 49 Two sections, 24 pages OFFICIAL OF CROOK COUNTY SEPTEMBER 2012 • ONLINE AT SWCOMMCONNECTION.COM • NO. 233 • FREE injures chief of PRINEVILLE, OREGON, FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 2013 J.C. ambulance 50 CENTS Glass halfLocal author publishes e-memoirfull about life, death and love By Holly M. Gill Crook County’s average weekly wage News Editor By DREW DAKESSIAN The chief of the Jefferson County Emergency Medical Walden state at an average of $1,101 per Th e Connection Services, Don Heckathorn, 64, was critically injured Aug. week, while Multnomah County Chastity Glass is beautiful. 8, when his motorcycle was struck by a car on U.S. High- ranks higherincome than make more onmost average averages of $988, the Benton stateCounty Her blonde hair falls in waves, just barely grazing her way 97, at Dover Lane. than most the state’s other coun- $918, and Crook County $908. All tanned shoulders. She wears glasses, sometimes, and her un- Heckathorn, who has managed JCEMS since March confident ■ Among all 36 counties ties. four counties exceed the state lined face is rarely without a small, comforting smile. She A recent report compiled by the 2007, was northbound on the highway around 3 p.m., average wage of $871 per week, looks like she could be a surfer, or possibly a librarian. the local weekly wage U.S. Department of Labor’s when an eastbound 1996 Cadillac, driven by Gerald Scott but three of them fall short of the What sets her apart from the scores of other blonde, tan Bureau of Labor and Statistics Green, 36, of Prineville, failed to stop at the stop sign on ranked fourth in the $1,000-per-week national average. and happy 30-somethings from California is a poem tat- Dover Lane, and collided with Heckathorn's motorcycle. about revealed that Crook County ranks Crook County Economic tooed on her right forearm: According to Oregon State Police, which is investigat- Fourth Quarter 2012 fourth in weekly wage among all RUSS Development Manager Russ DEBOODT “i am scared ing the crash, Heckathorn, who was riding a 2012 Harley 36 counties for Fourth Quarter of being scared… Jason Chaney 2012, and second out of the 31 Deboodt attributes the higher Davidson motorcycle and wearing a helmet, sustained WAGES, page A7 and so, Bowman counties with fewer than 75,000 See life-threatening injuries, and was transported by Lifeflight I am not to St. Charles Bend. Green was not injured. residents. Crook County may have one of Washington County tops the even if i am.” No citations had been issued as of Monday. She was 27 years old, living in Hollywood and recently The Jefferson County Sheriff's Office, JCEMS, Jeffer- the highest unemployment rates legislation in Oregon, but those who earn an dumped when she met Anthony Glass, a handsome video son County Fire Department, and Oregon Department of editor who worked at her offi ce. Th ey were instantly attract- Transportation assisted at the scene. The highway was ed to each other, exchanging poetic and increasingly fl irta- Susan Matheny/The Pioneer closed for nearly an hour, and investigatorson page 3 remained at See Ambulance tious emails and quickly falling in love. Just a few months after they started dating, their love story, a story of what she calls “that young 20s love when you start making plans,” was unexpectedly and indelibly altered. FIRED UP ABOUT He was diagnosed with stage III colon cancer. Debris is strewn across U.S. Highway 97 on Aug. 8, at the scene of a crash that critically injured City signs When he told her, she didn’t think twice about whether to Madras resident Don Heckathorn, chief of Jefferson County Emergency Medical Services. stay with him: they were in this together. documents “When Anthony was going through treatment, we would call each other co-patient,” she said. “You really do sort of Patriotic Pet FIRE COVERAGE become one, making sure the medication has been taken at to finalize the right time…I’m doing everything except for fi ghting the disease.” Jensen Th e two got engaged. Although she knew that he was in Crawdad Fest the fi ght of his life, she believed he would win, until she realized he could not. settlement “It wasn’t as simple as a cold; I knew it was going to be a Saturday at hard road, but I didn’t know just how hard,” she said. “Espe- cially with him being 30, we continued on this young, new By Holly M. Gill love phase…and then the cancer never got better.” News Editor ddresses Knowing that their time together in life was running out, RAMONA MCCALLISTER/CENTRAL Walden a OREGONIAN Culver park an G reg a r ound sm ng Congres ders d uri they moved up the date of their wedding and got married The Madras City Coun- iness l ea day. local b us st Wednes on July 26, 2006. Even though he was too weak to get out cil finalized details of a ting this la table mee of bed, he said that it was the best day of his life. The Culver Crawdad Festival kicks off at 8 a.m. Sat- lawsuit settlement agree- Th e next morning, at the age of 31, he died. urday in at Veteran's Memorial Park in Culver, and the ment with Paul Jensen, 69, Glass sought comfort from the person who had always celebration will last all day with plenty of activities for of Madras, at a special ■ Congressman Greg been able to make her feel better, Anthony himself. folks to enjoy. meeting at 7 a.m. Aug. 7. The day starts like all celebrations should, and that's Walden discussed the bill “Th e day he died, I needed to be reminded that Iwas The settlement finally loved,” Glass said, tearing up in spite of herself. “”For with the Redneck Obstacle Course. The five-kilometer resolved the lawsuit, which during a round table (3.2 miles) course will feature mud pits, haystack Christmas, he kept every single email we had ever written dated back to 2006, when meeting with local Photo by VERN UYETAKE to each other and made a book of it. And so when he died, climbing, crawling under both barb and hot wire,Madras live- the city Prineville King City Sherwood SE Portland stock trough plunge and a tire climb. SW PortlandSee GLASS, page 8 tried to al Chastity Glass, author of the e-memoir “even business owners this week nter. A tot Cost to register is $35, and the evict RAMONA MCCALLISTER/CENTRALmunity ce OREGONIAN if i am.” with her husband Grant Roesler. Butte com event begins at 8 a.m. at the Culver Jensen he Powell Ramona McCallister eeting at t High School sports from vening’s m Central Oregonian Tuesday e fields. proper- nts during utte reside The parade will start e Powell B ng. ty he When Congressman Greg Walden dresses th he meeti at 10 a.m., with entries begin- ranger ad attended t had sat down with Prineville business Scott G residents CCFR District calls ning to line up at 8:30 a.m., and the ommunity added. “The first thing we need to do, Monthly Monthly leased Tuesdays35 c & Fridays Monthly Wednesdays of 1 owners this week, he stressed that The CCFR District has three sta- Monthly crawdad dinner will start being served at is we need to decide how we think at the the three big national issues right 11 a.m. Holly M. Gill/The Pioneer Madras this ought to be handled — what’s tions, and covers 450 square Paul Jensen now are the debt ceiling, govern- ■ A large number of Powell The dinner features watermelon, pota- airport best for the district or for the commu- miles. Ninety percent of the calls ment funding, and the Farm Bill. Butte residents voiced their for service within the District come toes, onions, lemons, corn bread and a for 28 The round table meeting was nity of Powell Butte.” jing and then we just met and started working soft drink, and of course, a Cajun-style ren- Powell Butte resident Scott from the area of the Prineville sta- together in 2007, and just have been working years. organized by Prineville-Crook frustrations over fire dition of crawdads. Abby, a German shepherd mix dog adopted from the Jefferson County The city alleged that Granger pointed out that he had spo- tion. Powell Butte accounted for Olympic fencerknown as thetrains Oregon Fencing Alliance. in Southwesttogether ever since,” she said. County Chamber Director Holli Van The cost for the dinner is $8/plate. Kennel by A. Johnson, of Madras, was one of many dogs participating in coverage in their area ken with Crook County Fire Chief 2.9 percent of the total calls for Zagunis trained with three-time world Although Hunt had no previous fencing ex- Jensen, who had owned Wert, and other topics included From 9 a.m.-5 p.m., a dutch oven cook-off showcas- Matt Smith earlier, and Smith was the district last year, which is up .2 perience, he did extensive research to pinpoint the fundraising Pet Parade and Costume Contest at Sahalee Park on and operated an aerial Walden’s Bowman Dam legislation, Mariel Zagunis was the fi rst women’s saber champion Ed Korfanty and went on to win a es the culinary skills of local rustic chefs. The main Ramona McCallister asked not to attend the gathering by percent from the previous year. exactly what a fencer like Zagunis would need Saturday. See additional photos and information on page 10. crop-dusting business on his forest legislation, the economy, Central Oregonian fencer to hold the Olympic title, the fi rst Amer- gold medal at the 2004 Summer Olympics in dish judging will be at 1 p.m., and a pie eating contest the meeting organizers. This station logged 13,148 man leased property at the air- and the effects of these issues on ican fencer to win a Gold Metal in a century Athens. from a cross training regimen. will also take place at that time.on The page bread 6 judging will Granger thought Smith should hours in this period of time. After graduating from the University of “You have this idea in your mind of what the See Crawdad port since 1978, was be- the local economy. n Tuesday evening, 135 and the most decorated fencer in the history hind on his rent, which at Powell Butte residents have been invited, and several other The Juniper Canyon substation 11,520 Notre Dame, she was determined to be as sport is and you know that they’re carrying a Photo by DREW DAKESSIAN 46,560 8,880 Walden commented that he does- 8,400 26,400 of USA Fencing. In July, she was nominated Powell Butte residents concurred, 1203 accounted for 129 calls in 30,000 that time was $150 per n’t anticipate a lot of roadblocks to gathered to air their frus- to serve as fl ag bearer for the U.S. delegation at equipped as possible for the 2008 Summer sword…For me, it was more how tournaments adding that since they were not month. his current Bowman legislation. trations about fire cover- 2012, and 5.5 percent of the total the 2012 Summer Olympics in London. Olympics in Beijing, so she started cross train- were structured, how long points were, the Muriel Zagunis (right) with Josh Hunt. In December 2006, a “I actually feel really good about age in the Powell Butte authorities on firefighting, he should call volume for the district, with a She is also a native of Beaverton who cross- ing with Southwest Portland strength and con- Jefferson County Circuit have been present. decrease of .5 percent. Station See OLYMPIAN, page 14 it,” he said. “The community is Ocommunity. trains in Southwest Portland. ditioning specialist Josh Hunt. Court jury found that his In 2011, a similar meeting was Reprimands Beamer very supportive of what we are One of the key organizers, Art 1203 logged 13,148 man hours in Zagunis, 27, has been fencing since she was “I was like, I need to do something outside lease had given him unlim- called by the community to address doing. We just passed it once unani- Proctor, opened the meeting by point- the frame of time. 10 years old when her older brother’s interest of my fencing training to prepare me for Bei- ited renewal options, and similar concerns. The two biggest dif- support from the hospital mously in the House, and we just ing out that Powell Butte pays Monthly Readers in sword fi ghting prompted their mother to Monthly Readers restored his original Monthly Readers Weekly Readers Weekly Readersferences between that meeting and board. passed it again without objection in approximately 22 percent of the tax page A5 sign them bothMonthly up for lessons at the club now Readers known within the system. "It was all pretty disap- monthly payment of $75, See COVERAGE, After investigating the na- which meant that he had the House Resources Committee. Its base that goes into Crook County Medical boardately placedtakes on administra- no actionpointing and I don't know if bipartisan support then and now, Fire and Rescue. ture of my misdoing, they never been behind on rent. after a tive leave and later dis- I will ever fully understand and we hope to get it across the “We’re not getting 22 percent,” he missed for taking a con- found nothing disqualified Jensen, who declined to 24-hour me from employment and the motivation behind the House floor this fall early. It should By Holly M. Gill trolled substance. comment on the settle- WALDEN shift in hired me as a clinic physi- process," said Beamer. See , page A9 News Editor The hospital board took While he realizes that ment, had previously ex- the ER, cian at the prison in plained that the low rent TIF grant pays teachers no action to suspend his One year after an error in from Pendleton," he said. he must be accountable for privileges, and instead his actions, he said, "I was was due to the expensive 4,800 Circulation 19,400 Circulation Aug. 3 to Expressing gratitude for 3,500 Circulation 11,000 Circulation judgment disrupted3,700 the long Circulation awaited a decision from improvements he was re- 12,500 Circulation Aug. 4, most relieved that fairness Incentive Fund (TIF), and honorable medical ca- the Oregon Board of Med- the job, Beamer said that, quired to make to the prop- reer of Dr. Leland "Bud" 2012. "Things have worked out and justice is still alive in Juniper Canyon residents for putting in whichextra is part of effortthe ical Examiners. erty, which included con- Beamer, the Oregon Board Beam- very well," despite being the medical system and CLASS project. Even though he had that we can be judged on structing a hangar, in- ■ The amount of teachers that Last year, the district of Medical Examiners has er, who away from his home and stalling a septic tank, and hadDr. Bud worked as a physician for an individual basis." received compensation increased had one teacher meet the decided that Beamer will 40 years, Beamer found farm several days a week. grading, paving and fenc- have fire safetyCentral concerns Oregonian worked "I don't have night call "To have spent a career threshold for evaluation keep his medical license. Beamer himself out of a job. ing the property, which online article. significantly from last year In a recent vote, the for 33 and I'm off on weekends in a community and shared “We were prom- payoff. "After six months of re- so many experiences to- amounted to about ■ An escape route that leads “You had to be 100 per- board unanimously decid- years as and can attend gatherings, $175,000. ised an ‘escape route’ a physician and surgeon alizing that everything that gether and to now have the Ramona McCallister cent distinguished in the ed to take no action weddings, and the funerals Between May 16, 2006, residents to the Post-Paulina to the State Park Central Oregonian with Madras Medical we had worked for was strength of relationships previous year,” explained against Beamer, but repri- about to be turned over to that I used to only hear when the city cut off sewer Highway via an unimproved (Prineville Reservoir) JAYEL Group before going to prove to be such a powerful and over to the Hayden. manded him for his lapse the bank, I found work about while working the to the property, and the HAYDEN work in the ER, was con- force has been a most (Bowman) Dam,” the For the past three years, Crook Teacher assessments in judgment. with the Department of ER," he said. December jury decision, road has been designated Just over a year ago, cerned about his seriously Beamer is still perplexed unique and meaningful commenter, County School District has been part of are scored on a rating ill dog, and took a vial of Corrections," he said. time for myself and fami- on page 5 Jason Chaney a grant that focuses on teacher perform- scale, based on four per- Beamer was put on admin- "At 70 years of age and by what he considered "the See Jensen later_Peter, stated. istrative leave from his posi- ketamine home in case the excessiveness of the ly," he said. "There is such Central Oregonian “We are promised MIKE ance and evaluation, and the results formance levels — one to dog needed pain relief. under investigation, I a thing as a silver lining." this every time there MCCABE have monetary payoffs for local teach- level four. These include ineffective, tion as an emergency room could not find work else- charges that were filed doctor at the former Moun- On Monday, Aug. 6, against me," and the lack of As hot and dry summer weather is an election, and ers. basic, proficient, and distinguished. where. I had worked at Level 3 represents a proficient educator. tain View Hospital, where 2012, Beamer returned the takes hold in Crook County, fire safe- yet a major fire near At the July School Board meeting, unused medication to the Deer Ridge and was the bottom of the hill traps half the he had worked since 2007. ty concerns have again returned to CCSD Human Resource Director Jayel See TEACHERS, page A7 The action resulted from hospital, but was immedi- the forefront. Prineville population.” Hayden reported that 145 instructors an incident that occurred Serving Jefferson County since 1904 Among those concerns for Juniper As it turns out, an escape route received some sort of compensation from has been designated for people living Madras, Oregon • 541-475-2275 Canyon-area residents is what evac- the funds derived from the Teacher in Juniper Canyon if a wildfire takes uation options they have available in www.madraspioneer.com EVACUATION, page A10 the event of a major wildfire. One See person recently expressed such con- 5 cerns in the comment section of a 8 08805 93136 The Central Oregonian (USPS 098-060) is owned and published by Pamplin Communications every Tuesday and Friday at 558 North Main Street, Prineville, OR 97754. Periodicals postage paid C M at Prineville, OR, 97754. POSTMASTER: send address changes to Central Oregonian the Central Oregonian, 558 North Main St. Prineville, OR 97754. Y K 558 N. Main St. Prineville, OR 97754 Phone: (541) 447-6205 Fax: (541) 447-1754

C M

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Will Levenson (left) and Travis 13 weeks – $34 per column inch Williams, executive director of Willamette Riverkeeper, organized July 26 weeks – $30 per column inch 31’s Big Float event on the Willamette River. They hope to change the way Portlanders 52 weeks – $26 per column inch relate to the river, which is safer for swimming now that the city’s Big Pipe sewage overflow project 11”-59” weekly ad TWO is completed. TRIBUNE FILE PHOTO: CHRISTOPHER ONSTOTT 13 weeks – $30 per column inch County ISSUES! shelves 26 weeks – $28 per column inch library 52 weeks – $24 per column inch ONE More2011 district – PAGE 2 & 3 Supporters still THAT’S SO PORTLAND hope to convince ■ Portland stays weird PRICE! Streetcar 'concierge' commission for ■ The Rose City made a few unusual waves as ■ Top 5 stories 60” plus weekly ad Occupy Portland moves on May vote on plan Look closer and you’ll agree that ■ Top 5 non-stories it floated through a turbulent and eventfulPortland is still weirder 2011 than even The By STEVE LAW New York Times — which seems ob- Sam isn't running The Tribune STORY BY sessed with us as the “New Brooklyn” ■ Trib makes a difference — understands. And the number and Cracking down on Crack Alley With new polls showing TRIBUNE STAFF 13 weeks – $28 per column inch variety of stories we covered in the ■ History repeats itself local voters are resistant past year makes it clear that the city to any property tax in- cannot be easily classified. Blazers head for the exits n the surface, 2011 was the creases right now, Mult- See if you don’t agree after reading year that Portland went nomah County Chair Jeff our year-end roundup. mainstream, thanks in Cogen has decided against putting a li- large part to two network Portland stays weird code violations are only investigated 26 weeks – $26 per column inch brary dis- O once a citizen complaint is filed. Turns trict on the TV series. ■ Inner tube party on the river out, more than a few people have be- May pri- “Portlandia” on IFC pokes gentle Hundreds of Portlanders grabbed gun using the complaint-driven system mary bal- fun at our foodies, bike fanatics, old- inner tubes and paddled across the to carry out personal grudges and — lot. school feminists and even Mayor Sam Willamette River on July 31, in an who would have thought that? — gain Cogen’s Adams — or a reggae bass-playin’ ver- event billed by organizers as The Big a little business advantage, as the Tri- 52 weeks – $22 per column inch bow to politi- sion of Sam Adams. Float. Organizers Will Levenson and bune showed in its Snitch City series cal reality is NBC’s fantasy/cop drama “Grimm” Travis Williams, both leaders of the this fall. causing a gut showcases the region’s breathtaking Willamette Riverkeeper group, want- Nothing says Portland better than scenery, older buildings and Crafts- ed Portlanders to think of the once- food carts, and complaints against food SUMRALL check for li- brary boost- man-style houses we almost take for heavily polluted river as a place to cart operators and the properties on granted. swim again. which the carts sit have become ers, who had high hopes of Our fame is now so great that ■ Not-so-happy meals See 2011 / Page 2 gaining a permanent and “Leverage,” the TNT series filmed Short of revenue for its inspection dedicated source of property here for several seasons but set in teams, Portland, like many cities, re- TRIBUNE PHOTO: CHRISTOPHER ONSTOTT taxes for the county library Boston, is officially moving its fiction- lies on a complaint-driven system. City Portland Tribune Sample Ad Rates system. Protesters held their ground Nov. 13 as al crew of lovable grifters to Portland Cogen wants to ask voters police tried to evict between 200 and 400 next season. to renew the temporary li- Occupy Portland campers at Chapman and brary levy that expires June Lownsdale squares near City Hall. 30, at the current rate of 89 cents per $1,000 in assessed property value, so it won’t be considered a tax increase. Fifteenth of a page – 3.5”wide x 4”tall That leaves the heavily used library system without mon- ey to cover inflation and the costs of servingbranches new library for the next three years, likely Metro arycaught in Beaverton. Metro pur- in natural tangle 13 times – $272 per week “People causing re- chased the property in 2009 for are feeling duced branch Regional agency has $6.6 million, then received au- hours and thorization to spend about $3 broke, and staffing. thousands of acres but million more to build a nature “It’s a big they’re few bucks for projects center building, gardens, park- shift for us to ing, a children’s playground, 26 times – $240 per week feeling be thinking of bike racks and 3.5 miles of grav- scared. supporting an By JIM REDDEN el trails. 89-cent levy The Tribune Bottom The park is visited by thou- with staffing sands of people a year. line, I don’t cuts and serv- Metro owns a tree farm. Both properties were bought The regional government did think this ice reduc- with bond money approved by 52 times – $208 per week tions, com- not buy the farm to sell the voters in Multnomah, Washing- is the right pared to what trees. It is a large part of ton and Clackamas counties. time.” we had our Chehalem Ridge, a 1,143-acre Voters authorized a $136 million sights focused piece of property Metro bought bond sale in 1995 to protect nat- — Jeff Cogen, on,” says Mer- in 2010 for $6.1 million to pre- County chair ural areas and complete trails. ris Sumrall, serve as a natural area. A $227 million bond measure to But there is little natural chief execu- continue the work was ap- about the neat rows of identical- proved by voters in 2006. Metro TRIBUNE FILE PHOTO: JAIME VALDEZ 5.375”wide x 5”tall tive officer of The Eighth page ad – sized trees that cover much of Library Foundation. The has so far purchased around the land in Washington County. 11,000 acres of property foundation, which already Restoring it to natural condition has raised more than throughout the region. Nearly will take millions of dollars, $70 million was set aside for lo- $230,000 to run the library money that Metro currently Metro authorized a controlled burn in Cooper Mountain Nature Park in September to kill invasive plants district campaign, has sought cal governments. and encourage the return of native species. The property was bought and developed by Metro, which does does not have. But the measures did not stable library funding for 13 times – $450 per week The benefits of preserving not have enough money to do the same on all of the other natural lands it owns. many years. and enhancing natural areas See METRO / Page 7 Sumrall called an emer- can be seen at Cooper Mountain See LIBRARY / Page 8 Nature Park, a 231-acre sanctu- 26 times – $420 per week 52 times – $360 per week

Portland Tribune Quarter page ad – 5.375”wide x 10”tall Published every Tuesday and Thursday 13 times – $900 per week www.portlandtribune.com 26 times – $840 per week • GROWING READERSHIP – Loyal weekly readers. More 52 times – $720 per week than 179,000 people read the Tribune every week. Bulk Contract Rates • Covering general local news, sports and entertainment 65” within 12 months - $38.00 per column inch specific to the Portland market 135” within 12 months - $36.00 per column inch 250” within 12 months - $34.00 per column inch Weekly Readership: 200,000 plus 80,000 Circulation- Tuesday & Thursday combined Color Rates – Tuesday and Thursday Combo Space Reservation Full Color - $395 Spot Color - $145 Tuesday Tribune - Noon, Tuesday, one week prior Non-Profit Rate Thursday Tribune - Noon, Thursday, one week prior Non-profit advertising rates - $34.00 per column inch Mktg/Rate Cards/2013/PMG Rates 100413 Mktg/Rate Cards/2013/PMG WEEKLY NEWSPAPERS

Lotsa Hugs YOUR ONLINE LOCAL Portland band has the Portland Tribune tonic for winter blues New and improved? DAILY NEWS — LIFE, B3 Revamped Blazers’ lineup www.portlandtribune.com Readership sparks optimism for West race— SPORTS, B8 www.portlandtribune.com • Offering enterprise reporting that attracts readers who are TribuneNONDAILY PAPER • WWW.PORTLANDTRIBUNE.COM • PUBLISHED THURSDAY Portland• TICE CHOSEN THE NATION’S BEST THURSDAY, DECEMBER 22, 2011 affluent, highly educated and committed to understanding

Will Levenson 200,000 (left) and Travis Williams, local Portland issues executive director of Willamette Riverkeeper, Weekly Readers organized July 31’s Big Float event on the • Covering general local news, sports and entertainment Willamette River. They hope to change the way Portlanders relate to the river, which is specific to the Portland market EVERY TUESDAY & THURSDAY safer for swimming now that the city’s Big Pipe sewage overflow project is completed. TRIBUNE FILE PHOTO: CHRISTOPHER ONSTOTT • Named the nation’s best non-daily newspaper in 2003 and AD & COPY DEADLINE County 2007 shelves TUESDAY PAPER: TUESDAY NOON library • A 2007 survey by Market Decisions found that newspaper district THURSDAY PAPER: THURSDAY NOON Supporters still More2011 readers considered the Portland Tribune to be more THAT’S SO PORTLAND– PAGE 2 & 3 hope to convince commission for ■ The Rose City made a few unusual waves as ■ Portland stays weird Streetcar 'concierge' May vote on plan ■ Top 5 stories trustworthy and respected than Occupy Portland moves on By STEVE LAW it floated through a turbulent and eventfulLook closer and 2011 you’ll agree that Call 503-684-0360 The Tribune Portland is still weirder than even The ■ Top 5 non-stories New York Times — which seems ob- STORY BY Sam isn't running With new polls showing sessed with us as the “New Brooklyn” ■ Trib makes a difference local voters are resistant TRIBUNE STAFF — understands. And the number and Cracking down on Crack Alley to any property tax in- variety of stories we covered in the creases right now, Mult- past year makes it clear that the city ■ History repeats itself nomah County Chair Jeff n the surface, 2011 was the cannot be easily classified. Blazers head for the exits Cogen has decided against year that Portland went See if you don’t agree after reading putting a li- mainstream, thanks in our year-end roundup. brary dis- large part to two network trict on the O Portland stays weird code violations are only investigated May pri- TV series. once a citizen complaint is filed. Turns “Portlandia” on IFC pokes gentle ■ Inner tube party on the river mary bal- Hundreds of Portlanders grabbed out, more than a few people have be- lot. fun at our foodies, bike fanatics, old- gun using the complaint-driven system school feminists and even Mayor Sam inner tubes and paddled across the Cogen’s Willamette River on July 31, in an to carry out personal grudges and — bow to politi- Adams — or a reggae bass-playin’ ver- who would have thought that? — gain sion of Sam Adams. event billed by organizers as The Big cal reality is Float. Organizers Will Levenson and a little business advantage, as the Tri- causing a gut NBC’s fantasy/cop drama “Grimm” bune showed in its Snitch City series showcases the region’s breathtaking Travis Williams, both leaders of the SUMRALL check for li- Willamette Riverkeeper group, want- this fall. brary boost- scenery, older buildings and Crafts- Nothing says Portland better than man-style houses we almost take for ed Portlanders to think of the once- heavily polluted river as a place to food carts, and complaints against food ers, who had high hopes of granted. cart operators and the properties on gaining a permanent and Our fame is now so great that swim again. ■ which the carts sit have become dedicated source of property “Leverage,” the TNT series filmed Not-so-happy meals Short of revenue for its inspection See 2011 / Page 2 taxes for the county library TRIBUNE PHOTO: CHRISTOPHER ONSTOTT here for several seasons but set in system. Boston, is officially moving its fiction- teams, Portland, like many cities, re- Protesters held their ground Nov. 13 as Cogen wants to ask voters al crew of lovable grifters to Portland lies on a complaint-driven system. City police tried to evict between 200 and 400 to renew the temporary li- next season. brary levy that expires June Occupy Portland campers at Chapman and 30, at the current rate of 89 Lownsdale squares near City Hall. cents per $1,000 in assessed property value, so it won’t be Readership considered a tax increase. That leaves the heavily used library system without mon- ey to cover inflation and the www.beavertonvalleytimes.com costs of serving new library branches for the next three years, likely Metro caught in natural tangle “People causing re- ary in Beaverton. Metro pur- are feeling duced branch Regional agency has chased the property in 2009 for hours and $6.6 million, then received au- Zip codes: 97005, 97006, 97007, 97008, 97225, 97229 broke, and staffing. thousands of acres but thorization to spend about $3 they’re “It’s a big million more to build a nature shift for us to few bucks for projects center building, gardens, park- feeling be thinking of ing, a children’s playground, scared. supporting an By JIM REDDEN bike racks and 3.5 miles of grav- 89-cent levy The Tribune el trails. Bottom with staffing The park is visited by thou- line, I don’t cuts and serv- Metro owns a tree farm. sands of people a year. • Average family income in excess of $85,000 think this ice reduc- The regional government did Both properties were bought 16,80 0 tions, com- not buy the farm to sell the with bond money approved by is the right pared to what trees. It is a large part of voters in Multnomah, Washing- time.” we had our Chehalem Ridge, a 1,143-acre ton and Clackamas counties. sights focused piece of property Metro bought Voters authorized a $136 million — Jeff Cogen, on,” says Mer- County chair in 2010 for $6.1 million to pre- bond sale in 1995 to protect nat- ris Sumrall, serve as a natural area. ural areas and complete trails. chief execu- A $227 million bond measure to • Targeted business distribution to every Beaverton Chamber But there is little natural Weekly Readers tive officer of The about the neat rows of identical- continue the work was ap- Library Foundation. The sized trees that cover much of proved by voters in 2006. Metro foundation, which already the land in Washington County. has so far purchased around TRIBUNE FILE PHOTO: JAIME VALDEZ has raised more than Restoring it to natural condition 11,000 acres of property $230,000 to run the library will take millions of dollars, throughout the region. Nearly $70 million was set aside for lo- of Commerce member district campaign, has sought money that Metro currently Metro authorized a controlled burn in Cooper Mountain Nature Park in September to kill invasive plants stable library funding for does not have. cal governments. But the measures did not and encourage the return of native species. The property was bought and developed by Metro, which does many years. The benefits of preserving EVERY THURSDAY not have enough money to do the same on all of the other natural lands it owns. Sumrall called an emer- and enhancing natural areas See METRO / Page 7 can be seen at Cooper Mountain See LIBRARY / Page 8 Nature Park, a 231-acre sanctu- • Recognized as one of Oregon’s best overall weekly newspapers in 2006, 2007 and 2008 by the Oregon Newspaper AD & COPY DEADLINE Publishers Association THURSDAY, NOON • Reach affluent families who place a high value on community Call 503-684-0360

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Yes, they can The Can Men turn Boom! trash into cash The KISN radio ‘good — See NEIGHBORS, B1 guys’ are back — this Readership time on the Web — See inside www.lakeoswegoreview.com Zip codes: 97034, 97035, 97219 THURSDAY, AUGUST 1, 2013 • THE LAKE OSWEGO LEADER IN NEWS FOR 93 YEARS • LAKEOSWEGOREVIEW.COM • VOLUME 100, NO. 31 • 75 CENTS • Recognized as Lake Oswego’s most important information The store will continue to sell wine and 17, 4 0 0 liquor until the building is torn down in July 2014, and there will be a Wizer’s specialty food and wine store when the Wizer’s closing after 65 yearsnew retail section is built, hopefully by 2016. But the source in the City of Lake Oswego’s 2008, 2010 and 2012 change is still mo- “Ever since the Weekly Readers mentous, and The Lake Oswego longtime Wizer’s city announced institution will return customers are the taking the news redevelopment hard. Community Assessment Survey A big chapter in smaller form in “Some were in of Lake that is tears. Some were Oswego’s supposed to new development upset,” Wizer history will end said. “They like happen our when Wizer’s EVERY THURSDAY our selection.” By CLIFF NEWELL Oswego sales have The Review The general re- Market closes action has been decreased. Now When Wizer’s Oswego Market its doors in disbelief. seemed the about three • Offering a paid penetration of more than 50% in our primary closes its doors it will also close an “It’s hard to weeks. But best time to era in Lake Oswego history. imagine down- The supermarket that has been as owner Gene town Lake Oswe- close rather closely associated with this city as any Wizer is go without the already looking than later.” business is fi nally shutting down after Wizer’s store,” — Gene Wizer 65 years, and it won’t be the same in toward the said Chuck market of Lake Oswego. Owner Gene Wizer said future. O’Leary, chief ex- the market on First Street and A Ave- REVIEW PHOTO: ecutive offi cer of VERN UYETAKE the Lake Oswego Chamber of Com- AD & COPY DEADLINE nue is starting a liquidation sale today and will close in three weeks. merce. “The Wizer family has been a Customers have been going there for cherished and integral part of our com- Wizer, calling for building 242 upper- munity, and their generosity in support- generations, and many kids had their end apartments, retail spaces on the would have still kept his store going if ing virtually every local organization fi rst jobs at Wizer’s. Founder Jim Wizer street level and underground parking, and later his son Gene were stalwarts of the city had not announced its redevel- “Now seemed the best time to close plus a courtyard and public walkway. See WIZER’S / Page A4 opment plan for the area. • Serving one of Oregon’s most affluent communities with an the community, the type of people who Wizer will continue to have a strong rather than later.” In May developers and city staffers have made Lake Oswego a good place to Twice before developers were on the presence on First Street and A Avenue. live. Closing the store was not an easy presented a redevelopment plan for verge of buying Wizer’s property and THURSDAY, NOON decision for Gene Wizer. Lake Oswego’s Block 137, owned by starting a new project, but the deals ul- “Ever since the city announced the timately fell through. Wizer said he redevelopment that is supposed to hap- pen our sales have decreased,” he said. average family income of more than $104,000 A daughter of encouragement Call 503-684-0360 Mary Libby Boatwright leaves legacy of compassion at Lake Grove Presbyterian feet of Jesus Christ; she really By CLIFF NEWELL is.” the The Review “Libby is one of those high- energy people,” Eric Rey said. common saying “She has always got her hand about successful into something. She can do so people leaving a po- many things and do them suc- sition is “they leave cessfully.” A Obviously, Boatwright is a guide big shoes to fi ll.” woman of ma- In the case of the Rev. Libby ny talents. Boatwright, And, she said, she is practi- “In all my cally leaving work as a behind a shoe minister, God dog store at Lake has used ev- Grove Presby- erything I’ve terian Church. SUBMITTED PHOTOS: SARAH DEMERRITT ever done.” Boatwright Strangely has worked on enough, it is so many proj- highly unusu- dies Mary, the German shepherd guide dog, was a big part of Lake Oswego for years. ects with such al that Boat- energy, talent wright be- and commit- came a minis- ment that her ter of the Gos- associates sad- pel. She has SUBMITTED PHOTO ■ Remembered as the loyal and friendly companion ly say, “She lived many can’t be re- The Rev. Libby Boatwright is ready lives and placed.” for the next phase of her earned many Boatwright of local resident Patrick Bloedorn, she died last week remarkable life. After 10 years of high academic has left her degrees, but Readership service, she is leaving Lake Grove By EMILY HOARD congregation in her early www.westlinntidings.com Presbyterian Church. The Review in this dilem- ma because, life it seemed she would be any- ary, a German shepherd after 10 years here, she is leav- thing but a minister. Boatwright guide dog, was a loyal work- ing to become the head chap- started out in Rockville Center, er as well as a loving com- lain for the Stanford University N.Y., then hopscotched along panion to Lake Oswego resi- Clinic in Palo Alto, Calif. But with her parents across the country to Pennsylvania, to Zip code: 97068 M she is leaving for the best of dent Patrick Bloedorn for eight and a half years. reasons. God is leading her that New York again, and arrived in She passed away July 24 and will be re- way. California at the same time as “God told me, ‘It’s time to the Brooklyn Dodgers. She membered as a big part of the downtown Patrick go,’” Boatwright said. “Every- earned three degrees in drama Lake Oswego neighborhood. She was very Bloedorn thing worked out so that my and was even a professional active and loyal to Bloedorn, who is blind, and Mary husband, Frank, and I could mime for many years. One of and she always wanted to work. enjoyed “Mary was a confi dent and powerful dog move to California. We put our her most interesting positions hiking all • Recognized as West Linn’s most important information source and everyone in town knew her,” Bloedorn house here up for sale and it was her seven years as stage over the said. sold in two hours. I really want manager for the San Francisco Whenever Bloedorn and Mary were out country. to do hospice work and this will Opera in its golden age, hosting walking, people going by would say hello be a great opportunity to do it.” the greatest opera singers of or honk their horns as they drove by. She Still, Lake Grove Presbyteri- their day — Placido Domingo, 9,360 accompanied Bloedorn everywhere he training. an will not be the same place Joan Sutherland, Beverly Sills. in the City of West Linn’s 2008, 2010 and 2012 Community Over the years, Patrick has had several Boatwright supported all of went, from fundraisers at Safeway to talks bered as a great dog without her. Just ask some of about his blindness who loved her work guide dogs, including Augie, Stewart and her parishioners. these golden voices with her al- with children, and “Mary needs to be and helped Patrick Lyon. After Patrick retired Lyon, he “Libby is a dynamo,” said Jan most heroic versatility. The best from adventures at the live the life he wanted. brought Mary from San Rafael, Calif., and Pearce. “She has done so many example was the time when beach to explorations remembered as a great dog We will miss her so was able to do the training here in Lake wonderful things. She has em- there were no understudies to through caves. Mary much.” Oswego with Lori Brown, a trainer of powered other people and be found to go in for the opera Assessment Surveys Weekly Readers who loved her work and helped Before he was blind, was a lovable dog who guide dogs. Bloedorn had become very ex- found places for them to serve.” “Romeo and Juliet.” Desperate, was at times goofy and Patrick live the life he wanted. Patrick was a ship- perienced and knowledgeable about guide “Libby is invaluable,” said Boatwright got the only person liked to play. She espe- We will miss her so much.” ment foreman at the dogs and how to work with them, so Laurel Mousakis. “She has such available: herself. She tossed on cially loved romping — Sarah DeMerritt cement plant in Lake Brown left when she felt the training was compassion, especially for el- the fancy gown of her character, through the water Oswego. He became suffi cient. derly people. She’s an angel. See LIBBY / Page A4 Bloedorn said he was very in tune with She will be really, really hard to fountain at Millennium blind in 1985 and had to go through train- Plaza Park and she Mary and he could understand her. Mary replace. Libby is the hands and ing for a dog at the California Guide Dogs See MARY / Page A4 • Serving one of Oregon’s most affluent communities with an loved to be petted and hugged. for the Blind campus, which specializes in EVERY THURSDAY Sarah DeMerritt, who works at the A German shepherds and usually requires “Pamplin Media Group’s pledge is to Avenue Safeway, lives with Patrick and the blind person to live at the school for deliver balanced news that re ects the was very attached to Mary as well. stories of our communities. Thank” you She said, “Mary needs to be remem- for reading our newspapers. — DR. ROBERT B. PAMPLIN JR. OWNER & NEIGHBOR CONTACT US By email: [email protected] average family income of more than $93,000 per year By website: lakeoswegoreview.com By mail: P. O. Box 548, Lake Oswego, 97034 INDEX A22 In person: 400 Second St., Lake Oswego A7 Sports ...... B6 By telephone: 503-636-1281 Opinion ...... A16 Entertainment .... B8 By fax: 503-635-8817 Police ...... Business ...... Education...... A18 • Offering a paid penetration of more than 50% in our primary AD & COPY DEADLINE market of West Linn THURSDAY, NOON • Recognized as one of Oregon’s best overall weekly newspapers for its circulation in 2009, 2010 and 2011 Call 503-684-0360

The Times Readership www.tigardtimes.com | www.tualatintimes.com Serving Tigard, Tualatin & Sherwood Zip codes: 97223, 97224, 97062, 97140 12,60 0 • Average family income in excess of $83,000 per year Weekly Readers • Reach affluent families who place a high value on community EVERY THURSDAY • Offering local Tigard, Tualatin and Sherwood news readers can’t find anywhere else AD & COPY DEADLINE • Recognized in 2009, 2010 and 2011 as one of Oregon’s best weekly newspapers by the Oregon Newspaper Publishers THURSDAY, NOON Association Call 503-684-0360 WEEKLY NEWSPAPERS

Gresham Outlook Readership www.theoutlookonline.com Zip codes: 97019, 97024, 97030, 97060, 97080, 97230, 97233, 97236, 97009 24,000 • Oregon’s second largest twice-a-week subscriber newspaper Weekly Readers • Average family income of more than $61,000 per year EVERY TUES. AND FRI. • Named Oregon’s best twice weekly newspapers in 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 and 2010 AD & COPY DEADLINE •Targeted news content focusing on Gresham, Troutdale, TUES. PAPER: THURSDAY, NOON Fairview and Wood Village FRI. PAPER: TUESDAY, NOON Call 503-665-2181

Sandy Post Readership www.sandypost.com Zip codes: 97009, 97011, 97019, 97028, 97049, 97055, 97067 • Largest paid circulation newspaper in Sandy 9,600 - • The award winning Post has served the Sandy community Weekly Readers since 1937 EVERY WEDNESDAY --, • Average family income exceeds $62,000 per year :=-,- • Offering local Sandy news readers can’t find anywhere else AD & COPY DEADLINE THURSDAY, NOON - Call 503-665-2181

Estacada News Readership www.estacadanews.com Zip codes: 97022, 97023 • Paid distribution of more than 50% among single family 5,400 - homes in Estacada Weekly Readers - • Average family income of more than $56,000 per year EVERY THURSDAY :-.=::=.,-::a • Providing Estacada with local news about government, .:.-. . schools and local people AD & COPY DEADLINE • Reaching affluent families who place a high value on THURSDAY, NOON --- community .-----.. Call 503-665-2181

South County Spotlight Readership www.spotlightnews.net Zip codes: 97018, 97051, 97053, 97056 • Paid distribution of more than 50% in the Scappoose area 10,800 • The Spotlight has the largest market share of any newspaper Weekly Readers serving Scappoose EVERY FRIDAY • Paid circulation growth of over 10% in the last three years • The best source for local news and advertising for Scappoose AD & COPY DEADLINE and St. Helens TUESDAY, NOON - Call 503-543-6387 WEEKLY NEWSPAPERS

Canby — Inside this edition: Canby’s annual 3-on-3 basketball tournament, Nothing but Net, filled up the streets around Wait Park Saturday. See stories and photos on page 12, 13 and 15 Herald www.canbyherald.com CanbyHerald Zip codes: 97013, 97002, 97045 Readership

THE CANBY LEADER IN LOCAL NEWS FOR 107 YEARS l JULY 31, 2013 l WWW.CANBYHERALD.COM l VOLUME 107, NO. 31 l $1 ON THE STAND, 50 CENTS HOME DELIVERY • The best single source for local news about Canby and the surrounding Downtown 12,960 areas for over 107 years Weekly Readers parking • Average family income of more that issues get $58,000 per year EVERY wednesday exposure • Offering a paid distribution of over BY RAY HUGHEY [email protected] 50% among single family homes in AD & COPY DEADLINE Members of the Canby business community met July 23 as the Downtown Parking Task Force to our primary market area THURSDAY, NOON address parking issues in the city’s core. “We invited downtown business owners and managers to come together • We also offer a monthly direct to discuss some potential parking Call 503-682-3935 changes,” said Jamie Stickel, manager of the city’s Main Street program. mail publication targeting every Stickel led the session attended byrian about 15 business people. Mayor B Hodson also participated in the meet- ing held in the police department com- household in zip code 97013 munity room. TRAINING to be ready to take care of READ: PARKING, Page 18

Traffic committee up and running BUSINESS Canby High School was the scene of highly The Canby Traffic Safety Commission is up and running after an absence of sev- specialized training that brought about 165 eral years. Mayor Brian Hodson and City Greg Ellis say they hope area law enforcement officials to theement area Administrator Y The law enforc RAY HUGHE this commission will help address some of BY m response to an active shooter @canbyherald.co the city’s traffic issues, research the prob- rhughey situation has changed greatly lem areas, gather input and make recom- ass shootings. since the 1999 Columbine mendations. Tragedies that High School massacre, said The commission consists of Jack occur all too Canby Police Sgt. Doug Pendleton, chairman; Dan Leischner, vice often, in a Kitzmiller, training officer chairman; Bob Backstrom, secretary; Colorado movie for his department and the Leonard Walker, member; Clint Coleman, theater, a interagency workshop. city council liaison; Greg Ellis, city Before Columbine, police M Connecticut ele- — See page 8 administrator; Jerry Nelzen, public works would lock down the shoot- and Jeremy Holstad, mentary school and as close representative; The Buckeroo final standings ing site and call in special InsideCanby policethis officer.edition: to home as a Clackamas units he said. But that gave The commission meets at 8:30 a.m. the shopping mall. the shooter more time to first Friday of each month in the confer- It’s something law officers harm more people. ence room of the Public Works hope never happens, but if it Now small teams of offi- Molalla Department on North Redwood Street. does, they must be prepared cers go in as quickly as possi- The public is welcome.Molalla to deal with it. ble to hunt the shooter down And more officers are and stop further violence. being trained for that situa- The new training quickly tion through programs like puts small teams of trained Pioneer Fire district the interagency active shoot- first responding officers into er response training conduct- quick action, using adapta- ed over 2 ½ weeks recently in Readership tion of tested military tactics. imposes burn ban Canby andG Oregon$1 City. www.molallapioneer.com They no longer clump About 165 area law Canby Fire District 62 has enactedG THE MOLALLA LEADER IN NEWS FOR 100 YEARS together in the center of the a burnG banVOLUME due to dry101, hot NO. conditions 28 enforcement officers went hall, easy targets. They hug PioneerJULY 10, 2013 The ban includes: through the program initiat- the walls, leapfrogging each Zip codes: 97038, 97017, 1. Backyard burning. ed by Clackamas County other as they advance on the 2. Agricultural burning. Criminal Justice Training shooter. They move in fluid 3. Land clearing or slash burning. Council, comprised of com- crisp efficiency, working Drowning The Ban DOES NOT include: munity police chiefs. overlapping zones. 97042, 97004 1. Recreational burning (e.g., cook- Nine agencies were repre- The interagency training survivor hopesing fires, backyard pits.) Use extreme sented – Oregon State Police, allows officers from different caution. Recreational fires should be the Clackamas County agencies to all get on the 8,400 Sheriff’s Office and police someone findsconstantly supervisedBUCKEROO and fully extin- More than 165 police officers same page as far as tactics, departments from Canby, guished before leaving. underwent specialized train- Kitzmiller said. Oregon City, Milwaukie, 2. Ceremonial fires or small fires ing at Canby High School lost backpack Gladstone, Molalla, West READ: POLICE, Page 18 used for religious or ceremonial pur- recently, simulating an Weekly Readers Linn and Sandy. • Offering local Molalla, Colton and Peggy Savage poses that have a permit issued by the assault on a school building. Molalla Pioneer Canby Fire District. If conditions worsen, Canby Fire Photos by Ray Hughey Mulino news for over 100 years that may ban all burning. Games ...... 8 EVERY wednesday A 19-year-old Molalla man The Arts ...... 2 Obituaries...... 9 injured Sunday, June 30, cannot be found anywhere else while trying to rescue his The Voice ...... 4 Community...... 11 drowning friend on the INSIDE The Buzz...... 8 Molalla River is asking for 445029.072413 help to find his backpack that floated away on an innertube • Excellent paid penetration of single during the ordeal. AD & COPY DEADLINE Kyle Sauvageau had a standard black family homes of over 60% “When the backpack boys strapped to his tube when he THURSDAY, NOON realized it left it behind to was try to rescue • Paid circulation growth of over 5% impossible his drowning to save friend, 19-year- Andrew, old Andrew per year for the past three years Call 503-829-2301 they each Jason Moats of held on to Salem. one of his Moats was hands and trapped on an stayed underwater • Reaching families that place a high with him root ball and drowned when underwater tubing with as long as Sauvageau and value on community they a third friend, could.” 18-year-old -Stepanie Travis Carney Photo by Cory Mimms Sauvageau of Aurora. Sauvageau received lacerations to his face when he was caught in the same roots during the A bareback bronc throws his rider during July 4’s day performance of the 2013 Molalla Buckeroo PRCA rodeo. This year, $145,032 was awarded across seven events. attempted rescue. READ: RIVER, Page 2

Woman charged in Independence DayPARADE Hwy 213 I This year’s event celebrates crash 100 years for the city of Molalla Rise and fall n July 4 Molalla’s downtown streets were Peggy Savage YOUR ONLINE SOURCE FOR lined with people for the annual Giant Street Graduated athletes leave keyParade. This year’s theme, “Riding High for Molalla Pioneer voids at WilsonvilleO WS — See SPORtS,100 Years,”Page 14 marks Molalla’s 100th birthday. Call 911 LOCAL NE The Molalla High School band marched, candy Wilsonville New monitoring devicesA Milwaukie help woman is wilsonvillespokesman.com was tossed to kids from the floats, and horses, trac- victims on the scenefacing charges following a —crash See onPAGe Oregon 3 213 north of tors, log trucks and the Buckeroo Stage Coach kept Molalla Wednesday that sent people entertained. The Kiddies Parade on July 3 two people was also a huge success. to the hos- SEE: PARADE Photos, Page 10 Spokesman pital. Berenice Marin- es • man $1.00 / 35 CENTS HOME DELIVERY Avilez, 26, www.wilsonvillespokesman.com Readership was villeSpok •arraigned THE WILSONVILLE LEADER IN NEWS FOR 28 YEARS VOLUME 28, ISSUE 36 Wilsonin WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2013 Clackamas Zip codes 97070, 97140, 97002 County Marin-Avilez Circuit Court on charges of driving n With new control tower in works, airport boosts local job market under the influence of intoxi- One cants,last reckless driving, fourth-degree assault and recklessly endangering the life of another. She is being • Paid distribution of over 50% 8,400 held in the Clackamas patrolCounty Jail. for The two victims were hos- among single family homes in the pitalized after suffering non- Weekly Readers life-threatening injuries, a retiredpolice said. Wilsonville area Marin-Avilez was driving a Toyota pickup on South Union Mills Road at about EVERY wednesday 6:38 p.m. when she drove sheriff Left: TEAM Director Jenifer Hood (left) andRogge. “gun totin’Photo Mayor” by Cindy Debbie Fama through a stop sign at the • Average family income exceeds this DC-3 was intersection with Oregon 213. restored by Above: Patriotic girls, including the Miss ClackamasPhoto County by Eddie Queen Hartrampf USA. Bill Bell getsThe visit pickup fromshe was driving Aerometal crashed into a Ford SUV International, a $65,000 per year police K-9 unit,driven by ride-along Alfredo Mendoza company Quintero, 51, of Canby. dedicated to with Wilsonville policeCRASH, Page 2 rebuilding AD & COPY DEADLINE READ: vintage aircraft to FAA • The only source for local news and By JOSH KULLA standards. The Spokesman Milestones —7 What’s Up —3 Sports —8 THURSDAY, NOON Back in 1971, law enforcement technology Opinion — 4 advertising for Wilsonville and the did not include much, if anything, that could Communities —9 remotely be considered digital. Senior Life— 5 That’s the world of policingINSIDE inhabited by Bill Bell, who served as sheriff of Wasco County from surrounding areas 1968 to 1971. Today, Bell is retired and lives in Wil- Call 503-684-0360 sonville. And the tools used by current police offi ECONOMIC- Aurora airportHUB becoming an cers are replete with technology only hinted at in 1960s cinema. “Everything from the concept of a computer in • Offering a monthly direct mail the car that automatically reads license plates and talks to you, that’s ‘Star Trek’ stuff,” said Sgt. James Rhodes, chief of the Wilsonville Police De- sponsored by the Wilsonville partment. “He was sheriff in 1971, so you can imag- Chamber of Commerce. The lat- publication targeting every ine the vast difference. They had a radio channel, ter group has been at the fore- if it worked at all, and now we have two radio chan- uietly, underneath the front of efforts to smooth the nels, cellphones, computers, automatic license way for continued business plate readers, data bases, it’s amazing.” radar, so to speak, the household in zip code 97070 Aurora State Airport growth at the airport. They’ve Bell joined the city of The Dalles Police Depart- done this not only through re- ment in 1957 and worked for the city until he was Qhas been busy expand- cruitment, but continued public appointed sheriff in 1968. He resigned from that ing its economic infl uence in outreach that has helped quell post in 1971 to take a position with the Board on Wilsonville and the surround- the louder voices that once ex- Police Standards and Training, the forerunner of ing area. pressed trepidation at the pros- It’s a far cry from several today’s Department of Public Safety Standards pects of increased air traffi c at and Training. years ago, when public skepti- Oregon’s fi fth-busiest airport. On Aug. 27, Bell got a fi rsthand look at today’s cism over proposed future “I think the leadership law enforcement thanks to the collaboration of the change in the chamber of com- Clackamas County Sheriff’s Offi ce and Marquis STORY AND PHOTOS BY merce has helped to educate Care Wilsonville, the assisted living facility where the Wilsonville community,” he lives. JOSH KULLA said Oregon Aviation Depart- “It’s called the New Chapters program,” said See SHeRIFF / Page A7 ment Director Mitch Swecker. “The communication has al- plans for the airport were at ways been there in my mind. their height. Now, state offi cials A new Cessna owned by Aurora Aviation is displayed at the Aurora State PAAM (Positive Aurora Airport say, the construction of a new Airport during a recent open house. Management) and Charbon- air traffi c control tower is on neau have been involved in ev- track to start before the end of erything the whole time I’ve the year, and businesses are been here.” thriving in a way not seen Nonetheless, Swecker said, since before the recent reces- the past resistance to airport sion. expansion and the public in- “There are in the vicinity of volvement it generated actually 1,000 people working here, and has had a productive outcome. they’re all making good money, In the case of jets taking off, he most of them,” said James added, the Federal Aviation Ad- Hand, a local real estate broker ministration even adopted new and private pilot. “The multipli- rules requiring pilots to turn to er effect of those dollars in a the east or west after liftoff to community can be four or fi ve avoid overfl ying Charbonneau times what the transaction was on its face. Then that goes out See AIRPORt / Page A6 SPOKeSMAN PHOtO: JOSH KULLA and buys apartments, houses, food, automobiles, everything.” the Aurora Jet Center is a hub of activity for those traveling in and out of Retired Wasco County Sheriff Bill Bell served as the top Hand helped host a recent the Willamette Valley. lawman in that county from 1968 to 1971 before taking a tour of the Aurora Airport job with the state police academy. He rode on a patrol with Wilsonville police last week as part of Marquis Care Wilsonville’s “New Chapters” program for its residents.

must have made Creator of the ‘CON’an impact be- By JOHN BAKeR cause ticket sales n Canby Pamplin Media Group for this year have CAN YOU COUNt? man is already sur- Few people know that one of the passed last year’s brainchild largest pop culture events in Oregon total attendance. of Rose City was created, developed and is run out “This year, I the city wants your help Comic Con of small-town Canby. think we could Long-time Canby resident Ron Brister be north of 15,000 knows, though. He’s the driving force be- with perhaps as Wilsonville seeks hind Rose City Comic Con, a pop culture many as 22,000 at delight that highlights words, art and cre- the top end,” volunteers to help ativity in one fun, family-oriented pack- Brister said. age. Why the with pedestrian and growth in a con- It’s about comics, man. But it’s about RON BRISteR bike counting survey more than that. And yes, dressing up as a vention that, to super hero or comic book fi gure is just the outsider, seems to be nothing more By JOSH KULLA fi ne. That’s the way this “con” rolls. than comic books, T-shirts and memora- The Spokesman Created in 2012, this year’s second edi- bilia? Because it covers so much more tion will be Sept. 21-22 at the Oregon Con- than Conan, Wolverine and the latest in- The city of Wilsonville vention Center and is expected to see a carnation of Superman. And people like wants your help. dramatic increase in attendance from last that. The city is looking for volun- year. “Comic cons are interesting because teers to assist with an upcom- “Last year we were in a smaller space you have a group of people that feel se- ing bicycle and pedestrian and it was our fi rst year, so we were hop- cure in a large cluster of people,” Bris- count that ultimately is aimed ing for 1,000 people,” Brister said. “We at helping the city develop ended up with 4,100 that fi rst weekend.” See COMIC CON / Page A7 more effective bicycle and pe- SPOKeSMAN PHOtO: JOSH KULLA The formula Brister and his army of destrian amenities through friends, family and volunteers are using the city. The count will be held during the week of Sept. 10-15 Bicycles use roads, sure, but they also utilize the city’s network of trails and parks, such as the trail that runs across Boeckman Creek. “Pamplin Media Group’s pledge is to deliver balanced See COUNt / Page A10 news that refl ects the stories of our communities.” Thank you for reading our newspapers. — DR. ROBERT B. PAMPLIN JR. 12 OWNER & NEIGHBOR 4 Schools & Kids ...... 14 Subscribe today! Voices & Opinion ...... 9 Sports ...... 18 CALL 503-266-6831 Business ...... 11 The Big to-do ...... INSIDE Classifi eds ...... WEEKLY NEWSPAPERS

Woodburn Independent Readership www.woodburnindependent.com Zip codes: 97071, 97032, 97026, 97137, 97362 8,400 • Serving one of Oregon’s most diverse communities, with a 59 percent Latino population Weekly Readers • Hyper-local news coverage focusing on Woodburn, EVERY wednesday Hubbard, Gervais, St. Paul and Mt. Angel • Offering the largest market share of any newspaper serving AD & COPY DEADLINE the Woodburn area THURSDAY, NOON • Targeted business distribution to every member of the Call 503-981-3441 Woodburn Area Chamber of Commerce

Newberg native Coleman sisters— return to town for performance Newberg Graphic Critter Cabana rebuilding— Classically trained and accomplished musi- Readership effort is ‘coming together’ cians will perform together at Newberg Music A13 Arts & Leisure, Page Repairs on fire-damaged First Street Center next week — www.newberggraphic.com pet store could be completed by s, Page A5 October —Busines PHIC Zip Codes: 97132, 97115, 97137 THENEWBERGGRA Wednesday, August 14, 2013 — Volume 126, Issue 33 — 2 sections, 22 pages — $1.00 — www.newberggraphic.com 11, 9 0 0 The city • Telling the stories of the Newberg/Dundee/St. Paul area The 2013 Little League Softball World Series wants to Weekly Readers An unforgettably wild ride know what that nobody else will for more than 100 years. you think Local government EVERY wednesday — • Over 57% of subscribers have an income of over $50,000 Newberg mayor endorses online survey described as confidential and voluntary, and 23% over $75,000 but ‘highly valued’ TYLER FRANCKE Reporter Newberg Graphic [email protected] The city of Newberg is con- • Over 63% of readers are college graduates and 90% read AD & COPY DEADLINE ducting what it hopes will be- come an annual “citizens’ sur- vey,” polling local residents on their opinions about everything from the way government offi- every issue. cials spend constituents’ tax dol- THURSDAY, NOON lars to the quality of the city’s drinking water. The survey, which will close Aug. 23, is being offered online, with a small number (because of budget constraints) of print copies to local residents at • Official newspaper of record for the City of Newberg and being mailed random. In either format, respons- es are private and confidential. Call 503-538-2181 “The city is not tracking who submits survey responses,” a let- Yamhill County ter from Mayor Bob Andrews ex- plaining the survey said. “Only raw data in order to ensure confi- dentiality and certainty in the sur- veying techniques. Participation in this survey Seth Gordon / Newberg Graphic is voluntary but highly val- We’re pretty ued.” “ The survey much asking the citizens Kendra Gooding (No. 12) celebrates with CheyAnn Lang after drawing a game-winning walk with two outs in the sixth and final inning of a consists of six — m u l t i p a r t what they Once in a lifetime moment questions t hat nd three other players from Newberg Little League, finish pool play with a 2-2 record. think about thrilling 6-5 comeback win over Puerto Rico in the Little League Softball World Series Sunday at Alpenrose Stadium in Portland. The win helped the Tualatin City Major All-Stars, a ask respon- team which includes Gooding, Lang a the services dents to rate the city is their satisfac- when Newberg’s tion of various providing. Tualatin City team, which includes four players from Newberg, rallies for a dramaticMaddie DeVerna 6-5 aspects of the Brittney n for a my first base scored in the bot- city or New- Jeffries, city victory over Puerto Ricoto bring and home will the winning face ru the Philippinescoach told me itin theI thoughtseventh-place we were just gametom Wednesday of the first, berg govern- public affairs was over, and “ but notched runs officer SETH GORDON going to keep going. Then ment, includ- Reporter 6-5 victory over Puerto Rico at Newberg Graphic Alpenrose Stadium in Portland. everyone just at- my first base coach told me in the top of the ing quality of [email protected] It was the final play in a two-in- tacked me. I just second and third life; city serv- ran to the other it was over, and everyone 2-1. Like most ball players, Kendra ning rally that saw Tualatin City just attacked me. to go up ices such as police, fire, library,” erase a 5-1 deficit and while that girls that were Puerto Rico transportation, code enforcement Gooding has dreamed about the sit- running at me. I’m Player Kendra Gooding scored three more uation: two outs, with the score tied scenario had played out in Good- and planning and zoning; govern- ing’s mind, when she reached first usually not in the runs in the top of ment performance and city em- in the final inning of an important middle of the game and a full count with the base, she didn’t realize the game the fifth inning” to surge ahead 5-1, ployees. group hugs, I’m “We’re pretty much asking the bases loaded. was actually over. g. A2 “I thought we were just going to usually on the outside.” citizens what they think about the Gooding, a member of the Tu- Representing the Latin America Please see WORLD SERIES, p alatin City Major All-Stars, was put keep going,” said Gooding, who is services the city is providing,”e c ity’s one of five Newberg players on the region, Puerto Rico fell behind 1-0 said Brittney Jeffries, th in that very position Sunday at the ll-star team. “Then public affairs officer. “Essen- Little League Softball World Series cooperative a new Madras Pioneer and came through, drawing a walk tially, the citizens are our bosses, and we want to be able to serve Local filmmakers rush for contest them as best we can.” Readership The survey also calls on re- spondents to rank city services on their perceived level of impor- www.madraspioneer.com tance and asks which actions they NDPD officers make their mark at Camp Rosenbaum would be more likely to support really think that being counselors is what we do. to address possible funding short- And when they see us in uniform on Friday, falls, including reducing the level Unique camp for disadvantaged and at-risk youth features police, fire and military personnel as its covert counselors of city services or raising taxes or their eyes just get huge.” $1.00es. TYLER FRANCKE For some of the disadvantaged youth and user fe Graphic Reporter The survey also asks how resi- Zip Codes: 97741, 97761, 97734 Newberg their families, police, fire, military and housing dents would prefer to receive in- Page 12 [email protected] authority personnel may havememories. been previously Johns said Wednesday,August 14, 2013 associated with unpleasant formation from the city (email, More than a decade ago, Newberg-Dundee a week at Camp Rosenbaum can and does often social media, phone calls, texts, Police Department Sgt. Gwen Johns was asked go a long way toward changing those para- etc.) and includes eight basic de- Vol. 108 No. 49 Two sections,by then Deputy 24 pages Chief Brian Casey if she would digms. mographic questions regarding Crash criticallyrespondents’ living arrangements, be interested in participating in Camp Rosen- “I think it really helps us build that level of baum, a weeklong camp for at-risk youth living trust and respect that they may not have had be- employment status, age group, in- come level, marital status, gender in public housing each year at the Oregon Na- e- fore,” she said. “They’ve seen us invest in them tional Guard’s Camp Rilea near Warrenton. and their future, and they realize that we care and ethnicity. 8,880 injures chief of“We tried to cover as much as Not sure exactly what to expect of the exp about them and just want to give back to our - rience, Johns agreed to give it a try. And she’s communities.” possible without it being too • Paid distribution of over 50% among single family homes in been back almost every year since. Ken Howell, also an NDPD officer, is anoth lengthy,” Jeffries aysaid. be found on- The survey m “I was hooked,” she said. Graphic er RosenbaumJ.C. regular, ambulance who volunteered at the Submitted photo / Newberg A 42-year-old nonprofit organization, Camp camp earlier this summer for his eighth year. line at the city’s website, www.newbergoregon.gov. For Rosenbaum draws its counselors each summer To protect, serve and make camp awe- Howell subbed in for Johns the one year she was Weekly Readers from the ranks of the Oregon National Guard as Sgt. Gwen Johns, also known as “Pelé,” unable to participate, and he became just as more information, contact Jeffries some — By Holly M. Gill at 503-537-1201 or brittney. the Madras area well as police and fire agencies and housing au- “hooked” as she. poses with one of her campers at the conclusion of this News Editor Please see CAMP, pg. A2 [email protected]. thorities across the state. But the campers don’t year’s Camp Rosenbaum, which was held the last week know that; they generally“really” d don’to for a find living out until what the of July at the Oregon National Guard’s Camp Rilea near The chief of the Jefferson County Emergency Medical their counselors Warrenton. Services, Don Heckathorn, 64, was critically injured Aug. last day of camp, when they appear in uniform. “The kids are so funny,” Johns said. “They 8, when his motorcycle was struck by a car on U.S. High- way 97, at Dover Lane. INDEX Heckathorn, who has managed JCEMS since March • The leading source of local news & advertising for Madras, EVERY wednesday The St. Paul, Dundee and Newberg LEADER in news Serving Newberg, Dundee, St. Paul and 2007, was northbound on the highway around 3 Easternp.m., Yamhill County since 1888 PUBLIC SAFETY A8 A9 Night whenof the an eastbound Moon 1996 exhibit Cadillac, driven to by GeraldA & L Scott A13A5 RELIGION A14 BUSINESS SPORTS Green, 36, of Prineville, failed to stop at the stop CLASSIFIEDsign on ADS B1 VIEWPOINT A4 feature Japanese artworks COMMUNITY BRIEFS A10 “Pamplin Media Group’s Dover Lane, and collided with Heckathorn's motorcycle. According to Oregon State Police, which is investigat- Warm Springs, Culver and the surrounding Jefferson County pledge is to deliver balanced Copper kimonos and fine-art prints from two artists news that reflects the stories ing the crash, Heckathorn, who was riding a 2012 Harley of our communities. Thank will highlightDavidson different motorcycle aspects ofand the wearing Landage of A1a the 3helmet, sustained for reading our — P you Rising Sunlife-threatening at the cultural injuries, center and was transported by Lifeflight newspapers.” to St. Charles Bend. Green was not injured. areas No citations had been issued as of Monday. DR. ROBERT B. PAMPLIN JR. The Jefferson County Sheriff's Office, JCEMS, Jeffer- AD & COPY DEADLINE OWNER AND NEIGHBOR son County Fire Department, and Oregon Department of Transportation assisted at the scene. The highway was Susan Matheny/The Pioneer closed for nearly an hour, and investigatorson page 3 remained at See Ambulance • Offering the largest market share of any newspaper serving THURSDAY, NOON Debris is strewn across U.S. Highway 97 on Aug. 8, at the scene of a crash that critically injured Madras resident Don Heckathorn, chief of Jefferson County Emergency Medical Services. City signs Jefferson County Patriotic Pet documents Crawdad Fest to finalize Call 541-475-2275 Jensen • Publisher of Madras Area Phone Book, Jefferson County Saturday at settlement Chamber Directory and Sageland Magazine Culver park By Holly M. Gill News Editor

The Culver Crawdad Festival kicks off at 8 a.m. Sat- The Madras City Coun- urday in at Veteran's Memorial Park in Culver, and the cil finalized details of a celebration will last all day with plenty of activities for lawsuit settlement agree- folks to enjoy. ment with Paul Jensen, 69, The day starts like all celebrations should, and that's of Madras, at a special with the Redneck Obstacle Course. The five-kilometer meeting at 7 a.m. Aug. 7. (3.2 miles) course will feature mud pits, haystack The settlement finally climbing, crawling under both barb and hot wire, live- resolved the lawsuit, which stock trough plunge and a tire climb. dated back to 2006, when Cost to register is $35, and the the city event begins at 8 a.m. at the Culver tried to High School sports evict SBJlVINGfields. CI!N'J'RAL ORBOON SINCE lSlI Jensen The parade will start from at 10 a.m., with entries begin- proper- ning to line up at 8:30 a.m., and the ty he crawdad dinner will start being served at had 11 a.m. leased The dinner features watermelon, pota- Holly M. Gill/The Pioneer at the toes, onions, lemons, corn bread and a Madras C M soft drink, and of course, a Cajun-style ren- airport Paul Jensen dition of crawdads. for 28 Y K The cost for the dinner is $8/plate. Abby, a German shepherd mix dog adopted from the Jefferson County years. From 9 a.m.-5 p.m., a dutch oven cook-off showcas- Kennel by A. Johnson, of Madras, was one of many dogs participating in The city alleged that central Oregonian es the culinarySERVING skills of local rustic chefs. CENTRAL The main the fundraising OREGON Pet Parade SINCEand Costume Contest1881 at Sahalee Park on Jensen, who had owned Readership dish judging will be at 1 p.m., and a pie eating contest Saturday. See additional photos and information on page 10. and operated an aerial M OPPICIAL NEWSPAPER. OF CROOK COUNTY C will also take place at that time.on The page bread 6 judging will crop-dusting business on See Crawdad leased property at the air- Y K port since 1978, was be- www.centraloregonian.com hind on his rent, which at that time was $150 per month. Reprimands Beamer In December 2006, a Jefferson County Circuit CentralOregonian Court jury found that his Zip codes: 97754, 97753, 97752, 97751, 97750 lease had given him unlim- support from the hospital ited renewal options, and MedicalOFFICIAL NEWSPAPERboard takes OF CROOKknown no within COUNTYtheaction system. board. restored his original ately placed on administra- After investigating the na- "It wasVOL. all pretty CXXXI disap- — NO.monthly 71 payment of $75, after a tive leave and later dis- ture of my misdoing, they pointing and I don't know if which meant that he had By Holly M. Gill 24-hour missed for taking a con- found nothing disqualified I will ever fully understand never been behind on rent. News Editor shiftPRINEVILLE, in OREGON,trolled substance. FRIDAY, AUGUSTme from 9, employment 2013 and the motivation behind the Jensen, who declined to the ER, The hospital board took hired me as a clinic physi- process," said Beamer. comment on the settle- 8,400 50 CENTS One year after an error in from no action to suspend his cian at the prison in While he realizes that ment, had previously ex- judgment disrupted the long Aug. 3 to privileges, and instead Pendleton," he said. he must be accountable for plained that the low rent and honorable medical ca- Aug. 4, awaited a decision from Expressing gratitude for his actions, he said, "I was was due to the expensive reer of Dr. Leland "Bud" 2012. the Oregon Board of Med- the job, Beamer said that, most relieved that fairness improvements he was re- • Prineville’s best source for local news and advertising Beamer, the Oregon BoardCrookBeam- County’sical Examiners. average"Things have worked weeklyout and justice is still alivewage in quired to make to the prop- of Medical Examiners has er, who Even though he had very well," despite being the medical system and erty, which included con- Weekly Readers Waldendecided that Beamer will had worked as a physician for away from his home and that we can be judged on structing a hangar, in- Dr. Bud keep his medical license. worked 40 years, Beamer found farm several daysstate a week.at an averagean individual of $1,101 basis." per stalling a septic tank, and In a recent vote, the Beamer ranksfor 33 higherhimself out thanof a job. most"I don't haveweek, night of while call Multnomahthe"To have spentCountystate a career grading, paving and fenc- income make more on average board unanimously decid- years as "After six months of re- and I'm off on weekends in a community and shared ing the property, which than most the state’s other coun- averages $988, Benton County • Over 50% paid distribution in the primary zip code of confidented to take no action ■ Amonga physician all 36 and counties surgeon alizing that everything that and can attend$918, gatherings, and Crookso Countymany experiences$908. All to- amounted to about against Beamer, but repri- ties. with Madras Medical we hadA recentworked report for wascompiledweddings, by the andfour the funerals countiesgether exceed and theto now state have the $175,000. manded him for his lapsethe localGroup weekly before wagegoing to about to be turned over to that I used to only hear strength of relationships Between May 16, 2006, U.S. Department of Labor’s average wage of $871 per week, EVERY TUESDAY & FRIDAY in judgment. work in the ER, was con- the bank, I found work about while working the prove to be such a powerful when the city cut off sewer about ranked fourth in the Bureau of Labor and Statistics but three of them fall short of the Just over a year ago, cerned about his seriously with the Department of ER," he said. force has been a most to the property, and the revealed that Crook County ranks $1,000-per-week national average. 97554 Beamer was put on admin-Fourth Quarter 2012 Beamer is still perplexed unique and meaningful December jury decision, ill dog, and took a vial of Corrections,"fourth in heweekly said. wage among all Crook County Economic istrative leave from his posi- ketamine home in case the "At 70 years of age and by what he considered "the time for myself and fami- RUSS tion as an emergency room Jason Chaney 36 counties for Fourth Quarter Development Manager Russ See Jensen on page 5 Bowman dog needed pain relief. under2012, investigation, and second outI excessivenessof the 31 of the ly," he said. "There is such DEBOODT doctor at the former Moun- OnCentral Monday, Oregonian Aug. 6, could not find work else- charges that Deboodtwere filed attributesa thing asthe a silverhigher lining." counties with fewer than 75,000 WAGES tain View Hospital, where 2012, Beamer returned the where. I had worked at against me," and the lackSee of , page A7 Crook County may have one of residents. he had worked since 2007. unused medication to the Deer WashingtonRidge and Countywas tops the The action resulted fromthe highest unemployment rates • Primary circulation areas include Prineville, Powell Butte, legislation hospital, but was immedi- an incident that occurredin Oregon, but those who earn an Serving Jefferson County since 1904 Madras, Oregon • 541-475-2275 AD & COPY DEADLINE www.madraspioneer.com Post, Paulina and Mitchell 5 8 08805 93136 FIRED UP ABOUT TUES. PAPER: THURSDAY, NOON FIRE COVERAGE • Offering the largest market share of any newspaper in FRI. PAPER: TUESDAY, NOON Crook County

RAMONA MCCALLISTER/CENTRAL OREGONIANsses Call 503-665-2181 lden a ddre an G reg Wa d Congressm uring a r oun ess l eaders d local b usin nesday. this last Wed table meeting

■ Congressman Greg Walden discussed the bill during a round table meeting with local business owners this week

Ramona McCallister RAMONA MCCALLISTER/CENTRALe OREGONIANr. A total mmunity cent Central Oregonian owell Butte co eting at the P evening’s me uring Tuesday When Congressman Greg Walden te residents d he Powell But sat down with Prineville business r addresses t meeting. Scott Grange attended the owners this week, he stressed that nity residents f 135 commu the three big national issues right o added. “The first thing we need to do, CCFR District calls is we need to decide how we think now are the debt ceiling, govern- ■ A large number of Powell The CCFR District has three sta- ment funding, and the Farm Bill. this ought to be handled — what’s tions, and covers 450 square The round table meeting was Butte residents voiced their best for the district or for the commu- miles. Ninety percent of the calls organized by Prineville-Crook nity of Powell Butte.” for service within the District come frustrations over fire Powell Butte resident Scott County Chamber Director Holli Van from the area of the Prineville sta- Granger pointed out that he had spo- Wert, and other topics included coverage in their area tion. Powell Butte accounted for ken with Crook County Fire Chief Walden’s Bowman Dam legislation, 2.9 percent of the total calls for Matt Smith earlier, and Smith was his forest legislation, the economy, Ramona McCallister the district last year, which is up .2 asked not to attend the gathering by and the effects of these issues on Central Oregonian percent from the previous year. the local economy. the meeting organizers. n Tuesday evening, 135 Granger thought Smith should This station logged 13,148 man Walden commented that he does- hours in this period of time. Powell Butte residents have been invited, and several other n’t anticipate a lot of roadblocks to The Juniper Canyon substation gathered to air their frus- Powell Butte residents concurred, his current Bowman legislation. trations about fire cover- 1203 accounted for 129 calls in “I actually feel really good about adding that since they were not age in the Powell Butte authorities on firefighting, he should 2012, and 5.5 percent of the total it,” he said. “The community is call volume for the district, with a very supportive of what we are Ocommunity. have been present. decrease of .5 percent. Station doing. We just passed it once unani- One of the key organizers, Art In 2011, a similar meeting was 1203 logged 13,148 man hours in mously in the House, and we just Proctor, opened the meeting by point- called by the community to address the frame of time. passed it again without objection in ing out that Powell Butte pays similar concerns. The two biggest dif- approximately 22 percent of the tax ferences between that meeting and the House Resources Committee. Its page A5 bipartisan support then and now, base that goes into Crook County See COVERAGE, and we hope to get it across the Fire and Rescue. “We’re not getting 22 percent,” he House floor this fall early. It should See WALDEN, page A9 TIF grant pays teachers Juniper Canyon residents for putting in Incentiveextra Fund (TIF),effort which is part of the ■ The amount of teachers that CLASS project. have fire safetyCentral concerns Oregonian received compensation increased Last year, the district online article. had one teacher meet the ■ An escape route that leads “We were prom- significantly from last year threshold for evaluation residents to the Post-Paulina ised an ‘escape route’ payoff. to the State Park Ramona McCallister “You had to be 100 per- Highway via an unimproved (Prineville Reservoir) Central Oregonian cent distinguished in the road has been designated and over to the previous year,” explained (Bowman) Dam,” the For the past three years, Crook Hayden. JAYEL commenter, Teacher assessments Jason Chaney County School District has been part of HAYDEN later_Peter, stated. a grant that focuses on teacher perform- are scored on a rating Central Oregonian “We are promised scale, based on four per- MIKE ance and evaluation, and the results this every time there formance levels — one to As hot and dry summer weather MCCABE have monetary payoffs for local teach- is an election, and level four. These include ineffective, takes hold in Crook County, fire safe- yet a major fire near ers. basic, proficient, and distinguished. ty concerns have again returned to the bottom of the hill traps half the At the July School Board meeting, Level 3 represents a proficient educator. the forefront. Prineville population.” CCSD Human Resource Director Jayel Among those concerns for Juniper As it turns out, an escape route Hayden reported that 145 instructors See TEACHERS, page A7 Canyon-area residents is what evac- has been designated for people living received some sort of compensation from uation options they have available in in Juniper Canyon if a wildfire takes the funds derived from the Teacher the event of a major wildfire. One See EVACUATION, page A10 person recently expressed such con- cerns in the comment section of a The Central Oregonian (USPS 098-060) is owned and published by Pamplin Communications every Tuesday and Friday at 558 North Main Street, Prineville, OR 97754. Periodicals postage paid Central Oregonian at Prineville, OR, 97754. POSTMASTER: send address changes to M the Central Oregonian, 558 North Main St. Prineville, OR 97754. C 558 N. Main St. Prineville, OR 97754 : (541) 447-6205 Phone Y K Fax: (541) 447-1754

C M

Y K EASTSIDE WEEKLY NEWSPAPER RETAIL DISPLAY RATES (Per Column Inch)

All Rates Full East Clackamas Multnomah Oregon City, Oregon City Gresham Portland Gresham, Gresham Sandy Estacada Are Net Market Suburbs County County Clackamas and and Tribune Sandy • Portland Tribune • Portland Tribune and Clackamas Sandy and Includes all • Gresham Includes • Gresham 20 weekly • Sandy 10 weekly West Linn Estacada newspapers • Clackamas newspapers • Oregon City • Estacada open RATES

Open $182.35 $67.55 $100.00 $44.00 $23.63 $22.25 $17.15 $42.00 $23.98 $14.83 $9.45 $9.75

BULK CONTRACT RAT ES Annual Column Inches

65” $173.23 $64.17 $95.00 $40.00 $22.45 $21.14 $16.29 $38.00 $22.74 $14.09 $8.98 $9.26

135” $155.00 $57.42 $85.00 $38.00 $20.09 $18.91 $14.58 $36.00 $20.36 $12.60 $8.03 $8.29

250” $145.88 $54.04 $80.00 $36.00 $18.90 $17.80 $13.72 $34.00 $19.16 $11.86 $7.56 $7.80

500” $136.76 $50.66 $75.00 $34.00 $17.72 $16.69 $12.86 $32.00 $17.99 $11.12 $7.09 $7.31

1000” $127.65 $47.29 $70.00 $32.00 $16.54 $15.58 $12.00 $30.00 $16.79 $10.38 $6.62 $6.83

FREQUENCY CONTRACT RATES

4”-10”

13 Week $145.88 $54.04 $80.00 $36.00 $18.90 $17.80 $13.72 $34.00 $19.16 $11.86 $7.56 $7.80

26 Week $127.65 $47.29 $70.00 $32.00 $16.54 $15.58 $12.00 $30.00 $16.79 $10.38 $6.62 $6.83

52 Week $109.41 $40.53 $60.00 $28.00 $14.18 $13.35 $10.29 $26.00 $14.39 $8.90 $5.67 $5.85

11”-59”

13 Week $127.65 $47.29 $70.00 $32.00 $16.54 $15.58 $12.00 $30.00 $16.79 $10.38 $6.62 $6.83

26 Week $118.53 $43.91 $65.00 $30.00 $15.36 $14.46 $11.15 $28.00 $15.59 $9.64 $6.14 $6.34

52 Week $100.29 $37.15 $55.00 $26.00 $13.00 $12.24 $9.43 $24.00 $13.17 $8.16 $5.20 $5.36

60”+

13 Week $118.53 $43.91 $65.00 $30.00 $15.36 $14.46 $11.15 $28.00 $15.59 $9.64 $6.14 $6.34

26 Week $109.41 $40.53 $60.00 $28.00 $14.18 $13.35 $10.29 $26.00 $14.39 $8.90 $5.67 $5.85

52 Week $91.18 $33.78 $50.00 $24.00 $11.82 $11.13 $8.58 $22.00 $11.99 $7.42 $4.73 $4.88

Non-Consecutive Insertion, Inches Per Week: 13 weeks in 26 weeks, add 95¢ pci; 26 weeks in 52 weeks, add 65¢ pci non profit

$145.88 $54.04 $80.00 $36.00 $18.90 $17.80 $13.72 $34.00 $19.16 $11.86 $7.56 $7.80

Contract rates are valid only after credit approval or cash-in-hand, and signed and dated advertising agreement is received from the advertiser. Cancellation of contract prior to completion will result in an appropriate short-rate charge. WESTSIDE WEEKLY NEWSPAPER RETAIL DISPLAY RATES (Per Column Inch)

All Rates Full Clackamas Washington West Hillsboro Lake Oswego Beaverton Portland Lake West Beaverton Forest Scappoose Are Net Market County County Suburbs and and Tigard and Tigard Tribune Oswego Linn OR Grove Includes all Includes • Portland • Portland Tribune Forest OR OR Tigard Tribune • Lake Oswego Grove 20 weekly 10 weekly Lake Oswego Beaverton OR newspapers newspapers • Beaverton • West Linn • Tigard • Beaverton and West Linn and Hillsboro • Forest Grove • Tigard Hillsboro • Hillsboro • Hillsboro open RATES

Open $182.35 $100.00 $64.75 $76.09 $17.50 $19.25 $19.25 $42.00 $15.00 $12.50 $13.75 $11.25 $9.25

BULK CON TRACT RATE S Annual Column Inches

65” $173.23 $95.00 $61.51 $72.29 $16.63 $18.29 $18.29 $38.00 $14.25 $11.88 $13.06 $10.69 $8.79

135” $155.00 $85.00 $55.04 $64.68 $14.88 $16.36 $16.36 $36.00 $12.75 $10.63 $11.69 $9.56 $7.86

250” $145.88 $80.00 $51.80 $60.88 $14.00 $15.40 $15.40 $34.00 $12.00 $10.00 $11.00 $9.00 $7.40

500” $136.76 $75.00 $48.56 $57.07 $13.13 $14.44 $14.44 $32.00 $11.25 $9.38 $10.31 $8.44 $6.94

1000” $127.65 $70.00 $45.33 $53.26 $12.25 $13.48 $13.48 $30.00 $10.50 $8.75 $9.63 $7.88 $6.48

FREQUENCY CONTRACT RATES

4”-10”

13 Week $145.88 $80.00 $51.80 $60.88 $14.00 $15.40 $15.40 $34.00 $12.00 $10.00 $11.00 $9.00 $7.40

26 Week $127.65 $70.00 $45.33 $53.26 $12.25 $13.48 $13.48 $30.00 $10.50 $8.75 $9.63 $7.88 $6.48

52 Week $109.41 $60.00 $38.85 $45.65 $10.50 $11.55 $11.55 $26.00 $9.00 $7.50 $8.25 $6.75 $5.55

11”-59”

13 Week $127.65 $70.00 $45.33 $53.26 $12.25 $13.48 $13.48 $30.00 $10.50 $8.75 $9.63 $7.88 $6.48

26 Week $118.53 $65.00 $42.09 $49.45 $11.38 $12.51 $12.51 $28.00 $9.75 $8.13 $8.94 $7.31 $6.01

52 Week $100.29 $55.00 $35.61 $41.85 $9.63 $10.59 $10.59 $24.00 $8.25 $6.88 $7.56 $6.19 $5.09

60”+

13 Week $118.53 $65.00 $42.09 $49.45 $11.38 $12.51 $12.51 $28.00 $9.75 $8.13 $8.94 $7.31 $6.01

26 Week $109.41 $60.00 $38.85 $45.65 $10.50 $11.55 $11.55 $26.00 $9.00 $7.50 $8.25 $6.75 $5.55

52 Week $91.18 $50.00 $32.38 $38.05 $8.75 $9.63 $9.63 $22.00 $7.50 $6.25 $6.88 $5.63 $4.63

Non-Consecutive Insertion, Inches Per Week: 13 weeks in 26 weeks, add 95¢ pci; 26 weeks in 52 weeks, add 65¢ pci non profit

$145.88 $80.00 $51.80 $60.88 $14.00 $15.40 $15.40 $34.00 $12.00 $10.00 $11.00 $9.00 $7.40

Contract rates are valid only after credit approval or cash-in-hand, and signed and dated advertising agreement is received from the advertiser. Cancellation of contract prior to completion will result in an appropriate short-rate charge. SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER RETAIL DISPLAY RATES (Per Column Inch)

All Rates Canby Woodburn Any 2 Any 3 Canby Wilsonville Newberg Woodburn Newberg Lake Tigard Molalla Madras and Are Net or or Below Below and and and and and Oswego and or Molalla Newberg • Canby • Canby Clackamas West Linn Tigard West Linn Tigard and West Linn Estacada Prineville or • Molalla • Molalla and and and West Linn and or • Newberg • Newberg Wilsonville Oregon City Wilsonville Wilsonville and Wilsonville Madras • Wilsonvillle • Wilsonvillle Wilsonville and • Woodburn • Woodburn Prineville open RATES

Open $11.25 $11.25 $15.75 $23.63 $23.63 $15.75 $17.50 $24.50 $24.50 $24.50 $24.50 $12.95 $9.25

BULK CON TRACT RATE S Annual Column Inches

65” $10.69 $10.69 $14.96 $22.45 $22.45 $14.96 $16.63 $23.28 $23.28 $23.28 $23.28 $12.30 $8.79

135” $9.56 $9.56 $13.39 $20.09 $20.09 $13.39 $14.88 $20.83 $20.83 $20.83 $20.83 $11.00 $7.86

250” $9.00 $9.00 $12.60 $18.90 $18.90 $12.60 $14.00 $19.60 $19.60 $19.60 $19.60 $10.36 $7.40

500” $8.44 $8.44 $11.81 $17.72 $17.72 $11.81 $13.13 $18.38 $18.38 $18.38 $18.38 $9.71 $6.94

1000” $7.88 $7.88 $11.03 $16.54 $16.54 $11.03 $12.25 $17.15 $17.15 $17.15 $17.15 $9.07 $6.48

FREQUENCY CONTRACT RATES

4”-10”

13 Week $9.00 $9.00 $12.60 $18.90 $18.90 $12.60 $14.00 $19.60 $19.60 $19.60 $19.60 $10.36 $7.40

26 Week $7.88 $7.88 $11.03 $16.54 $16.54 $11.03 $12.25 $17.15 $17.15 $17.15 $17.15 $9.07 $6.48

52 Week $6.75 $6.75 $9.45 $14.18 $14.18 $9.45 $10.50 $14.70 $14.70 $14.70 $14.70 $7.77 $5.55

11”-59”

13 Week $7.88 $7.88 $11.03 $16.54 $16.54 $11.03 $12.25 $17.15 $17.15 $17.15 $17.15 $9.07 $6.48

26 Week $7.31 $7.31 $10.24 $15.36 $15.36 $10.24 $11.38 $15.93 $15.93 $15.93 $15.93 $8.42 $6.01

52 Week $6.19 $6.19 $8.63 $13.00 $13.00 $8.63 $9.63 $13.48 $13.48 $13.48 $13.48 $7.13 $5.09

60”+

13 Week $7.31 $7.31 $10.24 $15.36 $15.36 $10.24 $11.38 $15.93 $15.93 $15.93 $15.93 $8.42 $6.01

26 Week $6.75 $6.75 $9.45 $14.18 $14.18 $9.45 $10.50 $14.70 $14.70 $14.70 $14.70 $7.77 $5.55

52 Week $5.63 $5.63 $7.88 $11.82 $11.82 $7.88 $8.75 $12.25 $12.25 $12.25 $12.25 $6.48 $4.63

Non-Consecutive Insertion, Inches Per Week: 13 weeks in 26 weeks, add 95¢ pci; 26 weeks in 52 weeks, add 65¢ pci non profit

$9.00 $9.00 $12.60 $18.90 $18.90 $12.60 $14.00 $19.60 $19.60 $19.60 $19.60 $10.36 $7.40

Contract rates are valid only after credit approval or cash-in-hand, and signed and dated advertising agreement is received from the advertiser. Cancellation of contract prior to completion will result in an appropriate short-rate charge. MONTHLY NEWSPAPERS Regal Courier Serving King City/Summerfield

www.regalcourier.com Readership Zip code: 97224 • Carrier delivered to eight 11, 5 2 0 adult communities in King Monthly Readers City/Summerfield and nearby Tigard 4,800 Circulation • Targets Oregon’s largest senior market AD & COPY DEADLINE • The area’s best source 15th of each month for local news about local Call 503-684-0360 government, people and club activities

ADVERTISING RATES

Total Per Column Inch Rate Pick Up Rate Column Inches 1x 3x 6x 12x $ 75 per 3" – 8" 12.50 12.00 11.50 10.75 column 8 inch 9" – 30" 11.50 11.00 10.50 9.75 Earn a discounted per column inch rate when you run 31" – 50" 10.50 10.00 9.50 9.00 the same ad from another Community Newspapers 51" – 96" 9.50 9.00 8.75 8.50 publication in this paper.

Southwest Community

Police Tucker sisters Connection Multnomah Days Identical twins turn 100 Blotter See your friends and neighbors — Page 5 — Page 6 — Pages 9-11

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PERMIT NO. 32 GRESHAM, OR www.swcommconnection.com

PRSTRT. STD AUTO CR Readership Zip codes: 97219, 97221, 97239

• Targeted direct mail SEPTEMBER 2012 • ONLINE AT SWCOMMCONNECTION.COM • NO. 233 • FREE 30,000 distribution to select Monthly Readers Glass half full neighborhoods in the Local author publishes e-memoir about life, death and love affluent southwest hills of 12,500 Circulation By DREW DAKESSIAN Th e Connection Chastity Glass is beautiful. Portland Her blonde hair falls in waves, just barely grazing her tanned shoulders. She wears glasses, sometimes, and her un- lined face is rarely without a small, comforting smile. She looks like she could be a surfer, or possibly a librarian. What sets her apart from the scores of other blonde, tan • The source for news and happy 30-somethings from California is a poem tat- AD & COPY DEADLINE tooed on her right forearm: “i am scared of being scared… and advertising for the and so, I am not 15th of each month even if i am.” Hillsdale and Multnomah She was 27 years old, living in Hollywood and recently dumped when she met Anthony Glass, a handsome video editor who worked at her offi ce. Th ey were instantly attract- Call 503-684-0360 ed to each other, exchanging poetic and increasingly fl irta- neighborhoods tious emails and quickly falling in love. Just a few months after they started dating, their love story, a story of what she calls “that young 20s love when you start making plans,” was unexpectedly and indelibly altered. He was diagnosed with stage III colon cancer. • Average household income When he told her, she didn’t think twice about whether to stay with him: they were in this together. “When Anthony was going through treatment, we would of more than $84,000 per year call each other co-patient,” she said. “You really do sort of become one, making sure the medication has been taken at the right time…I’m doing everything except for fi ghting the disease.” Th e two got engaged. Although she knew that he was in the fi ght of his life, she believed he would win, until she realized he could not. “It wasn’t as simple as a cold; I knew it was going to be a hard road, but I didn’t know just how hard,” she said. “Espe- cially with him being 30, we continued on this young, new ADVERTISING RATES love phase…and then the cancer never got better.” Knowing that their time together in life was running out, they moved up the date of their wedding and got married on July 26, 2006. Even though he was too weak to get out Pick Up Rate of bed, he said that it was the best day of his life. Total Th e next morning, at the age of 31, he died. Per Column Inch Rate Glass sought comfort from the person who had always been able to make her feel better, Anthony himself. Column “Th e day he died, I needed to be reminded that Iwas loved,” Glass said, tearing up in spite of herself. “”For Inches 1x 3x 6x 12x Christmas, he kept every single email we had ever written Photo by VERN UYETAKE to each other and made a book of it. And so when he died, $ 30 per Chastity Glass, author of the e-memoir “even See GLASS, page 8 if i am.” with her husband Grant Roesler. 3" – 8" 20.00 17.00 15.00 13.00 column 13 inch 9" – 30" 18.00 15.00 13.00 11.00 Earn a discounted per column inch rate when you run

jing and then we just met and started working 31" – 50" 16.00 13.00 11.00 9.00 the same ad from another Olympic fencer trains in togetherSouthwest in 2007, and just have been working known as the Oregon Fencing Alliance. Zagunis trained with three-time world together ever since,” she said. Community Newspapers Mariel Zagunis was the fi rst women’s saber Although Hunt had no previous fencing ex- champion Ed Korfanty and went on to win a fencer to hold the Olympic title, the fi rst Amer- perience, he did extensive research to pinpoint gold medal at the 2004 Summer Olympics in 51" – 96" 13.00 10.00 9.00 7.00 publication in this paper. ican fencer to win a Gold Metal in a century exactly what a fencer like Zagunis would need Athens. and the most decorated fencer in the history After graduating from the University of from a cross training regimen. of USA Fencing. In July, she was nominated “You have this idea in your mind of what the Notre Dame, she was determined to be as to serve as fl ag bearer for the U.S. delegation at sport is and you know that they’re carrying a equipped as possible for the 2008 Summer the 2012 Summer Olympics in London. sword…For me, it was more how tournaments Photo by DREW DAKESSIAN Olympics in Beijing, so she started cross train- She is also a native of Beaverton who cross- were structured, how long points were, the ing with Southwest Portland strength and con- trains in Southwest Portland. Muriel Zagunis (right) with Josh Hunt. Zagunis, 27, has been fencing since she was ditioning specialist Josh Hunt. See OLYMPIAN, page 14 “I was like, I need to do something outside 10 years old when her older brother’s interest of my fencing training to prepare me for Bei- in sword fi ghting prompted their mother to sign them both up for lessons at the club now MONTHLY NEWSPAPERS The Bee Serving Sellwood & SE Portland www.thebeenews.com Readership Zip codes: 97202, 97206 • The best source for local 46,560 news and advertising Monthly Readers for the Portland 19,400 Circulation neighborhoods of Sellwood, Eastmoreland, Westmoreland, Brooklyn, AD & COPY DEADLINE Reed and Woodstock 15th of each month • Targeted direct mail distribution to single Call 503-232-2326 family homes in the affluent southeast ...... ,.­ neighborhoods of Portland _--- ~ • ADVERTISING RATES

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Sherwood Gazette www.sherwoodgazette.com Readership Zip codes: 97140 • Targeted direct mail 26,400 distribution to every home Monthly Readers and business in Sherwood =:::- .-

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Sustainable Life SUSTAINABLE LIFE publishes Readership as a stand-alone section the second week of every month, Wednesday and Thursday in 392,024 the Community Newspapers Monthly Readers and the Portland Tribune. 154,160 Circulation Recognizing that our readers are hungry for news and information about green living practices, the Portland Tribune AD & COPY DEADLINE and Community Newspapers 15th of each month publish SUSTAINABLE LIFE, Call 503-684-0360 a monthly full-distribution section. SUSTAINABLE LIFE has a total market readership of 392,024 ADVERTISING RATES in 18 newspapers throughout the Portland metropolitan area. Per Column Inch 1x 65 3x 55 6x 50 12x 37.50 WEB ADVERTISING

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Beaverton Valley Times Gresham Outlook Sandy Post Lotsa Hugs YOUR ONLINE LOCAL Portland band has the tonic for winter —blues LIFE, B3 Estacada News Lake Oswego Review New and improved? DAILY NEWS Revamped Blazers’ lineup www.portlandtribune.com Forest Grove News-Times Portland Tribune West Linn Tidings sparks optimism for West race— SPORTS, B8

TribuneNONDAILY PAPER • WWW.PORTLANDTRIBUNE.COM • PUBLISHED THURSDAY Portland• TICE CHOSEN THE NATION’S BEST THURSDAY, DECEMBER 22, 2011

Open 5X 13X 26X 52X Will Levenson (left) and Travis Williams, executive director of Willamette Riverkeeper, organized July 31’s Big Float event on the Willamette River. Single Sheet $32 $30 $28 $27 $24 They hope to change the way Portlanders relate to the river, which is safer for swimming now that the city’s Big Pipe sewage overflow project 4 Tab/2 Std $35 $32 $31 $29 $26 is completed. TRIBUNE FILE PHOTO: CHRISTOPHER ONSTOTT County 8 Tab/4 Std $44 $38 $36 $34 $30 shelves library More2011 district – PAGE 2 & 3 12 Tab/6 Std $49 $43 $41 $39 $35 Supporters still THAT’S SO PORTLAND ■ Portland stays weird hope to convince Streetcar 'concierge' commission for ■ The Rose City made a few unusual waves as ■ Top 5 stories Occupy Portland moves on Pre-printed Mayinserts vote on plan are accepted forLook closer andthe you’ll agree that Tuesday■ Top 5 non-stories and it floated through a turbulent and eventfulPortland is still weirder 2011 than even The By STEVE LAW New York Times — which seems ob- Sam isn't running The Tribune STORY BY sessed with us as the “New Brooklyn” ■ Trib makes a difference 16 Tab/8 Std $56 $50 $48 $46 $42 — understands. And the number and Cracking down on Crack Alley With new polls showing TRIBUNE STAFF variety of stories we covered in the ■ History repeats itself local voters are resistant past year makes it clear that the city Blazers head for the exits Thursday Portlandto any property tax in- Tribune. For morecannot be easily classified. information or n the surface, 2011 was the creases right now, Mult- See if you don’t agree after reading year that Portland went nomah County Chair Jeff our year-end roundup. mainstream, thanks in Cogen has decided against code violations are only investigated putting a li- large part to two network Portland stays weird brary dis- O once a citizen complaint is filed. Turns trict on the TV series. ■ Inner tube party on the river out, more than a few people have be- rates for insertsMay larger pri- than “Portlandia”12 on IFC standard pokes gentle Hundreds of Portlanders grabbed pages,gun using the complaint-driven system contact mary bal- fun at our foodies, bike fanatics, old- inner tubes and paddled across the to carry out personal grudges and — 20 Tab/10 Std $59 $54 $52 $48 $46 school feminists and even Mayor Sam Willamette River on July 31, in an who would have thought that? — gain lot. Cogen’s Adams — or a reggae bass-playin’ ver- event billed by organizers as The Big a little business advantage, as the Tri- bow to politi- sion of Sam Adams. Float. Organizers Will Levenson and bune showed in its Snitch City series cal reality is NBC’s fantasy/cop drama “Grimm” Travis Williams, both leaders of the this fall. causing a gut showcases the region’s breathtaking Willamette Riverkeeper group, want- Nothing says Portland better than your advertising representativescenery, older buildings andor Crafts- edcall Portlanders to think of the503-546-0784. once- food carts, and complaints against food SUMRALL check for li- brary boost- man-style houses we almost take for heavily polluted river as a place to cart operators and the properties on granted. swim again. which the carts sit have become ers, who had high hopes of Our fame is now so great that ■ Not-so-happy meals See 2011 / Page 2 gaining a permanent and “Leverage,” the TNT series filmed Short of revenue for its inspection dedicated source of property here for several seasons but set in teams, Portland, like many cities, re- 24 Tab/12 Std $62 $57 $55 $53 $49 TRIBUNE PHOTO: CHRISTOPHER ONSTOTT taxes for the county library Boston, is officially moving its fiction- lies on a complaint-driven system. City system. Protesters held their ground Nov. 13 as al crew of lovable grifters to Portland Cogen wants to ask voters police tried to evict between 200 and 400 next season. Inserts shouldto renew the temporarybe li- deliveredOccupy Portland campers at Chapman and one week in advance brary levy that expires June Lownsdale squares near City Hall. 30, at the current rate of 89 cents per $1,000 in assessed property value, so it won’t be considered a tax increase. That leaves the heavily used library system without mon- of publicationey to cover inflationdate and the to: Gresham Outlook, costs of servingbranches new library for the next three years, likely Metro arycaught in Beaverton. Metro pur- in natural tangle “People causing re- chased the property in 2009 for are feeling duced branch Regional agency has $6.6 million, then received au- hours and thorization to spend about $3 Central Oregonian Wilsonville Spokeman staffing. 1190 NE Division,broke, and Gresham,thousands of acres but OR 97030 million more to build a nature “It’s a big they’re few bucks for projects center building, gardens, park- shift for us to ing, a children’s playground, feeling be thinking of bike racks and 3.5 miles of grav- scared. supporting an By JIM REDDEN el trails. 89-cent levy The Tribune Bottom The park is visited by thou- with staffing sands of people a year. line, I don’t cuts and serv- Metro owns a tree farm. Both properties were bought Clackamas Review Madras Pioneer ice reduc- The regional government did think this with bond money approved by Full Distribution:tions, com- 80,000not buy the farm to sell the voters in Multnomah, Washing- is the right pared to what trees. It is a large part of ton and Clackamas counties. time.” we had our Chehalem Ridge, a 1,143-acre Voters authorized a $136 million sights focused piece of property Metro bought bond sale in 1995 to protect nat- — Jeff Cogen, on,” says Mer- in 2010 for $6.1 million to pre- County chair ural areas and complete trails. ris Sumrall, serve as a natural area. A $227 million bond measure to But there is little natural chief execu- continue the work was ap- Oregon City News Molalla Pioneer about the neat rows of identical- proved by voters in 2006. Metro TRIBUNE FILE PHOTO: JAIME VALDEZ tive officer of The sized trees that cover much of has so far purchased around Library Foundation. The the land in Washington County. foundation, which already 11,000 acres of property Westside Zone: Restoring it to natural condition throughout the region. Nearly has raised more than will take millions of dollars, $70 million was set aside for lo- $230,000 to run the library money that Metro currently Metro authorized a controlled burn in Cooper Mountain Nature Park in September to kill invasive plants district campaign, has sought cal governments. and encourage the return of native species. The property was bought and developed by Metro, which does does not have. But the measures did not stable library funding for The benefits of preserving not have enough money to do the same on all of the other natural lands it owns. many years. and enhancing natural areas See METRO / Page 7 Newberg Graphic Sumrall called an emer- can be seen at Cooper Mountain 97005,97006,97007,97008,97034,97035,97062,See LIBRARY / Page 8 Nature Park, a 231-acre sanctu- 97068,97124,97219,97223,97224,97225,97229, Open 3-6X 12X 24X 97239 – 13,000 Single Sheet $42 $37 $33 $32 Northeast Zone: 97203,97211,97212,97213,97217,97218,97220, 4 Tab $57 $53 $52 $51 97227,97230,97232 – 25,000 8 Tab/4 Std $63 $58 $57 $56 Southeast Zone: 12 Tab/6 Std $69 $65 $64 $63 97015,97027,97202,97206,97214,97215,97216, 97222,97233,97266,97267 – 21,500 16 Tab/8 Std $76 $72 $71 $70 Downtown Zone: 20 Tab/10 Std $83 $79 $78 $77 97201,97204,97205,97207,97209,97210 – 20,500 24 Tab/12 Std $90 $86 $85 $84 Costs are per thousand inserts. Minimum order a newspaper’s full circulation run. Frequency rates are available only with a signed advertising contract and credit approval or payment in The South County Spotlight advance. An indicia or mail permit cannot appear anywhere on the insert. Preprints larger Scappoose and St. Helens than 8 1/2”x 11” must be quarter-folded. Single Sheet $65 Full Buy Monthly Newspaper - Single Sheet Rates 4 Tab $65 King City Regal Courier:...... $265 8 Tab $65 Sherwood Gazette:...... $440 Southwest Community Connection:...... $600 12 Tab $75 The Bee:...... $846 16 Tab $85 Price indicated is for full-run. Preprints larger than 81/2” x 11” must be quarter-folded, and will be charged at a higher rate. Contact your advertising sales representative for more information. 20 Tab $95 INSERT DEADLINES: Thursday at Noon for the following week’s newspaper WHERE TO SEND INSERTS: Inserts can be sent to either the newspaper office or directly to our press facility. All inserts should be clearly marked with insertion date, which newspapers the insert will appear in and total quantity of inserts.

Newspapers printed at Eagle Web Press include: Eagle Web Press Lake Oswego Review, West Linn Tidings, Canby Herald, Molalla Pioneer, Newberg 4901 Indian School Road, Salem, OR 97305 Graphic, , Woodburn Independent 1-800-800-7980 Newspapers printed at the Gresham Outlook include: Portland Tribune, King City Regal Courier, Estacada News, Clackamas Review, Gresham Outlook Sandy Post, The Spotlight, Oregon City News, Forest Grove News-Times, 1190 NE Division, Gresham, OR 97030 Hillsboro Tribune, Southwest Community Connection, The Times, 503-665-2181 Beaverton Valley Times, The Bee, Sherwood Gazette and BOOM Central Oregon Press Newspapers printed at Central Oregon Press include: 558 N Main Street, Prineville, OR 97754 Madras Pioneer and Central Oregonian 541-447-6205 PRODUCTION REQUIREMENTS COPY & DESIGN Measurements: Standard Advertising Unit (SAU) • Basic copywriting and design available to advertisers at no charge. • Proofs ( maximum of 2) are for error correction only. WIDTH • Composition charges may be made for excessive changes or alterations 1 column ...... 1.7” of original copy when the space is ordered. 2 column ...... 3.5” • Photography and detailed art may incur additional charges. 3 column ...... 5.375” Number of Columns COPY & DESIGN 4 column ...... 7.2” Multiplied by Depth = Total Column CREDIT & PAYMENT 5 column ...... 9.0” Inches • Rates are net. 6 column ...... 10.875” • Advance credit approval required on advertising. • Payments on account with pre-approved credit are due the 10th of the DEPTH month following date of publication. BROADSHEET 21.25” Late payments will accrue service charges. Ads over 19” will be charged at the full-page depth. • VISA, Discover, American Express and Master Card accepted. • Cash only accounts include: political advertisements, going-out-of COLOR RATES PACKAGE RATES business advertisements, unapproved or poor credit, out-of-state One color...... $95.00 3 or more newspapers advertisers and ads placed from motel addresses. Two color...... $185.00 One color...... $60.00 per paper • Contract rates are valid only after credit approval or cash-in-hand, and Full color...... $280.00 Full color...... $150.00 per paper a signed and dated advertising agreement is received from the adver- tiser. ELECTRONIC SUBMISSION REQUIREMENTS GENERAL POLICIES Preferred: • Minimum ad size of at least four column inches is required for all retail Adobe Acrobat PDF* (with all text embedded) newspaper ads. • All advertising is accepted subject to approval of the publisher. Other: Publisher reserves the right to reject advertising copy. Adobe Photoshop jpg* (cmyk only) • No advertising positions can be guaranteed. Credit will not be issued Adobe Illustrator, CS5* (send all images and convert text to outlines) based on ad position. Adobe InDesign, CS5 (packaged with all fonts and links) • Community Newspapers will exercise due diligence to prevent *Must be a completed ad, it cannot be edited. mistakes, and cannot assume liability for errors once a signed proof approval is received from advertiser. Community Newspapers will be responsible for typographical or other errors only to the extent of a TEARSHEETS credit or corrected insertion of the portion of the advertisement that • Up to 5 tearsheets furnished at no charge. Additional tearsheets avail- is incorrect due to Community Newspapers’ error in the first insertion. able at an additional charge (Advance request required). Community Newspapers reserves the right to revise advertising rates • Co-op billing and tearsheets available at your request. upon 30 days notice. • Advertiser assumes full liability for advertising and agrees to indemnify and hold harmless the publisher from all claims, suits and related costs arising by reason of any advertisement. OFFICE LOCATIONS

Beaverton Valley Times Lake Oswego Review Clackamas Review/Oregon City News West Linn Tidings Sherwood Gazette • The Times Wilsonville Spokesman Portland Tribune Southwest Community Connection 6605 SE Lake Road, (Clackamas County) Portland, OR 97222 400 Second St. Mailing address: P.O. Box 548 P.O. Box 22109, Portland, OR 97269 Lake Oswego, OR 97034 Phone: (503) 684-0360 Fax: (503) 620-3433 Phone: (503) 635-8811 Fax: (503) 635-8817 E-Mail: [email protected] E-Mail: [email protected] Website: www.commnewspapers.com

Canby Herald (Clackamas County) Madras Pioneer (Jeffferson County) 241 N. Grant Street 345 SE Fifth Street P.O. Box 1108 Madras, Oregon 97741 Canby, Oregon 97013 Phone: (541) 475-2275 Fax: (541) 475-3710 Phone: (503) 266-6831 Fax: (503) 266-6836 Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Central Oregonian - Prineville (Crook County) 558 N. Main Street Molalla Pioneer (Clackamas County) Prineville, Oregon 97754 217 E. Main Street Phone: (541) 447-6205 P.O. Box 168 Email: [email protected] Molalla, Oregon 97038 Phone: (503) 829-2301 Fax: (503) 829-2317 Estacada News Email: [email protected] (Clackamas County) 313 SW Highway 224 P.O. Box 549 Estacada, OR 97023 Phone: (503) 630-3241 Fax: (503) 630-5840 Newberg Graphic (Yamhill County) E-mail: [email protected] 500 E. Hancock P.O. Box 700 Forest Grove News-Times Newberg, OR 97132 Hillsboro Tribune Phone: (503) 538-2181 Fax: (503) 538-1632 (Washington County) Email: [email protected] 2038 Pacific Ave. P.O. Box 408 Forest Grove, OR 97116 Phone: (503) 357-3181 Fax: (503) 359-8456 The Spotlight – Scappoose/St. Helens E-Mail: [email protected] (Columbia County) Email: [email protected] 33548 Edward Lane, Suite 110 P.O. Box C Gresham Outlook • Sandy Post Scappoose, OR 97056 BOOM! Phone: (503) 543-6387 Fax: (503) 543-6380 (Multnomah County) E-Mail: [email protected] 1190 NE Division Street P.O. Box 74 Gresham, OR 97030 Phone: (503) 665-2181 Fax: (503) 669-2760 Woodburn Independent E-Mail: [email protected] (Marion County) 650 N. First Street King City Regal Courier P.O. Box 96 (Washington County) Woodburn, Oregon 97071 10170 SW Nimbus Ave, Suite H-3 Phone: (503) 981-3441 Fax: (503) 981-1253 Portland, OR 97223 Email: [email protected] Phone: (503) 639-5414 Fax: (503) 968-7397 Website Visitors 3,718,635 Monthly your website! local Your advertising digital for targeted solution Your town,

e 5wego eVlew eW5 70,428 Daily Web Visitors DIGITAL MEDIAKIT

Markt/RateCard/482243.2014 2014 WEB DEMOGRAPHICS • • AGE GROUPS < 18 10% 18-24 9% 25-44 40% 45-54 19% Income47% 53% 55-64 14% GENDER 1111 65+ 7% Female Male 39% 26% 18%

8% 9%

Graduate School 21% INCOME b1 College Grad 46% $0-20k $20-49k $50-99k $100-150k $150k+ Some College 13% 26% of Portland Tribune visitors have a household

EDUCATION High School / GED 20% income of $100,000 or higher. COUNTY TRAFFIC SOURCES Multnomah 117,211 Mobile Web ~ Online Clackamas 40,639 32% - 68% Washington 56,715 OTHER INTERESTS The people who visit portlandtribune.com are CHILDREN also likely to visit these categories and sites: in HOUSEHOLD TRAVEL 2.5x CAR RENTAL 1.7x POLITICS & COMMENTARY 1.9x REFERENCE 1.7x Has Kids FANTASY SPORTS 1.9x MAPS 1.7x SCIENCE/NATURE 1.9x HOME & GARDENING 1.6x 43% AIRLINES 1.8x RELIGION 1.6x BANKING 1.7x TRAVEL AGENTS 1.6x No Kids NEWS 1.7x ONLINE TRADING 1.6x 57% WEB TRAFFIC

Unique Monthly Website Visitors: 365,796 Monthly Page Views: 3,718,635 • Daily Web Visitors: 70,428

Monthly Page Views Monthly Page Views PortlandTribune Portland Tribune 1,226,380 Ind~ndent Woodburn Independent 200,100 rJosu1of/OmL DAILY WEB VISITORS: 23,226 DAILY WEB VISITORS: 3,789 VAiIEVl1MES Beaverton Valley Times 117,440 CentretlOregonian Central Oregonian 221,890 DAILY WEB VISITORS: 2,224 DAILY WEB VISITORS: 4,202

Canby Herald 72,725 N~WBERGGRAPHIC Newberg Graphic 157,375 (anllj Itu'ald DAILY WEB VISITORS: 1,377 DAILY WEB VISITORS: 2,980

South County Spotlight 206,445 West Linn Tidings 161,150 DAILY WEB VISITORS: 3,910 DAILY WEB VISITORS: 3,052

Molalla Estacada News 50,430 Planeer· Molalla Pioneer 79,760 DAILY WEB VISITORS: 955 DAILY WEB VISITORS: 1,510 Forest Grove News Times 101,615 SpoI{esman Wilsonville Spokesman 57,790 DAILY WEB VISITORS: 1,924 DAILY WEB VISITORS: 1,094

Gresham Outlook 271,950 Sandy Post 53,780 DAILY WEB VISITORS: 5,150 DAILY WEB VISITORS: 1,018

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HiIIsboroTribune Hillsboro Tribune 67,900 Tigard / Tualatin Times 120,500 DAILY WEB VISITORS: 1,285 DAILY WEB VISITORS: 2,282

Lake Oswego Review 216,210 The Bee (SE Portland) 46,350 DAILY WEB VISITORS: 4,094 DAILY WEB VISITORS: 877

Madras Pioneer 165,720 SW Community Connection 9,710 DAILY WEB VISITORS: 3,138 DAILY WEB VISITORS: 183

Clackamas / Oregon City 115,000 Boom! Boomers & Beyond 5,405 DAILY WEB VISITORS: 2,178 DAILY WEB VISITORS: 102

FACEBOOK FANS TOP TRENDING STORIES SOCIAL MEDIA PAMPLIN E-BLAST 24.4% Referals from Facebook Link ______Twice Weekly Email Broadcast to 39,425 Followers 12,000 Weekly Subscribers

ONLINE ADVERTISING THE MOST ______LOCAL CONTENT 11 MILLION Average Monthly Stories Posted Ad Impressions delivered monthly ______4,811 Local Stories

2014 second quarter website traffic report WEB ADVERTISING

Site Site Sponsor Leaderboard (728x 90) Sponsor (120 x 90) (120 x 90)

Billboard Ad 680x360

680x360 One billboard ad would rotate among lead stories. Limit of one advertiser per site per week. $ per week 995 All websites $395 per week News Sponsor (468 x 60) Portland Tribune only $250 per week per Community Newspaper site PAMPLIN NETWORK - All 25 websites (Minimum 150,000 impressions) • Local newspaper websites are AD POSITION AD SIZE MONTHLY COST CPM more credible and informative Leaderboard 728 x 90 $1500 $10.00 than all other online sources. News Sponsor 468 x 60 $900 $6.00 • Extend your reach, 24/7 with the Site Sponsor 120 x 90 $450 $3.00 Portland Tribune and Med. Rectangle 300 x 250 $750 $5.00 Mini Community Newspaper websites. 3 x 1 Rectangle 300 x 100 $450 $3.00 Skyscraper Mini-Skyscraper 160 x 200 $450 $4.00 (160 x 200) • 77% of Online Readers not Skyscraper 160 x 600 $750 $5.00 Subscribers Med. Rectangle • Median Age - 39 yrs. Old (300 x 250) PORTLAND TRIBUNE • Average Household Income (Minimum 50,000 impressions) is 32% higher.

AD POSITION AD SIZE MONTHLY COST CPM Leaderboard 728 x 90 $750 $12.00 WEB CONTRACT RATES News Sponsor 468 x 60 $300 $7.20 3 month contract Site Sponsor 120 x 90 $200 $3.60 Med. Rectangle 300 x 250 $400 $6.00 Skyscraper SAVE 10% 3 x 1 Rectangle 300 x 100 $200 $3.60 (160 x 600 6 month contract 3 x 1 Rectangle Mini-Skyscraper 160 x 200 $300 $4.80 SAVE 20% Skyscraper 160 x 600 $400 $6.00 (300 x 100) 12 month contract SAVE 30% COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER SITES (Cost per site) MULTIPLE WEBSITE BUY

AD POSITION AD SIZE MO COST Leaderboard 728 x 90 $250 (Community Newspaper News Sponsor 468 x 60 $200 Websites Only) Site Sponsor 120 x 90 $100 Buy ONE site, each addi- Med. Rectangle 300 x 250 $250 Med. Rectangle Mini tional site is HALF PRICE (300 x 250) 3 x 1 Rectangle 300 x 100 $100 Mini-Skyscraper 160 x 200 $250 Skyscraper Skyscraper 160 x 600 $300 (160 x 200)

CS/Marketing/Rate Cards/2013/335963.011613 Web Ad Rates Web CS/Marketing/Rate Cards/2013/335963.011613 January 18, 2013 EMAIL BLAST

728 x 90 pixels $995

Pamplin Media Group - Top Stories for Tuesday, Decemt>er 17, 2013 month Email $395 week

Blasts rJ friend "n fllcelxx>k TOP NEWS STORIES t FoII"w "n Twitter

THE PORTlAND TlUBUNE ...... Water main break closes neighborhood street An 86-year-old water main burst In the o:>Id weather earty Thursday morning, sending wMer down Southwest Vista A~enu" and dosing neartly Ainsworth Sdlool'or th" day... ~

;Z:li~~~ THE GRESHAM DUT1.00K E Yoshida to Troutdale council' 'you will neyer see me again' I'DG ConstnJelk>n llnd Junkl Yoshklll withnw ther """""",I to 160 x 600 pixels help Troutdale bulk! II new dty hllil Wednesday, Dec. 10. The move Businesses interested in targeting readers ""me llt the Troutdale oty Coundl me... ~ craving hyper local news can do so through $995 '1IIIl!!:~!I THE PORTlAND TlUBUNE :-, ,..:.: ...,.. Young Oregonians find themselves stuck the Pamplin Media Group’s weekly email I!!l~ between economic rock and a hard place month '~'-:""NT ~ ~~""ly'::.~e~ :::~~~':'n~gt:~~~ blasts. :. s:,e.:'w: $395 week the Job mllrl<"'-. A h9/l unemploy... "'...__ ~ Twice a week, every Tuesday and .. Friday, we send out an email alert 468 x 60 pixels ..... ---lGresham Ford.. highlighting a few of the top $495 trending stories found on our month TOP SPORTS STORIES THE PORTlAND TRIBUNE websites. IN PHOTOS: Aldridge makes history and $175 week Blazers beat Rockets Th" Trail Blazers· 111-104 ~;aory Thursday n9/lt """Inst th" • Houston Rod

THE PORTlAND TRIBUNE Mack Brown will duck out after Alamo Bowl n Features top trending stories SUBSCRIBE TODAY Th" Alamo _I gam" """inst Oregon will be Mack Bmwn·s last as TexllS 'ootbllil

n Available ad units include: 468 x 60 pixels 728 x 90 pixels $295 160 x 200 pixels 160 x 600 pixels TOP FEATURES STORIES month ~,.., 468 x 60 pixels ...... THE GRESHAM OUT1.00K $245 $100 week Surgeon to take a new view of life for more thlln th"", decades, GrmJllln ... reach th" "9" d 40 - 26,000 per week llnd remllin llCl;"'e. Wear llnd tear on the body, younger o:>mpetitk>n, llnd real-iWe dl!mllnds usullily g... ~

THE PORTlAND TRIBUNE To reserve your space call your Mt Hood sets sights on hidden cosmos Tra~elln9 through space Is a privilege generally limited to llstronauts, who must train years to do so. But now you don t ha"" to par" through sa..nce t""'-books or I... sales representative today at ~

II ~ - Your Community Paper. Delivered to your Door. 503-684-0360 ~ ~'~1tJon~ \;-;-I.iii.iiii:.~"3D"ili§i:·!~.l!ij§ii!fiira~"iijiiMiil:~,±ii'ffii!~""~iiHi:j~..,ii.ii••• Ad~ertlsers: Interested In reachlno the Entire Metro Area with our Email Blasts?