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HomeMy WebLinkAbout052322Corr JEFFERSON COUNTY BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS 2022 CORRESPONDENCE DATE OF DATE ORIGINATING CORRESPONDENCE DOCUMENT RECEIVED PARTY I 5/12/2022 5/12/2022 Suzanne Duscha No Shooting Areas Workshop 5/12/2022 5/12/2022 Kellen Lynch Please Support Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance 5/12/2022 5/12/2022 Molly Torres May 17th No Shooting Areas Petitions Paralegal to James A. Doros 5/12/2022 5/12/2022 Jefferson County Water Quality News Flash:Anderson Lake High in Toxin Chris Moore I Executive Director County Courthouse Grant Program-Application 5/12/2022 5/12/2022 he/him/his Workshop Monday, May 16 @ 12noon Washington Trust for Historic Preservation 5/12/2022 5/12/2022 Washington State Liquor&Cannabis FERINO'S PIZZA 080774-2M 5/12/2022 5/12/2022 t IIIUy Jdy11C T UICJL dllU I ICC 171eelIIIUUJC VQJ RC�.JUIL J1�JFJIUYCU f'L.... !'I:..,.,l., A.,i;.,., I,,.!'A!' 5/12/2022 5/12/2022 Eric Nagle and Darbra Smith, Port Support for Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance Townsend WA Judith-Kate Friedman 5/12/2022 5/12/2022 Performing Songwriter and Composer Letter about Housing in Jefferson County Founder and Director Judith Kate Friedman Letter about Housing in Jefferson County(re-send 5/12/2022 5/12/2022 Performing Songwriter and Composer with sender info corrected) Founder and Director 5/12/2022 5/12/2022 Paula Thurston Yes on the Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance Port Townsend.WA 5/12/2022 5/12/2022 Bart and Louise Kavruck No Shooting Areas Workshop 5/12/2022 5/12/2022 NACo Reminder:Application for 2022-2023 Presidential Leadership and Committee Appointments 5/12/2022 5/12/2022 The Chamber of Jefferson County Next Month with Your Chamber-June 2022 5/12/2022 5/12/2022 Jennifer Poole I Administrative Manager HCCC Board of Directors Meeting May 18, 2022- Hood Canal Coordinating Council Agenda and Zoom video/teleconference details 5/12/2022 5/12/2022 John B. Vezina, Government Relations WSF Weekly Update Director,Washington State Ferries 5/12/2022 5/12/2022 Rhonda and Mike Burell RE: Shoreline Permit Filing Correspondence may be viewed attached to the BoCC Agenda each week on the County Webpage or contact the County Administrator's Office by calling, 360 385 9100 JEFFERSON COUNTY BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS 2022 CORRESPONDENCE DATE OF DATE ORIGINATING CORRESPONDENCE DOCUMENT RECEIVED PARTY 5/13/2022 5/13/2022 The Chamber of Jefferson County NW School of Wooden Boatbuilding &Resort at Point Ludlow ship christening and Ribbon Cutting! 5/13/2022 5/13/2022 The Hood Canal Salmon Enhancement HCSEG News: Free Nature and Nutrition Workshop Group for Kids! 5/13/2022 5/13/2022 Washington Counties I WSAC Friday 5 Courthouse Grants Contracts Hydrogen Plant I Drug Policy I Affordable Housing 5/13/2022 5/13/2022 William Dean Shine Quarry Status 5/13/2022 5/13/2022 EDC Team Jefferson Join us for our monthly Resource Roundtable: LEAN Thinking 5/13/2022 5/13/2022 Municipal Research and Services Center Ask MRSC: May 2022 (MRSC) 5/13/2022 5/13/2022 Lynn Sorensen KPTZ Listener Questions for Monday, May 16, 2022 KPTZ Virus Watch Team BOCC Update 5/13/2022 5/13/2022 Chimacum Grange Monthly Grange Meeting May 18th-Join us! 5/13/2022 5/13/2022 Libby Palmer Ordinance re temporary housing Port Townsend,WA 5/13/2022 5/13/2022 Al Bergstein Ordinance Governing Temporary Housing Facilities- Port Townsend Do PASS as written 5/13/2022 5/13/2022 Washington State Parks and Recreation Washington State Parks E-News May 2022 Commission 5/13/2022 5/13/2022 Daniel &Karen Quinn Shea Support for Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance Port Townsend,WA K.Austin Kerr 5/13/2022 5/13/2022 Professor Emeritus of History, Ohio State letter in support of homeless University 5/13/2022 5/13/2022 Tiffany Hudepohl DCD HOMELESS ORDINANCE 5/13/2022 5/13/2022 Blessings, Geralynn Blessings, Geralynn 5/13/2022 5/13/2022 Margaret D. McGee Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance Port Townsend,Washington 5/13/2022 5/13/2022 Margaret D. McGee Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance Comment Port Townsend,Washington Continued 5/13/2022 5/13/2022 Jeff Neill Gardiner- No Shooting Zone 5/14/2022 5/16/2022 NACo This Week in Photos 5/14/2022 5/16/2022 Peninsula Trails Coalition ODT Volunteers Needed! • Marathon Start Line• Correspondence may be viewed attached to the BoCC Agenda each week on the County Webpage or contact the County Administrator's Office by calling, 360 385 9100 JEFFERSON COUNTY BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS 2022 CORRESPONDENCE DATE OF DATE ORIGINATING CORRESPONDENCE DOCUMENT RECEIVED PARTY Mary Margolis(she/her/hers) 5/14/2022 5/16/2022 Administrative Assistant Housing Webinar Clallam-Jefferson County Pro Bono Lawyers 5/14/2022 5/16/2022 Suzy Elbow I support permanently adopting the temporary housing facility ordinance 5/15/2022 5/16/2022 Goeshua Holsinger Please Help! re:Why is this allowed to happen to us in a peaceful neighborhood? 5/15/2022 5/16/2022 Eliana Rose Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance District 24 5/16/2022 5/16/2022 Crystal Ellerbe, Federal Transit Safe Streets and Roads for All Notice of Funding Administration Opportunity 5/16/2022 5/16/2022 The Hood Canal Salmon Enhancement HCSEG News: Garden Yoga+Wellness at the Group Salmon Center! 5/16/2022 5/16/2022 Local 20/20 Local 20/20 Weekly Announcements 5/16/2022 5/16/2022 Crystal Ellerbe, Federal Transit USDOT Safe Streets for All (SS4A) Discretionary Administration Grant Program 5/16/2022 5/16/2022 Basecamp(Peninsula Trails Coalition) Basecamp(Peninsula Trails Coalition): Here's the latest activity 5/16/2022 5/16/2022 JeffCo Historical Society History Hikes Start This Saturday! IL, Monica le Roux[she/her] 5/16/2022 5/16/2022 Administrative Services Assistant Commissioner's Breakfast, June 1st at 8:30am Jefferson County Library 5/16/2022 5/16/2022 Commissioners Breakfast, June 1st at Jefferson County Community Leadership Awards 8:30am 5/16/2022 5/16/2022 Clallam EDC Join Steve Burke, Exec Dir of Shore Aquatic Center on Coffee with Colleen Wednesday at 8am 5/16/2022 5/16/2022 Lindsey Schromen-Wawrin adaptive virtual or hybrid meeting policy 5/16/2022 5/16/2022 EDC Team Jefferson Vote for PT! We are currently#10 nationwide! 5/16/2022 5/16/2022 KR Wolf 2022 Homeless Ordinance 5/16/2022 5/16/2022 Olympic Region Clean Air Agency Olympic Region Clean Air Agency news update: Permit Actions Paul Jewell I Policy Director—Water, Low-carbon energy project siting study: Flyers for 5/16/2022 5/16/2022 Land Use, Environment&Solid Waste public information meetings Washington State Association of Counties Correspondence may be viewed attached to the BoCC Agenda each week on the County Webpage or contact the County Administrator's Office by calling, 360 385 9100 JEFFERSON COUNTY BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS 2022 CORRESPONDENCE DATE OF DATE ORIGINATING CORRESPONDENCE DOCUMENT RECEIVED PARTY 5/16/2022 5/16/2022 Washington State Association of Counties New Work Group Opportunity from the Joint Transportation Committee! 5/16/2022 5/16/2022 EDC Team Jefferson 3 New Free Workshops Available: Cryptocurrency, Data Analytics, LEAN Manufacturing 5/16/2022 5/16/2022 North Olympic Land Trust May 2022 Landscapes Heath Heikkila 5/16/2022 5/16/2022 Director, Government Affairs Request for Work Session Participation American Forest Resource Council Heath Heikkila 5/16/2022 5/16/2022 Chris Manik MD Director, Government Affairs American Forest Resource Council Becky Brown-Nienow 5/16/2022 5/16/2022 resident of Port Townsend Temporary Housing and Facilities Ordinance supporter of Bayside Housing, Community Build and HSN 5/16/2022 5/16/2022 Kate Schinhofen In full support of Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance 5/16/2022 5/16/2022 Caroline K.Wildflower, MSW Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance 5/16/2022 5/16/2022 Ed Bowen Claim of discrimination for the Covid Question and Answer 5/16/2022 5/16/2022 Annie Bartos Online Form Submittal: Feedback 5/16/2022 5/16/2022 David Berrian Support for the Temporary Housing Facilities Port Townsend,JC District 1 Ordinance 5/16/2022 5/16/2022 Tom Thiersch Update to Hood Canal Bridge closures 5/16/2022 5/16/2022 Sandra Stowell I support the Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance 5/16/2022 5/16/2022 Earll Murman, Port Townsend. Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance Dylan Bergman Comments Re: Cape George and Gardiner No 5/16/2022 5/16/2022 Point No Point Treaty Council Shooting Zones Wildlife Program Manager 5/16/2022 5/16/2022 The Port Townsend Main Street Program May Mid-Month News&Updates Undated 5/16/2022 Neil Morgan Letter re: Shoreline Setbacks Gordon King, Handed in as Public Letter and Agenda re: Planning Commission and set 5/16/2022 5/16/2022 Comment, BoCC Regular Meeting, events of Shoreline Master Plan Periotic Review 05/16/22 5/17/2022 5/17/2022 Sierra Club Foundation Donate your , ,n, gm,or to the Sierra Club o Foundation Correspondence may be viewed attached to the BoCC Agenda each week on the County Webpage or contact the County Administrator's Office by calling, 360 385 9100 JEFFERSON COUNTY BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS 2022 CORRESPONDENCE DATE OF DATE ORIGINATING CORRESPONDENCE DOCUMENT RECEIVED PARTY 5/17/2022 5/17/2022 viki s(&multiple participants) In Support of Temporary Housing Ordinance Revisions 5/17/2022 5/17/2022 Janet Johnson No shooting area workshop Gardiner,WA 5/17/2022 5/17/2022 Annalisa Barelli Traffic Revision Urgently Needed:Appropriate Speed Limit for Hastings Avenue West&Surrounding 5/17/2022 5/17/2022 Jean Ball Legacy forest/older forest harvest 5/17/2022 5/17/2022 Olympic Community of Health OCH Community Briefing I May 17, 2022 5/17/2022 5/17/2022 Chris Butler-Minor-NOAA Affiliate; Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary Newsletter, Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary April/May 2022 Newsletter 5/17/2022 5/17/2022 The Hood Canal Salmon Enhancement HCSEG News: Free Nature and Nutrition Workshop Group for Kids! 5/17/2022 5/17/2022 Lissy Andros, Executive Director Confirmation:Jefferson County 2022 Community Forks Chamber of Commerce Leadership Awards Jennifer Poole Administrative Manager Revised Draft Agenda(with links): HCCC Board of 5/17/2022 5/17/2022 Hood Canal Coordinating Council Directors Meeting-May 18, 2022 at 1 p.m. via Zoom video/teleconference 5/17/2022 5/17/2022 NACo County News Now—May 17, 2022 I urge the Planning Commission to recommend to the 5/18/2022 5/18/2022 Carla Main, Port Townsend WA Commissioners that they adopt the permanent ordinance 5/18/2022 5/18/2022 Chris Moore I Executive Director County Courthouse Grant Program-Application Washington Trust for Historic Preservation Workshop Follow-up 5/18/2022 5/18/2022 The Chamber of Jefferson County This Week with Your Chamber NEWS RELEASE: Puget Sound Partnership begins 5/18/2022 5/18/2022 Puget Sound Partnership reporting on a new generation of Puget Sound Vital Signs 5/18/2022 5/18/2022 NACo NACo West Region Meeting May 2022 Janet Darling Grant Writing Training in Redmond,WA-June 13-14, 5/18/2022 5/18/2022 Marketing Director 2022 Grant Writing USA Toiyriah Turner I Government Affairs Specialist Technical Assistance Guide to Help Communities 5/18/2022 5/18/2022 The Office of Governmental Affairs Unlock Resources From Bipartisan Infrastructure Law Office of the Secretary, U.S. Department of Transportation Correspondence may be viewed attached to the BoCC Agenda each week on the County Webpage or contact the County Administrator's Office by calling, 360 385 9100 JEFFERSON COUNTY BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS 2022 CORRESPONDENCE DATE OF DATE ORIGINATING CORRESPONDENCE DOCUMENT RECEIVED PARTY 5/18/2022 5/18/2022 Matthew Edwards Gardiner beach no-shooting area proposal Washington State Liquor and Cannabis Licensed Establishments in Unincorporated Areas of 5/6/2022 5/18/2022 Board Jefferson County for Expiration Date of 08.31.22: Halfway House Restaurant Washington State Liquor and Cannabis Licensed Establishments in Unincorporated Areas of 5/6/2022 5/18/2022 Board Jefferson County for Expiration Date of 10.31.22: Pure Funk Correspondence may be viewed attached to the BoCC Agenda each week on the County Webpage or contact the County Administrator's Office by calling, 360 385 9100 jeffbocc From:Suzanne Duscha <suzanneduscha@gmail.com> Sent:Thursday, May 12, 2022 11:19 AM To:jeffbocc Subject:No Shooting Areas Workshop ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. I wold like to express my support for a no shooting zone at Cape George and Gardiner Beach. These areas have too many homes to take the risk of shooting nearby. Thank you, Suzanne Duscha 141 Ridge Drive Port Townsend, WA 98368 1 jeffbocc From:Kellen Lynch <kellen.lynch@outlook.com> Sent:Thursday, May 12, 2022 12:14 PM To:pcommissiondesk@jefferson.co.wa; jeffbocc Subject:Please Support Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Please support the ordinance to allow for growth of the temporary housing facilities in Jefferson County. Since departing Port Townsend and my job at HSN, I’ve been traveling through Europe and observing the differences in how various European societies hold their people. I’ve been astonished by the near complete lack of depressed areas, rundown homes, and unhoused people in cities or towns across Italy, Germany, and Denmark. They’ve built a culture and society that helps one another, and it’s an active, ongoing project. I’ve also been amazed by how often I hear of Europeans opening their doors to new refugees from Ukraine. It really puts our region and country in perspective. If encouraging and allowing more temporary housing facilities allows Jefferson County to grow its heart and hold its own people, we need to do this. It is up to local leaders like you to parse the difference between listening to misinformed people who lean towards fear and disrespect and those willing to put in the time to try and build solutions like these projects. Let’s build the home that inspires us, Kellen Lynch 1 jeffbocc From:Molly Torres <molly@jamesdoroslaw.com> Sent:Thursday, May 12, 2022 12:59 PM To:jeffbocc Subject:May 17th No Shooting Areas Petitions ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Hello, I hope to sign into the Zoom meeting on the 17th, but in the event I am unable to, wanted to submit my thoughts in advance. This seems like a no-brainer, and I can't imagine our petition will not be approved, but I want to speak to the issue as a resident of Cape George. I am acquainted with numerous neighbors and residents in Cape George and I am active in our community. I believe we speak as one voice in our desire to have Cape George declared a no shooting zone. We are a private, residential community, comprised primarily of senior citizens. This petition came about after an incident involving a non-owner resident who has been an ongoing source of problems in Cape George. This person decided to start firing his gun in the wee hours of the morning. I believe there were at least six shots. Rumors abound and one narrative he has spread is that he was shooting his elderly shih-tzu dog. Although I do believe he is the kind of person who would prefer to kill his dog rather than pay a vet to euthanize humanely, I find it hard to believe that it would take more than one bullet to dispatch a tiny dog. This resident has an image of an assault rifle displayed in his street facing window and he has repeatedly exhibited threatening and aggressive behavior towards his neighbors and the broader Port Townsend community. It is fortunate that his wild shooting that night did not penetrate the walls of one of his neighbor's homes. We do not live out in the country where guns can be safely fired. This is a neighborhood of homes situated next to each other. There is not one place in the entire Cape George community where a gun can be safely fired. I urge the Board to grant our petition and codify a no-shooting ordinance for Cape George. Thank you. -- Molly Torres Paralegal to James A. Doros 1 11255 Rhody Drive Port Hadlock, WA 98339 2208 NW Market Street, Suite 420 Seattle, WA 98107 (206) 633-2080 THE CONTENTS OF THIS COMMUNICATION MAY BE PRIVILEGED AND CONFIDENTIAL. IF YOU ARE NOT THE INTENDED RECIPIENT OF THIS EMAIL AND HAVE RECEIVED IT IN ERROR, PLEASE NOTIFY THE SENDER IMMEDIATELY 2 jeffbocc From:Water Quality <listserv@civicplus.com> Sent:Thursday, May 12, 2022 1:33 PM To:jeffbocc Subject:News Flash: Anderson Lake High in Toxin ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. View this in your browser This complimentary message is being sent to opt-in subscribers who might be interested in its content. If you do not wish to continue receiving these messages, please accept our apologies, and unsubscribe by following the instructions at the bottom of this message. * * * * * * * This news flash previously went out to the Public Health News group, and now has been added to the Water Quality News group. April 29, 2022 Anderson Lake High in Toxin Elevated levels of the potent nerve toxin anatoxin-a were detected in a water sample taken from Anderson Lake on Monday, April 25th. Washington State Parks has...… Read on * * * * * * * This complimentary message is being sent to opt-in subscribers who might be interested in its content. If you do not wish to continue receiving these messages, please accept our apologies, and unsubscribe by visiting our website at: http://www.co.jefferson.wa.us/list.aspx Please note, we will not sell or give your e-mail address to any organization without your explicit permission. 1 You are receiving this message because you are subscribed to Water Quality on www.co.jefferson.wa.us. To unsubscribe, click the following link: Unsubscribe 2 jeffbocc From: Chris Moore <Chris@preservewa.org> Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2022 1:31 PM To: Chris Moore Subject: County Courthouse Grant Program -Application Workshop Monday, May 16 @ 12noon ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Please join us for the Historic County Courthouse Grant Workshop being held Monday, May 16th at 12noon. The virtual workshop will focus on understanding the requirements of the County Courthouse grant program and provide guidance on completing the online grant application form. There will be time to respond to questions from participants. The Workshop is being hosted by the Washington State Association of Counties as part of their weekly Virtual Assembly, convened via Zoom. You do need to register for the Virtual Assembly, following which you will be sent a link to the webinar. To register for the Virtual Assembly and attend the workshop on Monday, May 16th at 12noon, please use the following link: County Courthouse Grant Workshop—WSAC Virtual Assembly If you have any questions prior to the workshop, please do not hesitate to reach out. Best, Chris Chris Moore I Executive Director he/him/his Washington Trust for Historic Preservation 1204 Minor Avenue I Seattle, WA 98101 206-624-9449 (o) 1206-930-5067 (c) preservewa.orq 1 5/17/22,8:28 AM Meeting Registration-Zoom Meeting Registration Topic WSAC Virtual Assembly Time May 23,2022 12:00 PM „gWSAC� LrfL v May 30,2022 12:00 PM 0000111111.111% Jun 6,2022 12:00 PM Jun 13,2022 12:00 PM Jun 20,2022 12:00 PM Jun 27,2022 12:00 PM WASHIiNGTON STATE ASSOCIATION Time shows in Pacific Time(US and Canada) ofCOUNTIES First Name* Last Name* Email Address* Confirm Email Address* * Required information Information you provide when registering will be shared with the account owner(https://support.zoom.us/hc/en-us/articles/360059564372- In-Product-Privacy-Notifications)and host and can be used and shared by them in accordance with their Terms and Privacy Policy. Register About(https://wsac- Download(https://wsac- Sales(https://wsac- Support(/zendesk/sso? 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Terms(/terms) Privacy(/privacy) Trust Center(/trust) Community Standards(/community-standards) Legal&Compliance(/trust/legal- compliance) Do Not Sell My Personal Information Cookies Settings 1.1 https://wsac-org.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJltfuirrDsiHtHgvwmPWZmbRmA0Vt4DDKso 1/1 jeffbocc From: No Reply (LCB) <NoReply@lcb.wa.gov> Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2022 4:19 PM To: malloricosse1111@gmail.com Cc: McFerran, Grover P (Pat) (LCB); Higbee, Kelly S (LCB);Wheeler, Maureen T (LCB);jeffbocc Subject: FERINO'S PIZZA 080774-2M Attachments: 080774-2M.pdf ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Congratulations, on receiving your Washington State Liquor License. We've attached your approval letter and a customer service survey link. Please take a few minutes to tell us how we can improve our service. Survey Link: https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/rrtbc2f Please check out the upcoming Licensing Classes and get your questions answered in real time. i • Washington State Licensing and Regulation „, and Cannabis Board PO Box8 r° LiquorOlympia WA 98504-3098 Phone—(360) 664-1600 Fax—(360) 753-2710 May 12, 2022 MC & DM, LLC PO BOX 210 PORT HADLOCK WA 98339-0210 Re: FERINO'S PIZZA 846 NESSES CORNER RD PORT HADLOCK, WA 98339 LICENSE #080774 - 2M UBI 604-874-409-001-0001 Your liquor license has been approved for the following: BEER/WINE REST - BEER/WINE This license is valid through April 30, 2023. Upon renewal, the expiration date of the license may subsequently be prorated as necessary in accordance with chapter 19.02 RCW (Business Licensing). For questions regarding the issuance of your liquor license, please contact our customer service unit at (360) 664-1600. For questions regarding the renewal process, please contact Business Licensing at (360) 705-6741. You must post this letter in a public service area as your temporary operating permit. If you do not receive your Business License with liquor endorsements in 15 days, please contact Department of Revenue's Business Licensing Service/Specialty Licenses at (360) 705-6744. All employees involved in the sale and service of alcohol, their supervisors, and managers of the liquor licensed establishment must have a valid MAST permit within 60 days of employment. Beer sold under this licensed must be purchased from a beer distributor or brewery. Wine sold under this license may be purchased from another retailer with a Wine Retailer Reseller endorsement. When applicable, you are obligated to meet all other requirements of state, county, and city laws and ordinances (such as sanitation, zoning, fire, safety and building codes, etc.). B/W Restaurant 9/3/14 DECISIONS Page 2 License No.-080774 Alterations or changes in ownership require prior Board approval. If you wish to make such changes, please contact our office for assistance. Your liquor license can now be renewed online through Department of Revenue's Business Licensing Service. Information on how to do this will be included on your renewal notice. Michael' Liquor License Specialist 360-664-1645 cc: Eastern Enforcement Jefferson County Commissioners File jeffbocc From: CindyJ <cindyj911 @yahoo.com> Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2022 4:34 PM To: jeffbocc; CityCouncil Cc: John Mauro; Mark McCauley Subject: Forest and Tree Greenhouse Gas Report Approved by CAC ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. BOCC and City Council, A few months ago, the Port Townsend/Jefferson County Climate Action Committee approved a new Forests and Trees Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Inventory for 2001-2016 and Next Steps report. We will be presenting it to the BOCC this coming Monday, and are in the process of scheduling a city presentation. We wanted to share the full report with you all here. As we did with the previous two reports (the 2018 GHG Emissions Inventory, and the 2020 GHG Community Emissions Reduction Opportunities), we are also planning to present these to the public after presenting to the county and city. There are two links of different sizes, on the county website: (without attachments-2M) (with attachments -27M). I want to share my sincerest gratitude to the volunteers who spent over a year and a half doing the modeling and writing this report-Cyndy Bratz, Catharine Copass, Patricia Jones, and thanks to staff support from Jefferson County- Kevin Hitchcock (GIS) and Malloree Weinheimer(forestry)! Best regards, Cindy Jayne Chair, Climate Action Committee 1 jeffbocc From: Eric Nagle <ericwnagle@gmail.com> Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2022 6:30 PM To: Planning Commission Desk Cc: jeffbocc;vikis@ecopraxis.org Subject: Support for Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Dear Jefferson County Planning Commissioners: We write in support of the April 20, 2022 mark-up of the Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance. We believe it will help the organizations that serve Jefferson County's homeless people meet a critical need for safe, humane temporary housing. We live two blocks from Pat's Place, the tiny house village in Port Townsend operated by Bayside Housing. When this facility was first proposed, we were concerned about how it might affect our neighborhood. But since it began operating several months ago, it seems to have had no visible impact. We walk past Pat's Place regularly, and we've seen no increase in trash, noise, crime, or traffic. To be honest, its presence seems almost invisible. We are happy to have its residents as our neighbors. Sincerely, Eric Nagle and Darbra Smith 1298 Hancock St Port Townsend WA 98368 District 1 1 jeffbocc From: Judith-Kate Friedman <songwritingworks@gmail.com> Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2022 8:11 PM To: Planning Commission Desk Cc: jeffbocc Subject: Letter about Housing in Jefferson County ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Commissioners, I am writing to urge you to support the Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance. We all benefit when everyone has a safe place to live.This ordinance represents a foundational step in solving housing needs for those in greatest need in our City and County. Participating organizations and the dozens of individuals who have so far created and contributed to the creation of the tiny house villages have brought us to the beginning of a county-wide sea change. Raising awareness and housing people.An exemplary collective effort in our rural area -and one which can serve as a foundation for more positive change. Let's keep it going. Thank you for your work on behalf of all everyone in our county. Sincerely, Judith-Kate Friedman "Don't just ask what the world needs. Ask what makes you come alive and then go and do it, because what the world needs is people who have come alive." --Howard Thurman Judith-Kate Friedman Performing Songwriter and Composer-https://judithkate.com Founder and Director Songwriting WorksTM Educational Foundation-https://songwritingworks.org Restoring Joy,Hope Vitality and Community through Story and Song Steward,the Mythsinger Legacy Project-https://mythsingerlegacy.org Restoring the Power of Myth to Culture and Community Mail:2023 East Sims Way#271 Port Townsend,WA 98368 Office:360/385-1160 Mobile:360/643-1961 1 jeffbocc From: Judith-Kate Friedman <judelsings@gmail.com> Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2022 8:14 PM To: Planning Commission Desk Cc: jeffbocc Subject: Letter about Housing in Jefferson County (re-send with sender info corrected) ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Please note, my return address email should be judelsings@gmail.com - please delete the version sent from my work address (songwritingworks( gmail.com -which was sent in error. I am writing as an individual in Port Townsend not on behalf of the organization.) Commissioners, I am writing to urge you to support the Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance. We all benefit when everyone has a safe place to live.This ordinance represents a foundational step in solving housing needs for those in greatest need in our City and County. Participating organizations and the dozens of individuals who have so far created and contributed to the creation of the tiny house villages have brought us to the beginning of a county-wide sea change. Raising awareness and housing people.An exemplary collective effort in our rural area -and one which can serve as a foundation for more positive change. Let's keep it going. Thank you for your work on behalf of all everyone in our county. Sincerely, Judith-Kate Friedman "Don't just ask what the world needs. Ask what makes you come alive and then go and do it, because what the world needs is people who have come alive." --Howard Thurman Judith-Kate Friedman Performing Songwriter and Composer-https://judithkate.com Founder and Director Songwriting WorksTM Educational Foundation-https://songwritingworks.org Restoring Joy,Hope Vitality and Community through Story and Song Steward,the Mythsinger Legacy Project-https://mythsingerlegacy.org Restoring the Power of Myth to Culture and Community Mail:2023 East Sims Way#271 Port Townsend,WA 98368 Office: 360/385-1160 Mobile: 360/643-1961 1 jeffbocc From: Judith-Kate Friedman <judelsings@gmail.com> Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2022 8:14 PM To: Planning Commission Desk Cc: jeffbocc Subject: Letter about Housing in Jefferson County (re-send with sender info corrected) ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Please note, my return address email should be iudelsings@gmail.com - please delete the version sent from my work address (songwritingworks@gmail.com -which was sent in error. I am writing as an individual in Port Townsend not on behalf of the organization.) Commissioners, I am writing to urge you to support the Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance. We all benefit when everyone has a safe place to live.This ordinance represents a foundational step in solving housing needs for those in greatest need in our City and County. Participating organizations and the dozens of individuals who have so far created and contributed to the creation of the tiny house villages have brought us to the beginning of a county-wide sea change. Raising awareness and housing people.An exemplary collective effort in our rural area -and one which can serve as a foundation for more positive change. Let's keep it going. Thank you for your work on behalf of all everyone in our county. Sincerely, Judith-Kate Friedman "Don't just ask what the world needs. Ask what makes you come alive and then go and do it, because what the world needs is people who have come alive." --Howard Thurman Judith-Kate Friedman Performing Songwriter and Composer-https://judithkate.com Founder and Director Songwriting WorksTM Educational Foundation-https://songwritingworks.org Restoring Joy,Hope Vitality and Community through Story and Song Steward,the Mythsinger Legacy Project-https://mythsingerlegacy.org Restoring the Power of Myth to Culture and Community Mail:2023 East Sims Way#271 Port Townsend,WA 98368 Office:360/385-1160 Mobile:360/643-1961 1 jeffbocc From: Polly Thurston <ptravennest@hotmail.corn> Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2022 8:54 PM To: pcomm@jefferson.co.wa Cc: jeffbocc Subject: Yes on the Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Dear Planning Commission and County Commissioners, I write you in support of the Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance. As a community we need to address the housing crisis. Every citizen deserves access to safe and supportive housing and this ordinance helps support underserved people in new ways. This ordinance creates the structure for people to regain their sense of well-being and focus on obtaining work and permanent housing. Please adopt the permanent ordinance in its entirety as presented by the Department of Community Development. Thank you. Paula Thurston N Jacob Miller Rd Port Townsend. WA i jeffbocc From: Barton Kavruck <blkavruckl @wavecable.com> Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2022 10:12 PM To: jeffbocc Subject: No Shoting Areas Workshop ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. One of the many assets of this community at Cape George Colony is the quiet and safe atmosphere we enjoy here. We vote for no shooting allowed in this community, not for practice or otherwise. Bart and Louise Kavruck 1 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2022 10:09 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: Reminder:Application for 2022-2023 Presidential Leadership and Committee Appointments Follow Up Flag: Follow up Flag Status: Flagged From: NACo Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2022 10:07:42 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: Reminder: Application for 2022-2023 Presidential Leadership and Committee Appointments ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Having trouble viewing this email? Click Here r a a H 4 C kpk y0 3 3r �'+ - II IPA hi e _ I ' i s y s t I i i a d NACo PRESIDENTIAL Get APPOINTMENTS Involved1. APPLICATION 1 TO: NACo Members FROM: Hon. Denise Winfrey, NACo First Vice President .' DATE: May 13, 2022 RE: Application for 2022-2023 Presidential Leadership and Committee Y Appointments Thank you for your dedication to your county and counties across America through your membership with the National Association of Counties (NACo). As we emerge from this pandemic, we are revisiting our personal and professional priorities. While you serve your county in vast ways, I ask you to strongly consider submitting your name for a leadership position at NACo. Together,we can achieve results for our counties and the people we serve each and every day. These appointments are for: • Policy Steering Committee chairs and vice chairs and subcommittee chairs and vice chairs • Large Urban County Caucus and Rural Action Caucus chairs, vice chairs and members • Standing Committee chairs, vice chairs and members • Ad Hoc Committee, Task Force and Advisory Board chairs, vice chairs and members • At-Large NACo Board Directors Below is more information for each committee and its specific appointment terms. Committee leaders and members must cover their own travel and conference expenses. IMPORTANT:Steering committee membership is not a part of this application process. State associations of counties are responsible for nominating general policy steering committee members. The online nomination form for policy steering committee membership can be found here. To become a member of a steering committee you must fill out the nomination form and submit it to your state association. They will submit the nomination to NACo. Presidential Appointment Application To be considered for a presidential appointment to any of the following committees or as an at- large director for the NACo Board of Directors, you MUST complete the application online by 11:59 p.m. EDT on May 31, 2022. POLICY STEERING COMMITTEE LEADERSHIP 2 The 10 policy steering committees will each have a leadership team consisting of a chair, an appropriate number of vice chairs and subcommittee chairs and vice chairs. Those applicants who have been active members of the steering committee will be given preference in consideration for these appointments. The applicant should be willing to help coordinate leadership conference calls, develop meeting agendas and participate in outreach with federal officials, if necessary. These appointments are for one year (July—July). RAC AND LUCC LEADERSHIP AND MEMBERS The Rural Action Caucus and the Large Urban County Caucus will each have a chair and an appropriate number of vice chairs and members. Applicants who have been active members of these caucuses will be given preference in consideration for these appointments. These appointments are for one year. AT-LARGE APPOINTMENTS TO THE NACO BOARD OF DIRECTORS Each president appoints 10 at-large directors to the NACo Board of Directors for a one-year term. These appointments are to add balance to the board with respect to any inequities between urban and rural, gender, geography and minority representation. As with our communities, our strength is in our diversity. These appointments are for one year. STANDING COMMITTEES The Standing Committees provide important feedback and facts for NACo's Board of Directors and Executive Committee. • Information Technology. Advises on information technology issues and provides oversight on NACo information technology projects. (Appoints the chair, vice chairs and members for a one-year term.) • Programs and Services. Advises the development and evaluation of programs and services for NACo members. (Appoints the chair, vice chairs and members for a one-year term.) • Membership. Actively recruits and retains member counties, parishes and boroughs to advance NACo's number one performance priority of county official engagement. (Appoints the chair, vice chairs and members for a one-year term.) AD HOC COMMITTEES, ADVISORY BOARDS AND TASK FORCES The Ad Hoc committees are as follows: • Arts and Culture Commission. Demonstrates how the arts can be used by county officials to promote economic development and provide solutions to many of the challenges that they face, through workshop sessions, field trips, special publications and its annual Arts & Culture awards, which recognize counties working to foster an environment where arts & 3 culture can thrive to create more livable communities. (Appoints the chair, vice-chair and members for a one-year term.) • Geospatial Information Systems Subcommittee. Provides a framework for gathering, managing and analyzing data to inform county decisions. (Appoints the chair, vice-chair and members for a one-year term.) • Resilient Counties Advisory Board. Provides information, guidance and support to the NACo Resilient Counties Initiative. (Appoints the chair, vice-chairs and members for a one-year term.) • Healthy Counties Advisory Board. Provides information, guidance and support to the NACo Healthy Counties Initiative. (Appoints the chair, vice-chairs and members for a one-year term.) • Immigration Reform Task Force. Educates Congress, the administration and NACo members on the impact of immigration on counties and helps advocate for NACo's priorities. (Appoints chair, vice chairs and members for a one-year term.) • International Economic Development Task Force. Provides information, guidance and support for international economic development activities, including tools for county officials. (Appoints the chair, vice-chairs and members for a one-year term.) • Veterans and Military Services Committee. Engages NACo and its members to develop and highlight county best practices and policies to promote innovative programs, services and benefits for military service members, veterans and their families. (Appoints the chair, vice chairs and members for a one-year term.) The Presidential Appointments Application Form must be completed by anyone who would like to be considered for a leadership or committee appointment on a steering, standing or ad hoc committee for the 2022-2023 presidential year. The online application form is available here. The deadline for submitting your application is 11:59 p.m. EDT on May 31, 2022. Thank you, in advance, for your interest in serving, and I look forward to receiving your application. Please direct any questions to committee@naco.org. 4 Amy t . Nat o s� iIN c $t. ioN .E N ,,., .3N ° .,, ...,, a„1= " „ate ,�.° . L . ax,' U " na . `��ems . 3 .....— e �^ ecotiNTIES ATioN 660 North Capitol Street,NW,Suite 400 Washington,D.C.20001 V f in + Did someone forward you this email?Sign up to stay up-to date on topics affecting America's counties! Click here to unsubscribe. 5 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2022 12:14 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: Next Month with Your Chamber - June 2022 From: The Chamber of Jefferson County Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2022 12:12:59 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: Next Month with Your Chamber-June 2022 ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. i� ,(Ioii (. i)�a��)O (�,... � �i�.,.LiI♦i�I I�i r...a �h N� I r ,:'a r, ;!'.a' aV ihrysii�illlii(j)ll Ij'Ij�d!i'M'�,�rac nil FVIV��illld!IIIIIIIII i�f"�,�.,. r ,,.a�a IIa�Vu I I,I r r a �idi u(hgla;P.� IIP�ry�lk.'i�J aiilpipiiliilrvac„h°UII'lulyih,Ml�duiliih�hi�NdiliV vs;,"+aa:r�lailpP�d�lil'6�iliii(il�nr�091�11,'�IliiNext Month at Your Chamber ail ii�;iyir�, Illili w;µ'�iililr r,..i;eVNiiinillll I�"+b.�d:°s�"�7Pllalrllianl,iINIIP,iiiVuIIIIViIIIiIIiIIItVui!illlli,a.wv�"a.,�','.N w i li ,:�.,r '�� !r�(j�jl'��ah�Vlb��'�;�„'!'�I,�IIII'iI'14�„ ��a,,IigNllullhillf 1fiG�nNMNikw".-., '`+vrn�. � � The Chamber OF JEFFERSON COUNTY �N. w!sl �IIII:I,I' ,ln June 2022 While some events are still virtual more and more are becominghybrid or live soplease check the Y chamber calendar regularly for accurate updated information and to add any of your new events or updates. rll�l�' Visit ourWebsiteI'la. b�.'',!':i Ih�Yi"�. iIV!ill!!lui'lljllmwl�llll4l�l�ln,lli":r,�alVaudi,i�iljl;!jil�l4)Ili ii,�"";, z .r, �;r, ;�"r 1 II''!'il�Ij'u PG�"ryl I .fill'j'ljll�llljlljl'jIIIPlllir!illlll"li�r'��„=iOlj!;p q ill�alllli4 I'i"?il�,,,s, 4vi'.,. !';:% . 1 Chamber Café - Friday, June 3rd III' Funding for Entrepreneurs II; Seeking funds to get started or grow that great SCO ' seedling of a business into an exciting sustainable future but traditional lenders are just not FOR THE LIFE OF YOUR BUSINESS impressed-yet?still in the"thinking about starting stage"? OciPti 1N Yes �I� v o CNI Join Erika Lindholm of Craft 3, Michelle gym. Sandoval of LION and Griff Lee from SCORE o 4 ®!►•''' a and learn about nontraditional funding o resources and mentorship opportunities that may ? be perfect for you. QA will be extended to allow T� ti time for your specific questions to be answered. '!TIES Don't miss this opportunity i6 k' June 17th - Chamber Café Willie Bence, Director Jefferson County Department of Emergency Management Planning Ahead for Disasters As a business owner or manager, do you know what steps to take to protect your business from �I : „ , �NI emergencies? If there is an earthquake? girl; Tsunami? Blizzard?If the power grid goes down? If an area floods?Rockslide?Mudslide?Wide Buli $r temperature swings?A pandemic?There are so mill many variables-do you know how to plan for them and how to train your team?Disasters take IQp many forms and the financial cost of rebuilding ,� after a disaster can be overwhelming. ari , If you are prepared for emergencies;you'll be in a better position to recover and continue operations should a disaster strike as well as assisting others in rebuilding our community. r ,pith Ail Café Registrations 'I!', www.jeffcountychamber.org a �,U" 9ui1101' ida'I" ;i1i91 4plll 'IN r IVIIII pl g' N IDIII!; 811i!V'r' IUII. !,I!iq 'a(i" l iiN Jefferson County Chamber of Commerce 12409 Jefferson Street, Port Townsend, WA 98368 Unsubscribe heisenhour@co.jefferson.wa.us 2 Update Profile I Constant Contact Data Notice Sent by director@jeffcountychamber.org powered by 0/0) Constant Contact Try email marketing for free today! 3 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2022 1:15 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: HCCC Board of Directors Meeting May 18, 2022 - Agenda and Zoom video/teleconference details Attachments: Agenda - Draft Board Meeting Agenda May 18 2022.pdf From: Jennifer Poole Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2022 1:12:12 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Charlotte Garrido; Dave Herrera; Edward Wolfe; Greg Brotherton; Heidi Eisenhour; Jeff Rimack; Jeromy Sullivan; Joseph Pavel; Kate Dean; Kevin Shutty; Kirvie Mesebeluu-Yobech; Liz Williams; Paul McCollum; Randy Neatherlin; Robert Gelder; Scott Brewer; Sharon Trask Cc: Diane Zoren; Julie Shannon; Kaitlyn Floyd; Marina Linville; Robyn Readwin; Alicia Olives; Haley Harguth; Heidi Huber; Mike Lisitza; Patty Michak; Terry Fischer Subject: HCCC Board of Directors Meeting May 18, 2022 - Agenda and Zoom video/teleconference details ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. To: HCCC Board of Directors The next Regular Meeting of the Hood Canal Coordinating Council Board of Directors is scheduled for Wednesday, May 18, from 1:00 to 3:45 p.m. Pacific via Zoom video and teleconference. The draft Agenda is attached. You may access the available materials in our May meeting folder linked here. Additional items will be uploaded as they are ready. The agenda with links will be circulated next week. Join the Zoom Meeting on May 18 Go to: https://us06web.zoom.us/j/81107883288 Or go to https://zoom.us/join and enter Meeting ID: 811 0788 3288 Enter Passcode: 051828 To join by phone, Dial (253) 215 8782 One tap mobile +12532158782„81107883288# US We look forward to meeting with you next week, Jennifer Jennifer Poole I Administrative Manager Hood Canal Coordinating Council I HCCC.wa.gov I OurHoodCanal.org 17791 Fjord Drive NE,Suite 118, Poulsbo,WA 98370 360-900-9063 I ipoole@hccc.wa.gov Note:All emails may be subject to public disclosure. 1 o°°" r (Sp\ Hood Canal Coordinating Council Jefferson,Kitsap&Mason Counties;Port Gamble S'Klallam&Skokomish Tribes FS7:1985 Regular Meeting of the Board of Directors — Draft Agenda May 18, 2022 from 1:00 p.m. to 3:45 p.m. (topic times are approximate) Location: Zoom video and teleconference Join Zoom Meeting at https://us06web.zoom.us/i/81107883288 Or go to https://zoom.us/sicinin Meeting ID: 811 0788 3288 Passcode: 051828 To participate by phone, dial (253) 215 8782 1:00 PM Call to Order, Introductions, Approval of Meeting Agenda Dave Herrera, HCCC Chair 1:05 PM Public Comment (please limit to approximately 3 minutes per person) Dave Herrera, HCCC Chair 1:10 PM Consent Items Dave Herrera, HCCC Chair All matters listed under Consent Items have been distributed to each member of the Board for reading and study, are considered to be routine, and will be enacted by one motion of the Board with no separate discussion. If a separate discussion is desired, that item may be removed from the Consent Items and placed as an additional topic by request. 1. Draft Board Meeting Summary February 16, 2022 2. Cash Disbursements Journal February 2022 3. Cash Disbursements Journal March 2022 4. Cash Disbursements Journal April 2022 5. Total Funds Life to Date as of April 30, 2022 6. HCCC draft annual charitable organization renewal with the Washington Secretary of State confirming that, "The organization's governing body or committee has reviewed and accepted the financial information provided where applicable." The renewal will be filed online with a Board officer's approval at the time of filing to allow HCCC's Administrative Manager to complete the filing on the officer's behalf. HCCC Board Outcome: Motion to approve consent items. 1:15 PM Executive Director Updates Scott Brewer, Executive Director 1. HCCC Watershed Project Coordinator, Nate White, left HCCC in March 2022, for a position with WDFW as an Environmental Planner with their Habitat Program, focusing on streamflow restoration. 2. Washington State Auditor's Office (SAO) accepted HCCC's CPA audit for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2020, in lieu of a separate SAO audit. The HCCC Board of Directors Meeting Agenda Page 1 February 25, 2022, letter from the Office of the Washington State Auditor is included in the Board meeting materials. The audit report has been published with HCCC's financial statements on the SAO's external website at https://sao.wa.ciov/reports-data/audit-reports/. 3. Office Leases: HCCC is renewing office leases at the Liberty Bay Marina in Poulsbo for another year, effective July 1, 2022 to June 30, 2023. 4. Open Public Meetings Act Emergency Proclamation expires June 1. HCCC is working on logistics to host hybrid meetings starting in June. HCCC Board Outcome: The Board is updated on the key topics. 1:30 PM HCCC 401(k) Retirement Plan Upgrades Jennifer Poole, HCCC Administrative Manager, on behalf of Scott Brewer, HCCC Retirement Plan Trustee 1. Review process to upgrade HCCC's 401(k) retirement plan, including new service providers, and preview upcoming requests for Board approval to update plan documents. HCCC Board Outcome: The Board is updated on HCCC retirement plan upgrades. 1:45 PM Lead Entity Advisory Group Membership Appointments Alicia Olivas, Lead Entity Program Coordinator, HCCC Salmon Program 1. Review and approve list of appointees to representative roles on the HCCC Lead Entity Technical Advisory Group (TAG) and Citizens Advisory Group (CAG) for terms up to three years. HCCC Board Outcome: Motion to appoint members for three-year terms to fill representative roles on the HCCC Lead Entity Citizens Advisory and Technical Advisory Groups. 2:00 PM Salmon Program Updates Alicia Olivas, Lead Entity Program Coordinator, HCCC Salmon Program 1. Discuss 2022 grant round process and currently proposed projects. The full Citizens Committee will convene a meeting in June 2022 to review and approve project ranking recommendations. 2. Discuss other ongoing large salmon restoration project developments in Hood Canal and Eastern Strait of Juan de Fuca. HCCC Board Outcome: The Board is updated on the 2022 Lead Entity Grant Round process, currently proposed projects, and large salmon projects in development. 2:30 PM Local Integrating Organization (LIO) Updates Haley Harguth, Watershed Program Manager(LIO Coordinator) 1. 2022 Action Agenda development update 2. Action Agenda implementation process update 3. New LIO capacity support from EPA infrastructure bill funds 4. Ecosystem Coordination Board meeting de-brief HCCC Board of Directors Meeting Agenda Page 2 HCCC Board Outcome: The Board is briefed on current LIO topics. No decision at this time. 2:50 PM BPA Shelton to Fairmont Project(In-Lieu Fee Mitigation Program) Mike Lisitza, Mitigation Program Manager 1. The Bonneville Power Administration (BPA) is seeking to purchase In-Lieu Fee (ILF) credits for impacts to three acres of freshwater wetlands and 11 acres of wetland buffer impacts for their Shelton to Fairmont Project. 2. We anticipate we will request the Board approve a credit sale to BPA within the next 18 months. HCCC Board Outcome: Mitigation Program Manager has informed the Board of a large upcoming ILF credit sale 3:20 PM Executive Session: In Lieu Fee (ILF) Mitigation Program Patty Michak, Senior Scientist and Mike Lisitza, Mitigation Program Manager The purpose of the Executive Session is by reason of RCW 42.30.110(1)(b) to consider the selection of a site or the acquisition of real estate. 3:40 PM Public Comment and Hood Canal Happenings Dave Herrera, HCCC Chair 3:45 PM Adjournment and Next Meeting Dave Herrera, HCCC Chair 1. Announce next meeting: The next regular meeting of the HCCC Board of Directors and the Citizens' Committee meeting is scheduled for June 15, 2022 at 1:00 p.m. via Zoom video and teleconference, with the option to participate in-person at HCCC's Poulsbo office, 17791 Fiord Drive NE, Suite 124, Poulsbo, WA 98370. Visit https://hccc.wa.gov/for additional information. 2. Adjourn meeting by Motion. HCCC Board Outcome: Motion to Adjourn. HCCC Board of Directors Meeting Agenda Page 3 Julie Shannon From: Kate Dean Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2022 1:39 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW:WSF Weekly Update From: Dean, Rachel Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2022 1:37:43 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) Subject: WSF Weekly Update ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. WASHINGTON STATE FERRIES r't :',i"'' "ins. :�` `�@ i' " 1� �•: Weekly .... � • � .update ��, y.„ ; •.W rya l�) 6, .0 c - rt;i"6 - ,j E .. _'i „ . 4 k e +llr6„ ..ra:.. .sa... f^. ._srr a._&—�� 11i _ s ' Mukilteo/Clinton route moves to restored service stage May 12, 2022 of restoration process Monday, May 16 New ORCA card system `` I'm pleased to report that our Mukilteo/Clinton route will begins Monday,May 16 ae �•, move to two-boat restored service (Stage 4) in our Service � x If you use an ORCA card Restoration Plan starting Monday, May 16. This week's Plan Progress Report shows the run has consistently for your ferry fare,change is°wilincg MondaY,May 16, achieved 95% reliability over the last three weeks, so wittthe launch,of a new we've decided to consider the route fully restored. Our website and mobile app to Anacortes/San Juan Islands and Seattle/Bainbridge runs access your ac unt. Don't are also operating on typical spring schedules. With worry,your current card will stilt work,and you will not COVID-19 cases on the rise though, our reliability—along lose any balance in your with many transportation agencies around the world — may account.But if you want to temporarily decrease in the weeks ahead due to rising add value or passes online, relief requests among our crews. you'll need to create a new account by registering your current card at myorca.com or on the smartphone app :- Also,any existing autoloads will expire and . t.x. 1 k? you'll need to set them up k: in your new account.You = _ can still add cash to your card at vending machines, customer service locations and participating retailers. N _ %. am. j Nam. A The new ORCA card Nine new oilers completed trainingthis week. Here they system Will bring upgraded P features such:as real--time are getting hands-on engine familiarization with Staff Chief loading and improved Engineer Eric Haynes and Chief Engineer Chad Scott. account management tools. Once COVID-19 relief requests begin to decline and During transition to the new staffing increases to levels adequate to provide reliable system this Weekend,fares service, we will begin trial service (Stage 3)on our will not be collected on Edmonds/Kingston route. Until then, most runs are systems the ri ee n3 a.transit systems between 3 a� operating alternate service (Stage 2). I know the alternate Saturday,May 14,and 2:29 service schedules are extremely challenging for many of a.m. Monday,May 16. For our riders. Please know that we continue to actively recruit, our ferries,,customers who hire and train new employees, but with U.S. Coast Guard walk on or are a passenger; and Department of Homeland Security credentialing for in a vehicle will net be �k ' �� charged but will need to • vessel positions, and the significant amount of time needed show their ORCA card to to train for licensed deck positions, it will take time to attendants.Vehicle-driver ti z. restore service across our system. fareS will still be required. Following the transition, Hostingstate senators at Bremerton terminal please be patient as it may take time to work out some kinkt in the new system. I hosted two state senators at our Bremerton terminal last Big shout out to all at WF week to discuss funding for state ferries in the Move Ahead who worked on our internal Washington bill. That includes$1.5 billion to help stabilize efforts for this'transition, our operations and money for our electrification efforts. Sen. Marko Liias, chair of the Senate Transportation Fauntleroy^terminal Committee, and Sen. Emily Randall, who represents much project community i1 x ryi � of southern Kitsap County, stopped by during a tour of transit projects in the 26th legislative district. Thank you Want to learn more about both for your support! our recent planning : progress anr�vvhal"i replacement alternatives we're considering for our s a• Fauntleroy terminal?We're hosting two virtual community meetings and an online open house, where you'll also be able to share your thoughts. Advanced registration is required for the noon to 130 p.m.Tuesday,May ; 24,and 6 to 7:30 p.m. 2 ... .•Ni„„, `:- 'ti,,,,p,,c, ,I;ig0,,;,� - Cdiililiil'ii�l'N •.:>':... .: �,,:�-„„:.,,° �:�:>,,:,y„�,�� ,.::: ��;uiiro*v��,;,i,::,,--„r.,�, � ICI,„F; May 2 '�' � Wednesday, M ,�, ,,W;..� 1-��ys:�,�, �;�;��� ;-� �F_ webln. r �.Both meetings F �,:i � �:'',., "'i'�I;fi��I,iiiUa r�ii°d��(� .�s :�ti ,.,,�:iii'i4,'o��''�i, will cover the same ' u ° ' information.Thy week after 1, ,I,t, :# 1 al:fill iihV,",", `- ' k ' ' :. " thewebinars,'a video �,i .v;��uil�4,,_i,1: o' '`°A `n -,•:*' recording will be available. . . lu - s on the proiec Webpage. The online open housewi l ' , beavailable at -� :_ ". en a emsddt:wa.4ov from May 18 through June 13, • i� •ej,. w..j � �� �� Est ..'.- "3.-:.,.:? • •;-^...•..:... i :fit a : ii d':§�..•ja.��..:;: "� r� Sens. Emily Randall and Marko Liias with me at the We must replace the 70- Bremerton Transportation Center. year-old Fauntleroy, terminal to maintain safe and reliable,service Colman Dock's Marion Street exit to reopen Thursday, between West Seattle, 0 May 19 Vashon Island and Kitsap County. The Marion Street vehicle and bicycle exit at our Seattle terminal is scheduled to reopen Thursday, May 19. The Vehicle restrictions an"° exit was closed in October 2020 so our Colman Dock some extreme clue to �a�treme tide' �. project could construct our new concrete trestle, and for the Seattle Department of Transportation (SDOT)to repave Alaskan Wayand build new sidewalks. This Many of��!a'are aware that ; : " p tides cause monthly sailing reopening will improve loadingand offloadin times for P 9 p 9 cancellations on our,Pdrt both our Bremerton and Bainbridge vessels. lownsendICoupeville route ::•:,,::: and vehicle restrictions on 73 our Vashon Isla c Rwmr �����,� �coaaswr�v�rrvia avr runs But �� - did u know that on rare w occasions,extreme lo�+t. es cause us o have ;; ,... loading >..• � ` steep vehicle�nd" on t, Mukiit o/Cli yin route as e nt ut .' welr drivinglonger . � vehicle, or on with low k,11 0•�••� [lb ,�,ru_ � '-� ear overhangs on clearance or orong ff . :a , . •k r, Vashon or Whidbey , :r.. x, islands,be surecheck . �. e_' warningspage • _,, ", before o! .. _. ate _-• '.::::::.- yo 9 ourtide When the Marion Street exit reopens, people drivingor ,,� 4 `.`I:. ,. biking who are arriving from Bainbridge will exit at Marion. ``, '` I " Bremerton will continue to use Yesler Way. You can turn •— _' 'j left, right or go straight at both exits. • With the return of two vehicle exits at our Seattle terminal, vehicles and bicycles may depart at either exit when Drivers of larger vehicles there's only one vessel at Colman that's loading or should avoid our Vashon° •• unloading. Please follow directions from terminal and Whidbey Island ro tes 3 w 's attendants who will direct you to the correct exit when during periods of extreme unloading. If using the Marion exit, follow the SDOT traffic lQW tides next week signal before navigating through the intersection. SDOT is working on Alaskan Way and crews may intermittently Sign Installation work`at close the Marion exit or reduce outbound traffic to one Vashon terminal lane. Sign up for rider alerts or check our(c�wsferries Twitter page for updates on this construction and the exact Our maintenance craws will reopening date. be installing new:electronic 'signs at our Vashon terminal to.help Manage National Maritime Day traffic.On Thursday,May 19,they'll need to close one of the two inbound Sunday, May 22, is National Maritime Day and in honor of lanes from 9 a_m,to 2 p.m., the event, I thank all our mariners in the WSF family for requiring Faunflerpy-bound their hard work and dedication to safely moving people traffic to be held on Vashon n across the Salish Sea every day. In addition to our vessel Highway Southwest and • n crews, you'll find our mariners amongst our land-based Southworth-biund traffic on 103rteams, such as our terminals, Eagle Harbor Maintenance his Avenue wetSouthwest, 9 This work to weather Facility and in our administrative offices. And a special dependent shout out to all the women in maritime as we celebrate the inaugural International Day for Women in Maritime on Wednesday, May 18! I'm very proud to be a part of a team • that keeps the region's maritime tradition alive and strong! Yi � ^ E The work is part of alarger 06, ' t °a effort to improve our Vashon terminal that,.. :;3 p . , includes restriping the dock to use the space more effectively. t 4 ' t ;4E Several of our terminal engineering and Eagle Harbor Maintenance Facility employees are touring all our terminals this month as they confirm work plans for each terminal. Here they are at our Shaw Island terminal. Next Weekly Update will be Thursday, May 26 There will be no Weekly Update on Thursday, May 19, as will be attending the Women's Transportation Seminar (WTS)Annual Conference next week. I look forward to sharing my experience there with you in our next Weekly Update on Thursday, May 26! Patty Rubstello Assistant Secretary, WSDOT/Ferries Division . x 4 ..mot "• ;::—:�a:...::x•.•.;. :.. .,y..�.;�:• •t.: .:::;:;;.�::' ....�,,.:� ., a.s• .,. .,,..,�:�.� " . ;,.asy;., .. .. - ::\.. �� ... �.k:�:<.ra��y�".. t'�.'"�•vv ;<;a�;;x•�: ..:a�T�•�� � \R::.x:"�: " • a... �'�s�SFerri�: Find � i ! � A". F'ar� � E .. :...: " .. :.,:,x„ •..i:'w'.'. �:.,:':r; •v .:.;..; `^,.a\ t.:•E4.C„�.::� .e.'aT"..... vvYi,.,.a S..v.,., e .........t ..w.:•. ...,r .., ... n, ..' .F ,,e�yi;,,. .C. :::av+\" s.. . STAY CONNECTED: Tao 5 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2022 5:05 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: RE: Shoreline Permit Filing From: rm.burell@comcast.net Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2022 5:02:23 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Greg Brotherton; Kate Dean; Heidi Eisenhour Subject: RE: RE: Shoreline Permit Filing ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Hello County Commissioners, We have been working with the Community Development office to get our permits for almost 17 months. It has been challenging to get status and movement. I emailed last week and left a voice mail on Friday and did get a call back from Morgan. She indicated that our permits were ready to pick up. We took time off from work today and drove to Port Townsend from Brinnon only to find out they were closed. This is not the first time this has happened. A couple months ago, it was closed for a staff meeting and as you know the office is closed on Fridays. My ask is that something be put into place as a backup plan for when employees are out on vacation or sick. Thank you for your time and help. Sincerely, Rhonda and Mike Burell From: Brent Butler<BButler@co.jefferson.wa.us> Sent:Thursday, May 12, 2022 1:48 PM To: rm.burell<rm.burell@comcast.net>;Jodi Adams<jadams@co.jefferson.wa.us>; Greg Brotherton <GBrotherton@co.jefferson.wa.us> Subject: RE: RE: Shoreline Permit Filing Dear Rhonda, DCD is normally open Monday to Thursday but unfortunately we had a COVID-19 related closure. -Brent Brent Butler DCD Director 360-379-4493 1 From: rm.burell<rm.burell@comcast.net> Sent:Thursday, May 12, 2022 1:39 PM To: Brent Butler<BButler@co.iefferson.wa.us>;Jodi Adams<jadams@co.iefferson.wa.us>; Greg Brotherton <GBrotherton@co.iefferson.wa.us> Subject: RE: RE: Shoreline Permit Filing ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Hi We were thrilled to find out our permits were ready and made a special trip and took time off from work to go to the county office today to pick up our permits. Unfortunately the whole office was closed. Is there no one else in the whole DCD office that can cover? This is a government office and can't continue to be closed. Can someone meet us tomorrow so that we can pick up our permit? Rhonda Burell 4254785076 Sent from my Verizon,Samsung Galaxy smartphone Original message From: Brent Butler<BButler@co.iefferson.wa.us> Date: 5/9/22 1:04 PM (GMT-08:00) To: "rm.burell" <rm.burell@comcast.net>,Jodi Adams<jadams@co.iefferson.wa.us> Subject: RE: RE: Shoreline Permit Filing Dear Rhonda Burell, We have limited staffing. Please forward the clearer site plan to the Department of Ecology and be sure to carbon copy the assigned planner and me as director. I support staff when they are on vacation.The goal is to keep this moving, and also to ensure that the Department of Ecology and Jefferson County are relying upon the same documents. Warm regards, Brent Brent Butler DCD Director 360-379-4493 From: rm.burell <rm.burell@comcast.net> Sent: Monday, May 9, 2022 12:57 PM To: Brent Butler<BButler@co.iefferson.wa.us>;Jodi Adams<iadams@co.iefferson.wa.us> Subject: FW: RE: Shoreline Permit Filing 2 ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Brent or Jodi, Is there someone other than Donna that can provide this information? We can but I wanted to check with you first. Also we talked to Morgan on Friday. She also mentioned there is something she needs from Donna. Who covers for her when she is out? Rhonda Burell Sent from my Verizon,Samsung Galaxy smartphone Original message From: "Rothwell, Rebecca (ECY)" <rebs461@ECY.WA.GOV> Date: 5/9/22 10:32 AM (GMT-08:00) To: rm.burell@comcast.net Cc: Donna Frostholm <DFrostholm@co.iefferson.wa.us> Subject: RE: Shoreline Permit Filing Hello, I sent the email below to Donna Frostholm and received an auto reply stating that she is out of the office until May 26. Can you please provide me with the information I requested below?Thank you. Mecca 12,otfiwell, Shoreline Planner WA Department of Ecology I cell:360-810-0025 This communication is a public record and may be subject to disclosure per RCW 42.56. From: Rothwell, Rebecca (ECY) Sent: Monday, May 9, 2022 10:26 AM To: Donna Frostholm <DFrostholm@co.iefferson.wa.us> Subject: FW: Shoreline Permit Filing Hi Donna, Can you please send me a clear site plan that shows dimensions of existing and new footprints?The site plan included with the permit submittal is blurry and I can't read it. I also would like to know the square footage of additional footprint for the patio/porch additions and the main house/garage additions. I'm looking at page two of the stormwater calculations where it shows that the roof area is increasing by almost 3,000 sf. Rebecca Ipthiweti, Shoreline Planner WA Department of Ecology I cell:360-810-0025 This communication is a public record and may be subject to disclosure per RCW 42.56. 3 From: Donna Frostholm<DFrostholm@co.jefferson.wa.us> Sent:Sunday, May 1, 2022 3:17 PM To: ECY RE SMP (SEA) <ECYreSEAsmp@ECY.WA.GOV> Cc: ecvolyef@atg.wa.gov Subject: Shoreline Permit Filing Hello Rebecca, Attached is a shoreline conditional use application issued by Jefferson County. Let me know if you have any questions. I will be out of the office most of May but will have some limited ability to check emails while out of the office. Donna grostho(m, PINS .associate PCanner-Lead/WetfandSpecialist Jefferson County Department of Community Development 621 Sheridan Street,Port Townsend,'Washington 98368 36o-379-4466 dfrosthorm@cojefferson.wa.us DCD IS OPEN MONDAY—THURSDAY FROM 9:00— 12:00 and 1:00 - 4:30; CLOSED FRIDAY. All emails sent to and from this address will automatically be archived by Jefferson County and emails may be subject to Public Disclosure under Chapter 42.56 RCW. 4 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Friday, May 13, 2022 8:27 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: NW School of Wooden Boatbuilding & Resort at Point Ludlow ship christening and Ribbon Cutting! Follow Up Flag: Follow up Flag Status: Flagged From: The Chamber of Jefferson County Sent: Friday, May 13, 2022 8:25:08 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: NW School of Wooden Boatbuilding &Resort at Point Ludlow ship christening and Ribbon Cutting! ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. c a:, I�,. ,,,,�,I, .-, lou= q!pt, ;��d , 't, .�wa3 ayl�i Gli�l .III Ip ;-�'III,I Fa{l�,N �!Ial�Gilo aye „I�Ntq� gIVIIIIrG�G 'aill1�lll�pill r(lill�l;lp vllllll4l' III'I'I�j'; �Ilbl!',.„tP"� ,'k����` ,'�i�,� �1191,1 nJl�ilix � ,;, r.,�pl,l ,,II�,9v �1,� ,;•�hll wfII�ICi,' dl�l. I"r� 'I"i(� ` ,� '�ildll ,r;,V;' �� •� ,,Il�r ��r,' ,�� ' :,"�i,. jflll!III) Join Fun! rT�in in un r° la � rally ,,.7hul ,il�aGn ,ti��n iII IRU,I61, a ;�� ���;nlNlp uIdI�G, III°1 Ir,;plill ydi The Chamber COUNTY OF JEFFERSON COUN Saturday, May 14th 9:30am The Resort at Port Ludlow Ribbon Cuttings ;y Nl,lh and Christening Join us! on the dock behind the general store at The Resort at Port Ludlow 1 i5 �4 q 's N' 110 `°y ,� 1 i�� � • , rx" •'t 7'7" ,4",*.Ar,‘ . rriM 'S^v ^, : 11 ram .€ w r ..1 ...,: I : .. r 4141.1 al c\iPN 13AY � ,III, 4or- a . s ac '�"- x • ,1,000015,-4 The Northwest School of Wooden Boatbuilding has completed construction on a 25'zero-emission pump out boat which will provide free services in Port Ludlow Bay.This pilot project features electric and solar technology and a corrosion prevention system which will keep heavy metals out of the water.The project came together through a collaboration with local marine businesses, private donors, and state agencies aligned around a common goal of promoting environmental stewardship—from its zero emission propulsion system to its role in keeping waterways clean of wastewater This is a community focused project. • Locally Designed. Naval architect Tim Nolan, based in Port Townsend,WA, developed the CLEAN BAY design. • Locally Engineered.Turnpoint Design, based in Port Townsend,WA, used CNC technology to cut the CLEAN BAY forms. • Locally Built. Students at the Boat School, based in Port Hadlock,WA, are building the hull, deck, house, and installing the marine systems. • Locally Operated. Port Ludlow Marine will operate the CLEAN BAY pump out boat, offering pump out services to any vessel in Port Ludlow,WA. • Learn more: https://www.nwswb.edu/cleanbay-zero-emissions-workboat/. Sent on behalf of our members: The Resort at Port Ludlow&NW School of Wooden Boatbuilding We can send yours too,just ask us how! membership@jeffcountychamber.org Jefferson County Chamber of Commerce j 2409 Jefferson Street, Port Townsend, WA 98368 2 Unsubscribe heisenhour©co.jefferson.wa.us Update Profile I Constant Contact Data Notice Sent by director@jeffcountychamber.org powered by Ott) Constant Contact Try email marketing for free today! 3 Julie Shannon From: Greg Brotherton Sent: Friday, May 13, 2022 9:02 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: HCSEG News: Free Nature and Nutrition Workshop for Kids! From: The Hood Canal Salmon Enhancement Group Sent: Friday, May 13, 2022 8:59:22 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Greg Brotherton Subject: HCSEG News: Free Nature and Nutrition Workshop for Kids! ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Free Nature & Nutrition Workshops for Kids! 1 Session 2: Cooking Methods for Kids Saturday: May 21st 10:30am — 12pm Kids will learn about the nutritional benefits of various fresh fruits and vegetables as well as learn different methods of how to cook and prepare local, seasonal produce. Activities: Sun Dehydrating Vegetables, Learning about different plant parts through using the 5 senses Sign-Up . -., -.:'-`,711,;*:*:, :,,,:.''''";744Cf'O'''.. ''ll, '-' '' ' " '":'''': ' 41110;15":,'::411iM.,' a , "a . 0 �u .- , Yen'` 'G ,Ii� 5,, , S fi /g m�� ti 2 Session 3: Soil, Seeds and Sustenance Saturday: May 28th 1:30-3pm Kids will learn about how the macroscopic and microscopic world collide through learning about living things in our soil, food and ecosystem around us. Activities: Pickling vegetables, dissecting seeds and companion planting Sign-Up • • w w 9 ie 3 f Q Copyright©2021 HCSEG, All rights reserved. Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list. 4 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Friday, May 13, 2022 10:02 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: Friday 5 I Courthouse Grants I Contracts I Hydrogen Plant I Drug Policy I Affordable Housing From: Washington Counties I WSAC Sent: Friday, May 13, 2022 9:59:50 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: Friday 5 I Courthouse Grants I Contracts I Hydrogen Plant I Drug Policy I Affordable Housing ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. May 13, 2022 Friday CO County Courthouse Grant • rogram Presentation Since 2005, the Historic County Courthouse Rehabilitation Grant program has provided matching grants to counties for the purpose of historic county courthouse rehabilitation. Administered through the Department of Archaeology & Historic Preservation (DAHP), nearly $21 M in grant funds has been awarded to 69 projects in twenty-six counties statewide since the program's inception. DAHP is presently seeking grant applications for funding in the 2023-2025 biennium and program staff are currently working with counties to develop eligible applications in anticipation of the July 28, 2022 deadline. Through this webinar co-hosted by the Washington Trust for Historic Preservation (the Washington Trust assists DAHP in program administration), i learn about important program changes, eligibility criteria, project implementation, and application strategies. Past courthouse rehabilitation projects will be reviewed, offering participants an in depth look at several of our wonderful county courthouses located across the state. Join WSAC on Monday, May 16th at 12:00pm to hear from DAHP during the weekly Virtual Assembly. Learn More STATE NEWS Statewide Contract for Vehicle Repair Services The Washington Department of Enterprise Services is developing a statewide contract for vehicle repair services and are currently looking for any counties interested in becoming purchasers with the contract for these repair services. Learn More JOBS BOARD NOW,AVAILABLE `- '`�. Find Local Government Jobs , ,•�'��' � Find your diedrn career di sign Up for Alerts and lie Start your search today! IPA Notified of New Listings! w....NGTON COUNI1FS Job Board =;R jobs.wsac.org Q W¢haw¢t0�obs avaRsWe for you? COUNTY NEWS 2 Economic Alliance Announces Potential $400 to $600 ydro • en Plant Coming to Centralia During its first "Hydrogen Symposium," the Economic Alliance of Lewis County announced on Thursday afternoon it is facilitating a partnership between TransAlta and Fortescue Future Industries (FFI) to potentially bring a hydrogen plant to the Centralia area. The plant, if built, would cost between $400 and $600 million and would be at the Industrial Park at TransAlta (IPAT), according to the Economic Alliance of Lewis County. FFI is an Australian company with headquarters in America seeking to use the fossil fuel infrastructure and workforce to create clean energy called green hydrogen. Learn More FEDERAL NEWS hite ouse ' eleases 2022 ational ' ru • Control Strate • y to A. • ress Addiction and • ver• • se On April 21, the White House released its National Drug Control Strategy (the Strategy), a document developed by the Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) that outlines the administration's approach to drug policy across and coordination with Congress. The Strategy, which is being released at a time when drug overdoses are at the highest level ever recorded, focuses on how the federal government can address untreated addiction and drug trafficking by building a stronger substance use disorder (SUD) treatment infrastructure and reducing the supply of illicit substances. Learn More 3 SCHEDULED WEEKLY WSAC 04-w- Virtual Assembly 4 4 WASHINGTON GET IT ON YOUR CALENDAR 'f COUNTIES Noto..5,32z4,- REGIST STATE NEWS Rural Technical Assistance Program for Affordable Housing GS Consulting has a contract with the Washington State Department of Commerce to provide technical assistance to rural communities to develop affordable housing projects. The goal is to help more organizations from rural areas, 1. Learn about options for creating more affordable housing and, 2. Apply to the state's Housing Trust Fund to create or preserve affordable housing. View the flyer at the link below for more information about the Rural Technical Assistance Program. Learn More UPCOMING EVENTS MAY 19 May19 Building a Great Workplace AOC Webinar on Court Grant Culture in a Time of Change Opportunities Webinar I 11:00 am I $35 Webinar I 12:00 pm I Free 4 •,,li(rdiir� �97 ,I�ii�i�� h��,""",�, ,,, ;, �awu �li'g 'flh� �,i ���,,,✓,,xiimii{tl� d(i6 ;::.� (.6idiitl{,i i aii!�.�,,�� �"` N.,:-..,g.a r ,i' �ri�°� u� liµ 1�iil,Y�io >�,it' ,' W w�'>ndio��II�Ill ,r wp i tiF ,.'�'4�., ., � as :ill( !�v,d�"r��"•; iiJ."Illiip'NPi uui r,�,: wws�,,w i ;,, - k i Awrn ii i i, ;, p!,I'ill,ii „ View � ,-�>;y,,, @.N"M�.,�w��ii l6Iln„I�`��"�i �,�I ii{u,;.diil!;!;���w�"�,�...��IiIdi h�in-.�a,��:„,�..�•�°�i i"t�,N,��i!!�GI'I ilIIp,�IkIIlYi�iit t i t�i�I.u�a�yI n:i�w.u,r,'f,�i,�1,'1i��a iN'NrI,">I3N�,M,wMore��, �II Upcoming c��'r;a ll i,lnl o�d•�luYal,y,�h,k inI c�) tEvents is P. • .,. "'�li�� � re"� { h I �., <�dr��yd �i�.�9 ,,�"W� "��'"" ���,rur. �'"?�Vd i!,"� dl Il w•�;.,.a b ,N� '� �h�N ii a :a. FOLLOW US { facebook twitter instagram Iil linkedin wsac.orq View this email incur browser This email was sent to hcisenhou_r@,...cojeffersc)n.wa.us I Why did I get this?. Want to change how you receive these emails? l dat€-Four preferences I Unsubscribe from this list Copyright©2022 Washington State Association of Counties,All rights reserved. 206 10th Ave SE•Olympia,WA 98501-1311 • USA l Contact Us 5 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Friday, May 13, 2022 10:31 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: Shine Quarry Status Attachments: 2022-05-12 Shine Quarry Status.docx From: William Dean Sent: Friday, May 13, 2022 10:29:07 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Kate Dean; Greg Brotherton; Heidi Eisenhour Subject: Shine Quarry Status ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Had a good meeting with Rayonier folks and then did some research to understand what is going on at Shine. Noise, traffic and blasting are the three issues our community has been concerned about in the past. Seems that their activities over the last 9 years or so have not resulted in any problems and their additional work will be similar. Regards, Bill 1 Hello Community Development Committee, I met with Adrian Miller (PR) and Ryan Conners (Mining Manager) of Rayonier yesterday. Iron Mountain Quarry (IMQ) operates the Shine Quarry under a long term lease from Rayonier that was put in place by Pope many years ago. SUMMARY: Shine has been doing rock mining operations, including blasting, since 2012 under State and County permits. In June 2021, Shine received approval to expand the area being mined by about 43 acres adjacent to the area of previous mining. To do that mining, Rayonier received a FPA permit in May 2022 to clear 29 acres of trees. The tree harvesting and then mining is approximately one mile from any residences in OT2 and is expected to commence in the next month. Noise and traffic on Route 104 is anticipated to be at the levels that have taken place over recent years. Blasting has been taking place over these recent years and is anticipated to continue at same level which has not had any concerns raised by residents. DISCUSSION: PHASE 1B AND 1A On September 28, 2012 JeffCo issued a "Type 1 Land Use Decision and SEPA Addendum" which included a Stormwater Permit based on the April 20, 2012 "Mitigated Determination of Non- Significance", MLA 10-00072 and Building Permit BLD 2010-0054 dated February 25, 2010. The project is to conduct mining activities in three (3) phases over approximately 40 years. The entire project is 142 acres of which the mining operation will be 69 acres. This 2012 approval only involved the first two phases, 1B and 1A and a mining area of 26 acres along with substantial processing and maintenance facilities. JeffCo is identified as being the Lead Agency relative to the project approval and the Stormwater Permit is the approval document. A SEPA "Determination of Non-Significance" was issued on April 20, 2012, and is referenced in the approval. Approvals from other agencies such as DNR and Ecology were also required before this approval was granted. As a condition of approval, a Monitoring Program was to be developed and approved by the County. I have made a Records Request for that document, but it has not been found yet. Monitoring includes details of the following areas: Critical Areas, hydrology, monitoring wells, wetland mitigation, Stormwater, Traffic and Citizen Outreach. All results of the Monitoring program are to be included in a combined report submitted to the County once a year. The traffic report is to be submitted each April. I have requested this as a Records Request also. Citizen Outreach is specifically required as a subsection of"Conditions Prior to Land Distrurbing Activities" calling for the establishment of a "roster of interested parties asking to be notified of blasting events" along with reports related thereto, page 15. In addition, further Citizen Outreach is defined under "Operating Conditions", relating to compliance with the Blasting Plan dated March 19, 2012, which requires notice to neighbors within 2,000 feet of blasting and monitoring thereof, page 22. According to Rayonier, operations at the mine are generally busy in the second and third quarters of each year and blasting takes place approximately once each month during that time. During other months blasting takes place about once every two months, at the most. As Shine has been operating under this permit, no public concerns have been registered with either the PLVC or Rayonier/Pope. PHASE 2 As was anticipated and required by the 2012 permit, additional application was made by Rayonier and Shine on December 14, 2020, to expand mining operations into Phase 2. On June 22, 2021, JeffCo DCD issued a "Type NA Land Use Permit", MLA20-00142, with conditions for all the stormwater and Public Works aspects. A GAP analysis was submitted updating the traffic study analysis. There were no conditions for Citizen Outreach and no reference to following the blasting plan. The approval indicated a SEPA is not required as it had been done as a part of the original application. To clear the land for commencing mining operations, Rayonier (Pope) submitted a FPA in April and received approval on May 1, 2022. Clearcutting is anticipated to be started in the next month. The maps on the following page show the relative locations of Shine (identified as Iron Mountain) and the MPR. Bill Dean May 12,2022 lili�'(i�Iiiq�UUl��6ip„ILI`j lllil�'I� I'llir^`�� h'''Yti I V'Iryl�dli'i•,I�. ' 't;" i I I"1'!id(I'll' °" !Ih�,V41i1 ( u, q,,,lilllll lig II'Illil!;;i;l;; Shine Qua Harvestf2617433 df X �i . ����II���I���Up���IiN�I��Iii�!�I�,�ip. © h' p p '�ni �IIi�I�j�il�llli�illl�lI�iui!I�I�P!'U Y�,wr! „'!!iil�I�II 'I�ih�ll�li�'lli h IJ�1a,�7,rR .. 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ROOe tp00�q- 20 0 NV IIIA Type hereto search 0 !i C' n x "' FM'm Rain... ,_p tl, ;tz:ozz Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Friday, May 13, 2022 3:28 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW:Join us for our monthly Resource Roundtable: LEAN Thinking From: EDC Team Jefferson Sent: Friday, May 13, 2022 3:25:56 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: Join us for our monthly Resource Roundtable: LEAN Thinking ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. ED.CTEA JefferSOfl Join us for our monthly Resource Roundtable On Thursday, May 19 at noon, Mr. Jay Bakst, our Community Lean Resource will share ideas that you can use to increase your effectiveness and productivity. In this era of limited resources, can you produce everything needed to serve your customers? For more than 35 years, Jay Bakst has worked with organizations large and small to improve their operations in order to better support their customers. The Community Lean Resource provides training classes as well as individual workshops and coaching to help you improve your business. From identifying wasteful activities to streamlining how you get things done, Lean Thinking is a proven methodology that organizations large and small use every day. No need to register, just join us on the link below: Join Zoom Meeting https://uso2web.zoo111.us/j/84326907336 Meeting ID:843 2690 7336 One tap mobile +12532158782„84326907336#US(Tacoma) Dial by your location 1 +1 253 215 8782 US(Tacoma) Economic Development Council Team Jefferson 360.379.4693 EDC Team Jefferson I EDCTJ EDC Team Jefferson 1385 Benedict Street, Suite 2A, Port Townsend, WA 98368 Unsubscribe heisenhour@co.jefferson.wa.us Update Profile I Constant Contact Data Notice Sent by admin@edcteamjefferson.org powered by (f..:%41 Constant Contact Try email marketing for free today! 2 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Friday, May 13, 2022 3:35 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW:Ask MRSC: May 2022 From: Ask MRSC Sent: Friday, May 13, 2022 3:33:21 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: Ask MRSC: May 2022 ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. AskMRSC May 2022 „: " ° , t i ; `,`11 I I'IUI! I�l!11,1'lhl,11,llY'l I e a?.. >p a M�INI"if"^ Il�wh 5 �:" ill . to .6 „, --,- 1 r w i��r� �:. a �, oil, •. % q 1 1 In This Issue 1 Do you have a list of jurisdictions that have adopted Juneteenth as Have a question. a holiday? Officials and employees What options have cities used to financially support downtown from eligible government facade and building improvements? agencies can use our free one-on-one inquiry service, We want to update our agency's official flag/logo.Are there any Ask MRSC. statutory requirements or other considerations we should be thinking about? Ask MRSC Is there any exemption for municipal corporations from obtaining a minor work permit? We are looking for guidance on hosting city-sponsored summer events,such as parades. Scroll down to read the answers Do you have a list of jurisdictions that have adopted Juneteenth as a holiday? [ We do not have a comprehensive list of jurisdictions that have adopted Juneteenth as a holiday, but we do have several examples below. The Washington State Legislature adopted SHB 1016, making Juneteenth (June 19)a paid state holiday, effective July 2021. Because June 19 is a Sunday this year, it will be observed for the first time on Monday,June 20, 2022. President Joe Biden also signed legislation into law making Juneteenth a U.S. federal holiday.The date of June 19 commemorates the day in 1865 when knowledge of the Emancipation Proclamation and the abolishment of slavery reached the last remaining enslaved people in Galveston,Texas. While local governments are not required to follow either the federal or state legal holiday schedule, many do,and RCW 1.16.050(6)authorizes the local legislative body to set their local government holiday schedules. Some jurisdictions that have adopted Juneteenth as a paid holiday for local government employees include Battle Ground, Bremerton, Burien, Burlington, Centralia, Edmonds, King County, Lynnwood, Renton, Sumner,Walla Walla,Woodway, and Yakima. Olympia has an agreement with the International Association of Fire Fighters—Mechanics that includes Juneteenth as a paid holiday. Examples of Juneteenth proclamations are located in MRSC's Sample Document Library,and include Kirkland's proclamation on Juneteenth and Snohomish County's resolution. What options have cities used to financially support downtown facade and building improvements? Below are several examples of programs in Washington cities.These examples are a mix of grant and loan programs, but all appear to be funded with non-general fund monies, such as Community Development Block Grant(CDBG)funds. • Chehalis Community Renaissance Team (CCRT) Façade Program—Grants provide a 50 percent match, up to$2,500 per business or property,for approved improvement costs; administered by CCRT,which is primarily a privately funded organization. • Business Improvement Districts: Edmonds Downtown BID—Business Improvement Districts (BIDs)are special assessment areas established under chapter 35.87A RCW.This was set up by Edmonds City Council. Edmonds BID has nearly 350 members under this special assessment area. Participating businesses assess themselves in order to fund programs and activities such as beautification, marketing, security, parking, or administration.Their website provides information on how often the group meets,what the process is to join, how decisions to spend funds are spent, etc. • Port Angeles Façade and Sign Improvement Program—Up to$10,000 for façade improvement and/or$1 K for signage improvements, using CDBG funds. 2 • Renton Façade Improvement Program—Loan program with a minimum loan of$10,000 using CDBG funds. • Selah Downtown Beautification Grant Program Application (2021)—Administered by the SDA, a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization. Here are the eligibility requirements. • Tacoma Building Facade Assistance Program—Loan program for business improvements including façades. • Downtown Association of Yakima(DAY) Façade Improvement Grant Program—Grant of up to$10K(with a 50% match required)for both business owners and commercial building owners; administered by the DAY. Here are some additional resources that may be helpful: • Main Street Program—Washington's Main Street Program (MSP) is a state iteration of a nationwide program to revitalize downtown districts. Some examples of cities that participate are Kent, Bellingham, Cle Elum, Puyallup,and Yakima.This program offers funding, networking opportunities,training, and other resources to cities who have an independent 501(c)(3)or 501(c)(6) nonprofit organization dedicated solely to downtown revitalization. Nationally,there are a vast number of cities that participate in this program. • USDA Information Center: Downtown Revitalization—Links to a variety of case studies, articles and guides,funding sources, relevant organizations,etc. Some of the topics covered on this site include Business Improvement Districts,community planning, downtown revitalization, and regional rural development. 1 j MRSC staff have noted that an obstacle to building façade improvement loan programs from cities is the state constitutional prohibition on the loaning or gifting of public funds in Article VIII, Section 7 of the State Constitution. Programs that have been successfully implemented appear to have been funded by passing through money from other sources such as the CDBG program or the Economic Development Administration. For more information, here are links to MRSC's topic pages Gift of Public Funds and Economic Development in Washington State:An Introduction. We want to update our agency's official flag/logo.Are there any statutory requirements or other considerations we should be thinking about? There are no state laws that specifically allow or prohibit the city from adopting a city flag, so you have a lot of flexibility. Several cities have adopted a seal and a logo. Sometimes a local government or agency will create a contest to solicit community input into a new design or logo. See the following examples of logo contests and projects: • The Courier-Herald: Enumclaw City Council chooses municipal flag (2022) • My Everett News: Details and Guidelines Revealed for$5000.00 City of Everett Logo Contest (2014) • Spokesman-Review: City of Spokane seeks new manhole cover designs through contest (2020) • Pasco City Logo Redesign Process • Ferndale Winner of the Thornton Logo Contest Announced • Bothell Enter the Safe Streets&Sidewalks Logo Contest If you do hold a contest, be sure to include language that, by submitting a logo,the applicant(or their parent or guardian on their behalf)surrenders any trademark or copyright to the logo, and that the agency reserves the right to not use the winning logo.We highly recommend you have your attorney review the terms and conditions of the contest. 3 Once an agency decides upon a new flag or logo, it can register its logo as a trademark with our state's Office of the Secretary of State(Corporations Division) if the trademark is to be used exclusively within the state or region. Chapter 19.77 RCW governs trademarks issued by the state.As noted on the Secretary of State's Trademarks webpage,the broadest protection is available through registration with the U.S.Trademark and Patent Office.The state Trademark Registration Form is available through the Secretary of State's Registration Forms website.We recommend that you contact the Office of the Secretary of State, Corporations Division,for more information at(360)725-0377. Your agency may also want to review the North American Vexillological Association's"Good Flag, Bad Flag"which"lays out five basic principles for good flag design, and then shows examples of flags that follow them and flags that disregard them, all illustrated in color."There's also an interesting and entertaining TED talk video on city flag designs. Is there any exemption for municipal corporations from obtaining a minor work permit? Municipal corporations are excluded from the definition of"employers"that are required to obtain a work permit by RCW 49.12.005(3)and WAC 296-125-015(2). However,the city must comply with the rest of the requirements for employing minors in RCW 49.12.110-.124. E I We are looking for guidance on hosting city-sponsored summer events,such as parades. For general information on regulation of special events, including parades, see our Special Events Permits webpage. MRSC also recently published a blog article:A How-To Guide to Sponsoring Summer Celebrations.And here are a couple of examples of city parade regulations: • Bainbridge Island Municipal Code Ch. 12.06—Parades and Assemblies. Covers traditional parades,fun runs, roadway foot races,fundraising walks or runs, auctions, bikeathons, parades, carnivals, shows or exhibitions,filming/movie events, circuses, block parties, and street fairs. • Coupeville Municipal Code Ch. 5.34—Parades,Athletic Events and Other Special Events Thank you to our generous sponsors Stay Informed MRSC publishes a number of e-newsletters related to 08®F I VE I N S L E local government issues. MU RAP H Y � You can also keep up with ,•,•• BEST us on social media. .� LHJ WALLACE "'""' e your ATTORNEYS pp�Mana Masi �toiuv MAD R.ONA LANE POWELL a� Subscri ? ii�lt�d IiIII'� If LAW GROUP. P L L C CAIRNCROSSeHEMPELMANN THE a�% CH&ATTORNEYS AT LAW f h�I ��� in AthenaTHE LAN!9FFICE OF a Lighthouse GROUP 111 RICHARII LMICHES If you have questions or comments for the newsletter editor, please MRSC.org contact Jill Dvorkin, Legal Consultant. 4 MRSC 12601 Fourth Avenue, Suite 800, Seattle, WA 98121 Unsubscribe heisenhour@co.jefferson.wa.us Update Profile I Constant Contact Data Notice Sent by it@mrsc.org 5 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Friday, May 13, 2022 4:16 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: KPTZ Listener Questions for Monday, May 16, 2022 BOCC Update From: Lynn Sorensen Sent: Friday, May 13, 2022 4:14:37 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Allison Berry; Berry, Allison; Willie Bence; Greg Brotherton; Kate Dean; Heidi Eisenhour; jeffbocc; KPTZ VTeam Subject: KPTZ Listener Questions for Monday, May 16, 2022 BOCC Update ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. County Commissioners, Dr Allison Berry, and Willie Bence, Please see the KPTZ listener questions below for Monday, May 16, 2022 BOCC Update. Thank you, Lynn Sorensen KPTZ Virus Watch Team Questions for Dr Allison Berry: 1. I noticed the CDC considers our county low in community risk level; https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/your-health/covid-by-county.html What is different with how they are calculating this level vs. how we are determining risk here? 2. Would you please repeat the total number of cases that come up over the weekend, at least twice in your update? I try to write the number down. It helps guide me for my entire week to know how things went over the weekend. 3. I understand why you don't want to mandate masks again. However with your authority can you mandate information? Can you require businesses to look up the case rate on the Jefferson County health site and post it on the door every day? Perhaps the first one has a note that says as of this date the case rate indicates that one in every 10 people entering this establishment is likely a Covid carrier. We highly recommend you wear your masks. There is almost no one that I have talked to in the last two weeks that is aware we are in a surge and that the situation is serious. Mandatory Information seems to be appropriate. 4. Last week you said to wait an hour after someone took a shower before using bathroom. What if you wanted to take a shower? i Would the humidity from that affect the aerosols from first shower or are those aerosols inactive? What do you recommend? 5. How concerned should one be to be unmasked in a large close crowd outside? (think Rhody Parade). Should we mask up? Question for Willie Bence: 1. Have you made any progress in securing more heat shelters for Jefferson County? As we remember vividly, there were none in Port Townsend during the terrible heat wave last June, the "Heat Dome", which lasted over three days and was particularly unbearable for those of us who are older residents. Unlike a spectacular emergency, such as earthquake, fire or tsunami, it is silent but can be deadly. Last week the U. S. Health and Human Services agency warned of the possibility of another such heat wave for western states this summer. They also said to expect average seasonal temperatures to be 2 to 4 degrees above normal. 2 Julie Shannon From: Kate Dean Sent: Friday, May 13, 2022 10:07 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: Monthly Grange Meeting May 18th - Join us! From: Chimacum Grange Sent: Friday, May 13, 2022 10:05:05 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Kate Dean Subject: Monthly Grange Meeting May 18th -Join us! ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. View this email in your browser IA\ , 0004 Gathering our Rural • Est.1918 Community since 1918 l 100 YEARS! 'RANGE CHIMACUM GRANGE #681 Monthly Grange Meeting We hope to see you at this month's Grange meeting. Everyone invited! May 18th, 2022 6:15 pm 1 Join us for soup, bread, healthy home-made food and anything optional you choose to bring. 7:00 pm Joe Holtrop, Executive Director of the Jefferson County Conservation District will be discussing: • The work of the Conservation District on behalf of local agriculture • The history of success of local farmers in implementing conservation practices • The impact on farms of the recent attempt by the Washington State Legislature to establish much larger buffers on streams 7:30 pm Doyle Yancey, our newest Grange member and volunteer, owner of Egg and I Pork will be leading a conversation about community-building and how the Grange can play a role. After a two year COVID hiatus, we are thrilled that monthly Grange meetings are taking place again! Monthly meetings typically occur on the 2nd Wednesday of each month, but may fluctuate depending on speaker availability. Come early to visit and share in a simple "bring something optional"potluck dinner. The actual meetings begin at 7:00. We will be announcing each meeting by newsletter and on our website. We look forward to seeing you there! j;1111111kib so.000000 "In essentials,unity;in non-essentials liberty;in all things, charity" E 2 Copyright(C) 2022 Chimacum Grange.All rights reserved. You are receiving this email because you opted into our mailing list. Our mailing address is: Chimacum Grange 9572 Rhody Dr Chimacum,WA 98325-8800 Add us to your address book Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe Grow your business with maiichimp 3 jeffbocc From: Libby Palmer <libbypalmer2@gmail.com> Sent: Friday, May 13, 2022 8:10 AM To: Planning Commission Desk; Planning Commission Desk Cc: jeffbocc Subject: Ordinance re temporary housing Follow Up Flag: Follow up Flag Status: Flagged ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. I am writing in support of the Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance as drafted by the planning department. I urge that it be passed in its current form, which is based on two years of hard work and discussion by a number of area non-profit organizations. The goal of the ordinance is clear: to remove barriers to providing humane, safe and decent transitional housing. Transitional housing does not solve all of our housing challenges in Jefferson County but they are a critical step towards an overall solution. The existence of successful tiny house villages in Jefferson County is helping the larger public accept variations on the single lot/single family/single ownership model on which the zoning code has been based for a number of years, a restrictive model that has prevented the development of new ideas in housing. I urge that the Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance be adopted by the Jefferson County Planning Commission. Thank you. Libby Palmer 2336 Kuhn Street Port Townsend, WA 98368 206-799-0278 i jeffbocc From: Al Bergstein <albergstein@outlook.com> Sent: Friday, May 13, 2022 8:49 AM To: Planning Commission Desk Cc: jeffbocc Subject: Ordinance Governing Temporary Housing Facilities - Do PASS as written Importance: High ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Dear Planning Commission and County Commissioners, Over the past year, the Jefferson County Department of Community Development planning staff has drafted revisions to the ordinance governing temporary housing facilities in the county. The Planning Commission has reviewed the drafts and made recommendations to Department staff. This ordinance is now in its final form. It reflects hundreds of hours of staff time, your participation and the input from a wide range of concerned citizens. This well written and humane permanent ordinance gives us the framework for providing temporary, safe, supported and professionally managed housing for our county's unsheltered. Although temporary shelter is not the whole answer to our county's housing woes, it is an essential part of the solution. People experiencing homelessness need a safe, supportive environment to regain their sense of well being in order to focus on obtaining permanent housing. This ordinance creates the structure for this to happen. I urge the Planning Commission to recommend to the Commissioners that they adopt the permanent ordinance in its entirety as presented by the Department of Community Development. Al Bergstein Port Townsend i jeffbocc From: Washington State Parks <WAA.Parks@public.govdelivery.com> Sent: Friday, May 13, 2022 9:07 AM To: jeffbocc Subject: Washington State Parks E-News May 2022 ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. WASHINGTON WASHINGTON STATE PARKS , ge _1 State Parks E-News May 2022'''f. 4''''' - 4 ' ' V� „ 'ill 047- 1%- 4..*t-'*''''' ' t _ ' . .i yr 'd I % � "� fig* ° :..n� sP , .' �y+ 7� 1 Memorial Day Weekend Fun Take a day trip to our parks Although our camping is booked up for Memorial Day Weekend, our parks are the perfect place to plan a day trip. Why rush to get out of town on a busy weekend? Sleep in, get your coffee, take your time and spend a day at a park near you! REMINDER: Looking to book for an upcoming holiday or for 2023? Reservations can be made nine months in advance. Start planning ahead of time to get your camping spot secured! Find a park near you Folk & Traditional Arts Program Events Summer is on its way! On top of the endless outdoor recreation opportunities at your favorite state parks, the Folk & Traditional Arts Program welcomes you to ' enjoy music, dance, food, and festivals and experience p ; the diverse cultural traditions of Washington! Summer Concerts June kicks off the beloved: Waikiki Beach Concert Series at Cape Disappointment State Park, and a new series: Mountain Melodies Concert Series at Lake Wenatchee State Park. Our annual American Roots Concert Series at Deception Pass State Park begins in July. Music and dance styles featured will include a variety of traditions from Brazilian forrO and Japanese folk tunes to old time music and Appalachian clogging. Complete schedules and lineups available here. Summer Festival Skandia Midsommarfest is scheduled for June 26 at Saint Edward State Park. For 63 years, Skandia Folkdance Society has produced Midsommarfest, a joyful Scandinavian celebration of the summer solstice. This year's festival includes in- person and virtual programming with traditional music, dance, food and crafts for the whole family. The grand parade and traditional raising of the majstang (garlanded midsommar pole) will occur at 2:30 p.m. Midsommarfest showcases a wealth of wonderful music and dancing by the Northwest's premier Nordic folk musicians and dancers. More festivals and programs will be announced soon! 2 Learn more Upcoming Park Events There are many events happening this spring and summer, including the Alta Lake Flower Power Hike on May 21 Be sure to check out our events calendar for mor • information about upcoming events at our parks. f Washington State Parks Events Calendar Check Out Washington More than 400 new adventure packs and Discover passes at libraries statewide will help communities in need explore state parks and other public lands �� , Your adventure is waiting! 4,4 , Check Out WA has expandedwith once more• e w th new ok. ,A , * adventure packs, a new partnership and additional , funding. This program allows local library card holders to check out adventure packs for a week at a time. Inside these adventure packs, you'll find a special Discover Pass, binoculars, and resources like maps and nature guides - everything you need to start your next park adventure! Learn more National Safe Boating Week 3 This year, the boating program is excited to announce a partnership with the Seattle Mariners to promote National Safe Boating Week and the new Washington f -,,,, Safe Boating Pledge! The Boating Program will be at :.7., , ,it 1.1VL , the Seattle Mariners home game on May 27. Attendees are invited to sign a kayak to pledge their ,,,, . commitment to boating safely! In addition, Washington State Park's newly appointed director, Diana Dupuis, i , ' \ will be throwing the first pitch. We hope to see you at j ' . 11 the ballpark! The introduction of the WA Boat Safe Pledge coincides with National Safe Boating Week, which takes place annually to encourage and promote safe boating. National Safe Boating Week, May 21-27, is coordinated each year by the National Safe Boating Council and boating safety partners across the United States and Canada. The campaign kicks off prior to Memorial Day to encourage boaters to make responsible decisions a daily habit, such as always wearing a life jacket, carrying the right equipment, knowing navigational rules, never boating under the influence and more. rt- • i'311: 415'41111'9111" Walk Among W ldflowers . covered with wildflowers! F• a Ptft 't 7';', + '.t.,,, ..,..e,;., ,i,4„L ,r. .-*,,4k,."- :',*.,:t. Plan a visit to Steamboat Rock, Columbia Hills, Ginkgo Petrified Forest, Fields Spring or Olmstead Place to see lupine and " *4'e i F balsamroot carpet the hills of our parks Plan your trip WASIRINGT ON --,,,...... , • ,i''..,7':::%+. 4 , El in tilr im 'ri Manage Subscriptions I Unsubscribe All I Help I Contact Us I Subscribe This email was sent to jeffbocc@co.jefferson.wa.us using GovDelivery Communications Cloud on behalf of:Washington State Parks and 91 Recreation Commission 1111 Israel Road S.W.•Tumwater•WA 98501-6512 gOVDELIVERY 5 jeffbocc From: Daniel J. Quinn-Shea <quinn-shea@msn.com> Sent: Friday, May 13, 2022 11:13 AM To: Planning Commission Desk;jeffbocc Subject: Support for Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Dear Planning Commission and County Commissioners, Over the past year, the Jefferson County Department of Community Development planning staff has drafted revisions to the ordinance governing temporary housing facilities in the county. The Planning Commission has reviewed the drafts and made recommendations to Department staff. This ordinance is now in its final form. It reflects hundreds of hours of staff time, your participation and the input from a wide range of concerned citizens. This well written and humane permanent ordinance gives us the framework for providing temporary, safe, supported and professionally managed housing for our county's unsheltered. Although temporary shelter is not the whole answer to our county's housing woes, it is an essential part of the solution. People experiencing homelessness need a safe, supportive environment to regain their sense of well being in order to focus on obtaining permanent housing. This ordinance creates the structure for this to happen. Housing is so intimate to us all. Grateful for my own housing, I can't imagine not having it. Please help us expand its availability. Sincerely, Daniel & Karen Quinn-Shea 560 Adelma Beach Rd Port Townsend, WA 98368 1 jeffbocc From: K. Austin Kerr <kaustinkerr@gmail.com> Sent: Friday, May 13, 2022 11:13 AM To: Planning Commission Desk Cc: jeffbocc Subject: letter in support of homeless Attachments: Homeless letter.docx ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. See Attached K. Austin Kerr Professor Emeritus of History, Ohio State University 1 Friday, May 13, 2022 Dear Planning Commission members: I applaud efforts to accommodate the homeless among us and any needed changes in zoning regulations. There is too much mythology and too little reality in conversations regarding homelessness. I have personally conversed with perfectly normal middle-class folks only to be surprised that they are homeless. There are many reasons. One lost a home in a divorce. Another man, a professional, lost his home when his landlord sold his dwelling and the new owner took the house off the rental market. Another couple lost their home due to an increase in rent (fortunately they were able to relocate). A friend who is a retired Ph.D lost his home recently in a divorce and had to live in a RV for almost a year before finding an apartment whose rent he could afford on his government pension. We need to help in many ways. Faith-based ventures such as Bayside Housing are a huge help but need assistance from public policy (as does Habitat for Humanity). Please help. K Austin Kerr Port Ludlow jeffbocc From: Tiffany Hudepohl <tiffany.hudepohl0@gmail.com> Sent: Friday, May 13, 2022 11:19 AM To: jeffbocc Subject: Fwd: DCD HOMELESS ORDINANCE Attachments: The Robert Martin V.docx ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Forwarded message ° From:Tiffany Hudepohl <tiffany.hudepohlO@gmail.com> Date: Fri, May 13, 2022, 10:50 AM Subject: DCD HOMELESS ORDINANCE To: <PlanComm@co.iefferson.wa.us> Cc: dcd@co.iefferson.wa.us<dcd@co.iefferson.wa.us>, <JeffBoCC@iefferson.wa.us>,<kdean@co.iefferson.wa.us> 1 The Robert Martin V. City of Boise, No. 15-35845 (9th Cir. 2019), court case that Cherish Chronmiller, director of Olycap, and others like to use to bully commissioners, boards and community members is not about being required to provide housing for every homeless person in Jefferson county. This case is about police enforcement and legal citation.The court case sided with a homeless man, Martin, in saying that sleep is a biological need for any human and one cannot give a citation to someone sleeping in public places if no other alternative is available. "According to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruling on the case..., cities can't arrest or punish people for sleeping on public property unless they provide adequate and relatively accessible indoor accommodations." If a bed is available for said homeless and they refuse to leave then a citation is legal.This court case is not about allowing the homeless to set up permanent residence on public lands. Law enforcement is allowed to ask the homeless to move on but do not have the authority to give a violation for sleeping or camping on public lands. Numerous counties in 9th Supreme Court district are dealing with homeless with this court case. Homeless advocates have repeatedly dictated and gas lighted our community into believing that our county is required to provide encampment housing is simply not true.Jefferson County does not"HAVE" to do anything, it is only that law enforcement cannot fine or arrest a homeless person for being homeless and performing the biological need of sleep. Using this ruling as an over reaching arm to redefine the newly proposed ordinance presented by Jefferson County DCD "Repealing and Replacing Interim Ordinance 08-1213-21 and Adopting Zoning Regulation for the Siting, Establishment and Operation of Temporary Homeless Facilities in Unincorporated Areas of Jefferson County",will only open up our county to an unrestricted number of homeless people creating a gateway that our county does not have the resources to accommodate. I understand Jefferson County is legally bound by the state to have an ordinance for siting homeless encampments and emergency housing. State law does not dictate how this policy is written. Jefferson County DCD is preparing an Ordinance which supports creating shelters with low barrier access allowing sex offenders and warrant criminals, removing fire restrictions then removing any buffers of community safety and creating an Ordinance with no checks and balances or adequate review process. Allowing a single person the "DCD director" to have such a wide berth of discretion in approving and managing these sites, then removing any and all limitations on capacity for sites is a legal and financial nightmare.These actions set a reckless precedent. All we are hearing as a community lately is there is not enough money in this county. Our roads are failing, our infrastructure is weak, parks are barely operating, school bonds are failing and we have no adequate mental health resources. Many of the community members who live and work here and pay taxes are unable to afford housing and basic necessities. I am confused how such a small minority of people-many of which refuse services-are allowed to consume so much of our counties resources.The county initially spent 600k$ for 14 acres of land. 400k$ additional to build infrastructure and an additional 500k$funding Olycap to support approximately 25 people at the Mill Rd complex until the end of December 2022 and this is only one encampment.This ordinance is going to create a vortex of need that the county and community simply cannot bear. Affordable housing, low income housing, transitional housing and true natural crisis emergency housing are not the same as a policy that allows a homeless encampment to be created anywhere with absolutely no limitation to population. When will our county stop wasting money and start putting our resources to good use by building systems that help young people and families and help struggling business owners and tax payers who live here now! Taking care of the community without throwing open arms and endless resource at attracting and supporting more homeless encampments is where the DCD and county commissioner's priorities should be,creating fair policies that have rules and metrics not an ordinance that is an open invitation to chaos. Sincerely—Tiffany Drewry—Resident, business owner,volunteer and mother for over 24 years. jeffbocc From: Grandrr@olypen <Grandrr@olypen.com> Sent: Friday, May 13, 2022 11:22 AM To: jeffbocc Subject: Tiny house, etc. ordinance ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. I support the tiny house, etc. ordinance.We need supervised locations for our homeless and houseless. Blessings, Geralynn Sent from my iPad 1 jeffbocc From: Margaret D. McGee <margaret@olympus.net> Sent: Friday, May 13, 2022 1:16 PM To: pcomm@jefferson.co.wa;jeffbocc Subject: Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Dear Planning Commission and County Commissioners, I want to live in a community that takes care of its vulnerable unsheltered people and safely supports their transition to permanent housing.To that end, I ask the Planning Commission to recommend to the Commissioners that they adopt the Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance in its entirety as presented by the Department of Community Development. With thanks for your service to our community, Margaret D. McGee 819 Adams Street Port Townsend,Washington 1 jeffbocc From: Margaret D. McGee <margaret@olympus.net> Sent: Friday, May 13, 2022 1:55 PM To: Planning Commission Desk;jeffbocc Subject: Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. (Sorry if you get this twice-- it bounced back at me due the first time due to an error in my email address to the Planning Commission.--Margaret) Dear Planning Commission and County Commissioners, I want to live in a community that takes care of its vulnerable unsheltered people and safely supports their transition to permanent housing.To that end, I ask the Planning Commission to recommend to the Commissioners that they adopt the Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance in its entirety as presented by the Department of Community Development. With thanks for your service to our community, Margaret D. McGee 81.9 Adams Street Port Townsend,Washington 1 jeffbocc From: Jeff Neill <jeffneill@hotmail.com> Sent: Friday, May 13, 2022 3:41 PM To: jeffbocc Cc: 'Suzan Neill' Subject: Gardiner - No Shooting Zone ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. To Whom it may concern: I plan on attending the zoom meeting; however, I'm also submitting my concerns in writing. Myself and family - Oppose the no shooting zone, boundary lines, as it directly affects our private property around the lagoon and violates our rights to target shoot on our property. We own tax parcels 002341021, 002341020, 002341022, 002341023 and 002341030 that are in the proposed boundaries. In my opinion, the people behind the "No Shooting" zone are trying to stop the Hunting that occurs every year on the lagoon. I'm in agreeance with a "No Hunting "zone proposal with the current boundary line drawn for, "No Shooting". A "No Shooting" zone would need to encompass the whole Gardiner area and not pick on a few private property owners rights. Thank you Jeff Neill 206-291-6060 1 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Saturday, May 14, 2022 5:11 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: This Week in Photos Follow Up Flag: Follow up Flag Status: Flagged From: NACo Sent: Saturday, May 14, 2022 5:06:20 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: This Week in Photos ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Having trouble viewing this email? Click Here IS EF I jaw- AssttrAt-NJ A lei_ orto nts d 3114,0 p , Photos rom Washington, D.C. & Counties s Across America NACo @NACoTweets Toni Preckwinkle @ToniPreckwinkle 1 t5 lowD 8I gib :..•«� WI, y s yx U. 'arTM` y it s Si d a I a } x f �� •y F'. ti 'c- l' 1 , NACo President Larry Johnson; Palm Beach Cook County, Ill. Board President Toni County, Fla. Commissioner Gregg Weiss; Preckwinkle welcomes President Joe Biden and Montgomery County, Md. Councilmember Craig highlights how the county is investing American Rice; and Stearns County, Minn. Commissioner Rescue Plan resources in local priorities. Tarryl Clark attend a White House event announcing efforts to increase access to affordable high-speed internet. VFNACo @NACoTweets VirMark @RitaccoMark ! € E w.. »' ''+ram CO Ali \ ' - Ift 4 i7 , ., T., , ,,,,,„„,„' ' i Itt NACo's Eryn Hurley outlines bipartisan policy NACo Chief Government Affairs Officer Mark priorities for the Rural Development title of the Ritacco leads a discussion on the American 2023 Farm Bill with the Rural Community Rescue Plan, broadband and infrastructure with Assistance Partnership and the National the United Counties Council of Illinois. Cooperative Business Association. 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NATIONAL A , OIATION COUNTIES 660 North Capitol Street,NW,Suite 400 Washington,D.C.20001 f in + Did someone forward you this email?Sign up to stay up-to-date on topics affecting America's counties! 4 Click here to unsubscribe. 5 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Saturday, May 14, 2022 10:56 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: ODT Volunteers Needed! • Marathon Start Line • From: ptcodt@mg2.1glcrm.netOn Behalf OfBrian Anderson' Sent: Saturday, May 14, 2022 10:54:31 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: ODT Volunteers Needed! • Marathon Start Line • ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Spearhead+ng the Olympic Discovery Trail since 1988 O LY M P[C PENINSULA P.O.Box 1836.Port Angeles,WA 98362 i bt c n e ry TRAILS infoi olympicdiscoverytrailorg TRAIL COALITION OlympicDiscoveryTrail.org In 2021, the Port Angeles Marathon Association donated $14,500 to the PTC from the Run the Peninsula and the North Olympic Discovery Marathon We need your help! The PTC has managed the start line every year at the 7 Cedars Resort in Blyn. 26 Volunteers needed (we have 14 committed) - 12 more needed • Date: June 5th, 2022 • Time: 5:30am to 8:00am • Location: 7 Cedars Resort, Blyn • Please contact Jeff Bohman, or call 360-477-8881 • Link to Starters Schedule You will receive a Volunteer North Olympic Discovery Marathon t-shirt and a Huge Thank You from Jeff Bohman, your President! i PORT ANGELES MARATIJOI ASSOCIATION Event Description PAMA is looking for additional volunteers before the event and the day of the event. To see the complete volunteer list go to NODM Volunteers Course Marshall volunteer positions listed below: Course Marshal Locations &Time Frames - Email Victoria Jones if you are interested in being a course marshal. PDT in Sequim Bay State Park f7:35 AMf8:10 AM ;Blake Ave. & E Firff7:55 AM 9:00 AM] N. Hendrickson St. & 5th Help Officer8:00 AM 9:15 AM E. Runnion Rd. &Sawmill Rd.] 8:20 AM 9:55 AM OIy.Disc.Trail & Heath Rd.INEED 2 HERE 8:20 AMI9:55 AM OIy.Disc.Trail &Carlsborg Rd.Help Sherif 8:25 AM110:05 AM OIy.Disc.Trail & Kitchen-Dick Rd.Help Sherif 8:30 AM10:25 AM 'Barr Rd.(heading S.) &ODT Help Sherif 8:25 AM]9:40 AM ;Buchanan Rd. & Half Marathon turnaround 9:00 AM12:35 PM 0 2 jeffbocc From: Mary Margolis <probonomary@gmail.com> Sent: Saturday, May 14, 2022 10:45 AM To: jeffbocc Subject: Housing Webinar Follow Up Flag: Follow up Flag Status: Flagged ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Dear Commissioners, Clallam-Jefferson County Pro Bono Lawyers (CJCPBL) has an upcoming housing webinar and we would welcome your attendance. The event is being held on Friday, May 27th, at noon. The free webinar will be offered via Zoom. Speakers include: Ted Howard, CJCPBL Housing Attorney Michelle Lucas,Attorney for the Northwest Justice Project Judge Simon Barnhart, Clallam County Superior Court Renee Riopelle, Executive Director Peninsula Dispute Resolution Center(PDRC) Cherish Cronmiller, Director of Olympic Community Action Programs(OIyCAP) The panel discussion will focus on areas of concern to both landlords and tenants. Our presenters will talk about the new eviction laws and resources in Washington state. As you know, housing is a huge concern to many in our community. It is essential to keep the conversation(s) between agencies and the public open. So many people in our area are one step away from homelessness. While this event was initially scheduled for attorney education,we have opened it to the public and to agencies working with individuals facing eviction and/or homelessness. Please register by emailing CJCPBL executive director,Shauna Rogers McClain, at probonolawyers.com or Mary Margolis at probonomary@gmail.com (or by responding to this email). Please feel free to share this information with those in your agency that might be interested in attending. Zoom links will be emailed to registered attendees on May 26th. We hope you are able to attend! Thank you, Mary Margolis (she/her/hers) Administrative Assistant Clallam-Jefferson County Pro Bono Lawyers P.O. Box 901 1 Port Angeles, Washington 98362 (360) 504-2422 probonomary(algmail.com My work hours: Monday through Thursday, 10-3 Thank you volunteers, for your amazing generosity and dedication. 2 jeffbocc From: Suzy Elbow <suzylelbow@gmail.com> Sent: Saturday, May 14, 2022 2:46 PM To: Planning Commission Desk Cc: jeffbocc Subject: I support permanently adopting the temporary housing facility ordinance ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Dear Planning Commission and County Commissioners, I'm a Jefferson county resident,voter, and next door neighbor to Pat's Place, and I'm writing to you today to express my strong support for adopting the permanent ordinance governing temporary housing facilities in our county. Providing temporary shelter to unhoused folks is a vital tool in grappling humanely with our nation's housing crisis. Everyone deserves to have a safe place to live,where they can begin to take steps to get back on their feet. I feel strongly that this ordinance will help empower our community to treat people who are struggling with the care and dignity that they deserve. Thank you, Suzy Elbow 1 jeffbocc From: Geoshua Holsinger <ftfonf@gmail.com> Sent: Sunday, May 15, 2022 1:18 PM To: jeffbocc; akerr@jeffco.us;tktharp@jeffco.us; tony.exum.house@state.co.us; stephen.fenberg.senate@state.co.us; rhonda.fields.senate@state.co.us; meg.froelich.house@state.co.us Subject: Please Help! Follow Up Flag: Follow up Flag Status: Flagged ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Why is this allowed to happen to us in a peaceful neighborhood? Ron ball, my old neighbor, who I still have to deal with through my new tenants. Ron Ball calls the cops almost everyday, even though he is free to molest and attempt to sexualy assault minors. He contacts the county commissioners, even though the county does absolutely NOTHING to resolve this 10-year issue that ALL OF US NEIGHBORS HAVE against Ron Ball. Why is he allowed to call the police over 500 times over the last year about there being too many hummingbirds in his neighbor's yard (among many other things), and he NOT be disciplined for abuse of the system? Why does Ron ball contact the county commissioner and put everyone's job on the line (Namely the sheriff who lives near him),yet Ron Ball is a sex offender,who has a crotch-rocket and drives 150 MPH+on the highway? Why is Ron Ball allowed to call the police on a small truck parked down the street which is'blocking the view of the mountains' when Ron Ball comes home at 2 in the morning, driving drunk,taking photos as he walks up and down the street of people's private dwelling? Can someone answer these questions? Why have I heard so many of my old neighbors threaten Ron Ball?Why have there been so many people who have chased Ron Ball down the street, off of someone's private property,yet there has literally been NOTHING done about this? Doesn't this seem like an issue to anyone? I have contacted a lawyer to see what CAN be done, because obviously this has been an issue for almost 10 years now. I could get 40+signatures from all of those who've been negatively impacted by this man. And yet, NOTHING has been done. Ron Ball Info: Address: 9247 w nichols pl Littleton Co 80128 email: r b ball@yahoo.com i ron.b.ball@gmail.com (303) 979-6892 (303) 883-7542 2 jeffbocc From: Eliana Rose <elianacrose@gmail.com> Sent: Sunday, May 15, 2022 6:01 PM To: jeffbocc Subject: Fwd: Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Forwarded message From: Eliana Rose<elianacrose@gmail.com> Date: Sun, May 15, 2022 at 5:57 PM Subject:Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance To: <pcommissiondesk@co.iefferson.wa.us> Good morning County Commissioners and Planning Commissioners. Please support the Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance as developed by the County's Planning Department. This Ordinance releases an opportunity for Jefferson County and Community Agencies to cooperatively"dare greatly" in designing, implementing, and nitty-gritty problem solving for the immediate local housing crisis as it is fully integrated with Community groups and agencies (which are already in place)that collaboratively address tools and supports a person needs to build a bridge to "homed". A mighty work. Thank you. Eliana Rose District 24 1 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 7:25 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: Safe Streets and Roads for All Notice of Funding Opportunity Follow Up Flag: Follow up Flag Status: Flagged From: Crystal Ellerbe Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 7:22:56 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Monte Reinders; Kate Dean; Heidi Eisenhour; Greg Brotherton Cc: Tylynn Gordon; Paul Berendt Subject: FW: Safe Streets and Roads for All Notice of Funding Opportunity ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. SAFE STREETS AND ROADS FOR ALL(SS4A) DISCRETIONARY GRANT PROGRAM (DOT/OST) Due Date: Applications must be submitted by 5:00 PM EDT on Thursday, September 15, 2022. Late applications will not be accepted. Funds: The BIL established the SS4A program with $5,000,000,000 in advanced appropriations in Division J, including $1,000,000,000 for FY 2022.Therefore,this Notice makes available up to$1 billion for FY 2022 grants under the SS4A program. Refer to Section D for greater detail on additional funding considerations and Section D.5 for funding restrictions. Grant funding obligation occurs when a selected applicant and DOT enter into a written grant agreement after the applicant has satisfied applicable administrative requirements. Unless authorized by DOT in writing after DOT's announcement of FY 2022 SS4A grant awards, any costs incurred prior to DOT's obligation of funds for activities ("pre- award costs") are ineligible for reimbursement.All FY 2022 SS4A funds must be expended within five years after the grant agreement is executed and DOT obligates the funds. In FY 2022, DOT expects to award hundreds of Action Plan Grants, and up to one hundred Implementation Grants.The Department reserves the right to make more, or fewer, awards. DOT reserves the discretion to alter minimum and maximum award sizes upon receiving the full pool of applications and assessing the needs of the program in relation to the SS4A grant priorities in Section A.3. i.Action Plan Grants For Action Plan Grants, award amounts will be based on estimated costs,with an expected minimum of$200,000 for all applicants, an expected maximum of$1,000,000 for a political subdivision of a State or a federally recognized Tribal government, and an expected maximum of$5,000,000 for a metropolitan planning organization (MPO) or a joint application comprised of a multijurisdictional group of entities that is regional in scope (e.g., a multijurisdictional group of counties, a council of governments and cities within the same region, etc.).The 1 Department will consider applications with funding requests under the expected minimum award amount. DOT reserves the right to make Action Grant awards less than the total amount requested by the applicant. Joint applications that engage multiple jurisdictions in the same region are encouraged, in order to ensure collaboration across multiple jurisdictions and leverage the expertise of agencies with established financial relationships with DOT and knowledge of Federal grant administration requirements. Applicants may propose development of a single Action Plan covering all jurisdictions, or several plans for individual jurisdictions, administered by the leading agency. ii. Implementation Plan Grants For Implementation Grants, DOT expects the minimum award will be $5,000,000 and the maximum award will be $30,000,000 for political subdivisions of a State. For applicants who are federally recognized Tribal governments or applicants in rural areas, DOT expects the minimum award will be$3,000,000 and the maximum award will be $30,000,000. For an MPO or a joint application comprised of a multijurisdictional group of entities that is regional in scope,the expected maximum award will be $50,000,000. For the purposes of the SS4A grant program award size minimum, rural is defined as an area outside an Urbanized Area (UA) or located within a UA with a population of fewer than 200,000. DOT reserves the right to make Implementation Grant awards less than the total amount requested by the applicant. Scope: The purpose of this notice is to solicit applications for Safe Streets and Roads for All (SS4A)grants. Funds for the fiscal year(FY) 2022 SS4A grant program are to be awarded on a competitive basis to support planning, infrastructure, behavioral, and operational initiatives to prevent death and serious injury on roads and streets involving all roadway users, including pedestrians; bicyclists; public transportation, personal conveyance, and micromobility users; motorists; and commercial vehicle operators Eligibility: Eligible applicants for SS4A grants are (1)a metropolitan planning organization (MPO); (2) a political subdivision of a State or territory; (3) a federally recognized Tribal government; and (4) a multijurisdictional group of entities described in any of the aforementioned three types of entities. A multijurisdictional group of entities described in (4) should identify a lead applicant as the primary point of contact. For the purposes of this NOFO, a political subdivision of a State under(2), above, is defined as a unit of government under the authority of State law.This includes cities,towns, counties, special districts, and similar units of local government.A transit district, authority, or public benefit corporation is eligible if it was created under State law, including transit authorities operated by political subdivisions of a State. States are not eligible applicants, but DOT encourages applicants to coordinate with State entities, as appropriate. Eligible MPOs,transit agencies, and multijurisdictional groups of entities with a regional scope are encouraged to support subdivisions of a State such as cities,towns, and counties with smaller populations within their region. The Department strongly encourages such joint applications for Action Plan Grants, and for applicants who have never received Federal funding and can jointly apply with entities experienced executing DOT grants. An eligible applicant for Implementation Grants must also meet at least one of these conditions: (1) have ownership and/or maintenance responsibilities over a roadway network; (2) have safety responsibilities that affect roadways; or(3) have agreement from the agency that has ownership and/or maintenance responsibilities for the roadway within the applicant's jurisdiction. For the purposes of this NOFO, an applicant's jurisdiction is defined as the U.S. Census tracts where the applicant operates or performs their safety responsibilities. Match or Cost Share Requirement: The Federal share of a SS4A grant may not exceed 80 percent of total eligible activity costs. Recipients are required to contribute a local matching share of no less than 20 percent of eligible activity 2 costs.All matching funds must be from non-Federal sources. In accordance with 2 CFR § 200.306,grant recipients may use in-kind or cash contributions toward local match requirements so long as those contributions meet the requirements under 2 CFR§ 200.306(b). Matching funds may include funding from the applicant, or other SS4A-eligible non-Federal sources partnering with the applicant, which could include, but is not limited to, funds from the State.Any in-kind contributions used to fulfill the cost-share requirement for Action Plan and Implementation Grants must: be in accordance with the cost principles in 2 CFR § 200 Subpart E; include documented evidence of completion within the period of performance; and support the execution of the eligible activities in Section C.4. SS4A funds will reimburse recipients only after a grant agreement has been executed, allowable expenses are incurred, and valid requests for reimbursement are submitted. Grant agreements are expected to be administered on a reimbursement basis, and at the Department's discretion alternative funding arrangements may be established on a case-by-case basis. For More Information: Please contact the SS4A grant program staff via email at SS4A@dot.gov, or call Paul Teicher at 202-366-4114. A telecommunications device for the deaf(TDD) is available at 202-366-3993. In addition, DOT will regularly post answers to questions and requests for clarifications, as well as schedule information regarding webinars providing additional guidance, on DOT's website at https://www.transportation.gov/SS4A.The deadline to submit technical questions is August 15, 2022. FY 2022 NOFO SS4A Discretionary Grant Program From: Federal Transit Administration <usdotfta@info.dot.gov> Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 9:57 AM To: Crystal Ellerbe<crystale@strategies360.com> Subject: Safe Streets and Roads for All Notice of Funding Opportunity 91) .5.Deportment of Transportation ar 411000 anal Transit Adm ni a on 0 The U.S. Department of Transportation today announced the application process is now open for communities of all sizes to apply for $1 billion in Fiscal Year 2022 funding to help them ensure safe streets and roads for all and address the national roadway safety crisis. The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law's new Safe Streets and Roads for All (SS4A) discretionary grant program provides dedicated funding to support regional, local, and Tribal plans, projects and strategies that will prevent roadway deaths and serious injuries. The SS4A program supports the Department's comprehensive approach, laid out in the National Roadway Safety Strategy, to significantly reduce serious injuries and deaths on our nation's highways, roads, and streets and is part 3 of our work toward an ambitious long-term goal of reaching zero roadway fatalities. SS4A grants aim to improve roadway safety by supporting communities in developing comprehensive safety action plans based on a Safe System Approach and implementing projects and strategies that significantly reduce or eliminate transportation-related fatalities and serious injuries involving pedestrians; bicyclists; public transportation, personal conveyance, and micromobility users; commercial vehicle operators; and motorists. Funding can also be used to support robust stakeholder engagement to ensure that all community members have a voice in developing plans, projects and strategies. Applications may come from individual communities, or groups of communities and may include Metropolitan Planning Organizations (MPOs), counties, cities, towns, other special districts that are subdivisions of a state, certain transit agencies, federally recognized Tribal governments, and multi- jurisdictional groups. Links: Safe Streets and Roads for All (SS4A) discretionary grant program Safe Streets and Roads for All Notice of Funding Opportunity Press release Questions?Contact Us U.S.OtootimentofTranspodotion Read our Privacy Policy Feder[Tiarvisit Administration STAY CONNECTED: O N N�yE CTE D: an n 93 You are receiving this information because you signed up to receive timely information from the Federal Transit Administration. SUBSCRIBER SERVICES: Manage Preferences I Unsubscribe I Help This message has been sent by Federal Transit Administration 1200 New Jersey Avenue,SE,Washington,DC 20590 gOU'OELIVEiRYIP 4 Julie Shannon From: Greg Brotherton Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 9:02 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: HCSEG News: Garden Yoga + Wellness at the Salmon Center! From: The Hood Canal Salmon Enhancement Group Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 8:59:32 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Greg Brotherton Subject: HCSEG News: Garden Yoga + Wellness at the Salmon Center! ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. ) a ._.'�sir_....._-x.:_: HCSEG NEW 1 Join us for our Yoga in the Garden and Wellness Series! 6-7pm Wednesdays At the Salmon Center Classes start June 1st In this series you will be led through yoga and meditation classes outside at the Salmon Center, followed by various wellness activities! Classes are led by Michelle Pugh from Joonbug Yoga. A portion of the class fee goes towards HCSEG's environmental efforts! —All skill levels welcome! —Ages 12+ up Sign-up for the full series for a discounted rate! Learn More / Sign-Up 2 ,, ,fie 7 ws ,,. ,,. .. , ,1,. ... 4440.4..t, ., .4. „ , ,A ,....„ ,,,,, R B.r: b 4 :.,., 1 ' u F .... ra yri, ' •�). " ems"" ��++ d y e�,•:Ra,#: *,p:.,^..,'? S :- '},: MAR "� �" N ' ear a 4 � P S.. xs Sao f Q 3 Copyright©2021 HCSEG, All rights reserved. Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list. 4 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 9:02 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: Local 20/20 Weekly Announcements From: Local 20/20 Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 9:00:12 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: Local 20/20 Weekly Announcements ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. View this email in your browser Local 20/20 Weekly Announcements May 16, 2022 1 47 10.440111, } C �f ��� � • • S ,f R ;' s n. iyr .R : 4 4;°°'-'73"V‘'°°' '1'4';a"•2+"ifticlit 1: \„ ,,,.°4 ' ;.44,!,.44",„: ' :;,, -1 ' flot '` S ,i , ZSA p, f ilaVi; °pr�Ra ' n l a• u li r y.a e� T r$ r a iltf,„ < ,. '.�.�..,,, '''.4. it ti .�'•,• ..�'�� ti. A. , _,, , „,\,.,,,,,„:„,,,,, , ‘,,,,„,,,,,, _ ,,,,,,,,,, , „s.„ .„„,,,e,:,•, ,:- e t ., EM4 ^ ..L j.,i ve 4,4.. .... j .G. ;.„ aia ,,t•: :}��`.�'i 3 ."� 'Ma, Y•:,,,wa';s• m t 4. < E,,, " :.„' • �_yw i q 1 f �°£ "M � !{^„ e £ -*rya...... ', Via,. . C �C- p. : .y , �,' \k `,.,. ..p'i'�'k.�d.�,�9x, d n l<� x`�£' °>" � �"r•'�.x � 1 ,..�„ �'t'r� � <�t� 1. `,1'° �� �� -( t a • •f ° , < , �,r . ,�,,, ,,,,,,,„:„ „,,,,,„, ,,,„,,,,,,,,..,, ,,....„,:" -fir, r 7 ;ems. s ,,r mm ., — r .a F i« :,,, 4 \i, i ;:„_:.„.„-„,",,,,"„:, ,, � jR' ,, ^nm j ,, it.„,,,,.. 7, @q xri •y� l• .�„� 1 �•�,-.. .- .���-„x. � ..�" � ,r�X.�- �'1 it edited by Cindy Jayne Indian Paintbrush by Cindy Jayne 2 *Editor's Note for regular readers:It's easy to keep up-to-date with our long newsletter by looking for items marked*New*or*Updated*.These are items that have been added or updated this week.Everything else has appeared in prior newsletters,and may be skipped if you have already read about it. This Week Jefferson Healthcare expansion virtual education sessions-various dates below*Online* Jefferson Healthcare will host virtual meetings to share the new hospital expansion project. Jefferson Healthcare Five scheduled virtual sessions will provide opportunities for the public to learn about 1 lealthcareplanned building improvement and service expansion priorities to continue to meet the health needs of the community.Each session will begin with a brief presentation about building improvements and replacement as well as service expansion priorities.The remainder of each meeting is reserved for community questions and feedback. Anyone may attend one of the five sessions via Microsoft Teams.The meeting link and phone call-in information can be found on the Jefferson Healthcare website.Each meeting will be recorded and posted to the website for those unable to attend.Additionally,in-person presentations are planned for June and are dependent on community COVID prevalence. Dates/Times:Wed,May 18,5:45 Pm,Mon,May 23,11:3o am,or Thurs,May 26,5:45 Pm Location:Online Chimacum Grange Meeting with JCCD ED-Wed,May 18th*New* f • Est.1918 , ■ 1I Chimacum GRANGE Chimacum Grange#681 will host Joe Holtrop,Executive Director of the Jefferson County Conservation District to speak about the work of the Conservation District on behalf of local agriculture.He will share the history of success of local farmers in implementing conservation practices in critical areas,especially relevant to the recent attempt by the Washington State Legislature to establish much larger buffers on streams. Doyle Yancey,their newest member,will share his enthusiasm for"traditional Grange"and its long-term focus on serving the community. Come at 6:15 pm to visit and share in a simple potluck dinner,soup provided.The meeting begins at 7:oo pm,at the Chimacum Grange hall. The public is invited.Contact Diane for more info.The public is invited. Time:6:15 potluck,7:oo pm meeting I Location Chimacum Grange Local 20/2o Council Meeting-Wed,May 18th*Online* 3 e monthly Local 20/2o Steering Council meeting is open to all and welcomes those interested in active involvement in Local 20/2o leadership.Newcomers are always welcome.If you'd like a virtual orientation,please us at info( l2o2o.org.For online meeting information,contact us at info@)12o2o.org. Time:4-6pm I Location:Online EDC Team Jefferson Monthly Resource Roundtable-Thurs, May 19 *New**Online* f erson Mr.Jay Bakst,their Community Lean Resource will share ideas that you can use to increase your effectiveness and productivity.In this era of limited resources,can you produce everything needed to serve your customers? For more than 35 years,Jay Bakst has worked with organizations large and small to improve their operations in order to better support their customers. The Community Lean Resource provides training classes as well as individual workshops and coaching to help you improve your business.From identifying wasteful activities to streamlining how you get things done,Lean Thinking is a proven methodology that organizations large and small use every day.No need to register,just join them via this zoom link.Learn more here. Time:12:00 I Location:Online Quilcene JeffCo Repair Event-Fri, May 20 *New* , f This event will be in conjunction with Quilcene's Show Us Your Community Night which will also be serving a free hot meal to community members. Join them for this free in-person community gathering in which people with repair skills share their time and talents to fix their neighbors'belongings.Bring your toaster that no longer toasts,sweater with a hole in the elbow,and excitement to get 4 these belongings repaired while also learning how they did it and ways you could do it yourself next time! Learn more.And if you are interested in helping repair items,contact Mandi.Limited,modest stipends are available per event. Time:4:3o-6:3o pm I Location:Quilcene High School Protest Chase Bank's Climate Crimes-Fridays*Updated* oin local demonstration at Port Townsend's JP Morgan Chase on Fridays,a am to i pm.Their Artful -N-1;:17;;v'l ction will include giant art posters and banners drawing attention to Chase's continued funding of ,, fossil fuel expansion and undermining indigenous rights.Held in coordination with protests around " � � he world,defund campaign info at Stop The Money Pipeline.RSVP to hold art or help out: 'ticommunityartworksPgmail.com.Or just show up! Homemade signs welcome. EFme: iiam-ipm I Location:Chase Bank,419 Kearney Street,Port Townsend T 5th Annual Bioblitz at Fort Worden-Sat, May 21-Sun,May 22 PORT TOWNSEND ....., MARINE SCIENCE N._ CENTER The Port Townsend Marine Science Center will host its 5th annual,24-hour BioBlitz at Fort Worden State Park.Join the fun at a safe social distance,and help us record all living species(including plants,animals, fungi,and everything else)within the park boundary! They will be using the iNaturalist app and website to help them as they venture out to all corners of the state park to find, photograph,and identify as many different species as they can.You can take photos with your smartphone and upload them to the iNaturalist app.Or use your camera and upload your photos to the iNaturalist website when you get home.More information is on the Marine Science Center website. Time:io a.m.on May 21,to io a.m.on May 22 Location:Anywhere in Fort Worden State Park! Upcoming Events TLAB Meeting-Mon, May 23 5 Pk � e e Transportation Lab is a Local 20/2o Action Group working to promote a transportation system that minimizes need for personal motor vehicles. Such a transportation system must be safe,convenient and healthy, and it must be based on: People walking,the most healthful mode; People bicycling,the most efficient mode; Mass transit,the most efficient for moving large numbers of people: Private vehicles for providing services and moving small numbers of people Time:4:30—6:00pm I Location:In person.Contact Richard Dandridge(dandrptOgmail.com) Restroom Deserts:where to go when you need to go.Tues,May 24th*New**Online* PHLUSH e dearth of public restrooms affects nearly everyone.For older people,the uncertainty • ash surrounding one's ability to access a public toilet causes many to stay home and can lead to .solation.Join World Toilet Founder Jack Sim and PHLUSH President Genevieve Schutzius as hey explore restroom innovations that help all members of society actively engage in the public 7 sphere.Featured in the Equity by Design series of AARP International.Register here.In addition o shaping sessions like this one,PHLUSH tracks public and publicly available toilets in 4 efferson County. Their current listing will soon appear as an interactive map.Please submit additions and corrections here. Time:8-8:3oam I Location:Zoom Coastal Processes and Shoreline Erosion:A Shore Friendly Workshop for Waterfront Owners-Tues, May 24*New* , Jefferson County Marine ., Resources Committee The Shore Friendly program of the Northwest Straits Foundation and the Jefferson County Marine Resources Committee are hosting a workshop and beach walk for shoreline landowners to learn about coastal processes that form our beaches and best practices for managing erosion through proper drainage and use of native vegetation.Featured speakers include Jessica Cote and Traci Sanderson of Blue Coast Engineering.The workshop will be followed by an optional beach walk at East Beach Park on Marrowstone Island till 1:3opm.This workshop is intended for Jefferson County residents and is limited to 35 participants.More information and registration here. Time:loam-1:30pm I Location:WSU Classroom(97 Oak Bay Rd)in Port Hadlock Port Townsend Marine Science Center Volunteer Interest Meeting-Thurs,May 26 *New* 6 PORT TOWNSEND �I- •' . MARINE A • 9 SCIENCE CENTER The Port Townsend Marine Science Center invites potential volunteers to explore opportunities to promote conservation of the Salish Sea.Learn about becoming a docent,explore Citizen Science opportunities,discover ways to educate and engage visitors through conservation and marine science advocacy.Questions? Time:4-6 pm I Location:PTMSC Museum at Fort Worden Car Free Day Event—Wed, Jun 1st— Get Ready! *Updated* An amazing set of prizes have been donated for this event,see them at 12o2o.org/carfreeday.To participate, _ . �` on June 1st,drive less,and use less car-dependent ways to get to school,work or run ' ` errands.Once you have,fill out entry form at the link above.For more information, l .. ' i please contact them.Mark your calendar for June 1st,and start making your plans now. 1 Who can you carpool with?What bike route or bus might you take?Join our 1.00 I community in reducing our car-dependence,and reducing our carbon footprint! N.,..7, it.>• .1-(' Tri-Area Repair Event-Sat,June iith*New* 1 V iff Join them for this free in-person community gathering in which people with repair skills share their time and talents to fix their neighbors'belongings.Bring your toaster that no longer toasts,sweater with a hole in the elbow,and excitement to get these belongings repaired while also learning how they did it and ways you could do it yourself next time! Learn more.And if you are interested in helping repair items,contact Mandi.Limited,modest stipends are available per event. Time:4:30-6:30 pm I Location:Quilcene High School Recurring Events 7 COVID-ig Update-Mondays*Online* 47—N-ff Public Healt Join the weekly A:oo am meeting of the Jefferson County Board of County Commissioners (BOCC),including the 9:45 am COVID-19 update with Public Health Officer,Dr.Allison Berry.You can also listen live to Dr. Berry on KPTZ.Additional COVID-19 information is on the County website here. Styrofoam Recycling- 2nd Mondays&4th Saturdays (PT) &some Tuesdays (Port Ludlow) The Port Townsend StyroCyclers can only accept pieces that are white,rigid,clean,and dry,with all tape,labels,paper,and cardboard removed.They also accept clean and dry packing peanuts of all colors and types(separated from the styrofoam),as well as white styrofoam food trays that are clean and free of stains and writing.Your materials will be inspected at your vehicle,and disqualified materials will be returned to you. Thanks to the Fort Worden PDA,the styrofoam is packed and stored at the Fort Worden Battery Putnam,then delivered to Kent once per month thanks to OlyCap and Northwest Harvest food bank trucks.At the Kent facility,a densifier machine uses heat and pressure to convert the styrofoam into a toothpaste-like consistency that cools into heavy,glassy blocks,which are then sold to manufacturers of products such as picture frames,construction details,and surfboard blanks.The densified product is in high demand because it is less expensive than virgin plastic. You can check the schedule and/or message them at any time at PTStyroCyclersPgmail.com or through their Facebook page. Port Townsend Styrofoam Recycling pick-up For residents of East Jefferson County only Monday,May 9th&Saturday,May 28th Time: io:oo-noon I Location:Fort Worden's Battery Putnam,which is near Alexander's Castle(229 Alexander's Loop). Park your vehicle in the middle of the street in front of the battery. Port Ludlow Styrofoam Recycling pick up-No May pickup Time:9-io:3oam I Location:Port Ludlow Marina,Bridge Deck off Harbor Drive Road Cooperative Cafe- 2nd Mondays*Online* 8 economics for peace institute An online incubator talking space for emergent cooperatives. Offering supportive mentored environment for new housing linked to grower and work spaces(studios,workshops,etc). Beyond Leasing:Co-develop new right-sized sustainable independent housing and land ownership through producer cooperatives. Opening new investor pools for coop financing in the region. Video Call Link-Free and Open Event:econ4peace.org/econ4peace-video-call/ Questions?Write directly to:salishseaPecon4peace.org Time:6pm I Location:Online Climate on Tap-First Wednesdays-Postponed until June Create a Climate for Change! Climate on Tap postponed until June—Green Transportation—Learn about cargo Climate bikes! May's Climate on Tap session is postponed until June.The presentation will focus on on Tap using cargo bikes to transport you AND your groceries,etc.as well as learn about how you can •Concerned about human impacts support local businesses who are using cargo bikes to deliver their goods! on our climate? •Wishing you knew what you can Summary of April 6th"What is the Carbon Footprint of Our Recycling?" do to make a difference? •There's plenty you can do Climate on Tapis back inperson in FinnRiver'sPavilion! that will help change the pattern! — cozy Each Climate on Tap is held on the first Wednesday of the month from 7-8:30 pm.Co-sponsored by Local 20/2o Climate Action,Jefferson County Public Health,and FinnRiver Cidery.This is not a lecture series,but a discussion format.For further information email Laura Tucker or call 36o-379-4491. The Groundwork Project-Wednesdays 0 economics for peace institute The Groundwork Project-The Institute supports local people in establishing meaningful,place- based indicators of community well-being and ecosystem stewardship.Two-Year,3 County Pilot Study-Kitsap,Clallam and Jefferson-to establish baseline indicators of community well-being and ecosystem stewardship. Drop in event.Stop by when you can. Limit of 20. Or,choose one circle for ongoing involvement. -Lunch circle: itam to ipm(drop in for min of 45 minutes) -Supper circle: 4pm to 6pm(drop in for min of 45 minutes) -Debrief/Analysis: 1:3opm to 3:3opm.(optional) Questions? econ4peace.org/the-groundwork-project.Online options with preregistration.Write salishseaPecon4peace.org for link and password. Research will culminate Earth Day week with evenings online and two sessions of in person time at the Chimacum Grange on Saturday,April 23. You are welcome to join in at any time. Times:see above I Location:Chimacum Grange Ask a Master Gardener! -Thursdays, May-Sept*Online* 9 Do you have a gardening question?Get quick,expert help from a Master Gardener in Jefferson County.Master Gardener volunteers are trained para-professionals who will provide you with . information that is research-based and focused on environmentally friendly gardening practices. . � Schedule a live zoom session on Thursdays,12:oo-2:00;May-September! ttps://www.signupgenius.com/go/508oe48aca72da1149-talk 4'' e OR Submit questions to our online form or Register for Zoom session here: https://extension.wsu.edu/jefferson/gardening-2/plant-clinic/ Time:12-2pm I Location:Online Birding in the Park- 2nd and 4th Fridays Beverly McNeil,Admiralty Audubon trip leader and photographer,is conducting bird walks at Fort P19�N� Flagler. Birding and nature tours are on the 2nd and 4th Fridays of each month.Wear sturdy , ��'°x�i, footwear and dress for changeable weather.Bring binoculars and your own water. mowi tir " Registration:Please send Bev an email,including where and when you'd like to join « ' " iit i at Bevybirds52 gmail.com.It is important to include this information as Beverly does walks in multiple locations and dates. Please note this program is dependent on good weather.Beverly's FORT F AtL F R photographs are displayed at the Port Townsend Gallery. Time:9 am I Location:Fort Flagler I Dates:2nd and 4th Fridays Forest/Orchard Bathing Walks-Sundays zi From Olympic Peninsula Mindfulness. Walk—Sit—Walk: As you cross the'threshold' �J_ into the woods and meadows of Fort Worden or the orchards at Finnriver,you can walk N...=It . A /+ comfortably and safely far apart without masks,or as you choose. Walks follow paths linking ' �.. _., the woods and meadows in the park.At Finnriver,they will meander around the orchard to 4•, quietly observe natures'progress through the life of apples and pears.Several times they will i'voi....„,...11, pause,listen to a nature poem,and sit or stand in silence,and join in an occasional guided meditation led by Ellen Falconer,mindfulness teacher.Please wear clothing which will keep you warm and dry,as you may be walking,sitting or standing about in wet,chilly,invigorating seasonal weather. For more information call 360-316-6544 or visit their website.Walks are on Sunday mornings,either at Fort Worden or Finnriver Farm and Cidery.Times and meetup places are described on the website.Registration is encouraged! Community Notices Editor announcement:Historically,we have not accepted"sales-related"submissions to this newsletter.We are reevaluating this position,and will now accept submissions related to vending and sales that are related to our mission on a trial basis for addition to this Community Notices section.Please refer to the bottom of this newsletter for how to submit 10 an announcement. Anderson Lake High in Toxins*New* Elevated levels of the potent nerve toxin anatoxin-a were detected in a water sample taken from Anderson Lake on Monday,April 25th.The toxin level is 1.3o micrograms per liter,which is just above the Washington State recreational criteria of i microgram ,.° per liter.The bloom of cyanobacteria in the lake contains toxin-producing species of Ison algae,including Dolichospermum(formerly Anabaena)and Aphanizomenon. Anatoxin-a can result in illness and death in people and animals when ingested. wr Washington State Parks has posted"Danger—Keep Out of Lake"signs at access points to the park alerting visitors of the potential hazards.Recreational activities such as fishing,boating,and swimming are prohibited until the toxins dissipate and the lake is deemed safe for recreation.Anderson Lake State Park remains open for other recreational activities such as horseback riding,hiking,and birdwatching. Learn more here. Website Volunteer Opportunity-Local 20/2o Local 20/2o is looking for one or more volunteers to help maintain our website.This is a great opportunity for those who want to grow in their website experience and/or contribute to their community's sustainability and resilience! e website is based on Wordpress,but Wordpress experience is not required.We can provide raining. Lots of flexibility in the amount of time you choose to contribute.Lots of opportunity to meet and help community members working in the sustainable arena.For more details,contact Cindy. Food Bank Growers hiring AmeriCorps Summer Associate*New* a IH RIB summer 141.11l ° `" The Food Bank Growers network grows,gathers,and gives organically grown fruits and vegetables to build healthy,vibrant communities,improve food security,and decrease food waste for our Jefferson County neighbors. This AmeriCorps opportunity is a project of Harvest Against Hunger.The AmeriCorps Summer Associate(SA)program will serve an intensive level of summer service for io weeks,and will be working with Food Bank Growers to coordinate metrics on what crops are needed and when.Full time,biweekly living allowance.Choice between Education Award($1,374),or Cash Award($345).Application deadline:May 31,2022.Details here. 11 Old Alcohol Plant Inn and Restaurant is hiring! � Fioi kl' i,t �ull I k l e are hiring at the Old Alcohol Plant Inn and Restaurant,a unique social enterprise company that exists to serve the mission of Bayside Housing and Services,a non-profit transitional housing program providing housing,meals,and services to those in need. Located in Port Hadlock on the beautiful waterfront of Port Townsend Bay, our boutique hotel and garden-to-table restaurant are committed to furthering our sustainable hospitality efforts and creating a unique hub of authentic eco-tourism. Join our team and know your work supports housing solutions and sustainable business practices! Positions include:Events and Sales Coordinator,Front Desk Receptionist,Cook,Server,and Housekeeper. Bayside Housing is also in search of a Full Charge Bookkeeper. Learn more about Bayside's impact in a recent Seattle Times article:A Trauma-Informed Model for Addressing Homelessness. Contact sustainability@voldalcoholplant.com or call 36o-390-4o17 if you have any questions. Kul Kah Han Native Garden(KKH) —A Call for Volunteers&Educational Opportunities! r Kul Kah Han Native Plant `' Demonstration Garclen r4 Chimacum, WA " .� Their mission is to inspire and guide our regional community toward the appreciation,cultivation and use of native plants in home landscaping.They hold Volunteer Working Days at HJ Carroll Park every Wednesday from io:3oam to 2:3opm(March-October).KKH is seeking new volunteers to join their passionate team.If you are interested,please contact their Volunteer Coordinator,Alan Potter alan.potter2,Pgmail.com,to arrange an introduction and orientation of the garden.They also sponsor educational presentations on related subjects such as wildlife habitat,beneficial mycorrhizae,wise water use,propagation,ethnobotany,sustainable landscaping and more!Please contact their Outreach Coordinator,Christina Ballew ballewsingh0gmail.com,if you are interested in these educational opportunities.Gardening requires lots of water—most of it in the form of perspiration! They look forward to seeing you at the Garden! WSU Seed Library on JC Library Bookmobile SEED LIBRARY WASH I NGTON STATE UNIVERSI"IY EXTENSION Jefferson County Master Gordener Program The JCL Bookmobile is partnering with WSU Master Gardeners to bring seeds directly to you! Borrow a variety of seeds from the Seed Library and grow beautiful,healthy plants to eat and for seed saving.At the end of the season,return a portion of your seeds to the Seed Library for the next year's borrowers.The Seed Library will visit all bookmobile stops(except Paradise Bay)during the last week of each month,March through October. This year they will be offering only seeds grown within Jefferson County—the best seeds grown by your neighbors,friends, and local seed growers. Learn more and get the schedule 12 Summer Job Opportunities with CedarRoot Folk School SCHOOL S/O04-14 CedarRoot is looking for enthusiastic instructors for its summer outdoor Nature Studies programs.Instructors will create a safe and fun environment for youth to engage with the natural world through play,nature awareness,wilderness skills and landscape exploration. Several open roles including a new Olympic Exploration Lead Instructor role. See CedarRoot website for more information. Jefferson Transit's Kingston Express Jefferson Transit is launching a pilot that connects with the Kingston Fast Ferry to Seattle!There t " will be a morning run and an afternoon run Monday-Saturday(note the fast ferry only runs M,Lr - F currently.)The Jefferson County stops are Haines P&R,Four Corners P&R,and the Gateway Visitors Center.Find out more at https://jeffersontransit.com/i4kingstonexpress/.You can show your support for this pilot by getting on board,literally! TRANS" Jefferson County Farmers Market BIPOC Start-Up Business Fund E5T.1992 JEFFERSON COUNTY **FARMERS ' MARKETS PORT TOWNSENO.CNIMNCUV The Black Indigenous and people of color(BIPOC)Start-Up Business Fund,now in its second year,accepts applications on an ongoing basis.They are excited to welcome more BIPOC vendors to market with small grants of$5oo-$1,5oo. Community Resources Biochar for Farms&Gardens 13 e Olympic Carbon Fund is continuing its mission to increase carbon sequestration in the soils of our region by continuing to give away biochar for food-growing soils. Farms,market gardens ,, g and large shared gardens are eligible for a full cubic yard,while home food gardeners may is artake of the"Bucket Share".Other soil regeneration projects may also be eligible for free ' siochar,if community resilience is enhanced by the project. iN '- More information and order. New Public Health Dept E-Newsletter Jefferson county Piddle Kean NEWSLETTE: 001,1 PGet on the list ATM to receive our first e-newsletterl. sign up here: napsv 0..oncwmrywwK+reaxh.«yflst.aspx Sign up at https://jeffersoncountypublichealth.org/list.aspx,and allow your mail tool to receive e-mails from li sts ervP civi cplus.com. Free art posters promoting peace and a healthy Earth HELP promote ideas of healthy change NOW!With WAR activities in Europe(risking Nuclear contamination)and the CLIMATE CRISIS growing,these changes are URGENT.Let's stop destructive practices that are destroying our Earth,while protecting our communities and 42 cultures.Art Posters are now available to download(more will come soon)on a new website www.thegentlerevolution.com.Please download these FREE posters to digitally post or print to ;` post—in community places,storefronts or make into small handbills to give out.Let these ideas grow life with love. New informational Electric Vehicle web tools for Jefferson County —-- _ Jefferson County's 2o18 Greenhouse Gas Inventory indicates that transportation accounts for 66%of our greenhouse gas emissions. This might be your best excuse yet for buying the most i `responsive(fast),fun vehicle you've ever had! Our community has a new set of web tools that ElectrIcrWehlote8 can help you in your EV research:https://jeffersoncan.org/electric-vehicles/ 14 Just Soup on Tuesdays JUtStc ' fotlIA No ' t Labicti Every Tuesday at 11:3o-1: o Just Soup provides free,hot soup lunches at St.Paul's Episcopal Church,1020 Jefferson St,on the Tyler St.bus line(by the Bell Tower).Enter the rear church parking lot on Franklin,and whether you are on foot,bike,or car,you will be in line for curbside pickup,with masks,gloves,and safe distancing protocols in place. Pick up a lunch for yourself or your neighbor in need.No questions asked. Many partners and supporters have come together to feed Port Townsend one bowl at a time. Time:Tuesdays,11:3o AM-1:3o PM I Location:St.Paul's Episcopal Church,1020 Jefferson St. Emergency Text Alerts from Jefferson County Ale" Sign up to receive Jefferson County Department of Emergency Management's emergency alerts by text on your mobile phone and/or by email.NIXLE messages provide crucial information in an emergency&are sent directly to your text-enabled device and/or email.The sign up web page also has information about other alert and warning systems, including the tsunami warning system and the WSDOT alert system. NPREP: Prepared Neighborhoods Prepare for emergencies with your neighbors by joining or starting an NPREP neighborhood.There neighborhood preparedness are currently over too NPREP neighborhoods organizing here in Jefferson County. Learn if you live in A Jefferson County Action Group an NPREP trained neighborhood.Learn about NPREP. A Tool for Neighborhood Organization Nextdoor is a private social network for YOUR neighborhood.Use this link to join one of 59 Nextdoor Neighborhoods in Jefferson County.Currently there are 14,724 subscribers,with many new members joining each day.Email Pete Hubbard with questions or comments. Calling Local Photographers 15 o ' • Local 20/2o Weekly Announcements invites local photographers to submit images that capture the character of our community and its natural setting.For the opening photo of each weekly email(which is also posted to our website),we seek local color,horizontal("landscape")orientation,and jpeg format.Please no children,pets or recognizable faces.Kindly send to eventsP12o2o.org.Please include your name in the jpeg filename.We are an all-volunteer non-profit,so compensation for your talent and generosity is a photo credit and our profound thanks. Resilience Readings Do you have readings,podcasts or videos to share that are aligned with our Local 20/2o mission?Please submit them here. The Story of Glen Canyon oir the Pacific Northwest celebrates dam removals on the Elwha and soon on the Klamath,and dream of salmon passage restored with removal of the Snake River dams,the world's eyes are also on Glen Canyon Dam. The Glen Canyon Institute shows us the re-emergence of the canyons as drought lowers Lake Powell. In the forward of Resurrection:Glen Canyon and a New Vision for the American West(2009).Bill McKibben,writes: Folly is always folly—yet this one is rare in that the mistake of damming Glen Canyon became clear within the lifetimes of the people responsible.But it's also rare in that,here,we may really get a second chance.If the Glen Canyon Institute and others have their way,we'll bypass this dam,fill Lake Mead,and designate Glen Canyon a national park....When that happens,the drained Lake Powell and the resurrected Glen Canyon will be emblematic not of our folly but of the graciousness with which nature is still willing to meet our adolescent species halfway.It will be a monument to the possibility that we haven't totally screwed up the planet forever,that we might still be able to back off a little and make our peace with the rest of Creation. To learn more about the emergence of Glen Canyon,join Washington Friends of Wild Utah's podcast by the Glen Canyon Institute on May 25 at 6 pm,The Return of the River: The Story of Glen Canyon. Preregister for the free event. 16 Exploring Jefferson Transit's New Kingston Express Service from Port Townsend to Seattle Cindy Jayne recently tried out Jefferson Transit's New Kingston Express Service from Port Townsend to Seattle,and wrote about it in the latest Local 20/2o column in the Port Townsend Leader.In it,she shares how easy it was to use,and how it allowed her and her husband to have a fun day in Seattle without having to deal with parking hassles.It was easy to connect to the Sound Transit light rail and King County Metro buses to get up to the University of Washington,and back down to Pioneer Square for a snack before getting back on the Kingston Fast Ferry back to Kingston,where the Jefferson Transit Kingston Express was waiting.Plus it kept the carbon footprint of the trip low! Read the full article in the link above,or learn more about the Jefferson Transit Kingston Express,including schedule,costs,etc.,at https://jeffersontransit.com/i4kingstonexpress/. A Better Transportation Future Li\B David Thielk shares the TLAB's vision for a better transportation future in the latest Local 20/2o Port Townsend Leader column.A vibrant Water Street filled with walkers and cyclists,tourists on bikes,and the absence of cars are part of the vision. Learn more about the vision and the road map to getting there in the full column. New IPCC Report Warns Climate Change is Causing Dangerous Disruption in Nature and Affecting Billions of People "Human-induced climate change is causing dangerous and widespread disruption in nature and affecting the lives of billions of people around the world,despite efforts to reduce the risks.People and ecosystems least able to cope are being hardest hit, said scientists in the latest Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change(1PCC)report..."notes the press release for the the latest IPCC report,"The Summary for Policymakers of the IPCC Working Group II report,Climate Change 2022:Impacts, 17 Adaptation and Vulnerability",which was released on 2/27/2022.The press release also notes that""There are options to adapt to a changing climate.This report provides new insights into nature's potential not only to reduce climate risks but also to improve people's lives." The report itself states that"Approximately half of the species assessed globally have shifted polewards or,on land,also to higher elevations." The report also highlights that we need to act now to both reduce emissions and adapt to the changes-"There is a narrowing window of opportunity to shift pathways towards more climate resilient development futures as reflected by the adaptation limits and increasing climate risks,considering the remaining carbon budgets."A shorter summary of the report can be found in this World Resource Institute article. Local 20/2o Mission Working together toward local sustainability and resilience—integrating ecology, economy and community through action and education. Climate Action Local allisr Beyond lnitiatives I Waste Energy 1,. Action � � Economic 40 Localization Transport- i Imistaiation Lab . 111, x* '0 Local Food Next? iHealth& nt "►4IIIM A Wellness Resiliency Education of Heart itEmergency Preparedness Action Groups are where we do most of our work. Each is focused on an interrelated aspect of sustainability.Visit 12020.org to learn what the different action groups are working on. 18 Want to submit an announcement? We welcome notices of events,calls for participation and other items of interest.Local 20/2o Announcements goes out every Monday morning.Please submit the following in paragraph form: Subject or event.Brief description.Day,date,time.Venue address.Contact information.Web links.Include a logo or a photo in jpeg format.See existing announcements for examples —no bullets,colored fonts,etc.,plain text is best. Email to eventsP12o2o.org by 8:0o PM Saturday to be included in the next Monday's newsletter.We post announcements aligned with Local 20/20's mission and of interest to our community.Note that we don't post on line petitions,pleas to contact legislators,or gofundme type items.Local 20/20 reserves the right to edit or reject submissions.If you have questions or concerns,please email us at events012o2o.org. The posting of any specific event does not in itself endorse the organization or the event.We reserve the right to edit or reject submissions considered inappropriate or inconsistent to our mission statement. Consider forwarding Local 2O/2o Announcements to a friend. New subscribers can sign up here. • Copyright CI 2021 by Local 20/20.All rights reserved. Our mailing address is: 124o W.Sims Way#12, Port Townsend,WA 98368 Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list. This email was sent to heisenhouraco.iefferson.wa.us why did I get this? unsubscribe from this list update subscription preferences 19 Local 20/20 1240 W. Sims Way#12 • Port Townsend,Wa 98368 • USA Grow your business with (46 mallchimp 20 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 9:06 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: USDOT Safe Streets for All (SS4A) Discretionary Grant Program From: Crystal Ellerbe Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 9:04:19 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Monte Reinders; Kate Dean; Heidi Eisenhour; Greg Brotherton Cc: Tylynn Gordon; Paul Berendt Subject: FW: USDOT Safe Streets for All (SS4A) Discretionary Grant Program ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. The Department will convene a series of stakeholder webinars in June to help potential applicants learn about the SS4A Grant Program and what they need to know to prepare an application. Monday, June 13: How to Apply for the Safe Streets and Roads for All (SS4A) Opportunity Wednesday, June 15: How to Apply for the Safe Streets and Roads for All (SS4A) Opportunity: Focus on Action Plan Grants Thursday, June 23: How to Apply for the Safe Streets and Roads for All (SS4A) Opportunity: Focus on Implementation Grants Additional information and resources about the SS4A Grant Program, including webinar links, also can be found at https://www.transportation.gov/SS4A. From: intergov<intergov@dot.gov> Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 11:53 AM To: Small, Charles (OST) <charles.small@dot.gov>; Rasky, Will (OST)<william.rasky@dot.gov>;Turner,Toiyriah (OST) <toiyriah.turner@dot.gov> Cc: intergov<intergov@dot.gov> Subject: USDOT Safe Streets for All (SS4A) Discretionary Grant Program Good afternoon, President Biden and U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg Announce Availability of $1 Billion for Local Communities to Ensure Safe Streets and Roads for All, Address National Roadway Safety Crisis i WASHINGTON —The U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) today announced that the application process is now open for communities of all sizes to apply for $1 billion in Fiscal Year 2022 funding to help them ensure safe streets and roads for all and address the national roadway safety crisis. The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law's new Safe Streets and Roads for All (SS4A) discretionary grant program provides dedicated funding to support regional, local, and Tribal plans, projects and strategies that will prevent roadway deaths and serious injuries. The SS4A program supports the Department's comprehensive approach, laid out in the National Roadway Safety Strategy, to significantly reduce serious injuries and deaths on our Nation's highways, roads, and streets and is part of our work toward an ambitious long- term goal of reaching zero roadway fatalities. This comes at a time when traffic fatalities are at the highest level they have been at in over a decade. "We face a national crisis of fatalities and serious injuries on our roadways, and these tragedies are preventable— so as a nation we must work urgently and collaboratively to save lives," said U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg. "The funds we are making available today from President Biden's Bipartisan Infrastructure Law will help communities large and small take action to protect all Americans on our roads." "The rise in deaths and serious injuries on our public roads affects people of every age, race and income level, in rural communities and big cities alike," said Deputy Federal Highway Administrator Stephanie Pollack. "This program will provide leaders in communities across the country with the resources they need to make roads safer for everyone." The primary goal of the SS4A grants is to improve roadway safety by supporting communities in developing comprehensive safety action plans based on a Safe System Approach, and implementing projects and strategies that significantly reduce or eliminate transportation-related fatalities and serious injuries involving pedestrians; bicyclists; public transportation, personal conveyance, and micromobility users, commercial vehicle operators; and motorists. Funding can also be used to support robust stakeholder engagement in order to ensure that all community members have a voice in developing plans, projects and strategies. The funding supports DOT's National Roadway Safety Strategy and collaborative efforts to advance the Safe System Approach and address safety by implementing redundant measures that lead to multiple types and layers of protection. The SS4A Grant Program was created by Congress under the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, which directed the Department to support local initiatives to prevent death and serious injury on roads and streets. The law also directed the Department, when selecting projects under the program, to consider other factors in addition to safety, including equitable investment in the safety needs of underserved communities. The program also supports the Biden-Harris Administration's goals of promoting equity and fighting climate change. Applications may come from individual communities, or groups of communities and may include Metropolitan Planning Organizations (MPOs), counties, cities, towns, other special districts that are subdivisions of a state, certain transit agencies, federally recognized Tribal governments, and multi- jurisdictional groups. 2 The Department has made the application process to receive funding to develop a comprehensive safety action plan as easy as possible to reduce administrative burden and encourage broad participation in this new funding program, especially for smaller communities, Tribal governments and new federal funding recipients. The Safe Streets for All Notice of Funding Opportunity announced today can be found at https://www.transportation.gov/SS4A. Applications are due on or before Sept. 15, 2022. The Department will convene a series of stakeholder webinars in June to help potential applicants learn about the SS4A Grant Program and what they need to know to prepare an application. Monday, June 13: How to Apply for the Safe Streets and Roads for All (SS4A) Opportunity Wednesday, June 15: How to Apply for the Safe Streets and Roads for All (SS4A) Opportunity: Focus on Action Plan Grants Thursday, June 23: How to Apply for the Safe Streets and Roads for All (SS4A) Opportunity: Focus on Implementation Grants Additional information and resources about the SS4A Grant Program, including webinar links, also can be found at https://www.transportation.gov/SS4A. Thank you. -- USDOT Intergovernmental Affairs of TR,A,s4 S� 7. o z Fa � o STATES of P 3 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 9:08 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: Basecamp (Peninsula Trails Coalition): Here's the latest activity From: Basecamp (Peninsula Trails Coalition) Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 9:06:00 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: Basecamp (Peninsula Trails Coalition): Here's the latest activity ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Peninsula Trails Coalition Here's the latest activity across everything Since 9am on Sunday, May 15 0 BOARD MEETING MINUTES Something was added to Docs & Files • Erik Rohrer uploaded Board Meeting Minutes 202204.pdf „01,4 MAMA WeayWO** awl rl Am lima Wwi+JMK1r helu 4C°i< u+:,iMw.. VY�'Y .w �ne �-'• M+,A!'L..w 0.1s. rtEr Basecamp emails this report every morning. Stop sending it to me. 1 Get easier,faster access to Basecamp when it's on your phone. Grab an app! 11 App Store • Google Play 20bc81a857ff82101729d27f 2 Julie Shannon From: Kate Dean Sent: Monday, May 16, Subject: 2022 9:16 AM To: Julie Shannon FW: History Hikes Start This Saturday! 0 From: JeffCo Historical Society Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 9:14.28 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Kate Dean Subject: History Hikes Start This SaturdayALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This ! mail originated outside the o rganization. Do not open attachments or click on links or click on links ifyou are not expecting them. Ides of May News from JCHS MAY 16, 2022 z�a s �; a .. - 7:7'; - 1--.":''''''4''IX'LW" it r.71111.1,0) ,,,,__ -,,.44111:111{tizs -._.... ;ice' 1' f _ d.� — TN I .leff e�son b Caunt sto cad ri ,y o c i` Y . Camas in bloom at yatay (kah-tai) Prairie in Port Townsend History Hikes kick off May 21 with two guided hikes at gatay Prairie and Lagoon 1 History Hikes Start This Saturday! Join North Olympic History Center's David Brownell at gatay Prairie and Lagoon this Saturday, May 21! The hike at this site is timed to coincide with the camas bloom. The 1.4-acre prairie between wetland areas is prime habitat for blue camas bulbs, and hikers will have a chance to learn all about the significance of this plant on this inaugural set of History Hikes! Hikes depart at 11:00 AM and 2:00 PM and each hike is capped at 12 participants. Lots of space is still available for the afternoon hike this Saturday and limited space remains for the morning hike. Learn about all our upcoming History Hikes and be sure to save your spot. We can't wait to see you on the trails, friends! LEARN MORE & REGISTER AHA! uction Items on View Pi s I. peg flu ed.d a�'= t�, a k pp �d e +a I C 9 414 i tt. „,„,„ ,„„‘„,„ uk nnr � For a limited time, some of the items up for bidding as part of our AHA! Auction are on view in the classroom and entrance lobby at the Jefferson Museum. Many of the items on display were made or curated specifically for the auction. It's a testament to the craftsmanship and talent in our community as well as the passion we all 2 share for local arts and heritage. If there's any item that catches your eye on our auction page that you'd like to see in-person, visit us at the museum when we're open to check it out! There's no admission chargefor ofvisi twtienrgoburrk,MuseumShoppbutugrebby, and or perusing these auction items whenever we're open. It's a beautifulcollection handcrafted items that reflect much of what we love about our mission and region. c2 AHA! Auction Is Underway! ' ' 7-,--- 4,,,,,- "'P'----)• ''''f4,--4 Onlineinspir biedbdydoinugr orengeioxbp,esrei erntsc,ebsearnitdegitems e bd „.. :AT," ,,„, • ,f-11,,,-:„-A-1,..4-, • I , ii* ' '-'.4-r- ' lFarniddasyca,pmearyun2s7t,harnodugalhl pmroidcneeigdhstboenip us you AUCTION 71-ite. . towardbelieve iourb the spring power fundraising museumgoal! " ' meducationlf - \ A ADVENTURE VOGERAN TmUsR E curiosityprogram at every ag stosatyisf. ae ndnadinslepairrenivnog leracvioer youcom cmaunbsituypbpyorptetrthiisciwpaotrik ibgniboutbris year's auction. SUPPORT JCHS EDUCATION PROGRAMS 4, 0. I • • I I 3 ,ar s„ ,, 1:3' 1,71 y '.. 'z'.. 1.' r ',', V Our Annual Members Meeting ' ' *1.-**, Don't forget to join us tomorrow, May -'41,. , 44 ' - - , 17, at 5:00 PM on Zoom for our annual ANNUAL MEMBERS MEETING members meeting! This virtual gathering May 17 // 5:00 PM PT on Zoom of our staff, trustees, and members falls on Celebrating JCHS members,our work,and 71 years the 71st anniversary of the Jefferson of the Jefferson Museum in Historic City Hall! Museum opening its doors in Historic City Hall! Celebrate this milestone with us, get > to know the people who power JCHS, and learn how you can get more involved. We'll share about our upcoming programs, exhibitions, and projects, and field your questions about our work! JOIN OUR MEMBERS MEETING i •'1.71-'' *. '', ' 1 Chinese American Voices CHINESE AMERICAN Encore VOICES ,,,,,I, Featuring ki. Recordings from our Spring First Friday 0, Graphic Men-loirist il ' < ,-•,'"i; i Speaker Series celebrating Chinese Tessa Hulls ',, - American voices from within the Port Filmmaker ., Valerie Soe i. Townsend community and beyond are Activist Historianass.&Author ri t t „,, available now by donation! Each of our Doug Chin * ,' presenters shared rich, thought-provoking , perspectives on historical and contemporary experiences of Chinese and Chinese American peoples in Jefferson County and Washington State. We encourage you to check this series out and hope you enjoy it as much as we did! ACCESS THE RECORDINGS 4 .•:„.•,..;.,,--,,,,,4'sl...-.."—' -' 'Is.1!,-t,4 . -„... , "s4Q--lis,',, •tk,l'i::::.>i," :',Wrig,„„,:AMA: •--, IA))44, ' '. ,:li::rs I-,i,:,r;."','L".'';',0i1::1,,K: .-•k r,1111,,;;.,;„....',..1.7Q1 if,4 -,-. .,ty!1..„,.;,,, . ,,:iili•k Volunteer with JCHS! , 0,,,,,,,,,;,,,,,t,'„,,,-,,,,,:,:.:!A,u,,p,t4.1i.v!.,rs,..,!Isj,, ii.i-A1,,,,t,,,,,..., 0---- "Attic:. ,-,I.F,N,,,,.s,;ki 4 , ''''''' ''''''''' 14:26•0414,,,f•.,,,'' '..4c; •:•‘;0', :,0 welcoming museum $1.,,tx,""'„,1''''''.24.iii77-.'„,:p:''-':(4:1",;s,,-,,,,'''''.: :::',P''' • ','''''1,'t 1 If you love art, historye,,xapnedriepnroceysid, cino kflit.7.7,:-.44,..:;.,..#4",.7-,...•:','..!,,4.4,,,,,., ,s!:i , il ',,, ',-7,,!j•41-04k,.4-2,:'11114ii.„.„.Y'- •-=,,-','!;:?!:!:''•.,:.- ', '-• ' gnsider ,;,..-.,-..N ift:i42'.,:.:4:17k0,,-1.:4 4:1,0,:i.,.:.4h,,:;,,,,I.,.,.,:: -••• iiiii‘•','' ',..:1,gpiki,t- ,•',!,6, 7,4'..:1!9tnilik, representativesln to om addwiteiolcntoeyisitor It''0"`'-`ii,;,•:;.'14'1141 .:,lit.:..7.at:Aga, ,;,I `. : • .111,41,;*73...i ,,,,,,.,. vseorlvuincteeseringwithusi svisitorsite s, we'reand i osuopkpi operationsnogrtforenth usie enthusiastic c our guides Akertgli.:47:1:::::::,:',,,,,,•,,,it,.;AR,!,..!,,.- - „ Historic to lead tours rithrough atotuhre Downtown i I d .- • .•„,;;J:,:-:.•.,:...•••„..,...-....::',').....':,::::;...•'•;',...:,.•..,..:.':.•,:E:'.:.' ,,. .'.',., . . . .,.......„.: :,...-...,,.,:....,.. .., .•• , .. • o cruiseve shipber.Visit passengersour nowvolunteer throughHo u se °f Nr mpage to learn how you can get involved! VOLUNTEER WITH US Two More Weeks of WOOD ..,„,,,.... ,7„,„,,„„,., ,,,,,,,,,:::‘, • ,,,-'-' ,:f:AliNEVT-7,1iign.- --,,,,,;" “--',.. ,,1:1„,' '"'"itia'' ,,,,,,,A4°::,,,,,„v04:''''',"'",1„5•"*. .. , x:'.,„, -, ,, •- A ''':Fliiitiitjt."'''.'' :,''-'' '-- .-'"i' ',11"'--,•'111';-:::', -44,-- 4"itiz - -i*OIT.1],„' .. „.•:- ;- ,..-7';;AIINO"":-.talislL',-- -'-,,'' ---.. . 1,-7;',,,,1 ---, .-'011,,'-,„„,,,g!!!!!!::,;::„,,,7,-.T.4:';',57.;; -• -'-',Agiallig---:1311115i---t--.=:, 2'---''' -.,:l., -01,,i4,,,,nlidvi,'w"!!Zlitii„"--1..-4,Sqi-,'''''Atif,,,,,'il--1"• . „aA,,.•:. . ,qg.4:. ''ulir4, 7.4',ii-,;";'„,,,4-.'41.17,,iiiiiirart....-litiv‘i ' - --y••,.:.-""•::'.:::,. :,,k,,,,.,;)''".,,,,,, 2.:,''.,,,,,,t'','-...li-...„:,[40,',,',"'" 1-.,:',..',„',';',;',,'-',7,„" '', ,..,1R-„,,..,-,'-eg-,,,-.,.4.05,'.,,,K,N40, •-• "-"„..."-" . -,.:::,..-„,..--,-,.0pk', T-1 11,,,,,,-,10:1ix„,-... -1.! """.. ',, , io, --""c","'" -r,1*,-- -4:V ''''-','''' ' •'''. 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'.i.02.,"..'..r, r,,,FT--!;',,,,,,0,----;-,,,- '• ,'' ','' ' . ''''' ",„2,,,-20-,,,,-,11,10'.'„,,,iiiiii!!.,:iiiik,„„„------,-, ,i-.,,,,,,,,-2,,,td,,,,,,,,,,,,,T4-„.14,,i ,j1,1,,„,,--,..,1%ii.--,-. .,,,„ • , Toi-,,„4.,-,•41:11kb ,'A'::- _ wOODON VIEW MAY 2 at th,eJ ffe!..,,,or1..,1\/1..,uze.,,u11p..,f iw40rt & History • , 5 This month is your final chance to see this showcase of our region's incredible woodworking talent. Artwork on view as part of Wood includes the portrait mask above by carver and installation artist Brian Perry (Port Gamble S'K|aUarn). Most of the work you'll see in this show is as functional as it is beautiful, and it's been an honor to share it with our community! We hope you'll stop by the Jefferson Museum this month and show Wood some love before the objects on view start going back to their respective homes. Come check it out during our regular hours at the museum 11:00 AM to 4:00 PM, Thursdays through Sundays! LEARN MORE ABOUT WOOD We're looking for a part-time bookkeeper! This position is an indispensable part of our fiscal fitness. If you have accounting and finance experience, we'd love for you tnjo/n our team! Visit our to learn more and apply. Throughcollections research, &hibits, and programs, ' 'we bring people , ""''together to share, learn' 'and be inspired OY,,Jefferson Countyarts and � BECOME JCHS MEMBER � � ~ ~ ' � ' ^ ^ ` ~ h We encourage our readers to forward our newsletters to friends and family. Were you forwarded this email? Want to make sure you don't miss the next one? SIGN UP TO RECEIVE OUR NEWSLETTER Copyright©2022 Jefferson County Historical Society, All rights reserved. You are receiving this email because have signed up to receive our bimonthly newsletters online, at our museum, or when you started a JCHS membership. Our mailing address is: Jefferson County Historical Society 540 Water Street Port Townsend,WA 98368 Add us to your address book Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list. C mailchimp 7 Julie Shannon From: Monica Le Roux <mleroux@jclibrary.info> Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 9:48 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: Commissioner's Breakfast, June 1st at 8:30am Attachments: 6.1.22 Commissioner's Breakfast Evite.png ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Hi Julie, Could you please see that Kate, Heidi, and Greg all receive this official invitation? (Tamara said it would be best to send it to you!) Much appreciate your help, and do let me know if I can answer any questions. M. Monica le Roux [she/her] Administrative Services Assistant Jefferson County Library 620 Cedar Ave. Port Hadlock, WA 98339 360-385-6544 mleroux@jclibrary.info www.iclibrary.info 1 n 0 > 4..1 0 8 2 cx, 66 •_. > a) E c ce 0 cl oi 0 0 0 kn cs4 O c C° 04 0 C tni C 0 w ..„.,, D < • 1,_ II: -0 -C ,-.. k() ''"*". CN tea 0 = E ‘4,.. ir;,-7, tp CL C`44 o 6 E 1 >, 76 o 0 --4; ?.. . 400,.. >4. .L32' 6 >7,7 0 0 ...0 ft, - Ap 13 7.7, te. a. x 0 t 6 D is it.5 J.,..3 Z- "c 0 C' :' 5; 'I) El 5 2 .0••• ,...h6 C Cr) -0 0. c ,to 0 ..a ‘.. ai 0 o AT (S. 2 -§ ,, 2 ,E ,c CL ED 0 0 0 t. e 0 itd1 z 0 0 r,„4 x u C L_Itn 4._ 0 0 — — (1) --1 0 10 'ii • 10 \ r v 1 1 t„.,., ? ' , , - ( ai , 4 , w-4 e....., = ..C• °*. 44, .., II / A '' t . , , e ... ‘„, ,„ ,:., 1 1 r At 1 ' 1 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 10:19 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW:Jefferson County Community Leadership Awards From: Jefferson County Chamber of Commerce Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 10:17:21 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: Jefferson County Community Leadership Awards ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. �+C) °�i. Ifliir I, 6u ,:��' °`o iF� �N{N '';r��,, r�lN� w `P ,Gh�(;i° ', •,,.G(I!N!liit°', eavo' � °fii " I,�,w. "nNiiii;, Nmw „ an, ;�av„:. ,. "„°.,.�,: u ; (� , ,6 r�d,,.�' ICI r.I...NaalG,'I�ln,,:xNfis,C�;,�' !N�:.,,.,���r JPIIIviiNb��.an, "��ln� �,Na,.,,.�!�!4,�"a. Illl�ilu^,',,," "r„� ;�iai�aH Niu. '4& "��l• I iIIN h e Chamber www.jeffcountychamber.org 0.385.7869 36 OF JFFFFRS0N COUNTY director@jeffcountychamber.org i. building business,building community NI�I 4�i�ll I`' ��119�I�ill a �rl Ndh �I�G'l i1iI�I,C�Ni� a���l� Ili 2022 Jefferson County Community Leadership Awards N IN Saturday, May 21st 4-6 pm The Resort at Port Ludlow Tickets are available t �4 ukvll{I ��I'�db� C' ,i316��a�� ail ,G..,: (Iu, i;, zn,,•y„ II lµ°,„m : I ";� 9" �iIP^lI ,; �11I ,v;: i II�„� ,il¢@�„; tU�k�„.': ��,i`i"��'1.1�I §�"� aN" 6 "�� ' o- i 4�s� `�.� . 'I`N �^ v��fin, i �fillhG�a.Ii�„�C" '. NUfi" I.G.. "I a ,•�+in. ire 9^ .D� ,.,, ++ 1 2022 Jefferson County Community Leadership Awards Thank you to our Community Partners and Event Sponsors Community Partners sor (Pr '�`_ • Cityaf PO 4�� J� PORT©f.. P - -, TOWNSEND 'ownsend ,. uT ffihc er, Gt ,r.tt. . ! r Award Sponsors Platinum Sponsor IS Illiiii, CEDARS aTne chamber BEAGLE PIPE �F.T FhRSON ,\ 1 .,AI D Gold Sponsors ' T . .;.! 'I RUST Silver Sponsors centrum FRECDtECRICKSI P U I) Kitsap creotwlxy in Commun,fX ELECTRIC r Jefferson County Bank 1ST SECURIIY BANK ips TERRAPIN Pudic Utility Mgr.. rTh Home ARCHITECTURE, dx»:hrd.Rn. NQNrpiw ,r THE , Rik: „iwmwWr,� r;,r,,.z. „...w .. t , o ,Business Instead. to s�v. i.. ! CPAs&Advisors :� View Place ryr � ' t €,�'s� :� Wallyworks �u.nlal1.14I�t}. *newamerioana Secrterul Service Windermere mere PORT TOWNSEND. WA ,don Rick """°'ett ard Ash? E .14FR PFINSON PT.! Award Finalists 2022 Business Leader of the Year Award Rob Birman, Centrum Steve Goldenbogen, Whistlestop Toys «»�« Nancy Karam, Korean Women's Association Rising Entrepreneur Award Kat Murphy, Katfish Salmon Company Brent&Wendy Davis, Lila's Kitchen & Brent Davis Construction Jaime Jaynes, Vespertine Boutique Young Professional of the Year Award Dr. Allison Berry, Jefferson & Clallam County Public Health Officer Crystal Manly, Quilcene Culinary Arts & Brinnon Fire Department Future Business Leader Award (youth) Eugenia Phillips Frank, Chimacum High School Akira Anderson, Chimacum High School Ezra Cook, Port Townsend High School Sean Boone, Quilcene High School 2 Citizen of the Year Award Michelle Sandoval, Windermere Real Estate, past Mayor of Port Townsend Dr. Allison Berry, Jefferson & Clallam Public Health Officer Ariel Speser, past Councilmember City of Port Townsend, Assistant Attorney General representing the State of Washington in Jefferson & Clallam Counties Barb Trailer, Northwest Maritime Center David Codier, Jefferson County Emergency Management Information &Tickets JEFFERSON COUNTY COMMUNITY LEADERSHIP AWARDS OA- ra. MAY 21, 2022 4-6PM Location:The Resort At Port Ludlow !. •Live music •Door prizes •Hors d'oeuvres&drinks •Outdoors'with water view PURCHASE TICKETS:$35.00 JeffCountyChamber.org/events Adaetion from baker sale s wiG be made to the Chambers Community Development Fund rn i he Ciwmber 'Esm,t will follow current Coma precautions and will be outdoors Ina tented area unth heat and venbketies Your Ad could be reaching this large audience at no cost to you!Just ask us! The Chamber is investing in our Community& YOUR business. The Chamber of Jefferson County Chamber of Jefferson County 12409 Jefferson Street, Port Townsend, WA 98368 Unsubscribe heisenhour@co.jefferson.wa.us Update Profile I Constant Contact Data Notice Sent by director@jeffcountychamber.org powered by @Constant Contact 3 Try email marketing for free today! 4 Julie Shannon From: Kate Dean Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 10:34 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW:Join Steve Burke, Exec Dir of Shore Aquatic Center on Coffee with Colleen Wednesday at 8am From: Clallam EDC Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 10:32:51 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Kate Dean Subject: Join Steve Burke, Exec Dir of Shore Aquatic Center on Coffee with Colleen Wednesday at 8am ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. F D C CLALLAM COUNTY ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT COUNCIL Join Steve Burke, Executive Director of the Shore Aquatic Center this Wednesday on Coffee with Colleen at 8am: In 2020 the Shore Aquatic Center re-opened its doors after the Port Angeles Community passed a bond and the $20 million project was completed. The project not only redeveloped the pool facilities but also expanded childcare services in Port Angeles. Here are some of the questions we may explore with Steve: • What type of government entity is Shore Aquatic Center? i • How is it governed? • Was it difficult to pass the bond? Any lessons learned? • Did the construction project come in under or over budget? How many change orders did you have? • Any lessons learned regarding public works construction? • How are your revenues today? What is your fee structure? • How many unique visitors do you have annually? • How does this compare to other public pools in the state? • Are you able to support the bond payments? When will the bond be paid off? • Are your child care services financially self-supporting? • Do you have any expansion plans for the Center? Please Join us on Zoom: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/89474510306?pwd=VIIrRHh5RG 1nYVh3V3JXRzFSM m Rodz09 Meeting I D: 894 7451 0306 Passcode: 187447 One tap mobile +12532158782„89474510306#,,,,*187447# US (Tacoma) Dial by your location - 253 215 8782 (Tacoma) Photography Notice: Be aware that by participating in the Clallam EDC's event,"Coffee with Colleen,"you are automatically authorizing the Clallam County Economic Development Council and its employees and agents to use your name,photograph,voice or other likeness for purposes related to the mission of EDC including but not limited to publicity,marketing,websites,and promotion of the EDC and its various programs. No Roundabouts Planned for the Sequim to Blyn Corrior on Hwy 101: At a meeting late last week the Washington State Department of Transportation met with Clallam County and City of Sequim transportation officials. The Washington State Olympic Region Administrator of the Department of Transportation agreed WSDOT would plan for frontage roads rather than the less expensive roundabouts. WSDOT was supporting roundabouts at the intersections of Palo Alto Road and Hwy 101 and also Happy Valley Rd and Hwy 101 due to the lower costs associated. The overall $30.5 million project will complete on and off ramps at Simdars Rd at the East end of Sequim and will construct frontage roads from Palo Alto Road to Simdars Rd. 2 Local officials have been advocating for frontage roads since Hwy 101 is the county's transportation and commerce lifeline and slowing the traffic flow creates inefficiencies with increased fuel usage and emissions. One element that is still up in the air is WHEN the project will begin. The funding was part of the $17 Billion "Move Ahead Washington" transportation package the State Legislature passed earlier this year. The list of projects included in the package doesn't detail which projects will be completed first and the funding runs for 16 years. City and County officials are working with Washington State Department of Transportation to determine when the project will finally be completed. Washington Small Business Development Center (SBDC) is hiring a local Advisor in Port Angeles: Do you know someone that may be great for this important position? SBDC Advisors are employees of Washington State University. Apply here: https://wsbdc.org/sbdc-business-advisor-multiple/ Upcoming State Grants... WA State has Numerous Upcoming Grant Programs for Small Businesses Affected by the Economic Impacts of COVID: At our last EDC Coffee Chat, Julia Turlinchamp from the Department of Commerce reviewed the latest information on each of the grant programs. To listen to her presentation go to the following link at 26 minutes 15 seconds at EDC Coffee Chat Link. Working Washington Round 5: $70 million • $45 million of the $70 million is only for the arts, heritage & science businesses and nonprofits • Opens about July 2022 Convention Center Grants: $5 million • Businesses and nonprofits reliant on economic activity generated through conventions 3 Hospitality Sector Grants: $100 million • $15M of the $100 million is required for lodgings impacted by state eviction moratorium Relief for Large Arts, Heritage and nonprofit orgs: $5 million • Reimburses mandated COVID Testing Costs Small Business Innovation & Competivness Fund: $34.5 million • Focused on Black, Indigenous, People of Color (BIPOC) Entrepreneurs Apply now for Building for the Arts grants: The 2023-25 funding round closes June 23 The 2023-25 Building for the Arts (BFA) grant application is now open. These grants fund 33% of eligible capital costs up to $2 million for acquisition and major new construction of arts or cultural facilities. Learn more Restaurant Revitilization Fund Program Update: On April 7, 2022 the US House passed legislation to add $42 billion to replenish the Restaurant Revitalization Fund (RRF). According to the National Restaurant Association, the US Senate appears likely to vote on a plan to partially or fully replenish the RRF, offering it as an amendment to a $10 billion COVID Preparedness bill. In addition, this bill will establish a new program to support the hardest-hit small businesses— delivering critical assistance to small businesses that have suffered revenue losses of at least 40 percent during the pandemic. The vote on the federal "Relief for Restaurants & Other Hard Hit Small Businesses Act"will likely will be after the Senate's upcoming two-week recess period, in late April or early May. This will likely be the last vote Congress takes on RRF replenishment. Please speak up for our valued restaurants, many of which are struggling, by participating in the National Restaurant Association's new grassroots activation campaign by clicking here -- it will take you just a minute! 4 National Restaurant Association "Next Steps" Guide: The National Restaurant Association has created a "Next Steps" Guide with resources for record-keeping, reporting and eligible expenses for RRF award recipients: https://restaurant.org/downloads/pdfs/business/rrf-now-what.pdf Free Training & Social Events - Online & In Person... ScaleUp Business Training, Your Business is Ready are You? Starts Wednesday May 18th I Register here: https://scaleupwashington.org/ ScaleUp is advanced business training for companies that have moved BEYOND startup and launch. ScaleUp is about building capacity, increasing profitability, and automating business systems. This program will show you how to position your business for investment and ready you for that moment. -Imagine your business as passive income through systemization -Working ON your business, NOT in it -Doubling or tripling revenues -Increasing shareholder distributions -Securing investors and investment -Having an exit strategy that ensures MAXIMUM value when you sell Our trainers come with years of experience building and scaling businesses and helping others do the same. ScaleUp Business Training is NOT JUST a 9 week training program, it's ongoing support and community. Graduates of the ScaleUp program maintain access to all ScaleUp resources and ongoing mentorship through our weekly Study Hall program and Alumni Network. This program is currently provided at NO COST thanks to Washington State businesses through 2022 thanks to support from the Washington Department of Commerce and in partnership with Clallam County Economic Development Corporation. 5 The path to seven figures starts here! https://scaleupwashington.org/ AMEBIC WASHINGTON You're Invited to the WA SBDC New Training Series on Cybersecurity: Washington SBDC training provides practical, real-life solutions tailored for the entrepreneur and facilitated by knowledgeable business professionals. There is no cost, but registration is required. Small Business Cybersecurity Training Series Small businesses are under cyber and data-breach attacks more than ever given the current climate. Cyber attacks happen every day, and for a small business they can be very costly and cripple business operations. Having your systems and information compromised is not only a direct threat to your confidential data, it can also ruin your relationships with customers and cause legal vulnerability. It is imperative to learn how to boost your cyber defense systems. This three-part training series was developed to help small businesses be cyber safe. The series will be a combination of cybersecurity presentation, subject matter expert panel and Q&A. Join us and become cyber safe today! Part 2: Authentication May 24 I 1:00 p.m. Register here Part 3: Systems June 7 I 1:00 p.m. Register here Are you in the Creative Sector? 6 Join the Creatives Academy Classes developed the State Department of Commerce's Senior Managing Director for Rural, Small Business and Marketing Solutions, Robb Zerr: This series of lessons covers a wide swath of business skills. It is designed to teach those in the creative sector how to turn their passion into a livelihood. Twelve sessions to help them create a sustainable, profitable business, from pricing and negotiation to intellectual property and going global. You can take the classes on your own time. It's already getting great reviews from creative sector professionals. Register Here Apply now for Youth Recreational Facilities program grants; The 2023-25 funding round closes May 26 Commerce has opened a biennial reimbursement-style funding round for Youth Recreational Facilities. These grants fund 25% of eligible capital costs up to $1.2 million for non-residential facilities that provide youth (K-12) with recreation opportunities integrated with social and/or educational services. Ranking criteria for applications include: • the ability to complete the project expediently • the organizational capacity to run the facility effectively • community need • availability of other funding sources Application information The ZoomGrants application and supporting materials are available on the program webpage. • Applications due: 5 p.m. Thursday, May 26 ZoomGrants tips • For existing ZoomGrants accounts, log in and follow the instructions. • New users should complete the required information for a new account to create a profile. • Please do not use "The" as the first word in the agency name. • Once an agency profile is created, select the YRF Grant and the "Apply" button to start your proposal. • Answers are automatically saved after each response. • Hardcopies of applications will not be accepted. Questions? Email cappprograms@commerce.wa.gov or call 360-725-3075. Learn more Info From State Agencies for Small Businesses... What is a 1099-K form? Beginning Jan. 1, 2022, all third-party network companies, including Venmo, PayPal, and Square, are required to issue 1099-K forms to merchants for card payments that exceed $600. Here's what you need to know about Form 1099-K Gig Economy Income is Taxable: The IRS requires all income earned from the gig economy to be reported; even if the income is temporary or not reported using a 1099 or W-2. The Gig Economy Tax Center offers tips for managing your records and taxes. Read more here Secretary of State's Office: GIVE SMART: Tips for anyone considering donating to a charity, nonprofit, or relief organization: Washington Secretary of State Steve Hobbs encourages Washingtonians to do their due diligence and conduct research on the charities or nonprofits to which they donate to support relief efforts in Ukraine. The Charities Division offers tips for anyone considering donating to a charity, nonprofit or relief organization. Learn more here Department of Labor & Industries: 8 Required Workplace Posters: Employers are legally required to display certain posters in their workplace to inform employees of their rights and responsibilities. You may order these posters or download them for free by visiting their website. Learn more here Employer Guide to Workers' Rights: Learn about the workplace rules and regulations enforced by the Employment Standards Program. Visit the Training Center to learn more Liquor & Cannabis Board: Making Outdoor Areas Permanent for Bars & Restaurants: Early in the COVID-19 pandemic, the LCB worked closely with members of the industry to approve temporary outdoor areas that would accommodate social distancing. If you have an outdoor area that received temporary approval that you would like to make permanent, please contact your local Enforcement and Education Officer for a consultation. State WAC 314-03-205 outlines the requirements for serving alcohol in outside areas. New members sought for state Affordable Housing Advisory Board: There is a massive need to provide more affordable housing options across the state, and we need advisors to help us achieve that goal. The Affordable Housing Advisory Board (AHAB) has five open seats. It takes a broad group of experts to lead this work, and the list of needs for the board reflects that, including individuals who have experience in the following roles: • Homeless shelter operator • For-profit housing development representative • Home mortgage lending representative • Residential construction representative • For-profit rental housing owner representative If you are interested in serving on the AHAB, go to the Washington State Boards & Commissions webpage and fill out an application. Please share this announcement with anyone you think would be interested. If you have any questions, contact Emily Grossman or Michelle Griffin. LEARN MORE 9 OTHER GOOD STUFF... Resources for Employer Health Insurance for Employees Are you looking to provide health insurance for your employees? Here are a few Washington State options! Business Health Trust One Redmond Need help navigating grant application proCesSes? We've got you covered! Get FREE accounting services for your small business from CPAs with Clark Nuber for: Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) Employee Retention Tax Credit Restaurant Revitalization Fund Grants Shuttered Venue Operators Grant (SVOG) Email leghj@seattlecharnber.com to get connected. Sponsored by Business REACH Health Trust _- akFu4 FiPfiM4Mk -_ �v. sou rye eemni. ` uMcq, eNanxu� THE CHAMBER Services available to any Washington small business with 100 employees or fewer who needs accounting assistance for any of these programs: Clallam County Free Food Resources WSU Extension has provided a comprehensive list of free food resources for Clallam county. To download the list click the button below. You can also find this and other resources at chooseclallamfirst.com/communityrelief Free Food Resources 10 Since 1981, the private, 501(c)(6) nonprofit EDC has been priority focused on recruiting quality new businesses to Clallam County while retaining the existing businesses and assisting in expansion. The EDC supports companies in creating new jobs and to grow the economy and infrastructure of our rural county and Washington State. Clallam County Economic Development Council 1338 W 1st St., Suite 105, Port Angeles, WA 98362 Unsubscribe kdean@co.jefferson.wa.us Update Profile I Constant Contact Data Notice Sent by info@clallam.org powered by L Constant Contact Try email marketing for free today! 11 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 11:05 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: adaptive virtual or hybrid meeting policy From: Lindsey Schromen-Wawrin Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 11:03:22 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Kate Dean; Heidi Eisenhour; Greg Brotherton Cc: sgross@mrsc.org; fcollins@mrsc.org; aunthank@co.clallam.wa.us Subject: adaptive virtual or hybrid meeting policy ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Jefferson County Commissioners, In your COVID briefing today I heard discussion of whether to go back to virtual meetings, and the recent state law change on this issue, so I wanted to share what City of Port Angeles is doing: In early March, inspired by Dr. Berry's comment at one of your briefings that now is the time to create resilient systems in anticipation of another COVID wave (which we had hoped would be many months away....), we decided to do virtual meetings when the countywide COVID risk dashboard was moderate or higher, and hybrid meetings when the risk was below moderate. That policy was informed by the challenge of wearing masks while speaking in a public setting, and our collective goal to follow public health recommendations. I've explained that policy to many people who have asked about when we are going to have in-person meetings and I haven't gotten any pushback. Based on the state law changes for OPMA with regard to virtual meetings, our city attorney is advising some language change to that policy, but the outcome is effectively the same in that the new policy adapts to the public health recommendations locally and uses the public health department's COVID risk scale to decide whether we will also be able to meet in person. That updated policy language is on PDF page 50 of https://www.cityofpa.us/DocumentCenter/View/11529/CC-Agenda-Packet-05172022. Thank you, Lindsey NOTICE:This email and any attachments may be subject to disclosure as a public record under the Public Records Act, RCW Chapter 42.56 1 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 11:33 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW:Vote for PT! We are currently#10 nationwide! From: EDC Team Jefferson Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 11:31:31 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: Vote for PT! We are currently #10 nationwide! ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. a 'j ' ''''' ' T,,..,"' ‘Iiii .. . , , Take 60 seconds to make PT a Voting is open until Mon, June 6th. "V 10Best will be promoting the winners o F their sites and social channels. ' --, . , ; �.., � � " .-.r.. :. a. . , q 8 x ,4 rs -4t. '4. 'IA*, ,. Vote for Port Townsend!We are only one week in, and _. current leaders of the 10 Best Readers' Choice Small T� poll are: % ro . m 1. Abingdon , , "irk 44 . 2. Thibodaux 3. Los Alamos 4. Lewisburg 1 5. Traverse City 6. Stillwater 7. Cambria 8. Bar Harbor 9. Vail 1o. Port Townsend VOTE and CLICK HERE https://www.l0best.comlawards/travel/sm town-food-scene!! EDC Team Jefferson 1385 Benedict Street, Suite 2A, Port Townsend, WA 98368 Unsubscribe heisenhour@co.jefferson.wa.us Update Profile I Constant Contact Data Notice Sent by admin@edcteamjefferson.org powered by qiii% Constant Contact Try email marketing for free today! 2 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 2:41 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: 2022 Homeless Ordinance From: KR Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 2:41:59 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: 2022 Homeless Ordinance ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Commissioner Eisenhour: When I found out about the revised homeless encampment ordinance pushed by the planning commission I was dismayed and appalled that you will actually be voting on it. I beg you to vote no and dismiss these misguided plans permanently. Some reports indicate that it's already in the works to ship people in from several other states to take advantage of your changes to our county ordinances. It is astonishing that you would strongly support criminals,the mentally ill and addicts to the detriment of your true constituents, myself and my neighbors, of our county. In 2021 your constituents were clear that we do not want to encourage an influx of homeless into our neighborhoods. Ms Eisenhour, it is to us --the workers, business persons, property owners,taxpayers who support the friendly, quiet, small-town life we have here--that you owe your allegiance. That charm will not survive these changes. Please do not allow the lure of federal funds to blind you to your duty to us the working, tax-paying residents of Jefferson County. We understand there is a huge amount of money to cast about at your will if you pass these revisions. Resist. Don't do it. Thank you for your time, KR Wolf i Julie Shannon From: Greg Brotherton Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 3:02 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: Olympic Region Clean Air Agency news update: Permit Actions From: Olympic Region Clean Air Agency Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 3:00:50 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Greg Brotherton Subject: Olympic Region Clean Air Agency news update: Permit Actions ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. View this email in your browser 2940 limited Lane NW , Olympia,WA 98502 ° P``NAlk. Ref+rrsmtsng rn,G sHarbar,je#vsan, 1-800-422-5623 (360)539-76W ,C Mason,art*and Mumma Gnomes News Update: ORCAA New Permit Action The Olympic Region Clean Air Agency (ORCAA) has one or more new or revised permit under consideration. See details below, or online at: https://www.orcaa.org/category/permits/ Public Comment Due 05/31/2022 for Permit Applications May 16, 2022 12:03 pm The following applications for approval of construction or modification of an air pollution source have been received by ORCAA. A formal public comment period will be provided if requested by any person, government agency, group, or applicant. 1 — Murphy Company 1 Location: 505 Elma McCleary Road, Elma Posted: May 16, 2022 Point of Contact: Lauren Whybrew, 360-539-7610 —lauren.whybrew(a�orcaa.orq Type: SMO — Synthetic Minor Order Application as received: 21SM01496 (*pdf format) Description: Murphy is an existing softwood veneer plant that emits criteria air pollutants, Hazardous Air Pollutants (HAP), and Toxic Air Pollutants (TAP). This permitting action will establish the facility as a minor source with respect to the Washington State Operating Permit Regulation in Chapter 173-401 WAC. No physical changes are proposed, and emissions will not increase as a result of this permitting action. To express interest in an application, submit your comments in writing by the deadline listed below. Please be sure to list the NOC # of the application you are commenting on: Deadline: May 31, 2022 By Mail: ORCAA, 2940 Limited Lane NW, Olympia, WA 98502 By Fax: (360) 491-6308 By Email: see the Point of Contact info block on each application listed above What is Notice of Construction? Notice of Construction (NOC) permits are required prior to the construction, installation, replacement, or modification of any air pollutant sources, emissions units, or air pollution control equipment. Once approved and issued by ORCAA, the NOC allows not only the `construction'but also the ongoing operation of that source or emissions unit. The NOC is in force until the source or emissions unit is modified or replaced, at which time a new NOC permit is required. You may find more details about the NOC program here. Read in browser 2 More Articles on this topic: Public Comment Due 05/27/2022 for Permit Applications Work in beautiful locations for a great agency Public Comment Due 03/18/2022 for Permit Applications Public Comment Due 03/17/2022 for Permit Applications ORCAA issues Determination of Non-Significance (DNS) for Artifact Puzzles LLC Further agency information can be found at ORCAA's homepage, www.orcaa.org, or by calling (360) 539-7610. ORCA f_. Copyright©2022 ORCAA, All rights reserved. You are receiving this email because you signed up at ORCAA.org, or you applied for an outdoor burning permit from ORCAA. Our mailing address is: ORCAA 2940 Limited Ln NW Olympia,WA 98502-6503 Add us to your address book 3 Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list. 4 Julie Shannon From: Kate Dean Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 4:19 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: Low-carbon energy project siting study: Flyers for public information meetings Attachments: LowCarbonEnergySiting_Public_Meetings_Flyer_eng_051022.pdf; LowCarbonEnergySiting_Public_Meetings_Flyer_sp_051022.pdf From: Paul Jewell Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 4:15:00 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: WSAC_AII Members; WSACRPD Subject: Low-carbon energy project siting study: Flyers for public information meetings ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Commissioners and WSACRPD Members, Attached are flyers announcing public meetings related to a study conducted by the Department of Ecology on the siting of low-carbon energy projects. WSAC has been participating in the project on your behalf. However, it's crucial for you to weigh in as well. Please plan to attend one of the study presentations, if possible, and provide feedback on the process.Also, please pass on this information to anyone in your community who may be interested. I'm happy to answer any questions. Sincerely, Paul Jewell I Policy Director—Water, Land Use, Environment&Solid Waste Washington State Association of Counties I wsac.org piewell@wsac.org 1360.489.3024 Disclaimer: Documents and correspondence are available under state law. This email may be disclosable to a third-party requestor. 1 DEPARTMENT OF d Washington State ECOLOGY Department of ,-- State of Washington •h►r Commerce WANT TO NEAR FROM x.. Low-Carbon Energy Project Siting Improvement Study Public Meetings '., We want to hear from you on the Low-Carbon Energy Project Siting Improvement Study being led by the Departments of Ecology and Commerce. The study is looking at how to improve environmental review and permitting processes for OP siting low-carbon energy projects in Washington. Clean energy projects can help the state achieve future greenhouse gas limits mandated under state law. This study will be used to develop recommendations for a report to the state Legislature. The study will: • Reduce potential adverse impacts to the environment and local communities • Help support good in-state jobs • Contribute to low-carbon economic development • Preserve Tribal consultation and treaty rights We will have multiple opportunities to provide input! The same content will be covered at both the May and June meetings so you have the option to join either one.You will hear presenters speak about the study, and then you will be invited to ask questions and provide important input that will help us create recommendations to improve permitting processes, siting decisions, and future 1 studies or actions related to clean energy projects. It Register for the May 26, 2022 meeting at: https://www.zoomgov.com/meeting/register/vJ lsc-2ogT0gHvq-2x4fHGIkw-IBRtn5pUs Register for the June 16, 2022 meeting at: https://www.zoomgov.com/meeting/register/vJlscOgggjsiHpM-Zt87O7QoCuio5HBrLGo 5 For more information: https://ecology.wa.gov/LowCarbonEnergySiting To request an ADA accommodation, contact Ecology by phone at 360-407-6573 or email " -E at diane.butorac@ecy.wa.gov, or visit https://ecology.wa.gov/accessibility. For Relay Service or TTY call 711 or 877-833-6341. DEPARTMENT OF Washington State -- — ECOLOGY ��~���U ������ of ������&��*��� K u�p�/ u//�/u ~. State ofVVash|nQton `����N� w Commerce Reun°oK es �� v��N~ : ~ s ������� �� ��N ��w�t �=�i�� =��^ ' .` ' -------- ~ ' ' ~ del N=� ~ m��w� =N @��N�N����� �m��m ������� �m�� � ^'^� " - - - '. �m ' =� =�^ ener�ia con ������s e���s�ones �e cam �on�� c� -�. ��� �� ~� � �� ��� UUU� ` ���� ��,_ "�"����� , ^`=���°_ U~=,�I�� ���� ���������k ������� �� a��K�0| P. M. ` - . - - ` Ouerennosescucharsuopinhjn con respectoa| estudiVdenoe]ora del ernp|azanoientn paraprnyectnsdeenergia con bajasernisiones'decarbVno' e| cua| est6acargo de |os Departments of Ecology and[ommerce. [one| estudioseana|izachnou nnejorar|aeva|uad6nannbienta|y`[osprocesosdeotorgannientodepernoisospa/ae| enop|azanoientndepruyectosdeenergia con bajasem|sinnesdeca/bonoen Washington. -- `- � Los proyectosdeenerg[a|innpiapuedenuyudaraquedestadoreduzca |aenoisibnde gases de efectoinvernadernsegdn |a ley estataiBpresenteestudioseusar6 con e|fin ' dee|abo/arreconnendacionespara uninfornnedi/igidoa |a |egis|atura del estado. Con esteestudiose|ograr6 |osiguipnte: ' ^ Reducir |ospnsib|esinnpactosadversosene| noedioannbientey |asconnunidades ' locales. ^ Ayuda/en |ac/eacibndeernp|eosdentro del estado. ^ [ontribui/a| desarroUnecon6nnico con bajasennisinnesdecarbono. ^ Preservar |asconsu|tasthba|esy |osde/pchosotorgadospor|ostratados. Jendrennnsvahasoportunidadespanaproponjona/comentahms! Seexpnndnj �r � e| noisnnocontenidoen |asreunionesdennuyoy'unio' asiquetiene |aopd6nde asisti/acua|quieradeeUas. Escuchacja |ospresentadoreshab|arsobnee| estudioy' |u go' |oinvitarennosuhacerpreguntasyconnenta/ios; estonosayudardagenenur /econoendacionesparannejonar|usprocesosdeotorgannientodepe/nnisos' |as decis)nnpssobree| ernp|azannientny[os futurosestudinsoacdonesentornoa proyectosdeenergis |inopia. ' Regfstrese para la reuni6n del 26 de mayo de 2022 en: ' htt�'/�vvvvv�oonl�ovconl/nleetin�/re�ster�1|mc-2ooT0oHvq'2x4fH�|kvv�BRtnSpUs ' ~ ' ' ' ~ �9 + para l0reun!6n deU16 dej unNo de 2022'en: ` com/meet Hp io5HBrLGo Wsinfornacibn: |ogyxva.gov/Lovv[arbonEnerevSiting " Para so|icitaracnnnodaci6nADA, cornuniquese con Eco|ug/aporte|6fonua| 36O'4U7- 6573 n correo e|ectr6nicn diane.butnrac@ecy.vva.gm4 ovisite https://eco|ugy.we.gov/ accessibility(en ing|6s). Para Sen/idodeRetransnnisibnoTTY||anne711oO77'833-6341. Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 4:55 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: New Work Group Opportunity from the Joint Transportation Committee! From: Washington State Association of Counties Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 4:52:24 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: New Work Group Opportunity from the Joint Transportation Committee! ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. OPENINGS FOR WSAC Statewide Boards Commissions WASHINGTONoicouNTIEs q � STATE ASSOCIATION ' i o� '4 1 9 �) ` Pholl�n iMi I a 11 i 100,6ailliigiai 1410 � _ Apply by Friday, May 20! Click Here to Apply Current Openings: Joint Transportation Committee Work Group Congress passed the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA) in November 2021. It reauthorized several surface transportation programs and created four new federal-aid 1 highway programs. When new federal transportation authorizations occur, Washington state has a tradition of convening a workgroup to recommend future distributions of federal-aid highway formula program funding to state and local governments. The 2022 Supplemental Transportation Budget directs the Joint Transportation Committee to convene this workgroup this year. Within existing resources, the joint transportation committee must convene a workgroup to discuss, collaborate, and develop recommendations to the committee on the distribution of federal-aid highway formula program funding from the infrastructure investment and jobs act to state and local government in future biennia. Requirements: Elected County Official Learn More and Apply Click Here to Apply Have additional questions? WSAC is here to help. Click here to send us an email or give us a call at (360) 753-1886. View this email in your browser Copyright Q 2022 Washington Association of Counties. All Rights Reserved You ate receiving this email because you are involved in county government. ao Our mailing address is: Washington State Association of,Counties 206 10th Ave SE Olympia,WA 98501-1311 2 Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your.preferences or unsubscribe from this list. { Facebook C) Twitter if „i 111 Linkedln wsac.org 3 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 5:02 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: 3 New Free Workshops Available: Cryptocurrency, Data Analytics, LEAN Manufacturing From: EDC Team Jefferson Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 5:00:41 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: 3 New Free Workshops Available: Cryptocurrency, Data Analytics, LEAN Manufacturing ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. III,'I ujlilil�r ti '�� "�''I''i„I", ��M�(W�diu °ii"i�ll4 ' ,i; ,r li illuDPQIIIiDi � �I'lllijll„ �ui;,iiv'll,l N 4 , r 3 New Classes Available � 9 I Ills ., 'illill i ' u:'!i, hui ;IIiIVl4i III. 41i i, 0 111 U I Wei n i .w li I iru 71' ED.CTEAM ujefferson Cryptocurrency, Data Analytics or LEAN Manufacturing Classes Take Your Business To the Next Level NW Innovation Resource Center nwInnovation ;h N RESOURCE CENTER hl .I°il III' ` u, I:;; �: ,pijl:; .'IMa nlil" y" iuli;i r i8q,'h� ;�4VIIIIIujI 'a9p'I'lll IrIIIP'i "'hr 1 Cryptocurrency, Blockchainvrt & Web 3.0 Event Vitt The NWIRC invites you to join their z� Cryptocurrency, Blockchain and Web . , 3.0 event via zoom. Thursday, May 19 from 4:30-6:00 PM. Blockchain databases are an emerging technology that has the potential to protect your personal information, practically eliminate data ulll,- theft, fraud and offer full transparency of how your data is used. The Zoom link will be emailed to you when your RSVP. LINK HERE to sign up, limited seats available. dpol Data Analytics Workshop gnu �m ryy ` Join the NWIRC on May 24, for 4 m P;iulllll'llll � 'iillj4 weeks, meetings on Tues & Thurs 0 from 3:30 — 5pm. ''"nOB, With data analytics at your command, you as a business leader can make informed decisions that drive strategic g advantage. The latest data analytics tools provide an easy and affordable way for all small businesses to gain strategic advantage and build resilience for the future. Free to a limited number of Jefferson County businesses adversely affected by Covid. Inquire now through EDC Team Jefferson: admina,edcteamjefferson.org or 360.379.4693. II„ Principals of Lean Manufacturing - ,�..; i !p'. i flIVI. �"er 4",,;, , iqi!iF,�dli0l�IIII�I,I�IIII�Il9rl'il, ili!Iu4i ''L.I!Illiillijll Iullflii'ilil;lll li �� 2 with Live Simulation 11111IMPACT Lean and Green 101 WASHINGTON Lastly, on May 24th (Tacoma) or 25th (Seattle), Impact Washington's upcoming Lean and Green 101 workshop is an in-person opportunity for local manufacturers to learn about how environmental sustainability and lean . manufacturing go hand in hand. Funded through the America Works Grant, this workshop will offer a full day of training (8:30am-5:OOpm) at no cost to the participants. More Information Sign Up HERE Other classes available from EDC Team Jefferson ., ...._........ ..o I Business P'lalnni g CQ'uu' 'se,,' ,EA• : Workshop,, &.Res `urce Rourti'��,table E lave you.att n edd either our'''Business , 'Planning Course or the L AN Worksho . _,�.: Don't missc t 1ili!!!0 5,. 1�0(lop�h a '' i�iiill �,� �x ig'n!��iup now to. eon r waiting'i ist � sinus' lanna;l . A �i o lR oeDnt'forget ourfr, mi thy eo of�; t ' i i601, 311` 'the nthfrom noon-10,vzoom �, ti�� li� ���6��d� :.i'ti 4' Pill (} �,} ry' �} �' _ i,'i i;1 MI�I i�11, "p„ S+ UR. .'� ND[AB �iil,illill�) t EDC Team Jefferson 1385 Benedict Street, Suite 2A, Port Townsend, WA 98368 Unsubscribe heisenhour@co.jefferson.wa.us Update Profile I Constant Contact Data Notice Sent by admin@edcteamjefferson.org powered by © Constant Contact 3 Try email marketing for free today! 4 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 5:03 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: May 2022 Landscapes From: North Olympic Land Trust Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 4:59:38 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: May 2022 Landscapes ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Land Trtist ,_ ki r Lad e. r _ News from your Land Trust 1 NN NUailui ,. � 9 • Celebrating Farmland Access Doubling the size of Dungeness Valley Creamery, the family-owned farm purchased 4o acres of conserved farmland from the Land Trust along River's Edge at farmland prices. Why are "farmland" prices important? In Dungeness Valley, skyrocketing land prices prevent affordable farm access. The Land Trust helps to keep farmland affordable through conservation easements at places like Dungeness Valley Creamery and across Clallam County. Support conservation work like this - donate to the Land Trust today. Pictured: Sarah and Ryan McCarthey of Dungeness Valley Creamery, photo by Tom Sanford. April Events 2 4111,11tr "" 1111`'e;'' , '11474,, 4td)itica_- 111,1,111[01,, Ar, .2"iriql _ --41141t; ° ãlk • 2022 Conservation Breakfast Recap At our 14th Annual Conservation Breakfast, the Land Trust was pleased to present John Gussman with our Out Standing in the Field Award! John has dedicated his career to highlighting the beauty of our plant and the amazing creatures we share the world with. Thank you for all of your amazing work, John! Visit John's website, DoubleClick Productions to see more of his outstanding photos. We are also excited to share that Dr. Robert Michael Pyle, our original event speaker, has recovered from COVID and was able to travel home from England. We're working on rescheduling time with Dr. Pyle, stay tuned! 3 '1,4! *t, , , . - • • , Earth Day 2022 To celebrate Earth Day this year, we partnered with our friends at North Olympic Library System to host a family scavenger hunt at the Lyre Conservation Area.After families searched for plants and wildlife, they had time to sightsee and explore the beauty of this natural area! Pictured above: Families enjoying the Lyre during the scavenger hunt, photo by Clair Dunlap. 0,4i4 Phenology Files Steelhead trout are finishing their -„„ spring migration this month, caught in action by John Gussman. If you ;114k plan to see some fish jump,you „-- - 4 better jump on it! Learnsmbohreeraeb!about these flopping, flailing fish Making a Difference Olympic North Local. m liallniodntrusttshleikderiving u Land Trust are the of land ' G Al N N2 five ., , " - If:::=0 conservation P sincearkl sizeLe aor2fn°1 Olympic5 - , the Alliance d Trust Lan Ground. five timesNational more fi theso for e r PICNIC: JULY we are Gaining3i ,G2022 TRUST FAMILY ..„,, . Nil- ;.• LAND We're thrilled to return to ",1 starting with ki, , 4 411-.• SAVE THE DATElevents again, „ ' Picnic on July. our3l' . . , . hosting in-person t Familyfon a I inform 7th Annual LanedyTerus for more out Myers. Jeremey 2022. Keepnalliphoto by coming soo— owfrhortriooccignhee Ui Community Photo 5 # * 41**, • tet*OF 41r , 1.4t =4. 000,0 444* ' t ** ' ‘*. VflIZ ,, As spring is still coming alive, we're Thank you to Josh G this aed h t kpefortooml loving your photos of plants and submitting Forks for critters. Taken on the Elk Creek Click the box belowsecan't to share wait to e e your Trail, this stunning Pacific banana photos with hu slug wanders through the damp forest floor. Share your Spring photos! The Land Trust is grateful to have recently received the following gifts: In memory of: William Gray Harris 6 In honor of.: John Gussman League of Women Voters, Environmental Committee, &Carol Hull Donate adil„lor.:1110 ri7'0:1) Copyright©2022 North Olympic Land Trust, All tights reserved. You're receiving this e-mail because you support land conservation on the North Olympic Peninsula. Our mailing address is: North Olympic Land Trust 602 E Front St(physical) PO Box 2945(mailing) Port Angeles,WA 98362-3320 Add us to your address book 7 Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list. Cmailchimp 8 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 9:14 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: Request for Work Session Participation From: Heath Heikkila Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 9:12:41 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour; Greg Brotherton; Kate Dean Cc: jeffbocc Subject: Request for Work Session Participation ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Good evening Commissioners: I watched your work sessions today regarding carbon/forests and proposed DNR timber sales in Jefferson County, including a discussion about potential reconveyance requests for state forest transfer lands in Jefferson County. As you might imagine, our organization and members are keenly interested in the topics you are considering. I am writing with a request for a more balanced work group as the Board considers its next steps on pending DNR timber sales, including a potential work session at next week's meeting. As you know,this afternoon's second work session included representatives from organizations who are advocating for a reduction or end to timber harvests from DNR state trust lands. The carbon/forests work session was also informed by some of the same organizations. I am sure you would like to hear different perspectives to ensure you have a broad range of perspectives and information to make an informed decision on behalf of the residents of Jefferson County. Ideally, I would recommend inviting participants who can provide a different perspective on the issues related to the management of DNR state trust lands,the current timber sales being prepared, as well as the carbon implications of forests and wood products more broadly. I would also recommend inviting representatives from Junior Taxing Districts that rely on revenue from these forests. I also hope to receiving the documents and correspondence that informed today's work session discussion. I submitted a Public Disclosure Request in the hopes of receiving the information as soon as possible given the pressing nature of the discussions. Thank you for your consideration. Regards, Heath Heikkila Heath Heikkila Director, Government Affairs American Forest Resource Council i Office: 253-248-0650 Cell: 202-285-3514 hheikkilaAamfore st.org 2 jeffbocc From: Todd Oberlander Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 7:40 AM To: jeffbocc; Monte Reinders Subject: FW: Online Form Submittal: Feedback Follow Up Flag: Follow up Flag Status: Flagged FYI Todd Oberlander Jefferson County Information Services 1820 Jefferson St. Port Townsend, WA 98368 (360) 385-9355 (360) 385-9195 fax Time flies like an arrow. Fruit flies like bananas. The urge to save humanity is almost always a false front for the urge to rule. — H. L. Mencken It is okay to print this email. Paper is a biodegradable, renewable, sustainable product made from trees. Growing and harvesting trees provides jobs for millions of men and women, and working forests are good for the environment, providing clean air, clean water, wildlife habitat, and carbon storage. When you don't need it anymore, be sure to put it in a bin designated for recycling and it will come back to us as new paper or cardboard or recycle it back in to the carbon cycle. From: noreply@civicplus.com <noreply@civicplus.com> Sent:Saturday, May 14, 2022 10:55 AM To:#MailGateway<#MailGateway@co.jefferson.wa.us> Subject: Online Form Submittal: Feedback ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Feedback What kind of comment Problem would you like to send? What would you like to Public Works comment about? 1 Other Homelessness Comments Please consider taking a harder line on tent encampments of homeless people. We do not want to become like Seattle or Olympia. As a physician I have cared for many mentally ill and substance abusing homeless people. They learn what communities will tolerate them and tend to move to those locations. Focus your energy and limited resources on the housing crisis for the middle class and working poor. A good first start might be to streamline the permitting process. Thanks for reading this. Name Chris Manik MD Email cmanik(c�aol.com Phone Number 919 428 0228 Please contact me as soon Field not completed. as possible regarding this matter. Email not displaying correctly?View it in your browser. 2 jeffbocc From: becky brown-nienow <bbnienow@hotmail.com> Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 8:38 AM To: jeffbocc; Planning Commission Desk Subject: Temporary Housing and Facilities Ordinance ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. To the Planning Commissioners and Board of County Commissioners : I would like to voice my full support for the recommended updates to the county's ordinance that governs temporary housing. Temporary and transitional housing is greatly needed in Jefferson County. Much thought and work has gone into creating safe spaces for our unsheltered neighbors by HSN's Tiny Home Communities Housing Action Team,the Community Build, and Bayside Housing. Imagine yourselves unsheltered. To gain a foothold in life, a basic need is safe shelter. Please vote to support the ordinance as written. Thank you. Becky Brown-Nienow resident of Port Townsend supporter of Bayside Housing, Community Build and HSN 1 jeffbocc From: kate schinhofen <katetheshrinemaker@gmail.com> Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 9:04 AM To: jeffbocc Subject: In full support of Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. This ordinance reflects hundreds of hours of staff time, your participation and the input from a wide range of concerned citizens. This well written and humane permanent ordinance gives us the framework for providing temporary, safe, supported and professionally managed housing for our county's unsheltered. Please help our county shelter transition its homeless population with these houses into permanent stable housing. Thanks for providing for healthy living spaces for our population, Kate Schinhofen 1 jeffbocc From: Caroline K.Wildflower <ckwildflower@gmail.com> Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 10:01 AM To: pcommissiondesk@jefferson.co.wa;jeffbocc Subject: Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance Attachments: Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance.pdf ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. my letter is copied below and also attached as a pdf--Caroline Wildflower May 16, 2022 Dear Planning Commission, I am writing support of the Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance. I have lived in Jefferson County since 2003.Over that time period, I have watched housing become increasingly unaffordable and hard to find. Personally, I created an ADU apartment in my house and rent it to my tenant on a Section 8 certificate. People laugh at me for keeping the rent low enough that he can use that housing subsidy. I helped build one of the tiny houses now being used in Port Townsend. I was so glad to be able to make that contribution toward building some pathways toward housing for the homeless people in our midst. I want these changes to the zoning rules to make it easier and more cost effective to permit tiny shelter villages. Between 1989 and 1998, I worked as a Housing Advocate in Seattle and in Snohomish County,creating housing and assisting homeless clients to access this housing. I attest that temporary,safe, supported and professionally managed housing works well to provide homes for homeless people and assist them toward permanent housing.This ordinance will go a long way toward stemming our housing crisis in Jefferson County. Although temporary shelter is not the whole answer to our county's housing woes, it is an essential part of the solution. People experiencing homelessness need a safe,supportive environment to regain their sense of well being in order to focus on obtaining permanent housing.This ordinance creates the structure for this to happen. I urge the Planning Commission to recommend to the Commissioners that they adopt the permanent ordinance in its entirety as presented by the Department of Community Development. Sincerely, Caroline K.Wildflower, MSW 1 May 16, 2022 Dear Planning Commission, I am writing support of the Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance. I have lived in Jefferson County since 2003. Over that time period, I have watched housing become increasingly unaffordable and hard to find. Personally, I created an ADU apartment in my house and rent it to my tenant on a Section 8 certificate. People laugh at me for keeping the rent low enough that he can use that housing subsidy. I helped build one of the tiny houses now being used in Port Townsend. I was so glad to be able to make that contribution toward building some pathways toward housing for the homeless people in our midst. I want these changes to the zoning rules to make it easier and more cost effective to permit tiny shelter villages. Between 1989 and 1998, I worked as a Housing Advocate in Seattle and in Snohomish County, creating housing and assisting homeless clients to access this housing. I attest that temporary, safe, supported and professionally managed housing works well to provide homes for homeless people and assist them toward permanent housing. This ordinance will go a long way toward stemming our housing crisis in Jefferson County. Although temporary shelter is not the whole answer to our county's housing woes, it is an essential part of the solution. People experiencing homelessness need a safe, supportive environment to regain their sense of well being in order to focus on obtaining permanent housing. This ordinance creates the structure for this to happen. I urge the Planning Commission to recommend to the Commissioners that they adopt the permanent ordinance in its entirety as presented by the Department of Community Development. Sincerely, Caroline K. Wildflower, MSW jeffbocc From: Ed Bowen <rockypt@olypen.com> Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 10:22 AM To: Greg Brotherton;jeffbocc Subject: Claim of discrimination for the Covid Question and Answer ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. What is the Zoom Room for the Dr Berry question and answer? Am I not in the Zoom Room too? Is raising my hand not also being in the Zoom Room? Is there other means for me to submit my question during the meeting if I am going to so blatantly be discriminated against? Seems apparently the BOCC Chair since she is in the "Chamber" has taken the position in the chat to deny we the people our chance to "ask Dr Berry" a question. Seems we are being discriminated on a mass scale today! Especially if this is the position of the Chair. Ed Bowen Virus-free. www.avg.com 1 jeffbocc From: Todd Oberlander Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 10:44 AM To: jeffbocc; Monte Reinders; Matt Tyler Subject: FW: Online Form Submittal: Feedback FYI Todd Oberlander Jefferson County Information Services 1820 Jefferson St. Port Townsend, WA 98368 (360) 385-9355 (360) 385-9195 fax Time flies like an arrow. Fruit flies like bananas. The urge to save humanity is almost always a false front for the urge to rule. — H. L. Mencken It is okay to print this email. Paper is a biodegradable, renewable, sustainable product made from trees. Growing and harvesting trees provides jobs for millions of men and women, and working forests are good for the environment, providing clean air, clean water, wildlife habitat, and carbon storage. When you don't need it anymore, be sure to put it in a bin designated for recycling and it will come back to us as new paper or cardboard or recycle it back in to the carbon cycle. From: noreply@civicplus.com <noreply@civicplus.com> Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 10:34 AM To:#MailGateway<#MailGateway@co.jefferson.wa.us> Subject: Online Form Submittal: Feedback ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Feedback What kind of comment Suggestion would you like to send? What would you like to Parks and Recreation comment about? Other Bike parking 1 Comments Hello! Would you please consider adding more bike parking at Memorial Field?The current bike parking is insufficient; it is difficult to use due to its current location, it is too small to properly lock a bike (or more than one), and when in use, there are no other places to park additional bikes. This is such a great field in town and many people ride their bikes to the field (or would if they had a place to lock them). Please consider adding more bike parking and in a location that is easy to access. Thank you so much! Name Annie Bartos Email anniebartosgmail.com Phone Number 360-390-8454 Please contact me as soon Field not completed. as possible regarding this matter. Email not displaying correctly?View it in your browser. 2 jeffbocc From: dberrian <dberrian@riseup.net> Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 10:53 AM To: Viki Sonntag Cc: Planning Commission Desk;jeffbocc Subject: Support for the Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. The Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance provides a way forward to developing meaningful action in assisting our neighbors who are experiencing homelessness. Having this community agreement will help us go beyond good intentions and will help expand opportunities for building concrete facilities, infrastructure, and services that can alleviate the suffering that homelessness brings to our entire community. David Berrian 450 - 35th Street Port Townsend, WA 98368 District 1 i jeffbocc From: Tom Thiersch <tprosys@gmail.com> Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 11:36 AM To: jeffbocc;John Mauro Subject: Update to Hood Canal Bridge closures ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. https://wsdot.wa.gov/construction-planning/search-projects/sr-104-hood-canal-bridge-center-lock-rehabilitation "Four total weekend closures of the SR 104 Hood Canal Bridge have been rescheduled to 2023. No total weekend closures are planned for 2022. The closures will occur sometime between spring and early fall 2023. As soon as they are scheduled, WSDOT will announce the closures via this webpage." Whew! Tom Thiersch i 5/17/22, 10:11 AM SR 104-Hood Canal Bridge-Center Lock Rehabilitation I WSDOT Search Q Project SR 104 - Hood Canal Bridge — Center Lock Rehabilitation, , Four total weekend closures of the SR 104 Hood Canal Bridge have been rescheduled to 2023.No total weekend closures are planned for 2022.The closures will occur sometime between spring and early fall 2023.As soon as they are scheduled,WSDOT will announce the closures via this webpage. Project overview Crews will upgrade and replace key elements of the SR 104 Hood Canal Bridge.The construction bolsters systems that guide the bridge together and keep both halves of the bridge connected. Timeline May 2021-September 2023 Project status Construction Funding $1.28 million What to expect During summer or early fall 2023, travelers can expect up to four total weekend closures of the SR 104 Hood Canal Bridge. https://wsdot.wa.gov/construction-planning/search-projects/sr-104-hood-canal-bridge-center-lock-rehabilitation 1/4 5/17/22, 10:11 AM SR 104-Hood Canal Bridge-Center Lock Rehabilitation I WSDOT A key element of this bridge helps keep both halves of the bridge together.The area, called a center lock, is similar to a door's deadbolt. During this project, crews will bolster the center lock to better withstand tremendous forces, especially during powerful winter storms and fast-moving tides. Crews also will make permanent repairs to another system.Twin metallic objects shaped like pyramids on one half of the bridge help guide the bridge into dual receivers located on the second half of the bridge.Workers will temporarily remove both systems - called pyramids - and a large metal plate that secures the pyramids in place. Crews will then reinstall the metal plate and the pyramids using industrial-sized bolts. During winter 2020,WSDOT maintenance crews made temporary repairs to the mechanisms.That phase of work was completed by contractor crews during during winter 2021. Over four weekends between spring and fall 2023, contractor crews working for WSDOT will make permanent repairs to the pyramids.The pyramids help guide the draw span together when both halves of the bridge are connected. Repairs will extend the ability for the bridge to open for marine traffic and close the draw span for all travelers crossing the SR 104 Hood Canal Bridge.With no convenient alternate routes between Kitsap and Jefferson, repairing the bridge preserves an important lifeline for residents and businesses. Performance highlights from the Gray Notebook Zero emission 45 projects to Washington state electric vehicle improve freight rail leveraged $100,000 registrations in structures and to secure $27 million Washington freight movement in funding for airport investments increased 192%between 2017 were underway as of December in Fiscal Year 2022. and 2021. 31,2021. https://wsdot.wa.gov/construction-planning/search-projects/sr-104-hood-canal-bridge-center-lock-rehabilitation 3/4 jeffbocc From: Sandra J Stowell <sjstowe111000@gmail.com> Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 2:16 PM To: Planning Commission Desk Cc: jeffbocc Subject: I support the Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Thank you for your efforts and work to provide regulations that will assist us all in supporting people in need of temporary shelter. I support the ordinance as written, and hope you will approve this so that organizations will be better able to help those in need find shelter. Sandra Stowell Sandra Stowell & PTArtist.com 1 jeffbocc From: Earll M Murman <murman@mit.edu> Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 3:12 PM To: Planning Commission Desk Cc: jeffbocc Subject: Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Dear Members of the Jefferson County Planning Commission I write to urge you to adopt the Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance that will be before you on May 1.8, 2022. I am not an expert on this topic, nor on the ordinance itself. However, I understand that these changes have been carefully and thoughtfully constructed by DCD with input from housing advocates. I am satisfied that a process with integrity has been used to construct the updates for this ordinance. My reason for urging you to adopt the ordinance is rooted not in my area of expertise, but as a member of a community that I feel needs to support adequate shelter for all of our community members. I am fortunate to not being unsheltered, nor have I have been unsheltered in my 8o years of life. That gives me the responsibility to speak out in support of my fellow citizens who have not been as fortunate as I. Our community has come together to create Peter's Place,and now Pat's Place. Peter's Place has shown that temporary housing facilities can be assets to our community and not problems. Please support efforts like this by passing this carefully constructed ordinance. Thank you. Earll Murman 325 Lincoln Street Port Townsend. 1 jeffbocc From: Dylan Bergman <dbergman@pnptc.org> Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 5:03 PM To: jeffbocc Cc: Randy Harder; Hansi Hals; Paul McCollum Subject: Comments Re: Cape George and Gardiner No Shooting Zones Attachments: PNPTC Comments_Cape George and Gardiner No Shoot Zones_2022.05.16.pdf ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Jefferson County Commissioners, Please see the attached comments from the Point No Point Treaty Council regarding the proposed No Shooting Zones at Cape George Colony and Gardiner Beach. Thank you, Dylan Dylan Bergman Point No Point Treaty Council Wildlife Program Manager Cell - (360) 731-8674 1 1 Point No Point Treaty Council Zi 0 Port Gamble S'Klallam I Jamestown S'Klallam May 16, 2022 Jefferson County Board of Commissioners PO Box 1220 Port Townsend, WA 98368 By email—JeffBoCC@co.jefferson.wa.us Re: Objections to Cape George Colony and Gardiner Beach No Shooting Zones Dear County Commissioners, The Point No Point Treaty Council (PNPTC) is a natural resource consortium that represents the Jamestown S'Klallam Tribe and the Port Gamble S'Klallam Tribe. Thank you for reaching out to us on May 3, 2022 in regards to three proposed No Shooting Zones (NSZs) in Jefferson County. In the future, a longer time for comments,preferably 4-6 weeks, would be much appreciated. Currently, we have a significant objection, based upon the elimination of Treaty Rights, to the larger proposed NSZ at Cape George Colony, and an objection to the Gardiner Beach NSZ. All three of the proposed NSZs are within the area ceded under the Treaty of Point No Point,to which the Port Gamble S'Klallam Tribe and Jamestown S'Klallam Tribe are signatories. We have no objection to the Cape George Colony NSZ requested on November 11, 2021. This proposal covers an area predominated by relatively dense housing and will not negatively impact Treaty Rights. However, we have strongly object to the Cape George Colony NSZ requested on March 9, 2022 because it includes a block of 234 contiguous acres of DNR-managed lands that is accessible via a public roadway. Implementing this NSZ will directly diminish Treaty Rights by removing the ability of Tribal members to hunt on this public land. The east and west sides of the DNR parcel are minimally occupied with a large proportion of undeveloped lots, and an established NSZ extends from the southern edge of the DNR parcel. The incident that spurred the NSZ request was not related to hunting on this DNR land in any way. We request that the County Board of Commissioners not move forward with this NSZ as it is currently planned. If the Board is considering approval, we request direct government-to-government consultation to discuss the impacts to Treaty Rights. We also object to the Gardiner Beach NSZ proposal because it will negatively impact Treaty Rights. Tribal hunting on private land is an ongoing issue that has not been fully resolved in federal court. However, it is generally agreed that Tribal members can hunt on timberlands with landowner permission. Discovery Bay Land Company (DBLC) is one of the two property owners that would be impacted by the proposed Gardiner Beach NSZ, and is the larger of the two affected property owners. DBLC is a timberland and allows some hunting on their property, including on this parcel in very limited amounts. The creation of this NSZ would adversely impact treaty rights now and into the future by limiting hunting. There are currently no County NSZs within the Gardiner community, and the area covered within this proposal includes zero residences. The area covered in the proposed NSZ,with the exception of a boat launch and parking area, is private property that should not be supporting recreation by the public or neighbors. The proponents of the NSZ list "beaching" and "exercising" as reasons to justify the NSZ. However,the proponents do not have any legal access to the beach or lagoon in NSZ and should not be beaching or exercising on the lands owned by DBLC. A NSZ is not warranted — this area is private property and legal hunting is already strictly controlled and occurs only in small amounts. Authorizing a NSZ on undeveloped property that is not publicly accessible,while not developing a NSZ within the heavily developed residential areas and shorelines surrounding this area, appears to be poorly considered and developed. The broader issue at play is continued illegal use by local residents and by trespassing hunters. A NSZ seems unlikely to resolve either of these issues, but does limit the ability of Tribal members with legal access for hunting to legally hunt at this location. The PNPTC would be very unlikely to oppose a NSZ within the surrounding,developed residential areas where hunting cannot be done safely. If you have any questions, please contact Dylan Bergman at (360) 731-8674 or dbergman@pnptc.org. Regards, Randy Harder, Executive Director Point No Point Treaty Council rharder(2i pnptc.org Cc: Hansi Hals, Jamestown S'Klallam Tribe Natural Resources Director Paul McCollum, Port Gamble S'Klallam Tribe Natural Resources Director Dylan Bergman, PNPTC Wildlife Program Manager jeffbocc From: The Port Townsend Main Street Program <director@ptmainstreet.org> Sent: Monday, May 16, 2022 5:25 PM To: jeffbocc Subject: May Mid-Month News & Updates ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. ,.,,W. .,i„ .terF': .,-"` .v1i4'a5 ""I;,, ",I;';,, a,' ?° ":{ ->::.-'r,:^ ."vui� '':!' , :^; tn. .,`"w:• 'Wag I, . mV�' rv, '.- ..a, ?r-- - ';j .� L':. ,,'i ,"s'= .,Y, ra) o ;. ir. 4' ilk, p- 1 p, :- tVi!, 'a .:: �V, �r� '' a W I !I! h 01�ry; 6i ".,. ".,.., i Gwr, t.;,ri ,;' ? 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'f Ili grI ru, 0oC 7��tm ��U�12l , Iv • Main Street News -� u �� rr�e� � 1� ilU uui a t ii d '�°j r f ig�� M.•>r• r - d::;;T 4, ,' 'j'c,a r v:" pn 'y a d i i 1 li ;W May is Art Wave! �, For the month of May,Historic Districts' = '' merchants are showcasing student ' me .µ w i , artwork,created in the Port Townsend Schools,for"Art Wave!"Children's pieces • . of art installed as part of this PT Main Street promotion.The"Art Wave"exhibit Buskers on the Block-Thursdays,in celebrates children's creative expression May,2022 from apm through art and is a collaboration with participating Port Townsend businesses, Join us for some free outdoor music at The funds raised will help support diverse Tyler Street Plaza to celebrate spring! offerings by PT Artscape including the Coordinated by the Port Townsend Main Teaching Artists Programs at Salish Coast Street Promotion Committee and Elementary,Blue Heron School,and Port sponsored in part by The Lighthouse Townsend High School,and professional Cafe. development for teaching artists and classroom teachers.PT Artscape also The next performance will be Kristin supports Centrum's Tales,Texts and Myers at 2pm&Jere Canote and Bobbi Theater Program for the sixth grade,as Nikles to follow at 3pm on May 19th at well as special projects and 'Tyler Plaza. 2 materials. Once again, PT Artscape Donation Jars will be in select stores; all Pull lineup available now on our website. proceeds from the jars will go directly to Rain cancels. art education programs in the Port Townsend School District» Visit our website f©r a list of participating businesses. ._ B sue. ` d r 1 i , t, II,/..'`;:a1; i--- w Irl ,r f� a � � y�, a P? �. a Businesses are Open! k Show your local and love and please ,4 + ;; patronize Northwest Man,Thuja, Deja Vu 1: ▪ Collectibles,and Summer House Design k * ; , P `` during the Admiralty Apartments renovation project in the 90o block of { i ' Water Street♦ r a� Thank you! 1)dy Uii f ` , t' . rear 3> The Main Street Hanging Flower tg too, Baskets are going up! �. L The Hanging Flower Baskets are going up 0.4m,'. .J .1 (2 '� this week adding color all summer long— thanks to all the businesses which signed up to support this program to beautify � Port Townsend. t ( c concerts on the�o�k � '} n,r 1,„,,„„,,( 1) Concerts on the Dock—Sponsors Make it Happen! We are so excited for summer and this year's Concerts on the Dock lineup.There 3 are still some beer garden and stage sponsorship slots available—great visibility for your business! Email us if you'd like us to get in touch and tell you more. .P ii a" • 9Y ae.. x,pr :ti. ;= d9li I: a. .., 2di !.N.t.r�. v?;IIR�Ii� r^'. -r;�,,3 dli " ii LIVY+n; rd9tli."4. a ililuur,,,c ... dui =,s � fliioli(dll - Jim ?dmirii 1 rarmo.,,,, : aliddldldllli - 0104 ..::: , ,:iiii�. ruoiit�k`:�r°,il��(�r0 '' a EP,':Ull4lil g.,,,,,.,.. „� +^ � .. (fi-.".Nil "-- 'u' .- m„., I�llu "' ' '-" "w.ptlW i ,. U�., �,y .. ,.:re.. :W-. oidie D , � iii �� e ,Ipl� mI" 0: 4tl 'T,�1p fl t- e ilk i14„,�fl � iit,i, - I,if Py��i:.. 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We care for the hanging flower � t� _ � ` g fit;. �411 baskets, downtown gardens and Adams Street Park. We coordinate Creative District 1,11j� t ia�� l� efforts, work on design projects, promote our local economy, coordinate events, and ��� � r�1PGl help light up Port Townsend for the holidays. We offer low-interest loan funds to : ���IIN t ` property owners for commercial building renovations and microloans to business N�i� . �Co IdIgG�'A; 'IR' owners to offset the financial impacts of emergencies. The work of the Port � �� ph,N:(rrt ' ohju, Townsend Main Street Program enhances the quality of life for residents and mlibir'� � ��ih �' :- visitors. Become a member today! -AAM b °I'°° rti" (Pictured: Board Member Jan Carter helping to plant up the planters at Adams Street hie,'::'Li-'- ','" ,, �� `� ' Park as part of Main Street's Earth Day Spring Clean Up) ��� � irli :, :rr iNN'lee rer .k it s-„i e reeer miPNi ' ;,m,m7""I'➢Irrk -. 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'- j ire' a yat cr:. �;",..' ._ -'i7 ;':.` *;.r!.s I'.` ,,,,all'ii� ,. b ill ix,r.m;r., `'.-=, 1 dtttt,y, `„' fir-;:.:' " h"lh i`'' wh1=W-': ,,:m,�,",0 -: ii iat _.-,:.. n='m ' +ir ". "m'_ ry� Jig, ,,t -- ,ni' _..'fil U I11 -,cd,�„ m,, Y..a 'i,, ' _*i!p' =�i^-� �rdt`W Y,'i,i,fitlryry' i hi,I���:. �� " ----d !P,vW.:,: `t'�.:-,n .....;ml� (;'� _ ( .r,pl�N_i lBVie S'r-�.�- .`'��,., 0 !trot ;liPN�illltp �I�CII � �:Gi, _ taa c - �itit�u�,,. � _ VI( ,� 11 12 geeEfif ED From: Neil T.Morgan 45 West Eugene Street MAY . 2022 Port Hadlock,Washington 98339 (360)385-3915 JEFFEcomillisSIONERS R 3 COUNTY To: Jefferson County,Department of Community Development,Assistant Planner Amanda Hunt 621 Sheridan Street Port Townsend,WA 98368 References: (a) Customer Assistance Meeting(CAM)#2022-00065,Telephone conservation of 2/17/2022 between Neil Morgan and(DCD) Assistant Planner,Amanda Hunt. (b) Summary of CAM 2022-0065 dated 2/19/2022 From DCD (c) Email between AHunt@co.jefferson.wa.us and Office of Jefferson County Assessor, Sherrie Shold dated 26 April 2022 (d) 1 March 2022 meeting between DCD Director,Brent Butler,Neil T.Morgan and Malinda S.Morgan Enclosure (1) Aerial View of Property Parcel# 801104004 1.Reference(b)in part, below information it italic font indicates allowances and set back distances but are specific only in general terms. The applicant is allowed to build one single family residence and one additional dwelling unit on their property,if the structures meet all other applicable environmental health and land use requirements. The shoreline setback is 150 feet+10-foot building setback. 20 foot setback off of private roads,local access roads and minor collector roads as defined in Jefferson County Code(JCC) 18.30.050 Table 6-1 Notes. 30-foot setback off of major collector roads including:SR 116,Center Road,Chimacum Road,Irondale Road,Quinault South Shore Road,and Upper Hoh Road. 35-foot setback off of minor arterial roads including:SR 19. 50-foot setback off of principal arterial roads including: US 101,SR 104,and SR 20. 5-foot setback from adjacent residentially zoned property. 250-foot setback from commercial forest zoned property. 100-foot setback from rural forest zoned property. 2.Reference(c)reflects your response to a member of Jefferson County Assessor office regarding a conservation I had with that office. Your response to that representative is in part,found below and in italic font. Jefferson County DCD does not have 500 foot setbacks for forestland.For parcels adjacent to commercial or rural forest land,the standard setback for buildings is 250 feet(JCC 18.15.150).Jefferson County DCD also has a forestry setback reduction process so the 250 foot setback is a starting point. Maybe he was reading the notice of disclosure for forestlands?A notice is included in permit conditions when an applicant is building on a property within 500 feet of forest or agricultural lands. Other general setbacks include 20 feet from a minor collector,S feet from the sides and rear of the structure to the property,and critical area setbacks(if the property has critical areas). First and third paragraphs are confusing,conflicting and unclear. First paragraph you indicate Jefferson County does not have a 500 foot setback for forestlands. Second paragraph indicates a 500 foot setback within 500 feet of forest or agriculture lands. At no time did I specify 500 foot setback to Assessor Office. I was very clear and very specific not to give a distance as I did not have the exact figure at the time of the conservation. I very specifically indicated such to person I discussed matter with. The first information I received from you indicates"250 foot setback from commercial forest zoned property". In the second paragraph of information indicates"For parcels adjacent to commercial or rural forest land, the standard setback for buildings is 250 feet(JCC 18.15.150).Jefferson County DCD also has a forestry setback reduction process so the 250 foot setback is a starting point". The 250 feet setback from commercial forest and 100 foot setback from rural forest which is in conflict with second set of specifications contained in reference(c)indicating 250 foot setback from both commercial forest and rural forest. Request clarification and explanation of the first heard of statement contained in reference(c)dated 26 April 2022, "Jefferson County DCD also has a forestry setback reduction process so the 250 foot setback is a starting point. " What forestry setback is this pertaining to,commercial forest or rural forest?What does the reduction process pertain to? If this process something the DCD uses alone or in conjunction with the landowner?Is this a process applied for and paid by the landowner? 3.Using the setback information provided in reference(b)dated 19 Feb,2022 and those measurements provided in enclosure(1),I concluded these requirements,as given,essentially prohibit me from building a residence on my property.This conclusion prompted reference(d). 4. The meeting with DCD Director Brent Butler was an impromptu meeting on 1 March 2022. The issues,copy of survey,aerial drawings and additional detailed information were presented to Mr.Butler. He acknowledged he understood the issues and informed us he had the authority to change the setback distances after he considered the issues. As of this date he has not taken any action after repeated written request by us for a Plan of Action(POA). 5. If the setback requirement remains at 250 feet from commercial forest property,we continue our position a dwelling cannot be built on this property as the width of 450 feet prohibits it. 6. Request you provide correct setback requirements and answer the questions I ask in the above last subparagraph of paragraph 2. 7. Request formal written statement by DCD stipulating minimum negotiated setback distance from commercial forest. 8. Questions or comments can be directed to(360)385-3915. Sincerely Neil T.Morgan cc: CDC Director,Bret Butler Jefferson County Board of County Commissioners files: 9 2022 Assessor's Land use Code 8800 Designated Forest, N3andy841peRd Zoning CF80 Comm Forest _-' -* 801101001 10 01 " '''`' ti 601104010 _- "" ..�-y - r Ass land Use Code_, _ 9800 Garages f �� d° ��_ !, y._— — outbuildings, 80 601104004 Other Imps, Zoning, IF 20 v \� Inholding Forest 801104005 Y \ \ \ .. 15 801104011 \t \\ Assessor's Land use Code 8300 Open Space \ Agriculture, Zoning CF80 Comm Forest Zoning, Comm Forest \ 1 la h( \ 80110dd07 601104009 "t Enclosure(1) 1 u • M n M L w . s r { i c3 -.a; �M tJ I N , -- .,,..,..„-,.:.,. -- ,- -..„.„....*,-..,,::- ., , ' r, . ----- : ,-1----.N,z14'..f.4,-.., F« .,.. r . Y t t ' .A Z y a. T n c •T ry x ( 0. w W ii...i (I) w (}7) 0o b nCD , 4 o ° r O h? JC y' O ID cn N O ( ) CD N O 0 O O MD G' ,.0. y O co O w 0- Q, 0 41 CO "-n cn -$ 0 i'' �aa ,:0 tea: IIIt)hi 7Z ; { a h i,\ 4\ , RECEIVED C-=,b vt ,> < MAY 16 2022 ''��°l �'Z I am concerned about process that the Planning Commission used during the Periodic Revi of the SC CC Shoreline Master Program: JEFFERSON COUNTY - • Planning Commission meetings were difficult to access ancVat Fea t onneemm etignS s canceled without any public notification. • Minutes for Planning Commission meetings from 10th Feb. through September 1st were not provided until October 2021 and there are no minutes for the July 7th,July 21st and the August 18th 2021 meetings.The minutes that are provided for the other meetings are sparse to the point of useless. RCW 42.30.035 requires that minutes be promptly recorded and open to public inspection.This did not happen with the Planning Commission meetings during Periodic Review of the SMP. • I understood there was a limited period in which to provide input to the Planning Commission which ended June 16th.Taylor Shellfish provided written comments to the Planning Commission and I attended the meeting online and very clearly heard DCD staff and Michelle McConnell from WDO Ecology say that Public Comment would be closed June 16th. I am disturbed that after the June 16th meeting considerable additional public comment was heard by the Planning Commission and it clearly influenced them because major parts of the aquaculture section were altered. • Audio recordings for the June 16th meeting were provided online by June 21st. For all subsequent meetings the audio recordings were not made available until at least December 29th 2021 and the September 1"audio was not uploaded until May 26th 2022.This meant that any member of the public that couldn't join the meeting as they were happening, had no way of finding out what happened at the meetings until after the significantly altered SMP was sent to Ecology for their review. This resulted in a very one sided and opaque process. • The Draft SMP as it was sent to WDO Ecology has major changes compared to the current SMP. This is outside the scope of the process as explained to the SMP Periodic Review Task Force by DCD staff David W.Johnson and also outside RCW 90.58.080(4).The changes to the aquaculture section are a major rewrite which should only happen in an SMP update not a periodic review. • In summary I am disturbed about how the Planning Commission part of the SMP Periodic Review took place and from my reading the process does not comply with the Revised Code of Washington. Posted Agenda Minutes Approved Minutes Uploaded Meeting Recording and Meeting Date Date Date Created Date May 5, 2021 October 9, 2021 October 15, 2021 June 21, 2021 May 19, 2021 October 29, 2021 October 29, 2021 June 7, 2021 June 2, 2021 October 29, 2021 October 29, 2021 June 2, 2021 June 16, 2021 October 29, 2021 October 29, 2021 June 21, 2021 July 7, 2021 No record No minutes provided December 29, 2021 July 21, 2021 No record No minutes provided No audio August 18, 2021 No record No minutes provided December 2, 2021 September 1, 2021 October 29, 2021 October 29, 2021 April 26, 2022 October 6, 2021 December 3, 2021 December 3, 2021 December 3, 2021 Jefferson County Planning Commission MEETING MINUTES Virtual Meeting(no in-person attendance allowed per Gov.Inslee's Proclamation 20-28) June 16,2021 Public Hearing REGARDING THE SHORELINE MASTER PROGRAM PERIODIC REVIEW 5:33 pm Welcome (chair) and Overview Presentation • Call to Order/Roll Call District 1, District 2 District 3 Alen:Present Sircely:Present Hull:Present Coker: Unexcused Smith: Unexcused Nilssen:Excused Koan:Present Richert:Excused Llewelyn:Present Hearing • Staff Report Presentation David Wayne Johnson,Associate Planner DCD; Lisa Grueter, BERK Public Testimony The Chair opened the floor to public comment and 2 people provided oral public testimony. 6:37 pm Adjournment • The next Planning Commission meeting is scheduled for 07/07/2021 at 5:30 pm virtually You can dial in using your phone by calling:+1 (646)749-3122;Access Code:883-126-605. PLEASE NOTE:This Hearing was recorded live.The link to the recording is: http://test.co.jefferson.wa.us/webli nkexte rnal/0/fol/2806893/Rowl.aspx These meeting minutes were ppro ed this seventh day of October ,2021. 'Rf6ri Hull,Chair Nicole Allen,PC Secretary/DCD Office Coordinator • ON U1,2 MINUTES Shoreline Master Program (SMP) Task Force Regular Meeting — October 12, 2020, 5:30 p.m. Jefferson County Courthouse—Commissioners' Chambers 1820 Jefferson Street,Port Townsend,WA MEMBERS: Arlene Alen Lorna Smith Richard Hull Cliff O'Brien Gordon King Amy Leitman Chris Kelley Brent Vadopalas David Wilkinson Craig Durgan Ron Rempel REVIEW MEETING OBJECTIVES:Lisa Grueter, Facilitator with BERK Consulting, called the meeting to order at 5:30 and called attendance. All Task Force members were present, except for Phil Andrus. Also present was Jefferson County Commissioner Greg Brotherton,and Jefferson County Department of Community Development (DCD)Associate Planner David Wayne Johnson. Julia Tesch with BERK Consulting, Inc. and Amy Summe, Shannon&Wilson supported the meeting on behalf of the consultant team. Michelle McConnell Washington Department of Ecology Regional Shoreline Planner was also present. Consultant Grueter presented the meeting objectives, which were to review and discuss scoping document for remaining changes needed to achieve consensus. MEETING MINUTES:Consultant Grueter asked for a motion to approve the minutes from the October 5,2020 meeting, as amended to correct the spelling of Arlene Alen's name. Task Force member Rempel made a motion to approve the minutes of October 5, 2020 as amended,which was seconded by Task Force member Kelley. Consultant Grueter asked if there was anyone who cannot agree with this motion. Hearing no objections, the minutes were approved by consensus. PUBLIC COMMENT:There were no public comments. RESULTS ON STORY MAP AND SURVEY:Associate Planner Johnson shared preliminary survey findings,which as of that date numbered about 83 or 84. He described comments about the permitting process for shoreline access, but the location of the commenter was unknown. SCOPING DOCUMENT PART 1:Consultant Grueter reviewed the meeting materials focusing on Attachment E the draft Scoping Document. The Task Force rules for voting stive for consensus but accept majority votes. Dissents would be noted.Each item on the Task Force List would be taken in order for discussion and votes. There were some comments on Attachment D regarding Staff Code Dockets/Interpretations as well. Task Force Scoping Item A: Conditional Use Permits and Variance Permits for Proper Level of Review. After reviewing options for scoping language in the Task Force Packet Attachment E, Task Force member Durgan expressed concerns that the Task Force is not being asked to make specific recommendations, and he did not fmd that the intention to create a scoping document was clear at the beginning of this process. Consultant Grueter noted that the Task Force Resolution and Welcome Letter identified the SMP Task Force charge and that example scoping documents from other counties were provided to the Task Force at prior meetings. Commissioner Brotherton clarified that the scoping document is to create guardrails for the actual policy changes. Task Force members as individuals will still have the opportunity to provide guidance for specific code as the process proceeds at the public hearing for the Planning Commission or the Board of County Commissioners. The Task Force is intended to give guidance to DCD staff. Ron Rempel moved to select Option 3. Amy Leitman seconded the motion. The motion passed with 10 Ayes and 1 Nay. Task Force member Durgan voted Nay due to concerns about whether there was enough citizen input in the overall SMP Periodic Review process; about the Scoping Item A itself he indicated the language was not clear enough about what would be reviewed. Scoping Item A: Review Conditional Use Permits and Variance Permits for Proper Level of Review. Option 3 —Focus on Permitting Levels, Maintain Standards:Maintain protective standards to achieve no-net-loss of shoreline ecological function,but reduce unnecessary CUPs/variances. Potentially adjust administrative versus discretionary CUPs.Examples include but are not limited to: existing single family home expansions and septic systems. Task Force Review of Future SMP Draft Language. Task Force member Durgan also expressed concern that three members of the Task Force were Planning Commission members rather than other local residents or property owners; he owns land along Chimacum Creek. Associate Planner Johnson noted that all county residents that applied were included in the Task Force; state and tribal agencies would be reached separately. Task Force member Smith who is also a Planning Commission member noted that with the prior Critical Areas Ordinance(CAO)Task Force,the Planning Commission had very little time to review reams of documents,and felt they were being pressed to review significant material with very little time. Task Force member Smith appreciates being part of this SMP Task Force so she can help provide context. The group discussed how the Task Force could be involved when there are drafts of the SMP policies and code amendments. Task Force member Rempel moved that the SMP Task Force have a meeting with a member of DCD,after DCD drafts the changes, to review those changes before it goes to the Planning Commission. Task Force member Durgan seconded the motion. The Task Force passed the motion unanimously with 11 Ayes. Task Force Scoping Item B: Mooring Buoys.The SMP Task Force discussed Item B regarding mooring. Task Force Member Durgan indicated that monitoring and enforcing seasonal versus year-round mooring could be difficult.Task Force Member King commented that tribes would likely weigh in on mooring or other activities that could interfere with fishing. Consultant Summe noted the approach to mooring buoys to avoid crowding,such as boats running into one another during storms, grounding, interactions with eelgrass are found in other SMPs; even though standards may duplicate other agencies, the County needs to show that the SMP is appropriately protective by itself. Task Force member Kelley suggested considering appropriate locations for mooring first and then identifying appropriate numbers. After reviewing options, Task Force member Hull moved to adopt Option 2 with a modification to"consider the appropriate number or density of buoys."Task Force member O'Brien seconded the motion. The motion passed with 9 Ayes and 2 Abstentions by Task Force Members Durgan and King. There were none voting Nay. Scoping Item B:Mooring Buoys. Option 2—Modified:Review permit type and standards for buoys compared to other shoreline facilities for boating. Consider where there are good locations for buoys. Review buoy standards versus anchoring, and unintended consequences of SMP regulations. Clarify permitting standards surrounding eelgrass beds,including differences between areas with eelgrass patches and full eelgrass coverage. Consider appropriate number or density of buoys. RECESS:The Task Force members recessed the meeting at 6:30 p.m. and reconvened at 6:40 p.m. SCOPING DOCUMENT PART 2:The Task Force continued discussion of items in Attachment E of the Task Force packet. Task Force Scoping Item C, Sea Level Rise. The integration of the Jefferson County Comprehensive Plan policies into the SMP was discussed as appropriate. Task Force member Wilkinson asked about Local 2020 comments to Port Townsend; Consultant Grueter noted the comments were provided to the SMP Task Force. Regarding whether to add new policies or code,Task Force member King was concerned about the lack of specificity. There was discussion about the process to amend the SMP outside the periodic review process. Task Force member Leitman described an example project that would have benefited from regulations to allow adjustments to development regulations. Task Force member Kelley suggested allowing new development to proactively address sea level change in their design and adjust,and noted it would be ideal if the County could fund a survey to mark the sea level rise boundary. Task Force member Rempel moved to approve Option 2, and Kelley seconded the motion. Seven Task Force members voted Aye to the motion. Four Task Force members voted Nay including Durgan,King O'Brien, and Vadopalas. The motion passed. Scoping Item C,Climate change and sea level rise. Option 2:Add in Comprehensive Plan climate policies like Option 1. Plus, strive for consistency with Port Townsend's SMP. Ensure that policies and permit standards do not limit projects that are proactively addressing projections in sea level rise due to climate change. Consider elevation,not just distance from the ordinary highwater mark, for shoreline permitting. Task Force Scoping Item D: Marine Trades and Economic Development. The Task Force discussed options to address marine trades. Consultant Grueter discussed what is included in marine trades per a study identified in past Task Force materials: ship and boat building/maintenance/repair, passenger ship/charter ship activities, fishing and seafood processing, marina and recreational boating, maritime education,and training. It also includes aquaculture as part of seafood.Undue burden was discussed and Consultant Grueter described that since some activities occur in water where there is habitat care should be taken to ensure no net loss of shoreline ecological function,but not put barriers beyond what's necessary. Ecology Shoreline Planner McConnell noted that in her research of other counties there have not been no known shoreline permits for new marine trade activities. Task Force Member Smith indicated support for marine trades and also a concern that encouraging marine trades should not exclude public from the shoreline. Craig Durgan made a motion to approve Option 1. Christopher Kelley seconded the motion. There were 8 Ayes and 3 Nays, including SMP Task Force members Rempel, Smith, and Wilkinson. Scoping Item D,Marine trades and economic development. Option 1: Ensure SMP permitting process does not unduly burden marine trades. Task Force Scoping Item E. Boat Launches. Consultant Grueter reviewed options. Task Force member Rempel moved to use Option 1. Cliff O'Brien seconded.The motion passed with 9 Ayes and 2 Nays including Task Force Members Durgan and Kelley. Scoping Item E,Boat Launches. Option 1 —Original: Encourage development of new public boat launches and improvement of existing boat launches in SMP. Task Force Scoping Item F Shorelines of Statewide Significance. The Task Force discussed the broad nature of the scoping item. Consultant Grueter indicated the main idea is for consistency with the Shoreline Management Act principles, and if there's a finding of inconsistency then there would be a proposal for amendments. Associate Planner Johnson indicated that this task might also help clarify the Shorelines of Statewide Significance better.Task Force Member King indicated that without the specifics, he was uncomfortable supporting this. Task Force Member Kelley moved to accept Item F and Task Force Member Rempel seconded.The motion passed with 9 Ayes and 2 Nays including Task Force Members Durgan and Kelley. Scoping Item F Shorelines of Statewide Significance. Review how Shoreline Management Act purposes are carried out with use allowances and permitting. Task Force Scoping Item G Priority Aquatic Environment. Consultant Grueter noted this item was to identify an area for review between Priority Aquatic and Aquatic Environments. Task Force Member King indicated that it's unclear if changes will be more conservative or more liberal; all this does is tell the Planning Commission to change however they feel. Task Force Member Kelley indicated he thought this Scoping Item was not necessary since questions about this topic were answered in prior meetings, e.g. Industrial Piers and Utility Pipelines. Task Force member Kelley moved to discard Item G which was seconded by Task Force member Vadopalas seconded.The Task Force voted unanimously to discard this item. Scoping Item G.Priority Aquatic Environment. Review allowed activities given purpose of environment. Review in relation to Aquatic Environment. Meeting Extension. Consultant Grueter noted it was close to the end time of 7:30 and asked for a motion to extend the meeting for 20 minutes to finish this evening, or another meeting could be scheduled.Task Force member King moved to extend the meeting by 20 minutes, which was seconded by Task Force member Rempel. The meeting was extended with unanimous approval. Task Force Scoping Item H,Aquaculture. Consultant Grueter reviewed the item to review net pen policies and indicated that the state was still working on guidance. Task Force member Smith moved to delay consideration until there is state guidance,and Rempel seconded.The motion carried with 10 Ayes and 1 Nay by Task Force member Durgan. Scoping Item H,Aquaculture: Review net pen policies to expand County capacity for aquaculture. Task Force Scoping Item I, Consistency in the CAO and SMP regarding existing landscaping and noxious weeds.Consultant Grueter indicated this item was proposed by Task Force member Rempel to align CAO and SMP provisions on landscaping and noxious weeks. Rempel moved to include in the scoping document. There were no seconds. Durgan moved to table the motion, and Rempel objected.No others objected to tabling the Scoping Item. Item#35,Attachment D Shoreline Master Program Docket/Code Interpretations. Consultant Grueter described Item#35 in Attachment D, and the email from Task Force member Ron Rempel in the packet. Attachment D includes an item about a planting plan and references the need to refer to Habitat Management Plans. Task Force member Rempel is concerned about the cost of such plans. Task Force member Leitman indicated such plans are much less costly if the changes proposed to the shoreline are minor or specific standards are included in the SMP. Task Force member Durgan moved to table. No one provided a second.Task Force member Rempel moved to accept the change to Item 35 on the staff list, and Task Force member Smith seconded.The motion passed with 6 Ayes, 2 Abstentions by Vadopalas and King, and 3 Nays by Durgan,Leitman, and O'Brien. Item#35 Staff Docket/Code Interpretations.Define what is needed in a "planting plan" in subsections 18.25.660(8) &(9).Clarify planting plan related to other SMP standards and definitions with attention to regulatory reform to address implementation needs and avoid unnecessary paperwork and expense. Commissioner Brotherton especially thanked the SMP Task Force for spending their evenings in the Task Force meetings, and their work on the SMP Scoping Document and encouraged them to stay involved. Consultant Grueter extended her appreciation for Task Force members and the great amount of material reviewed over the four meetings. Consultant Grueter adjourned the meeting at approximately 7:42 p.m. Respectfully submitted by: David Wayne Johnson, DCD Date jeffbocc From: Sierra Club <reply@emails.sierraclub.org> Sent: Tuesday, May 17, 2022 8:22 AM To: jeffbocc Subject: Donate your 4ait.,cat 121, or 143 to the Sierra Club Foundation ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. SIERRA tl EQ LIVE WELL, DO GOOD Put It in The Rearview. Donate Your Vehicle. GIVE TODAY �a i to Dear John, Do you have a car, truck, trailer, boat, or motorcycle that you barely use or is not as reliable as it used to be? Donating that vehicle you aren't using will not only clear out space in your garage or on your block, but will also help support our work empowering people to safeguard the health of our communities, protect our natural resources and wildlife habitats, and advocate for a just, clean energy future. i How it works: 1. Fill out the form at sierraclubfoundation.careasy.org or call us at 855- 337-4377. 2. Our partners at CARS will handle the rest—including picking up your vehicle from any location, no matter its condition, and at no cost to you. 3. Receive a donation receipt at the time of pickup for a possible tax deduction. Whether it's running or not, CARS accepts your truck, trailer, boat, motorcycle, or other vehicle. Plus, you'll get a free pick-up! Together, we can build a future we all want to share. Donate your vehicle today and help pave the way for a better world for all. Get Started Today, Thank you, Sierra Club Foundation This email was sent to: jeffbocc@co.jefferson.wa.us This email was sent by the Sierra Club 2101 Webster St., Suite 1300, Oakland, CA 94612 Unsubscribe I Manage Preferences I View as web page 2 jeffbocc From: vikis <vikis@ecopraxis.org> Sent: Tuesday, May 17, 2022 8:36 AM To: Planning Commission Desk;jeffbocc Subject: In Support of Temporary Housing Ordinance Revisions Attachments: Ordinance Support email 5.17.pdf ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. May 17, 2022 Dear Planning Commission and County Commissioners, Over the past year, the Jefferson County Department of Community Development planning staff has drafted revisions to the ordinance governing temporary housing facilities in the county. The Planning Commission has reviewed the drafts and made recommendations to Department staff. This ordinance is now in its final form. It reflects hundreds of hours of staff time, your participation and the input from a wide range of concerned citizens. This well written and humane permanent ordinance gives us the framework for providing temporary, safe, supported and professionally managed housing for our county's unsheltered. Although temporary shelter is not the whole answer to our county's housing woes, it is an essential part of the solution. People experiencing homelessness need a safe, supportive environment to regain their sense of well being in order to focus on obtaining permanent housing. This ordinance creates the structure for this to happen. We, the 38 undersigned, urge the Planning Commission to recommend to the Commissioners that they adopt the permanent ordinance in its entirety as presented by the Department of Community Development. Sincerely, Judith Alexander, Port Townsend, District 1, volunteer for Housing Solutions Network, and the Community Build: 'Having been directly involved in the creation of two of the villages that provide temporary supportive housing for otherwise shelterless folks, this ordinance does a lot to make such housing access available to more people for longer periods of time, all of which make the community investment of greater value." David Berrian, Port Townsend, District 1, "The Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance provides a way forward to developing meaningful action in assisting our neighbors who are experiencing homelessness. Having this community agreement will help us go beyond good intentions and will help expand opportunities for building concrete facilities, infrastructure, and services that can alleviate the suffering that homelessness brings to our entire community." 1 jeffbocc From: Janet Johnson <johnsonjanet55@yahoo.com> Sent: Tuesday, May 17, 2022 9:33 AM To: jeffbocc Subject: No shooting area workshop ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. First, let me apologize for this late submission. I just noticed this morning that the cut off date was yesterday afternoon. I hope to still have my comments on record.. I am all in favor for the county to institute a No Shooting Area for the Gardiner Lagoon and beach. This area has become increasingly more dangerous over the years. It is unsafe to walk my dog down Gardiner Beach Road during hunting season. I have, in the past, been shot at by a hunter (he didn't see me walking my dog on the beach). Even some of my hunter friends that are also neighbors have told me that it's crazy for anyone to hunt that lagoon area due to the close proximity of houses, people and domestic animals. Also the hunters have left trash which the neighborhood has cleaned up on private property. I hope that the Commissioners will proceed with the No Shooting area which is heavily supported by the community and neighbors. Much thanks, Janet Johnson 641 Bachelor Road Gardiner, WA 98382 360-643-0815 i Elizabeth Revord, Port Townsend, District 1, Housing Solutions Network- Network Weaver, "I support this ordinance in response to the growing housing crisis in Jefferson County. There is an immediate need to address and protect transitional and temporary housing services, in a humane and inclusive manor, and this ordinance is a step in the right direction." Karen Richards, Port Townsend, District 1, community volunteer, "A county needs to serve all its members. This ordinance is an essential piece of the whole picture of how that happens for those currently experiencing homelessness." Eliana Rose, Port Townsend, District 1, Volunteer/Comfort Care LMT Home Health and Hospice, "This EMERGENCY ordinance will, combined with other funded measures which will hopefully be enacted within the county in the coming months, help provide transitional support for citizens of our county who themselves have and will in future provide critical services in areas such as home health care, a growing need in our county." Bruce and Marge Samuelson, District 3, "We support passage of the Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance." Kate Schinhofen, Port Townsend, District 1, "This ordinance reflects hundreds of hours of staff time, your participation and the input from a wide range of concerned citizens. This well written and humane permanent ordinance gives us the framework for providing temporary, safe, supported and professionally managed housing for our county's unsheltered. Please help our county shelter transition its homeless population with these houses into permanent stable housing. Thanks for providing for healthy living spaces for our population." Viki Sonntag, Port Townsend, District 1, Housing Solutions Network member, "This ordinance represents an important milestone in creating Housing and Community for All in Jefferson County." Debbi Steele, Port Townsend, District 1, Community Build Leadership Team member Sandra Stowell, Port Townsend, District 1, "I am a Port Townsend resident who supports the Jefferson County the Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance. I am very much in favor of this ordinance, which will allow organizations to better assist those in need of temporary shelter." Caroline K. Wildflower, Port Townsend, District 1, member, RoseWind Cohousing Community & Port Townsend Friends Meeting (Quaker), "Between 1989 and 1998, I worked as a Housing Advocate in Seattle and in Snohomish County, creating housing and assisting homeless clients to access this housing. I attest that temporary, safe, supported and professionally managed housing works well to provide homes for homeless people and assist them toward permanent housing. This ordinance will go a long way toward stemming our housing crisis in Jefferson County." Page 4 of 4 Rebecca Kimball ARNP, Port Townsend, District 1, "This ordinance provides a proven path to permanent housing, employment, and the restoration of dignity for many in our community" Mary and Allan Kollar, East Quilcene Road, District 3, "The need for affordable housing is critical for our entire section of the peninsula. It is a disgrace that even our school teachers cannot readily find affordable housing within the neighborhoods of their schools." Annalee McConnell, Port Townsend, District 1, Community Build volunteer, "This ordinance will go a long way toward providing better transitional housing while respecting neighborhood concerns. It appears that most of the opposition is based on misinformation about its content and impact, just as early opposition to Pat's Place came primarily from the mistaken impression that it would be an unsupervised tent encampment." Margaret D. McGee, Port Townsend, District #1, "I want to live in a community that takes care of its vulnerable unsheltered people and safely supports their transition to permanent housing. This ordinance helps make that goal a reality." Barbara Morey, Port Townsend, District 1, Housing Advocate, Affordable Housing Action Group, Housing Solutions Network (Tiny Houses, Zoning Housing Action Teams), 'I urge the Planning Commission and the BOCC to adopt this ordinance as developed and proposed by a coalition of organizations and advocates in the community. Rather than having unsanctioned and unregulated tent encampments scattered throughout our parks and woodlands, the ordinance offers an effective and structured response to addressing the housing crisis by permitting supported temporary housing facilities on land owned/managed by religious organizations and non-profits organizations on their property or that owned by the city or county." Joan Murphy, Port Ludlow, District 3, "I regularly donate to Bayside Housing and Services, The Tiny Homes Project, and The Housing Solutions Network. "I wholeheartedly support passing the Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance. Peter's Place has been a great success, as we can reasonably expect Pat's Place to be. This ordinance is an important step toward ensuring that every citizen has access to safe and supportive housing. Who are we as individuals and as a community if we are not concerned with offering humane support for those who are struggling?" Heather Dudley-Nollette, Port Townsend, District 1, Bayside Housing & Services, "This ordinance serves as a model for how rural communities can lead the way, ensuring that every citizen has access to safe and supportive housing." Libby Palmer, Port Townsend, District 1, "Providing Providing temporary, safe, supported housing for Jefferson County's unsheltered persons is finally within reach. I urge the Planning Commission to recommend to the Commissioners the adoption of this permanent ordinance in its entirety." Noreen Parks, Port Townsend, District 2. "The need to responsibly address the increasing need for providing shelter options for homeless individuals in our county has become ever more pressing. I support the well-considered, humane, and detailed ordinance that is currently on the table and urge the county commissioners to pass it in a timely manner." Page 3 of 4 Lauren Ehnebuske, Port Townsend, District 1, design and construction professional, "It is important to update codes as local conditions and priorities shift. These proposed changes help us respond more efficiently and with more dignity to pressing needs in our community." Suzy Elbow, Port Townsend, District 1 John and Donna Fabian, Shine Road, District 3, Regent Emeritus, Washington State University, former Chair of Jefferson County Democrats, Democratic Precinct Committee Officer. "[We cast [our] support to Bayside Housing and tiny villages. Quality of life begins with a roof and four walls. Every other human material need is secondary. I hope the Planning Commission will take action to help make Jefferson County a welcoming home to all of its citizens." Judith-Kate Friedman, Port Townsend, District 1, Working artist, business owner and non-profit director, "We all benefit when everyone has a safe place to live. This ordinance represents a foundational step in solving housing needs for those in greatest need in our City and County. I urge your support. Participating organizations and the dozens of individuals who have so far created and contributed to the creation of the tiny house villages have brought us to the beginning of a county-wide sea change. Raising awareness and housing people. Let's keep it going." Justine Gonzalez-Berg, Port Hadlock, District 2, Housing Solutions Network Director and Olympic Housing Trust board member, "I support this ordinance as a significant improvement in how we respond to the growing need for safe, effective transitional and temporary housing services in Jefferson County." Lawrence Jensen, Port Ludlow, District 3, Jefferson County Immigrant Rights Advocates, "This ordinance is needed to allow some relief for those without permanent housing. We have a responsibility to help our neighbors in this situation." Carol McCreary, Port Townsend, District 1, Housing Solutions Network volunteer. "Building on the shared achievements of county officials, social service professionals, and citizen volunteers, this ordinance offers a sound humanitarian response plan for continuing and future emergencies." Rita Marie Kepner, Ph.D, Nordland, District 2, I am in favor of going ahead with the ordinance to help the unsheltered. We all need RESPECT -- even and especially anyone who has fallen on hard times." Ken, I fully and wholeheartedly support legislation to make THS a permanent part of Jefferson County's housing solution. Everyone deserves a roof over their heads and a place to call home, even if on a temporary basis. I lived in a 96 square foot tiny house by choice for 8 years in downtown St. Augustine, FL 40 years ago." K. Austin Kerr, Port Ludlow, District 3, Professor Emeritus of History, Ohio State University, "I know or know of homeless local citizens who deserve help from the community for providing safe even if temporary housing." Page 2 of 4 May 17, 2022 Dear Planning Commission and County Commissioners, Over the past year, the Jefferson County Department of Community Development planning staff has drafted revisions to the ordinance governing temporary housing facilities in the county. The Planning Commission has reviewed the drafts and made recommendations to Department staff. This ordinance is now in its final form. It reflects hundreds of hours of staff time, your participation and the input from a wide range of concerned citizens. This well written and humane permanent ordinance gives us the framework for providing temporary, safe, supported and professionally managed housing for our county's unsheltered. Although temporary shelter is not the whole answer to our county's housing woes, it is an essential part of the solution. People experiencing homelessness need a safe, supportive environment to regain their sense of well being in order to focus on obtaining permanent housing. This ordinance creates the structure for this to happen. We, the 38 undersigned, urge the Planning Commission to recommend to the Commissioners that they adopt the permanent ordinance in its entirety as presented by the Department of Community Development. Sincerely, Judith Alexander, Port Townsend, District 1, volunteer for Housing Solutions Network, and the Community Build: 'Having been directly involved in the creation of two of the villages that provide temporary supportive housing for otherwise shelterless folks, this ordinance does a lot to make such housing access available to more people for longer periods of time, all of which make the community investment of greater value." David Berrian, Port Townsend, District 1, "The Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance provides a way forward to developing meaningful action in assisting our neighbors who are experiencing homelessness. Having this community agreement will help us go beyond good intentions and will help expand opportunities for building concrete facilities, infrastructure, and services that can alleviate the suffering that homelessness brings to our entire community." Peter Bonyun, Port Townsend, District 1, Community Build volunteer Arnie Burdick, Port Townsend, District 1 Diane Cox, Port Townsend, District 1, I support the commissions voting in favor of the temporary housing facilities ordinance. It's important that our town address the situation of its homeless residents." Amy Rose Dubin, Chimacum, District 2 , "Stable affordable housing is a benefit for the whole community." Page 1 of 4 themselves have and will in future provide critical services in areas such as home health care, a growing need in our county." Bruce and Marge Samuelson, District 3, "We support passage of the Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance." Kate Schinhofen, Port Townsend, District 1, "This ordinance reflects hundreds of hours of staff time, your participation and the input from a wide range of concerned citizens. This well written and humane permanent ordinance gives us the framework for providing temporary, safe, supported and professionally managed housing for our county's unsheltered. Please help our county shelter transition its homeless population with these houses into permanent stable housing. Thanks for providing for healthy living spaces for our population." Viki Sonntag, Port Townsend, District 1, Housing Solutions Network member, "This ordinance represents an important milestone in creating Housing and Community for All in Jefferson County." Debbi Steele, Port Townsend, District 1, Community Build Leadership Team member Sandra Stowell, Port Townsend, District 1, "I am a Port Townsend resident who supports the Jefferson County the Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance. I am very much in favor of this ordinance, which will allow organizations to better assist those in need of temporary shelter." Caroline K. Wildflower, Port Townsend, District 1, member, RoseWind Cohousing Community & Port Townsend Friends Meeting (Quaker), "Between 1989 and 1998, I worked as a Housing Advocate in Seattle and in Snohomish County, creating housing and assisting homeless clients to access this housing. I attest that temporary, safe, supported and professionally managed housing works well to provide homes for homeless people and assist them toward permanent housing. This ordinance will go a long way toward stemming our housing crisis in Jefferson County." email attached as pdf file 4 Mary and Allan Kollar, East Quilcene Road, District 3, "The need for affordable housing is critical for our entire section of the peninsula. It is a disgrace that even our school teachers cannot readily find affordable housing within the neighborhoods of their schools." Annalee McConnell, Port Townsend, District 1, Community Build volunteer, "This ordinance will go a long way toward providing better transitional housing while respecting neighborhood concerns. It appears that most of the opposition is based on misinformation about its content and impact, just as early opposition to Pat's Place came primarily from the mistaken impression that it would be an unsupervised tent encampment." Margaret D. McGee, Port Townsend, District #1, "I want to live in a community that takes care of its vulnerable unsheltered people and safely supports their transition to permanent housing. This ordinance helps make that goal a reality." Barbara Morey, Port Townsend, District 1, Housing Advocate, Affordable Housing Action Group, Housing Solutions Network (Tiny Houses, Zoning Housing Action Teams), 'I urge the Planning Commission and the BOCC to adopt this ordinance as developed and proposed by a coalition of organizations and advocates in the community. Rather than having unsanctioned and unregulated tent encampments scattered throughout our parks and woodlands, the ordinance offers an effective and structured response to addressing the housing crisis by permitting supported temporary housing facilities on land owned/managed by religious organizations and non-profits organizations on their property or that owned by the city or county." Joan Murphy, Port Ludlow, District 3, I regularly donate to Bayside Housing and Services, The Tiny Homes Project, and The Housing Solutions Network. "I wholeheartedly support passing the Temporary Housing Facilities Ordinance. Peter's Place has been a great success, as we can reasonably expect Pat's Place to be. This ordinance is an important step toward ensuring that every citizen has access to safe and supportive housing. Who are we as individuals and as a community if we are not concerned with offering humane support for those who are struggling?" Heather Dudley-Nollette, Port Townsend, District 1, Bayside Housing & Services, "This ordinance serves as a model for how rural communities can lead the way, ensuring that every citizen has access to safe and supportive housing." Libby Palmer, Port Townsend, District 1, "Providing temporary, safe, supported housing for Jefferson County's unsheltered persons is finally within reach. I urge the Planning Commission to recommend to the Commissioners the adoption of this permanent ordinance in its entirety." Noreen Parks, Port Townsend, District 2. "The need to responsibly address the increasing need for providing shelter options for homeless individuals in our county has become ever more pressing. I support the well-considered, humane, and detailed ordinance that is currently on the table and urge the county commissioners to pass it in a timely manner." Elizabeth Revord, Port Townsend, District 1, Housing Solutions Network- Network Weaver, "I support this ordinance in response to the growing housing crisis in Jefferson County. There is an immediate need to address and protect transitional and temporary housing services, in a humane and inclusive manor, and this ordinance is a step in the right direction." Karen Richards, Port Townsend, District 1, community volunteer, "A county needs to serve all its members. This ordinance is an essential piece of the whole picture of how that happens for those currently experiencing homelessness." Eliana Rose, Port Townsend, District 1, Volunteer/Comfort Care LMT Home Health and Hospice, "This EMERGENCY ordinance will, combined with other funded measures which will hopefully be enacted within the county in the coming months, help provide transitional support for citizens of our county who 3 Peter Bonyun, Port Townsend, District 1, Community Build volunteer Arnie Burdick, Port Townsend, District 1 Diane Cox, Port Townsend, District 1, "I support the commissions voting in favor of the temporary housing facilities ordinance. It's important that our town address the situation of its homeless residents." Amy Rose Dubin, Chimacum, District 2 , "Stable affordable housing is a benefit for the whole community." Lauren Ehnebuske, Port Townsend, District 1, design and construction professional, "It is important to update codes as local conditions and priorities shift. These proposed changes help us respond more efficiently and with more dignity to pressing needs in our community." Suzy Elbow, Port Townsend, District 1 John and Donna Fabian, Shine Road, District 3, Regent Emeritus, Washington State University, former Chair of Jefferson County Democrats, Democratic Precinct Committee Officer. "[We cast [our] support to Bayside Housing and tiny villages. Quality of life begins with a roof and four walls. Every other human material need is secondary. I hope the Planning Commission will take action to help make Jefferson County a welcoming home to all of its citizens." Judith-Kate Friedman, Port Townsend, District 1, Working artist, business owner and non-profit director, "We all benefit when everyone has a safe place to live. This ordinance represents a foundational step in solving housing needs for those in greatest need in our City and County. I urge your support. Participating organizations and the dozens of individuals who have so far created and contributed to the creation of the tiny house villages have brought us to the beginning of a county-wide sea change. Raising awareness and housing people. Let's keep it going." Justine Gonzalez-Berg, Port Hadlock, District 2, Housing Solutions Network Director and Olympic Housing Trust board member, "I support this ordinance as a significant improvement in how we respond to the growing need for safe, effective transitional and temporary housing services in Jefferson County." Lawrence Jensen, Port Ludlow, District 3, Jefferson County Immigrant Rights Advocates, "This ordinance is needed to allow some relief for those without permanent housing. We have a responsibility to help our neighbors in this situation." Carol McCreary, Port Townsend, District 1, Housing Solutions Network volunteer. "Building on the shared achievements of county officials, social service professionals, and citizen volunteers, this ordinance offers a sound humanitarian response plan for continuing and future emergencies." Rita Marie Kepner, Ph.D, Nordland, District 2, "I am in favor of going ahead with the ordinance to help the unsheltered. We all need RESPECT -- even and especially anyone who has fallen on hard times." Ken, "I fully and wholeheartedly support legislation to make THS a permanent part of Jefferson County's housing solution. Everyone deserves a roof over their heads and a place to call home, even if on a temporary basis. I lived in a 96 square foot tiny house by choice for 8 years in downtown St. Augustine, FL 40 years ago." K. Austin Kerr, Port Ludlow, District 3, Professor Emeritus of History, Ohio State University, "I know or know of homeless local citizens who deserve help from the community for providing safe even if temporary housing." Rebecca Kimball ARNP, Port Townsend, District 1, "This ordinance provides a proven path to permanent housing, employment, and the restoration of dignity for many in our community" 2 jeffbocc From: Annalisa Barelli <annalisabarelli@gmail.com> Sent: Tuesday, May 17, 2022 10:27 AM To: jeffbocc Subject: Traffic Revision Urgently Needed:Appropriate Speed Limit for Hastings Avenue West& Surrounding ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Hello, I am writing today for concern for my neighborhood: Hastings Avenue West. In my own opinion and experience as well as many neighbors,we am very concerned about the speed. In this region I have witnessed accidents and near accidents, run ins with wildlife and neighbors pets.The first thing my family did upon purchasing our home in 202o was build a safe gate and fence but the speed is such that even turning into my driveway or going to get my mail feels very unsafe. In my short time taking residence just outside city limits I have been shocked by the lack of concern for these outlying neighborhoods.With the housing situation what it is in city,these outlying neighborhoods are filling with greater population. I have called the police for being run off the road for speeding trucks and assisted in support for vehicles in ditches. With the new housing development underway off Cook,cement trucks and large work vehicles towing tractors fly by at 5o+ mph often with debris flying from their trucks. It's unnerving and unnecessary. For the many who commute by bike or walk it us incredibly unsafe. It seems to me the entire outlying roads; Hastings, Cape George, Discovery, Four Corners, need serious consideration for revision, lowering the speeds as well as an increased monitoring of speeds. Ignoring this concern will put many at risk for injury or death. I recently witnessed three horseback riders run off the road and I have seen many bicyclists in a similar situation in the last two years. Please advise on what can be done to address this issue. If I need to start a petition and get my community and neighbors to sign, I will. This needs to be addressed sooner than later.As tourism to the region continues to pick up, and as more families move to outlying areas,the issue will only grow.Thank you for your time and I look forward to witnessing the local government support into quickly address this growing issue. Annalisa Barelli 3545 Hastings Ave W. Port Townsend WA 98368 36o-821-8897 1 jeffbocc From: J Ball <gnarleydogfarm@gmail.com> Sent: Tuesday, May 17, 2022 10:05 PM To: jeffbocc Subject: Legacy forest/older forest harvest ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Good evening commissioners and staff, Thank you for the presentation yesterday. It answers some questions and raises far more but the conversation is very important and I'm grateful to live in a county were our leaders agree and are willing to pursue difficult answers. There were many things said on which I would like to express an opinion but one thing in particular is just chewing me up so I'm going to let it out now. It has been said that trees grow, which is undoubtedly true,and if they are harvested that they will regenerate.This sounds like a reasonable assumption on its face, right? The simple fact is that giant trees which stand nearly 200' tall with girths around 4'which have grown over the course of 80-150 or more years will NEVER be allowed to regrow once they are cut on any land managed by DNR. The problem with this claim is that DNR has adopted a practice of harvesting trees long before they ever have a chance to attain such mammoth sizes.Trees are commonly harvested at under 50 years old and frequently at 30 years old. I think it is important to base our decisions on facts so I encourage you to determine if what I have just pointed out is an accurate statement. If it is not, I would very much like to know. Kind regards,Jean 1 Julie Shannon From: Greg Brotherton Sent: Tuesday, May 17, 2022 9:30 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: OCH Community Briefing May 17, 2022 From: Olympic Community of Health Sent: Tuesday, May 17, 2022 9:27:56 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Greg Brotherton Subject: OCH Community Briefing I May 17, 2022 ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. -n N) of ° -"ci i lily i N' plbPitiuliirdli�h1pgw 9149P �9 MEEKLY C �d' i� BRIEFINGpppa as Stronger Together: Foster a region of healthy people, thriving communities May 17, 2022 Monthly deep dive: Together, recovery is possible (substance use disorder) Stigma of substance use disorder(SUD) is a health challenge that requires a collaborative and innovative regional response. OCH recently compiled regional findings on the presence of SUD stigma into a presentation that was made available to groups across the Olympic region. To date, OCH has completed 16 presentations with local groups across Clallam, Jefferson, and Kitsap counties and has engaged with over 365 individuals. One group shared, "People came away more aware and equipped to be the safe open people our community needs to move us toward less stigma."Below are some of the many community commitments that have come out of these discussions. Interested in hosting OCH to learn more about stigma? Email och@olympicch.org to learn more. i person , "Use person first language, remove stigmatizing language in all my data analyses." Learning about h'personal "ibtas "Be aware of my own bias." Talking to acolleague,�h71IIINl fa m i Iya'and/or 1 friend Y I III !� III^}I y� (I�.:H about stilt III " 61pI�1 l T b illlll "Speak out and challenge stigma in the workplace. Pursue a trauma informed care training " Coordinate a training with my team in trauma informed care and mental health first aid." Practice kindness in "I am personally working on 'assuming positive intent'in all my daily interactions with interactions-and will include an awareness of personal bias to this others work." Partner Spotlight The Makah Tribe's Village of Hope The Makah Tribe, located in Neah Bay, is creatively tackling homelessness. They have named their tiny-home neighborhood "The Village of Hope" and have great plans and visions for the land moving forward. Read more about the Makah Village of Hope here. ' i � Y�q Iil�ill'(I�q iiIIIIhIIII�IIUq'� p1Q���'il'I'Iq ry iIIi�a t � IIiIII -c n �r3"II���IP r �I�Ilil�llllllll''I,� II r� d�l�: VILLAGE OF a. 0 .. ,. v 9, Idl p .. Makah'.4Tribe ^. a. OCH Board officer elections Annual elections for the officers for the OCH Board of Directors will take place at the June 13 Board meeting. If you are interested in contributing at the Executive Committee level, please contact Celeste Schoenthaler. Officers include President, Vice President, Treasurer, and Secretary. Officers must be current OCH Board members and each term is one year. This is an exciting opportunity to get more deeply engaged with the governance and strategic direction of OCH. OCH funding opportunities Olympic youth addressing SUD stigma 2 OCH is excited to announce a funding opportunity for youth-led projects that meaningfully address and reduce the stigma of substance use disorder in the Olympic region. Learn more about this funding opportunity by reviewing the request for proposals (RFP) and budget template, due to och@olympicch.org by May 22. Applicants are encouraged to connect with youth coalitions, youth-serving organizations, and other youth groups throughout the region to identify youth-led projects that will address SUD stigma. Project ideas include education campaigns, recovery celebration events, and more. Questions can be sent to och@olympicch.org. FUN:."40 -OR � a ' OLYMPIC YOUTH ADDRESSING SUBSTANCE USE DISORDER STIGMA OLYMPICCH.ORG/YOUTH—STIGMA DEADLINE MAY 22 Care coordination agencies OCH recently announced a funding opportunity to identify Care Coordination Agencies (CCAs)throughout the Olympic region. At this time, care coordination activities will be focused on community members in need of supports while in isolation or quarantine for COVID-19. OCH expects the program to expand to other health supports in 2023. Eligibility for this opportunity includes community-based organizations, Federally Qualified Health Centers, local public health jurisdictions, Tribal nations, and other organizations or agencies with presence in the three-county region of Clallam, Jefferson, and Kitsap counties. Learn more about this funding opportunity by reviewing the Care Coordination Agency request for proposals (RFP)webpaqe which contains links for all associated materials. Applications are due by May 22. Opportunities & Resources Help keep Washington's healthcare industry on the leading edge. Be a Sentinel! The Spring 2022 Washington Health Workforce Sentinel Network IS OPEN NOW, providing you and your organization a unique opportunity to make your workforce needs known to policymakers, planners, and educators. As a key health workforce partner, you are being asked to share your health workforce needs via the link below. This will take approximately 20 minutes, depending upon the size and complexity of your organization. Learn more here. Equity Conversation with Erin Jones Join Kitsap Strong on May 24th from 1:00-2:30 for the second equity conversation with Erin Jones (recording of the first session can be accessed here). This session will focus on understanding the community you serve or want to serve (who are you serving well, not well, not at all?); participants will unpack the broader narratives at play in the United States regarding how BIPOC communities experience systems and practices; participants will identify the particular communities they are serving locally; participants will discuss strategies that could be used to more effectively connect to communities with whom they are struggling to connect. Register here. 3 Mark your calendar Upcoming OCH events • Board of Directors I Jun 13, 1-3p Add to calendar • Olympic Action Collaboratives (contact OCH@olympicch.org for calendar invite) o Access to the full spectrum of care May 18, 1-2:30p I Port Gamble S'Klallam Wellness Center, Room 212 o Individual needs are met timely, easily, and compassionately Jun 8, 1-2:30p (Port Gamble S'Klallam Wellness Center, Room 212 o Together, recovery is possible Jun 14, 1-2:30p I North Olympic Healthcare Network o Everyone housed Apr-May Members will be asked to schedule 1:1 meetings with OCH Follow us on social media! Have you connected with us on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and Linkedln? If not, be sure to follow us to stay up to date on all things OCH. Oin ©If 0 In partnership, Olympic ." COMMUNITYof°HEALTH Together,we acknowledge,with humility,the indigenous peoples whose presence permeates the waterways,shorelines,valleys,and mountains of the Olympic region.The land where we are is the territory of the Coast Salish Peoples,in particular the Chimacum,Hoh,Makah,S'Klallam,Suquamish,and Quileute tribes on whose sacred land we live,work,and play.Click here to learn more about the Indigenous land where you are. Was this email forwarded to you? Subscribe ere! Olympic Community of Health,41 Colwell St, Port Hadlock,Washington 98339, United States, 3606336298 4 Julie Shannon From: Kate Dean Sent: Tuesday, May 17, 2022 9:56 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: OCNMS April / May 2022 Newsletter From: Chris Butler-Minor - NOAA Affiliate Sent: Tuesday, May 17, 2022 9:53:38 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) Subject: OCNMS April / May 2022 Newsletter ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Office of National Marine Sanctuaries %leMTh National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary Newsletter April - May 2022 i )11 ti m ��u� , w L ,. IIIIx Get Involved! Upcoming events and meetings • May 20 Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary Advisory Council Virtual Meeting(10:00 am— 1:00 pm PST) Join meeting from your computer, tablet, or smartphone: https://global.gotomeetinq.com/join/934726957 • May 21 MATE Olympic Coast Regional ROV(Remotely Operated Vehicle) Competition [Details here]. • June -July Junior Oceanographer youth summer camps with Feiro Marine Life Center and Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary[Details here] • July 15-17 Quileute Days [Details here] • July 17 Get Into Your Sanctuary(NOTE date and time change from previous posting) Sanctuary takeover guided tidepool walk at Olympic National Park Kalaloch, meet at Beach 4 trailhead on Sunday at 9am • July 18-20 Summer Institute for Climate Change Education [Details here] • July 22 Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary anniversary! • July 22 Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary Advisory Council Hybrid Meeting (10:00 am— 1:00 pm PST) Quileute Tribal Center-Westwing 90 Main St, La Push, WA 98350; Join the meeting in person or from your computer, tablet, or smartphone: https://global.gotomeeting.com/ioin/934726957 • August 5-7 Superhero Music Fest Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary will join (superhero)forces with organizers of Superhero Music Fest in Ocean Shores, WA to 2 feature NOAA's Ocean Heroes- National Marine Sanctuaries! The three-day event will offer fun, family-friendly activities such as a street fair, kid-zone games and attractions, and a live music concert. Dress up like your favorite superhero or make your own NOAA Ocean Hero costume with us! On Sunday, August 7,join us in a Superhero Beach Cleanup. [Details here] • August 26-28 Makah Days [Details here] Sanctuary News and Activities Olympic Coast Ocean Acidification Sentinel Site Symposium AllO The Olympic Coast Ocean Acidification Sentinel Site (OASeS) hosted ' • a hybrid symposium in Ocean Shores, WA. This meeting brought together the OASeS Steering Committee, federal and state agencies, tribal governments, resource managers, scientists, and interested public focused on changing ocean conditions on the Olympic Coast. Nearly 100 people attended, either in person or online from Washington, Oregon, Connecticut, Washington DC, and Slovenia! The ��'� _ ���^��� purpose of the meeting was to share information, generate solutions, r �'�� and address work plan actions related to policy, management, science, education, and outreach needs of the region regarding changing ocean conditions. We heard directly from tribal members regarding their concerns and observations related to ocean acidification (OA) and changing ocean conditions, policy priorities from the national and state perspectives, emergent research results, and education and outreach efforts related to OA. The Steering Committee met on the final day of the symposium to reflect on lessons learned for future symposia, suggested changes to our membership and work plan, and how to better collaborate with other OA- related entities Join our team as the 2022-2023 AmeriCorps Education and Stewardship Specialist! Applications are being accepted for the 2022-2023 Washington Service Corps AmeriCorps with Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary. The 10.5 month service term position will support education and outreach for Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary, including planning, implementing and evaluating K-12 ocean science education programs based on Ocean Literacy Principles and best practices for NOAA B-WET"meaningful watershed educational experiences". The AmeriCorps member will also assist sanctuary staff, in partnership with Washington CoastSavers, to plan and coordinate beach cleanups. Additionally, the AmeriCorps will conduct public outreach with local service and interest groups and at prioritized community events such as Dungeness Crab and Seafood Festival, Beachcombers Fun Fair, Grays Harbor Shorebird Festival, and regional career fairs. The position is based out of Port Angeles, WA, and will take place from Sept 2022—July 2023. n€ Apply at: *: `; https://mv.americorps.gov/mp/listing/viewListinq.do?id=74731&fromSearch=true 3 »a, a • f ` itP it 4 A�`' aim , Vessel Operations Coordinator Anna Hallingstad completes duty assignment Anna Hallingstad, LTJG, an officer in the NO AA Commissioned Corps, is completing her assignment to Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary at the end of May. During her assignment she managed the transition of sanctuary operations from the Tatoosh to the Storm Petrel, and oriented her replacement Haley Glos on sanctuary operations. New Vessel Captain hired Andrew Micks has been hired to captain the Storm Petrel. Andrew is a USCG Licensed Master, and most recently worked for Jamestown S'Klallam Tribe, and has experience working in the fishing and whale-watching industry in Alaska. WA Coast Cleanup Earth Day event attracts hundreds of volunteers to Olympic Coast Sunny skies welcomed hundreds of volunteers to the beach for the Washington Coast Cleanup annual Earth Day event in an effort to remove marine debris from Washington's coast! Volunteers were able to remove tons of marine debris (with final numbers still being tallied) off of 65 beaches from the Strait of Juan de Fuca and down Washington coast from Cape Flattery to the Columbia River. Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary staff organized volunteers at their regular registration station at Hobuck Beach in Neah Bay, on the Makah Reservation, after two years of Covid-19 closures. 4 '"h1 iilu n .a ire 9uul0 d E '' ;� K llhiiN�Pii l li ' F � : ��: alp, G(iill4l I) � � 1N Ini ti�N�i p �� - tih�h4�, , i.7 : w � lid��y --i 1 03 ld Ud , <• II ��� �� �I�'U9i� .�"t y� gy.� i„="d-fir S dhti 4 l r B1 wArwmllk:�Mwww..* • ,tltd i�tvxY COO s1.w721 BE AV-1 CLEA ui 1 Photo: NOAA/OCNMS Registration station at Hobuck Beach Campground, where volunteers sign in, receive safety instructions, and head out to the beach to remove debris Release of Olympic Coast underwater sound data causes a splash! Earth Day 2022 marked the introduction of a new web portal that allows users to learn about and listen to underwater sounds throughout NOAA's National Marine Sanctuary System, including from four locations in Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary. Users can access, download, visualize, and analyze recordings, plus listen to dozens of sound clips featuring a wide variety of natural and human-made sounds. So, grab some headphones, turn up the volume on your phone or computer, and dive in! Data from recording stations in Olympic Coast are available at: https://sanctsound.ioos.us/s ocnms.html. Olympic Coast supports Junior Ranger Day with Olympic National Park Rain or shine, Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary AmeriCorps members Anna Marchand and Kennedy Cameron get stuff done! Anna and Kennedy supported Junior Ranger Day with partners at Olympic National Park with an informational table and hands-on activities that shared the Northern Sea Otter story along Olympic Coast. Despite the rain, hail, sleet, and snow, approximately 70 Junior Ranger badges were presented to students completing the day's tasks for ranger accreditation. 5 �( U 916� i u 1 xrs a y, me cx xq . iil„;,,,,,10$1t7'2L", .4-bev .,4%., '.:t.4., '`F-„,,,•,.;''',.!-',.- ,'‘.4.`"'•Va'4"i.,'," ' *ce,'"e.'',44, -' alTa.‘',*." 071LIA• al _ ,,,. :,''N'aq sr.: -."—',,e, 4',..;44,054..-4,,,,,,„,, h'v ^^ 4,:'" a I nix " x a N. 104 Photo credit: Nicole Harris/ NOAA Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary AmeriCorps members Anna Marchand and Kennedy Cameron host a sea otter activity at Olympic National Park Junior Ranger Day. 6 : -. Ins; 11410" •gyp f y 44 ,.mow i gip:$' ' • x ,�a p 1 { d\"e ;d7 f N, gp <. `ia+'+ �. 7`, gash ,046 b tT t a.: ' 4 Photo credit: Anna Marchand/ NOAA A junior ranger in training thoughtfully selects the colors for their sea otter puppet. Olympic Coast teachers dive in to explore deep sea corals! Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary, an alliance partner with NOATea a'scher OceanProfessional Exploration and Research and the National Marine Sanctuary Foundation's Deep Sea Development series, hosted the follow-up workshop on deep sea corals. 17 teachers participated in the 90-minute virtual workshop, where facilitators shared additional resources, hands-on activities, and content development to encourage implementing deep sea coral education into the classroom. Learn more about deep sea corals here. Presentation to Hoh Tribal Council shares results and resources from Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary's Condition Report(2008-2019) Chairwoman Lisa Martinez and members of the Hoh Tribal Council welcomed Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary Research Ecologist, Jenny Waddell, to a March 23 meeting to present findings associated with the site's new condition report, which was released earlier in the month. The tailored presentation touched on issues known to be of particular importance to the Hoh Tribe— one of four Coastal Treaty Tribes with reserved treaty rights to marine resources on the Olympic Coast—and provided an overview of the various materials that are now available Webinars and Web Stories 7 • Webinar: 2022 Climate Impacts and Resilience Speaker Series: Olympic Coast as a Sentinel: Resilience Actions for Tribal Community Well-Being in the Face of Ocean Change [View recording here.] • Web Story: Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary in Good Condition: Climate Change a Growing Concern [Read here]. • Web Story: Live for Listening: Underwater Sound in National Marine Sanctuaries [Read here]. Featured Resource Collections • SanctuarySound underwater sound web portal • Ocean Sound and Impact of Noise Resource Collection • Whale Resource Collection • Ocean Acidification Resource Collection • Additional Resource Collections Pending Permits OCNMS-2022-002 Tim Jewell, Enviro-Tech Diving Inc Project Title: Survey and removal of sunken 48' Pacemaker motor vessel Proposed Permit Activity: Enviro-Tech Diving Inc is proposing to lift, tow, and dispose of the MN Unwind by safely lifting the hull using lift bags, dewatering the vessel, and towing it to Port Angeles for proper land disposal while minimizing the potential for release of possible pollution. Requested Permit Duration: Work to be conducted between May 1, 2022 and June 20, 2022 Comment: The vessel was located 5 miles offshore of La Push in 130 feet of water. While a different salvage effort was permitted last summer, it was not able to be implemented as the cost for the proposal exceeded the insurance policy. This new salvage plan was just received and will undergo thorough engineering and environmental compliance reviews and consultations. OCNMS-2021-002-A1 Greg Schorr, Marine Ecology and Telemetry Research Project Title: Cetacean surveys in coastal waters for determining killer whale prey selection and deployment of tag. Proposed Permit Activity: Amendment requesting permit extension for 5 years. No change in the scope of work. Small boat surveys conducting biopsies, tagging, and Uncrewed Aerial Surveys (UAS)for marine mammals, including Southern Resident killer whales. Requested Permit Duration: April 1, 2021 through June 30, 2027 (current permit covers 4/1/2021 through June 30, 2022). Comment: No change in scope of work,just duration. OCNMS-2022-005 Jenny Waddell and Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory Project Title: Community Species Composition and Diversity from Environmental DNA water samples in Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary 8 Proposed Permit Activity: Deployment of two plankton samplers in OCNMS (Cape Elizabeth and Teahwhit Head 42m depth). These will collect plankton samples as well as oxygen, current, temperature, and pH data. All gear, including anchors, will be recovered. Requested Permit Duration: Work to be conducted between May 19, 2022 and October 31, 2023. Comment: Project was originally permitted in 2020 and deployed in 2021. Issued Permits and Authorizations OCNMS-2022-001 Brad Hanson, Northwest Fisheries Science Center Project Title: Determining the distribution of killer whales and other cetaceans in the coastal waters of the U.S. using acoustic recorders Proposed Permit Activity: Deployment of bottom-anchored moorings of an acoustic recorder within OCNMS. Up to four moorings would be deployed in the OCNMS in 2022 for a period of twelve months. All moorings will utilize an acoustic release, resulting in the recorder, release cable and floats being recovered but the anchor will be left on the sea bed. Requested Permit Duration: January 30, 2022 through December 31, 2024 Comment: Worked to find any anchor recovery solutions currently available, without success. Emphasized importance of fully recoverable systems for future proposals. OCNMS-2022-003 Sue Thomas, US Fish and Wildlife Service Project Title: WMNWRC Aerial Surface-nesting Seabird Survey-Aerial surveys of seabird colonies on refuge islands within Flattery Rocks, Quillayute Needles and Copalis NWRs. Proposed Permit Activity: Low overflights proposed to survey breeding population size and distribution of Common Murre (Uria aalge), Brandt's Cormorant(Phalacrocorax penicillatus), Double-crested Cormorant(P. auritus), Pelagic Cormorant(P. pelagicus) and hybrid gulls on Flattery Rocks, Quillayute Needles and Copalis National Wildlife Refuges. Requested Permit Duration: Work to be conducted between May 1, 2022 and May 1, 2027. Comment: This permit application is proposing to continue long-term monitoring of breeding populations at the National Wildlife Refuges. OCNMS-2022-004 Joe Smith, Northwest Fisheries Science Center Project Title: Salmon Ocean Behavior and Distribution (SOBaD) Proposed Permit Activity: Proposing to deploy nine acoustic moorings west of Cape Flattery, spaced —2.5 miles (4km) apart. Moorings will be outfitted with two passive listening devices, an Innovasea VR2AR receiver capable of detected animals tagged with 69 kHz Innovasea transmitters and an OceanInstruments SoundTrap ST600 HF capable of recording marine mammal vocalizations. The anchoring system will include an acoustic release canister that will allow for the retrieval of all equipment including anchor material. Requested Permit Duration: April 15, 2022 through December 31, 2027 9 Comment: Worked with Makah Fisheries to adjust locations of some deployments to avoid fisheries interactions. LEARN MORE Latest news from your National Marine Sanctuaries For more information contact: Jacoueline.Laverdureanoaa.00v ifLunn4. u pdate your subscriptions, modify your password or email address, or stop subscriptions at any time on your Subscriber Preferences Page. This email was sent to olympiccoaststaffanoaa.dov using GovDelivery Communications Cloud on behalf of:NOAA's National Ocean Service SSMC4,Room 9601 1305 East-West Hwy Silver Spring,MD 20910 gOVDELIVERY" Hope you enjoy reading about OCNMS efforts over the past couple of months! Best, Chris Butler-Minor (she/her) Community Engagement Specialist Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary National Marine Sanctuary Foundation for NOAA's Office of National Marine Sanctuaries Chris.ButlerMinor@noaa.gov I 360-406-2092 S . https://sanctuaries.noaa.gov/qattery/olympic-coast.php "To find the pearls in life's ocean, you have to venture out far past the shore." - Unknown Julie Shannon From: Greg Brotherton Sent: Tuesday, May 17, 2022 12:02 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: HCSEG News: Free Nature and Nutrition Workshop for Kids! From: The Hood Canal Salmon Enhancement Group Sent: Tuesday, May 17, 2022 11:59:26 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Greg Brotherton Subject: HCSEG News: Free Nature and Nutrition Workshop for Kids! ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. ° ' SAL •e e- Free Nature & Nutrition Workshops for Kids! 1 Session 2: Cooking Methods for Kids Saturday: May 21st 10:30am — 12pm Kids will learn about the nutritional benefits of various fresh fruits and vegetables as well as learn different methods of how to cook and prepare local, seasonal produce. Activities: Sun Dehydrating Vegetables, Learning about different plant parts through using the 5 senses Sign-Up 2 � as � 7 P 40, I�� �. Win .@ a t .a. K .. 410. 401 wt �" e an Session 3: Soil, Seeds and Sustenance Saturday: May 28th 1:30-3pm Kids will learn about how the macroscopic and microscopic world collide through learning about living things in our soil, food and ecosystem around us. Activities: Pickling vegetables, dissecting seeds and companion planting 3 Sign—Up .„.,....., .. ,.. ,:... . , .,„ s..,.. ., .:, ..: . ,....,,:.. ., : .....,...,.. . , . :: ..... .. ,, . ,.... ..„,.. . ,i .. ... :.,, . .. ......., , , - ,,;'',''. '...',,,'' ', .',,_ • ,,,,'.'.',„.,:',,, =..:,.-',',., . :,,,....,,,,, '. '•,,, ' .. ',.'''_ .... ',,,,,:',' ' "., ,'.•' .,,'", ,,. , ; ' . ' ' ' - , ,,,,,", •. ,' .. .', ,' ^ '.. '''''..e7.. •''' ' - '''-: ... ,,,.,.', ' .•,,,,,,: ..,.. ..,. - ..,', ' .,.' , , ,.,.,,,,,, --,,,,-. ',,'„i.,-.',', ' .-''• . : . •,,. . ., ,,, -'. ' . 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You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list. 5 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Tuesday, May 17, 2022 12:28 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: Confirmation:Jefferson County 2022 Community Leadership Awards From: director@jeffcountychamber.org Sent: Tuesday, May 17, 2022 12:26:10 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: Confirmation: Jefferson County 2022 Community Leadership Awards ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Registration Information Jefferson County 2022 Community Leadership Awards Date: May 21 , 2022 4:00 PM - 6:00 PM PDT Location: Port Ludlow Resort Date/Time Details: May 21, 2022 4:00pm - 6:00pm You've successfully completed registration for Jefferson County 2022 Community Leadership Awards via Jefferson County Chamber of Commerce Website. Click Here for More Information Summary item °'Details Quantity Total Amt Leadership 2022 Ticket Heidi Eisenhour 1 $35.00 Total: $35.00 PAID Edit Registration / Edit Attendee(s) Add to Google Calendar Add to Yahoo Calendar Add to iCal (Outlook, Apple, or other) Calendar PRINT AT HOME TICKET 1 Jefferson County 2022 Community Leadership Awards Date: May 21, 2022 4:00 PM - 6:00 PM PDT TrierrrR>�:�i c Chamber ,ihr, Location: Port Ludlow Resort Date/Time Details: May 21, 2022 4:00pm - 6:00pm Item: Leadership 2022 Ticket Attendee Name: Heidi Eisenhour ■ ■ 7 •1 . ■ • • ■ Attendee ID: 4146 ■ Confirmation Number: e.658.1189.3926 • 1 • OR PRESENT TICKET ON MOBILE DEVICE 2 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Tuesday, May 17, 2022 1:00 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: Revised Draft Agenda (with links): HCCC Board of Directors Meeting - May 18, 2022 at 1 p.m.via Zoom video/teleconference Attachments: Agenda - Draft Board Meeting Agenda May 18 2022 with links.docx From: Jennifer Poole Sent: Tuesday, May 17, 2022 12:57:50 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Charlotte Garrido; Dave Herrera; Edward Wolfe; Greg Brotherton; Heidi Eisenhour; Jeff Rimack; Jeromy Sullivan; Joseph Pavel; Kate Dean; Kevin Shutty; Kirvie Mesebeluu-Yobech; Liz Williams; Paul McCollum; Randy Neatherlin; Robert Gelder; Scott Brewer; Sharon Trask Cc: Diane Zoren; Julie Shannon; Kaitlyn Floyd; Marina Linville; Robyn Readwin; Alicia Olivas; Haley Harguth; Heidi Huber; Mike Lisitza; Patty Michak; Terry Fischer Subject: Revised Draft Agenda (with links): HCCC Board of Directors Meeting - May 18, 2022 at 1 p.m. via Zoom video/teleconference ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. To: HCCC Board of Directors Hello - A revised Draft Agenda is attached for the HCCC Board of Directors meeting scheduled for Wednesday, May 18, from 1 to 3:45 p.m. Revisions were made to include an opportunity for Board consent on the retirement plan upgrade, and to move the public comments from the end of the meeting to before the Executive Session. The Draft Agenda with links to the available materials is attached for your convenience. If you prefer to navigate directly to the materials folder, click HERE. Additional materials will be added as they become available. To Join the meeting on May 18: Go to: https://us06web.zoom.us/i/81107883288 Or go to https://zoom.us/ioin and enter Meeting ID: 811 0788 3288 Enter Passcode: 051828 To join by phone, Dial (253) 215 8782 One tap mobile +12532158782„81107883288# US We look forward to seeing you tomorrow, Jennifer Jennifer Poole I Administrative Manager Hood Canal Coordinating Council I HCCC.wa.gov i OurHoodCanal.org 1 17791 Fjord Drive NE,Suite 118, Poulsbo,WA 98370 360-900-9063 I ipoole@hccc.wa.gov Note:All emails may be subject to public disclosure. 2 °\ Hood Canal Coordinating Council Jefferson,Kitsap&Mason Counties;Port Gamble S'Klallam&Skokomish Tribes 181.198 Regular Meeting of the Board of Directors — Draft Agenda May 18, 2022 from 1:00 p.m. to 3:45 p.m. (topic times are approximate) Location: Zoom video and teleconference Join Zoom Meeting at https://us06web.zoom.us/i/81107883288 Or go to https://zoom.us/signin Meeting ID: 811 0788 3288 Passcode: 051828 To participate by phone, dial (253) 215 8782 1:00 PM Call to Order, Introductions, Approval of Meeting Agenda Dave Herrera, HCCC Chair 1:05 PM Public Comment (please limit to approximately 3 minutes per person) Dave Herrera, HCCC Chair 1:10 PM Consent Items Dave Herrera, HCCC Chair All matters listed under Consent Items have been distributed to each member of the Board for reading and study, are considered to be routine, and will be enacted by one motion of the Board with no separate discussion. If a separate discussion is desired, that item may be removed from the Consent Items and placed as an additional topic by request. 1. Draft Board Meeting Summary February 16, 2022 2. Cash Disbursements Journal February 2022 3. Cash Disbursements Journal March 2022 4. Cash Disbursements Journal April 2022 5. Total Funds Life to Date as of April 30, 2022 6. HCCC draft annual charitable organization renewal with the Washington Secretary of State confirming that, "The organization's governing body or committee has reviewed and accepted the financial information provided where applicable." The renewal will be filed online with a Board officer's approval at the time of filing to allow HCCC's Administrative Manager to complete the filing on the officer's behalf. HCCC Board Outcome: Motion to approve consent items. 1:15 PM Executive Director Updates Scott Brewer, Executive Director 1. HCCC Watershed Project Coordinator, Nate White, left HCCC in March 2022, for a position with WDFW as an Environmental Planner with their Habitat Program, focusing on streamflow restoration. 2. Washington State Auditor's Office (SAO) accepted HCCC's CPA audit for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2020, in lieu of a separate SAO audit. The HCCC Board of Directors Meeting Agenda Page 1 February 25, 2022, letter from the Office of the Washington State Auditor is included in the Board meeting materials. The audit report has been published with HCCC's financial statements on the SAO's external website at https://sao.wa.gov/reports-data/audit-reports/. 3. Office Leases: HCCC is renewing office leases at the Liberty Bay Marina in Poulsbo for another year, effective July 1, 2022 to June 30, 2023. 4. Open Public Meetings Act Emergency Proclamation expires June 1. HCCC is working on logistics to host hybrid meetings starting in June. HCCC Board Outcome: The Board is updated on the key topics. 1:30 PM HCCC 401(k) Retirement Plan Upgrades Jennifer Poole, HCCC Administrative Manager, on behalf of Scott Brewer, HCCC Retirement Plan Trustee 1. Discuss process to upgrade HCCC's 401(k) retirement plan, including new service providers, and preview upcoming requests for Board approval to update plan documents. 2. Approve execution of application and agreement documents for advisory services by Scott Brewer as Trustee of the Hood Canal Coordinating Council 401(k) Retirement Plan. HCCC Board Outcome: Motion to Approve Scott Brewer, as Trustee of the Hood Canal Coordinating Council 401(k) Retirement Plan, to execute the application and agreement documents for advisory services with Merrill Lynch. 1:45 PM Lead Entity Advisory Group Membership Appointments Alicia Olivas, Lead Entity Program Coordinator, HCCC Salmon Program 1. Review and approve list of appointees to representative roles on the HCCC Lead Entity Technical Advisory Group (TAG) and Citizens Advisory Group (CAG) for terms up to three years. HCCC Board Outcome: Motion to appoint members for three-year terms to fill representative roles on the HCCC Lead Entity Citizens Advisory and Technical Advisory Groups. 2:00 PM Salmon Program Updates Alicia Olivas, Lead Entity Program Coordinator, HCCC Salmon Program 1. Discuss 2022 grant round process and currently proposed projects. The full Citizens Committee will convene a meeting in June 2022 to review and approve project ranking recommendations. 2. Discuss other ongoing large salmon restoration project developments in Hood Canal and Eastern Strait of Juan de Fuca. HCCC Board Outcome: The Board is updated on the 2022 Lead Entity Grant Round process, currently proposed projects, and large salmon projects in development. HCCC Board of Directors Meeting Agenda Page 2 2:30 PM Local Integrating Organization (LIO) Updates Haley Harguth, Watershed Program Manager (LIO Coordinator) 1. 2022 Action Agenda development update 2. Action Agenda implementation process update 3. New LIO capacity support from EPA infrastructure bill funds 4. Ecosystem Coordination Board meeting de-brief HCCC Board Outcome: The Board is briefed on current LIO topics. No decision at this time. 2:50 PM BPA Shelton to Fairmont Project (In-Lieu Fee Mitigation Program) Mike Lisitza, Mitigation Program Manager 1. The Bonneville Power Administration (BPA) is seeking to purchase In-Lieu Fee (ILF) credits for impacts to three acres of freshwater wetlands and 11 acres of wetland buffer impacts for their Shelton to Fairmont Project. 2. We anticipate we will request the Board approve a credit sale to BPA within the next 18 months. HCCC Board Outcome: Mitigation Program Manager has informed the Board of a large upcoming ILF credit sale 3:15 PM Public Comment Dave Herrera, HCCC Chair 3:20 PM Executive Session: In Lieu Fee (ILF) Mitigation Program Patty Michak, Senior Scientist and Mike Lisitza, Mitigation Program Manager The purpose of the Executive Session is by reason of RCW 42.30.110(1)(b) to consider the selection of a site or the acquisition of real estate. 3:40 PM Hood Canal Happenings Dave Herrera, HCCC Chair 3:45 PM Adjournment and Next Meeting Dave Herrera, HCCC Chair 1. Announce next meeting: The next regular meeting of the HCCC Board of Directors and the Citizens' Committee meeting is scheduled for June 15, 2022 at 1:00 p.m. via Zoom video/teleconference, with the option to participate in-person at HCCC's Poulsbo office, 17791 Fjord Drive NE, Suite 124, Poulsbo, WA 98370. Visit https://hccc.wa.gov/for additional information. 2. Adjourn meeting by Motion. HCCC Board Outcome: Motion to Adjourn. HCCC Board of Directors Meeting Agenda Page 3 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Tuesday, May 17, 2022 3:09 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: County News Now—May 17, 2022 From: NACo Sent: Tuesday, May 17, 2022 3:06:51 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: County News Now— May 17, 2022 ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Having trouble viewing this email? Click Here NA11ONAL HOC AIION USES CN NOW 00 0 CountyNews May 17, 2022 POI „,""1141FPW- • kk "dx ti Yillil, . ._ a x my, P W Mxi. :.. ` , a Familiar Faces Leadership Network launches 1 NACo's Familiar Faces Leadership Network will support up to 10 county or city leaders with an interest in creating or expanding cross- system data-sharing efforts to align systems to improve outcomes for their highest-needs residents. READ MORE '' ° Counties testify on creating a more resilient nation p Before a subcommittee of the U.S. House Committee on " Homeland Safety, Mecklenburg County, N.C. Commissioner - r George Dunlap highlighted the challenges and opportunities to :�� addressing inequities in disaster response and recovery,and how federal programs have affected the overall preparedness of gy communities. Watch recording \ ...0, Data sharing can keep 'familiar faces' from facing jail's revolving door In many communities,vital service systems do not have the mi( 4.),...;.-.-1)11 means to communicate and share information about their most -rr. ' frequent users, possibly letting their underlying needs go unmet. ..,.. ..., \ Read more County aims to sharpen justice data tools through °� a initiative The County, Court&Justice Leaders Initiative can help counties ., turn daunting amounts of justice data into actionable intelligence to help those in need. Read more 2 Counties continue efforts to address the Medicaid I Inmate Exclusion Policy m Legislation allowing inmates to retain Medicaid coverage while brjr s awaiting trial has received bipartisan support federally and from " counties and sheriffs. Read more 40011II - r Counties can help residents cope with the infant W formula shortage County leaders can provide education and outreach to prevent parents from pursuing unsafe alternatives to formula. Read more ir MORE COUNTY NEWS Learn how the City of Fort Smith enhanced efficiency `,,,; with Constructione Software. : �� JULY 21-24, 2022 I I i bilk „2O2 AN ALJ,C tolFtriENCE EX S T Q jll ADAMS COUNTY COLORADO , i III;Io I Explore the full schedule for the 2022 NACo ANNUAL CONFERENCE & EXPOSITION 3 REGISTER TODAY VIEW SCHEDULE* *Note new pattern of Thursday—Sunday Ex pan your strategy MANAGED E ngY SERVICES TOM! Security event analysis and notification The Latest From NACo National Civic Review—Spring Edition 1 � .� Civic League �� � 1rNt Spring 2022: VOLUME 111, NUMBER 1 National Civic Review View Table ofContents Communities succeed when they leverage the power of civic engagement and take collaborative approaches to local challenges such as the lack of affordable housing.This issue of the National Civic Review borrows some old ideas—organizing local civic leagues and publishing local monthly newsletters—and explores some newer ones— community-oriented real estate development and the use of public housing agencies to promote literacy. To access this edition,go to the table of contents where you will be prompted to enter your unique access code: NACo22. 4 Counties laud broadband expansion effort NACo welcomed the White House's efforts to secure high-speed internet for millions of Americans through enrollment in the Affordable Connectivity Program and the launch of?Getlnternet.gov. Read more Understand your liquidity Hear how Chautauqua County, N.Y. Director of Finance Kitty Crow and County Executive PJ Wendel are using cashVest®data from three+one®to create incredible outcomes for their taxpayers. Learn more Oyu__ ... BROADBAND CON1.144EAciyED ,1111 is important to TELEHEALTH ... ,.. ,d': ..r!'., s,aC r . 877446-7710 ?t�1y b r}{.^<'!f�t� p^, x Con11'ctedl itt ICkr1 -it"- .. rs . : -_s fifi , �11. "-�^ ` '. w® ! .'.._�--_ •. ., •. - m # "'..y 'rat,. �. .'11 . <A ..:: F 4*/, 1111 <: .: ra W: W:-_= " ' Pam;^".: -. __ _ a4. a I---'-..- 1,-,--_, 16 1F'i;;;,ti,--4,1.4l-i1i.ca_: ,,' I„f-i4 l4r,04ieim,...,-----'-IP ..,,..„...-!---..,_..- . iQ.rs^ .... `le_ -`ma`s- »-:.- rk z :: -,m,illpa..1 qua:_ '0,4�i -"-op l?. : e 6 1. - _ .4 - 'I� s , .s �3 magi ,. Y . .^ _^ ... , ,^ ;. 3,`�' NACo Career Center connects top employers with thousands of qualified candidates. SEARCH JOBS Post a job or post your resume today! 5 NATIONAL ASSOCIATION eirCOLINTIES 660 North Capitol Street,NW,Suite 400 Washington,D.C.20001 inl Did someone forward you this email?Sign up to stay up-to-date on topics affecting America's counties! Click here to unsubscribe. 6 jeffbocc From: Carla Main <mainwestpt@gmail.com> Sent: Wednesday, May 18, 2022 10:50 AM To: Planning Commission Desk;jeffbocc ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Dear Planning Commission and County Commissioners, I am a long term resident of Jefferson County and have volunteered for the past 12 or more years at COAST winter shelter. I also have volunteered for the Housing Solutions Network for the past few years to find more opportunities for Emergency shelter, transitional housing, and workforce housing. I am so grateful for the work of the Planning Commission and the staff of the Jefferson County Department of Community Development planning staff. You have worked hard to draft revisions to the ordinance governing temporary housing facilities in the county. I am excited that the ordinance is now in its final form. It shows the efforts of all those mentioned earlier as well as the time and attention of many local citizens. This well written and humane permanent ordinance gives us the framework for providing temporary, safe, supported and professionally managed housing for our county's unsheltered. We all know that temporary shelter is not the whole answer to our county's housing woes, it is an essential part of the solution. With all the challenges for housing that are facing our community, even more people are losing their homes. They need a safe, supportive environment to regain their sense of well being in order to focus on obtaining permanent housing. This ordinance can help make that happen. Community volunteers will continue our work to find new and creative alternatives for the unhoused in our community. We hope to continue to work in partnership with the county and this ordinance will enhance the opportunities for us to do so. I urge the Planning Commission to recommend to the Commissioners that they adopt the permanent ordinance in its entirety as presented by the Department of Community Development and I thank you for your hard work. Gratefully, Carla Main 2260 Seaview Drive i Port Townsend WA 2 jeffbocc From: Chris Moore <Chris@preservewa.org> Sent: Wednesday, May 18, 2022 2:31 PM To: Chris Moore Subject: County Courthouse Grant Program -Application Workshop Follow-up Attachments: wsac courthouse webinar - 5.16.22.pdf ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Thanks to all who were able to join us for the County Courthouse Grant Program workshop offered on Monday through WSAC's Virtual Assembly program —we appreciate your participation! There were several requests for a copy of the presentation — please find a pdf version of presentation attached. In addition, the workshop was recorded as well. You can watch the video recording of he workshop via YouTube here: https://youtu.be/Azc H2ry9aA The recording is also embedded on County Courthouse info/application webpage here: https://preservewa.orq/programs/grants/historic-courthouse-program/ As always, please don't hesitate to reach out with any questions you have—we look forward to working with you as you develop a grant application. Best, Chris Chris Moore I Executive Director he/him/his Washington Trust for Historic Preservation 1204 Minor Avenue I Seattle, WA 98101 206-624-9449 (o) 1206-930-5067 (c) preservewa.orq From: Chris Moore Sent:Thursday, May 12, 2022 1:31 PM To: Chris Moore<Chris@preservewa.org> Subject: County Courthouse Grant Program -Application Workshop Monday, May 16 @ 12noon Please join us for the Historic County Courthouse Grant Workshop being held Monday, May 16th at 12noon. The virtual workshop will focus on understanding the requirements of the County Courthouse grant program and provide guidance on completing the online grant application form. There will be time to respond to questions from participants. The Workshop is being hosted by the Washington State Association of Counties as part of their weekly Virtual Assembly, convened via Zoom. You do need to register for the Virtual Assembly, following which you will be i sent a link to the webinar. To register for the Virtual Assembly and attend the workshop on Monday, May 16th at 12noon, please use the following link: County Courthouse Grant Workshop—WSAC Virtual Assembly If you have any questions prior to the workshop, please do not hesitate to reach out. Best, Chris Chris Moore I Executive Director he/him/his Washington Trust for Historic Preservation 1204 Minor Avenue I Seattle, WA 98101 206-624-9449 (o) 1206-930-5067 (c) preservewa.org 2 WASHINGTON COURTHOUSES IN HISTORIC COUNTY 1887 County Architect Columbia W.H. Burrows, 1955 Whitney, Architects Maloney & Kittitas County - nine - 2003: Funds appropriated to complete a needs assessment study of county courthouses statewide.2005: $5M allocated in the 200507 biennium to assist eligible counties implement courthouse rehabilitation projects.Program to Date: Grant funding has been awarded to 26 counties to complete sixtycourthouse projects.July 24, 2022: Next deadline to submit grant applications. Walla Walla County Courthouse Preservation/rehabilitation of exterior and interior character defining architectural featuresImprovements to courthouse accessibility and accommodations for persons with disabilities made in conjunction with historic rehabilitationSeismic retrofitsImprovements to life safety made in conjunction with historic rehabilitation System upgrades (match only)General repairs (match only) Program Particulars Eligible Activities Walla Walla County Courthouse General courthouse maintenanceArchitectural and engineering fees (such expenditures, however, may be used toward the required county match, or a portion thereof)Project planning (such expenditures, however, may be used for the required match, or a portion thereof)LobbyingReduction of debts Program Particulars Ineligible Activities Courthouses listed in the National Register of Historic Places or Washington Heritage Register, or determined eligible for listing in either register.Public visibility of work that addresses the historic character defining features of a courthouse. Degree of urgency and extent to which inaction would lead to loss of historic fabric and character defining features.Projects that assist in providing structural and life safety, including improvements to courthouse accessibility and seismic retrofits. Program Particulars Evaluation Criteria 1.2.3.4. hand at time of application or grant award, - Projects that have match inand have successfully worked to leverage other funding sources.Project feasibility.Percentage of requested state funding applicant intends to match with funding from other allowable sources. Program Particulars 5.6.7. and are for a new historic features are eligible for grant funds. matching funds preservation projects : County expenditures on projects completed after Expenditures eligible for reimbursement must be made between July 1, 2023 and June 30, 2025.All expenditures committed as eligible county matching funds must be made between July 1, 2023 and June 30, 2025.ExceptionJanuary 1, 2022 may be used as project moving forward.Only project elements that address considered Other project expenditures may count toward the match. Program Particulars Stipulations RCW by . Distressed Standards compliance requirement will receive extra consideration. Please note this does Rehabilitation year - All work Standards for the Rehabilitation of Historic Properties5National Register/WA Heritage Register Listing.Grant funds available on a reimbursement basis only.Courthouse projects in counties defined as 43.168.020 not guarantee funding for projects in Distressed Counties. Program Particulars 25 Biennium - Applications will be reviewed by the Courthouse Steering Committee.A ranked list of projects will be submitted to the agency.No cap on the amount that can be requested.Work must be complete by June 30, 2025 2023---- July 24, 2022 Grays Harbor County Courthouse Grant Application Deadline: Clallam County Courthouse designation, ask program staff. Particulars to the Application Process Section 3: Historic Designation Grant County Courthouse request. grant Be sure to include the total Include a brief project summary. Particulars to the Application Process Section 4: Project Summary Franklin County Courthouse Organize your project into no more than five (5) work elements. The narrative should identify the major components/activities of each work element.Use the same work elements in the budget form as you use in the project description. Particulars to the Application Process Section 5: Project Description Grays Harbor County Courthouse Work elements from Section 5 must be used on the budget sheet.A&E Fees are broken out as a separate section Particulars to the Application Process Section 6: Project Budget 50/50 Grant to Match Ratio Single Work Element Increased Grant to Match Ratio Single Work Element 50/50 Grant to Match Ratio Multiple Elements Increased Grant to Match Ratio Multiple Elements Prior Expenditures with 50/50 Grant to Match Ratio Prior Expenditures with Increased Grant to Match Ratio Are plans/specs in hand?Are there any studies that have been done?Have official cost estimates been prepared?Provide as detailed a timeline as possible for each work element. Particulars to the Application Process Section 7: Project Feasibility*Note: Project completion date of June 30, 2025 term preservation - going maintenance of the courthouse - defining features of the courthouse? - What county functions will the courthouse serve after project completion?How will the county support the onfor the next 10 years? What specific measures will be taken to ensure the longof the historic characterDescribe any specific capital projects or improvements outside of the existing grant request planned for the next five (5) years.as a result of the proposed rehabilitation project. Particulars to the Application Process Section 8: Courthouse Perpetuity Franklin County Courthouse Sliding Scale - Required County MatchStatement of SupportNational Register of Historic PlacesLocal Register of Historic Places Particulars to the Application Process Okanogan County Courthouse WindowsOrnamentationBrick PattersParapetsColumnsBalustersWoodworkLightingMaterials Particulars to the Application Process Character Features*Note: Maintenance not eligible! Adams County Courthouse is defined as the act or process of making possible a http://www.cr.nps.gov/hps/tps/standguide/rehab/rehab_index.htm Rehabilitation compatible use for a property through repair, alterations, and additions while preserving those portions or features which convey its historical, cultural, or architectural values. The Secretary of the the Treatment of Historic Properties 1905 Gaunt, County Douglas Architect Newton C. additions to buildings Rehabilitation 1905 Gaunt, County Douglas Architect Newton C. character defining features Rehabilitation 1895 County Spokane Architect Willis Ritchie, character defining features Rehabilitation 1895 County Spokane Architect Willis Ritchie, character defining features Rehabilitation 1895 County Spokane Architect Willis Ritchie, character defining features Rehabilitation 1895 County Spokane Architect Willis Ritchie, character defining features Rehabilitation 1924 County Wahkiakum character defining features Rehabilitation 1924 County Wahkiakum character defining features Rehabilitation 1924 County Wahkiakum improving efficiency Rehabilitation , 1916 Henry County Architect Osterman Walla Walla improving efficiency Rehabilitation , 1916 Henry County Architect Osterman Walla Walla improving efficiency Rehabilitation , 1916 Henry County Architect Osterman Walla Walla improving efficiency Rehabilitation , Pherson 1938 Architect G.A. Stevens County improving efficiency Rehabilitation , Pherson 1938 Architect G.A. Stevens County , Bittman 1917 1931 ArchitectArchitect A.W Gould, King County Henry improving accessibility Rehabilitation King County , Heide 1910 County Architect A.F. Snohomish , Heide 1910 County Architect A.F. Snohomish exterior facade Rehabilitation , Heide 1910 County Architect A.F. Snohomish exterior facade Rehabilitation , Heide 1910 County Architect A.F. Snohomish 1910 Wilson, C. Lewis Architect Pacific County Roof Systems Replacement 1910 Wilson, C. Lewis Architect Pacific County roof replacement Replacement 1910 Wilson, C. Lewis Architect Pacific County character defining features Restoration 1910 Wilson, C. Lewis Architect Pacific County character defining features Restoration 1910 Wilson, C. Lewis Architect Pacific County character defining features Restoration 1910 Wilson, C. Lewis Architect Pacific County exterior facade Rehabilitation , Wohleb 1929 County Mason Architect Joseph exterior facade Rehabilitation , Wohleb 1929 County Mason Architect Joseph improving accessibility Rehabilitation , Wohleb 1929 County Mason Architect Joseph 1895 County Spokane Architect Willis Ritchie, interior renovation Rehabilitation 1895 County Spokane Architect Willis Ritchie, interior renovation Rehabilitation 1895 County Spokane Architect Willis Ritchie, 1892 County Jefferson Architect Willis Ritchie, structural stabilization Jefferson County Rehabilitation 1892 County Jefferson Architect Willis Ritchie, structural stabilization Jefferson County Rehabilitation 1892 County Architect Jefferson Willis Ritchie, structural stabilization Jefferson County Rehabilitation 1892 County Architect Jefferson Willis Ritchie, Comprehensive Rehabilitation , 1901 Charles Burgraf Architect Garfield County Comprehensive Rehabilitation , 1901 Charles Burgraf Architect Garfield County , 1901 Charles Burgraf Comprehensive Rehabilitation Architect Garfield County , 1901 Charles Burgraf Architect Comprehensive Rehabilitation Garfield County Comprehensive Rehabilitation , 1901 Charles Burgraf Architect Garfield County Comprehensive Rehabilitation , 1901 Charles Burgraf Architect Garfield County 9449 - 624 - Questions?Chris Moore206 cmoore@preservewa.org Julie Shannon From:Heidi Eisenhour Sent:Wednesday, May 18, 2022 9:18 AM To:Julie Shannon Subject:FW: This Week with Your Chamber From: The Chamber of Jefferson County Sent: Wednesday, May 18, 2022 9:16:41 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: This Week with Your Chamber ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Exciting week This Week with Your Chamber While some events are still virtual more and more are becoming hybrid or live so please check the chamber calendar regularly for accurate updated information. Visit our Website 2022 Jefferson County Community Leadership Awards - Live May 21st This year, the awards are back live at the Resort at Port Ludlow from 4pm - 6pm. There will be past awardees, live music, fabulous food & beverages and a great view of the marina along with a COVID-friendly tent and adherence to all COVID policies in place at that time. Tickets are limited to ensure proper distancing. Gift baskets will abound. Join us in honoring your community heroes who have worked tirelessly for the past few years to enhance your quality of life. 1 Learn More & Tickets May 20th - Chamber Café Commissioner Greg Brotherton and project team Ventilation of indoor spaces is another layered mitigation that businesses and other organizations can use to make their spaces safer in the current phase of the pandemic and beyond. Peter Rhines, Professor of Fluid Dynamics, and Phil Pilgrim of Bueno Systems, have been running a pilot project at Finnriver to demonstrate that they can evaluate and help prescribe ventilation practices for small businesses to make their indoor spaces safer for staff and customers. They will show high-tech measurements from a variety of indoor spaces, and discuss how these can be used to assess and improve indoor air quality. Phil and Peter will also discuss the service they are looking to offer. Commissioner Brotherton with Peter Rhines, Professor of Fluid Dynamics, Phil Pilgrim of Bueno Systems, Eric Jorgenson of Finnriver All Café Registrations www.jeffcountychamber.org Jefferson County Chamber of Commerce | 2409 Jefferson Street, Port Townsend, WA 98368 Unsubscribe heisenhour@co.jefferson.wa.us Update Profile | Constant Contact Data Notice Sent by director@jeffcountychamber.org powered by Try email marketing for free today! 2 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Wednesday, May 18, 2022 9:54 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: New Work Group Opportunity from the Joint Transportation Committee! From: Washington State Association of Counties Sent: Wednesday, May 18, 2022 9:52:01 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: New Work Group Opportunity from the Joint Transportation Committee! ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. OPENINGS FOR SAC WAC Statewide Commissions WASWINGTON mkt etc� I. STATE ASSOCIATION r • COUNTIES . m Apply by Friday, May 20! Click Here to Apply Current Openings: Joint Transportation Committee Work Group Congress passed the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA) in November 2021. It reauthorized several surface transportation programs and created four new federal-aid i highway programs. When new federal transportation authorizations occur, Washington state has a tradition of convening a workgroup to recommend future distributions of federal-aid highway formula program funding to state and local governments. The 2022 Supplemental Transportation Budget directs the Joint Transportation Committee to convene this workgroup this year. Within existing resources, the joint transportation committee must convene a workgroup to discuss, collaborate, and develop recommendations to the committee on the distribution of federal-aid highway formula program funding from the infrastructure investment and jobs act to state and local government in future biennia. Requirements: Elected County Official More Information Here Current Applications: 0 Click Here to Apply Have additional questions? WSAC is here to help. Click here to send us an email or give us a call at (360) 753-1886. 01 View this email in your browser Copyright 0 2022 Washington Association of Counties, All Rights Reserved You are receiving this email because you are involved in county government Our mailing address is: Washington State Association of Counties 2 206 10th Ave SE Olympia, WA 98501-1311 Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list. 0 Facebook 0 Twitter itt L,inkedln wsac.org 3 Julie Shannon From: Kate Dean Sent: Wednesday, May 18, 2022 10:15 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: NEWS RELEASE: Puget Sound Partnership begins reporting on a new generation of Puget Sound Vital Signs From: Puget Sound Partnership Sent: Wednesday, May 18, 2022 10:09:53 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Kate Dean Subject: NEWS RELEASE: Puget Sound Partnership begins reporting on a new generation of Puget Sound Vital Signs ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. v a4°� Pii i rill�'NNiH ( i 13 ^ vpi it-, , Ii rd a`v �Pa � I� i a � 4a"��l,:dI NCI Ir ,i,i �q! d,u...w .'• , C �a al i'1u i ili i ��Ii a iil lilll�i � 1iv4y81718�N���lllryll�iil�r�� PUG STUN DI!INgll'i III'" ARTN E RS H I P Puget Sound Partnership begins reporting on a new generation of Puget Sound Vital Signs FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE May 18, 2022 MEDIA CONTACT: Kevin Hyde, 360.819.3045, kevin.hvde(c psp.wa.ciov OLYMPIA—The Puget Sound Partnership has started reporting on a new generation of the Puget Sound Vital Signs, which measure ecosystem health, through an updated website. The website includes a new infographic for the Vital Skins, showing the relationship between the Puget Sound recovery goals and the Vital Signs. "The Vital Signs are a transparent, credible, and accessible communication tool that highlights the problems of Puget Sound as well as success stories. They inspire i action and drive the 2022-2026 Action Agenda," said Laura Blackmore, executive director of the Puget Sound Partnership. The Action Agenda, the recovery community's plan that charts the course of Puget Sound recovery, is scheduled for release in June 2022. "The Vital Signs are well grounded in the latest science and will improve how we track progress of Puget Sound recovery," said John Stein, co-vice chair of the Puget Sound Partnership's Science Panel. "They will also let our partners and leaders at all levels and the public have a clearer picture of the state of the Sound we all care about." The revised Vital Signs retain many of the previous generation's indicators, such as those for orca, salmon, and natural resource industry jobs in Puget Sound, but include new and improved Vital Signs and indicators representing more aspects of the ecosystem. The Partnership changed the Vital Signs in the following ways: • Re-framed Vital Signs related to habitat to reflect parts of the ecosystem rather than human activities. For instance, the Vital Sign called Forests and Wetlands evolved from Land Use and Development, and Beaches and Marine Vegetation came from Shoreline Armoring. • Combined the habitat and abundant water recovery goals and their respective Vital Signs under a single umbrella paraphrased as Functioning Habitat. • Expanded Vital Signs to widen their scope, with Salmon replacing Chinook Salmon; Forage Fish broadening Pacific Herring. This allowed for additional species indicators. • Added Groundfish and Benthic Invertebrates and Zooplankton as new Vital Signs. • Included many new indicators. Examples include water temperature indicators as an important measure connected to climate change; primary production and zooplankton biomass to better understand the bottom of the food web; kelp as important habitat for salmon and many other species; and noise in marine water as a factor implicated in orca recovery. "Monitoring efforts carried out by a network of dedicated folks from tribes, community organizations, and academia, as well as local, state, and federal governments make up the fabric of the Puget Sound Ecosystem Monitoring Program —what we call "PSEMP," said James West, a marine ecologist at the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife who oversees the Toxics in Aquatic Life Vital Sign. "These efforts are critical to provide the information we need to track Puget Sound recovery. It will be important to sustain PSEMP as we move forward, so we can tell whether our recovery efforts are successful." The Puget Sound Vital Signs are part of the Puget Sound Indicators, a shared monitoring and evaluation system. The Vital Signs are complementary to the Action Agenda Progress Indicators, metrics that track changes in human activities and 2 behaviors that the recovery community can influence through investments or policies. The Vital Signs website housed on Puget Sound Info is the web platform where partners publish their indicator results and key messages. Anyone from the public can learn about the status and progress of Vital Signs and their indicators. As things stand, only about half the indicators show results while the other half is in development. The Partnership is actively forging new relationships to identify data streams and collaborations to support indicator reporting. The Partnership adopted targets for certain Vital Sign indicators. Targets help articulate our long-term goals for Puget Sound. They represent iconic and valued components of the Puget Sound ecosystem and are strongly linked to the work proposed in the 2022-2026 Action Agenda. To date, Southern Resident killer whales, Chinook salmon, toxics in aquatic life, eelgrass sites, shellfish beds and swimming beaches are indicators with targets. Nathalie Hamel, the lead for the Vital Signs reporting at the Partnership, said, "Through the Vital Signs, we track many properties of Puget Sound, from the bottom of the food web to whales and humans. Many of the indicators are clearly interconnected and sometimes they even clash. The beauty of our Vital Signs is that they challenge us to confront sometimes conflicting demands on the ecosystem." 3 HEALTHY HUMAN POPULATION �� f ire �s Aquakkar it III II I�IIIIIIIbQ � e I�la�hdiirgi�,, Watercc regt a �IIpIIP'%I cC 'III, � ap��,��� J uullury,,'IIOII�r ast FrgathW ekes' "'Ii " EZeflOrttle �: I�III�I. - ,Ills '�t:�'Nlll�llllllllllllli iC,.d� -Wwl PI/GETSOLIND il'Il�llt'llh ���Il�a ", ilu�IIIIi,I�-' VITAL SIGNS REPORTING. For Hts/ry ECOSYSTEMHEALTH ill III ' q I' to ��I���� II�oI�I', I�III, rrt Sound E tau Allot. Stiroostrieb4p tl,orridtt 09 For Ile. �lll!p III.* {pl�l, liil�su a.a,. a v. tkke71na a i nictoo Sa'rr/un art 44 end 6�axkfide 3� rkBe VeCekm 1.4 wetkekRe�e THRIVING SPECIES 6 FOOD WEB Resources: Access the new Vital Signs infographic: Vital Signs visual Vital Signs on Puget Sound Info: Vital Signs (wa.gov) List of Vital Signs and indicators in spreadsheet form: https://gspwa.box.com/v/RevisedVSIndicators This message has been sent to Puget Sound Partnership boards, Strategic Initiative Leads, Lead Integrating Organizations, Puget Sound Ecosystem Monitoring Program, and interested parties. 4 About the Puget Sound Partnership The Puget Sound Partnership is the state agency formed to lead the region's collective effort to restore and protect Puget Sound. Working with hundreds of government agencies, tribes, scientists, businesses, and nonprofits, the Partnership mobilizes partner action around a common agenda, advances Sound investments, and tracks progress to optimize recovery. For more information, go to www.psp.wa.gov. PUGETSOUND PARTNERSHIP STAY CONNECTED: SUBSCRIBER SERVICES: Manage Subscriptions i Unsubscribe All i Help This email was sent to kdean@co.jefferson.wa.us using GovDelivery Communications Cloud on behalf of:Puget Sound Partnership Washington 326 East D•Tacoma,WA 98421 gOLIVERy 5 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Wednesday, May 18, 2022 12:39 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: Grant Writing Training in Redmond, WA -June 13-14, 2022 From: Janet Darling Sent: Wednesday, May 18, 2022 12:37:29 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: Grant Writing Training in Redmond, WA -June 13-14, 2022 ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Dear Commissioner Eisenhour, I hope this email finds you well. We are excited to present an in-person Grant Writing Workshop in partnership with the Redmond Police Department,June 13-14, 2022. In this workshop we cover how to write grant proposals start to finish and how to locate and track relevant grant opportunities. This training is not specific to law enforcement, it is appropriate for all city and county offices.We felt this program might be of interest to Jefferson County offices.Your consideration for circulation of the below notice to offices that may benefit is greatly appreciated. Have a wonderful Wednesday! Janet Darling Marketing Director Grant Writing USA 888.290.6237 (PST) 41" di GRANT WRITING USA Grants Writing Training in Redmond, WA - June 13-14, 2022 Redmond Police Department and Grant Writing USA will present a two-day grants workshop, June 13-14, 2022. This training is for grant seekers across all disciplines. Attend this class and you'll learn how to find the funding sources and write winning grant proposals. 1 Click here for full event details. Beginning and experienced grant writers from city, county and state agencies as well as healthcare organizations, nonprofits, K-12, colleges and universities are encouraged to attend. Tuition is $455 and includes everything: two days of terrific instruction, workbook, and access to our Alumni Forum that's packed full of tools, helpful discussions and more than 200 sample grant proposals. Groups of 5 or more receive a $50 discount per person. Discounts for Grant Writing USA alumni and nonprofits are also available. Please call for details. Payment is not required at the time of registration. More information including learning objectives, class location, graduate testimonials and online registration is available here. Contacts: Janet Darling Grant Writing USA 888.290.6237 toll free janet@grantwritingusa.com More than 10,000 agencies across North America have turned to Grant Writing USA for grant writing and grant management training. 2 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Wednesday, May 18, 2022 12:39 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: Grant Writing Training in Redmond, WA -June 13-14, 2022 From: Janet Darling Sent: Wednesday, May 18, 2022 12:37:29 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: Grant Writing Training in Redmond, WA -June 13-14, 2022 ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Dear Commissioner Eisenhour, I hope this email finds you well. We are excited to present an in-person Grant Writing Workshop in partnership with the Redmond Police Department,June 13-14, 2022. In this workshop we cover how to write grant proposals start to finish and how to locate and track relevant grant opportunities. This training is not specific to law enforcement, it is appropriate for all city and county offices. We felt this program might be of interest to Jefferson County offices. Your consideration for circulation of the below notice to offices that may benefit is greatly appreciated. Have a wonderful Wednesday! Janet Darling Marketing Director Grant Writing USA 888.290.6237 (PST) GRANT WRITING USA Grants Writing Training in Redmond, WA - June 13-14, 2022 Redmond Police Department and Grant Writing USA will present a two-day grants workshop, June 13-14, 2022. This training is for grant seekers across all disciplines. Attend this class and you'll learn how to find the funding sources and write winning grant proposals. 1 Click here for full event details. Beginning and experienced grant writers from city, county and state agencies as well as healthcare organizations, nonprofits, K-12, colleges and universities are encouraged to attend. Tuition is $455 and includes everything: two days of terrific instruction, workbook, and access to our Alumni Forum that's packed full of tools, helpful discussions and more than 200 sample grant proposals. Groups of 5 or more receive a $50 discount per person. Discounts for Grant Writing USA alumni and nonprofits are also available. Please call for details. Payment is not required at the time of registration. More information including learning objectives, class location, graduate testimonials and online registration is available here. Contacts: Janet Darling Grant Writing USA 888.290.6237 toll free j anet@grantwritingusa.corn More than 10,000 agencies across North America have turned to Grant Writing USA for grant writing and grant management training. 2 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Wednesday, May 18, 2022 5:16 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: Technical Assistance Guide to Help Communities Unlock Resources From Bipartisan Infrastructure Law From: Crystal Ellerbe Sent: Wednesday, May 18, 2022 5:14:37 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Monte Reinders; Kate Dean; Heidi Eisenhour; Greg Brotherton Cc: Tylynn Gordon; Paul Berendt Subject: Fwd: Technical Assistance Guide to Help Communities Unlock Resources From Bipartisan Infrastructure Law ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Get Outlook for iOS From: intergov<intergov@dot.gov> Sent:Wednesday, May 18, 2022 8:03:21 PM To: Small, Charles (OST)<charles.small@dot.gov>; Rasky,Will (OST)<william.rasky@dot.gov>;Turner,Toiyriah (OST) <toiyriah.turner@dot.gov> Cc: intergov<intergov@dot.gov> Subject:Technical Assistance Guide to Help Communities Unlock Resources From Bipartisan Infrastructure Law QQQQ ifitQCIl�LI, l0 Pi THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON White House Releases Technical Assistance Guide to Help Communities Unlock Resources From Bipartisan Infrastructure Law Administration Highlights New Capacity from Philanthropic,Nonprofit&Labor 1 Organizations to Help States and Cities Respond to Once-in-a-Generation Opportunity Today,the White House released&Bipartisan Infrastructure Law technical assistance guide to help state,local,Tribal and territorial governments navigate, access,and deploy infrastructure resources that will build a better America. The Biden Administration has identified over$700 million in dedicated funding across more than 65 technical assistance programs.In addition to highlighting federal government technical assistance,the White House Infrastructure Implementation Team has engaged with a range of external stakeholders including,philanthropic,labor and nonprofit organizations,to highlight available nongovernmental resources and create a pipeline to assist communities in quickly and equitably accessing and deploying federal infrastructure funding. Over 9o%of the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law's historic funding will be deployed by non- federal partners. In the past,too many communities have lacked the resources to apply for and deploy transformative infrastructure opportunities.This guide,building on the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law Guidebook and Rural Playbook,highlights programs that help communities navigate programs and resources that can help them deliver infrastructure projects. While some of these programs offer hands-on and intensive planning and delivery support for communities, others are more self-directed resources and tools such as webinars and websites, or funding that can support project planning. "This technical assistance guide is just one more way we're working to ensure state,local, Tribal and territorial governments have the tools and resources they need to take advantage of investments in President Biden's Bipartisan Infrastructure Law,"said Mitch Landrieu, Senior Advisor&Infrastructure Implementation Coordinator. "Building a better America requires that we leave no community behind.This guide aims to pull together the many different technical assistance resources available across the federal government that can help communities deliver transformative infrastructure projects.We are also grateful to the many philanthropic organizations who have stepped up to support states and local communities in ensuring we do not leave any community behind in this once-in-a-generation investment." In response to the Administration's external engagement efforts,philanthropic,labor and nonprofit organizations have also committed new resources to assist communities accessing and deploying federal infrastructure funding,including: • Bloomberg Philanthropies,Emerson Collective, Ford Foundation, and the Kresge Foundation, are launching the Local Infrastructure Hub, a national program to ensure that all U.S. cities and towns can access federal infrastructure funding to drive local recovery, improve communities, and deliver results for residents.The $5o million commitment of support for local communities in collaboration with the U.S. Conference of Mayors,National League of Cities, and Results for America,will bring together leading experts and resources to help city leaders access and ambitiously leverage funding from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law to advance 2 groundbreaking solutions to major challenges, especially narrowing racial wealth disparities and cutting the emissions that cause climate change. • Accelerator for America is providing technical assistance, in-kind support for strategic planning and grant writing,communications strategy,policy research, and guides to help local government and development leaders navigate the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law and complementary funding opportunities. Accelerator for America is working directly with 20 cities on infrastructure projects and expanding scope and reach regularly as cities prioritize local infrastructure projects, including workforce development initiatives and project delivery support. • The Communities First Infrastructure Alliance is working with technical assistance providers,frontline communities and government leaders to build just, equitable, and more resilient communities.The Alliance is led by national equity-centered leadership groups and includes a national ecosystem of valued aligned partners committed to communities first.The Infrastructure Alliance members will work collectively to support communities with the resources, capacity and technical assistance required to actualize community-centered plans,projects, and visions to meet this moment for the movement. • The recently launched What Works Plus(WW+)funding collaborative coordinates efforts across philanthropy,government, and nonprofit organizations to advance racial and economic equity through more just and climate resilient infrastructure investments.The collaborative is focused on partnerships that result in better outcomes for communities,workers, and entrepreneurs. • The Climate Jobs National Resource Center is assisting communities and states with workforce training, including building an equitable,inclusive renewable energy economy by investing in union apprenticeship and pre-apprenticeship programs.CJNRC will be working with labor-led climate jobs coalitions and unions in states to support a successful implementation effort by expanding and strengthening initiatives to increase access to union climate jobs for infrastructure workers in under-resourced communities on the frontlines of climate change. The Administration welcomes additional commitments from nongovernmental stakeholders to support states and local communities access this once-in-a-generation investment. Since President Biden signed the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law six months ago,the Biden- Harris Administration has hit the ground running to deliver results.More than$iio billion has been announced and allocated to states and communities from formula and competitive programs for roads and highways,bridges,ports, airports, and water systems, with another nearly$ioo billion in notices of funding availability for competitive programs now underway.The historic$1.2 trillion Bipartisan Infrastructure Law is rebuilding 3 crumbling roads and bridges, replacing lead pipes to provide clean water,delivering cleaner energy,helping provide affordable,high-speed internet to every family in America, and producing concrete results that change people's lives for the better. As the Administration implements the law, it is following through on President Biden's commitment to ensure investments advance equity and reach communities all across the country—including rural communities, communities of color, and disability communities —and strengthen the nation's resilience to climate change. ### Privacy Policy I Unsubscribe I press@who.eop.gov --USDOT Intergovernmental Affairs Warm Regards, Toiyriah Turner I Government Affairs Specialist The Office of Governmental Affairs Office of the Secretary, U.S. Department of Transportation moo New Jersey Ave., SE. Rm W85-u4 c: 2o2-763-68o2 / f: 202-366-3675 Toiyriah.Turner@dot.gov S141 OF TRgHsAo 144 iv C so, 2 a 41. OSTATEgOF4i 4 jeffbocc From: M. george <edwards.matt5@gmail.com> Sent: Wednesday, May 18, 2022 9:40 PM To: jeffbocc Subject: Gardiner beach no-shooting area proposal ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. To whom it may concern, I'm a resident of Gardiner and I'm writing to share my thoughts regarding the proposed no shoot area around the Gardiner boat ramp. I oppose this measure because Gardiner beach is a unique and important area for hunting, in that it provides local access to recreation for residents. But it's more than just a convenience -- its location expands access to those who may have limited economic means or physical ability to travel further afield. The concept of a rural neighborhood abutting a hunting area is a common occurrence throughout the US, and it can be done safely with the right measures in place. For one,the issue of hunters leaving behind shotgun shells should be considered the same way we do with any other kind of litter. All recreation areas deal with litter to some extent, whether it's from dog walkers, campers, or hunters, and we should take the same steps here to encourage hunters to leave no trace.As for concerns over hunters' behavior, WDFW can post signs detailing required hunting etiquette, and residents can call WDFW enforcement to report violators. It's also worth noting that the shotgun shells used to hunt waterfowl have a limited range and are extremely unlikely to cause harm to person or property unless intentionally aimed toward them. These are all preliminary steps that should be taken in an effort to resolve any issues residents are experiencing before implementing an outright ban. I appreciate your time allowing residents to weigh in on this issue. Best, Matthew Edwards 1 N N O '. N 0 6 W % W o W (V '97 o o -' N 9 e� N W r4W oo (7) w W ®Z E. W y H ♦ co CaCC W Q m u. 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