5.29.2009

Lower Nehalem Community Trust e-Bulletin

Lower Nehalem Community Trust e-Bulletin
June 1, 2008
News and Upcoming Events



Events

Living Locally Event, June 13, 2009 – 6:00-8:30 pm
There is still time to buy your tickets for LNCT’s Second Annual Living Locally fundraiser. This year the event will feature a light buffet dinner and silent auction. This is the perfect opportunity to introduce your friends and neighbors to the work of the Trust and enjoy an evening of wonderful local food, catered by Bread and Ocean, sustainable Oregon wines, the musical talents of guitar duo of Bob Brook and Paul Miller, and great conversation with others who love the Nehalem Valley and Neahkahnie region. Tickets to the Living Locally event are $25 a piece and can be purchased through Erich Miller at the LNCT office (contact him at 503-368-3203, or lnct@nehalemtel.net) or from the LNCT Board Members.

Plant Sale: Support the Garden & Get Your Veggie Starts - Ongoing
The Gardeners at Alder Creek Farm are once again offering vegetable plants for sale. All plants have been grown using organic methods and materials. We have an excess of plants in the greenhouse at clearance prices. Plants are $2 for gallon pots and $1 for 4" starts.

Come early for best selection, a list of plants available include: Lettuce, Broccoli, Thai Basil, Brussels Sprouts, Tomatillos, Tomatoes, Calendula and more! Our tomato varieties include: Brandywine Heirloom, Mexico Midget, Early Girl, Sweet 100, Yellow Pear Heirloom, Goldset Cherry, Tomatillos, Oregon Spring, and Sun Sugar.

Plants are in the Greenhouse on a self-service table. Only the plants on the sales table are available for purchase. Proceeds from the plants will help support the gardens at Alder Creek Farm. If you have question call Karen at 503-368-4531

Volunteer Opportunities


Alder Creek Farm Saturday Work Party, June 6, 2009 - 10:00 am – 2:00 pm
The first Saturday work party for June will be held on the 6th from 10:00-2:00 at Alder Creek Farm. Tasks will include removal and suppression of scotch broom and other invasive species as well as weeding and re-caging recently planted trees. Wear clothes appropriate for the weather and bring a dish to share for the potluck lunch. Alder Creek Farm is located at the end of Underhill Lane off of US 101 right at the edge of Nehalem.

Vosberg Creek Saturday Work Party, July 11, 2009 - 9:00 am – 1:00 pm
July’s Vosberg Creek work party will be held on the second Saturday of the month, July 11. The focus of this work party will be on re-roofing the two leaky sheds to the front of the property. Due to heat considerations, we will be starting early at 9:00 and ending early at 1:00. We would greatly appreciate if those volunteers who have pick-ups would bring them to allow us to haul old roofing materials to Cart’m. Bring clothing appropriate to doing roofing and debris hauling as well as dishes to share for the potluck lunch, which will follow. Vosberg Creek is located at the South West edge of wheeler at the corner of Dubois and 101.

2009 AWRA Summer Specialty Conference

2009 AWRA Summer Specialty Conference
Snowbird Ski & Summer Resort * Snowbird UT
June 29-July 1, 2009
Register today for the best rates on
conference registration fees
and hotel room rates!
Earlybird Registration Deadline:
June 8, 2009
Hotel Reservation Deadline:
June 5, 2009
Registration

OSU Tillamook Extension Master Gardener Newsletter

Your Summer issue of the Tillamook County TILLER OSU Extension horticultural newsletter is now available online at:

http://extension.oregonstate.edu/tillamook/tillamook-tiller-newsletter-amp-current-gardening-events

In This Issue

Pg 1 Is This Your Year to Enter County Fair?

Pg 2 TCMGA President's Corner

Pg 3 Troubleshooting the Garden

Pg 4 Bring Pollinators to Your Garden

Bank on Beneficials to Reduce Pesticide Use

Pg 5 Plan to Preserve

Pg 6 Plant Asian Greens

Pg 7 Plant Asian Greens - (Continued)

Pg 8 Homegrown Caneberries

Pg 9 Best Time to Plant Cilantro

Mulch to Conserve Water, Suppress Weeds

Pg 10 The (Invasive) Weed Patch - False Brome

Pg 11 Garden Tips for June, July, & August

Pg 12 Upcoming events

Plan to enjoy

Tillamook County Master Gardener Association's

Spade And Wade

Garden Tour

& Plant Sale

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Tour 6 distinctly different gardens

Plant Sale Features Nursery Vendors

Passports: $15 per person

at Farmers Markets -Manzanita or Tillamook

Or at OSU Extension Service

2204 4th St. - Tillamook 503-842-3433

Patricia Penney, Office Specialist

OSU Extension Service

2204 Fourth Street

Tillamook, Oregon 97141

503.842.3433 / fax 503.842.7741

5.28.2009

Directive Limits Activity in Roadless Areas of Forests

Rather than going through local USFS offices, managers will now have to apply directly to the Secretary of Ag to gain approval for new roads or harvest activities within roadless areas (RARE; I don't know if it has to be classed as a RARE area...) except in Idaho.

What do you think? Is this a good idea?

It seems that although it will add more scrutiny to harvest activities on some public lands that it may make the Secretary of Agriculture's job all the more complicated. Maybe some tougher regulation or standards about which projects could happen and which couldn't rather than have every project go through one person. That seems like too much power (and time) for one person although making it less regional might be better in the long run.

5.27.2009

Non-vascular Plant tour correction

Mosses and Lichens and Liverworts, Oh My!

This Saturday, join botanist Kurt Heckeroth for a fascinating look into the world of mosses, lichens and yes, liverworts, in a lovely area of Gearhart known as the Neacoxie Forest.

Just what are liverworts, you say? Come along and find out!

We'll meet at the Neawanna Point (Gateway Park) parking lot in North Seaside at 11:00am, and carpool from there over to the forest for the hike. For more information including map and directions, follow this link.

Please dress for the weather. We won't be covering a lot of distance, and the ground is level but somewhat rough and may be wet, so boots are suggested.

This event is part of the North Coast Land Conservancy's Gateway to Discovery program series. To see what else is coming up, visit www.nclctrust.org and follow the events link.

Thanks for your interest. See you outside!

PS. Be sure to forward this email to anyone you know who might be interested, using the Forward email link below.

5.26.2009

Watershed Awareness in the Coos Watershed!

Date and Time

Event Description

Thursday May 28th through Saturday May 30th, 10 am to 6 pm each day

The Coos Watershed Association will be hosting Watershed Awareness Days at the Pony Village Mall this Thursday, Friday and Saturday from 10 am to 6 pm each day. The three-day campaign will provide free information to mall-goers about the local watershed, water quality, and resources and opportunities for local individuals and landowners. The CoosWA booth will be located in front of the Hallmark store.


It is NOT to late to volunteer. Email Marley at mbice@cooswatershed.org today. Just one hour of your time would be greatly appreciated.

Saturday May 30th, 8 am to 4 pm

On Saturday May 30th, the City of Coos Bay and the State Department of Environmental Quality are hosting a free hazardous waste collection event in the K-Mart parking lot. They are also looking for volunteers (call Lisa Crawford at 269-8918 if you are interested) but most importantly, you should take some time to gather unused or expired materials from your garages and basements and take advantage of this opportunity to dispose of them properly.

Materials that can be disposed of include:

  • oil-based paints or spray paints
  • herbicides, pesticides, and fertilizers
  • automotive fluids
  • fluorescent light bulbs
  • aerosol cans

The full flyer for the event is available on our website at: http://www.cooswatershed.org/coos_co_env.html

Sunday May 31st, 11 am to 1 pm

On Sunday May 31st from 11 am to 1 pm the Downtown Association is hosting the North Bend Clean Sweep event including a picnic lunch afterwards. More information including the meeting place is on our website at: http://www.cooswatershed.org/volunteer_local.html

Boat and Equipment Sale

Greetings Again Steelheaders!

We typically do not want to use emails to frequently contact our members to avoid creating "email fatigue". However, we have news to share that couldn't wait until next month's Executive Director email blast.

One of the Association's long time supporters, Stevens Marine has extended a win-win offer to all Northwest Steelhead members for their "Biggest Sale Ever" taking place next week.

The details are as follows:

Who: Stevens Marine, Tigard and Milwaukie

What: Buyers can save up to $15,000 on a new boat package during next week's sale. Plus, everything in their two stores is on sale including all in-stock outboard motors.

When: Starting Tuesday, May 26 and ending Monday, May 31.

How: Stevens Marine will donate $75 to the Association for every boat sold to a Northwest Steelheader member if they present to the sales manager this coupon (click).

Where: Click on to http://www.stevensmarine.com/ for a Google map on directions to the Milwaukie (800-576-7371) and Tigard (800-225-7023) locations.

Contact: For more information on the sale, contact Paul Mayer at 503-620-7023.

Thank you for supporting Stevens Marine and the Northwest Steelheaders.

Warmest regards,

Paul J. Cathcart
Executive Director
Association of Northwest Steelheaders

5.25.2009

Wood and PCB removal from the Hudson River

Here is the link to a more detailed article http://www.poststar.com/articles/2009/05/23/news/local/doc4a18542498a77677730303.txt

Dredging has commenced on the Hudson River. Although the dredging is specifically designed for the removal of PCBs and other contaminants on the river's bottom, a secondary impact is very significant; the removal of wood so that the large dredging barges can make it up the river unhindered.

That is a pretty big catch.

I wonder...
1) How successful the PCB removal will be?
2) Won't PCBs still enter the system?
3) Is the EPA going to require the replacement of all of the stumps and logs removed?

We will see.

5.24.2009

Pharmaceuticals in the Tillamook Bay Watershed

[A] speaker series event will be held on Thursday June 18th at the Tillamook County Fairgrounds from 6:30-8:00PM. The speakers at the event will be Abby Bourdouris from DEQ Solid Waste and Sheree Stewart from DEQ Water Quality. On Saturday June 20th, there will be a collection/drop site event at the Tillamook County Fairgrounds from 9AM-12PM that the Sheriff’s department will be involved in. The purpose of the collection event will be to allow individuals to bring their unwanted prescriptions (whether its Advil or other narcotic type prescriptions) for proper disposal

Kaylee Haertel

Tillamook Estuaries Partnership

PO Box 493 / 613 Commercial St

Garibaldi, OR 97118

PH. 503.322.2222

Fax 503.322.2261

email: kaylee at tbnep.org

www.tbnep.org


5.19.2009

Check out the video of the Pelican release



Here is a link to an interview http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CXFQpivLKDY

Pelicans Released back into the Wild!!!






















Check out the album link here. http://picasaweb.google.com/virhua/PelicanRelease051709?feat=email#slideshow/5336998694171108114

Hello Supporters of the WCNC,

14 pelicans who were victims of the December snow storm were successfully released back into the wild in Chinook, Sunday, May 17. They came to us weak and starving with frostbite to their feet and have been successfully rehabilitated by Sharnelle Fee and the volunteers at the Wildlife Center of the North Coast (www.coastwildlife.org).

It has been a very rewarding experience for all involved and we thank you for all of your donations which helped us to keep up with the voracious appetite these large birds have for fish. 35 pelicans can eat a lot of fish!

We had picture perfect weather for the release and Oregon Field Guide filmed the release. Oregon Field Guide tells us the segment will air this Fall (we'll keep you posted).

The rest of the pelicans need more rehabilitation and will probably be released sometime in the next several weeks. All of the pelicans we released have been banded so we can keep track of their progress.

Thank you again for all of your support!

Virginia Huang
volunteer

5.18.2009

LCREP Update

Welcome……..To the Lower Columbia River Estuary Partnership E-Update - a summary of some of the current activities of the staff, committees and Board.



REI Funds Estuary Partnership for Seventh Year!

At our May 7 Board meeting, Holly Van Fleet, our Board member from REI presented us with a check for support of our Outdoor Service Learning Program. We are grateful that REI, a loyal and generous grantor, has chosen to support us again this year! We are humbled to receive such long standing support from REI. Their partnership extends well beyond their funds – they have helped us deliver many stewardship program and helped us train volunteers for our water quality monitoring event. Thank you REI.



Oregon Community Foundation Supports Estuary Partnership Outdoor Learning!

The Oregon Community Foundation is providing $10,000 to help expand our existing outdoor environmental education program to include six Oregon communities in the lower river area. The Estuary Partnership is honored to partner with OCF. Their commitment to children and the outdoors sets an example for all of us.



Opening at Steigerwald Lake National Wildlife Refuge – Join us Saturday, June 14 at 1:00, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Columbia Gorge Refuge Stewards will host the opening of the Gibbons Creek Wildlife Trail at Steigerwald Lake National Wildlife Refuge. The Refuge is located on State Route 14 outside Washougal, WA. Josh Holcomb and Annie Kleffner of our Stewardship Team will be on site that day to help out. The Estuary Partnership and the Columbia Gorge Refuge Stewards have partnered on a National Fish and Wildlife Foundation grant to involve youth, teachers, and parent volunteers in a project educating participants on the importance of the Ridgefield National Wildlife Refuge and building personal stewardship for the Refuge’s protection. Since January of 2009, the Estuary Partnership led a total of fourteen workdays at the Refuge; eight Saturday volunteer plantings and six service learning filed trips with eleven classes of students. The numbers are impressive: 1328 volunteer hours on the Refuge and 1476 native trees and shrubs planted. We’re not done yet! Watch our website at www.lcrep.org for plantings at Steigerwald in Fall of 2009. Visit the Fish and Wildlife Service website at www.fws.gov/ridgefieldrefuges/steigerwaldlake/recreation.html for details on the June 14th opening.



Big Canoes Back in the Water

Wet skies in April didn’t keep the Estuary Partnership’s Stewardship Team from kicking off the 2009 Big Canoe season. We have already had 27 classes with 698 students and 85 adults participate in our on-river program. Big Canoe trips have taken place on Lake River in Ridgefield, along the Multnomah Channel near Sauvie Island, and at Coffinbury Lake at Fort Stevens State Park along the Oregon Coast. School trips will continue in May and June before a busy summer season begins. Thanks to Gail Alexander with Ridgefield Kayak Rental for helping with Big Canoe storage!



Habitat Restoration Prioritization Framework used in Ranking Project Applications

The Estuary Partnership used our prioritization framework for the first time this past month as additional information to our existing evaluation criteria to evaluate and rank habitat restoration projects for funding. This prioritization offers a tiered approach to prioritizing restoration—the first tier assesses disturbance at the project site scale and surrounding areas providing a ranking of individual areas of high, medium or low disturbances. This then allows the Estuary Partnership to determine the type of project suitable for the area: protection, enhancement, or restoration, and whether the technique used will be likely to succeed based upon surrounding landscape land uses. The second tier allows a comparison of the potential benefits, effectiveness, and likelihood of success across specific restoration projects. The Estuary Partnership developed this with the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. Estuary Partnership staff will work with PNNL in the upcoming year to incorporate new datasets and concepts to refine the framework. The framework was developed over the past couple of years with funds from EPA and BPA.



Two Events: River Event and our Annual Dinner

We are planning two fun and new events this year! By popular request, we are back on the river for fun ‘family’ event – for kids of all ages. On Sunday, August 9 from noon to 4 pm, we will host a festival at Frenchman’s Bar Park in Vancouver. The big event will be team races in our 34’ canoes! We’ll also have fun events and plenty of good food!

Saturday, November 14 from 6 pm to 10 pm we will host our annual dinner at the Portland Art Museum. This year we will celebrate with a show of art and artists of the lower Columbia River, a special art show featuring art work from the students in our programs and as always, yummy food from the Vibrant Table, a performance by some of our students and just a fun time.



Dirt to Turn at the Humboldt Learning Garden

Within the next few weeks contractors will begin to transform a vacant, weed filled lot adjacent to Humboldt School in Portland into the Humboldt Learning Garden. The Humboldt Learning Garden is the latest of the Estuary Partnership’s Schoolyard Stormwater projects and the biggest to date. Phase 1 work will begin in the next few weeks and will include clearing and grading the site, constructing a plaza that will serve as a student classroom, creating a network of gravel paths, and installation of a new fence and entries. Phase 2, scheduled for later this year, will include installation of a cistern to capture stormwater runoff from the school roof and the plumbing necessary to irrigate the garden. Project partners include Oregon Solutions, Humboldt School and the Portland School District, Bureau of Environmental Services, the Housing Authority of Portland, and Greenworks PC.



Stewardship Update

The Spring planting season is over for this year! Our Stewardship Team led weekend volunteer plantings and student service learning plantings at Steigerwald Lake National Wildlife Refuge and Ridgefield National Wildlife Refuge. Our weekend planting events draw volunteers from Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, church groups, civic organizations, corporations and members of the general public. Students and teachers from public and private schools in both Washington and Oregon participated in our student service learning projects. By getting involved with the plantings, these volunteers helped the Estuary Partnership and the wildlife refuges restore damaged habitat. We thank each and every volunteer for their time and amazing effort! We hope to see you again during the Fall planting season.



Habitat Forum Regional Needs

On May 1, 75 policy makers and habitat restoration practitioners joined us to set a course for habitat restoration in the next decade. We took a quick look at what has happened since 1999:

§ 123 projects including 13,054 acres have been completed by the major entities

§ More coordination, notably by the Estuary Partnership Science Work Group

§ A significant investment money

§ new information and data, such as our shoreline inventory, landscape classification, a prioritization- GIS based framework to help target habitat types and functions for restoration and regional criteria for restoration.

We looked at what we have learned. The accessible, ready to go projects have pretty much been exhausted. To go to the next level, we heard that:

§ Restoration and conservation need to fit into community needs – not their needs into ‘ours’

§ Developing projects takes more access to technical expertise

§ Current funding is not (diverse) enough: allowable portions of projects and funding cycles are limited

§ Land availability takes time

What We Heard. There was as a strong consensus that the Estuary Partnership is both a convener and a facilitator for the partners and lower river, reinforcing the purposes of the Estuary Partnership when formed by the Governors and EPA in 1995. As a convener, participants wanted us to bring together key ‘lead entities’ periodically to work on evolving topics and make sure collectively we are covering regional needs, supporting each other, leveraging etc. As a facilitator, the Estuary Partnership should continue to be the voice for the estuary and region: identifying regional needs and strategies, supporting local needs, filling gaps in what others can do. Participants said we should continue as the lead on such activities as restoration priorities and strategic project development, establishing the importance of the estuary, providing access to technical assistance and expanding our effectiveness monitoring. And the goal is to increase on-the-ground results – not build more processes! The Estuary Partnership is convening a follow-up discussion June 5 that will focus on giving everyone the same understanding about what each key partner is doing.



Piles and a Derelict Vessel Removed from Coal Creek Slough

Over the last year, the Estuary Partnership has been leading a coordinated effort with the Bonneville Power Administration and the US Army Corps of Engineers to look at removing or enhancing pile structures on the lower Columbia River to benefit juvenile salmon. Yet, it was through a NOAA Marine Debris Grant that the Estuary Partnership removed our first piles. As part of a two part project, the Estuary Partnership removed 31 piles from Coal Creek Slough, a small slough to the lower Columbia River near Stella, Washington. For part two, the Estuary Partnership removed a 42-foot derelict vessel that had marred the Coal Creek shoreline for years. Thank you to NOAA for funding the Coal Creek Marine Debris removal project. Implementation not only benefited the Coal Creek Slough ecosystem, but provided valuable learning lessons for future projects.







Debrah

May – June 2009



Executive Director

Lower Columbia River Estuary Partnership

811 SW Naito Parkway, Suite 410

Portland, Oregon 97204

503.226.1565 x227

5.17.2009

Nonstick chemical pollutes water at notable levels

Check out this article posted in Science News at http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/43712/title/Nonstick_chemical_pollutes_water_at_notable_levels

Nonstick chemical pollutes water at notable levels
Concentrations approach those shown to have adverse effects in laboratory animals
By Janet Raloff
Web edition : Tuesday, May 12th, 2009


A new study finds evidence that people may be exposed through drinking water to a persistent chemical — one used to make nonstick products — at levels approaching concentrations that trigger adverse effects in laboratory animals.

The fluorine-based chemical, PFOA or perfluorooctanoic acid, has been in production for more than 50 years. One primary use has been the production of chemicals that long served as the basis of DuPont's Teflon line of nonstick products. Ironically, earlier studies have shown that the PFOA itself sticks around a very, very long time — potentially forever.

The chemical appeared in roughly two-thirds of some 30 public water systems sampled by New Jersey’s Department of Environmental Protection between 2006 and 2008, researchers report online and in an upcoming issue of Environmental Science & Technology.

In five of the New Jersey water systems sampled, PFOA concentrations exceeded a safety limit developed by the researchers — sometimes by a factor of two or three. In each of those instances, says toxicologist Keith Cooper of Rutgers University in New Brunswick, the affected water came from groundwater or from well water. However, he adds, where contaminated water entered a water-treatment plant, “[PFOA] concentrations in the intake water and the output water were basically the same.” So it looks like the treatment plants didn’t remove the pollutant.

How PFOA gets into water remains largely unknown, although the chemical has been used in everything from carpeting and frying pans to popcorn bags. So, Cooper says, “I think the values we saw in New Jersey water probably are representative of [water supplies] around the country.”

Human data have shown that blood concentrations of PFOA tend to be 100 times higher than the values in drinking water. To gauge whether the concentrations of PFOA found in the state’s aquifers, wells and surface waters were likely to pose health risks, the researchers used blood concentrations of PFOA associated with toxicity in animals. The scientists then calculated how low water concentrations of PFOA would need to be to fall below the adverse-effects level. For added safety, they cut this value to a 10th of the starting value — a common practice when toxicologists need to extrapolate between animals or human life stages.

As a result of this analysis, the researchers propose a drinking water limit of 0.04 micrograms per liter. On January 8, the Environmental Protection Agency proposed a “provisional health advisory” for PFOA that was 10 times higher. At the time, EPA explained it was issuing the advisory “in response to an urgent or rapidly developing situation” involving unregulated pollution.

One explanation for the difference: EPA’s value was set to deal with short-term emergencies such as a spill, Cooper says, whereas “ours was designed to deal with chronic exposure over a lifetime.”

Abby D. Benninghoff, a PFOA toxicologist at Oregon State University in Corvallis, finds the proposed New Jersey safety limit for PFOA pretty convincing. “I looked through the math pretty carefully and I am familiar with most of the studies that they based it on. So it [the proposed limit] strikes me as reasonable.”

But the implications are a bit unsettling. She’s been studying PFOA activity in trout, a surprisingly good model for testing the chemical’s human cancer risk (SN Online: 5/21/08), and in human cells. These data show that the 8-carbon PFOA molecule and its 9- and 10-carbon analogs — which also show up in the environment — all bind to and activate the estrogen receptor. In trout, this estrogen action promotes the development of liver cancer.

Concentrations of any of these chemicals needed to turn on this hormone mimicry in human cells are fairly low, she reported at a toxicology conference last November. Indeed, she now notes, such levels are in the same ballpark as what would likely develop in the blood of people drinking water from the more contaminated sites described by Cooper’s team.

5.15.2009

Wal-Mart: Making Its Suppliers Go Green

Original Posting at "http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/09_21/b4132044814736.htm"

Wal-Mart: Making Its Suppliers Go Green
The mega-retailer is pushing its Chinese suppliers to conserve resources and cut energy use. Its campaign will affect a vast swath of China's manufacturing sector

By Adam Aston
BW Magazine

Last October, Wal-Mart Stores' (WMT) then-CEO, H. Lee Scott Jr., stood at a podium in Beijing's swank Shangri-La Hotel and politely unleashed a litany of demands on the crowd. For the more than 1,000 suppliers gathered in the ballroom, the dynamic was familiar. After all, Wal-Mart became the world's biggest retailer in part by obsessively pressuring its suppliers to cut prices.

But this time the message was different. Rather than hammering on the importance of cutting costs, Scott spent half an hour building a case for why Wal-Mart's vast network of partners—from components makers to factories and shippers—had to go green. "Our goal is for supplier factories to meet or exceed all social and environmental laws and regulations," said Scott. Meeting these standards "is not optional."

To spur these changes, Scott offered both a carrot and a stick. Wal-Mart pledged to work with its top suppliers to help improve their operations, teaching them how to increase energy efficiency and how to cut the amount of raw materials they use. The threat: By 2012, Wal-Mart would pull its orders from companies not meeting the new standards.

Tracking Energy Use a Must

Because of Wal-Mart's size and scale, Scott's pledge rippled across a vast swath of China's manufacturing sector. The company buys some $9 billion worth of goods every year from some 20,000 vendors.

The scope of Wal-Mart's green goals is also without parallel. The mandate requires Chinese factories to track great volumes of data on energy use and to make it available for audits. Wal-Mart's top 200 factories have to become 20% more energy-efficient by 2012. "Many Western companies can't track their own energy consumption," says Andrew Winston, consultant and author of the book Green to Gold, who attended the meeting. "Getting Chinese companies to track these kinds of operations data takes [Wal-Mart] many steps forward."

The results already are beginning to trickle in. With Wal-Mart's help, Jiangsu Redbud Dyeing Technology in Changshu City, Jiangsu Province, has cut coal consumption by one-tenth and is aiming to bring toxic emissions down to zero. The company has accelerated new product innovation: Redbud Dyeing has garnered more than 150 patents for its line of environment-friendly jute-based textiles.
Keeping a Focus On Price

Wal-Mart's fast-growing network of 144 Chinese stores is playing a part, too. Adapting green building technologies developed in the U.S., Wal-Mart China is opening stores that use 40% less energy than its older stores. In existing sites, it plans retrofits that will reduce energy use by about one-third by 2010. Water is another focus. Over the next two years, Wal-Mart China aims to halve water use by installing water-conservation fixtures in bathrooms, kitchens, and maintenance closets.

Smart tactics spread quickly among factories, says Andrew Hutson, a supply chain expert at the Environmental Defense Fund, a U.S.-based nonprofit environmental group, who has been advising Wal-Mart without receiving compensation. As a rule of thumb, buyers such as Wal-Mart try to divvy up a given order among at least eight factories. Manufacturers, in turn, follow a similar rule: Typically they won't book more than an eighth of the required capacity with a single customer. When a factory accepts Wal-Mart's standards, the plant's other customers are likely to benefit from any efficiency gains. "This is ultimately about making the supply chain more efficient," says Hutson. "If Wal-Mart can help do that, the factories will carry through these practices to all their customers."

It's fair to ask whether managers who are concentrating on going green will still be able to keep a laser-like focus on bringing prices down. Hutson argues that an eco-focus ultimately serves the company's low-price goals. By helping its suppliers cut waste and reduce spending on energy, Wal-Mart fully expects to see those savings passed on in lower prices. "Lowest cost doesn't have to come from past method—the squeeze-'em-till-they-bleed approach. If anything, that approach leads to environmental degradation." he says.

Aston is Energy & Environment editor for BusinessWeek in New York.


What do you think? Given that Wal-Mart is the biggest store of it's kind in terms of gross sales and geographic footprint, what do you think the impact will be? If they follow through I imagine it will be enormous. This is a great first step. Maybe now they will develop a policy for not ruining small businesses every where they go!

LCREP Science Work Group Meeting for May Canceled

Science Work Group members;

We are not holding a Science Work Group meeting this month. We will have hosted a Habitat Restoration Forum in early May and a Landcover workshop in late May; hence, in deference to your time, we decided to eliminate the full SWG meeting.



The next meeting is scheduled for Tuesday, June 23rd. We will provide an update to the Pile Structure Program at this meeting. The July meeting will be, as you know, the Big Canoe trip. Hopefully, you have placed July 28 on your calendars for this trip! In the meantime, if you are going through SWG meeting withdrawals, please feel free to stop by the office and chat with Partnership staff.



Look forward to seeing you next month!





Catherine Corbett

Technical Programs Manager

Lower Columbia River Estuary Partnership

811 SW Naito Parkway, Suite 410

Portland, OR 97204

(503) 226-1565 ext 240

corbett@lcrep.org

www.lcrep.org

Fire Bureau Practice

Greetings Gateway Enthusiasts,



As you may know, the Portland Development Commission purchased the J.J. North/Bingo site at 10250 NE Halsey. The building has been empty for quite some time and is scheduled for demolition soon. This provides the Portland Fire Bureau an opportunity to use the building for training exercises. The training sessions will occur on May 16th, 22nd and 25th, between 8:30 am and 5:00pm. You may see smoke coming from the building – please note this is fake smoke and is intended for practice purposes only. The Fire Bureau will have signs on site indicating that an training exercise is taking place, but just in case, please share this information with your neighbors to ease any potential concern.



Thank you very much,



Sue Lewis
Sr. Project/Program Specialist
East/SE Neighborhood Section

Urban Development Team

Portland Development Commission
(503) 823-3331 Office

(503) 865-3885 Fax
222 NW Fifth Ave
Portland, OR 97209-3859

5.13.2009

Check out the North Coast Wildlife Center Photos

http://picasaweb.google.com/virhua/WCNCOPENHOUSE050309?feat=email#

More set asides by the Nature Conservancy

The Conservancy purchased the 272-acre property from a private estate for $1.1 million, taking out a loan from the group’s revolving loan fund. In addition to repaying the loan, the nonprofit is also raising private and public funds for a stewardship and research endowment of $255,000 to support long-term management of the preserve. The Oregon Watershed Enhancement Board has made a major commitment to assist with the purchase

The Nature Conservancy has purchased 27 parcels of private land located primarily in the Hells Canyon National Recreation Area

Original story by the Nature Conservancy posted on the Mother Nature Network.

The Nature Conservancy has purchased 27 parcels of private land located primarily in the Hells Canyon National Recreation Area. The Pacific Northwest Region of the U.S. Forest Service proposes to acquire the properties from the Conservancy using funds dedicated to land purchases. Public ownership would ensure public access for fishing, hunting and hiking on lands previously closed to the public.

The 27 land parcels, totaling 6,673 acres, are private inholdings surrounded by National Forest, concentrated mainly along seven miles of the Imnaha River and six miles of tributary creeks.

“These properties are the gateways to hundreds of thousands of acres of public lands,” said Phil Shephard, formerly regional program director for the Conservancy. “This purchase will consolidate ownership, enabling the Forest Service to control weeds, manage fire and provide access more effectively on public lands. It also prevents these properties from being divided into multiple ownerships and developed.”

"We worked hard to listen to community leaders and took their interests and concerns into account as we shaped this land purchase over many months,” Shephard added. He recently left the Conservancy to take the helm of a local land trust in his home state of Alaska.

The Conservancy will work cooperatively with the Forest Service to manage the properties during the ownership transition. Management will include biological surveys and weed control efforts. The Conservancy will also continue leasing the lands to current grazing permittees.

“The Conservancy purchase is very important to many species of fish and wildlife,” said Vic Coggins, Wallowa District biologist for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife. “All of the parcels are within conservation opportunity areas identified in the Oregon Conservation Strategy. Fourteen key fish and wildlife species, including Oregon’s largest Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep herd, occupy this area.”

The streams and their floodplains on the 27 parcels provide habitat for Snake River steelhead, Snake River chinook salmon and bull trout, all federally listed as threatened species. They also harbor rare plants and at-risk bird species including the yellow breasted chat, mountain quail, Lewis’ woodpecker and willow flycatcher.

The Conservancy’s purchase price of $7.39 million was determined by an independent appraisal in conformity to federal standards. With the properties on the market, the Forest Service asked the Conservancy to purchase and hold the lands until the agency could obtain the needed funding. The Conservancy will not profit from the sale to the Forest Service.

The Conservancy will raise other funds to help cover property taxes, loan interest, closing costs and land management activities. A grant from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation to support protection for ecologically important lands identified in state conservation plans is helping to make possible the land transfer.

MNN is working with The Nature Conservancy to bring you state-by-state environmental information.




*
* EMAIL
* Bookmark and Share
* RSS RSS
* Stumble Stumble
* Tweet Tweet

5.11.2009

Proposed Changes to Short Term Rentals in Tillamook County, Oregon

Proposed Changes to Short Term Rentals in Tillamook County, Oregon

Section 19.0 Short Term (Vacation) Rentals
This section regulates the short-term rental of dwelling units within Tillamook County. For purposes of this section, “Short Term Rental” means a dwelling unit (including any accessory guest house on the same property) that is rented to any person or entity for a period of up to thirty (30) consecutive nights. “Rental” means an agreement granting the use and possession of a residence to a person or single group not to exceed the maximum occupancy as set forth in this section. “Rented” means that their use and possession of a residence is granted to one or more persons in exchange for consideration valued in money, goods, or labor. “Cooking Facilities” includes stoves, ovens, or other equipment designed to prepare hot meals, but does not include a single hot plate, microwave, or toaster. Use of a short-term rental by a record owner of a property shall not be considered to be a rental under this section.

Section 19.20 Purpose
The purpose of this section is to regulate short-term rentals to enhance livability and safety in residential neighborhoods.

Section 19.30 Permit Required
An owner shall obtain a revocable short-term rental permit whenever a dwelling unit (as defined in this section) is to be used for short-term rental purposes.
1.A short-term rental permit shall be obtained prior to using the unit as a short-term rental.
2.The initial short-term rental permit shall be valid until July 1, 2010 and shall be renewed annually by July 1 thereafter.
3.The short-term rental permit is transferable to the new owner, so long as the new owner registers with the County to transfer the short-term rental, updates the short-term rental permit application and agrees in writing to comply with the requirements of the short-term rental permit
4.If the terms of the short-term rental are not met, the short-term rental permit may be revoked and the owner subject to penalties per Tillamook County Code.

Section 19.40 Short Term Rental Permit Application Requirements
An application for a short-term rental permit shall be completed on the form provided by Tillamook County and provide the following information.

1.A list of all property owners of the short term rental including names, addresses and telephone numbers. Property ownership, for the purposes of this section, shall consist of those individuals who are listed on the Tillamook County Assessor’s tax records.
2.Completion of the inspection section of the application by an Oregon Certified Home Inspector as defined by ORS 701.005(4), based on a visual inspection to certify the following:
1.Compliance with the following standards:
i.There shall be one functioning smoke detector in each sleeping room, with a minimum of two functioning smoke detectors in each dwelling unit. There shall also be one functioning fire extinguisher at each unit;
ii.Exterior doors shall be operational. All passageways to exterior doors shall be clear and unobstructed.
iii.Electrical systems shall be serviceable with no visual defects or unsafe conditions
iv.All fireplaces, fireplace inserts or other fuel burning heaters and furnaces shall be vented and properly installed.
v.Each sleeping room shall have an exterior exit that opens directly to the outside or an emergency escape or rescue window.
2.The number of sleeping rooms within the short term rental, as defined in Section 19.50 (2).
3.The number of parking spaces as defined in Section 19.50 (3)
4.Inspection certificates shall be valid for a period of three years or whenever dwelling unit modifications require a building permit, are made at which point a new inspection certification shall be required.
3.A site plan drawn to scale, showing the location of buildings and required parking
4.The name, address, and telephone number of a contact person, who shall be responsible, and authorized, to act on the owner’s behalf to promptly remedy any violation of these standards. The contact person may be the owner or designated agent who shall serve as a contact person.
5.Statement that the applicant has met and will continue to comply with the standards in this section.
6.Other information as requested by the County.

Section 19.50
All short term rentals shall meet the following standards.
1.A Short Term Rental unit shall be rented for no more than one rental in a consecutive three (3) night period. (can be modified by changing specific Rural Community’s Community Plan Policies.)
2.The maximum occupancy for each short term rental unit shall be calculated on the basis of three (3) persons per sleeping room plus an additional two (2) persons, up to a maximum of twelve (12) persons. A person is considered as twelve (12) months of age and older. For this purpose, a sleeping room is defined as fully-enclosed habitable space with a heat source, and an emergency escape or rescue opening.
3.Off street parking shall be used if physically available and shall be limited to three (3) people per car renting the unit. Parking is “physically available” when a garage or driveway can be emptied or materials removed so as to allow for the parking. Under no circumstance shall parking hinder any emergency vehicle’s path when responding to an emergency. The owner shall notify every renter in writing of these requirements and shall advise the renter where the off-street parking spaces to serve the unit are available.
4.There shall be no loud noise from 10:00PM till 10:00AM.
5.Garbage must be picked up a minimum of one time a week and must be in a secured container. Garbage containers must be placed where they are not clearly visible from the street except between 5:00 PM on the day prior to pickup and 5 PM on the day of pickup.
6.A house number visible from the street shall be maintained

5.10.2009

Electric Windows

Transparent plastic solar cells fitted into windows

Solar company Konarka has developed a transparent solar cell that it hopes will be built onto electricity-generating windows.

Check out the entire story here http://news.cnet.com/8301-11128_3-10235480-54.html

5.06.2009

Gateway

Greetings Members of the Gateway PAC!

This is a friendly reminder that we will be meeting next Wednesday, May 13 from 6:30 – 8:00 PM in Classroom 1 at the East Portland Community Center (740 SE 106th Avenue); I’ve attached a draft agenda for your review. We’ll spend a good deal of this meeting discussing the update to the Gateway Master Street Plan and the upcoming June 10 Open House. In addition, the PDC Board recently approved changes to our financial assistance programs to make them more appealing during the down economy; I’ll share these changes with you and have some brochures to hand out.

Finally, some good news! The Portland Bureau of Transportation has received $2 million in federal funding for Phase 2 of the 102nd Avenue Streetscape Improvement Project. These funds will go towards improvements between Glisan and Burnside, very similar to those recently completed between Glisan and Weidler. Funding will be allocated in the 2012-13 fiscal year, but PBOT is trying to expedite and have funding available for 2011-12. A hearty thank you to all who advocated for funding Phase 2, your efforts were invaluable!

Please let me know if you will not be able to attend next week. Otherwise, see you on the 13th!

Justin

Justin Douglas, AICP
Senior Project Coordinator
Portland Development Commission
phone 503-823-4579 fax 503-865-3609

5.01.2009

Lower Nehalem Community Trust Events

Lower Nehalem Community Trust e-Bulletin
May 1, 2008
News and Upcoming Events




Events

Living Locally Event, June 13, 2009 – 6:00-8:30 pm
Mark your calendars for the Trust’s second annual Living Locally fundraising event. This year the event will feature a light buffet dinner and silent auction. This is the perfect opportunity to introduce your friends and neighbors to the work of the Trust and enjoy an evening of wonderful local food, catered by Bread and Ocean, sustainable Oregon wines, the musical talents of guitar duo Bob Brook and Paul Miller, and great conversation with others who love the Nehalem Valley and Neahkahnie region. Tickets to the Living Locally event are $25 a piece and can be purchased after May 4 through Erich Miller at the LNCT office (contact him at 503-368-3203, or lnct@nehalemtel.net) or from the LNCT Board Members.

The Trust seeks your small, unique items for out silent auction tables at the Living Locally fundraising event. Suggested items include jewelry, ceramics, table-top décor, or that novel conversation piece. It’s an easy way to donate to the Trust and make room in your life for something new. Please call 503-368-3203 to discuss your potential auction donation for fit and arrange for pick up or delivery. Thank you for your support.

Down by the Riverside, May 11, 2009
The second annual North County Down by the Riverside educational event will be happening Monday May 11th. Down by the Riverside is an education event sponsored by SOLV and managed by the Tillamook Estuaries Partnership. This year, third graders from Nehalem and Garibaldi Elementary Schools will learn about invasive species, riparian zone insect and wild life and will assistant in building the Nehalem native plant teaching trail.

How You Can Help


Vosburg Creek Work Party, May 2, 2009 - 10:00 am – 2:00 pm
The first Saturday work party for May will be held on the 2nd from 10:00-2:00 at LNCT’s Vosberg Creek property. Tasks will include removal and suppression of blackberries, ivy, weeding and re-caging recently planted trees; ongoing clean-up of debris; and minor maintenance of the buildings on the property. For the first year, Scotch Broom (see Nature Notes below) has invaded Vosberg Creek and it is particularly important that we remove the young plants before they establish a real foothold on this property. Bring boots appropriate for working in a wet lowland area and a dish to share for the potluck lunch. Vosburg Creek is located at the corner of Highway 101 and Dubois St. on the southwest edge of Wheeler.

Wish List
- An 20 inch or greater flat-screen LCD Monitor for a second office computer we recently received.
- Transportation for 2 fifty-gallon drums collected during the March estuary clean-up to Metro hazardous waste disposal centers, in St John’s or Oregon City
- Old Cedar Posts – for extending our split rail fence
- 200 feet of plastic coated laundry line &
- 8’ cedar fence posts for trellising raspberries
- A Cat door
- 4’-6’ shop lights
- A metal dust pan
- A power grinder/sharpener – for sharpening tools
- 6’ metal T-posts – can be rusty but not bent
- Rolls or partial rolls of 4’ woven wire fencing

For more info about volunteer opportunities or to donate goods from our wish list contact the Trust at (503) 368-3203 or LNCT@nehalemtel.net.

News

New Office Hours
LNCT office hours will be expanded to 7:30 – 12:30, Monday, Wednesday and Thursday and Tuesdays 12:30-3:30 through the end of June. Please stop in or give us a call during those hours with questions about events, Living Locally tickets, wish list donations or any other Trust related matters.

Nature Notes

Controlling the Scotch Bloom Scourge
One of the areas, most unwanted invasive plants, the evergreen shoots and yellow blooms of the Scotch or Scot’s Broom (scientific name cytisus scoparius) are an unfortunately common sight all over the Nehalem Valley and Neahkahnie area, as well as the rest of the Pacific Northwest. There are several competing stories about how the Scotch Broom arrived in the region, my favorite one indicates that it was used as packing material for Scotch whiskey sent to gold mining camps in the 1860s, but regardless of how it got here it has since established a firm foothold. Scotch Broom, which grows up to as high as 12 feet or more, forms dense stands crowding out native trees and plants and displacing wildlife which uses these native flora for food and habitat. After reaching an age of three years, each plant can produce between 10,000-18,000 seeds a year and each seed can remain viable for as long as 60 years. Scotch Broom, like all legumes, is nitrogen fixing allowing the plants to sustain themselves in sand and nutrient-poor soils particularly in recently disturbed areas such as clear-cuts.

Managing the spread of the Scotch Broom is difficult, however very young plants can be pulled easily making monitoring and early intervention critical. Non-chemical removal methods of more mature plants are limited to manual cutting during the mid summer months, after flowering but prior to the maturation of the seed pods when the plant is stressed from the summer drought. Cutting is most effective on the oldest plants, with only 20% of plants aged more than 5 years re-sprouting. While the roots of the plant can be removed at the same time, experts recommend removing the roots only in the winter months as the soil disturbance provides ideal conditions for germination of dormant Scotch Broom seeds in the soil. Scotch Broom debris can be chipped or burned if it doesn’t contain seeds, otherwise it should be left to decompose on site to minimize its spread. Scotch Broom seeds can hitch rides on boots and shovels, so be sure to clean your gear well after working in an infested area.



If a friend forwarded this e-Bulletin to you and you would like to subscribe, please email lnct@nehalemtel.net with “Subscribe” in the subject line and your first and last name in the body. To unsubscribe, simply reply to this email with “Unsubscribe” in the subject line.

Lower Nehalem Community Trust • Phone: (503) 368-3203 • Email: LNCT@nehalemtel.net
Address: PO Box 496 Manzanita, OR 97130

PNAMP

Greetings PNAMP Participant,

PNAMP is hosting the following meetings during the months of May and June 2009:
o May 7 - PNAMP Technology Exchange Series, Olympia, WA
o May 28/29 - PNAMP Steering Committee Retreat, Vancouver, WA
o June 16 - PNAMP Steering Committee Meeting, TBD

Please check the PNAMP calendar for recently added meetings as well as meeting updates, agendas, directions, and phone bridge information.

Other meetings of interest for May and June 2009:
o May 7 - Washington Invasive Species Council Meeting, TBD
o May 12 - 14 - Northwest Power and Conservation Council Committee Meeting, Walla Walla, WA
o May 13 - Columbia River Basin Toxics Reduction Workshop, Pendleton, OR
o May 14 - 15 - Salmon Recovery Funding Board Meeting, Vancouver, WA
o May 19 - Puget Sound Stormwater Monitoring Workshop: Designing a Monitoring Program for the Future, Renton, WA (see below for more information)
o May 19 - 22 - 2009 Society for Ecological Restoration NW Chapter Regional Conference, Lynwood, WA (see below for more information)
o May 28 - LCREP Landcover Workshop, Portland
o June 2 - Columbia River Basin Toxics Reduction Workshop, White Salmon, WA
o June 2 - 3 - Oregon Watershed Enhancement Board Meeting, Salem, OR
o June 9 - 11 - Northwest Power and Conservation Council Committee Meeting, Whitefish, MT
o June 10 - Washington Biodiversity Council Meeting, Eatonville, WA
o June 15 - 17 - The International Environmetrics Society North American Regional Meeting, Corvallis, OR (see below for more information)
o June 23 - LCREP Science Work Group Meeting, Portland
o June 24 - Washington Forum on Monitoring Meeting, TBD
If you would like your meetings posted on the PNAMP calendar or if you would like to be removed from this email list, please reply to jschei@usgs.gov.

Additional information on conferences and abstract deadlines:

ABSTRACT DEADLINE - MAY 6 for Water and Land Use in the Pacific Northwest: Integrating Communities and Watersheds (November 4 -6, Stevenson, WA)
www.swwrc.wsu.edu
This regional conference merges the best available water science and land-use knowledge to promote collaboration between scientists, planners, and decision-makers on sustainable land-use methodologies. The agenda was developed in response to comments from previous water quality-based conference participants who stressed the need to plan future development in ways that would protect and improve water resources. The conference will include presentations, featured speakers, panel discussions, and a poster session.

THEMES:
· Carrying Capacity: The Science of Planning
· Co-management: Surface/Groundwater, Science and Policy

· Intersection of Economics, Land Use, and Water Resources

· Planning for Climate Change: Adaptation and/or Mitigation

· Assessing Effectiveness of Stormwater Mitigation

· Assessing Effectiveness of TMDL Implementation

· Enabling Local Leadership and Action: Optimizing Extension and University Resources

· Transboundaries: Watersheds and Jurisdictions

· Integrating the Built Environment and Watersheds

· Outreach and Education Strategies

· Using Modeling as a Predictor for Future Needs

ABSTRACT DEADLINE - MAY 15 for Coastal and Estuarine Research Federation, 20th Biennial Conference (November1-5, Oregon Convention Center, Portland)
https://www.sgmeet.com/cerf2009/
The CERF 2009 Program Committee invites you to submit an abstract for an oral or poster presentation for CERF 2009. The Federation is committed to bringing scientists and students from around the world together to exchange information and ideas about the science and management of coastal ecosystems. We view our Federation conferences as providing outstanding opportunities for professionals at all stages in their career for continuing education and development. Please see the conference website for more information.

May 19 - Puget Sound Stormwater Monitoring Workshop: Designing a Monitoring Program for the Future (Renton Community Center, Renton, WA)
The Stormwater Work Group has been meeting since October 2008 to prioritize objectives for monitoring stormwater and develop recommendations for implementing a regional stormwater monitoring strategy that addresses stormwater impacts to beneficial uses, pollutant loadings, and efficacy of management actions in Puget Sound. The workshop will provide background information to interested parties about our efforts to develop the strategy and to hear about some recent monitoring/research efforts. Of primary importance however, is receiving your early input for developing the strategy and identifying opportunities to link the stormwater monitoring strategy to other efforts.

The intended audience for the workshop is: stormwater managers, engineers, and scientists, planners, natural resource managers, industry professionals, non-profit environmental advocates, decision makers, and technical folks engaged in ecosystem and environmental monitoring.
Please plan to come give your feedback and hear about:

· New ideas for approaching stormwater monitoring in Puget Sound

· Findings and lessons learned by local monitoring programs

· Findings of the National Research Council on stormwater monitoring efforts nation-wide

· And more

Space is limited. If you would like to register or if you have other questions, please contact Project Manager Karen Dinicola at 360.407.6550.

May 19 - 22 - 2009 Society for Ecological Restoration NW Chapter Regional Conference (Lynwood Convention Center, Lynwood, WA)
http://www.ser.org/sernw/Conference2009.asp
"Creating Thriving Rural and Urban Communities through Ecological Restoration" SERNW is pleased to announce the 2009 SERNW Regional Conference. Conference tracks will include technical sessions, workshops, field trips, and special presentations focused on promoting the preservation, conservation, enhancement, and restoration of urban and rural ecosystems of the Pacific Northwest.

June 15 - 17 - The International Environmetrics Society North American Regional Meeting (Corvallis, OR)
http://www.science.oregonstate.edu/~madsenl/TIESNA2009/index.html
Tracking the quality and quantity of environmental resources is an important issue that involves the gamut of environmental sciences, as well as statisticians, mathematicians, and environmental managers. The focus of the conference will be on forests and fisheries, but talks dealing with other resources are welcome.We encourage submissions covering any aspect of measuring, monitoring, or modeling an environmental resource. Abstracts are due no later than May 1, 2009. For further information, contact Don Stevens at 541-737-3587, stevens@stat.oregonstate.edu, or go to the conference website. Abstracts may be sent by email to stevens@stat.oregonstate.edu or mailed to Don Stevens, Statistics Department, 44 Kidder Hall, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR 97331.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Jacque Schei
5501A Cook-Underwood Road
Cook, WA 98605
office: 509.538.2299 x282
cell: 503.201.0880

Have your say!

LEED for Neighborhood Development: 2nd Public Comment Opens Today

The consensus-based process that drives the development of the LEED rating systems is key to ensuring LEED encourages the very best in building, design and development practices. As LEED grows to cover the way we plan and build our neighborhoods, it’s especially vital that we hear as many diverse voices as we can.

The second public comment period for LEED for Neighborhood Development opens today, Friday, May 1, and will close Sunday, June 14, at 11:59 p.m. PDT. Please don’t miss this chance to be part of the development of the rating system!

See the updated rating system draft and submit your comments »

During the first public comment period that ended earlier this year, we received more than 5,000 comments, and we have posted responses to each of those comments at the link above. Please note that, in the second public comment period, only changes to the draft that were made after the first public comment period are open for comment.

The LEED for Neighborhood Development rating system integrates the principles of smart growth, new urbanism and green building into the first national rating system for neighborhood design. The program is the result of a collaboration among USGBC, the Congress for the New Urbanism, and the Natural Resources Defense Council. The rating system has been in pilot since July 2007, with nearly 240 projects participating. Feedback gathered from those projects, as well as countless hours of USGBC volunteers’ time, have led to the current, more-sophisticated and market-responsive draft of LEED for Neighborhood Development.

RE: Strengthening Federal Forests and Protecting Old Growth - Senator Wyden's Newsletter

FYI-

"Coming on the heels of months of input from concerned parties and ordinary citizens, I am preparing to introduce legislation that will protect our treasured federal forests for years to come and provide many much-needed jobs right now. The Oregon Forest Restoration and Old Growth Protection Act will jumpstart federal efforts to make forests healthier and more fire resistant by allowing for the increased thinning of over-grown federal forests while permanently ending the harvesting of old growth trees in Oregon. I am currently sharing a draft of this legislation on my website and public comments are always welcome. I will consider further revisions before introduction.

I am calling on the timber interests and the environmental groups to move beyond a decades-old battle over forest thinning and look at how it would benefit the economy to the tune of 5,000 family-wage jobs while making forests healthier and safer. The legislation will also protect some of Oregon's oldest trees, those 120 years or older, from being harvested. The science no longer supports the harvesting of these state treasures and I believe they should be protected. Working together, we can create thousands of jobs while protecting old growth and strengthening our forests.

Click here to learn more about the Oregon Forest Restoration and Old Growth Protection Act.
Click here to read a summary of my legislation."