Willamette Valley News, Wednesday 3/29 – Human Remains Found Near Glide Positively Identified, Apartment Building Evacuated In Eugene After Ground-Floor Fire Breaks Out

The latest news stories and stories of interest in the Willamette Valley from the digital home of Southern Oregon, from Wynne Broadcasting’s WillametteValleyMagazine.com

Wednesday, March 29, 2023

Willamette Valley Weather

Human Remains Found Near Glide Positively Identified, Major Crimes Team Investigating

Megan Wendel

GLIDE, Ore. – The human remains found in the middle of February near Glide have been positively identified. 

 On Thursday, February 16, 2023, the Sheriff’s Office was notified by a caller that his son, who had been antler shed hunting, located what were believed to be human remains in the Thunder Mountain area of Glide. 

Deputies located the area described and confirmed the presence of skeletal human remains. The Douglas County Sheriff’s Office Investigations Division and Medical Examiner were notified and have been investigating the incident since the discovery. 

The Oregon State Medical Examiner’s Office has positively identified the remains of those belonging to Megan Dyanne Wendel of Roseburg. Wendel was previously reported missing to the Roseburg Police Department in July of 2022. She was 36-years-old at the time of her disappearance. 

The Douglas County Major Crimes Team is continuing the investigation into her death, which is considered suspicious. Anyone with information is encouraged to contact the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office at (541) 440-4471 referencing Case #23-0618.

Original Story at Willamette Valley Magazine http://willamettevalleymagazine.com/2023/02/24/willamette-valley-news-friday-2-24-eugene-police-seek-tips-after-pedestrian-killed-in-hit-and-run-accident-on-hwy-99-detectives-investigate-human-remains-found-near-glide/

The Douglas County Major Crimes Team consists of investigators from the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office, Roseburg Police Department and Oregon State Police working in consultation with the Douglas County District Attorney’s Office.

Apartment Building Evacuated In Eugene After Ground-Floor Fire Breaks Out

A fire broke out Tuesday afternoon at a 3-story apartment building at 13th and High in Eugene. According to Eugene Springfield Fire officials, the building was evacuated quickly.

The fire occurred on the ground floor and damage was contained to just one apartment. Officials say the fire was under control within ten minutes.

No one injured and no one was home in that apartment at the time, officials said. No word yet on what might have started the fire which is under investigation.

Lebanon Fire District Responds to Four Fires in 48 Hours

The Lebanon Fire District has seen an unusually high occurrence of fires in our area, and has responded to three fires in our District and one in Sweet Home in fewer than 48 hours. 

The first two fires, both in Lebanon, occurred on Sunday, March 26. Crews battled a blaze in a pole barn on a property that provided difficult access, as it was full of RVs, cars, and other obstacles. In addition to being one of the four fires in two days, this was also the second fire at this property in less than a month. Later on Sunday, the same crews were dispatched to a fully-engulfed RV in a rural part of our District. Even without access to the city hydrant system, this fire was knocked down within 20 minutes of arrival.

On Monday evening, our neighbors to the east in Sweet Home were busy with their own structure fire. As part of our mutual aid agreements, LFD sent Aerial Truck 34 (T34) to assist, as well as a fully-staffed ambulance to cover any EMS calls for service during the fire. While those six duty crew members were assisting Sweet Home, several of our volunteers and off-duty staff came in to cover Lebanon. 

The final fire came in on Tuesday morning, approximately 20 minutes before the 7:00 AM shift change, which meant crews that battled the previous night’s fire were dispatched again, much like Sunday’s fires. First-arriving units found a residential home in the 300 block of Maple Street showing flames and smoke from both the home and attached garage. Firefighting efforts were challenged by the older construction of the home as well as a large volume of personal contents in and around the structure. Firefighters were able to bring the blaze under control, but 5th street was closed to local access for several hours. Because of the shift change timing, LFD was able to respond with over 25 personnel between A shift and B shift, Commanding Officers, and volunteers. One resident was evaluated for a minor burn injury on scene that did not require medical transport, and no firefighters were injured. 

Thank you to PP&L for securing electrical, Albany Fire Department for sending one engine and one medic to cover the district, and the City of Lebanon for providing traffic control. The cause of this fire also remains under investigation.

Though no causes for any of the fires have been determined yet, the Lebanon Fire District would like to remind residents to be cautious when using alternative home-heating methods, such as space heaters, and the importance of regularly testing and maintaining your smoke alarms. If you need assistance with smoke alarms, or wish to schedule a free home safety evaluation, please call our Fire & Life Safety office at (541) 451-1901.  

Two arrested for retail theft

Salem, Ore. — Salem Police patrol officers acted quickly yesterday, March 27, and arrested two women involved in a retail theft incident at the Willamette Town Center mall complex.

On Monday afternoon at approximately 12:15 p.m., officers responded to the Ulta Beauty Store at 831 Lancaster DR NE on the report of a woman who entered the store with a shopping bag and filled it with an estimated $5,000 of merchandise, then left the store without paying.

The woman fled the scene in a vehicle driven by another woman. Using witness information on the description of the suspects and the vehicle, patrol officers were able to locate the two female suspects inside the vehicle in the parking lot of the Target Stores across from the mall. A search warrant to search the vehicle was obtained, allowing officers to search its contents. Officers subsequently located the merchandise stolen from the store, as well as documentation of organized theft, drug paraphernalia, and a handgun.

The two women identified as Amber Dawn Alvarado, age 37, and Taylor Paige Hunt, age 29, were lodged at the Marion County Jail on charges of theft in the first degree. 

Alvarado faces an additional charge of felon in possession of a weapon, a firearm, and remains in custody, awaiting arraignment today at the Marion County Criminal Court Annex

Deputies Arrest Man for Assaulting Employees at Business

Linn County Sheriff Michelle Duncan reports that on March 27, 2023, at 4:22 p.m., deputies responded to a business in the 38000 block of Mason Road for a disturbance.  While enroute deputies learned a vehicle had hit a person.   Deputies arrived on scene and found several employees holding down a male in the parking lot of the business.  The male was identified as Robert France, 55, from Alamogordo, New Mexico. 

Investigators learned France drove his green 1997 GMC Yukon through a man door of the business, running over a 35-year-old employee of the business.  France got out of his vehicle and threatened another employee, 53-years old, with a knife inside the business.  Employees from the business were able to subdue France until law enforcement arrived. 

Paramedics from the Jefferson Fire Department and Albany Fire Department responded, and the 35-year-old employee was transported to the Salem Hospital.  He was later transferred to Legacy Emanual Medical Center in Portland due to the seriousness of his injuries.  The 53-year-old employee was transported to the Albany General Hospital where he was treated and released for a knife wound. 

Robert France was arrested and lodged in the Linn County Jail for Assault in the First Degree.  Other charges are pending.  The investigation is ongoing and anyone with information regarding this incident is asked to contact Detective Dakotah Hinrichs of the Linn County Sheriff’s Office at 541-967-3950.

U.S. Department Of Housing Sending $50 Million To Oregon To Address Homelessness

The federal government is sending nearly $50 million to Oregon nonprofits, counties and other entities to address homelessness.

The money – from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development – adds to a $200 million investment approved by the state Legislature this month to help hundreds of Oregonians find housing. At least 18,000 Oregonians are homeless, according to the U.S. housing department and many more live precariously, struggling to make rent or mortgage payments on unaffordable homes. Addressing the crisis is one of Gov. Tina Kotek’s top priorities.

A tent is anchored with shopping carts off of Lancaster Drive in Salem, Oregon on Thursday, March 24, 2023. The U.S. Department of Housing estimates that at least 18,000 people in Oregon are unsheltered. (Amanda Loman/Oregon Capital Chronicle)

The federal funding program supports efforts by nonprofits and state and local governments to get homeless individuals and families quickly into homes. The program also aims to help homeless individuals and families gain access to support programs in an effort to get them stabilized.

Oregon’s two Democratic senators – Jeff Merkley and Ron Wyden – announced the funding in a release.

“This funding will provide critical support for communities and individuals across the state struggling to find affordable housing,” Merkley said. 

Wyden added: “Quality of life for Oregonians or anybody else in America requires people to have a roof over their heads and a floor under their feet.”

Earlier this month, Wyden reintroduced a bill that died in a previous congressional session to get people on the streets into housing and make homes more affordable by increasing the supply and making the purchase of a new home easier through a tax credit. The bill has been referred to the U.S. Senate Finance Committee, which Wyden chairs.

In Oregon, Home Forward, a Portland-based nongovernmental housing authority that relies on the federal government for funding, will get the biggest grant from the federal government, more than $7 million, followed by $4.6 million to the Washington County Department of Housing Services. The housing department awarded Central City Concern, a Portland-based nonprofit, $4 million.

Nine other entities got at least $1 million:

  • Housing Solutions, Inc.: $3.5 million
  • Multnomah County: $3.2 million
  • Lane County: $2.5 million
  • Transitions Projects, Inc.: $2.4 million
  • Self Enhancement, Inc.: $2.3 million
  • Cascadia Health: $1.5 million
  • Clackamas Department of Health, Housing & Human Services: $1.4 million
  • Urban League of Portland: $1.2 million
  • Clackamas Women’s Services, Inc.: $1.1 million

The department awarded another 42 grants to nonprofits and governments, including $245,666 for the city of Portland. The smallest grant – $14,696 – is going to Oregon Housing and Community Services, the state housing agency. (SOURCE)

Scientists Pursue Project In Eastern Oregon To Stem Climate Change

Scientists and energy executives are pursuing capturing carbon emissions produced in Oregon and storing them underground, a novel process that could someday reduce the effects of climate change. 

The Hermiston-based project would involve capturing carbon dioxide emitted by the town’s natural gas facility and storing it in rock thousands of feet below the Earth’s surface. Putting carbon dioxide below-ground instead of releasing it into the air would help bring Oregon and Washington closer to their carbon reduction goals to fight climate change, project leaders said. 

The university is leading the project in partnership with the U.S. Department of Energy’s Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, the oil company Oxy Low, and the natural gas company Calpine, which runs the Hermiston facility. The facility burns natural gas to create energy, which is sold to power companies in Oregon, Washington and California. The Department of Energy has awarded researchers $10.5 million to determine how feasible it would be to store the facility’s carbon emissions underground. 

The Hermiston area is rich in basalt, a type of rock that can store carbon. When carbon dioxide is injected into basalt, it solidifies and turns into a rock, a process that takes about two years. Officials would insert carbon emissions from the Hermiston natural gas facility through wells drilled deep into the basalt layer. 

If greenlit by the Department of Energy, the Hermiston project would be the first location in the country to offer carbon-emitting industries the option to store carbon dioxide in basalt on a commercial scale, project leaders said. 

Storing carbon in basalt would keep the emissions from entering the atmosphere, a primary cause of climate change. Project leaders are still estimating the amount of carbon dioxide that could be stored at the site. 

The project has been lauded by energy executives as a way for Oregon to reach its carbon reduction goals. 

The Hermiston project is currently in the second of a four-phase implementation process. A 24-month long study will begin this summer to determine its feasibility. 

Researchers will drill a well into the basalt to understand what would happen if millions of tons of carbon dioxide were injected into the rock. Researchers will also determine whether the project could affect the area’s groundwater or overlap with earthquake fault lines. 

Once the study is completed, Department of Energy officials will decide whether next steps should be taken. If the project moves forward, the social and economic impacts of carbon storage in Hermiston would be studied, and meetings and webinars would inform the public of the project’s purpose, its impacts and why it’s needed, according to the project’s leaders. 

Upon approval and funding from the Department of Energy, the fourth and final phase would establish the project’s infrastructure and require obtaining a permit for injecting carbon dioxide into deep rock formations. In the U.S., this type of permit has never been issued to a project using basalt to store carbon. 

“We might be one of the first that ever gets to do that,” Schaef said. “I would love to be one of the first that does it right, and sets that precedent for ‘here’s the bar you have to meet.’”  Officials said the project would likely span 30 years. (SOURCE)

Oregon Lawmakers Discuss New Gun Control Bill As Measure 114 Remains In Legal Limbo

Senate Bill 348 would enact a gun permitting system and raise the minimum age to purchase a gun as Measure 114 faces multiple legal challenges.

Oregon lawmakers are discussing a new bill that both mirrors and expands upon Measure 114, the stalled gun control measure which faces multiple legal challenges after voters passed it in November.

Senate Bill 348 would raise the minimum age to purchase a gun from 18 to 21, with some exceptions for hunting rifles and shotguns.

It reflects parts of Measure 114 including banning high-capacity magazines and establishing a permit-to-purchase system for guns, but it would also postpone this permitting process until July 2024.

Under SB 348, gun permits would be more expensive, up from $65 to $150 for new permits and $110 for renewals – an increase that supporters said would give law enforcement more resources to run background checks and regulate sales.

The bill would also establish waiting periods for gun transfers and require gun safety courses.

Measure 114, Oregon’s landmark gun control legislation that narrowly passed with voter approval in November 2022, currently faces multiple legal challenges at the state and federal levels.

Oregon Rep. Kim Thatcher, a Republican from Keizer, said SB 348 feels like a way to sidestep the ongoing lawsuits.

“The constitutionality of the provisions of [Measure 114] have been challenged and are being challenged and yet this bill will short-circuit that process, as it’s in the courts right now,” Thatcher said. “[SB348] will cost the state a lot of money to implement for no real return.”

At a public hearing for SB 348 on Monday night, a majority of speakers shared their opposition to the gun regulation bill.

“This amendment goes beyond ballot measure 114’s already unconstitutional requirements, like the increase in fees, time, delays, age restriction increases and retroactive magazine bans,”said Aoibheann Cline, NRA State Director.

Some supporters of the bill at the hearing — including representatives for Everytown for Gun Safety, Mom Demand Action, and the Oregon Alliance for Gun Safety — said the bill needs adjustments but it would create a safer system for gun permits and background checks with the structure to make it work.

“Senate Bill 348 makes some important changes to aid in the implementation of the new permit system and ensures law enforcement has the tools and resources they need to implement the measure,” an Oregon Alliance for Gun Safety spokesperson testified.

Most of the speakers at the Monday’s public hearing opposed the bill, saying this bill could also face legal challenges if passed.

“These measures are disenfranchising Oregonians and making them feel as if they have no voice in their government, I pray you will let Senate Bill 348 die,” said John McDonnell of Salem.

And hundreds of people have submitted written testimony via OLIS – mostly in opposition.

“I had a customer come into my store and she was scared, she had a threatening neighbor,” said Jeremiah Kaufman of Tualatin. “Police couldn’t do anything because he hadn’t harmed anybody yet. With this bill going through, she’d have to wait days and she didn’t have days.”

The Senate Judiciary Committee is accepting written testimony on SB 348 through Wednesday night at 5 p.m. It will then hold a work session on Thursday. (SOURCE)

Southbound I-5 Closed At Oregon-California State Line, Northbound Lanes Closed In Redding

It happened again yesterday, the California Department of Transportation closed Interstate 5 from Redding to Weed because of heavy snow and blizzard conditions.

CalTrans also requested the Oregon Department of Transportation to close Southbound lanes of Interstate 5 from Ashland to Weed because of blizzard conditions.

CalTrans has closed Interstate 5 multiple times this winter between Redding and Weed always citing winter hazardous driving conditions. It is unclear why CalTrans snow plows and sanding equipment cannot keep Interstate 5 open.

Closing Interstate 5 has traditionally been a very rare occurrence but this year it has been the norm with any adverse winter weather. Interstate 5 was reopened to traffic between Ashland and Redding late yesterday afternoon.

Another Quake off the Coast West of Coos Bay

A magnitude 4.0 earthquake rumbled out in the Pacific Ocean Sunday night, the United States Geological Survey reported. The temblor occurred shortly before 10 p.m. about 124 miles west of Bandon, 132 miles west of Coos Bay, at a depth of about 6 miles.

There are no reports of injuries or damages, and no tsunami warning was issued. Small earthquakes are common off the Oregon coast. A magnitude 3.3 quake struck last Wednesday in the same general area in the ocean. A magnitude 2.8 quake registered two days before that, and a magnitude 4.3 quake hit on March 17.

Experts say there’s about a 40% chance a large quake — up to magnitude 9.0 — from the Cascadia subduction zone will uncork sometime in the next 50 years. January marked the 323rd anniversary of the last major quake along the 600-mile fault off the Pacific Northwest coast.

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