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HomeMy WebLinkAbout061322Corr JEFFERSON COUNTY BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS 2022 CORRESPONDENCE DATE OF DATE ORIGINATING CORRESPONDENCE DOCUMENT RECEIVED PARTY .. ,., mm ._ 6/2/2022 6/2/2022 The Chamber of Jefferson County JeffConnects Leadership 2022 6/2/2022 6/2/2022 JeffCo Historical Society Opening Today: Now&Then a 6/2/2022 6/2/2022 Olympic Community of Health OCH Community Briefing I June 2, 2022 6/2/2022 6/2/2022 Mike Cronin DNR Legacy Forests 6/2/2022 6/2/2022 MRSC—Local Government Recruiting I Government Speech I Donations 6/2/2022 6/2/2022 Recovery Cafe Jefferson County Recovery Cafe Jefferson County 6/2/2022 6/2/2022 John Vezina,WSDOT/Ferries Division WSF Summer 2022 Virtual Public Meetings 6/2/2022 6/2/2022 White House Intergovernmental Affairs TONIGHT: President Biden to Deliver Remarks on Gun Violence-7:30 PM ET 6/2/2022 6/2/2022 NACo Coronavirus pandemic resources for counties—June 2, 2022 Cindy Brooks ARPA Small Business and Tech service Provider 6/2/2022 6/2/2022 Executive Director Grant Report 6.2022 EDC Team Jefferson 6/2/2022 6/2/2022 John Vezina, WSDOT/Ferries Division WSF Weekly Update 6/2/2022 6/2/2022 Mike Cronin legacy forests 6/3/2022 6/3/2022 Lynn Sorensen, KPTZ Virus Watch Team KPTZ Listener Questions for Monday,June 6, 2022 BOCC Update Washington State Department of WSDOT News: One down,one to go! First of two 6/3/2022 6/3/2022 Transportation emergency slide repair projects wrap up on SR 112 in Clallam County 6/3/2022 6/3/2022 Washington Counties I WSAC Friday 5 I ARPA I Text-to-911 I Grants I Public Health 6/3/2022 6/3/2022 Washington State Association of Counties County Virtual Assembly I June 6 Programming 6/4/2022 6/6/2022 NACo This Week in Photos 6/4/2022 6/6/2022 The Chamber of Jefferson County USA Today Top 10 Small Town Food Scenes in America 6/5/2022 6/6/2022 Patricia A.Jones, Phd Jefferson County Democrats Membership Program on June 23rd- Forestry in our County 6/5/2022 6/6/2022 White House Intergovernmental Affairs White House IGA Weekly Newsletter-6/5 6/6/2022 6/6/2022 The Chamber of Jefferson County The Chamber of Jefferson County 6/6/2022 6/6/2022 The Hood Canal Salmon Enhancement HCSEG News: Garden Yoga+Wellness at the Group Salmon Center-June 8th 6/6/2022 6/6/2022 Local 20/20 Local 20/20 Weekly Announcements 6/6/2022 6/6/2022 The Chamber of Jefferson County The Business Insider-June 2022 6/6/2022 6/6/2022 Clallam EDC Join First Fed Bank's Chief Banking Officer on Coffee with Colleen at 8am Wed morning 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 6/6/2022 6/6/2022 Joe Irwin, Performance Reporting WSDOT publishes its quarterly performance report Manager, Gray Notebook for March 31, 2022(Gray Notebook 84) 6/7/2022 6/7/2022 Jean Ball Legacy forests and carbon credits 6/7/2022 6/7/2022 Port Ludlow Village Council COVID-19 Bi-weekly Report-6/07/2022 6/7/2022 6/7/2022 EDC Team Jefferson Today's Workshop at 1:00 6/7/2022 6/7/2022 Olympic Community of Health NEW funding opportunity.We want to partner with YOU! 6/7/2022 6/7/2022 NACo County News County News Now—June 7, 2022 Julianne Stanford For immediate release: Northwest Navy bases 6/7/2022 6/7/2022 Naval Magazine Indian Island Public conducting earthquake, multi-hazard response Affairs Officer exercise 6/7/2022 6/7/2022 Lissy Andros, Executive Director Please join us Wednesday to learn about Field Arts Forks Chamber of Commerce and Events Hall Paul Jewell I Policy Director—Water, Wednesday Evening Dinner Invitation-Timber 6/7/2022 6/7/2022 Land Use, Environment&Solid Waste Training Participants Washington State Association of Counties 6/7/2022 6/7/2022 EDC Team Jefferson June 16 Resource Roundtable: LION investors Paul Jewell I Policy Director—Water, 6/7/2022 6/7/2022 Land Use, Environment&Solid Waste Timber Industry Economic Impact Report Washington State Association of Counties 6/7/2022 6/7/2022 EDC Team Jefferson June 16 Resource Roundtable: LION investors 6/6/2022 6/7/2022 State of Washington Office of Financial Letter re: Preliminary April 21, 2022 Population Management Estimates June 2022 6/7/2022 Village of Port Ludlow The Voice Newsletter June 2022 6/7/2022 Washington Grown Magazine 6/8/2022 6/8/2022 Port Ludlow Village Council Jefferson County Board of Health Restructuring - Needs New Members 6/8/2022 6/8/2022 Washington Trust for Historic Preservation Snapshot—June 2022 El 6/8/2022 6/8/2022 Chimacum Grange June 15th- Monthly Grange Meeting! Jennifer Poole Administrative Manager HCCC Board of Directors and Citizens Committee 6/8/2022 6/8/2022 Hood Canal Coordinating Council Meeting-Agenda and Details for June 15, 2022, 1 p.m. 6/8/2022 6/8/2022 Sierra Club Sierra Forum June 22: 30x30&Closing the Nature Equity Gap 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 Julie Shannon From:Heidi Eisenhour Sent:Thursday, June 2, 2022 8:22 AM To:Julie Shannon Subject:FW: JeffConnects Leadership 2022 Follow Up Flag:Follow up Flag Status:Flagged From: The Chamber of Jefferson County Sent: Thursday, June 2, 2022 8:20:18 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: JeffConnects Leadership 2022 ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. The Business News of Jefferson County www.jeffcountychamber.org 360.385.7869 director@jeffcountychamber.org Your Jefferson County 2022 Community Leadership Awards 1 The Awardees Your Leadership Finalists Click the above images to read or print JeffConnects May-June, 2022 Reimagine - Reengineer - Revitalize Jefferson County Join us for Chamber Cafes June 3rd and June 17th Cafes are free and membership is not required. Registration is necessary to obtain Zoom access Register Now! 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:Kate Dean Sent:Thursday, June 2, 2022 8:46 AM To:Julie Shannon Subject:FW: Opening Today: Now & Then? From: JeffCo Historical Society Sent: Thursday, June 2, 2022 8:44:27 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada) To: Kate Dean Subject: Opening Today: Now & Then ? ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Featuring PTHS student photography and historic images JUNE 2, 2022 June News from JCHS Now & Then: A Photo Story of the Place Called Port Townsend 1 Throughout the 2022 school year, Port Townsend High School students in David Egeler’s Photography and Advanced Media classes selected historic images from JCHS's collection, then found the location where the photos were taken and worked to recreate the exact framing and angle of view in the present day. The resulting photo essays visually illustrate some of the ongoing evolution of Port Townsend and they are on view at the Jefferson Museum this month! Join us for the Now & Then opening reception at the museum from 4:30 to 6:00 PM today, June 2! And don’t forget that this Saturday, June 4 is a free first Saturday at the museum! Stop by during our regular Saturday hours, 11:00 AM to 4:00 PM, for free admission. VISIT OUR JUNE EXHIBITIONS Sponsor Free First Saturdays at the Jefferson Museum! 2 One excellent way to support fun and accessible programming for visitors of all ages at the Jefferson Museum is by sponsoring a free first Saturday! Our museum sees anywhere from two to five times our typical visitation for a weekend day on the first Saturday of every month when admission is free. First Saturday sponsors support waived admission, extended hours, and special Art Walk activities at our museum! Plus, starting in July, we’re bringing live music to our gallery every first Saturday through the end of 2022. Visit our sponsorships page to learn how your business can sign up to sponsor free first Saturdays at the museum! BECOME A SPONSOR Upcoming Programs & Events 3 Rothschild House Open Saturdays for Tours Starting this weekend, we're offering afternoon tours at the 1868 Rothschild House every Saturday this summer! This immersive house is a historic gem. Come for a glimpse into the daily life and memories of the Rothschild family and learn from our staff about Uptown Port Townsend and this special house that JCHS cares for in partnership with Washington State Parks and Rothschild family descendants. You can join us this Saturday, June 4, between 1:00 and 4:00 PM to tour the house this weekend! LEARN MORE ABOUT THE HOUSE Anthropocene Opens This Month This ambitious installation featuring the work of Port Townsend-based artist Karen Lené Rudd goes on view at the Jefferson Museum starting Thursday, June 16! A window into the beautiful and horrifying era of humans on our planet, this exhibition will run through September. Visit during our regular hours and be sure to join us every first Saturday beginning in July for free admission, extended hours, and live music at the museum from 5:00 to 7:00 PM! 4 PLAN YOUR VISIT History Hikes Continue at Fort Flagler Join North Olympic History Center's David Brownell at Fort Flagler on Saturday, June 18 for our next set of History Hikes! On these guided hikes at historically significant sites around east Jefferson County, hikers will explore evidence of the many layers of history. Hikes depart at 11:00 AM and 2:00 PM for each date, and each hike will be capped at 12 participants. LEARN MORE & REGISTER Vanishing Murals Tours Return In July! Preregistration required Our popular Vanishing Murals of Port Townsend walking tours return this July! Happening every Saturday at 11:00 AM in July and August, this unique take on a historic walking tour explores some of the faded “ghost” murals still visible around Downtown Port Townsend. Join us to learn about the advertising murals that were ubiquitous throughout the 19th and early 20th centuries and discover some of the ones hiding in plain sight in our downtown area! 5 LEARN MORE & REGISTER Join Our Team! Open Positions at JCHS Visitor Services Representative 12-16 hours per week, $18/hour Season runs June 25 – October 31 If you enjoy working with the public, providing welcoming museum experiences, and have an acute eye for detail, we're looking for you! JCHS is seeking a visitor services representative to staff our museum on weekends through our busy summer season. This position works weekends and Art Walk evenings at the front desk, opens and closes the museum, takes admissions, facilitates shop sales, and creates an excellent visitor experience. 6 Part-time Bookkeeper 12-15 hours per week, $25/hour We’re looking for a part-time bookkeeper to oversee all of our organization’s financial data and compliance by maintaining accurate books on accounts payable and receivable, other financial entries, and monthly reconciliations. Our bookkeeper is an indispensable part of our organization’s fiscal fitness. If you have accounting and finance experience, we'd love for you to join our team! LEARN MORE & APPLY Help Us Reach Our Spring Fundraising Goal 7 Thanks to everyone who made a spring gift and participated in our AHA! Auction in May, we have raised 77% of our $12,500 spring fundraising goal! ? Our education programs aim to satisfy and inspire voracious curiosity at every age and learning level and we're grateful to everyone who directly supported that! While auction bidding has ended, we are still accepting donations through our auction page through the official end of spring. We hope you'll cheer us on, track our live progress toward our goal, and encourage others to visit our AHA! page to make their gift in honor of lifelong learning. All gifts made through Monday, June 20 count toward our goal. Thanks for helping us reach it! HELP US REACH OUR GOAL 8 Through collections, research, exhibits, and programs, we bring people together to share, learn, and be inspired by Jefferson County arts and heritage. BECOME A JCHS MEMBER 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. 9 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. 10 Julie Shannon From: Greg Brotherton Sent: Thursday, June 2, 2022 8:50 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: OCH Community Briefing I June 2, 2022 From: Olympic Community of Health Sent: Thursday, June 2, 2022 8:47:55 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Greg Brotherton Subject: OCH Community Briefing I June 2, 2022 ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. a r i-�I��, u INS � li II f 1� ty: �: �7 I� '' �y4 ri'Y,9� J It n, '. r ilryti � � � BRIEri Q .° ,.u,a n� Ty a� ��� '1:'"' .% M;�7a -�. l9IYi i i r,.w.� "�91N Hn1ni�;n; .. ,� ... Stronger Together: Foster a region of healthy people, thriving communities June 2, 2022 Monthly deep dive: Access to the full spectrum of care Partners of OCH hold a common vision for a region of healthy people, thriving communities—which includes access to the full spectrum of care physical, behavioral (mental health & substance use disorder), dental, specialty, and social services. A few ways that OCH has worked towards addressing access to the full spectrum of care: • The Access to Care Action Collaborative is made up of partners across the region. They meet regularly to identify specific metrics and projects to collaborate on. They recently identified a shared goal statement, "Access to the right care and services at the right time and place". 1 • Over 70 partnerships were strengthened through OCH's call for community-clinical linkage projects and enhanced transformation projects--these partnerships help connect community strengths and fill gaps in local services. • The region took a deeper dive into the topic of community-based care coordination by coming together for a region-wide convening and sharing partner perspectives in a new video. • The Olympic Region Behavioral Health Report was released in 2021, shedding light on behavioral health needs in the region and opportunities for action Partner Spotlight Jamestown Healing Clinic The Jamestown Healing Clinic is all about just that: healing. From its social navigator and medications for opiate use disorder, primary care, dental, and behavioral health services to finer details like its Native American architecture and art, the Clinic will "[provide] sustained recovery for those struggling with addiction."With the official opening of the Clinic just around the corner, it aims to fill a significant gap in the needs of the Olympic region. Learn more here. ogovio iHuljui bniai i 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. Workforce survey: OCH wants to hear from you OCH in conducting a workforce survey. Responses will inform a regional workforce report, detailing challenges unique to the Olympic region and spotlighting partner successes and creative solutions. The survey takes about 30 minutes and OCH is offering $100 as a thank you for participating.The survey closes 6/21. Note: Implementation Partners were sent unique links for this survey on 5/24/22. fa 2 OII WE WANT - TO HEAR 4; 77„hpoma YO _. r FROM YOU! In WORKFORCE SURVEY ()lympic COMMUN1TY0/HEAtTH Opportunities & Resources Funding opportunity: Clallam hotel leasing and rapid re-housing Clallam County Health & Human Services is happy to announce the 2022-2023 Hotel Leasing and Rapid Re- housing Funding Application is available and can be found at http://www.clallam.net/HHS/(scroll down to first blue box). Qualifications and instructions can be found in the application document. Applications are due to the Clallam County Health & Human Services office, attn. Christine Dunn, no later than 3:00 P.M. June 14, 2022. For questions please contact Christine Dunn. Help create a healthier Kitsap Passionate about public health?Apply to join the Kitsap Public Health Board! The Health Board is seeking applicants to fill three nonelected community representative positions this year, as the Board expands to meet the requirements of a recently enacted state law. Learn more and apply here. 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 Individual needs are met timely, easily, and compassionately Jun 8, 1-2:30p I Port Gamble S'Klallam Wellness Center, Room 212 o Together, recovery is possible Jun 14, 1-2:30p I North Olympic Healthcare Network o Access to the full spectrum of care Jun 21, 1-2:30p I Peninsula Behavioral Health, Port Angeles o Everyone housed Jun 29, 1-2:30p I North Olympic Healthcare Network 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. 3 f V 0 In partnership, Olympic COMMUNITY of 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. as this email forwarded to you? Subscribe here! Olympic Community of Health,41 Colwell St, Port Hadlock,Washington 98339, United States, 3606336298 4 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Thursday,June 2, 2022 10:46 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: DNR Legacy Forests From: cronin@broadstripe.net Sent: Thursday, June 2, 2022 10:44:43 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: brotherton@jefferson.wa.us; Kate Dean; Heidi Eisenhour Subject: DNR Legacy Forests ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. I listened in on your Tuesday meeting and noted the question raised about what is different about the "Valley View" and "Pennywise"timber sales proposals. I have monitored the growth and development of these and all the DNR forests of east Jefferson County for more than 40 years. In retirement I regularly visit the remaining stands of natural second growth. Old growth logging in the Puget Sound lowlands began in the 1860s starting with tidewater stands easily transported by water to early sawmills at Port gamble, Port Ludlow and Seabeck among others.The earliest old growth logging, done by horse and oxen left a good number of the old growth trees, often damaged but intact and they added to the diversity of the subsequent stands. After about 1910 railroad logging with steam generated power left little behind and the second growth which followed had few of these legacy trees. By the 1940s most of the old growth had been cut and the substantial slash was burned by homestead era landowners or accidently by lightning or other man caused fires. The intensity of these fires determined the path of the next forests. On steep,dry slopes the fires were very intense and created perfect conditions for the germination of dense, nearly pure Douglas fir stands while on more moist and gently sloping topography where fires were less intense,the naturally regenerated forests are less dense with greater species and structural diversity. At this point in time these "second growth" stands have matured and mostly been cut again on timber industry lands. The planted, "3rd growth" stands, harvested again at less than 50 years are very efficient at growing fiber but lack species and structural diversity. DNR lands still have some of the natural second growth left and at 70- 100+years, they are developing old forest conditions with a much different look and feel. Yesterday I revisited the Penny creek area to look at the Pennywise sale proposal. Units 1 through 6 are located near the valley bottom and extend to the USFS boundary on the west side of the creek. These 60-70 year old stands are mostly DF with low percentage of other species. I believe that they can be replicated by harvest and reforestation if DNR can hold the third growth to a similar age. With the proximity of similar stands on the USFS which likely won't be logged, and their relatively homogenous nature I don't find these units particularly unique. Unit 7 is located on the broad, relatively flat ridgetop between Penny creek valley and Quilcene . Bob Worthington called this the mesa. Possibly due to the flatter and wetter ground the stands on this mesa are not as purely DF as those on the slopes.This unit has a higher level of diversity and could develop more old forest conditions if not harvested but as of now it does not exhibit unique conditions. The "Valley View" sale proposal illustrates the forest development path described above. Entering the unit on the west side just above and east of the Jefferson County PUD parcel, the forest is pure DF with virtually no understory.This west slope burned intensely, creating a high value timber stand.This part of the unit is not particularly unique nor does it exhibit old forest conditions. East of this pure DF stand is a flat area of approximately 10 acres with widely spaced, very large fir and cedar(40-60+inches diameter) mixed with maple alder and all the native tree species. 1 I find this small patch to be unique, likely not replaceable in less than a century, and very worthy of protection. If DNR has not done an old forest assessment of this area it would seem appropriate. It may not be "old growth" but it has all the characteristics of the nicest old forests of the Puget sound lowlands and I would hate to see it gone. Thanks for the opportunity to sound off. Sincerely, Mike Cronin 2 Julie Shannon From: Kate Dean Sent: , , 11:03 AM To: JulieThursday Shannon June 2 Subject: FW: Recruiting Government 2022 Speech Donations From: MRSC— Local Government Sent: Thursday, June 2, 2022 11:01:09 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Kate Dean Subject: Recruiting I Government Speech I Donations ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. .,„ MRSC in focus • Local GGovernment June 2, 2022 • ,r ''1):'-- 21:* * 71,4 '''''*4.1!'t-H, ' ,' : a 4 n :ate ''''''L---7r, _ ":"''i''''' /„1"A'''''t 0,01 ' '' II\ ' ' - '-,:,---_,-,10 [1.6.-. , i ,...4. i .„t _ V:114 ," doll 44:- `tee a � s. ,.:. Ask MRSC i" From MRSC 1 Recruiting for Local Government Positions We are looking for guidance By Flannary Collins on hosting city-sponsored Many employers are finding employee recruitment challenging.This blog summer events, such as explores some out-of-the-box approaches to attracting new talent,from parades. signing and referral bonuses,telecommute options and other incentives, as well as what to consider if you hire out-of-state staff. More from MRSC What options have cities Insight used to financially support downtown façade and Speaking Versus Regulating — The Government building improvements? Speech Doctrine Have a question? By Oskar Rey Officials and employees Government speech is analyzed differently by the courts than from eligible government government regulation of the speech of others.This blog looks at agencies can use our free government speech case law, including the recent U.S. Supreme Court one-on-one inquiry service, decision in Shurtleff v. City of Boston. More from MRSC Insight Ask MRSC. Donations and Local Governments: The Basics of Giving and Receiving MRSC By Eric Lowell This blog looks at how a local government can receive donations and how it can make a donation without violating the gift of public funds prohibition. More from MRSC Insight JLARC Public Records Program Reporting Deadline Coming Up Fast By Ashley Elliott The JLARC Public Records Program reporting deadline is July 1.This guest blog covers major findings from the 2020 report as well as answers to frequently asked questions regarding the reporting process. More from MRSC Insight Upcoming Trainings Registration for each webinar closes at 5 PM the day before the event.All pre-registered attendees will get access to the recorded webinar a day after the broadcast. Legislative Update on 2022 Public Records Bills (and Bonus OP MA Bill) (Webinar) Thursday,June 16, 10 AM—11 AM Cost: FREE I Credits:WAPRO, CML Learn more and register Increasing Transportation Options and Access: Local Success in Washington's Cities (Webinar) Tuesday,June 28, 11 AM—12 PM Cost: $35 I Credits: CM, CML Learn more and register Land Use Case Law Update (Webinar) Thursday,July 21, 11 AM—12 PM Cost: $40 I Credits: CM Law, CLE (pending approval), CML(pending approval) Learn more and register Missed a webinar?On-Demand Webinars are available to view for a fee; credits are available for some. 2 In Focus Planning & Mapping EV Charging Government's Role in Including Stations Along Highway Corridors Accessibility in Procurement Public Listening Session During a session at the 2022 Code for America Through the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Summit, experts explored how government Act,Washington will receive about$70 million agencies can do a better job of centering over five years to build out electric vehicle (EV) accessibility during procurement processes and infrastructure along our state's major highway how to overcome obstacles. More from corridors.Join WSDOT and WSU on June 2 or 8 Government Technology for a webinar about this new opportunity. Register and select your preferred date How Rethinking Land Use Can Boost Local Government Revenue Local Governments Seek Other Governments looking to make revenue streams Options Amid Cyber Insurance more dependable should consider revisiting land- use regulations, incentives and taking other steps, says a recent report. More from Route Fifty As insurance costs and requirements rise, some municipalities are looking to self-insurance and Building Cities of Opportunity: service providers'cyber incident warranties to help in cases of ransomware and other incidents. More Putting Residents at the Center of from Governing Cities Work A pillar of NLC's Cities of Opportunity(CoO) Lessons From California: Tips to initiative is to support municipal government Keep Transit Projects on Time, on leaders in meaningfully and authentically engaging Budget with city residents to work together on policy and g system changes to improve health and equity. There's a problem with American transit projects: More from National League of Cities they consistently run over budget and fall behind schedule.A new study from UC Berkeley delves into five California rail case studies to find out why. More from Smart Cities Dive Washington News National News Crypto mine gets conditional use permit from Pend Eugene(Or.)officials unanimously pass middle Oreille County; opponents appeal housing rules after months of community feedback Sultan gets a boost from remote-work newcomers Water companies are increasingly uninsurable due —and growing pains to ransomware, industry execs say Spokane city council adopts ordinance to ban With training, mentorship, and more, Utah works watering lawns during peak hours in summer,fall to attract public workers who have resume gaps New plan would merge Snohomish Health District A California police department offered gas money with county for unwanted guns. It ran out Burlington offering retention bonuses for first Fairfax County(Va.) uses mapping to show areas responders of greatest need Okanogan County starts work on fire protection New York now has more Airbnb listings than plan apartments for rent Kennewick considers$500 fine for illegal July 4 Largest US counties lost record number of fireworks. Others want to ease restrictions residents in 2021 Seattle sets minimum wage for app-based delivery Tennessee is about to become the first state to drivers make camping on public land a felony 3 Thank you to our generous sponsors Stay Informed MRSC publishes a number of e-newsletters related to (� D ( INSLEE local government issues. MUY You can also keep up with ,, ,,,��, us on social media. WALLACE = BEST ATTORNEYS(--- Manage � � ur MADRONA LANE POWELLy „ WYF inw r.nc�ur. riLr, ,� CHCAIRNCROSS&HEMPELMANN � � i� ■ &ATTORNEYS AT LAW 1f E In Athena TH LAW QFFJCE QF a Lighthouse GROUP I11 RICHAIIR 1II1IGHES ,vl%`, ,w '-„ii! ;rd, '-,�� ., ./e[ ur ,.i,li ,,,;.d„ it ;"tit ,,;%o„ „y,,,,^%. i`l i,rn;.n Jv,� /4Y j,✓„ ,.'i�°';; .: If you have questions or comments for the newsletter editor, please M RSC.org contact Lisa Pool, Public Policy Consultant. MRSC 12601 Fourth Avenue, Suite 800, Seattle, WA 98121 Unsubscribe kdean@co.jefferson.wa.us Update Profile I Constant Contact Data Notice Sent by it@mrsc.org 4 Julie Shannon From: Greg Brotherton Sent: Thursday,June 2, 2022 11:08 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW:Join us at Recovery Cafe this month From: Recovery Cafe Jefferson County Sent: Thursday, June 2, 2022 11:06:01 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Greg Brotherton Subject: Join us at Recovery Cafe this month 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 Rac 1NEAdvocacy overyCar@ Services HOUSE Recovery Café 'W " 1. .,f Jefferson County m °,4 939 Kearney St,Port Townsend,WA 98368 Ihl lecoveryCafeJC.org �ik 860-085-5292 Join us at Recovery Café Check out our upcoming events below. Now serving free lunch on Wednesdays at 12:30pm! In addition to Thursdays at 12:30pm and Fridays at 10:30am Volunteers needed!Join us Wednesday mornings at 11am for an orientation, or contact us to learn more. Volunteer Training on Friday 6/24 1:30pm-3pm (details TBA) 1 "The Wisdom of Trauma" Join us for a screening and brief discussion of the documentary "The Wisdom of Trauma" on Friday 6/10 from 1:30pm-4pm Trauma is the invisible force that shapes our lives. It shapes the way we live, the way we love, and the way we make sense of the world. It is the root of our deepest wounds. Dr. Mate gives us a new vision: a trauma-informed society in which parents, teachers, physicians, policy-makers, and legal personnel are not concerned with fixing behaviors, making diagnoses, suppressing symptoms and judging, but seek instead to understand the sources from which troubling behaviors and diseases spring in the wounded human soul. A FILM BY ZAYA AND MA1 R IZ It9 ':R ENA Z Zo Ij INn; THE wISDOM OF A JOURNEY TO THE ROOT OF HUMAN PAIN AND THE SOURCE OF HEALING WITH DR . GABOR MATE 2 Summer Open Mic Nights on the patio --- ' �'' ,i 0 ka L R: a 'PI, - • :,,OPEN . . . , : M IC NI. HTS . .,.. ......- F.:ADAltiw s 6E.1,,..,:pnapm r ill, of z fr,. .7, 1 iiiia tst,it ri ars. . ,,,,„,, iii#7J . I FREE, FAMILY-FRIENDLY, . DRUG-AND-ALCOHOL-FREE-FREE EVENT . SNACKS AND BEVERAGES PROVIDED . 939 Kearney Street ,, CecoveryCafe Pori Townsend,WA 96368 swig I '1 360-385-5292 . . 10(`t' develrpmmenire ovehouselc. . v.. w June 2022 Events Calendar 3 JUNE 2022 RECOVERY CAFE EVENTS CALENDAR SUN MON TUES WED THURS FRI SAT May 30 May 31 1 2 3 4 Yoga for Members New Member Intro 9-10am Café Open 10am-1 pm (register at desk) Volunteer Orient 11-12 Cafe Open 12-4pm -Brunch served 10:30 10-1130am -Lunch served 12:30 Cafe Open 12-4pm Lunch 12:30 "Stitching it Together"130-3pm Art Group 1:30pm Soul's Journey class 4-5 Garden Group 2p Chair massage w/Tracy LeMoine NAM Support Group 7-B30 130-3p 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Yoga for Members New Member Intro 9-10am Cafe Open 10am-1pm (register at desk) Volunteer Orient 11-12 Cafe Open 124pm -Brunch served 10:30 10-1130am -Lunch served 12:30 Cafe Open 12-4pm Lunch 12:30 "Wisdom of Trauma"screening Garden Group 2p 130-4pm Soul's Journey class 4-5 Open Mic 8pm-8pm 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 Yoga for Members New Member Intro 9-10am Cafe Open 10am-1pm (register at desk) Volunteer Orient 11-12 Cafe Open 12-4pm -Brunch served 10:30 10-1130am -Lunch served 12:30 Cafe Open 12-4pm Lunch 12:30 Qigong with Susanne Skadron Garden Group 2p 130-3pm Soul's Journey class 4-5 NAMI Support Group 7 830 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 New Member Intro 9-10am Volunteer Orient 11-12 Café Open 10am-ipm Yoga for Members Cafe Open 12-4pm -Brunch served 10:30 (register at desk) Café Open 12-4pm Lunch 12:30 -Lunch served 12:30 10-1130am Soul's Journey class 4-5 Garden Group 2p JC MASH Clinic 130-3pm Recovery Café 0 Copyright(C)2022 Dove House Advocacy Services.All rights reserved. You are receiving this email because you opted in via our website. Our mailing address is: Dove House Advocacy Services 1045 10th St Port Townsend,WA 98368-2933 Add us to your address book Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe 4 Grow your business with t mailchimp 5 Julie Shannon From: Kate Dean Sent: Thursday, June 2, 2022 11:24 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW:WSF Summer 2022 Virtual Public Meetings From: Vezina, John Sent: Thursday, June 2, 2022 11:22:07 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) Subject: WSF Summer 2022 Virtual Public Meetings ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. County and City Elected Officials from WSF-served communities, WSF will hold our next biennial (virtual) public meetings on Tuesday, June 14 at 1:00PM and on Wednesday, June 15 at 6:00PM. WSF leadership will give a brief presentation on meeting will be reserved for questions from participants. Members of the public can participate in the meeting from a laptop, desktop or mobile device, but advanced registration is required to participate: Registration for the virtual meetings: o Register online for the 1:00PM, Tuesday, June 14 meeting at: https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN FIhDjfDRTbyEP2iEKV35gA o Register online for the 6:00PM, Wednesday, June 15 meeting at: https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN VkH2f2IzRBCe-TFPWIvgyg o Participants must provide a name and valid email address and have access to a computer or mobile device with an internet connection. o Once registered, participants will receive an email with detailed instructions on how to join the meeting. o The day after each meeting, a video recording will be available online on WSF's community participation webpage. We hope you'll advertise the public meetings to your constituents and join if your schedule allows. Best, John John B. Vezina Director of Planning, Customer, and Government Relations Washington State Ferries i Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Thursday,June 2, 2022 11:50 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW:TONIGHT: President Biden to Deliver Remarks on Gun Violence - 7:30 PM ET From: White House Intergovernmental Affairs Sent: Thursday, June 2, 2022 11:48:21 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: TONIGHT: President Biden to Deliver Remarks on Gun Violence - 7:30 PM ET ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. 1aIIo I� a l�a 0-a�2111 C3 § Q H22 THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON June 2,2022 TUNE IN: President Biden Remarks at 7:30 PM ET on Gun Violence This evening, President Biden will deliver remarks on the recent tragic mass shootings and the need to for Congress to act to pass commonsense laws to combat the epidemic of gun violence that is taking lives every day. WATCH HERE: https://www.whitehouse.gov/live/ Today at 7:3o PM ET i Privacy Policy I Unsubscribe Office of Intergovernmental Affairs • 1600 Pennsylvania Ave NW•Washington, DC 20500-0005 • USA • 202-456-1111 2 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Thursday,June 2, 2022 2:09 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: Coronavirus pandemic resources for counties—June 2, 2022 From: NACo Sent: Thursday, June 2, 2022 2:07:04 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US&Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: Coronavirus pandemic resources for counties—June 2, 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 CORONAVIRUS ( VID49) RESOURCES FOP COUNTIES NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF COUNTIES I NACo.org/coronavirus June 2, 2022 NEW NACo PARTNERSHIP TO DELIVER MENTAL HEALTH FIRST AID TRAINING TO THE COUNTY WORKFORCE 1 ill w' e(I lio i { ° t° e .l. Nl�l ''a bG tlly li�l p d i'vi lip" �� ro � ' Ra� r �� .' �iilllli � I' Health ppyy�(� �}}q �, is'S ■143-_Illt�l[F7& IES.r7 T�# ., y` �,m, f - . ze}YmxaFq ue`9Ed"�; [t d,+afifl'�.i E".`' This week, NACo and the National Council for Mental Wellbeing announced a new partnership , to make Mental Health First Aid available to county employees. Since the beginning of the pandemic county elected officials and staff have served on the front lines. This new partnership will help enhance the county workforce's mental health and wellbeing, while reducing stigmas associated with mental health and substance use challenges. • LEARN MORE ABOUT THE PARTNERSHIP • COUNTY NEWS: EMPLOYEE HEALTH SERVES AS A CRUCIAL UNDERPINNING OMB ISSUES INFORMATION ON SINGLE AUDIT COMPLIANCE REQUIREMENTS FOR ARPA RECOVERY FUNDS AND ERA PROGRAM 2 ' •. � rPilllll" ry zkAa p ON j Y u w "3 _ n( I III Y � ul .. ' ..; u00:- I Iu ,.. fig ".._ ri HI9Id d The Office of Management and Budget recently published guidance on how auditors should conduct Single Audits for ARPA Recovery Fund investments and the Emergency Rental Assistance (ERA) Program. Federal law requires counties that invested $750,000 or more in federal funds within its fiscal year to have an auditor conduct Single Audits of these expenditures. • LEARN MORE • NACo's RECOVERY FUND RESOURCE HUB • NACo's ERA RESOURCE HUB ADDRESSING THE NATION'S BEHAVIORAL HEALTH CRISIS WITH RECOVERY FUNDS 3 , laif Ill�t ,�1 I�� �rl law .41 �1 d °rew, §`e' d ..E j WEBINAR I TUNE 8 I 3:00 P.M. EDT Learn how Ulster County, N.Y.; Placer County, Calif. and Clackamas County, Ore. are leveraging ARPA resources to expand the availability and scope of behavioral health services, invest in local crisis centers and construct rehabilitation centers to strengthen community resources. REGISTER TODAY ftir0 ADVANCING INFRASTRUCTURE JOBS IN FEDERALLY FUNDED TRANSPORTATION PROJECTS 4 5 III� ::'-'ll f'lii'i siN),��T]Ibk 7i'' ._» mow._, ra s , _ .__ . AyyV 14a lrll�" O1114( vo f Np - Y®ii :.?i r iii ilIbN1h t I 1 ,a,W«m.e,.� M „ a � � N F�- . ���v .t.� �� ';`'k 'b° ,es— wl m'N ""�''"� a .yn ., ,�, ��` .- Y ,",' —„".' Yrr ' 41w ,;fin �� :; »:"" "� � +.. % dry �, `. WEBINAR I JUNE 9 13:00 P.M. EDT Counties are investing federal funds to support local infrastructure priorities and drive COVID-19 recovery. Join officials from the U.S. Departments of Labor and Transportation to learn about their recently announced partnership on forthcoming funding opportunities that include requirements and allowances for focuses on job quality and equitable workforce development. • REGISTER TODAY • NACo's BIPARTISAN INFRASTRUCTURE LAW RESOURCE HUB BUILDING FOR SUCCESS: HOW COUNTIES CAN LEVERAGE FEDERAL FUNDS FOR WORKFORCE HOUSING 5 iluhil ii `II fl , p1r, „}„ ,,, .4 ..,,,„,..t,'„„,,A,,,,,,,,,,2,,,T,,,,,,,,- , , , ,, .„, , ^.xa.. .,.. 9 uwM� t "� a t�N,i k�.�..,4 a.a r .•,' WEBINAR I JUNE 23 I 3:00 P.M. EDT Learn new strategies and ideas from fellow county leaders, top research organizations and NACo staff that can help you leverage federal funds to support your county's workforce through housing. REGISTER TODAY 6 TREASURY RELEASES FISCAL RECOVERY FUND PUBLIC REPORTING DATA THROUGH END OF 2021 6 b • 040k , *•''' j;?;t:f R1 s'i; .4 ': "A,.. ° ms 4,,, 1,..;.-7-i At i e,. :, 440.4,...44 4,,,,z 14-4-'-:., ' ' g p N,..:$ ' '; 41; s:' 'k iT A..,i,k0'':1`44;'"' ';‘,1.."':'.*- ' is_ -,,-,,,,,,- ';,;' :, ''',, i,k, ,ss. 4'' ' •liks:'-', ' ,,A i''' .4;;'4 4:A..- .'k 1. 1 ,:1 .0'1.4 ' .. * ,, The U.S. Treasury Department released public reporting data for ARPA Fiscal Recovery Fund investments from recipients with a population over 250,000 or an award over $10 million. By the end of 2021, counties and cities with populations over 250,000 budgeted 83 percent of available ARPA Recovery Funds. LEARN MORE • NACo's RECOVERY FUND RESOURCE HUB v RECOVERY FUND SPOTLIGHT: INTERGOVERNMENTAL PARTNERSHIPS Counties across the nation are complementing Recovery Fund investments with intergovernmental partnerships to efficiently deliver programs and services, leverage state funding opportunities and support a regional approach to recovery. COUNTIES PLAN TO INVEST RECOVERY FUNDS TO: 0 • 0 • SUPPORT REGIONAL HEALTH I STREAMLINE ARPA GRANT COORDINATE HOUSING INITIATIVES AND WELLNESS APPLICATIONS TO BETTER SERVE RESIDENTS ro Iw. ADDRESS LEARNING DISPARITIES LEVERAGE STATE FUNDING EXPAND LOM BUSINESS IN THE COMMUNITY OPPORTUNITIES CAPACITY AND DEVELOPMENT • LEARN MORE • FULL ARPA INVESTMENT ANALYSIS SERIES JOIN NACo's UNTOLD STORIES CAMPAIGN AND TELL YOUR COUNTY'S STORY 8 ,,,, , , , ., lk, 4, -,, �U4 , , STORIESitin. '�ri-N UNTOLD _, ., ,, 9` ',,,,,, r /tt , . ,I OIG� Counties continue to invest in pandemic recovery and plan for the future. Tell the story of your county's efforts. Use our online form to tell your county's story, and visit NACo.org/UntoldStories to learn more. • LEARN MORE • SHARE YOUR STORY EXPLORE THE FULL SCHEDULE FOR THE 2022 NACo ANNUAL CONFERENCE & EXPOSITION 9 2022 ANNUALCONFERENCE&EXPOSITION ADAMSC.OUNTV COLgOR;( AC O UlY a2"'r 20 2 N wi. W.. t .. J U LY 21 — 24 I NOTE NEW PATTERN OF THURSDAY— SUNDAY Explore the full schedule for the NACo Annual Conference & Exposition. Register today to join us in Adams County, Colo. to exchange cutting-edge practices, including COVID-19 recovery and American Rescue Plan investments. • REGISTER TODAY • EXPLORE THE FULL CONFERENCE SCHEDULE f en TOP RECOVERY FUND QUESTIONS & ANSWERS Do counties need a Unique Entity Identifier for the second tranche? On April 4, 2022, the federal government switched from using the DUNS Number to using the Unique Entity Identifier (UEI) to confirm counties' identities. A UEI is a 12- digit number that verifies that a county is a legitimate entity eligible to receive federal grants, loans or contracts. Counties must ensure that they have an active UEI to receive the second tranche of Fiscal Recovery Funds. Counties can use the General Services Administration's start guide to read more about receiving a UEI. Does the switch from the DUNS Number to UEI affect entity validation? When the federal government switched to using the UEI instead of the DUNS Number, it also changed its service provider for validating users' submitted data. io Because of the switch, all entities, even ones currently registered in SAM.gov, will need to validate their information through the new service provider. • ASK YOUR QUESTION • NACo's ARPA RECOVERY FUND RESOURCES NATIONAL AS ► ((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! Click here to unsubscribe. • 11 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Thursday, June 2, 2022 2:31 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: ARPA Small Business and Tech service Provider Grant Report 6.2022 Attachments: ARPA Business-Tech Service Provider Grant Report 6.2022.docx From: Cindy Brooks Sent: Thursday, June 2, 2022 2:28:48 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Mark McCauley; Kate Dean; Greg Brotherton; Heidi Eisenhour Subject: ARPA Small Business and Tech service Provider Grant Report 6.2022 ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Hi Mark McCauley and County Commissioners, Please find attached a summary report of the ARPA Small Business and Technical Service Provider grant process.Thank you for the opportunity to administer this funding. It helped us meet and understand the challenges facing the small business community and provider network. We will be hosting the Center for Inclusive Entrepreneurship at the EDC soon, and are developing a robust referral network to best connect small businesses to the provider best suited to assist them. We appreciate your support and trust. Best, Cindy Cindy Brooks Executive Director EDC Team Jefferson 385 Benedict St, Suite 2A Port Townsend, WA 98368 Office: 360.379.4693 Cell: 360.671.3199 i ARPA Grant Report June 1, 2022 Addendum to EDC Team Jefferson Quarterly Report EDC Team Jefferson has confirmed that all grant checks have been received and cashed. A spreadsheet was developed to compare businesses and technical service providers based on their application and submitted documents relative to the criteria established by Jefferson County and EDC Team Jefferson. An external review team provide final analysis. Five technical providers received grant funding: $12,000 The Jefferson Community Foundation for services to nonprofits $12,000 The Center for Inclusive Entrepreneurship for no cost services to Jefferson County microenterprises $12,000 The Chamber of Commerce for outreach to Quilcene Chamber members $12,000 North Olympic Development Council to extend their no cost online marketing assistance program to Jefferson County through 2022 $ 2,000 Skillmation, for their May 26th job fair in Chimacum $50,000 Total One hundred thirty-three small businesses received grant funding. The criteria for this grant was grounded in Treasury Guidance, primarily based on COVID related financial need, underserved groups, and those left out of prior grant funding rounds. The Small Business Grant recipients have received a copy of the short form of the federal Treasury Guidance which describes how the grant can be spent. The have also been provided with resources regarding bookkeeping and accounting through the service partners. The list below has removed business names to respect confidentiality, and has been sorted by industry codes. The next step in EDC follow up will be to survey the recipients in December 2022 to discover how they spent their grant funding and inquire about the process and anticipated future needs. We will reach out by email this summer and fall to see if we can connect them to other support services. # # Employees Employees INDUSTRY NAICS FT PT Amount Greenhouse, Floriculture 1114 1 0 ,, Floriculture Production ,, 111422 0 - 0 4,000 Other Traveler gccomodatlott 72119 Other Crop Farming 1119 0 1 Residential Building Construction 2361 0 0 3325 0 1 Hardware Manufacturing 8134 0 0 g Civic& Social Organizations Restaurants 72251 4 4 F Vegetable, Melon Farming 111210. 1 , 0� 2,50f1- Frozen Food Manufacturing mm 3114b0 Vegetable, Melon Farming 111219 0 0 ": ^° ' Misc Crop Farming 111998 0 3 ,1", 111998 2 0 Misc Crop Farming Misc Crop Farming 111998 1 2 ` Other Crop Farming 112900 0 0 # Support Activies for Forestry 115310 1 1 ma's`� # Residential Building Construction 236115 0 0 236110 4 2 , '- Residential Building Construction ' Electrical Contractors ,,,,, 238210 1 0 Specialty Trade Contractors 238990 0 0 �' Framing Contractor 238130 3 0 " Retail Bakeries 311811 1 2 4 W Food Manufacturing 311900 0 0 ° 314910 0 26 Textile Bag, Canvas Mills Sic Extract-Manufacturing 11942 ± e� . 0 _ Z,7�0 specialty Fo d� ti re 44 239 Sawmills 321113 0 0 00 Commerical Printing 323111 1 0 Ship Building & Repair 336611 0 0 Jewelry and Silver Ware Manufacturing 339910 1 0 Doll,Toy,Game Manufacturing , 33993t► 0 1 2,500 Book Publisher • 51113d Dairy Product Wholesalers 424430 0 0 0 424460 1 0 -`3 9Q: Fish, Seafood Wholesalers Farm Supply Wholesalers 424 110 0 0 :' 500 Lessor„ �f-Res dential Buildingg 531110' Other Nondurable Goods Wholesalers 424990 0 0 Auto Parts Store 441310 2 1 0 442299 2 0 Home Furnishings Store Stationery,•Office Supply.Whc lesalers '';i 42412 • 1 500 Photographic Services 541 2 �' Garden Center Store 444220 0 0 Grocery Store 445110 45 31 I6, Meat Market 445210 3 0 445230 0 3 Fruit,Vegetable Marketr::::,„-----_,:,:-:-'."1-:- Beauty Supply Store 446120 2 4 �40 Children's Clothing Store 448130 0 0 !!,, r 4fl Famili,Clothing Store 4'48140 0 0 500. Other Home Furnishing Stare 442299 . Family.Clothing Store 44.8140 2 0 2,7�50 '' .«ikee,H6fe-FOf6itOinf$toro z „42299 Clothing Accessories Store 448150 0 2 Hobby, Toy, Game Store 451120 1 9 {0 .7.:atioHT.,2!:..iEi,:::::::„-.„,,-,-.,,,,•:::,,,,:„,,ip.-:-1;, Musical Instrument and Supplies Store 451140 0 0 Book Store 451211 1 0 _- .. Book Store 451211 2 0 „1 6 Gift, Novelty, Souvenir Store 453220 1 2 kkk' -0' Gift, Novelty, Souvenir Store 453220 1 0 "q Used Merchandise Store 453310 1 0 , Used�Merchandise Store � 453310 0 0 2,50Q� - Other Home Furnishing Store � � 1442299 � � �, Art Dealer 453920 0 0 a t " Art Dealer 453920 0 00,,. Art Dealer 453920 0 0 r " ' Art Dealer 453920 0 0 2,500 Other Nondurable Goods Wholesalers 424990 Misc Store Retailer 453990 2 0 ' ° Misc Store Retailer 453998 1 0 ' " kft Misc Store Retailer 453998 0 0 < " Misc Store Retailer 453998 0 0 0' Misc Store Retailer 453998 0 3 _i iti Special Needs Transportation 485991 2 1 " 41 Sightseeing on Water 487210 1 0 3 Motion Picture,Video Production 512110 0 0 1 0 Motion Picture,Video Production 512110 2 0 Sound Recording Studios 512240 5 3 ' Internet Publishing &Web Search Portal 519130 0 0 Ail Lessor of Nonresidential Buildings 531120 2 0 , 1 04 Interior Design Services 541410 1 0 0+ Admin Management Consulting Services 541611 1 1 ! t Admin Management Consulting Services 541611 0 0 ay Admin Management Consulting Services 541611 1 0 w 3,250 Lawyer 541.110 Business Service Center, Copy Shop 561439 2 1 - ° ' Investigation &Security Services 561600 2 2 .° " Landscaping Services 561730 0 0 " Misc School and Instruction 611699 0 0 r " 1.: Educational Support Services 611710 0 0 "_ Educational Support Services 611'710 1 1 3;000 W.. 611t91 exam Prep and Tutoring Physicians 621111 1 0 62111 3 2 3,500 Physicians , Other Servidest Health Care 624190, Offices of Misc Health Practitioners 621339 0 0 Offices of Misc Health Practitioners 621399 0 0 Offices of Misc Health Practitioners 621399 0 0 « 1 Offices of Misc Health Practitioners 621399 0 0 ' Child &Youth Services 624110 1 3 ! 3 Services for Elderly & Disabled 624120 3 7 Performing Arts Co 711100 0 0 ,'" Musical Groups &Artists 711130 0 0 "1 D Independent Artists,Writers, Performers 711510 1 0 $ Independent Artists,Writers, Performers 711510 0 0 6 Independent Artists,Writers, Performers 711510 1 1 Vol) Independent Artists,Writers, Performers 711510 0 0 a Hotels, Motels 721110 6 4 to Hotels, Motels 721110 2 7 Hotels, Motels 721110 0 0 Bed & Breakfast 721191 0 0 Special Food Services 722300 0 4 Special Food Services 722300 0 0 tea== Special Food Services 722330 5 3 Special Food Services 722330 0 3 Full Service Restaurants 722511 0 6 Full Service Restaurants 722511 2 9 Full Service Restaurants 722511 2 4 = t Full Service Restaurants 722511 5 11 Full Service Restaurants 722511 10 4 Limited Service Restaurants 722513 2 3 -_r ti ..= Limited Service Restaurants 722513 0 5 -3-45m Limited Service Restaurants 722513 1 0 Limited Service Restaurants 722513 0 3 Limited Service Restaurants 722513 1 0 20 Limited Service Restaurants 722513 1 2 WAZ Cafeterias, Buffets 722514 0 5 V Snack& Nonalcoholic Beverage Bars 722515 2 2 E Snack& Nonalcoholic Beverage Bars 722515 1 1 4� a Snack& Nonalcoholic Beverage Bars 722515 1 2 # a Snack& Nonalcoholic Beverage Bars 722515 1 2 a General Auto Repair 811111 8 0 AS ,77A ' 41,11 .�u Other Auto Repair 811190 2 0 Z Repair, Service Household Goods 811490 1 0 Repair, Service Household Goods 811490 1 0 Repair, Service Household Goods 811490 2 0 Barber Shop 812111 0 0 356 ._ Personal Care Service 812199 0 0 i, 2,5a"i Pet Care Service 812910 0 0 0 Pet Care Service 812910 0 1 Other Personal Services 812990 0 0 Other Personal Services 812990 0 1 Other Social Advocacy Organizations 813319 0 10 Human Rights Organizations 813311 0 5 4,250 Store Retailers not specified 453998 Civic & Social Organizations 813410 0 0 Civic & Social Organizations 813410 0 0 . Civic &Social Organizations 813410 0 0 Professional Organizations 813920 0 0 TOTAL 400,000 * Grey highlight indicates a single business with multiple NAICS codes. The first two digits designate the economic sector, the third digit designates the subsector, the fourth digit designates the industry group, the fifth digit designates the NAICS industry, and the sixth digit designates the national industry. A complete and valid NAICS code contains six digits. Thank you for the opportunity to administer this process. The EDC Team Jefferson Team Cindy Brooks Kathy Decker Julie Shannon From: Kate Dean sent: Thursday, June 2, 2022 3:14 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW:WSF Weekly Update From: Vezina, John Sent: Thursday, June 2, 2022 3:12:28 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. WASHINtaTC?F+i STATE FERR1 5 ; ' $,L 2 v , �"any. � - , Ns.„"l I- "�Iqp„ iil �s§ ,n a e�?` i' iaGia �'��u ilNl+:.. @let_. emuo.. ��m • Join us for a virtual public meeting,June 14 or 15 June 2, 2022 " Mark your calendar! We're hosting two virtual public Happy birthday to us! � , meetings to provide our customers with insight about them 44 coming months and respond to questions and concerns. This week,we're celebrating71 ears oaf safe Advanced registration is required to participate in the 1 and effic► t s ices On p.m. Zoom meeting on Tuesda , June 14, or the 6 p.m. yJune 1, 1951,Washington . Zoom meeting on Wednesday, June 15- Both meetings will State: erri`estaestan cover the same material and are desi ned to ive 9 9 operations follow-.the � � ' participants the option to join the meeting that best fits your state's purchase of the ferry schedule. system from Puget Sound ; Navigation Company Black Bali Linea.Happy birthday to US! 1 ' x - „ µif ,:::, I i:',;„ si,-11::''' i ; '..., --- ,s- IS.ig i E'TAKES:I '- "s; s'st, l :x €k is t ��f^ --�" „ it V£il CONTRBI I tf�:'_ �::: 1 ,-':w �� . !OF--- ..:--- FERRY LINES4 „ ‘.. ...t. .‘---.; — - . ..� „.x ., s': s. 7- �l efaAlt Cif 5_MItiIiart @3m.. ,<s.. - .� ` PR#rchax+ddml�tR"d" .. ht <�'•<::�t �..... � � < . •:�-�•�,� •�'a _...... ., Slate rrtalra*~t�t thel3#Vl ` „ _ � �.� < 2t<�#t Lines +eifsCV;s#iRSdt< .ere °�•... • :: r •. . < la snd tenninnt wscs rat. ' :: ' "M. � Pid 7;tur�il]ay morning in 4,,, <. " , P r mink et 1otla , � i , a ?; :.€ ' • , .. ,, ii.. rhymes# ttawast'r et the Meta' .•u .: ;us Ir_ ki..-47 ,, ,wRVt the t'rlenirole t e the Wash.! ..> ' > -.!' ^i k ,R�drr 4., Mitt Vff we *en w ".3 '.' •R,,. d'Uxl the argent, e. tette ,place v:... P• S. :'.�:�.„>. �'..,1�— w� Pretty.� tit •..., �,.y •. '4s a ,nrleibitrrarvrr, et ate row ., . a€ ! t s;s�t94amerei %V ,^ +#Pt 1.,—; w,ln#nrtr 'by N}ye}` �".rsrerll ;i*,us 9 ,.< ' � ��"' jaerr r< d, 1#rt's��r'� �+9 y[trtr ''�� During the community meetings, we will give a brief ,Ingnrtay Ditettee Wtaltate A! presentation on upcoming summer service, hiring „n a :< a..: gy; ,a� challenges and our process to restore service to pre- �;-=m ' ; �' pandemic levels. Seattle Post-lntelligencer :•:< "'' '` p news article from June 1, 1951,our first day of ASCE International Conference on Transportation 8t ' operations. ; :" Development + . .�•�;�. • xr 50-year gold stripe goes _ �;„ : We have a big presence at the American Society of Civil upon Spokane s, ae Engineers (ASCE) International Conference on , °: Transportation & Development this week in Seattle. In Spokane is 50 years old in •:.,�<,.f, • ' $ �...:.: ‘,..,- addition to WSDOT Secretary Roger Millar serving as 24221 To mark the `; :���;" : 7` µ conference co-chair and a plenary session moderator, occasion,a gold stripe was ,•µ',, .,:.' painted on its center stack , ,_ there was a breakout session yesterday featuring a ,=� during the vessel's recent ,�••..�$`� . `` ''° Washington State Ferries executives discussing our \k'.. •• 9 maintenance period at our `ka i',. sustainability efforts. We also had a table where attendees Eagle Harbor Maintenance ::::` could talk to our IT staff about marine internet connectivity Facility. Built in 1972, ,�. •.° and technology challenges. Tomorrow, we will host some Spokane is the first of two attendees on a tour of the Colman Dockproject, a Jumbo-class ferries.Next ;, " ;ti ) year, Walla Walla will get k :e.. :„; • „:.: Seattle/Bainbridge ferry ride and our Eagle Harbor its old stripe,which :::a x";..ym, '' >< Maintenance Facility. Signifies 50 years in :n' service. -,1:. 4:1., ' ',---4,0,..0„44, - k ' 'k t't tss: 't _a, /* 15, x4P iC,. R „ < „,,,, -- ' .,, iii ,, , )6,1„. i :^ Spokane is erneEr';° our ferries in servicrece ,"i ' , t I: ._. a 50-year gold e. .:- ' , r others are Tillikum '' ; 1.° , Kaleetan and Yakima. . Marion Street exit at <.; ::. Colman Dock to close k•F ;sir, next week,June 7-9 2 For three days at our R," • : Chief Sustainability Officer Kevin eartoy; Planning, Seattle terminal next week u ' • Customer, and Government Relations Director JohnrM x'•• all vehicles wilt once again � . , ;, '• Vezina; Ferry System Electrification Program Administrator exit at l`esler Way during ' <:. Matt Von Ruden; Terminal Engineering Director David �::• g g specific hours.That's ';, -' Sowers and Marine Operations Director Steve Nevey because the recently conduct a discussion on our sustainability efforts. reopened Marion Street exit ..;", m will be closed daily from 4 ,_,,,''. a.m.to 2 30 m.Tuesda :.;z: :,- i B :,,,, ,,, .,: Wednesda and Thursda :c,.•;, r June 7-9. During the '� � ':: k-,4 4,,,„ Via :�. I " <,..�„ `..% closures,Seattle $max .. , 4 Ak- Department of s °`" Transportation crews will . ro: a • ,:< " r -�� ,., ...emu. ..„. ": • ,,,o, drill a shaft into Alaskan s 4{ Way that will support the , -" • ` ¢ 1s:.A future Marion Street ''ry rvv. p Pedestrian Bridge.Stay s :M::. M i,F , updated with our rider k.h,. ;:..•:: :gin .�•, A , �. � xa, �". ''' lerts for information on ar � � - �"� ���� ad rtion xit cl os es ,.�,;� '" �"'"^ � � d' ale : ','. . throughout June. ..> . v Edmonds terminal Y� . " repaving work I.' Work began this week to ,' `::ra .. • s>;• , ,.x resurface and restripe �� portions of the pavement at � , ^� .. .: ;. IT Infrastructure Supervisor Kyle Ilk and IT Infrastructure our Edmonds terminal.The ' <„„ x' . " ' Support Technician John McKay talk to conference mostly evening and ° - overnight work should,have ;. n, ,' x>< attendees. minimal effects on . 4, w-* : ''.......:,, operations,Crews are •.:' •.".: as Hosting Cal Maritime cadets aboard Tacoma grinding out the old .. ; ` pavement this week and are scheduled to repave ��, ' `'` Workforce development is vital as we build back our ro `ve' p next week if the weather �: �< s^ crewingpersonnel and look to the future. To consider more coo erates. If'there are no "er" p ,. : . 4:: people to consider a career with us, we hosted a group of delays,the work should �=e '= cadets from California State UniversityMaritime Academywrap up by the end of the .. .. aboard Tacoma last week. The cadets were in town as part month. ;;:;. ry of the academy's summer cruise on Training Ship Golden ______ . w Bear. While at Cal Maritime, license-track students are trained in everything from deck operations to ship stabilitya .,. and navigation. Each summer, they go to sea either aboard - ' the Golden Bear or a commercial vessel to put those skills : to use and prepare for a career in the maritime industry. '"" 7 a` Crews are repaving the - ';- ` pavement at our Edmonds ''. • terminal, which is deteriorating due to age •• �.: . ' and needs to be repaired -' " ..:::_ .` customer '::: ,, 3 ` ..,.:, ' TT m �' Washington:w ,� r an#a the Sta e Fenfiesj :. Thank you : ': system for allowing those -•. ','';..., • :: . volloomit who wish to spread their ` :.. s loved ones ashes in Puget -,:: ^ Sound the ability to do so. ;::. '1, ` [...1 M son, daughter and! -: .: � . ��., ��";{��;'-� were able to spread my `�,� ��Gr r' !" husband, David's ashes at t W TurnerPaint on our way to .: ',,, ' ... FridayHarbor[Chief Mate T °..: * - : Janet Offley]and ;..„ [Dockhand PharabyRan '. ( Ryan], 11 were so gracious and .,..;..• %.,.. :;.�� respectful of our wishes. ' : The listened to us when -\ Y:.' .° j ... ". :: T we mentioned that David �..::::.. .� . `` , : had been a diver for E urchins.Jane!asked the : ° captain to go towards ,-. Turner Point so he could be A in urchin country: p. <=\. Thank you to Capt. Stephen Phillips and the crew of ` ' Tacoma for hosting a group of cadets from Cal Maritime on ,.«: A An announcement was n < ., Friday, May 27. made by the captain of the ' ferry that they were slowing �,`+-:::���� Orca Action Month down fora memorial ceremony. We were joined Vi `, • ` � by other passengers. Afters: „ `„, June is Orca Action Month and a good time to share how the ashes were placed in ��;;.: .,', -' we're helping to protect and spread awareness of southern the water, 3 horn blows • were made according to ' ` ti; v' Y; resident killer whales. In addition to our continued g � :: .;:�• maritime honor,Janet took a`:. partnership with Orca Network, we're one of the top whale x�a .a-- pictures for us but stayed a • :. • ', �P reporters for Ocean Wise's Whale Report Alert System, distance away to allow us J <• " "° which we use toprovide our crews with accurate and `�.... :; some privacy.For the ,.. 1::� , M updated location information for large marine mammals. stress we went through ra ri . We also serve on the Leadership Committee of Quiet trying to figure out how we , ` ' Sound, a collaborative program to reduce the effects of were going to follow � .. ." David's wishes,the ferry . . noise from large commercial vessels on orcas. In addition, , we're a member of the Port of Vancouver's Enhancing41.:system made it easy. {a',:, ::.. Nv ,,. :' ..\ Cetacean Habitat and Observation (ECHO) Programs : , -AnacortesiSan Juan - ; AdvisoryWorkingGroupand serve on several of the islands customer : ECHO's technical committees. And finally, we're a partner ° ' `_' in the state's recently launched Southern Resident Orca :, Recovery website. : ..S - 4 x a' ••R'8Y•{mx N" t "" \ .\•.x. " ,4 , n , _ t � a; '„••'ce' Mtr 44, a < a "• lam'-'- t _" .Y.•• .. - ." " r""..- ": rn .,„• c",` ,°.dm \•�r• '„; Via•• .. ''- c � ..�: .fix'.• �e .a,ae•\'".. '\a'"•r aM ,`•a�:'�" •• . „ � " .., FtT.']Z.x,,?'y'ox.,;d•4w '.k ;p a" ra s e„r t •- The vast majority of our employees have successfully completed the Whales in our Waters online training tutorial. Patty Rubstello .° '4x= Assistant Secretary, WSDOT/Ferries Division tk, w „ ., a.,x..„; "'. •• ura,, ,,:�,,:.�= �C•^;xa: •�,,`.""::-:a .. x• ">w :;r.:a`'� .. „„, :;.° :9.'` 4 u' "" .. 4.,a..," ""'\" •"„•: "„." � •„�� `. ,; �.. .�:�•;S� w.«5,,. a 4 ro� µ ,.v v „ 3a+� v a�..:<�s\• "�4: '•„<= \s,„ �- �' ate; , ". "„,s,,', : ,s : .• ' •a:^, '^,, , . ..< , 'W a .v..a.;,< . ,, °� '-' '. .,a=: ro ,'' �Ya: ,_ .sue .\ .;,a '' row a,• •:_ . „ ",.U� ° .,'' •„ .a.,,. ,>"•• y„ 4... 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"a :..,ram„�„haw•' ,: :. '':... °a44`;` '� . fit\"' . „� m µ„a:v •,„m�a:.";;",.�• �>"�° .�. .•;..„ ,�`". .�•. ':"„��„,.d'�''",.p'r`•�' :..�:' •,E.S�at<s„� a a„.> ":":1•. � '&�� sw x• w`S .••�"�"'., a °t w. `, �; �xa`�k-,• „a'`'µu .. � �'�::•. ...,• �".�. • ^a•„t ate': .•.\�a�•,., ,� ....�•°•�. ,S .:�. .s?�•• •:•r�"a .,•4 a"..� '>M:.,� ..s• 3 :,':..:.�rma 74 " �..�`>'. „ »r> ,. .5�. :,••.��"," .fie.• ,u��ut':"'.a1'.• •� µ"".''e: �\u ,a,° "••�•,•� „.� -. .<;�.q'" „ „"a..a.-' ���': ^N:. Imo"'„x � •,,•, a•a• ' .�a`.&• "��,a` = ` •,a:.,„• �;. ''sr\'.'.\ro,.; =tip,.. a .,.-.. „ � � �• ....�•.a,`,�^'.,. :, !` Yy '":i<.��. �. "x,., i �'' �.> „'" ..a. „ w �,*� „,.� °<�?a4,.. a�s.a„. :�..:: • .,�, ..�"w.. ' .,?,s�•..:ro•".a,:: 1,,M."\•'� �.: .. ... r,. .• �..- •a>�x `'�. x•:"'a�`"y •��'',,�"�'a,?a„•�`"`<a�i ,:� � m.nS..„ STAY CONNECTED: F ' ri 5 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Thursday,June 2, 2022 5:57 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: legacy forests From: cronin@broadstripe.net Sent: Thursday, June 2, 2022 5:55:12 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Greg Brotherton; Kate Dean; Heidi Eisenhour Subject: legacy forests ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. I just read the PDN article by Ken Park. I see you are way ahead of me on this issue and I appreciate it. I mistakenly referred to "Beaver Valley Sorts" as the "Valley View" sale in my email sent this morning. Thank you for your foresight and leadership on this important issue. Mike Cronin 1 jeffbocc From: Lynn Sorensen <passages2007@yahoo.com> Sent: Friday, June 3, 2022 12:16 PM To: Allison Berry; Berry,Allison;Willie Bence; Greg Brotherton; Kate Dean; Heidi Eisenhour; jeffbocc; KPTZ VTeam Subject: KPTZ Listener Questions for Monday, June 6, 2022 BOCC Update 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 y ou are not expecting them. County Commissioners, Dr Allison Berry, and Willie Bence, Please see the KPTZ listener questions listed below for Monday, June 6, 2022 BOCC Update. Thank you, Lynn Sorensen KPTZ Virus Watch Team 1.The Port Townsend leader reported that Dr. Locke said Brown University estimated that almost one out of every two people who died after the vaccines became available did not need to die. Does that mean that in Jefferson County we lost about 15 people needlessly? 2. The newspapers are reporting that Jefferson county has one of the lowest Covid death rates in the nation. Do you think the unique weekly radio broadcasts allowing KPTZ questions and answers have contributed to good community outcomes? 3. Monkeypox is in the news. Would you be so kind a to inform us about the monkeypox protection we may have from childhood smallpox immunization? Though I remember it, I have no record of my grade school immunization. My doctor said it is required to attend school, but I don't know whether it was required back in the 1950s. 4. Having been double vaccinated and boosted in December 2021, I'm a healthy person still struggling to recover from a stubborn case of Covid after 16 days. For the reported Covid cases since the Omicron variant, are there any statistics indicating that it is less likely to infect a vaccinated and boosted person, compared to those who are unvaccinated? Are the reported symptoms any less severe for those who are vaccinated? 5. Is it possible that cases of the Deltacron variant may be circulating in Jefferson County? 6. In the era of the Wuhan strain, the White House was promoting a treatment called Hydroxychloroquine. Now, in the Omicron era, theWhite House is promoting a treatment called Paxlovid. i Is there data to suggest that Paxlovid is more effective for treating Omicron than Hydroxychloroquine was for treating the Wuhan strain? 7. Why are we seeing a surge in cases in the spring? Is COVID19 not seasonal as expected? Should we expect to experience this year round? 8. It seems most people who travel, end up with Covid while traveling or upon return and then exposes the community. Obviously we need to travel for many reasons. Could this be due to very safely protected community, that when we leave, we get sick immediately? Or is this just happening everywhere right now? 9. I hear people saying hospitalizations increasing but I don't see that locally. Is it a good sign that even with incredibly high case numbers, we have zero hospitalizations here, especially considering our demographic? It helps to see some positives as we continue into year 3 of this pandemic. 2 jeffbocc From: Washington State Department of Transportation <wsdot@service.govdelivery.com> Sent: Friday, June 3, 2022 4:56 PM To: jeffbocc Subject: WSDOT News: One down, one to go! First of two emergency slide repair projects wrap up on SR 112 in Clallam County 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 Department of Transportation — NEWS Olympic Region — P.O. Box 47440— Olympia, WA 98504-7440—360-357-2600 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE June 3, 2022 Contacts: Dan McKernan, project engineer, 360-565-0620 Mark Krulish, communications, 360-819-0375 One down, one to go! First of two emergency slide repair projects wrap up on SR 112 in Clallam County PORT ANGELES —After nine weeks of construction,the Washington State Department of Transportation has reopened State Route 112 at milepost 32 near Jim Creek in Clallam County. "Our crews know how important SR 112 is to the local community," said WSDOT Project Engineer Dan McKernan. "Weather conditions prevented paving before the Memorial Day weekend. We are glad this work is now complete, and the highway is reopened to Olympic Peninsula travelers." During the week of June 6, travelers will see one-way alternating traffic while crews finalize culvert installations. The work is not scheduled to last more than a day. Heavy rains caused the highway to drop four feet in November 2021. WSDOT's emergency contractor, Scarsella Bros., began repair work on Monday, March 28 which included: • Removing guardrail • Clearing fallen vegetation • Excavating the roadway 20 feet below grade level • Installing drainage • Rebuilding and paving the roadway History of slide activity In July 2021, WSDOT completed a$1.4 million emergency contract to reopen SR 112 at five locations, including this location, after heavy rains caused the roadway to drop 13 feet. Due to the topographical and i geological condition of site, design and hydraulic engineers took a calculated approach to fixing it by installing horizontal trench drains to alleviate ground saturation. Clallam Bay work wraps up Further west, crews reopened SR 112 at milepost 15.8 near Clallam Bay to alternating travel on March 21, 2022. Hours before it was scheduled to fully reopen, the highway dropped four inches in the eastbound lane. The highway is currently open to two-way traffic with the eastbound lane being unpaved for about 80 feet. Through late June, crews will install a new surface culvert at the site to move water more efficiently and complete final paving. Once that work is complete and the eastbound lane paving is done, crews will officially reopen the highway to two-way travel. Olympic Peninsula travelers are encouraged to sign up for email updates. Real-time traffic information is available on the WSDOT app and WSDOT regional Twitter account. Hyperlinks within the release: • Clallam Bay: www.wsdot.wa.gov/construction-planning/search-projects/sr-112-clallam-bay-emergency- repairs • Drop four feet: www.wsdot.wa.gov/construction-planning/search-projects/sr-112jim-creek-west-emergency- repairs • Same location: www.wsdot.wa.gov/construction-planning/search-projects/sr-112-wjim-creek-landslides- emergency-repairs • Email updates: www.public.govdelivery.com/accounts/WADOT/subscriber/new?topic id=WADOT_542 • WSDOT app: www.wsdot.wa.gov/travel/know-before-you-go/mobile-app • Twitter account: twitter.com/wsdot_tacoma ### WSDOT keeps people, businesses and the economy moving by operating and improving the state's transportation systems. To learn more about what we're doing, go to wsdot.wa.gov/about/news for pictures, videos, news and blogs. Real time traffic information is available at wsdot.com/traffic or by dialing 511. STAY CONNECTED: _ 0 ' L E EI SUBSCRIBER SERVICES: Manage Preferences I Unsubscribe I Help This email was sent to jeffbocc@co.jefferson.wa.us using GovDelivery Communications Cloud on behalf of: Washington State Department of Transportation 310 Maple Park Ave SE • Olympia, WA 98504 2 jeffbocc From: Washington State Department of Transportation <wsdot@service.govdelivery.com> Sent: Friday,June 3, 2022 4:56 PM To: jeffbocc Subject: WSDOT News: One down, one to go! First of two emergency slide repair projects wrap up on SR 112 in Clallam County 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 Department of Transportation — NEWS Olympic Region — P.O. Box 47440— Olympia, WA 98504-7440—360-357-2600 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE June 3, 2022 Contacts: Dan McKernan, project engineer, 360-565-0620 Mark Krulish, communications, 360-819-0375 One down, one to go! First of two emergency slide repair projects wrap up on SR 112 in Clallam County PORT ANGELES—After nine weeks of construction, the Washington State Department of Transportation has reopened State Route 112 at milepost 32 near Jim Creek in Clallam County. "Our crews know how important SR 112 is to the local community," said WSDOT Project Engineer Dan McKernan. "Weather conditions prevented paving before the Memorial Day weekend. We are glad this work is now complete, and the highway is reopened to Olympic Peninsula travelers." During the week of June 6, travelers will see one-way alternating traffic while crews finalize culvert installations. The work is not scheduled to last more than a day. Heavy rains caused the highway to drop four feet in November 2021. WSDOT's emergency contractor, Scarsella Bros., began repair work on Monday, March 28 which included: • Removing guardrail • Clearing fallen vegetation • Excavating the roadway 20 feet below grade level • Installing drainage • Rebuilding and paving the roadway History of slide activity In July 2021, WSDOT completed a$1.4 million emergency contract to reopen SR 112 at five locations, including this location, after heavy rains caused the roadway to drop 13 feet. Due to the topographical and i geological condition of site, design and hydraulic engineers took a calculated approach to fixing it by installing horizontal trench drains to alleviate ground saturation. Clallam Bay work wraps up Further west, crews reopened SR 112 at milepost 15.8 near Clallam Bay to alternating travel on March 21, 2022. Hours before it was scheduled to fully reopen, the highway dropped four inches in the eastbound lane. The highway is currently open to two-way traffic with the eastbound lane being unpaved for about 80 feet. Through late June, crews will install a new surface culvert at the site to move water more efficiently and complete final paving. Once that work is complete and the eastbound lane paving is done, crews will officially reopen the highway to two-way travel. Olympic Peninsula travelers are encouraged to sign up for email updates. Real-time traffic information is available on the WSDOT app and WSDOT regional Twitter account. Hyperlinks within the release: • Clallam Bay: www.wsdot.wa.gov/construction-planning/search-projects/sr-112-clallam-bay-emergency- repairs • Drop four feet: www.wsdot.wa.gov/construction-planning/search-projects/sr-112jim-creek-west-emergency- repairs • Same location: www.wsdot.wa.gov/construction-planning/search-projects/sr-112-wjim-creek-landslides- emergency-repairs • Email updates: www.public.govdelivery.com/accounts/WADOT/subscriber/new?topic_id=WADOT_542 • WSDOT app: www.wsdot.wa.gov/travel/know-before-you-go/mobile-app • Twitter account: twitter.com/wsdot tacoma ### WSDOT keeps people, businesses and the economy moving by operating and improving the state's transportation systems. To learn more about what we're doing, go to wsdot.wa.gov/about/news for pictures, videos, news and blogs. Real time traffic information is available at wsdot.com/traffic or by dialing 511. STAY CONNECTED: fro - ot !, El ! o ! SUBSCRIBER SERVICES: Manage Preferences I Unsubscribe I Help This email was sent to jeffbocc@co.jefferson.wa.us using GovDelivery Communications Cloud on behalf of: Washington State Department of Transportation 310 Maple Park Ave SE • Olympia, WA 98504 2 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Friday, June 3, 2022 10:03 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: Friday 5 I ARPA I Text-to-911 I Grants I Public Health Follow Up Flag: Follow up Flag Status: Flagged From: Washington Counties I WSAC Sent: Friday, June 3, 2022 10:00:02 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: Friday 5 I ARPA I Text-to-911 I Grants I Public Health ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. June 3, 2022 Fridgiof / nr FEDERAL NEWS •' e ec • ! pay ents for the i • . '. r As counties prepare to receive the second tranche of Recovery Funds, the U.S. Treasury Department has released new information on the distribution process. Counties should ensure that their designated point of contact from the first tranche submission is available and that they have an active SAM.gov registration. Treasury will email counties 30 days before their payment date notifying them that the portal is open for counties to verify their payment information. 1 Learn More FEDERAL NEWS o Acce • tin • P• !icy esolutions n • ' latf• r Chan • es for t e 122 A Co A nnual o ference In preparation for the National Association of Counties (NACo) 2022 Annual Conference & Exposition, NACo members are invited to submit policy resolutions and platform changes to be considered during the conference. The deadline to submit resolutions is Tuesday, June 21. The NACo resolutions process provides members with the opportunity to participate in national policy decisions affecting county governments. During the Annual Conference, NACo's 10 policy steering committees, Board of Directors and the general membership consider proposed policy resolutions and platform language that will guide NACo advocacy until the next NACo Annual Conference in July 2023. The American County Platform and the association's policy resolutions are carefully considered statements of the needs and interests of county governments throughout the nation. These federal policy statements serve as a guide for NACo members and staff to advance the association's policy agenda before Congress, the White House and federal agencies. Please refer to the comprehensive overview of NACo's policy resolution process here. Learn More 2 JOBS BOARD NOW AVAILABLE! 1121=111.1111111111) 41` CI Find Local Government Jobs Find your dream career. A itSign Up for Alerts and be start Pur search t°48Y1 Notified Of New Listings! WASWNGTON COUNTIFS Job Board jobs.wsac.org S SO couNTy NEWS Pend Oreille County Begins Text-to-911 service Pend Oreille County is the latest county to turn "on" Text-to-911 service in the state. Check the map to see if your county is one of 31 counties that have turned on the service or are testing it out. Other counties are still working on their systems. It is very important that you only use Text-to-911 if you are not able to make a voice call. A voice call will get help coming to you much quicker than a text will due to the technological limitations of Text-to-911. Learn More COUNTY NEWS AOC Grant Opportunities Grants are now available to counties via the AOC. When it comes to grants for therapeutic courts and community coordinators, they're looking for applicants that are implementing evidence-based best practices and following effective and proven models. Learn More 3 9 � a .• SCHEDULED WEEKLY uau WSAC Virtual Assembly IT ON YOUR CALENDAR w�s��NGTON " T 5TAr&nsSCcaarer� .,j:. of COUNTIES EGl 0 .�l ,u! 11001 STATE NEWS Rule Adoption, Chapter 246-90 WAC, Local Board of Health Membership The Washington State Board of Health (Board) has adopted rules to establish chapter 246-90 WAC, Local Board of Health Membership. The rules go into effect on July 1, 2022. The CR-103 announces the new rules, filed as WSR 22-11-039. This new chapter establishes rules regarding the appointment process for non-elected members of local boards of health as required by Engrossed Second Substitute House Bill 1152 (E2SHB 1152). The concise explanatory statement (document attached) summarizes the differences between the proposed rules, the adopted rules, and the responses to public comments. Among other things, the Board rules: • Establish the purpose and scope of the chapter. • Define terms for use throughout the chapter. • Establish the requirements for any resolution, ordinance, or other mechanisms for amending the composition of a local board of health. • Establish requirements for recruitment activities for non-elected members of local boards of health. 4 • Establish requirements and provide flexibility for the selection of non-elected members of local boards of health. • Describe the exceptions to the chapter in alignment with E2SHB 1152. Learn More UPCOMING EVENTS JUNE 16 JULY 21 L gi lative Update...on2022.....Public Land Use Case L w Update — Records Bills Summer 2022 Webinar 110:00 am I Free Webinar 111:00 am I $40 View More Upcoming Events FOLLOW US facebook I twitter Q instagram in linkedln wsac.org View.this email in your browser This email was sent to heisenhour@sTojpiferson,Ava.us I Why did 5 Want to change how you receive these emails? lipdate your preferences Unsubscribe from this list Copyright©2022 Washington State Association of Counties,All rights reserved. 206 10th Ave SE•Olympia,WA 98501-1311 • USA I Contact Us 6 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Friday, June 3, 2022 2:31 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: County Virtual Assembly I June 6 Programming From: Washington State Association of Counties Sent: Friday, June 3, 2022 2:29:09 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: County Virtual Assembly I June 6 Programming ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Pililgii° J', Virtual Assembly WA5NIIro "Xt3N STATE A65C+C IATION at COUNTIES .IN t i W E c Pt3' I JI Department of Retirement Systems Monday, June 6 at 12:00 pm Join WSAC for an overview of the state of pension funding in Washington, including projections of contribution rates as the unfunded liability associated with PERS Plan 1 is paid off. There will also be a discussion of the efforts DRS is making to improve retirement readiness and financial wellness education for all employees, including resources for employers that can be used in the onboarding, offboarding, and retention processes. 1 Speaker: •Seth Miller, Retirement Readiness Director, Department of Retirement Systems Register Now 1Pii; View past Virtual Assemblies, ssemblies, presentations, and notes -- Register in advance for these meetings After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting. View this email in your browser Copyright 0 2022 Washington State Association of Counties.All rights reserved. You are receiving this email because you are involved with county government. Our mailing address is: Washington State Association of Counties 206 10th Ave SE Olympia,WA 98501-1311 Add us to your address book Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list. 2 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Saturday, June 4, 2022 5:09 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW:This Week in Photos Follow Up Flag: Follow up Flag Status: Flagged From: NACo Sent: Saturday, June 4, 2022 5:06:05 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 T IS E I 0 Po* S 4r 'NA Photos from as in ton, DC. & Counties Across America Jaclyn Rothenberg @FEMAspox Richard F. Cortez @JudgeCortez 1 At )11'' ''-- .,,Ak 'I i y a/ N...,, .1 \ E'. . 4 ba s4 St.:Aid .ep a R ' A i 1: A, \ i .111#1 if L.„, ,it ak,: 4. k ,,,..4., ..t. ,, to k I tf � ` :. .� "�.. ......... .. .::..tea.... ........ Miami-Dade County, Fla. Mayor Daniella Levine Hidalgo County,Texas leaders and local officials Cava (center left) and FEMA officials highlight host a press conference on efforts to prepare the importance of modern building codes. for the upcoming hurricane season. Senator John Hickenlooper @SenatorHick �Councilmember Sarah Perry @CMSarahPerry nn µdt '... b V aY 1' y rCy fit : ,j� A. m � ‘ i ,? 1 vb t< jai At the Colorado Counties, Inc. summer King County, Wash. Council Chair Claudia conference, U.S. Sen. John Hickenlooper Balducci (right), Councilmember Sarah Perry discusses shared priorities and (second from right) and Redmond city officials intergovernmental partnerships. break ground on a senior and community center. V Hennepin County @Hennepin grWCA @WisCounties 2 a t t s'. , *1. 6', .. ». ..,n ., F ,+ $':ytri illk 1I1(_ 2 !e* t . n 4.4 r 1 fY Tx. 'r & `p& fix:$. • ,t i Ilfirss s- a as w ice: =. sae r ,, .. .mm .. . :.... :,.�, i'.;n. ,_.. _.....—.sue. .._ ., _ ,._ Hennepin County, Minn. celebrates recent Maggie Gau, chief of staff for Gov. Tony Evers, graduates from its community engagement briefs the Wisconsin Counties Association leadership program. Board. lirClermont County @ClermontCounty IOL.Johnson @Reach4Wellness Y . lk, -';'• s it. +� ,.4.!:11,?otHi,,.'.,,,4•',...,„,::,:-'1:410;;;.,':::' '•;e7„,,,,•,,.?:._,,,,,,7„;;;',,,,:;::,,•,,,,,:,•Dii,:.:•..„ if •••, N„,,..4,' „!,..7,- . ' °. t , 11/4 � "w.* Clermont County, Ohio Commissioners Bonnie NACo President Larry Johnson (left) hosts a Batchler, Claire Corcoran and David Painter community barbeque in DeKalb County, Ga. participate in a Memorial Day parade. rrrr • SEE MORE PHOTOS NATIONAL ASSOC, l CODE 660 North Capitol Street,NW,Suite 400 Washington,D.C.20001 3 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. 4 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Saturday, June 4, 2022 9:55 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: USA Today Top 10 Small Town Food Scenes in America From: The Chamber of Jefferson County Sent: Saturday, June 4, 2022 9:53:41 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: USA Today Top 10 Small Town Food Scenes in America ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. ywMl9lillllillt... 'r���,t�141'41'DI,',ii') {",;;iiI�N�I�'llillllllilllrylp4; ���;�"„N�.q�"N�Nhl�ullliilil'�^ I `����ii��'�V�II,,I'ilu�'i�N ,;g",w�iN+?�I�IIIIIIIihiIIIII�iNrce?,. ,���~��INa'IIiIINhl,liiay;i . aiN The Chamber pd: OF JEFFE RSON COUNTY r; VOTE for Port Townsend �nl. USA Today's Top 10 Small Town Food Scenes 6'! Only 2 days left - vote daily -let's move us to #1! � r�1' Nu41���' 'N' A10 iu r. �Vd Only one week of voting to go! 1 The current leaders in USA TODAY 10Best's Small Towns contests are: Best Small Town Food Scene Ili 1. Abingdon 2. Thibodaux 3. Lewisburg 4. Stillwater 5. Los Alamos 6. Port Townsend 7. Traverse City 8. Newberg gllj;ii(, 9. Vail 10. Cambria 11. �Y luu,r Keep your nomination on everyone's mind by rocking the vote at https://www.10best.com/awards/travel/small-town-fond-scene//.To see some live voting action, look for us on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and Pinterest. Voting is open until Monday,June 6th.There's still time to make an impact on your standing, or further protect your top spot. �u! The winners will be promoted on 10Best. Good luck in your quest! mp Warm regards, The Editors y' USA TODAY 10Best We can send your information too,just ask us how! membership@jeffcountychamber.org p„ www jeffcountychamber.org li Jefferson County Chamber of Commerce 12409 Jefferson Street, Port Townsend, WA 98368 Unsubscribe heisenhour@lco.jefferson.wa.us Update Profile I Constant Contact Data Notice Sent by director@jeffcountychamber.org powered by qui; Constant Contact Try email marketing for free today! 2 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Sunday,June 5, 2022 2:20 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW:Jefferson County Democrats Membership Program on June 23rd - Forestry in our County Follow Up Flag: Follow up Flag Status: Flagged From: Patricia A Jones Sent: Sunday, June 5, 2022 2:18:07 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Kate Dean; Greg Brotherton; Heidi Eisenhour Subject: Jefferson County Democrats Membership Program on June 23rd - Forestry in our 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-thank you so much for your incredible work of the past two months, and historic decisions on behalf of our forests and local funding. The Democrats passed a resolution that asks us to hold a public educational about the forestry issues facing our county. The educational will take place on June 23rd at 6 PM, before our second endorsement meeting which begins at 7 PM. I am unsure of all the protocol for such a request, but if possible, it would be wonderful if one of you could give an update about your efforts. I realise it is a burden on your time and apologize for adding yet another request to your schedules. As it is a partisan political organization, I am struggling to bring in the voices of those institutions that receive funding from forestry and its importance. The format will be zoom. Also confirmed are Peter Bahls to talk about the conservation at Dabob, Stephne Krop to talk about the older forests, and hopefully one of the attorneys who can talk about the All the People case before the WA Supreme Court. Thank you for considering this request. Patricia Patricia A.Jones, Phd +360 774 3384 patricia.a.ionesphd@gmail.com Quilcene, WA USA 1 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Sunday, June 5, 2022 4:22 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW:White House IGA Weekly Newsletter- 6/5 From: White House Intergovernmental Affairs Sent: Sunday, June 5, 2022 4:19:31 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: White House IGA Weekly Newsletter - 6/5 ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. 0 m � 9 0 II II D inrin m it OHO THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON Sunday,June 5,2022 President Paden Urges Congress to Take Immediate Action Gun Violence i President Biden @POTUS 14* United States government official This isn't about taking away anyone's rights. It's about protecting children. It's about protecting families. It's about protecting communities. It's about protecting our freedoms to go to school, to a grocery store, to go to church without being shot and killed. 7:36 PM • Jun 2 2022 • The White House This week, President Biden forcefully called on Congress to finally take action — speaking to the nation in a prime-time address. He has done more through executive action in his first year than any of his predecessors, but he can't do it alone. Congress needs to act. According to new CDC data, guns are the number one killer of children in the United States of America—more than car accidents or cancer. Over the last two decades, more school-age children have died from guns than on-duty police officers and active duty military combined. We can't prevent every tragedy. But here's what President Biden—and the overwhelming majority of the American people—believe we must do: • Ban assault weapons — or at least raise the age to purchase them from 18 to 21. • Ban high-capacity magazines. • Strengthen background checks. • Enact safe storage laws and red flag laws. • Repeal the immunity that protects gun manufactures from liability. • Address the mental health crisis deepened by the trauma of gun violence. 2 The President supports the bipartisan efforts that include a small group of Republican Senators trying to find a deal. But the fact that the majority of Senate Republicans don't want any of these proposals to even debated or come up for a vote is unconscionable. President Biden has been in this fight a long time. He knows how hard it is. But he will never give up.And if Congress fails, he believes the majority of the American people will not give up either. READ: Full remarks here. ICYMI: President Biden and First Lady Dr. Biden Visit Uvalde to Grieve with Families of the Victims 3 President Biden• ..- POI-US United States government official To everyone impacted by the horrific elementary school shooting in Uvalde, Texas: We grieve with you. We pray with you. We stand with you. And we're committed to turning this pain into action. 41* fi r. L # F ' vie r'O � " wren � a ` 1. ,44 �a. Pt ,t1 Ti,ELT 6:33 PM • May 29, 2022 • The White House Wall Street Journal Op-Ed - Joe Biden: My Plan for Fighting Inflation 4 # -4, X 4 s k a Pi 41 "�r yea 't'..' t � . ` , ! (.. gip. �a Y ri:.�5 3� � �'h. Check out President Biden's Wall Street Journal op-ed outlining his plan to fight inflation. An excerpt is below: "The U.S. is in a better economic position than almost any other country.According to the International Monetary Fund, the U.S. economy will be larger at the end of this year— relative to its prepandemic size—than any other Group of 7 economy. The U.S. economy may grow faster this year than China's economy for the first time since i976. With the right policies, the U.S. can transition from recovery to stable, steady growth and bring down inflation without giving up all these historic gains. During this transition, growth will look different. We will likely see fewer record job-creation numbers, but this won't be cause for concern. Rather, if average monthly job creation shifts in the next year from current levels of 500,00o to something closer to 150,000, it will be a sign that we are successfully moving into the next phase of recovery—as this kind of job growth is consistent with a low unemployment rate and a healthy economy. Things should also look different from the decades before the pandemic, when too often we had low growth, low wage gains, and an economy that worked best for the wealthiest Americans." 5 President Biden Announces Third Operation Fly Formula Mission di 41I .. p1" +i&�.-I-,.y. ,�. d .r� IIIII'lloltiti tl��iP11 s IY tide ,‘I11 I:1l 1 d 1. i I� t1III ir, ' 7.` n; � s i lo fymtca ,r tI ua r 11111i ,011NT,!, o I:: * , ( liBqa" ,, ti:lI ;NrIIII MI,ll i iiuui, IIIiI)II.0 : u1f, sash E� ,fir' r M i, i i l „I ti t II :> M10 I1 1Ii113 v d Ii l;,', '''-- _ uI. � i ,1WN . I U;� �: 'a a a, I$ _ If I I li �11Q �ti 1 I �I �I.' ,� � r r . i A a !y 1!,1i'I C c rhe Bidetcrb dn� r � I - ldllll il r If :. 1 I M11 ini a, b to 945 eh$ � sioi ICI m T i , , I „ t : I�Ip1 , I Y :I„ ,,,5„ IIII11 I � t y I t012 : ;Ol: PIU I i:a( I IS Ytt NI 19IO ( I IIl iI G a `ii ' �'11S li : IiI lliI IIi � I dviil ; i,r,,o, lu � � � � e �;�' ui l �gCo-_:a I w+daIl;;ll4om� oI �4 i� t ( G111111 ii ' PAta 9.. I101 y N DD � �m r �, ...,,�„ ail,. � I IIIIIP�����i i,a „.m 8O,S M " it 6OM ., _ ,." s p' o SHIM-— - ' - . . , ��.,�,''''7. �CI�DIIII Iu 1 �M .tiI€ ,1I ° . d M 1Y 2QM° 6 ,' EOM rt 1II " JII .�. �..�....� � ...a.....a..�.....�.. � ��_�..»...*...�"..ut�-+.-.-.o...oa�...w.w... .._ , f51 .. ,r ' J ` I/ I of s ' I i211 ffi . ' *1 Oil_. ,''., ��:, .., _ ..awexatwer In ..:-_ - "y a.. 0 -.,,XQi1 i0t�b . -. _ �rt1 rl r,F.L.. - .,,..�,-.A%a, �u. .aatl�1: - FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE June 1, 2022 6 President Biden Announces Third Operation Fly Formula Mission United Airlines will air ship approximately 3.7 million 8-ounce bottle equivalents of Kendamil infant formula Today, President Biden is announcing that his Administration has arranged the third Operation Fly Formula flight for the first shipment of Kendamil infant formula entering the United States. United Airlines has agreed to transport Kendamil formula free of charge from Heathrow Airport in London to multiple airports across the country over a three-week period. These are the first Operation Formula Flight to be donated by an airline carrier. These Operation Fly Formula flights donated by United Airlines will contain over 300,000 pounds or approximately 3.7 million 8-ounce bottle equivalents of Kendamil infant formula and will begin shipping on June 9. These flights will contain approximately 3.2 million 8- ounce bottle equivalents of Kendamil Classic Stage i and 540,000 8-ounce bottle equivalents of Kendamil Organic. ### Additional Infant Formula Resources: • WH: WH.gov Formula Website • WH: Biden Administration Approves First Operation Fly Formula Mission • WH: FACT SHEET: President Biden Announces New Actions to Address Infant Formula Shortage • HHS: Find Formula During the Infant Formula Shortage President Biden on Unemployment Claims and Manufacturing Progress 7 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE June 2, 2022 Statement from the President on Unemployment Claims and Manufacturing Progress Today we received more data that, despite the global challenges we face,America is on the move. Unemployment benefits have reached historic lows. Since I took office, the number of Americans relying on unemployment benefits is now down 95%, and our economy has added 8.3 million jobs. And, as we make the transition from an historic jobs recovery to steady, stable economic growth, companies are investing in manufacturing in America-- strengthening supply chains, lowering costs for working families, and securing our energy independence. During my first year in office, the U.S. economy created more manufacturing jobs on average per month than any other President in the last 50 years. Two new announcements today will add to that historic manufacturing boom. Ford's $3.7 billion investment to create more than 6,o0o good- paying, union jobs in Michigan, Ohio, and Missouri building new electric vehicles is great news for American workers. Stellantis' agreement to purchase up to 25,00o metric tons of lithium per year that CTR is producing from geothermal brine in California's Imperial County sets the U.S. on a path to being a leading producer of sustainably sourced,low carbon lithium. This builds on announced investments by dozens of companies over the past year, from Intel's $2o billion investment to build semiconductors in America to Tesla,America's largest manufacturer of electric vehicles. This isn't an accident — it's the result of my economic plan to grow the economy from the bottom up and middle out. My Bipartisan Infrastructure Law was a major step forward in making America a place where businesses invest and good jobs grow, including our national electric vehicle charging infrastructure and battery supply chain. I urge Congress to continue this transition toward steady and stable economic growth that benefits all Americans, extend and expand incentives for clean vehicles, chargers, batteries, and semi- conductors, and to pass the Bipartisan Innovation Act to catalyze even more domestic manufacturing. 8 Vice President Kamala Harris on Protecting Roe v. Wade Vice P•resklent Karnak,Harris tif 74, United States government°MM aar Right now, we're in the fight to protect reproductive rights. Here's what you need to know. :II : ,• jai ..-3...' a.,:,. M +§•T, ate,. Y- r a'. Irof abortion could be banned Department of Defense Funding Opportunities - $9oM for Infrastructure and $3oM for Manufacturing 9 siift... t, sE coa , 0,44c4,4;'1** .‘,4„. 0,40,41, stv, toor„„, ' coup „,,-414„•* 0,00 III riot iota 610. • ,00, C .1:. 4.,,C4? (Z„,s," 61 0 °O rt?Ai\ it, iti LINITIESVIL'' DoD's Office of Local Defense Community Cooperation (OLDCC)has released notices of funding opportunities for two grant programs critical to the U.S.'s ongoing national security and the partnerships that underpin many of our efforts — the Defense Community Infrastructure Pilot Program (DCIP) and the Defense Manufacturing Community Support Program (DMCSP). Each program will be awarded prior to September 3o, 2022, but applications are due in mid July. Below you will find a quick overview of both programs. Defense Community Infrastructure Pilot Program $90 million supports off-post infrastructure projects to boost the military value, resilience, and/or family quality of life of a local installation. To qualify for funding, communities, states, io and other eligible entities compete to construct transportation projects, schools, hospitals, police, fire, emergency response, or other community support facilities; or water, wastewater, telecommunications, electric, gas, or other utility projects. • For more formation and details on eligibility and the application process, please visit grant.gov DCIP page. Defense Manufacturing Community Support Program $3o million supports long-term community investments to strengthen national security innovation and expand the capabilities of the local defense industrial ecosystem. To qualify for funding, communities — through local consortiums — compete to attract and expand defense manufacturing through targeted public and private investments in critical skills, facilities, research and development, and/or small business assistance. Priority sectors include: biotechnology, hypersonics, kinetic capabilities, energy storage and batteries, castings and forgings, microelectronics, and submarine and shipbuilding sectors. • For more formation and details on eligibility and the application process, please visit grants.gov DMCSP page. Interested parties may also visit the website at https://oldcc.gov for additional details and may sign up for further updates here. NEW: White House Internship Applications Open Monday, June 6! u GET INVOLVED APPLY TO BE A WHITE HOUSE INTERN Applications for the Fall 2022 Session will open on Monday,June 6 and close on Friday,June 24.Learn how to apply. I HOU°( ®, INTERNSHIP RA T President Biden and Vice President Harris announced the launch of the White House Internship Program and that, for the first time in history,White House interns will be paid. The first session will commence in Fall 2022. The Fall 2022 session will be hosted in-person on the White House campus. Program leadership will continue to monitor the public health landscape related to COVID-19 and will adapt the Program's approach in order to ensure a safe and healthy work environment. All interns will be required to attest to their vaccination status and must adhere to any White House COVID-19 protocols. The Fall 2022 session will be a 14-week program,beginning on Monday, September 12 and ending on Friday, December 16. Selected applicants will be notified the week of August 8. 12 Program participants must be U.S. citizens, at least i8 years or older before the first day of the Program, and meet at least one of the three following criteria: • Currently enrolled in an accredited undergraduate or graduate degree program at a college, community college, or university(two-to four-year institution) • Graduated from an accredited undergraduate or graduate program at a college, community college, or university(two-to four-year institution) no more than two years prior to the first day of the Program • A veteran of the United States Armed Forces who possesses a high school diploma or its equivalent and has served on active duty, for any length of time, no more than two years prior to the first day of the Program President Biden and Vice President Harris have committed to building an Administration that looks like America, believing that qualified people from every background and walk of life should have equal opportunity to serve our Nation. That commitment is reflected in each White House Internship Program class, and all who are interested and meet the established criteria are highly encouraged to apply. The White House Internship Program application and additional information about the Program can be found at WH.gov/intern. Prospective candidates with questions about the Program, as well as college/university administrators, faculty, campus leadership, and others interested in more information to share with their communities can reach out to the White House Internship Program team at internship(&who.eop.gov. "Our Way Home" Housing Supply Initiative Launch 13 0 U.S. Housing and Urban Development Secretary Marcia L. Fudge on Wednesday launched the Our Way Home initiative, a new effort to boost the nation's affordable housing supply. Our Way Home builds on the Biden-Harris Administration's actions to address communities' housing supply needs in an equitable, inclusive, and sustainable fashion. Our Way Home is a national initiative that uplifts the unique housing supply successes in local communities and connects cities, counties, Tribal communities, states, and U.S. Territories to the tools and resources needed to help preserve and produce ahttp://hud.gov/ourwayhome/ffordable housing in their area. "Easing the burden of housing costs for families is a top economic priority for this Administration," said Secretary Fudge. "For too long and in too many communities, housing supply has not kept up with the growing demand. It's going to take government working at all levels to help close the housing supply gap. I am excited to launch Our Way Home, an initiative that will not only build on the momentum that's already begun at the federal level,but will also put into focus the unique challenges and successes in communities when it comes to making sure we all find our way home." Biden-Harris Administration Launches Initiative to Modernize Building Codes, Improve Climate Resilience, and Reduce Energy Costs The Biden-Harris Administration announced a National Initiative to Advance Building Codes that will help state, local, Tribal, and territorial governments adopt the latest, current 14 building codes and standards, enabling communities to be more resilient to hurricanes, flooding, wildfires, and other extreme weather events that are intensifying due to climate change. Modern building codes and standards provide a range of smart design and construction methods that save lives, reduce property damage, and lower utility bills—for example, by ensuring that roofs can withstand hurricane winds, that construction materials are resistant to flood damage, and that insulation keeps heating and cooling costs low. With extreme weather events threatening millions of homes each year, and taking a greater toll on underserved communities, every dollar invested in building code adoption provides eleven times more in savings by reducing damage and helping communities recover more quickly. Additionally, modernized energy codes can save households an average of$162 dollars each year on utility bills, which is especially significant in reducing energy burden for low- income households. Unfortunately, nearly two out of every three communities in the U.S. have not adopted the latest building codes and, as a result, are vulnerable to climate impacts and higher energy costs. President Biden is committed to lowering costs for families and protecting communities from extreme weather—especially communities that have long been underserved and are disproportionately impacted by climate change. Earlier this year, President Biden's National Climate Task Force approved the new National Initiative to Advance Building Codes to accelerate the adoption of modern building codes to improve resiliency, create good-paying jobs, and lower energy bills. Happy Immigrant Heritage Month! 15 President Biden • @POTUS Ms United States government official This National Immigrant Heritage Month, we honor our immigrants and recommit to remaining a country worthy of their dreams and aspirations. Each generation of immigrants has made our nation stronger and reaffirmed that diversity is and always has been — our greatest strength. 4:49 PM • Jun 3, 2022 • The White House During National Immigrant Heritage Month, we honor the contributions of immigrants to our great Nation and celebrate their profound impact. The Biden-Harris Administration is committed to ensuring that our immigration system is accessible and humane. 1. Issue a proclamation for your state, city, town, or organization to honor June as Immigrant Heritage Month. You can check out the President's Proclamation here. 2. On June 15th celebrate the 10 year anniversary of DACA by hosting or joining an event with DACA recipients, lift up the stories and contributions of DACA recipients in your community, issue a statement of support for the program and encourage DACA recipients to renew ASAP! 3. Post an old family photo and caption your family, parent, or other relative's personal immigration story to your Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram accounts. Throughout the month please use the hashtag #ImmigrantHeritageMonth so we can lift up your stories and celebration of IHM 2022! 16 HAPPYp , MONTH President Biden ;0, ... .r POTU United States government official During Pride Month, we honor the resilience of LGBTI+ people who are fighting to live authentically and freely. We reaffirm that LGBTI+ rights are human rights. And we recommit to delivering protections, safety, and equality so everyone can realize the full promise of America. 9:36 AM •Jun 1, 2022 • The White House Vice President Kamala Harris ..• ; vP United States government official For me, Pride Month has always been a joy-filled celebration. It is also a reminder that the fight for full LGBTI+ rights continues. This month, and every month, let us continue to celebrate the LGBTI+ community and march ahead. Happy ride l . 17 Weekly IGA Call Tune in weekly for Administration updates Thursdays at 4 PM ET. When: Every Thursday at 4 PM ET Register here: https://pitc.zoomgov.com/webinar/register/WN 2fN1C5oHQoWuzo6briPbVw See you next week! Privacy Policy J Unsubscribe Office of Intergovernmental Affairs ° 1600 Pennsylvania Ave NW•Washington, DC 20500-0005 • USA • 202-456-1111 18 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Monday,June 6, 2022 8:37 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: Chamber Cafe 6.17 Emergency Management - Planning for what's Coming Next Follow Up Flag: Follow up Flag Status: Flagged From: The Chamber of Jefferson County Sent: Monday, June 6, 2022 8:35:13 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: Chamber Cafe 6.17 Emergency Management - Planning for what's Coming Next ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. '„I'll':') '"�2iY�,;G�ll'I i;� I at I,-,;'••� �= :-.. ......• �.�.���,.,,Ilillol�gi.li411,,lllin,�, .�'�' (�r�,) ,- a hr IIII i II�I�'I' �IiQill l ii l""I '-- 17th at"Your ChamberIIIIP IIIII,II I N l Nat,,.. June�����i'�;�a P , a,•„b�l�l�f!lii) "� r- b '�i�ili I��I'I�����aiN,ll�i�,aw The Chamber OF JEFFERSON COUNTY I I June 17th - Chamber Cafe Willie Bence, Director Jefferson County Department of Emergency Management Planning Ahead for Disasters Ili�I,l it p,Np,I�Ui�p,l ll f" 111101 II1l1illll111�lll As a business owner or manager, do you know ��l�lNl�b {[�1OOlpl,�� ' l��� pllq; what steps to take to protect your business from emergencies? If there is an earthquake? 0*4 Tsunami?Blizzard? If the power grid goes down? fir!: If an area floods?Rockslide?Mudslide?Wide temperature swings?A pandemic?There are so ql4 many variables-do you know how to plan for them and how to train your team? Disasters take many forms and the financial cost of rebuilding after a disaster can be overwhelming. IDmll 'N�O� ,Iua,�.P„!yuIIIl011�llllsf. III ol�lixr,�,,Y',u• ;;'I.r �-v+ i . 9 u�F(iNl.e r� ilpi�;4pmlp uyi, a.,,a,l+ .r.01 l�rliill211111i11�l�iul 1 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. All Café Registrations vvvvw.jeffcountychamber.org p �I Jefferson County Chamber of Commerce 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 Cii> Constant Contact Try email marketing for free today! 2 Julie Shannon From: Greg Brotherton Sent: Monday,June 6, 2022 9:02 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: HCSEG News: Garden Yoga + Wellness at the Salmon Center June 8th From: The Hood Canal Salmon Enhancement Group Sent: Monday, June 6, 2022 8:59:22 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Greg Brotherton Subject: HCSEG News: Garden Yoga + Wellness at the Salmon Center-June 8th ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. .., .�-:fie. .,.,:.. + ....�.:...:•vx.:.. .aa��,°°.�<..�..: ,���:' v .. .;....a„ ... . •.„..aL'.�.. � .. : .r",1,,.;. „•.•.., •��Eyix vv '.•��s?,�+ 'i 3Tx' ��d.t.`+iv...�i. .. .x.+::�::'. ..:�. ..;'<:! .ao�•x.x� � ...�:.!V::`: ml'a'��' .,N J;, :��„aa'`d'" •„8 \.:\�4"v';.:...�:,�:�.. a � yy .41*iiHe:hduto ' Mr 8 � v • .. ., a,• ..�a<,s..... \,.. � J� ��;' ..,..+...+. ..':'.:P+ ...�'x,:•: ..•.>...a, ... :.a' i�2•:4, \ixti�.rN•.::�' .�Fv:i��•..�+P:...."�'•.. .. .. ........��.^ .. ,.:is'++:.... 1 Join us for our Yoga in the Garden and Wellness Series! Sign-up now r the J e 8th 6-7pm Wednesdays At the Salmon Center 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 Learn More 1 Sign-Up 2 b o- � ,_a C •'Sin ' s • ,• �', sx r giv M1�'p�3 _ 0, i .. ��:. as "� .<; rx.. f . Copyright©2021 HCSEG, All rights reserved. Want to change how you receive these emails? 3 You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list. 4 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Monday,June 6, 2022 9:03 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: Local 20/20 Weekly Announcements From: Local 20/20 Sent: Monday, June 6, 2022 9:00:28 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 y � R Local 20/2o Weekly Announcements June 6, 2022 six o�w� •. r. �.�5`:' .� g..;; y t .Ltd,. `'%_x. •�..a .„. +.M .Y ti 5 $ f'Aff.--4 3�t"q'"" ate.?- • � ��i,""is edited by Orion Armstrong 1 Leaf by Ellen Falconer *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 Climate Working Group-Local 20/20 -Thurs,Jun 9th*Online* Interested in learning what is happening locally on climate change,discussing current and potential new projects,and sharing news on climate change?This working group includes both climate mitigation(reducing greenhouse gases)and climate adaptation(preparing for climate impacts)aspects.The first hour will be a discussion of current and proposed projects-gather feedback on existing projects,share successes,and brainstorm on possible future projects.The second hour will be a general discussion of current climate topics-what's been in the news,learning opportunities,etc.Feel free to join for either half. For the online meeting information,contact cag( l2o2o.org. Time:3—5pm I Location:Zoom Tri-Area Repair Event-Sat,Jun iith IF ,ff fir 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:4:30-6:3o pm I Location:Quilcene High School 2 The Future of Oceans Lecture Series: "Preventing Extinction-the Story of Southern Resident Orcas" -Sun,Jun 12th*Online* PORT TOWNSEND 0 MARINE I ." SCIENCE N, CENTER Presented by Cindy Hansen,Education&Advocacy Coordinator, Orca Network From Namu to Free Willy to Blackfish,orcas have fascinated us for generations.But sadly our Washington State marine mammal is in serious trouble.Learn about the fascinating biology,social structure and culture of our local orcas and the events that have led to their decline.Find out how you can become involved and help in the ongoing efforts to prevent the extinction of this beloved icon of the Salish Sea.To learn more or to RSVP and receive a Zoom link,go here. Time:3:oo PM 1 Location:Zoom Upcoming Events Local 20/2o Council Meeting-Wed,Jun 15th*Online* 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 infoPI2o2o.org.For online meeting information,contact us at infoP12o2o.org. Time:4-6pm I Location:Online All You Wanted To Know About Growing Soil-Wed, Jun 15th*New* 3 7,44 � On June 15th,Dr.James Cassidy will be at Chimacum Grange via video,and will explain where soil comes from and how to grow it.You will learn some geology,along with very helpful information about cover crops and crop rotation.Dr.Cassidy is a soils professor at Oregon State University.He established a CSA farm to provide his students with hands-on opportunities to learn about crop production as well as the entrepreneurial aspects of farming.Dr.Cassidy is an enthusiastic speaker who entertains as he informs—his presentation will make you fall in love with your soil! Come downstairs at 6:15 pm at the Chimacum Grange hall to visit and share in a simple potluck dinner,soup provided.The video presentation begins upstairs at 7:0o pm,The public is invited;no charge. Time: 6:15 PM(dinner);7:00 PM(presentation) Location:Chimacum Grange Secret Garden Tour-Sat,Jun 18th(Tickets on sale now!) For the first time since 2019,the Jefferson County Master Gardener Foundation will host the Secret Garden Tour.The event will feature gardens at the Port Townsend Library,three Uptown homes,one tucked away in a quiet neighborhood off Hastings,and two in the Cape George area.A highlight at one of the gardens is a large,beautiful Camperdown Elm tree,said JEFFERSON COUNTY MASTER to be i3o years old. FOUNDATION TICKETS:Go on sale on May 18: $15 for advance tickets; $2o for day-of tickets WHERE TO BUY:Port Townsend Garden Center,Secret Garden Nursery,Shold Landscape Products and Garden Center, Chimacum Corner Farmstand,and online. HELPFUL DETAILS:Garden maps are available at the nurseries selling tickets.Those purchasing tickets online at Brown Paper Tickets may pick up a map at the Port Townsend Library will-call on the day of the tour.Tour participants should bring water and wear comfortable shoes. For more information,email Jeanne Touger,or visit jcmgf.org. Time:10 am—4 pm I Location:Starts at Port Townsend Library,1220 Lawrence St. Low Tide Walk-Sat,Jun i8th Ling Low Tide VYilik oin Port Townsend Marine Science Center for a guided walk on the beach at low tide and learn how living things survive and thrive in the intertidal zone.Explore tide pools and learn about how marine organisms are adapted for the challenges and daily extremes of living in the intertidal zone.They recommend weather-appropriate clothing and 4 shoes with good traction for moving around on wet slippery rocks.The beach is a.4 mile walk from the Museum;closer parking spots are available near the beach.More information.Contact:Carolyn Woods. Included with admission to PTMSC; $7 for adults and$5 for children over 5.Members are always free! Time:1-2:3o pm I Location:Kinzie Beach-meet at Museum portico in Fort Worden State Park Overview of Fish Health Research at the USGS-Marrowstone Marine Field Station-Wed, Jun 22 *New* � 19 �" arP�pi� � �olaipd rte ds of FORT FLAGLER Ever wonder what goes on at the USGS Marrowstone Marine Field Station,the set of red-roofed buildings at the NE tip of Marrowstone Island?Join Friends of Fort Flagler for a rare opportunity to learn about the research conducted at the station and why it's important to the health of all marine life in the Puget Sound.Dr.Paul Hershberger,the field station's director,will bring attendees up to speed on our foraging fish,herring,and why they are important to our ecosystem.You'll learn about the threats to these fish,what can be done to improve the health of wild fish populations and the vitality of all marine life up the food chain. For more information and to register for the event,click here. Time: 6:oo PM I Location:Fort Flagler Lower Campground Picnic Area across from Boat Landing:1321 Flagler Campground Road,Marrowstone Next Climate on Tap: The CPR Climate Emergency Tour—Wed, Jun 22 *New* Join the Climate Protection and Restoration Initiative Executive Director and General Counsel Dan Galpern for an exciting opportunity to make real change in our nationwide climate policy! Dan has worked with Dr. James Hansen,the climate change pioneer,for over 14 years!Dan and Dr.Hansen have created an initiative to urge President Biden and the EPA to phase out carbon emissions by imposing a revenue-neutral rising user fee on oil,gas,and coal.Dan is taking this initiative literally to the streets on a cross-country bicycle trip.His first stop is Jefferson County on his way to Maine.Learn how you can support this ground-breaking initiative with letters,petitions,and more. Register here:https://cprclimate.org/climate-on-tap/.The event is free but will hit facility capacity,so register early!Each Climate on Tap is co-sponsored by Local 20/2o Climate Action,Jefferson County Public Health,and FinnRiver Cidery.For further information email Laura Tucker or call 36o-379-4491. Time: 6—8 pm I Location:Finnriver Farm and Cidery 5 Invasive Plant Species Hike-Sat,Jun 25 *New* d�� i y3 i1y+" lil Y"i friends x„�ii��� FORT FLAGLER Join Friends of Fort Flagler and presenter Christine Heycke for a hike to identify invasive plant species in Fort Flagler State Park.Expect a 1-1.5 miles easy hike while learning where these species come from,how to manage and eliminate them and why they're here in the first place.Meet in front of museum. For more information about Christine Heycke and to register for the event,click here. Time: 10:00 AM I Location:Fort Flagler Historical State Park,10541 Flagler Road,Nordland Recurring Events COVID-19 Update-Mondays*Online* 4/—\\-11- 69ellason Public Heat Join the weekly 9:0o 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&3rd 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 6 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 PTStyroCyclerscc gmail.com or through their Facebook page. Port Townsend Styrofoam Recycling pick-up-2nd Mondays&3rd Saturdays For residents of East Jefferson County only Time: io:oo-noon 1 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-periodically Tuesdays(no set schedule) Time:9-io:3oam 1 Location:Port Ludlow Marina,Bridge Deck off Harbor Drive Road Cooperatives Cafe- 2nd Mondays*Online* 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. For more information,go here. Questions?Write directly to:salishseaPecon4peace.org Time:6pm 1 Location:Online The Groundwork Project-Wednesdays 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: uam 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 salishsea(a econ4peace.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. 7 Times: see above I Location:Chimacum Grange Ask a Master Gardener! -Thursdays, May-Sept*Online* A , 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,1.2:oo-2:00;May-September! I ttps://www.signupgenius.com/go/5o8oe48aca72daif49-talk ,4,, , , , OR Submit questions to our online form or Register for Zoom session here: https://extension.wsu.edu/jefferson/gardening-2/plant-elinic/ 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 Flagler. Birding and nature tours are on the 2nd and 4th Fridays of each month.Wear sturdy ,, ,footwear and dress for changeable weather.Bring binoculars and your own water. " �� ��� 1 Registration:Please send Bev an email,includingwhere and whenyou'd like to join l� �'�I'''xi iG �P ' qq��b�,�� � at Bevybirds53Pgmail.com.It is important to include this information as Beverly does walks in f rionds of multiple locations and dates. Please note this program is dependent on good weather.Beverly's FORT FLAGLER photographs are displayed at the Port Townsend Gallery. Time:9 am I Location:Fort Flagler I Dates:2nd and 4th Fridays Protest Chase Bank's Climate Crimes -Fridays , $Join local demonstration at Port Townsend's JP Morgan Chase on Fridays,n am to i pm.Their Artful � s. , ction will include giant art posters and banners drawing attention to Chase's continued funding of fossil ` I el expansion and undermining indigenous rights.Held in coordination with protests around the world, . '>''� defund campaign info at Stop The Money Pipeline.RSVP to hold art or help out: communityartworksPgmail.com.Or just show up! Homemade signs welcome. CLIMATE i " 'me:uam-ipm I Location:Chase Bank,419 Kearney Street,Port Townsend ;9 arc, Farmers Markets-Saturdays&Sundays 8 r. E9 JEFFERSON COUNTY •s **FARMERS eib's MARKETS PORT TOWNSEND•CHIMACUM Port Townsend Farmers Market on Saturdays -The Port Townsend Farmers Market operates 9-months out of the year from the first Saturday in April through the 3rd Saturday in December. Located in the heart of uptown Port Townsend on the 600 block of Tyler Street between Lawrence and Clay streets,the market offers a wide variety of seasonal produce,pasture-raised meat,hard cider,honey,artisan cheese,bread and pastries,prepared food, as well as fine arts and crafts from Jefferson and neighboring counties.From locally grown food to pottery,the items sold travel no more than 5o miles to reach the market.Some of our vendors even bike their products to market.More information. Time:9am-2pm I Location:65o Tyler Street,Port Townsend Chimacum Farmers Market-Sundays Want to shop for locally grown food in the heart of our farming community with your dog at your, your side?Well,the Chimacum Farmers Market is the market for you.Located just a stone's CO NM throw from several participating farms in Jefferson County's farm country,the Chimacum P, VIERS SUNDAYS ..ttr Jun tOct Farmers Market operates Sundays,June-October.More rustic than its sister market in Port Townsend,this jewel of a market offers a remarkable variety of seasonal produce from N neighboring farms as well as artisan food and crafts. Look forward to seeing you! Time:loam-2pm I Location:9122 Rhody Drive.Chimacum's only 4-way stop,in the parking area of Chimacum Corner Farmstand,where Highway 19 meets Chimacum Road and Center Road. Forest/Orchard Bathing Walks-Sundays From Olympic Peninsula Mindfulness. Walk—Sit—Walk: As you cross the'threshold' �,!ir into the woods and meadows of Fort Worden or the orchards at Finnriver,you can walk 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 " c$ quietly observe natures'progress through the life of apples and pears.Several times they will 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 36o-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 9 an announcement. LandFest'22 is coming.Your help is needed! JEbrERSON �D TRUST LandFest,Jefferson Land Trust's annual fundraising farm dinner,will once again be out on the land on Thursday,July 7 at Finnriver Farm&Cidery.We need a number of volunteers to help with the event,from greeters, to servers,parking attendants,and more.You will receive a delicious dinner and camaraderie with lots of fun folks!For more information,contact Ric Brewer at rbrewer( saveland.org.Or if you would like to purchase tickets to attend the event as a guest,visit www.saveland.org/landfest. Housing Solutions Network is hiring an Event Weaver! �C,,\C,Q�pPLE,IDEAS gNOResO G Housing z % Network O JANWJEFFERsoN cc Are you passionate for affordable housing?Interested in supporting volunteers who want to make a difference for the workforce in our community?Have a knack for coordination and gathering people?If this sounds like you,check out HSN's Network Weaver position!This 20hr/week contract position will support the network of volunteers who are working on solutions for workforce housing,including community engagement and outreach.More details can be found on the HSN website,including the position details here.Interested folks should send a cover letter and resume to Liz@jcfgives.org. Anderson Lake High in Toxins 10 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 friT algae,including Dolichospermum(formerly Anabaena)and Aphanizomenon. Anatoxin-a can result in illness and death in people and animals when ingested. owiti Pu*tic ea 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.As of May 31,Anderson Lake is still marked as dangerous.You can check the status of Anderson and other lakes 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 14 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. Old Alcohol Plant Inn and Restaurant is hiring! Full Ce Pooklc[per 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@oldalcoholplant.com or call 36o-39o-41:n7 if you have any questions. Kul Kah Han Native Garden(KKH) —A Call for Volunteers&Educational Opportunities! Kul Kah Han Native Plant t `. Remonstration Garden Chimacum, WA 01#1 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.potter25@gmail.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 ballewsingh@ gmail.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 WASIIINGTON STATE ts UNIVERS!'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 Summer Job Opportunities with CedarRoot Folk School SCHOOL 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 12 Jefferson Transit is launching a pilot that connects with the Kingston Fast Ferry to Seattle!There 4, will be a morning run and an afternoon run Monday-Saturday(note the fast ferry only runs M- j ,. ..immot -, ` F currently.)The Jefferson County stops are Haines P&R,Four Corners P&R,and the Gateway NB IF1 11 fl Visitors Center.Find out more at https://jeffersontransit.com/i4kingstonexpress/.You can �ll ^ show your support for this pilot by getting on board,literally! TRANSIT Jefferson County Farmers Market BIPOC Start-Up Business Fund �y�' —En.199i— spis "T JEFFERSON COUNTY •sr ' *FARMERS *►+r c.MARKETS PORT TOWNSEND•CHIMACUM 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 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 74 ,, and large shared gardens are eligible for a full cubic yard,while home food gardeners may . 0 partake of the"Bucket Share".Other soil regeneration projects may also be eligible for free a iochar,if community resilience is enhanced by the project. � ore information and order. New Public Health Dept E-Newsletter Jefferson county Puhftc 11081M NEWSLETTE: :)�' Get on the list :en to receive our first e-newsletter!. sign up here: i p9Yfefierro+Mfwntypu22I25E50 O2O2IE2.aspx Sign up at https://jeffersoncountypublichealth.org/list.aspx,and allow your mail tool to receive e-mails from 13 listserv@civicplus.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 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 a `g� 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 2018 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 ,o� A responsive(fast),fun vehicle you've ever had! Our community has a new set of web tools that ElectrizArehlcies can help you in your EV research:https://jeffersoncan.org/electric-vehicles/ Just Soup on Tuesdays JUtStc4S()(44F) No ' Every Tuesday at ii:3o-1:3o,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,ii:3o AM-1:30 PM I Location:St.Paul's Episcopal Church,1020 Jefferson St. Emergency Text Alerts from Jefferson County 14 mots 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 0 Prepare for emergencies with your neighbors by joining or starting an NPREP neighborhood.There neighborhood preparedness are currently over ioo 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 14,806 subscribers,with many new members joining each day.Email Pete Hubbard with questions or comments. Calling Local Photographers 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 events012o2o.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. 15 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 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. 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 16 LAB 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(IPCC)report..."notes the Dress release for the the latest IPCC report,"The Summary for Policymakers of the IPCC Working Group II report,Climate Change 2022:Impacts, 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. 17 Local.;2o/2o Mission Working together toward local sustainability and resilience—integrating ecology, economy and community through action and education. Climate Action Local \ Beyond initiatives ♦ 1111, Waste Energy •, t,`, Action5� Economic v.Localization Transport- imoraraPe anon Lab 091,40 Local Food Next � ,, 4116, Health& Wellness 0101.1141, Resiliency Education of heart Emergency Preparedness Action Groups are where we do most of our work. Each is focused on an interrelated aspect of sustainability.Visit 12o2o.org to learn what the different action groups are working on. 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 eventsc l2o2o.org by 8:0o PM Saturday to be included in the next Monday's newsletter.We post announcements aligned with Local 20/2o'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 2o/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. 18 Consider forwarding Local 20/2o Announcements to a friend. New subscribers can sign up here. f Copyright©c 2021 by Local 20/2o.All rights reserved. Our mailing address is: 24o 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 heisenhour(a)co.lefferson.wa.us why did I get this? unsubscribe from this list update subscription preferences Local 20/20 • 1240 W. Sims Way#12 • Port Townsend,Wa 98368 • USA Grow your business with / mailchimp 19 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Monday,June 6, 2022 9:17 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW:The Business Insider -June 2022 From: The Chamber of Jefferson County Sent: Monday, June 6, 2022 9:15:18 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: The Business Insider-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. Za °Nye , ! 1:1 ! !'S n. pi rig www.jeffcountychamber.org ���! ThFe chamber .� a',, FERsO COUNTY 360.385.7869 � director@jeffcountychamber.org ,!I „ building business,building community � ire.. 0!1:, ,'lm,h m- r � The Business Insider - June 2022 �� Housing Updates in Jefferson County & more ��ur To honor the manyrequests we've had to send the °� q Business Insider electronically,we are continuing to - "="� „„.,-..,w The Chamber ,, send this digitally and discontinuing our print version -� + ;""`°"�°"`°°"' mailing soon.The print copy will still be distributed in Business Insider the Port Townsend Leader. llQ t .»..« -�„M,�, MEMBER UPDATE -���T^--^+� ,! . Bayside Housing&Services �U i„!!!_ If you would like to continue to receive this newsletter AHomebyAryOUrrName vl via USPS, Chamber members need to contact the office and sign up for that courtesy service. Il . • t " admin@jeffcountychamber,org or 360.385.7869 3.nuns„it M ww !,� Click here to read the Business Insider, copy, " "" 0t �; forward or print it and enjoy! 4 �- !!7 4i 1 Was your business prepared for a pandemic? ! 0.a LOCATION Zoom Meeting DATE AND TIME 06/17/22 10:00am - 06/17/22 11:00am 0 p Willie Bence, Director, Jefferson County Emergency Management will discuss being ready for whatever is next and how the County is preparing . ��' 0 I&apos;ll be there! Maybe i '` !!ilil 1, ,.."' I can&apos;t make it Register for Chamber Cafes Now! www.jeffcountychamber.org Jefferson County Chamber of Commerce 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 Cciord4t Constant Contact Try email marketing for free today! 2 Julie Shannon From: Kate Dean Sent: Monday, June 6, 2022 1:56 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW:Join First Fed Bank's Chief Banking Officer on Coffee with Colleen at 8am Wed morning From: Clallam EDC Sent: Monday, June 6, 2022 1:54:30 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Kate Dean Subject: Join First Fed Bank's Chief Banking Officer on Coffee with Colleen at 8am Wed morning 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 Kelly Liske, First Fed Bank's, EVP Chief Banking Officer, and their partner, Innovation Refunds, as they explain the Employee Retention Credit (ERC) Tax Rebate which could mean thousands to you as a Local Business Owner: Do you have employees? If you do, and you haven't received an Employee Retention Credit (ERC) Tax Rebate this presentation could be worth tens of thousands to you - even if you already received a PPP funding. Your business may qualify for up to $26K per employee: The Employee Retention Credit (ERC) tax rebate program is a payroll tax refund from the 2020 COVID relief bill that also established PPP loans. Originally, companies could claim i either PPP or ERC, but not both. In early 2021, guidelines changed to permit businesses to claim ERC in addition to PPP funds. Don't wait - the ERC program still funds are still available but the funding may run out without notice. Please Join us on Zoom: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/89474510306?pwd=VIIrRHh5RG1nYVh3V3JXRzFSMmRodz09 Meeting ID: 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. Upcoming State Grants... WA State has Numerous Upcoming Grant Programs for Small Businesses Affected by the Economic Impacts of COVID: At a recent 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 2 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 $2 million for acquisition and major new construction of arts or cultural facilities. Learn more Free Training & Social Events - Online & In Person... Nonprofit Training Workshop: Covering: • How to Update Your Bylaws to Comply with the New Washington Nonprofit Corporation Act by Clallam EDC's Board Chair, Jennifer Burkhardt, who in her fulltime role serves as Chief HR Officer & In-House Counsel at OMC • Board of Directors/Staff responsibilities by Patty Hannah. When Thursday, June 30, 2022 from 8:00 AM to 10:00 AM PDT Where 3 Dungeness River Nature Center 1943 W Hendrickson Rd Sequim, WA 98382 For More Information Contact: Lorie Fazio, Business Relationship Manager Clallam County Economic Development Council Ifazio@clallam.org 360-457-7793 Register Now Ili �:':' , Ir .r�A or .k iqe$ m ylp illi i 'r! ' IiIIIIIIIIIiIIIIG'a Clallam EDC Members — Lefties Baseball Night: Take me out to the Ball Game! Members Join Us Wednesday, June 29, 2022 at Civic Field to watch the Lefties take on the Nanaimo's! First Pitch is at 6:35 PM. All members will be our special guests on the deck behind 3rd baseline. Please email our Buiness Relationship Manager Lorie Fazio to reserve your wristbands! Ifazio@clallam.org Register for the Lefties Game 4 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/ AMER1CAcS , ---- • WAS HN GTO June Webinar Schedule - No-cost Webinars for Entrepreneurs & Small Business Owners: There is no cost, but registration is required How to Write a Business Plan Do you want to start your own business? Are you wondering what steps you need for a successful start? Join us for this webinar to learn all about writing a business plan. We will review topics included in standard business plans such as executive summary, business structure, management, marketing, and financials. You will come away from the webinar with solid ideas of how to get started on your business plan. Register Here: June 9 I 11:00 a.m. Why Your Business Needs Video You are invited to join the Green River College Small Business Center for a live 90-minute webinar on producing video content for your business. Topics include: • How to use video for both targeted marketing and organic marketing • How to use video to solve sales problems • Using video to take potential customers through the sales funnel 5 These concepts can be applied whether you are doing it yourself or hiring a pro. Register Here: June 9 I 1:00 p.m. Loan Preparation: How to get ready, so that you can get to a YES! Join us for this webinar where we will talk about what you need to do to be fully prepared for loan conversations with bankers or alternative lenders, so that you can be considered for a small business loan. You'll also receive a checklist of loan package items, so that you can compile and prepare the best business plan and loan package possible. We'll discuss what lenders look for, what kinds of loans are available for small businesses, and how to overcome obstacles. We'll show you how to go through the loan process as your own best advocate! This training is offered as part of the partnership between the Washington Small Business Development Centers and the Kittitas County Chamber of Commerce. Register Here: June 16 I 11:00 a.m. Small Business Flex Fund Info Webinar The Washington State Small Business Flex Fund is a new loan program for the smallest Washington businesses and nonprofits affected by COVID-19. Join us for this webinar where we'll provide information about the loan program and application process and help you prepare to apply. Register Here: June 21 I 1:00 p.m. From Email to Social Media...Marketing that Coverts Webinar In today's world, social media content is essential for connecting with potential customers. Content marketing is a proven strategy to generate ongoing traffic, build trust, and increase sales. However, there's no one-size-fits-all approach for every business. Join us for this interactive webinar on creating digital content that will help you convert your audience into paying customers. After this webinar, you'll be able to develop a strategic and achievable plan to stay connected to your audience, attract new fans, and promote your offerings — based on your unique strengths. Register Here: June 23 I 11:00 a.m. Business Growth and Development Webinar Could you use a boost to keep your business going and growing? If so, join us for this webinar designed to give business owners hope and options to survive and thrive in challenging and normal times. 6 Topics include: cashflow management, managing debt, turnaround strategies, survival tips, exit strategies and more. Register Here: June 28 I 1:00 p.m. Thank you to Our New & Renewing Members - Learn about Their Businesses... Strategic Partner Level Member 5 Tv Jamestown S'Klallam Tribe >7; New Executive Partner Level Members: • Trotter& Morton Facility Services • Airflo Heating Company New Major Partner Level Members: • Steve Methner Insurance Inc • Port Angeles Association of Realtors Our Renewing EDC Members - Thank you for Your Continued Support of Our Work! Renewing Executive Partner Level Member: • Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Renewing Major Partner Level Member: • Red Lion Hotel Port Angeles Harbor • Shipley Center • John Ralston Consulting • Peninsula Behavioral Health 7 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 za , i.": Sara'.:,, , "",`aa` «.e�t.:.. �, �,��•�^ ,.x':. m �iyr �: a,:,�an3y*, Need help navigating grant application processes? We've yy a ac �, ygot you covered! m " 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 leighj@seattlechamber,com to get connected. Sponsored by: Business REACH Oa Health Trust , - - 1fC#8H8fM.fiApxdM4pkA. w++a xs ero.e _ pudC *b4' '""" THE CHAMBER Services available to any Washington small business with 100 employees or fewer who needs accounting assistance for any of these programs. 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 8 Unsubscribe kdean@co.jefferson.wa.us Update Profile I Constant Contact Data Notice Sent by info@clallam.org powered by 02/ Constant Contact Try email marketing for free today! 9 jeffbocc From: Irwin,Joe <IrwinJ@wsdot.wa.gov> Sent: Monday, June 6, 2022 9:53 AM Subject: WSDOT publishes its quarterly performance report for March 31, 2022 (Gray Notebook 84) 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. Hello, The March 2022 edition of WSDOT's quarterly performance report (the Gray Notebook) is now available online. While numerous performance measures are reported throughout the Gray Notebook, highlights from this issue include: • WSDOT's Electronic Screening System helped the trucking industry avoid 230,000 travel hours and $28.9 million in operating costs in 2021 • Amtrak Cascades had a 46% increase in ridership to 251,000 passengers in 2021 compared to 172,000 in 2020 • In the first quarter of 2022, WSDOT Incident Response teams provided an estimated $21.3 million in economic benefit by reducing the effects of incidents on drivers • Washington State Ferries completed 27,955 (98.8%) of its 28,306 regularly scheduled trips in the third quarter of FY2022 • WSDOT and partners recorded a minimum of 8,683 animal crossings in the Snoqualmie Pass East Project area in 2020 and 2021 • WSDOT began monitoring nine new wetland and stream mitigation sites on 32.7 acres in 2021 • WSDOT's and Washington State Ferries' combined agency-wide recordable incident rate increased 29.5% in 2021 • WSDOT advertised 58 of 143 Pre-existing Funds projects during the third quarter of the 2021- 2023 biennium Gray Notebook editions can accessed at the Gray Notebook archive page. Feel free to share this message with staff and colleagues and, if you have comments and suggestions, please contact Sreenath Gangula, Assistant Director, Performance Management, at (360) 705-6888 i (Sreenath.Gangula@wsdot.wa.gov) or Joe Irwin, Performance Reporting Manager, at (360) 705-6879 (Joe.I rwi n@wsdot.wa.gov). 2 jeffbocc From: J Ball <gnarleydogfarm@gmail.com> Sent: Tuesday, June 7, 2022 6:25 AM To: jeffbocc Subject: Legacy forests and carbon credits 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. https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/environment/blockchain-company-buys-lm-in-carbon-credits-generated- by-issaquah-forest-biggest-such-deal-in-u-s/ 1 6/9/22, 11:39 AM Blockchain company buys$1 M in carbon credits generated by Issaquah forest,the biggest such deal in U.S.history The Seattle ... Environment TO e Seattle Z!ttmes npany buys $1M in carbon cr ;saquah forest, the biggest St I June 3,2022at6:40pm e of carbon credits generated J to further protect and to...(Courtesy of King County) ?d Friday that Regen a Delaware-based �velopment company, trbon credits generated by quail. https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/environment/blockchain-company-buys-1m-in-carbon credits-generated-by-issaquah-forest-biggest-such-d... 1/3 6/9/22, 11:39 AM Blockchain company buys$1 M in carbon credits generated by Issaquah forest,the biggest such deal in U.S. history I The Seattle ... more than ioo,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide that would have been released into the atmosphere were it not for the county's protection. Microsoft became its first local customer when the company agreed to buy all credits from the program's first year. "You know, we're new to all of this," said King County Forest Carbon Program Manager Kathleen Wolf. That project and the 46-acre plot in Issaquah are two of the largest carbon offset projects overseen by King County. "Between the two, we've been on a really steep learning curve as well, just trying to better understand what it takes to get these projects up and running, how the sale of credits can help us make connections with, in particular, local buyers who then become participants," Wolf said. Carbon credits and emission offsets can be fascinating but nauseatingly complex. Still, she was able to boil it down to a workable mantra. "Protect forest. Generate the credits. Sell those. Use that funding to protect more forest." Nicholas Turner: 206-464-8541 or nturner@seattletimes.com; on Twitter: @nickturner217. Nicholas covers climate change, biodiversity and environmental issues. View 79 Comments https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/environment/blockchain-company-buys-1 m-in-carbon-credits-generated-by-issaquah-forest-biggest-such-d... 3/3 Julie Shannon From: Greg Brotherton Sent: Tuesday, June 7, 2022 4:32 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: COVID-19 Bi-weekly Report - 6/07/2022 Follow Up Flag: Follow up Flag Status: Flagged From: Village Council Sent: Tuesday, June 7, 2022 4:30:17 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Greg Brotherton Subject: COVID-19 Bi-weekly Report - 6/07/2022 ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. illli i Illl�da�Y•". "�r° . P' 7D!L _ e OUl Cl( TO PROTECT, PRESERVE, PROMOTE, AND UNIFY COVID-19 Bi- e kly Report 6/07/2022 This bi-weekly update covers Dr. Allison Berry's (JeffCo Public Health) presentation at the (BoCC) Board of County Commissioners meeting Monday. JeffCo DEM is in a stand down position relating to COVID-19 at this time. View the BoCC meeting recording from this week HERE 129 New Cases Last Week 1 New cases in the last two weeks: 299 Download the Jefferson County Case Report HERE Mod The Two-Week COVID-19 Case Rate ee in Jefferson County is:High ♦ _ '. IROSu.* thac.wryun.mat*a.pa6aa,eW.a...e0a1c144 .. Lett ".;Mkaferpte;#.tammnwd.dMot eetayan.me.#In POOk.'Wow**NOV thin 46 low alar tended Ow thou eR hK a r.l.et sett n hltnen w Mate. thin adtl.hounetwtd ol.a.bert of hkllet riMM wtneo mwNa tadaan.Mat > ,,i- 200 safer for tower ak poplala^sea unmask ye ry Lam Safer tat"w.ee.in.lu+M;114harrl.M pepulatfanu to utmost • The two-week COVID-I.9 Case Rate in JeffCo is showing signs of flattening. This is due to the high vaccination rate in JeffCo. • We are still at a high level. It continues to be STRONGLY RECOMMENDED that good quality face masks be worn in indoor settings when 10 or more individuals are present. • The USA represents 4.24% of the world's population. The USA represents 15.94% of the world's COVID-19 cases and 16.01% of the world's COVID-19 related deaths. • We are not over this Pandemic, but we are starting to transition into the Endemic Phase. It is still up to all of us to personally choose the best mitigation protocols to follow; whether it be masking, social distancing, or the washing of hands. What we choose to do will not only protect us, but those around us who may.be'lmmuno-compromised. 6/6/2022 5/23/2022 Change Total Positives (confirmed cases) 4,211 3,912 299 All Time Percent Positive 8.23% 7.80% 0.43% Percent Postitive Current Week 21.07% 14.10% 6.97% Percent of Population Initiating Vaccination 82.80% 82.60% 0.20% Percent of Population Fully Vaccinated 77.50% 77.30% 0.20% Total Tests Administered 51,139 50,171 968 Total Cases Ever Hospitalized 131 129 2 Total Cases Currently Hospitalized 0 2 -2 Active Cases in Isolation 149 187 -38 Two Week Case Rate per 100K Population 839.00 848.00 -9.00 Deaths 29 29 0 2 To download full County Case Information, click HERE To download full Global Case Count Information, click HERE Resources Click below for more information • jeffersoncountypublichealth.org/1429/covid-19 • coronavirus.wa.gov/information-for/you-and-your-family/safer- gatherings • cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/vaccines/index.htmI • doh.wa.gov/Portals/1/Documents/1600/coronavirus/821-133- BehavioralHealthTipsGettingTheVaccine.pdf • doh.wa.gov/Portals/1/Documents/1600/coronavirus/348-804- COVID19Vacci nesWhatToKnow.pdf • COVID-19 Data Dashboard: Washington State Department of Health Wash Hands Maintain Distance Wear a Mask 3 Visit the Village Council Web Site 0 Your Village Council is a 501(c)(3)non-profit corporation whose purpose is to be a unifying force and information conduit for the benefit of all Port Ludlow residents. Port Ludlow Village Council I Post Office Box 65012, Port Ludlow, WA 98365 Unsubscribe gbrothertonCa@co.lefferson.wa.us Update Profile I Constant Contact Data Notice Sent by portludlowvillagecouncileblast@gmail.com 4 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Tuesday,June 7, 2022 9:46 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW:Today's Workshop at 1:00 From: EDC Team Jefferson Sent: Tuesday, June 7, 2022 9:43:47 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: Today's Workshop at 1:00 ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. E D.Ci EAM jeerso n June 7,2022, 1:00pm PDT Are you thinking about hiring your first employee? Do you already have several on your payroll?This workshop will help you navigate the employment relationship from start to finish so you can best understand how local, state and federal employment laws impact your growing business. This comprehensive workshop takes you through the lifecycle from hiring to firing, including what to do beforehand and afterwards. This workshop presents the following: • What to Do Before Hiring • Process of Hiring an Employee • Being an Employer 1 Managing Effectively Employee Problems Important Employment Laws - This is a workshop not to miss if you are planning on hiring soon, or if you already have employees. You will leave the workshop with a roadniap of what you need to do to minimize your legal risks'involved with having employees. You will also leave with a framework to provide your employees with a quality work environment so that you have satisfied workers. Presenter This workshop is presented by Rebecca Schach. Rebecca is an attorney in the Miller Nash LLP firm in Seattle. Rebecca is a member of the firm's employment law and labor relations team, representing employers in Washington and California on a wide range of employment matters. Sponsored by SCORE Greater Seattle. Greater Seattle SCORE 1206.553.7320 I greaterseattle a(�scorevolunteer.orgi seattle.score.org EDC Team Jefferson I 0 (1) edcteamjefferson.orq 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 L Constant Contact Try email marketing for free today! 2 Julie Shannon From: Greg Brotherton Sent: Tuesday, June 7, 2022 10:37 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: NEW funding opportunity.We want to partner with YOU! From:• Olympic Community of Health Sent: Tuesday, June 7, 2022 10:35:11 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Greg Brotherton Subject: NEW funding opportunity. We want to partner with YOU! ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. View in browser Olympic COMMUNITY of HEALTH we want to partner ,Fit 4.0 Funding Opportunity: Expanding the table Are you interested in joining the funded network of partners at Olympic Community of Health?Are you passionate about collaborating across the three-county region with a variety of health-serving partners?Would you like to work together to tackle health issues that no single sector or Tribe can tackle alone? Olympic Community of Health (OCH) is excited to announce a funding opportunity to expand the OCH table. OCH seeks to provide funding to additional organizations and Tribes in the collective work of OCH—including topics such as reducing stigma of substance use disorder, addressing the health-serving workforce crisis, and working with others to address social needs for those on Medicaid. Eligibility for this opportunity includes organizations and Tribes, not currently contracted with OCH, with a strong base of Medicaid clientele/patients in the three-county region of Clallam, Jefferson, and Kitsap counties. 1 Learn more about this funding opportunity by reviewing the Expanding the Table webpage. Applications are due July 12. Learn more and appl no Informational session June 13 OCH will host an optional virtual information session at 10:30 AM on June 13 to discuss this opportunity and to get answers to your questions. You can also email questions to och(a�olvmpicch.org, call Miranda Burger at 360.633.9579, or visit our FAQ page. "The,o tinued support o€community ,t-e) provided by the OCH is integral to [mprovrng the'social and health needs of community members in our region �Ay ik 116*" "STRONGER Olympic Community of Health is a non-profit with the purpose of tackling health issues that no single sector or Tribe can tackle alone; OCH works to foster a region of healthy people and thriving communities. To learn more about OCH, visit olympicch.orq. In partnership, OCH Team och@olympicch.org Olympic Community of Health,41 Colwell St, Port Hadlock,Washington 98339, United States,3606336298 Manage preferences 2 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Tuesday, June 7, 2022 2:10 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: County News Now—June 7, 2022 From: NACo County News Sent: Tuesday, June 7, 2022 2:06.52 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: County News Now—June 7, 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 NATIONAL ASSOCIATION eirCOUNTIES 0 0 0 0 CN NOW ountyrNews June 7, 2022 a i r�) Itlil� .. M41 i J, .m A $ ,00,0104 i � @ v' ci Weighing retail warehouse boom: Jobs, revenue vs. traffic, pollution 1 Some citizens and officials question whether the benefits of tax dollars and new jobs from warehouses outweigh the problems of the increased traffic and pollution. READ MORE �� ; . ' ry can issue p F ry. CharlotteUrban County, FI. crafted a compromise between backyard- !' ' m- chicken keepers poult and theirbe neighbors.a "` Read more t 1 041:110 ' ,,,,, , _,,,,...„,i,,,,, Partnerships vital to sustain county-military coexistence The REPI program helps counties mitigate the complications that � ' � ` '' ' arise from managing relationships with nearby military °4.4 . °t installations. a s s T '' Read more MORE COUNTY NEWS Read the Cale Study x ° , z - 2 G JULY 1- 4, 2022 -atern Thor may. = 20 ,A NU I.CONFERENCE EXPOSITI ADAms CO N TY COLORADO Explore the full schedule for the 2022 NACo ANNUAL CONFERENCE & EXPOSITION REGISTER TODAY VIEW SCHEDULE* *Note new pattern of Thursday-Sunday Expand your SE:VICESTRDAY!. strategy , s Security event analysis and notificationAIM MO Legislative Updates EPA's $500 million aims to replace existing school buses with zero, low-emission models %.1 Applications for the Clean School Bus Rebate program are due 3;i( �``f W Aug. 19. „ ir, # Read more A.v 8 3 v,,, -1 a Interior announces Land and Water Conservation � '' �� "� '� ' Fund grants to states and territories for FY 2022 Roughly$279 million will be distributed through Land and Water Conservation Fund state matching grants in FY 2022. Read more " 7: HHS announces first-ever behavioral health ' ' '' recovery innovation challenge The challenge seeks to identify innovations that advance s'S:?' ' ''' recovery developed by peer-run or community-based 4 r organizations and their partner, including counties. 7 Read more The Latest From NACo Healthy Counties Leadership Spotlight: Vice Chair Nick Macchione Macchione is the director of San Diego County, Calif.'s Health and Human Services Agency. Learn more A county leader's perspective on cashVest Douglas County, Neb. Commissioner Mary Ann Borgeson, a former NACo president, shares her point of view on how collaborating with her county's treasurer and finance office complemented the county's successful liquidity-management strategy. Learn more 4 0 A e a n ' 4 -„-, . ', ^ F� l N x ..;4.- ,f,.. ' i, M ', tea;„ ,� - a . r .� �, i4. jt, 9 To 1 :P 3Rs , ( IIIll JUNE �yQ .� JUNE �, . .�"W ": . ry. �: �, ,i ,; 4 tl l I 9 rt r , I �0 � -tit , , 1" a as ,i -.,aG"ti''mr y fi 1 W',,1 n ""` r,..in' '�`77`," rlep �yur,k '�i ,Zak ,. !I 'kr JUNE I�� �- � ,, 2.;" v - , �ll` ,�.;' " . mom A �r C47,a a u , l�uac) V ..,, tom, F4 ,'..a,r ; ", 4-„,, p �G ettt} altq� �It to dF" k�„04..l w .' "r "Ulr^ n �P ` y:-lm" � 'III7. ' �t Fa dr'"" Nay a r� 'Z. }�," 7 C, � '�i �'�""'_td?iIl 0 � � �„., �, I , � {ail ,.. -�(,'A` ,r-;Ia,"' F,� i ttff � t , ,- tit - 1I. '4 i - u' .it_t ,�7��f�� c fr - 55,'o �._.,x� .._,� „, . a �?(I7a<�.� �� -�!'„.:4N`�' � ��. "�i,:�:� 7I�-ri ��-''�.a-I� .a,,�,,r� ,i'�:am'R�"nlwj: 4 ,,a, ppq ;p. -" - � ,U I FiE iqq cli[i70 ;-., i � ..44 f raw= ,� l . d ih op- i V �c 6ccll .01 iocicl Iii JUNE [t. _ _W � 1111� INK:iN mot 2 3 4 �� Arndt- ,, + rce:R0� � �� • ptt : �, 0, -G Y E� fi 1 f, n - _ - �0, _ . I� u _ -- 1 „ ^t � , „ ,;,. a?? -- IN .. u ,. -,:.� I 14 � ta4! ,.a� f ,I „ ., :m� "i . ( Ik �� I.. �, ' �1! � NACo Career Center connects top employers with thousands of qualified candidates. SEARCH JOBS Post a job or post your resume today. NATIONAL ASSOCIATION VCOUNTIES 660 North Capitol Street,NW,Suite 400 Washington,D.C.20001 i` 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: Kate Dean Sent: Tuesday,June 7, 2022 2:22 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: For immediate release: Northwest Navy bases conducting earthquake, multi-hazard response exercise Attachments: 220606_Northwest Navy bases conducting earthquake, multi-hazard exercise.pdf From: Stanford, Julianne E CIV USN COMNAVREG NW BGR WA (USA) Sent: Tuesday, June 7, 2022 2:20:16 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) Subject: FW: For immediate release: Northwest Navy bases conducting earthquake, multi-hazard response exercise Good afternoon, I am passing along a press release from Navy Region Northwest about an upcoming region-wide training exercise Naval Magazine Indian Island will be participating in next week. Very respectfully, Julianne Stanford Naval Magazine Indian Island Public Affairs Officer Desk: (360)-396-5393 Cell: (360)-867-8525 julianne.e.stanford.civ@us.navy.mil https://www.facebook.com/NAVMAGIndianlsland From: Overton,Joe William (J.) CIV USN COMNAVREG NW BGR WA(USA)<joe.w.overton.civ@us.navy.mil> Sent: Monday,June 6, 2022 10:04 AM Subject: For immediate release: Northwest Navy bases conducting earthquake, multi-hazard response exercise FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE June 6, 2022 Release # 220606 Northwest Navy bases conducting earthquake, multi-hazard response exercise SILVERDALE, Wash. — U.S. Navy installations in the Northwest region will conduct an earthquake and multi- hazard response exercise June 13-17. The participating installations include Naval Air Station Whidbey Island, Naval Base Kitsap, Naval Magazine Indian Island and Naval Station Everett. The annual exercise, called Citadel Rumble, will test Navy installations' capabilities to prepare for, respond to and recover from an exercise scenario that includes multiple hazards triggered by a natural disaster. In this case, simulated major earthquakes will trigger other simulated hazardous events. 1 People near a Navy installation may see or hear activities related to the multi-day exercise, but this activity is not expected to impact the public outside of Navy property. Exercise activity that might be observed include messages played over the Navy's emergency notification loudspeaker system and increased emergency response vehicle and personnel activity. The Navy aims to minimize impact to the public as much as possible during such exercises. This exercise will provide Navy personnel the opportunity to exercise emergency management teams, processes, procedures and partnerships with local mutual aid agencies to be better prepared to respond to real-world disasters. The exercise will also further enhance the Navy's readiness and ability to deploy forces even under the most adverse conditions. The installations, along with their tenant commands, will test various procedures, including damage assessment, evacuation plans, disaster preparedness, recovery and consequence management plans, and accounting for Sailors and Navy families in the affected regions through the Navy Family Accountability and Assessment System. Citadel Rumble, spearheaded by Commander, Navy Installations Command, is an annual fully-integrated disaster preparedness, response and recovery exercise that evaluates Navy Shore Emergency Management program readiness. -USN- 2 COMMANDER, NAVY REGION NORTHWEST Public Affairs Office 1100 Hunley Road, Silverdale, WA 98315-1100 Phone: (360) 396-1630 Fax: (360) 396-7127 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE June 6, 2022 Release # 220606 Northwest Navy bases conducting earthquake, multi-hazard response exercise SILVERDALE, Wash. —U.S. Navy installations in the Northwest region will conduct an earthquake and multi-hazard response exercise June 13-17. The participating installations include Naval Air Station Whidbey Island, Naval Base Kitsap, Naval Magazine Indian Island and Naval Station Everett. The annual exercise, called Citadel Rumble, will test Navy installations' capabilities to prepare for, respond to and recover from an exercise scenario that includes multiple hazards triggered by a natural disaster. In this case, simulated major earthquakes will trigger other simulated hazardous events. People near a Navy installation may see or hear activities related to the multi-day exercise, but this activity is not expected to impact the public outside of Navy property. Exercise activity that might be observed include messages played over the Navy's emergency notification loudspeaker system and increased emergency response vehicle and personnel activity. The Navy aims to minimize impact to the public as much as possible during such exercises. This exercise will provide Navy personnel the opportunity to exercise emergency management teams, processes, procedures and partnerships with local mutual aid agencies to be better prepared to respond to real-world disasters. The exercise will also further enhance the Navy's readiness and ability to deploy forces even under the most adverse conditions. The installations, along with their tenant commands, will test various procedures, including damage assessment, evacuation plans, disaster preparedness, recovery and consequence management plans, and accounting for Sailors and Navy families in the affected regions through the Navy Family Accountability and Assessment System. Citadel Rumble, spearheaded by Commander, Navy Installations Command, is an annual fully- integrated disaster preparedness, response and recovery exercise that evaluates Navy Shore Emergency Management program readiness. -USN- Julie Shannon From: Kate Dean Sent: Tuesday,June 7, 2022 3:08 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: Please join us Wednesday to learn about Field Arts and Events Hall From: director@forkswa.com Sent: Tuesday, June 7, 2022 2:58:09 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Kate Dean Subject: Please join us Wednesday to learn about Field Arts and Events Hall ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Dear Kate Dean , Please join us Wednesday,June 8th for our last meeting before breaking for summer. We are excited to welcome Steve Raider-Ginsburg, Executive Director and Judge Brooke Taylor, Board President of Field Arts and Events Hall in Port Angeles.Join us to hear about the plan to bring people to Clallam County through conventions, weddings, performances and more. There will be a lunch special, or you can order off the menu. Our meetings take place at Blakeslee's Bar & Grill, 1222 S. Forks Avenue, Noon— 1pm and are open to the public and all are welcome to attend. This is an in-person meeting. We will not have a Zoom or call-in option due to limited internet at the venue. UPCOMING PROGRAMS June 8—Steve Raider-Ginsburg, Executive Director and Judge Brooke Taylor, Board President of Field Arts and Events Hall SUMMER BREAK September 28—Clallam County Budget and Road Show CHAMBER MEETINGS SURVEY Thank you to everyone who has taken time to fill out the survey. We appreciate it! Chamber meetings offer a chance to hear interesting programs, community announcements, and to network with business neighbors, and guests. To better serve you, we are asking for your help to make our Chamber meetings the best they can be. Please give us your input on this link: https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/H8VPJ9N CLALLAM EDC MAKE SURE TO JOIN CLALLAM EDC'S MAILING LIST SO YOU DON'T MISS GRANT OPPORTUNITIES AND COUNTY NEWS! https://chooseclallamfirst.com/ I. Join Kelly Liske, First Fed Bank's, EVP Chief Banking Officer, and their partner, Innovation Refunds, as they explain the Employee Retention Credit (ERC)Tax Rebate which could mean thousands to you as a Local Business Owner: Do you have employees? If you do, and you haven't received an Employee Retention Credit (ERC) Tax Rebate this presentation could be worth tens of thousands to you - even if you already received a PPP funding. Your business may qualify for up to $26K per employee: The Employee Retention Credit (ERC) tax rebate program is a payroll tax refund from the 2020 COVID relief bill that also established PPP loans. Originally, companies could claim either PPP or ERC, but not both. In early 2021, guidelines changed to permit businesses to claim ERC in addition to PPP funds. Don't wait -the ERC program still funds are still available but the funding may run out without notice. Please Join us on Zoom: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/89474510306?pwd=VIIrRHh5RG 1nYVh3V3JXRzFSMmRodz09 Meeting ID: 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. CLALLAM COUNTY RURAL COMMUNITY LEADERSHIP PROGRAM REGISTRATION NOW OPEN! Join RDI for Rural Community Leadership training in Forks or in Port Angeles/Sequim! Please complete the form on the link to register or to request more information. The program builds community collaboration, collective action, and fundamental skills- connecting a critical mass of emerging and existing local leaders. Class size will be limited to 25-30 participants. https://airtable.com/shrZzYF4eySXkOJCJ WEST END BUSINESS& PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATION (WEBPA) WEBPA meetings take place at the Congregational Church, 7:30am. Dues are only $10 for an individual, and $25 for a business. WEBPA is a wonderful non-profit organization that provides business networking, and through fundraising, keep our lovely town decorated for Christmas! For more information, please contact Christi Baron 360-374-3311 or cbaron@forksforum.com UPCOMING IN-PERSON EVENTS RECURRING • Tuesdays—Bingo Night @ Forks Elks Lodge • Every third Tuesday—West End Historical Society @ Forks Congregational Church • Wednesdays through August 31 (Wednesdays) Forks Logging & Mill Tours • Wednesdays—Quileute Drum Group @ Quileute Akalat Center (June 8th at Ki'tla Center) • Saturdays through October 1 (Saturdays) Forks Open Aire Market @ Sully's Parking Lot SPRING EVENTS • June 8 Senior Lunch @ Forks Congregational Church • June 11-12 West End Thunder Drag Races & Show N Shine SUMMER EVENTS 2 • July 1-4 Forks Old Fashioned 4th of July (schedule is live on our events page) • July 8-10 Clallam Bay/Sekiu Fun Days • July 9-10 West End Thunder Drag Races &Show N Shine • July 15-17 Quileute Days • July 30-31 31st Annual Fred Orr Memorial Co-Ed Softball Tournament @ Tillicum Park • August 4 Fee Free Day at Olympic National Park • August 4-12 Meet Mick Dodge @ Peak 6 Adventure Store • August 6-7 West End Thunder Drag Races & Show N Shine and Hot Thunder Nite • August 26-28 Makah Days Celebration • August 27-28 33rd Annual West End Invitational Co-ed Softball Tournament @ Tillicum Park For more events, please visit our website If you would like to submit an event for our events page, send the information to Events@ForksWA.com and include your contact details and a photo or flyer. eitainfielt S tag NEW WEBSITE PHOTOS We are so excited to be working on our new website. As part of this process, if you are a Chamber member and listed on our website (Sponsor, Organization, Introductory Organization, Additional Business)we need updated photos from you. Kari will be reaching out via phone to all members as a follow-up to this email. What we need: • 1- 10 photos your choice, that best represent your business. We have a slideshow option if you send multiple photos. • Horizontal is best. • Size: around 1800x750. • Please email them to us individually or send them to us in a group with Dropbox or another file sharing link. • Please make sure to tell us which business these are for if you have multiple businesses. • Please email them to Chamber@ForksWA.com and Kari will respond that she has received them. • If we don't receive photos from you after this email and the follow up phone call, you may end up with a very small photo to represent your company. We hope everyone takes advantage of this new opportunity. • Please have these photos to us as soon as possible. SAVE THE DATE—COMMUNITY SHRED EVENT IN OCTOBER! The Forks Chamber of Commerce will be sponsoring a community shred event on Saturday, October 1st from 10am — 1 pm. This gives you four months to go through that pile of paperwork in your closet, garage, storeroom, desk, etc. and sort it out to see what needs to be shredded in October. This fundraiser will benefit our ongoing scholarship program. FOREVER TWILIGHT IN FORKS COLLECTION & FESTIVAL 3 FTF IS LOOKING FOR LOCAL VENDORS! Forever Twilight in Forks Festival Grand Bazaar- Friday, September 9th 9am-5pm at Ki'tla Center. All spots are outdoors, so bring your own table, chair, pop-up. We will set up in the grassy area in the SE corner and there will be high visibility from the highway. People are coming from all over and want to buy local art, photography,jewelry, Twilight-themed items and more! Spaces are only $25 each. We are offering free spaces for local non-profits, and our Quileute and Hoh neighbors!Advance registration is required. To find out more information or to register click on this link. All are welcome to shop!! FOREVER TWILIGHT IN FORKS COLLECTION Forever Twilight in Forks Collection is open Thursday—Monday Noon —4 pm. Please see link for more details. WE WANT TO DO YOUR RIBBON CUTTING CEREMONY Would you like to celebrate your new business, grand opening, re-opening, addition, or a special unveiling with a ribbon cutting ceremony? We would love to provide that service to you! Simply contact me and we will put it on the calendar. Ribbon Cutting Ceremonies make great acknowledgements for business milestones! Sta,%. 1, . Lissy Andros, executive director Reach me at director@forkswa.com Kari Larson, assistant to the E.D., Kari handles all of our visitor correspondence and administrative duties for the Chamber, and the online store. She is also in charge of ordering our merchandise and sending out visitor packets. Reach Kari at chamber@forkswa.com info@forkswa.com and events@forkswa.com Gay Bunnell, Forever Twilight in Forks Collection and VIC staff member. Gay is our lead staff member at the Collection, including maintaining the records for the exhibits. Reach Gay at collection@forkswa.com Wendy Sumner, Ronnie Aldrich,Justin Braden, Cherish Varlack-Visitor Center staff members. (No email) Rob Hunter, Forever Twilight in Forks Festival volunteer and part-time staff member. Reach Rob at projects@forkswa.com Susie Michels, IT Manager. Susie runs our website and handles all technical issues. Reach Susie at webmaster@forkwa.com 2022 DUES Thank you to everyone who has sent in their dues for 2022! We will send out reminders this week. If you haven't received yours, please contact me. Thank you for your time. I hope you have a wonderful day! Best, Lissy Andros, Executive Director Forks Chamber of Commerce 1411 S. Forks Avenue Forks, WA 98331 4 360-374-2531 office 903-360-4449 cell director@ForksWA.com 5 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Tuesday,June 7, 2022 4:15 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW:Wednesday Evening Dinner Invitation - Timber Training Participants From: Paul Jewell Sent: Tuesday, June 7, 2022 4:12:22 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Amanda McKinney; Bill Peach; Brian Smiley; Chris Branch; Lee Grose; Lee Tischer; Lindsey Pollock; Lisa Janicki; Mark Burrows; Randy Johnson; Sharon Trask; Tiffany Gering; Tye Menser; Vickie Raines; Wes McCart; Tom Lannen; Amy Cruver; Jani Hitchen; Kaylee Galloway; Cory Wright; Greg Brotherton; Heidi Eisenhour; Robert Bradley; ashley.arai@co.thurston.wa.us Subject: Wednesday Evening Dinner Invitation -Timber Training Participants 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 other Timber Training Attendees, Please see the email below from Timber Counties Chairman Tom Lannen regarding a group dinner invitation for anyone arriving Wednesday, 6/8/22,for the Timber Training that begins Thursday. 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. Good afternoon, This invitation is being sent to you because you are registered for the WSAC Timber 101 Training program on Thursday and Friday this week (June 9th and 10th) As the training on Thursday begins early in the morning, I know that several of you may be arriving the afternoon or evening before (Wednesday,June 8th). If you do arrive early,or if you live locally and would like to join, I'd like to invite you to join me and others for a no-host group dinner. Since several of us may be in town together, it seems like a good opportunity to meet and connect. If you are interested in dinner, please meet in the lobby of the hotel (Olympia Hotel at Capital Lake)where the training will be held at 7 PM on Wednesday,June 8th. We'll decide from there where to go to dinner. I look forward to seeing all who want to join. 1 Sincerely, Commissioner Tom Lannen 2 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Tuesday, June 7, 2022 4:25 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW:June 16 Resource Roundtable: LION investors From: EDC Team Jefferson Sent: Tuesday, June 7, 2022 4:23:33 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: June 16 Resource Roundtable: LION investors ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. f LION Learn orebou 'li Thursday June 16 noon - 1:00 pm ,h,,,,,,,.4 west speaker, Larll Merman �" Res ,�I(�N , Resource lrundtab�e first I_IC local investing' philosophy. ; � , �- �" • learn how o a I C loan • �,�i i; II .-'4 'Illy'„'�liji .�9��-! 9 " " J '` ulinderaland th 'LION .` n it �ii i�°SIB • ,,philosophy .I I li' understand the expectations'' Build Community a �w Together 1 E2 �;� Our mission is to build prosperous • { .; ;� your' local businesses, keep investing �ip> j" money in our community, and help build a more resilient and sustainable � economy in East Jefferson County, � Washington. IvestinLca no � i etw rkOrrtuntisp o e Link to ,te fe ; ►nIi ►� .ne-t,''"' S, • vi . Sponso, ......red y' DGTam Jefferson „J„,„,i,,,,.. iiii3 Jeffe1SOfl EOM Team-Jefferson is the W hingtor Styate Department of Commerce 'r��i,, designated, ssociat Development Organization f ;'1efFer on g o tEDC "beam Jefferson,connects businesses to resources and fundin�', and works N"' a,p pr„ with government and partner�organizations td'help ourcommunities thrive.. �' EDC Team Jefferson �! �i. ' Sign up HERE for future classes, grant info and more EDC Team Jefferson 1385 Benedict Street, Suite 2A, Port Townsend, WA 98368 Unsubscribe heisenhour@ico.jefferson.wa.us Update Profile I Constant Contact Data Notice Sent by admin@edcteamjefferson.org powered by C.IN‘ Constant Contact 2 Try email marketing for free today! 3 Julie Shannon From: Greg Brotherton Sent: Tuesday,June 7, 2022 4:32 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW:Timber Industry Economic Impact Report Attachments: WFPA_Industry_Econ_Impacts_2021.pdf From: Paul Jewell Sent: Tuesday, June 7, 2022 4:28:23 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Timber Counties Cc: Court Stanley; Mark Meleason; Eric Johnson Subject: Timber Industry Economic Impact Report 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, Attached is a new timber industry economic impact report by county.The report was completed by Mason Bruce & Girard for the Washington Forest Protection Association (WFPA). I thought it might interest many of you. Thanks for everything you do for counties! 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 Contribution of Working Forests to the Washington State Economy: 2021 Prepared by: MASON,BRUCE&GIRARD Insights.Ideas.Integrity. Mason, Bruce & Girard, Inc. 6/4/2022 Prepared for: WFPA Washington Forest Protection Association (� Forest products industry Economic Impacts in Washington State-2021 WFPA Table of Contents 1.0 Introduction 2 2.0 Data and Methods 3 2.1 Data Sources 3 2.2 Methods 4 2.2.1 Direct jobs and wages 4 2.2.2 Indirect, induced jobs and wages 5 2.2.3 Direct and estimated taxes 7 3.0 Employment and Wages 8 3.1 Industry Sectors 8 3.2 Counties 9 4.0 Revenue and Taxes 10 4.1 Direct Revenues 10 4.2 Estimated Tax Revenues 11 5.0 References 13 5.1 Data 13 5.2 Methods 13 6.0 Appendix 14 Data Availability Note: The US Census Bureau has substantially delayed release of critical economic datasets, and Washington forest property tax data for 2021 remain unavailable at the release of this report.To facilitate a timely assessment of the forest industry's economic contributions, this report relies on partial-year data for 2021, some CBP county data from 2020, 2020 tax data benchmarked to 2021 GBI, and some results retained from the WFPA's 2017 economic impact report in certain cases where none of the recent 2020 or 2021 data are suitably compete. Final data for 2021 could alter the employment, wage, and tax data reported here; a final determination will not be possible until release of the 2021 County Business Patterns-Non-Employer Statistics Combined Report, expected ca. 2024. !! 4rrep) Forest products industry Economic Impacts in Washington State-2021 WFPA 1.0 INTRODUCTION Forestland in Washington State covers approximately 23 million acres, with 11 million acres of working forests. Private timberland accounts for 9.2 million acres. Forests on State land cover 2.3 million acres, approximately half of which can be classified as working forest. Although Federal land holdings represent 5.7 million acres, around one fifth qualifies as working forest. Private land produced 70%of the timber harvest in 20142, 72% in 2017, and 67% in 20213. Working forests contribute to Washington's economy directly and indirectly. Direct impacts of the timber industry include sale of harvested timber, wood products manufacturing, transport, and tax revenues on harvested timber and timberland property. Indirect impacts include spending by the forest products industry on materials and support services. Both direct and indirect activity support an induced economic impact in the form of service jobs. The current report estimates economic impacts (Table 1) of the Washington forest products industry in 20214. Multiplication factors necessary to calculate indirect and induced jobs and wages are available on a two-year cycle with 2018 as the latest complete year.This report follows methodology consistent with prior reports WFPA commissioned to calculate forest products industry impacts for 2014 and 2017 (see §2.2). In some cases, excessive reporting delays at the State and Federal level limited 2021 data availability through Q2 or Q3. Final 2021 annual data may alter the conclusions presented in this report. Where estimated 2021 figures differ substantially from past results,and where 2020 census data are also divergent,some results from the 2017 report have been retained as a likely baseline for current activity. Table 1.Direct and estimated jobs,wages,and revenues from forest products industry in Washington. Economic Impact Factor 2017 2021 Stumpage sales $ 897,705,614 $ 942,251,339 Direct jobs 40,359 42,122 Total jobst 101,435 102,345 Direct wages $ 2,453,176,434 $ 2,623,149,959 Total wagest $ 5,488,652,644 $ 5,631,372,374 Total revenue $ 28,590,532,029 $ 36,076,433,415 Total taxes $ 231,552,544 $ 300,867,829 t Includes direct,indirect,induced jobs or wages;avoids double-counting industry activity 1 https://www.fs.fed.us/pnw/rma/fia-topics/inventory-data/ 2 WFPA internal technical report, Forest2Market. 3 Data available through Q3, may change when final data released: Washington Department of Revenue. https://dor.wa.gov/find-taxes-rates/other-taxes/forest-tax/harvest-statistics 4 Complete annual data were available for export activity. Harvest,tax,and gross business income was extrapolated from Q1-Q3 data. Quarterly employment and wages were available for Q1 and Q2. Property taxes were not yet available for 2021; non-harvest tax revenues, except fire-related fees, were calculated by benchmarking 2021 to 2020 GBI.Once available,final 2021 numbers may differ from this report. 2 MAscet BRUCE&GIRARD (� Forest products industry Economic Impacts in Washington State-2021 WFPA Direct stumpage sales increased from $897 million in 2017 to $942 million in 2021. Economic activity in 2021 continued to be heavily impacted by federal and local government responses to the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic declaration. Competing factors both challenged the forest industry (difficulty securing employees)and afforded advantages(record high lumber prices). It is beyond the scope of this report to discuss the trajectory of economic trends or the relative decline from market peak in 2018-2019. Direct and total (direct, indirect, induced) employment and wages in 2021 were all higher than reported in 2017. Gross Business Income (GBI), the total revenue from forest products industry sectors, increased by 26% thanks to sustained record-high prices for lumber in 2020-2021. Total tax revenues increased by $69.3 million compared to 2017. Washington's working forests produced 2,773 million board feet (MMbf) of logs in 2021, down 4.9% compared to 2017, when the annual harvest was 2,871 MMbf. Each million board feet of timber harvested in 2021 supported 15 direct jobs(one more job above 2017), 36 total jobs (also one more job from 2017)and yielded $106,481 in total tax revenues for the State of Washington. 2.0 DATA AND METHODS 2.1 Data Sources Data to prepare this impact assessment were publicly available from Federal agencies and State of Washington sources: 1. Census Bureau (quarterly jobs and wages; exports) 2. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages (QCEW) 3. Washington Employment Security Department (ESD) QCEW 4. Census Bureau and Non-Employer Statistics Combined (CBP-NES) 5. Washington Department of Revenue (DOR) Gross Business Income (GBI) 6. Washington DOR stumpage revenues, property tax, business taxes and fees 7. Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) Regional Input-Output Modeling System (RIMS II) 8. Washington DOR Input-Output Model (2012) Direct employment and wages were calculated chiefly from BLS QCEW and WA ESD QCEW, available for Q1 and Q2.Census Bureau CBP-NES from 2017-2018 were used in select cases where QCEW data were suppressed to maintain confidentiality;2021 CBP-NES were inferred from ratios of QCEW to CBP-NES from 2017-2018. The ratio of forest products export tonnage relative to total export tonnage from 2021 was used to infer the fraction of port activity represented by the forest products industry by county.Total revenues (GBI) from the forest products industry were extracted from WA DOR, available through Q3 2021. Property taxes were not available for 2021 at the time this report was prepared. Property taxes were estimated for 2021 using the 2020 ratio of property tax to GBI. Other taxes were derived from NAICS categories in the Quarterly Business Review or estimated in proportion to the forest products industry direct wages. Multiplication factors from the BEA RIMS II model were used to compute indirect, induced, and total jobs and wages for the forest products industry. Double-counting of related industries was mitigated using interaction coefficients from the latest (2012) Washington Input-Output model. 3 MASON BRUCE&GIRARD nForest products industry Economic Impacts in Washington State-2021 WFPA 2.2 Methods Detailed methodology is provided to WFPA in a separate technical memo. 2.2.1 Direct jobs and wages Jobs and wages for 2021 were estimated from BLS QCEW, WA ESD QCEW, and CBP-NES data, organized by county and industry code.This report uses the same set of forest products industry North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) codes that were used in the WFPA 2014 and 2017 impact assessments (Table 2), standardizing NAICS categories to three-digit groups. Data from BLS QCEW and WA ESD QCEW were used in a complementary capacity to compute direct employment and wages for each target NAICS category. Both datasets must not report jobs and wages in certain cases to maintain confidentiality;to infer these quantities,we relied on reporting from the CBP-NES combined data. The CBP-NES are currently only available through 2018.To infer likely 2021 CBP-NES quantities,we constructed ratios with the QCEW as numerator and the CBP-NES as denominator for 2017-2018, then applied those ratios to annualized 2021 QCEW data to infer 2021 CBP-NES. Any inferred 2021 CBP-NES values exceeding observed 2017- 2018 values were capped at the maximum of the observed source range. Checking county-level summaries from the WA ESD QCEW against the county jobs and wages from BLS QCEW provides a way to infer employees per entity and wages per employee in cases where data have been intentionally set to zero by the agencies. Where one dataset reported nonzero values while the other was zero,we adopted the nonzero value. For WA ESD QCEW,we used only values for which the three-digit and six-digit NAICS encompassed the same set. While 2021 employment data were available only for Q1 and Q2, harvest data and GBI were available through Q3, and showed continued increase. As harvest and employment are positively linked, we adjusted likely second- half employment to reflect the recorded higher harvest levels. Table 2. NAICS codes with crosswalk to RIMS industry groups. NAICS codes with more than three digits were aggregated into three-digit groups for the remainder of this analysis. NAICS Description Category RIMS II Group 113 Forestry and logging Forestry logging support 2 1153 Support activities for forestry Forestry logging support 2 321 Wood product manufacturing Wood product mfg. 8 322 Paper manufacturing Paper manufacturing 22 33711 Wood kitchen cabinet, counter mfg. Wood furniture mfg. 17 337122 Nonupholstered wood furniture mfg. Wood furniture mfg. 17 337211 Wood office furniture manufacturing Wood furniture mfg. 17 337212 Custom architectural woodwork Wood furniture mfg. 17 42331 Lumber, plywood, etc.wholesalers Paper lumber wholesale 27 4883 Support activities for water transport Forestry port activity 34 483111 Deep sea freight transportation Forestry port activity 34 " , b 4 MASON.RRUCE&GIRARD Forest products industry Economic Impacts in Washington State-2021 WFPA Washington State is the single most important state in the nation for exporting forest products. A total of $3.06 billion in forest products were exported via Washington's ports in 2021, corresponding to 7.26 million tons of material. By mass, Washington exports 25%of national log and lumber products and 9% of paper products (Table 3), collectively 14% of the national total. Port-related NAICS reported by BLS and WA ESD include all support activities and deep-sea freight transport jobs and wages, but only a fraction of these are related to the forest product industry. We collected port-level and regional import-export data from USA Trade to estimate the fraction of port activities attributable to the forest products industry. We acquired vessel tonnage and dollar value for all forest products commodity groups for Washington ports,as well as total vessel tonnage and dollar value for those ports. We calculated the ratio between forest products tonnage and total tonnage for ports at the county level and computed an average value for counties with port-related activities but no physical port locations. We multiplied NAICS 4883 and NAICS 483111 jobs and wages by commodity ratios for 2021 from the appropriate county to estimate forestry-related port activities. Table 3. Forest products exported through Washington State constitute 9% of total national forest products exports in terms of dollar value,and 14%of forest exports by weight measure. Export Value(2021$) Export Tonnage Commodity USA Total Washington USA Total Washington ($million) $million % (million tons) million tons % Wood products $ 9,731 $ 1,633 17% 22.91 5.81 25% Wood pulp $ 9,677 $ 449 5% 22.64 0.93 4% Paper products $ 15,339 $ 982 6% 5.79 0.52 9% Total: $ 34,747 $ 3,064 9% 51.34 7.26 14% 2.2.2 Indirect, induced jobs and wages Direct impacts of the forest products industry include jobs and wages inferred from the QCEW and modeled CBP-NES data for 2021. Indirect impacts measure the jobs and wages that result from supplying or servicing industries outside the target NAICS set. For example, a sawmill would purchase logs (direct), but also machinery (indirect). Further induced impacts of the forest products industry result when persons employed by the industry spend their income in the larger community, e.g. a logging contractor purchasing groceries. Multipliers to calculate indirect and induced jobs and wages were purchased from the Bureau of Economic Assessment RIMS I/O model. Multipliers must be aggregated by regions that share economic ties. Following prior WFPA methods, we used six regions in Washington, Kennewick-Richland-Pasco, Lewiston (includes some Idaho Counties), Portland-Vancouver-Beaverton (includes some Oregon Counties), Seattle- Tacoma-Olympia, Spokane (includes Idaho counties), and Wenatchee. Counties in each region are listed in Table 13 (§6.0); each county in a region was assigned the same RIMS multipliers. To calculate indirect and induced jobs and wages, for each unique combination of WA county and NAICS code,we multiplied direct jobs and wages(§2.2.1) by the RIMS II multiplier set for the A 5 MASON.BRUCE r.GMAKRD Forest products industry Economic Impacts in Washington State-2021 WFPA region featuring the county in question, assigning the RIMS II industry group to the appropriate NAICS code (Table 2). Based on consultation with experts at the Bureau of Economic Analysis, inter-industry economic activity should not be double-counted. Indirect and induced jobs and wages should derive from final industries in a sector (Figure 1), which are defined as those that export value outside the region or those that provide a final good or service within the region. Industry interactions double-count Intermediate(I)sub-sectors in Final(F)sub-sectors °9u 4 Forestry& OP'�i Logging(I) oodp fg(I) ih"Furnitu r+nifg` i Wholesale(I) Port Activity(F) r tiWood pdts mfg(F) Furniturernfg"(F) Wholesale(F)' l d la Paper pdts mfg(I Paper pdts mfg(F) Figure 1. Intermediate (I) industries contribute to downstream production in final (F) industries, defined as exporting economic output beyond the region of analysis,or consumed as final products in the region.The most basic industry(1°)is forestry and logging,serving as intermediate to higher-degree(2°through 5°)sub-sectors. Economic activity in final industries is a combination of final activities (export, sales) as well as contributions from intermediate industries (Figure 1). Intermediate industry contributions are counted in RIMS II multipliers for both final and intermediate industries because the multipliers enable use within a single RIMS II code. When aggregating the effects of multiple industries within a sector, intermediate impacts are likely to be counted twice. Avoiding double-counting intermediate industry impacts is important, otherwise the combined sector impact will be overestimated. For this report, we consider forestry, logging, and their support activities (NAICS codes 113 and 115) to be intermediate industries, because their downstream products—logs—are entirely accounted for in downstream industries. The impact of double-counting forestry and logging is deducted from the forestry and logging contribution in the form of a double-count reduction factor(Table 4),which is applied against the Type 2 RIMS II multiplier (for calculation details, please refer to WFPA technical methods memo made available with this report). Some final industries are also partially intermediate, for example wood products manufacturing (Figure 1) is final relative to logging but intermediate relative to wholesale and port activities. In these industries,we accrue to the double-count reduction factor for industry interactions that are duplicated, e.g.wholesale and port activities are deducted from the impact of wood products manufacturing (Table 4). For this 2021 report, the double-count factors were calculated from the latest WA 1-0 models released in 2021, derived from 2012 data. https://ofm.wa.gov/washington-data-research/economy-and-labor-force/washington-input-output-model/2012- washington-input-output-model 1 '4Srr 6 MASON.BRUCE&GIRARO Forest products industry Economic Impacts in Washington State-2021 WFPA Table 4.Double-count reduction factors derived from the 2012 WA I-O model.Note that NAICS group 113 includes the contributions from 115,support activities for forestry. Inter-Industry Output Total Output Double-Count WA I-O Description NAICS group Sum I-I DC PCE output Industry Sum Factor Forestry and Logging 113 1,428.3 1,403.2 89.5 2,896.5 1,492.7 0.515 Wood Product Mfg. 321 2,210.6 1,111.6 28.3 5,187.9 1,139.9 0.220 Paper Manufacturing 322 1,043.0 303.9 222.6 6,504.6 526.5 0.081 Furniture 337 381.3 16.6 16.7 1,379.8 33.3 0.024 Wholesale 423 9,645.1 1,251.7 6,542.8 25,723.2 7,794.5 0.303 Ports Related 483 531.4 7.7 944.1 2,359.9 951.8 0.403 2.2.3 Direct and estimated taxes The timber industry produces tax revenues in several forms. Sales of timber (stumpage) are subject to a direct tax, and designated forest land (DFL) is also taxed at state rates. Businesses in the forest products industry are also taxed with Business and Occupation (B&O) tax, retail sales tax, Public Utility Tax (PUT), other assorted fees, and fire protection tax. These latter taxes are leveed with slight variation across counties. Combined tax revenues from the forest products industry therefore include stumpage and land tax, and business operations taxes. These tax revenues are calculated for broad NAICS categories from the Quarterly Business Review6. Taxes are grouped into Primary Taxes (stumpage (2021 data), land fees (2020 data pro-rated to 2021)), for which values are directly reported by WA DOR, and Estimated Taxes (B&O, PUT, etc.). The state-level B&O, PUT, etc. taxes are known quantities at the state level by NAICS code, but we estimate county-level tax using the fraction of total GBI per county, and in this sense these taxes are estimated for the county level. 6https://dor.wa.gov/about/statistics-reports/q uarterly-business-reviews/quarterly-business-review-2021 7 MASON BRUCE&GIRARD Forest products industry Economic Impacts in Washington State-2021 WFPA 3.0 EMPLOYMENT AND WAGES Direct and total jobs and wages were summarized by industry sector(RIMS II group, §3.1) and by county (§3.2). Methods were developed to compute direct jobs and wages from a complementary set of WA ESD QCEW and BLS QCEW data, using the WA ESD state-level sum by six-digit NAICS code to infer county-level employment and wages for three-digit NAICS codes. All direct jobs and wages, and tax data, were downloaded March 2022 for the 2021 calendar year, at which point Q1 and Q2 2021 were available. Final 2021 employment and wages are subject to change when the Q3 and Q4 data are released and may be updated further if the Census Bureau decides to release CBP-NES data again (currently only available through 2018). 3.1 Industry Sectors We group NAICS codes into the six industries corresponding to RIMS II multiplier categories (Table 2,Table 5). For 2021,the forest products industry accounted for 42,122 direct jobs, paying $2.62 billion in wages(Table 5).With indirect and induced economic impacts,the forest products industry contributes to 102,345 total jobs and $5.63 billion total wages paid (Table 5). Direct and total employment and wages are likely higher than in 2017 (Table 1, Table 5), based on trends observed in data available through Q2 and Q3 2021. Table 5. Direct and total jobs in the Washington forest products industry for 2020. Industry Sector Direct Jobs Total Jobs Direct Wages Total Wages Forestry and Logging 5,192 7,576 $ 326,253,694 $ 486,179,877 Wood Product Manufacturing 13,734 36,853 $ 813,872,574 $2,087,448,864 Paper Manufacturing 9,819 29,981 $ 689,338,433 $1,587,006,028 Furniture 5,740 10,338 $ 268,524,511 $ 513,830,560 Wholesale 7,139 15,840 $ 456,954,117 $ 789,575,858 Ports Related 498 1,757 $ 68,206,634 $ 167,331,191 Total 42,122 102,345 $2,623,149,960 $5,631,372,375 County direct jobs and wages figures are available from the BLS and WA QCEW datasets (§2.2.1), with modeled CBP-NES values inferred where possible, from which we computed total jobs and wages using the RIMS II multipliers and double-count avoidance factors (Table 6). Where modeled QCEW data departed substantially (more than a 10% decline or 25% gain), we either used CBP statewide data from 2020, or the 2017 baseline from the prior WFPA report. Counties with substantial forest products industry activity may be home to either basic forestry activity (e.g. Lewis County, with 2,513 direct jobs) or some combination of logging, processing, and manufacture or export(e.g. Cowlitz County,with 4,009 direct jobs). For further details pertaining to RIMS II multiplier calculations, please refer to supplemental materials provided to WFPA with this report. 8 MASON DRUCE K GIRARD 404. Forest products industry Economic Impacts in Washington State-2021 WFPA 3.2 Counties Table 6. Direct and total jobs and wages in the Washington forest products industry comparing for 2021. Each county quantity represents the sum across NAICS categories. County Direct Jobs Total Jobs Direct Wages Total Wages Adams 144 216 $ 8,739,076 $ 12,669,141 Asotin 156 319 $ 9,468,325 $ 18,657,257 Benton 350 748 $ 21,732,103 $ 41,773,701 Chelan 485 775 $ 29,433,878 $ 42,351,684 Clallam 791 1,705 $ 64,371,822 $ 125,764,577 Clark 2,499 7,427 $ 139,825,155 $ 355,202,225 Columbia 145 379 $ 8,790,698 $ 18,318,152 Cowlitz 4,009 13,106 $ 225,263,240 $ 606,027,512 Douglas 140 222 $ 8,531,460 $ 12,570,888 Ferry 83 212 $ 5,040,042 $ 12,454,941 Franklin 462 992 $ 28,037,638 $ 52,824,529 Garfield 5 7 $ 303,920 $ 438,527 Grant 349 569 $ 21,218,673 $ 30,456,508 Grays Harbor 1,671 4,108 $ 126,824,289 $ 289,834,884 Island 335 830 $ 20,353,123 $ 42,989,388 Jefferson 270 644 $ 16,485,578 $ 32,811,489 King 7,362 17,245 $ 397,191,857 $ 783,266,956 Kitsap 373 721 $ 22,742,291 $ 42,915,861 Kittitas 118 245 $ 7,122,787 $ 13,236,126 Klickitat 329 842 $ 20,406,966 $ 51,020,805 Lewis 2,513 5,807 $ 201,752,940 $ 452,264,706 Lincoln 222 634 $ 13,528,455 $ 30,326,856 Mason 454 954 $ 27,611,591 $ 55,895,688 Okanogan 382 592 $ 23,234,009 $ 34,334,844 Pacific 278 503 $ 16,925,979 $ 29,717,081 Pend Oreille 309 835 $ 18,836,922 $ 40,945,269 Pierce 5,203 12,421 $ 297,020,576 $ 631,224,720 San Juan 84 189 $ 5,124,209 $ 11,554,016 Skagit 1,190 2,981 $ 72,332,259 $ 169,174,207 Skamania 201 567 $ 12,228,476 $ 31,815,699 Snohomish 2,650 6,013 $ 161,035,041 $ 344,433,603 Spokane 2,368 5,215 $ 204,748,939 $ 394,295,226 Stevens 779 2,104 $ 63,986,451 $ 164,262,186 Thurston 1,042 2,231 $ 64,830,013 $ 123,105,657 Wahkiakum 196 449 $ 11,951,809 $ 26,838,332 Walla Walla 611 1,535 $ 37,180,307 $ 75,997,857 Whatcom 1,983 4,781 $ 112,823,946 $ 254,996,195 Whitman 61 114 $ 3,697,190 $ 6,467,796 Yakima 1,520 3,108 $ 92,417,945 $ 168,137,307 Total 42,122 102,345 $ 2,623,149,960 $ 5,631,372,375 � a , MASON.BRUCE t.GIRARD Forest products industry Economic Impacts in Washington State-2021 WFPA 4.0 REVENUE AND TAXES 4.1 Direct Revenues Annual forest products industry total revenues (Table 7) for each county are calculated as the product of annual revenue and the quotient of county wages to statewide wages. Primary taxes are extracted from WA DOR reported stumpage taxes and DFL property taxes (Table 7). Table 7. Primary forest products industry tax revenues from stumpage and DFL property taxes. County Annual Revenues Stumpage Sales Stumpage Taxes Property Taxes Total Primary Taxes Adams $ 120,189,351 $ - $ - $ - $ - Asotin $ 130,218,782 $ 964,845 $ 48,242 $ 7,550 $ 55,792 Benton $ 298,883,698 $ - $ - $ - $ - Chelan $ 404,806,949 $ 742,055 $ 37,103 $ 5,807 $ 42,909 Clallam $ 885,311,846 $ 47,201,138 $ 2,360,057 $ 369,355 $ 2,729,412 Clark $ 1,923,028,777 $ 30,247,866 $ 1,512,393 $ 236,693 $ 1,749,087 Columbia $ 120,899,313 $ 27,761 $ 1,388 $ 217 $ 1,605 Cowlitz $ 3,098,066,960 $ 97,428,360 $ 4,871,418 $ 762,389 $ 5,633,807 Douglas $ 117,333,988 $ 14,663 $ 733 $ 115 $ 848 Ferry $ 69,316,181 $ 7,016,425 $ 350,821 $ 54,904 $ 405,726 Franklin $ 385,604,326 $ - $ - $ - $ - Garfield $ 4,179,841 $ 111,871 $ 5,594 $ 875 $ 6,469 Grant $ 291,822,446 $ - $ - $ $ Grays Harbor $ 1,744,226,619 $ 98,828,467 $ 4,941,423 $ 773,345 $ 5,714,768 Island $ 279,918,454 $ 1,931,897 $ 96,595 $ 15,117 $ 111,712 Jefferson $ 226,727,737 $ 30,795,058 $ 1,539,753 $ 240,975 $ 1,780,728 King $ 5,462,617,731 $ 34,091,072 $ 1,704,554 $ 266,7'67 $ 1,971,320 Kitsap $ 312,776,911 $ 10,804,343 $ 540,217 $ 84,545 $ 624,762 Kittitas $ 97,960,373 $ 686,528 $ 34,326 $ 5,372 $ 39,699 Klickitat $ 28.0,658,962 $ 38,292,490 $ 1,914,624 $ 299,643 $ 2,214,268 Lewis $ 2,774,727,548 $ 166,998,068 $ 8,349,903 $ 1,306,781 $ 9,656,684 Lincoln $ 186,058,140 $ 217,764 $ 10,888 $ 1,704 $ 12,592 Mason $ 379,744,861 $ 42,666,431 $ 2,133,322 $ 333,870 $ 2,467,192 Okanogan $ 319,539,556 $ 3,492,510 $ 174,625 $ 27,329 $ 201,955 Pacific $ 232,784,614 $ 62,865,824 $ 3,143,291 $ 491,933 $ 3,635,224 Pend Oreille $ 259,055,996 $ 11,082,899 $ 554,145 $ 86,725 $ 640,870 Pierce $ 4,084,952,489 $ 32,583,249 $ 1,629,162 $ 254,968 $ 1,884,130 San Juan $ 70,473,738 $ 322,527 $ 16,126 $ 2,524 $ 18,650 Skagit $ 994,792,500 $ 45,542,407 $ 2,277,120 $ 356,375 $ 2,633,495 Skamania $ 168,179,404 $ 22,622,743 $ 1,131,137 $ 177,026 $ 1,308,163 Snohomish $ 2,214,730,375 $ 37,955,116 $ 1,897,756 $ 297,003 $ 2,194,759 Spokane $ 2,815,931,810 $ 6,264,417 $ 313,221 $ 49,020 $ 362,241 Stevens $ 880,011,802 $ 34,469,836 $ 1,723,492 $ 269,731 $ 1,993,223 Thurston $ 891,613,391 $ 41,214,146 $ 2,060,707 $ 322,506 $ 2,383,213 Wahkiakum $ 164,374,376 $ 15,554,847 $ 777,742 $ 121,719 $ 899,461 Walla Walla $ 511,344,331 $ 293,711 $ 14,686 $ 2,298 $ 16,984 Whatcom $ 1,551,678,558 $ 18,365,663 $ 918,283 $ 143,714 $ 1,061,997 Whitman $ 50,847,809 $ 352,701 $ 17,635 $ 2,760 $ 20,395 Yakima $ 1,271,032,868 $ 201,640 $ 10,082 $ 1,578 $ 11,660 Total $ 36,076,433,41S $ 942,251,339 $ 47,112,567 $ 7,373,233 $ 54,485,E ms. 10 MASON.BRUCE&GIRARD Forest products industry Economic Impacts in Washington State-2021 WFPA 4.2 Estimated Tax Revenues The forest products industry contributes additional taxes to state revenues in the form of business and occupation tax (B&O), public utility tax (PUT), retail sales tax, assorted other fees, and fire protection dues paid to WA DNR (Table 8). Table 8. Estimated revenues for taxes from Business and Occupation(B&O),retail sales,Public Utility Tax(PUT), other fees, and fire protection as relative fractions of county-level Gross Business Income (GBI), distributed to counties in accordance with the fraction of forest economic activity represented by the county(Table 7). County B&O Retail Sales Public Utility Other Fees Fire Protection Total Estimated Tax Adams $ 319,149 $ 448,188 $ 8,409 $ 5,498 $ 39,582 $ 820,827 Asotin $ 345,781 $ 485,588 $ 9,111 $ 5,957 $ 42,885 $ 889,322 Benton $ 793,652 $ 1,114,542 $ 20,912 $ 13,673 $ 98,430 $ 2,041,210 Chelan $ 1,074,919 $ 1,509,532 $ 28,324 $ 18,519 $ 133,314 $ 2,764,607 Clallam .$ 2,350,845 $ 3,301,342 $ 61,944 $ 40,501 $ 291,557 $ 6,046,189 Clark $ 5,106,384 $ 7,171,005 $ 134,552 $ 87,974 $ 633,305 $ 13,133,220 Columbia $ 321,034 $ 450,835 $ 8,459 $ 5,531 $ 39,815 $ 825,675 ,Cowlitz $ 8,226,565 $ 11,552,741 $ 216,767 $ 141,729 $ 1,020,277 $ 21,158,079 Douglas $ 311,567 $ 437,540 $ 8,210 $ 5,368 $ 38,641 $ 801,326 Ferry $ 184,061 $ 258,481 $ 4,850 $ 3,171 $ 22,828 $ 473,391 Franklin $ 1,023,928 $ 1,437,925 $ 26,980 $ 17,640 $ 125,990 $ 2,633,464 Garfield $ 11,099 $ 15,587 $ 292 $ 191 $ 1,377 $ 28,546 Grant $ 774,901 $ 1,088,211 $ 20,418 $ 13,350 $ 96,105 $ 1,992,985 Grays Harbor $ 4,631,596 $ 6,504,249 $ 122,041 $ 75,794 $ 574,421 $ 11,912,100 Island $ 743,292 $ 1,043,820 $ 19,586 $ 12,806 $ 92,185 $ 1,911,688 Jefferson $ 602,050 $ 845,471 $ 15,864 $ 10,372 $ 74,668 $ 1,548,425 King $ 14,505,361 $ 20,370,188 $ 382,212 $ 249,901 $ 1,798,987 $ 37,306,649 Kitsap $ 830,544 $ 1,166,350 $ 21,885 $ 14,309 $ 103,006 $ 2,136,093 Kittitas $ 260,123 $ 355,296 $ 6,854 $ 4,481 $ 32,261 $ 669,015 Klickitat $ 745,258 $ 1,046,582 $ 19,637 $ 12,839 $ 92,429 $ 1,916,745 Lewis $ 7,367,974 $ 10,347,003 $ 194,144 $ 126,937 $ 913,792 $ 18,949,850 Lincoln $ 494,056 $ 693,814 $ 13,018 $ 8,512 $ 61,274 $ 1,270,674 Mason $ 1,008,369 $ 1,416,075 $ 26,570 $ 17,372 $ 125,060 $ 2,593,447 Okanogan $ 848,501 $ 1,191,568 $ 22,358 $ 14,618 $ 105,233 $ 2,182,278 Pacific $ 618,133 $ 868,058 $ 16,288 $ 10,649 $ 76,662 $ 1,589,790 Pend Oreille $ 687,920 $ 966,061 $ 18,126 $ 11,852 $ 85,317 $ 1,769,277 Pierce $ 10,847,127 $ 15,232,853 $ 285,819 $ 186,877 $ 1,345,285 $ 27,897,960 San Juan $ 187,135 $ 262,798 $ 4,931 $ 3,224 $ 23,209 $ 481,297 Skagit $ 2,641,558 $ 3,709,597 $ 69,604 $ 45,509 $ 327,612 $ 6,793,881 Skamania $ 446,581 $ 627,144 $ 11,767 $ 7,694 $ 55,386 $ 1,148,572 Snohomish $ 5,880,965 $ 8,258,765 $ 154,962 $ 101,318 $ 729,370 $ 15,125,380 Spokane $ 7,477,387 $ 10,500,654 $ 197,027 $ 128,822 $ 927,362 $ 19,231,252 Stevens $ 2,336,771 $ 3,281,578 $ 61,573 $ 40,258 $ 289,812 $ 6,009,992 Thurston $ 2,367,578 $ 3,324,840 $ 62,385 $ 40,789 $ 293,632 $ 6,089,225 Wahkiakum $ 436,477 $ 612,955 $ 11,501 $ 7,520 $ 54,131 $ 1,122,586 Walla Walla $ 1,357,817 $ 1,906,811 $ 35,778 $ 23,393 $ 168,399 $ 3,492,198 Whatcom $ 4,120,306 $ 5,786,234 $ 108,569 $ 70,985 $ 511,009 $ 10,597,104 Whitman $ 135,021 $ 189,612 $ 3,558 $ 2,326 $ 16,,746 $ 347,262 Yakima $ 3,375,083 $ 4,739,702 $ 88,932 $ 58,147 $ 418,585 $ 8,680,449 Total $ 95,796,871 $134,529,593 $ 2,524,218 $1,650,408 $ 11,880,938 $ 246,382,029 11 MASON.BRUCE&GIRARD nForest products industry Economic Impacts in Washington State-2021 WFPA Total combined tax revenue from the forest products industry includes primary taxes directly from forestry activities (stumpage, DFL property tax) and taxes from business activity apportioned to counties by the ratio of forest products industry activity in each county. Total 2021 tax revenue from forest products industry activity summed to $300.9 million (Table 9). Table 9. Direct and estimated tax revenues by county for 2021. County Total Primary Taxes Total Estimated Taxes Combined Taxes Adams $ - $ 820,827 $ 820,827 Asotin $ 55,792 $ 889,322 $ 945,114 Benton $ - $ 2,041,210 $ 2,041,210 .':Chelan $ 42,909 $ 2,764,607 $ 2,807,515 Clallam $ 2,729,412 $ 6,046,189 $ 8,775,600 Clark $ 1,749,087 $ 13,133,220 $ 14,882,306 Columbia $ 1,605 $ 825,675 $ 827,281 ,Cowlitz $ 5,533,807 $ 21,158,079 $ 26,731,886 Douglas $ 848 $ 801,326 $ 802,174 Ferry $ 405,726 $ 473,391 $ 879,117 Franklin $ - $ 2,633,464 $ 2,633,464 Garfield $ 6,469 $ 28,546 $ 35,015 Grant $ - $ 1,992,985 $ 1,992,985 Grays Harbor $ 5,714,768 $ 11,912,100 $ 17,626,869 Island $ 111,712 $ 1,911,688 $ 2,023,400 Jefferson $ 1,780,728 $ 1,548,425 $ 3,329,153 King $ 1,971,320 $ 37,306,649 $ 39,277,969 Kitsap $ 624,762 $ 2,136,093 $ 2,750,855 Kittitas $ 39,699 $ 669,015 $ 708,714 Klickitat $ 2,214,258 $ 1,916,745 $ 4,131,013 Lewis $ 9,556,684 $ 18,949,850 $ 28,605,534 Lincoln $ 12,592 $ 1,270,674 $ 1,283,266 Mason $ 2,467,192 $ 2,593,447 $ 5,060,638 Okanogan $ 201,955 $ 2,182,278 $ 2,384,233 Pacific $ 3,635,224 $ 1,589,790 $ 5,275,014 Pend Oreille $ 640,870 $ 1,769,277 $ 2,410,147 Pierce $ 1,884,130 $ 27,897,960 $ 29,782,090 San Juan $ 18,650 $ 481,297 $ 499,947 Skagit $ 2,633,495 $ 6,793,881 $ 9,427,376 Skamania $ 1,308,163 $ 1,148,572 $ 2,456,735 Snohomish $ 2,194,759 $ 15,125,380 $ 17,320,139 !Spokane $ 362,241 $ 19,231,252 $ 19,593,493 Stevens $ 1,993,223 $ 6,009,992 $ 8,003,215 Thurston $ 2,383,213 $ 6,089,225 $ 8,472,438 Wahkiakum $ 899,461 $ 1,122,586 $ 2,022,047 Walla Walla $ 16,984 $ 3,492,198 $ 3,509,182 Whatcom $ 1,061,997 $ 10,597,104 $ 11,559,101 Whitman $ 20,395 $ 347,262 $ 367,657 Yakima $ 11,660 $ 8,680,449 $ 8,692,109 Total $ 54,485,800 $ 246,382,029 $ 300,867,E 12 MASON BRUCE s GIRARD nForest products industry Economic Impacts in Washington State-2021 WFPA 5.0 REFERENCES 5.1 Data Beyers, W.B., Lin,T. 2021.The 2012 Washington Input-Output Study. Washington State Office of Financial Management. Thompson, J. 2018. The Pacific Northwest Forest Inventory and Analysis Database. Forest Inventory and Analysis Program (USFS), 2018. https://www.fs.fed.us/pnw/rma/fia- topics/inventory-data/ Table 10. Agency, abbreviation, and URL for data sources that remain fixed once initially posted. tData source requires establishing a user account and is subject to surcharge. Data type Agency Source URL Regional Input-Output Modeling BEA https://bea.gov/regional/rims/rimsii/ Systemt Washington Input-Output Model WA OFM https://ofm.wa.gov/sites/default/files/public/datares earch/economy/10 2012 report.pdf Private/public harvest statistics WA DoR https://dor.wa.gov/find-taxes-rates/other- taxes/forest-tax/harvest-statistics Gross business income(GBI) WA DoR http://apps.dor.wa.gov/ResearchStats/Content/Gros sBusinesslncome/Report.aspx Designated Forestland Valuation WA DoR https://dor.wa.gov/find-taxes-rates/other- taxes/forest-tax/forest-land-values Tax levy rates by industry WA DoR https://dor.wa.gov/about/statistics-reports/detailed- tax-data-i nd ustry-and-tax-classfication Table 11.Agency,abbreviation,and URL for data sources that may be subject to retroactive revision.tData source is freely available but requires establishing a user account to access. Data type Agency Source URL Port-level import-exportt Census Bureau https://usatrade.census.gov/ Quarterly Census of Employment BLS https://www.bls.gov/cew/datatoc.htm and Wages(QCEW) WA Employment Security WA ESD QCEW https://fortress.wa.gov/esd/employmentdata/report Department(ESD)Quarterly s-publications/industry-reports/quarterly-census-of- Census of Employment and employment-and-wages Wages(QCEW) 5.2 Methods Ehrlich, E.M., Landefeld, J.S., Barker, B.L. 1997. Regional Multipliers: A user Handbook for the Regional Input-Output Modeling System (RIMS II). Bureau of Economic Analysis. The Contribution of Working Forests to the Economy of the State of Washington. 2014. Washington Forest Protection Association. ry 13 MASOhtORUCEaG BARD 434 Forest products industry Economic Impacts in Washington State-2021 WFPA 6.0 APPENDIX Table 12.Jobs,wages,and tax revenues expressed on a per-MMbf(million board feet)harvest scale for 2021. Harvest Quantity if MMb County (MMbf} Direct Jobs Total Jobs Direct Wage Total Wage Total Tax Adams - - - - $ - Asotin 8.8 18 36 $ 1,081,682 $ 2,131,446 $ 107,972 Benton - $ - $ $ - Chelan 4.1 118 188 $ 7,158,044 $ 10,299,534 $ 682,762 Clallam 215.5 4 8 $ 298,763 $ 583,699 $ 40,729 Clark 65.6 38 113 $ 2,130,528 $ 5,412,248 $ 226,763 Columbia 0.0 *** *** *** *** **s Cowlitz 246.7 16 53 $ 913,175 $ 2,456,722 $ 108,609 Douglas 0.1 *** *s *** *** *** Ferry 44.4 2 5 $ 113,566 $ 280,643 $ 19,809 Franklin - - - $ - $ - $ - Garfield 0.7 7 10 $ 418,239 $ 603,478 $ 48,186 Grant - - - $ - $ - $ - Grays Harbor 279.5 6 15 $ 453,689 $ 1,036,828 $ 63,057 Island 4.8 70 173 $ 4,236,703 $ 8,948,665 $ 421,191 Jefferson 118.2 2 5 $ 139,433 $ 277,515 $ 28,157 King 99.7 74 173 $ 3,984,670 $ 7,857,815 $ 394,041 Kitsap 22.4 17 32 $ 1,016,794 $ 1,918,742 $ 123,436 Kittitas 3.5 34 70 $ 2,025,821 $ 3,764,541 $ 201,568 Klickitat 103.6 3 8 $ 196,910 $ 492,308 $ 39.,861 Lewis 401.1 6 14 $ 502,947 $ 1,127,445 $ 71,313 Lincoln 1.5 144 412 $ 8,784,711 $ 19,692,764 $ 833,290 Mason 97.6 5 10 $ 282,801 $ 572,491 $ 51,832 Okanogan 15.2 25 39 $ 1,530,971 $ 2,262,444 $ 157,105 Pacific 201.3 1 2 $ 84,092 $ 147,641 $ 25,959 Pend Oreille 89.3 3 9 $ 210,924 $ 458,479 $ 26,987 Pierce 80.6 65 154 $ 3,583,595 $ 7,828,335 $ 369,352 San Juan 1.4 58 131 $ 3,542,080 $ 7,986,647 $ 345,585 Skagit 115.5 10 26 $ 626,080 $ 1,464,306 $ 81,600 Skamania 60.3 3 9 $ 202,825 $ 527,705 $ 40,748 Snohomish 102.1 26 59 $ 1,576,714 $ 3,372,392 $ 169,584 Spokane 23.7 100 220 $ 8,633,853 $ 16,626,640 $ 826,218 Stevens 167.3 5 13 $ 382,566 $ 982,100 $ 47,850 Thurston 92.9 11 24 $ 697,988 $ 1,325,408 $ 91,218 Wahkiakum 51.0 4 9 $ 234,460 $ 526,490 $ 39,667 Walla Walla 2.1 292 734 $ 17,783,948 $ 36,351,016 $ 1,678,499 Whatcom 47.6 42 100 $ 2,370,251 $ 5,357,063 $ 244,939 Whitman 3.0 20 37 $ 1,212,458 $ 2,121,052 $ 120,570 Yakima 1.7 897 1,834 $ 54,534,586 $ 99,215,563 $ 5,129,097 Total 2,773 15 36 $ 917,225 $ 1,981453 $ 105, 0 "'"Limited harvest prevents computation of jobs or wages per volume 0 14 - - MASON.BRUCE&GIRARD Forest products industry Economic Impacts in Washington State-2021 WFPA Table 13.Interrelated economic regions in Washington,organized by RIMS II multiplier regions. RIMS Abbr. Region County State KRP Kennewick-Richland-Pasco Benton WA KRP Kennewick-Richland-Pasco Columbia WA KRP Kennewick-Richland-Pasco Franklin WA KRP Kennewick-Richland-Pasco Walla Walla WA KRP Kennewick-Richland-Pasco Yakima WA LEW Lewiston Asotin WA LEW Lewiston Garfield WA PVB Portland-Vancouver-Beaverton Clark WA PVB Portland-Vancouver-Beaverton Cowlitz WA PVB Portland-Vancouver-Beaverton Klickitat WA PVB Portland-Vancouver-Beaverton Skamania WA PVB Portland-Vancouver-Beaverton Wahkiakum WA STO Seattle-Tacoma-Olympia Clallam WA STO Seattle-Tacoma-Olympia Grays Harbor WA STO Seattle-Tacoma-Olympia Island WA STO Seattle-Tacoma-Olympia Jefferson WA STO Seattle-Tacoma-Olympia King WA STO Seattle-Tacoma-Olympia Kitsap WA STO Seattle-Tacoma-Olympia Kittitas WA STO Seattle-Tacoma-Olympia Lewis WA STO Seattle-Tacoma-Olympia Mason WA STO Seattle-Tacoma-Olympia Pacific WA STO Seattle-Tacoma-Olympia Pierce WA STO Seattle-Tacoma-Olympia San Juan WA STO Seattle-Tacoma-Olympia Skagit WA STO Seattle-Tacoma-Olympia Snohomish WA STO Seattle-Tacoma-Olympia Thurston WA STO Seattle-Tacoma-Olympia Whatcom WA SPK Spokane Ferry WA SPK Spokane Lincoln WA SPK Spokane Pend Oreille WA SPK Spokane Spokane WA SPK Spokane Stevens WA SPK Spokane Whitman WA WEN Wenatchee Adams WA WEN Wenatchee Chelan WA WEN Wenatchee Douglas WA WEN Wenatchee Grant WA WEN Wenatchee Okanogan WA 15 MAGMA BRUCE&GIRARD Julie Shannon From: Greg Brotherton Sent: Tuesday, June 7, 2022 4:47 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW:June 16 Resource Roundtable: LION investors From: EDC Team Jefferson Sent: Tuesday, June 7, 2022 4:23:30 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Greg Brotherton Subject: June 16 Resource Roundtable: LION investors ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Learn more about LION ____ _ Thursday June 16 I noon - 1:00 pm .., „, Guest speaker, . aril Merman E fr ,inr LIEN, will jon our cnth; , Resource Roundtable to shire '44 ;'au LIQN's local investing phll'.soph�y. 'I 40* roil lk ; 3 � ,- learn howto apply for a l an ��� P i �lti v L 9 understand the LIOld . ai y , O :�t:; ` i Ohl 1i , i74�,i 1 i,, (lip p 'i 0 �d understand the expectations' B u i I d Community pc! Together 1 ,.c Our mission is to build prosperous • ,learn hover to develop'your- local businesses, keep investing 1tc " ' �' money in our community, and help p � 1 build a more resilient and sustainable a it li'I- ` economy in East Jefferson County, ,all �q�: a,, . , Washington. ' LocalInvestin Opportunities Network 1j _ �y y�r�r 1 I fink to �effersonhion.t''ieth IIIIII1141I,olllgl �p 1 (I Sponsored by: 1 E D.c EDC Team„Jefferson Jefferson ... ,,,,..;.:..,.::: I11 - 4.3e ,.-<' �' ' ' -_ ��.: .., -' u�:'t .14��i I4C II IIa 0„,,.I rlli ��I 0 ',�a . . ` CC Team Jefferson'is the Washington State Department of Commerce designated,Associate Develo ment°°s r anization for effersor Count EDC " 1 p g Y� Team Jefferson connects tp,pl i esse t ir ores and f rnding, and works III a,withl�govgmp entand partner organizations to help our om u�lnities thrive.' A. v r ,- EDC Team Jefferson III,; 1 Aill 1 e` Y Sign up HERE for future classes,grant info and more EDC Team Jefferson I 385 Benedict Street, Suite 2A, Port Townsend, WA 98368 Unsubscribe gbrotherton@co.jefferson.wa.us Update Profile I Constant Contact Data Notice Sent by admin@edcteamjefferson.org powered by 0L Constant Contact 2 Try email marketing for free today! 3 scnTF :tatt ° : ► RECEIVED oy �'t 1889 d ' STATE OF WASHINGTON JUN 0 7 2022 OFFICE OF FINANCIAL MANAGE WERSON COUNTY, Insurance Building, PO Box 43113 •Olympia, Washington 98504-31161SWttib NERS June 6,2022 Dear City,Town,and County Officials: Enclosed for your review is an information packet that includes the preliminary April 1,2022,population estimates developed by the Office of Financial Management. Preliminary population estimates are being sent to the highest elected official in all local jurisdictions,city population contact persons,county and commissioner executives,county planners and regional planning agencies. The figures are provided for administrative review only and are subject to change.These population estimates should not be released to the public or to the press under any circumstances until they are finalized and released on OFM's public website on June 30,2022. Please evaluate your jurisdiction's 2022 population estimate based on housing and population changes from 2020 to 2022. When reviewing your estimate please consider that: • After every census OFM conducts a comprehensive review of group quarter facilities.As we conduct the review this year and next,the group quarter portion of your estimate may vary due to changes in your facility list.If a facility on the tracking list appears to have been counted in the 2020 Federal Census as housing,OFM will also classify that facility as housing,removing it from the tracking list. In some cases, OFM has added group quarter facilities to your tracking list. Changes to individual facilities are listed on the OFM edited Form A available through the PES reports menu or by request. • The health and safety measures required by the COVID-19 pandemic forced many people living in group quarters(college dorms,jails,prisons,nursing homes, etc.)into the household population in 2021.There has been some recovery to group quarter populations in 2022 but not all institutions have recovered to pre-pandemic levels.Jurisdictions with large group quarter facilities may see fluctuations in their estimate due to the fluctuations in group quarter populations. • The 2020 Census was conducted under extraordinary circumstances. If you believe there are issues with the data the Census Bureau reported,there are two programs that may provide relief: o The Census Count Question Resolution(CQR)program is designed to address errors in the decennial census,but is limited in scope. Corrections are limited to geocoding and " processing errors.For more information see: https://www.census.gov/programs- surveys/decennial-census/decade/2020/planning-management/evaluate/cqr.html. City,Town, and County Officials June 6,2022 Page 2 o The Post-Census Group Quarters Review program will address group quarter errors that could not be addressed through the CQR program.Data corrections will not change the 2020 Census counts but will impact numerous other programs including:the Census Bureau's Population Estimate Program and the American Community Survey. For more information see:https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/decennial- census/decade/2020/planning-management/evaluate/pcgqr.html. Please get in touch with us if you plan to request a correction from either of these programs as we may be able to help.If the Census Bureau makes a correction to your jurisdiction's data, OFM will make a correction as well. • 2020 Census data releases have been delayed. The 2020 Census Demographic Housing Characteristics file is expected to be released in May of 2023. OFM will incorporate updated census information into its estimate and forecast models soon after it becomes available.For more information about 2020 Census data releases visit the Census Bureau's webpage: https://www.census.gov/newsroom/press-releases/2022/2020-census-data-products-schedule- . 2023.html. For questions or concerns regarding your city's estimate,please email us at pop.estimates cr ofm.wa.gov, °or contact your analyst directly.Requests for revisions and supporting documentation must be received by close of business,June 21,2022.By statute,OFM must finalize and release these figures by June 30,2022. OFM will post the official April 1, 2022,population estimates on our website at: http://www.ofm.wa.gov/pop/aprill.If you do not have interne access,please email pop.estimates ciiofm.wa.gov to request a paper or PDF copy. If you have further questions,please contact me at 360-902-0602 or email me at mike.mohrman@ofm.wa.gov. Sincerely, Mike Mohrman, State Demographer Forecasting and Research Division Enclosures r Preliminary April 1,2022 Population of Cities,Towns and Counties I DO NOT RELEASE 'REQUESTS FOR REVISIONS AND SUPPORTING DOCUMENTATION. Used for Allocation of Selected State Revenues MUST BE RECEIVED BY OFM FORECASTING ON OR BEFORE N State of Washington JUNE 21,2022. . : County Census Estimate Estimate County Census Estimate Estimate Municipality 2020 2021 2022 Municipality 2020 2021 2022 Grant continued King continued Grand Coulee 972 970 965 Issaquah 40,051 40,640 40,950 Hartline 180 180 180 Kenmore 23,914 24,050 24,090 Krupp 49 50 50 Kent 136,588 137,700 137,900 Mattawa 3,335 3,340 3,535 Kirkland 92,175 92,900 93,570 Moses Lake 25,146 25,760 26,020 Lake Forest Park 13,630 13,630 13,620 Quincy 7,543 7,720 7,830 Maple Valley 28,013 28,640 28,920 Royal City 1,776 1,855 1,910 Medina 2,915 2,920 2,915 Soap Lake 1,691 1,695 1,740 Mercer Island 25,748 25,790 25,780 Warden 2,449 2,485 2,525 Milton part 1,640 1,630 1,630 Wilson Creek 204 205 205 Newcastle 13,017 13,310 13,560 Normandy Park 6,771 6,785 6,790 Grays Harbor 75,636 76,050 76,400 North Bend '7,461 7,685 7,915 Unincorporated 28,993 29,020 29,125 Pacific part 7,194 7,215 7,230 Incorporated 46,643 47,030 47,275 Redmond 73,256 73,910 75,270 Aberdeen 17,013 17,050 17,040 Renton 106,785 107,100 107,500 Cosmopolis 1,638 1,655 1,665 Sammamish 67,455 67,940 68,150 Elma 3,438 3,450 3,460 SeaTac 31,454 32,000 31,910 Hoquiam 8,776 8,785 8,785 Seattle 737,015 742,400 762,500 McCleary 1,997 2,040 2,040 Shoreline 58,608 59,260 60,320 Montesano 4,138 4,145 4,150 Skykomish 161 160 165 Oakville 715 710 720 Snoqualmie 14,121 14,490 14,490 Ocean Shores 6,715 6,965 7,160 Tukwila 21,798 22,000 22,620 Westport 2,213 2,230 2,255 Woodinville 13,069 13,100 13,450 Yarrow Point 1,134 1,125 1,125 Island 86,857 87,100 87,700 Unincorporated 59,146 59,310 59,820 Kitsap 275,611 277,700 280,900 Incorporated 27,711 27,790 27,880 Unincorporated 179,719 180,840 182,040 Coupeville 1,942 1,950 1,965 Incorporated 95,892 96,860 98,860 Langley 1,147 1,150 1,155 Bainbridge Island 24,825 24,930 25,060 Oak Harbor 24,622 24,690 24,760 Bremerton 43,505 43,970 45,220 Port Orchard 15,587 15,960 16,400 Jefferson 32,977 33,100 33,350 Poulsbo 11,975 12,000 12,180 Unincorporated 22,829 22,880 23,060 Incorporated 10,148 10,220 10,290 Kittitas 46,468 $ 45,225 47,200 Port Townsend 10,148 10,220 10,290 Unincorporated 20,567 20,530 21,045 Incorporated 25,901 $ 24,695 26,155 King 2,269,675 2,287,050 2,317,700 Cle Elum 2,157 2,210 2,250 Unincorporated 246,266 247,385 248,160 Ellensburg 20,797 $ 19,530 20,940 Incorporated 2,023,409 2,039,665 2,069,540 Kittitas 1,438 1,440 1,440 Algona 3,290 3,290 3,300 Roslyn 950 955 960 Auburn part 77,243 78,040 78,690 South Cle Elum 559 560 565 Beaux Arts Village 317 315 315 Bellevue 151,854 152,600 153,900 Klickitat 22,735 23,000 23,150 Black Diamond 4,697 5,320 6,145 Unincorporated 16,019 16,255 16,405 Bothell part 28,956 28,930 29,210 Incorporated 6,716 6,745 6,745 Burien 52,066 52,430 52,490 Bingen 778 780 780 Carnation 2,158 2,150 2,160 Goldendale 3,453 3,475 3,475 Clyde Hill 3,126 3,110 3,110 White Salmon 2,485 2,490 2,490 Covington 20,777 20,890 21,200 Des Moines 32,888 33,100 33,160 Lewis 82,149 82,700 83,400 Duvall 8,034 8,125 8,320 Unincorporated 49,461 49,840 50,185 Enumclaw part 12,543 12,830 12,910 Incorporated 32,688 32,860 33,215 Federal Way 101,030 101,700 101,800 Centralia 18,183 18,280 18,360 Hunts Point 457 455 460 Chehalis 7,439 7,350 7,365 Preliminary April 1,2022 Population of ' Cities,Towns and Counties I DO NOT RELEASE .REQUESTS FOR REVISIONS AND SUPPORTING DOCUMENTATION. Used for Allocation of Selected State Revenues i MUST BE RECEIVED BY OFM FORECASTING ON OR BEFORE i State of Washington • JUNE 21,2022. ■ County Census Estimate Estimate County Census Estimate Estimate Municipality 2020 2021 2022 Municipality 2020 2021 2022 Snohomish 827,957 837,800 847,300 Thurston 294,793 297,800 300,500 Unincorporated 367,716 371,300 371,915 Unincorporated 144,856 145,255 143,760 Incorporated 460,241 466,500 475,385 Incorporated 149,937 152,545 156,740 Arlington 19,868 20,690 21,260 Bucoda 600 595 610 Bothell part 19,205 19,400 19,730 Lacey 53,526 54,850 58,180 Brier 6,560 6,570 6,590 Olympia 55,382 $ 55,960 56,370 Darrington 1,462 1,470 1,490 Rainier 2,369 2,440 2,510 Edmonds 42,853 42,900 42,980 Tenino 1,870 2,010 2,030 Everett 110,629 112,300 113,300 Tumwater 25,573 $ 26,050 26,360 Gold Bar • 2,403 2,420 2,290 Yelm 10,617 10,640 10,680 Granite Falls 4,450 4,490 4,705 Index 155 155 155 Wahkiakum 4,422 4,475 4,525 Lake Stevens 35,630 37,000 40,700 Unincorporated 3,862 ' 3,915 3,965 Lynnwood 38,568 38,650 38,740. Incorporated 560 560 560 Marysville 70,714 71,250 72,380 Cathlamet 560 560 560 Mill Creek 20,926 20,930 21,510 Monroe 19,699 19,900 19,700 Walla Walla 62,584 62,100 62,625 • Mountlake Terrace 21,286 21,980 22,070 Unincorporated 17,084 17,110 17,200 Mukilteo 21,538 21,560 21,590 Incorporated 45,500 44,990 45,425 • Snohomish 10,126 10,160 10,200 College Place 9,902 9,775 9,855 Stanwood 7,705 7,980 8,405 Prescott 372 370 370 Sultan 5,146 5,370 6,260 Waitsburg 1,166 1,165 1,180 Woodway 1,318 1,325 1,330 Walla Walla 34,060 33,680 34,020 Spokane 539,339 542,100 550,700 Whatcom 226,847 226,300 231,650 Unincorporated 158,524 159,560 162,715 Unincorporated 92,660 $ 92,730 93,130 Incorporated 380,815 382,540 387,985 Incorporated 134,187 $ 133,570 138,520 Airway Heights 10,757 10,760 11,040 Bellingham 91,482 89,860 93,910 Cheney 13,255 12,390 12,920 Blaine 5,884 6,020 6,130 Deer Park 4,383 4,520 4,670 Everson 2,888 2,935 3,060 Fairfield 589 600 600 Ferndale 15,048 15,570 15,970 Latah • 185 185 185 Lynden 15,749 15,930 16,150 Liberty Lake 12,003 12,480 12,870 Nooksack 1,471 1,515 1,560 Medical Lake • 4,874 4,870 4,840 Sumas 1,665 * 1,740 1,740 Millwood 1,881 1,915 1,915 Rockford 522 520 545 Whitman 47,973 44,600 47,800 Spangle 280 280 280 Unincorporated 5,929 5,880 5,920 Spokane 228,989 229,400 230,900 Incorporated 42,044 38,720 41,880 Spokane Valley 102,976 104,500 107,100 Albion 550 545 545 Waverly 121 120 120 Colfax 2,782 2,765 2,785 Colton 401 400 405 Stevens 46,445 46,725 47,050 Endicott 312 310 310 Unincorporated 36,675 36,925 37,172 Farmington 131 135 140 Incorporated 9,770 9,800 9,878 Garfield 562 565 565 Chewelah 2,470 2,485 2,535 LaCrosse 297 300 300 Colville 4,917 4,910 4,900 Lamont 79 80 80 Kettle Falls 1,636 1,655 1,650 Malden 216 110 135 Marcus 216 215 215 Oakesdale 395 400 400 Northport 297 295 295 Palouse 1,015 1,020 1,035 Springdale 234 240 283 * Pullman 32,901 29,690 32,790 Rosalia 598 600 590 St.John 599 600 600 Tekoa 817 810 810 Uniontown 389 390 390 Preliminary April 1,2022 Population of �. Cities,Towns and Counties DO NOT RELEASE Used for Allocation of Selected State Revenues .REQUESTS FOR REVISIONS AND SUPPORTING DOCUMENTATION State of Washington ' MUST BE RECEIVED BY OFM FORECASTING ON OR BEFORE ' . JUNE 21,2022. . County Census Estimate Estimate County Census Estimate Estimate Municipality 2020 2021 2022 Municipality 2020 2021 2022 • Adams 20,613 20,900 21,100 Columbia 3,952 3,950 3,950 Unincorporated 9,472 9,575 9,575 Unincorporated 1,385 1,380 1,385 Incorporated 11,141 11,325 11,525 Incorporated 2,567 2,570 2,565 Hatton 79 80 80 ' Dayton 2,448 2,450 2,445 Lind 535 535 535 Starbuck 119 120 120 Othello 8,549 8,725 8,920 Ritzville 1,767 1,775 1,780 Cowlitz 110,730 111,500 112,350 Washtucna 211 210 210 Unincorporated 48,339 $ 49,115 49,850 Incorporated 62,391 $ 62,385 62,500 Asotin 22,285 22,500 22,600 - Castle Rock 2,446 2,445 2,445 Unincorporated 13,920 14,070 14,165 Kalama 2,960 $ 3,010 3,065 Incorporated 8,365 8,430 8,435 Kelso 12,720 12,720 12,720 Asotin 1,204 1,215 1,220 Longview 37,818 37,750 37,780 Clarkston 7,161 7,215 7,215 Woodland part 6,447 6,460 6,490 Benton. 206,873 209,400 212,300 Douglas. 42,938 43,550 44,000 Unincorporated 36,556 36,760 37,445 Unincorporated 23,700 24,290 24,590 Incorporated 170,317 • 172,640 174,855 Incorporated 19,238 19,260 19,410 Benton City 3,479 3,500 3,710 Bridgeport 2,141 2,110 2,135 Kennewick 83,921 84,620 • 85,320 Coulee Dam part 200 200 200 Prosser 6,062 6,130 6,195 East Wenatchee 14,158 14,180 14,180 Richland 60,560 61,320 62,220 Mansfield 326 330 330 West Richland 16,295 17,070 17,410 Rock Island 1,279 1,300 1,425 Waterville 1,134 1,140 1,140 Chelan 79,141 $ 80,000 80,650 Unincorporated 32,507 33,140 33,460 Ferry . 7,178 7,250 7,300 Incorporated 46,634 $ 46,860 47,190 Unincorporated 6,186 6,250 6,300 Cashmere •3,248 3,260 3,280 Incorporated 992 1,000 1,000 Chelan 4,222 4,320 4,390 Republic 992 1,000 1,000 Entiat 1,326 . 1,340 • 1,355 Leavenworth 2,263 2,390 2,515 Franklin 96,749 98,350 99,750 Wenatchee 35,575 $ 35,550 35,650 Unincorporated 13,668 13,990 14,195 Incorporated 83,081 . 84,360 85,555 Clallam 77,155 77,750 77,625 Connell 5,441 5,125 4,840 • Unincorporated 45,836 46,170 45,850 Kahlotus 147 145 145 Incorporated 31,319 31,580 31,775 Mesa 385 390 390 Forks 3,335 3,335 3,360 Pasco 77,108 78,700 80,180 Port Angeles 19,960 20,120 20,200 • Sequim 8,024 8,125 ' 8,215 Garfield 2,286 2,300 2,300 Unincorporated 897 905 905 Clark 503,311 513,100 520,900 Incorporated 1,389 1,395 1,395 Unincorporated 233,048 $ 236,200 237,650 Pomeroy 1,389 1,395 1,395 Incorporated 270,263 $ 276,900 283,250 Battle Ground 20,743 21,160 21,780 Grant 99,123 100,800 101,775 Camas 26,065 26,870 27,250 Unincorporated 44,987 45,635 45,855 La Center 3,424 3,605 3,835 Incorporated 54,136 55,165 55,920 Ridgefield 10,325 $ 11,910 13,640 Coulee City 549 560 560 Vancouver 190,915 194,400 197,600 Coulee Dam part 0 0 0 Washougal 17,039 17,200 17,390 Electric City 956 955 960 Woodland part 84 85 85 Ephrata 8,477 8,575 8,620 Yacolt 1,668 1,670 1,670 George 809 815 820 Preliminary April 1,2022 Population of ' •Cities,Towns and Counties ! DO NOT RELEASE REQUESTS FOR REVISIONS AND SUPPORTING DOCUMENTATION! ' Used for Allocation of Selected State Revenues i I MUST BE RECEIVED BY OFM FORECASTING ON OR BEFORE I State of Washington JUNE 21,2022. • is II I County Census Estimate Estimate County Census Estimate Estimate Municipality 2020 2021 2022 Municipality 2020 2021 2022 Lewis continued Pend Oreille continued Morton 1,036 1,055 1,070 Metaline 162 160 160 Mossyrock 768 775 780 Metaline Falls 272 275 275 Napavine 1,888 1,895 1,955 Newport 2,114 2,120 2,130 Pe Ell 642 640 650 Toledo 631 635 685 * Pierce 920,393 $ 928,200 937,400 Vader 629 645 655 Unincorporated 430,248 435,135 440,800 Winlock 1,472 1,585 1,695 Incorporated 490,145 $ 493,065 496,600 Auburn part 10,013 10,040 10,060 Lincoln 10,876 10,900 11,050 Bonney Lake 21,750 $ 23,510 22,990 Unincorporated 5,290 5,320 5,440 Buckley 5,114 5,300 5,315 Incorporated 5,586 5,580 5,610 Carbonado 734 740 740 Almira 318 315 320 DuPont 10,151 10,180 10,180 Creston 213 215 215 Eatonville 2,845 2,875 2,890 Davenport 1,703 1,705 1,710 Edgewood 12,327 13,110 13,520 Harrington 429 425 430 Enumclaw part 0 0 0 Odessa 896 890 890 Fife 10,999 . 11,150 11,130 Reardan 637 640 650 Fircrest 7,156 7,195 7,215 Sprague 495 495 500 Gig Harbor 12,029 . 12,200 12,540 Wilbur 895 895 895 Lakewood 63,612 63,600 63,800 Milton part 7,057 7,065 7,065 Mason 65,726 65,750 66,200 Orting 9,041 9,010 9,055 Unincorporated 55,355 55,340 55,770 Pacific part 41 40 40 Incorporated 10,371 10,410 10,430 Puyallup , 42,973 43,060 43,260 Shelton 10,371 10,410 10,430 Roy 816 815 815 Ruston 1,055 1,060 1,060 Okanogan 42,104 42,350 42,700 South Prairie 373 375 620 Unincorporated 25,943 26,105 26,325 Steilacoom 6,727 6,745 6,790 Incorporated 16,161 16,245 16,375 Sumner 10,621 10,700 10,800 Brewster 1,983 1,995 1,990 Tacoma 219,346- 218,700 220,800 Conconully 193 190 190 University Place 34,866 35,100 35,420 Coulee Dam part 1,011 1,010 1,010 Wilkeson 499 495 495 Elmer City 239 245 245 • Nespelem 180. 180 180 San Juan 17,788 17,850 18,150 Okanogan 2,379 2,395 2,415 Unincorporated 15,175 $ 15,220 15,470 Omak 4,860 4,870 4,950 Incorporated 2,613 $ 2,630 2,680 Oroville 1,795 1,800 1,805 Friday Harbor 2,613 $ 2,630 2,680 Pateros 593 590 590 Riverside 329 325 325 Skagit 129,523 130,000 131,250 Tonasket 1,103 1,095 1,085 Unincorporated 52,606 52,750 52,970 Twisp 992 1,015 1,035 Incorporated 76,917 77,250 78,280 Winthrop 504 535 555 Anacortes 17,637 17,750 17,880 Burlington 9,152 9,290 9,800 Pacific 23,365 23,425 23,600 Concrete 801 805 810 Unincorporated 15,763 15,815 15,960 Hamilton 299 295 295 Incorporated 7,602 7,610 7,640 La Conner 965 970 980 Ilwaco 1,087 1,085 1,100 Lyman 423 420 425 Long Beach 1,688 1,700 1,715 Mount Vernon 35,219 35,390 35,500 Raymond 3,081 3,075 3,090 Sedro-Woolley 12,421 12,330 12,590 South Bend 1,746 1,750 1,735 Skamania 11,604 $ 11,750 11,900 Pend Oreille 13,401 13,475 13,625 Unincorporated 9,148 9,255 9,375 Unincorporated 10,272 10,345 10,480 Incorporated 2,456 $ 2,495 2,525 Incorporated 3,129 3,130 3,145 North Bonneville 965 $ 970 975 Cusick 153 150 155 Stevenson 1,491 1,525 1,550 lone 428 425 425 Preliminary April 1,2022 Population of Cities,Towns and Counties DO NOT RELEASE !REQUESTS FOR REVISIONS AND SUPPORTING DOCUMENTATION! Used for Allocation of Selected State Revenues i MUST BE RECEIVED BY OFM FORECASTING ON OR BEFORE ; State of Washington DUNE 21,2022. • County Census Estimate Estimate • Municipality 2020 2021 2022 Yakima 256,728 258,100 259,950 Unincorporated 88,147 $ 88,240 88,955 Incorporated 168,581 $ 169,860 170,995 Grandview 10,910 $ 10,960 11,020 Granger 3,624 3,690 3,740 Harrah 585 580 580 Mabton 1,959 1,975 1,975 Moxee 4,326 4,405 4,665 Naches . 1,084 1,110 1,125 Selah 8,153 8,235. 8,365 Sunnyside 16,375 16,400 16,500 Tieton 1,389 1,430 1,505 • Toppenish 8,854 8,870 8,870 Union Gap 6,568 6,595 6,640 Wapato 4,607 4,610 4,615 Yakima 96,968 97,810 98,200 Zillah 3,179 3,190 3,195 Washington 7,706,310 7,766,975 7,864,375 Unincorporated 2,668,754 2,689,740 2,708,387 Incorporated 5,037,556 5,077,235 5,155,988 *-State certified special census. +-Informal count.A population count that is considered accurate but does not meet all special census certification requirements. #-Informal census.A population and housing count that is considered accurate but does not meet all special census certification requirements. $-Corrected Federal Census. Census 2020 population and housing adjusted for misallocated group quarters and annexations effective and approved by OFM from January 2,2020 to April 1,2020. The 2020 federal census count for Bonney Lake was corrected in 2022. The 2020 populations are,with a few exceptions,equal to the federal census P.L. 94-171 counts. With the exception of corrections or updates to the federal census counts, annual estimates in this official series are not revised on the basis of other information that becomes available after the estimate date. --„, ,„.. (111 0 Port Ludlow „... t ----° x. _..\ cwvo ov - cie'cil See ,„ tr,„ He v ,21.,:le of Poet LI_ ..-11.7 .,,, So-K,e I ci':/:-:, June 2022 7::.......,..,... .... ,.... .... • • • • • xte T' >+ » . rro#me . E ` ',', ;) 'a " pa ,, . t r :4,f k l, . A r lxn e ,� " c ax{ . �'" t " ' R# i � ;irhrA' T YI , s ..'s, ", , ° F, . .t f eir::1 r ; . , .X ` '� ` 6 � £+ te a , ?` nt�f reau a. 0 LEcole N 4l Julie Shannon From: Greg Brotherton Sent: Wednesday,June 8, 2022 4:32 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW:Jefferson County Board of Health Restructuring - Needs New Members Follow Up Flag: Follow up Flag Status: Flagged From: Village Council Sent: Wednesday, June 8, 2022 4:30:32 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Greg Brotherton Subject: Jefferson County Board of Health Restructuring - Needs New Members ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. �,�piUl I M•, i �Nai!P�p� u,ii 1 i;i:�,°'� iigi Ilisulil r� .�, ,; , ip , ,,, ,; aia iu i i�(r„ a i i ag P �� +L ouncit TO PROTECT, PRESERVE, PROMOTE, AND UNIFY JeffCo County Board Of Health Restructuring Needs New Members f ,1 f�` This message is being sent by the PLVC on behalf deffersonVof Jefferson County Public Health _ Public Hea It 1 d� Jefferson County, WA. Before the - COVID 19 pandemic, the role of ? 4: Jefferson County Public Health was not ;� 4 often discussed nor well understood by most Jefferson County residents. ALWAYS WORKING FOR A SAFER AND HEALTHIER JEFFERSON COUNTY The pandemic has brought public health Apply to join the Jefferson County Board of Health as a nonelected to the forefront and the Jefferson County n, community representative public Health Commissioners hope this will spark www.jafferaoncountypublichealth org. interest to community members wanting g �, , �i9�il to serve on a newly restructured Board of -11,111 m q i'I. Health. The Board of Health is required to fill four new positions, to be appointed by the Board of County Commissioners. Changes initiated by House Bill 1152 include appointment of a tribal representative recruited/selected by the American Indian Health Commission, a position which is not yet filled. These four positions will join the three County Commissioners and one City Council member to comprise the Board, which meets monthly. Jefferson County residents who are interested in serving in the Consumer of Public Health or the Community Stakeholder position are encouraged to visit https://www.Co.]efferson.wa.us/1595/Board-of-Health-Expansion for more information and to digitally apply. Applications are also available in person at Jefferson County Public Health (615 Sheridan Street, Port Townsend) or the Commissioner's Office in the basement of the County Courthouse (1820 Jefferson Street, Port Townsend). For the complete press release please click HERE. Jefferson County Public Health Always Working for a Safer and Healthier Community Visit the Village Council Web Site 0 Your Village Council is a 501(c)(3)non-profit corporation whose purpose is to be a unifying force and information conduit for the benefit of all Port Ludlow residents. Port Ludlow Village Council I Post Office Box 65012, Port Ludlow, WA 98365 2 Unsubscribe gbrotherton@co.jefferson.wa.us Update Profile I Constant Contact Data Notice Sent by portludlowvillagecouncileblast@gmail.com 3 Julie Shannon From: Kate Dean Sent: Wednesday, June 8, 2022 12:04 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: Snapshot—June 2022 From: Washington Trust for Historic Preservation Sent: Wednesday, June 8, 2022 11:59:58 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Kate Dean Subject: Snapshot—June 2022 ;12 ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. W'ASHINGTON TRUST 14 FOR HISTORIC it PRESERVATION June 2022 Snapshot 1 , , alai! , , lir x..„. . 1 ii ,,,,,.. „z„... i , 4 ,, mir tr ,I, , FA. , µIf ;,,,, - 114/ :., ..� „5 x, g. � � ." a Ili rid "^r^ h a y Event Recap el' Vintage Washington 2022 Another Vintage Washington event is in the books! On May 21, we had a wonderful, sun-filled evening at the ASUW Shell House, where 150 guests joined us to tour the amazing building, enjoy dinner and drinks, and learn more about our Most Endangered Places program. Besides the Shell House itself, several Most Endangered "saves"—including the Bush House Inn in Index, Beverly Bridge near Vantage, Robert Morris Earthwork in SeaTac, and Camp Kilworth in Federal Way—were highlighted, as well as the ongoing fight to save the Masonic Home in Des Moines. Check out the link below for the digital program and photos from the event: See'Program & Photos 2 c i I • t a r " �I Board of Directors (;:3 Now Accepting Applications for Nominees The Washington Trust seeks nominees who share our commitment to saving places that matter throughout Washington to join our Board of Directors. Our board members come from all corners of the state and comprise leaders from the private sector, other nonprofits, and local government. Our board members champion the importance of historic preservation in building strong communities and serve as direct liaisons to the communities in which they live. If you're interested in being nominated to our Board of Directors, please complete an application form at the link below. Apply Here 3 i. ,,,..:,, ' '..,,,,,,t7.: ,'•\,, 'g,4.,„ l'il ki,41 , ' ' 4:''', ***,;4 :,' '444* -'1,,,, "." —,'"'"lit. - ' 1 ? -, '''"' -1 .i 4''''' ''..1;\ \\''f4kk, Iiiti:t''qV'-'1, '-' " ''''.,, 3 f 'tt t ''TT e , itE F � , y, _ " „, :. t , ^•lia' , L.. .L. 7,,,,," y �'1.—,., If sx a ic: � Li ' �E7 �#�. * t, ask t r '. ' _ f y 1 .,„.„...... .,,,' L,,. . La, I . , ; , .., iii, , ,.. ,:7„.... _ . 4,N .3 it,, , ,I 1 , i ,, „ ..., , !p ,;,,, Washington Main Street 4 Happy Main Street Week! It's Main Street Week here in Washington State! This celebration is all about the good and necessary work of building community, preserving our historic downtowns, and helping entrepreneurs thrive. Keep an eye on our social media channels throughout the week as we share highlights from a new study that shows how small businesses in Washington Main Street districts stayed more resilient during the pandemic than businesses elsewhere ini the state. Follow us @preservewa on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter via these links: 0 a' Iiir . .. ti.._ - A #11' ' ; dig 1 ' ': 4g\''':4 ar i { k '444' 1 ' .„. talr'' 1 f '' .;441,, P. . 'I. . Upcoming Event Mansion Tours of Seattle's , .., k out one completed Stimson-Greene check we've $ 0 Monthly public r monthlystewardshipeach month. _of vaccination greatthe pandemic. but free f°1 . .. during P _, public, are the genera' indoors Here for while Register masks andrequired. 5 A , cti 4T _A =tee: ➢ 4 A K ! This Place „a Washington's Largest Historic Tax Credit Project In the Spring 2022 issue of This Place, Executive Director Chris Moore writes about how the Federal Historic Rehabilitation Tax Credit Program enabled the transformation of the historic landmark Century 21 Coliseum into Climate Pledge Arena. The transformation represents the largest historic tax credit project ever undertaken in Washington State and one of the largest in the country. Read the Article 6 i 4 � a� I„ I d ' do ; Did You Know? Pride Month: Local LGBTQ+ History Happy Pride Month from all of us at the Washington Trust! This month commemorates the 1969 Stonewall riots in New York City, often cited as the birth of the gay rights movement. But did you know that historians, indigenous scholars, and groups like the Northwest Lesbian and Gay History Project have documented a vibrant and often visible queer world in many cities, including Seattle, long before 1969? Which Seattle neighborhood was an early home to the city's queer community from the 1890s until the 1970s? A. Capitol Hill B. Pioneer Square C. Queen Anne D. Ballard 7 2022 Sustaining Sponsors The work of the Washington Trust would not be possible without the generous support of our sponsors. Interested in joining our sponsor ranks? Contact Development Director Kristy Conrad at 206-624-9449. Gold Level Support ::paar ; ` Io la Pinehiff n. l E&HAN! L �� IC Silver Level Support b,J�(�[�'j�p!■i CO+UGyHLINRAFNi assettl 1-YJ P. t E R i ttweemwd wwa wv architects LUNDEEN " .A..*AL.. w Bronze Level Support zrrth usv %"M*�n(Al: ■■ 4#Ri4.%Yd.AVC'#€til ENDERIS G KN25 N :"FAN, A,,, ilh;«Y''r 3 ed,SE# JTM .�t•�aF_5 N,, ,�rNrs %MA.,earn � a ...., CONSTRUCTION 11 NELSON R EfTRNC .. {'iicKa VCN Advocate Level Support :.. . E RV ,,,.0 92P integLA,,,, %*(11111 . MITHUN STUDO N 8 OShare O Tweet OForward .k' Support the Washington Trust today -e The preservation community is powerful, resilient, and united, and we will play an important role in the ; post-COVID economic recovery of our state. Donate Li' today to support the places that matter. The Washington Trust for Historic Preservation is a nonprofit organization dedicated to saving the places that matter in Washington State and to promoting sustainable and economically viable communities through historic preservation.We are Washington's only statewide nonprofit advocacy organization working to build a collective ethic that preserves historic places through education, collaboration, and stewardship. WASHINGTON TRUST FOR HISTORIC III PRESERVATION 9 0 View this email in your browser. Copyright©2022 Washington Trust for Historic Preservation, All rights reserved. You received this email because you are a member or friend of the Washington Trust for Historic Preservation.We manage a variety of programs that include Washington's Most Endangered Places,the RevitalizeWA Conference,Washington Main Street, the Youth Heritage Project, Revisiting Washington, the Heritage Barn Program,the Cemetery Preservation Program,the Maritime Washington National Heritage Area, and the Stimson-Green Mansion. Our mailing address is: Washington Trust for Historic Preservation 1204 Minor Ave. Seattle,WA 98101 Add us to your address book Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list. 10 Julie Shannon From: Kate Dean Sent: Wednesday,June 8, 2022 2:20 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: [BULK] June 15th - Monthly Grange Meeting! From: Chimacum Grange Sent: Wednesday, June 8, 2022 2:18:12 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US &Canada) To: Kate Dean Subject: [BULK] June 15th - Monthly Grange Meeting! 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 Gathering our Rural Est. 1918 Community since 1918 ,or � I i 100+ YEARS! GRANGS CHIMACUM GRANGE #681, Monthly Grange Meeting - June 15th ! EVERYONE INVITED! Join us at 6:30 for soup and bread provided by the Grange and any optional potluck item you choose to bring. At 7:00 we will welcome Dr James Cassidy Soils Professor at Oregon State University i Via video entitled "Cover Crops and Crop Rotation" The main topics of conversation will include: • The origins of soil; where it comes from, how it is created • Composting and mulching • The benefits of cover crops and crop rotation. Dr. Cassidy is an enthusiastic speaker who entertains as he informs—his presentation will make you fall in love with your soil! He established a CSA farm to provide his students with hands-on opportunities to learn about crop production as well as the entrepreneurial aspects of farming. Click to read more about this very inspiration transformative man, rockstar of the famed band "Information Society (InSoc)" turned rockstar organic soils evangelist. After a two year COVID hiatus, we are thrilled that monthly Grange meetings are back and everyone is invited! Come at 6:30 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. Normally the meetings will occur on the 2nd Wednesday of each month, but the date may change to a different day, especially as we restart if there are conflicts. GET INVOLVED AND HELP US SERVE OUR FARMING COMMUNITY! Av. 100/4%\ `"In essentials,unity; in non-essentials liberty; in all things, charity" 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 2 Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe Grow your business with t maiichimp 3 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Wednesday, June 8, 2022 4:54 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: HCCC Board of Directors and Citizens Committee Meeting - Agenda and Details for June 15, 2022, 1 p.m. Attachments: Agenda - Draft Board and Citizens Committee Meeting Agenda June 15 2022.pdf From: Jennifer Poole Sent: Wednesday, June 8, 2022 4:51:37 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: Cassidy Perkins; Julie Shannon; Kaitlyn Floyd; Marina Linville; Robyn Readwin; Alicia Olivas; Haley Harguth; Heidi Huber; Mike Lisitza; Patty Michak; Terry Fischer Subject: HCCC Board of Directors and Citizens Committee Meeting - Agenda and Details for June 15, 2022, 1 p.m. 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 and Citizens Committee Meeting is scheduled for Wednesday, June 15, from 1:00 to 2:30 p.m. Pacific. The draft Agenda is attached. You may access the available materials in our June meeting folder linked here. Additional items will be uploaded as they are ready. The agenda with links will be circulated next week. The meeting will be held remotely and in-person. All participants, including Board members, staff, presenters and members of the public may participate remotely via Zoom video or call-in options. Public comment will be allowed during public comment periods. Remote access: Join the Zoom Meeting on June 15 Go to: https://us06web.zoom.us/j/84402691945 Or go to https://zoom.us/join and enter Meeting ID: 844 0269 1945 Enter Passcode: 954351 To join by phone, Dial (253) 215 8782 One tap mobile +12532158782„84402691945# US In-person location: HCCC offices at Liberty Bay Marina, 17791 Fjord Drive NE, Suite 124, Poulsbo, WA 98370. We look forward to meeting with you next week, Jennifer i 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. 2 ocowN4 fikif r\s Hood Canal Coordinating Council % C Jefferson,Kitsap&Mason Counties;Port Gamble S'Klallam&Skokomish Tribes 4 '.4g FS!.1985 Regular Meeting of the Board of Directors & Citizens Committee Meeting — Draft Agenda June 15, 2022 from 1:00 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. (topic times are approximate) Location and remote access details: • HCCC office, 17791 Fjord Drive NE, Suite 124, Poulsbo, WA 98370, at Liberty Bay Marina. • Remote via Zoom video and teleconference: Join Zoom Meeting at https://us06web.zoom.us/i/84402691945 Or go to https://zoom.us/signin Meeting ID: 844 0269 1945 Passcode: 954351 To participate by phone, dial (253) 215 8782 Notice regarding hybrid (remote and in-person) meetings: All participants, including Board members, staff, presenters, and members of the public may participate remotely via Zoom video or call-in options. Public comment will be allowed during the public comment periods. 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 May 18, 2022 2. Cash Disbursements Journal May 2022 3. Total Funds Life to Date as of May 31, 2022 HCCC Board Outcome: Motion to approve consent items. 1:15 PM Executive Director Updates Scott Brewer, Executive Director 1. Years of service anniversary in June: Heidi Huber, Programs Development Specialist, celebrating 13 years of service. HCCC Board Outcome: The Board has been updated on the key topics. HCCC Board of Directors Meeting Agenda Page 1 1:20 PM HCCC Lead Entity Citizens Committee Meeting Dave Herrera, HCCC Chair Alicia Olivas, HCCC Lead Entity Program Coordinator, Salmon Program The HCCC Lead Entity Citizens Committee is convened for the purpose of discussing the annual Habitat Project List to be forwarded to the Salmon Recovery Funding Board (SRFB) in consideration of the SRFB funding decision. 1. The Chair will call the Citizens Committee meeting to order. 2. Review and approve the Citizens Advisory Group (CAG) recommended Habitat Projects List. 3. The Chair will adjourn the Citizens Committee meeting. HCCC Citizens Committee Outcome: The Citizens Committee moves to approve the HCCC Lead Entity Habitat Projects List as presented by the HCCC Citizens Advisory Group to forward to the Salmon Recovery Funding Board for funding consideration. 2:25 PM Public Comment and Hood Canal Happenings Dave Herrera, HCCC Chair 2:30 PM Adjournment and Next Meeting Dave Herrera, HCCC Chair 1. Announce next meeting: The next regular meeting of the HCCC Board of Directors is scheduled for July 20, 2022 at 1:00 p.m. via Zoom video and 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.ciov/for additional information. 2. Adjourn regular meeting. HCCC Board Outcome: Motion to Adjourn. HCCC Board of Directors Meeting Agenda Page 2 jeffbocc From: Dallas Pulver, Sierra Club <reply@emails.sierraclub.org> Sent: Wednesday, June 8, 2022 1:31 PM To: jeffbocc Subject: Sierra Forum June 22: 30x30 &Closing the Nature Equity Gap 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. SIERRA National Event CLUB III II IFI 4 Please join us Wednesday, June 22 for a forum with Congresswoman Nanette Diaz Barragan and Sierra Club leaders and staff on protecting 30 percent of US lands and waters by 2030, and diving deep into how we close the nature equity gap. Representative Barragan will provide opening remarks about how we can achieve some of this work through legislation, and you'll hear on the ground stories from the San Gabriel mountains, and beyond! Date: Wednesday, June 22 Time: 9:00 am PT / 11:00 am CT/ 12:00 pm ET i Christine Hill Congresswoman Jackie Ostfeld Roberto Morales Senior Campaign Nanette Diaz Director, Outdoors Senior Organizing Director, Our Wild Barragan for All Campaign Representative, America Outdoors For All Campaign Register We are in the midst of a mental health crisis among youth. Nature provides clear physical and mental health benefits, but right now, Black and brown kids are three times less likely to live in neighborhoods with nearby nature access than their white neighbors. We need Congress to act to help close the "nature gap" by advancing outdoor equity legislation. Supporting programs like the Outdoor Recreation Legacy Partnership program, Every Kid Outdoors, and the Civilian Climate Corps would ensure that young people can establish direct connections to nature close to home, visit national parks for free, and find meaningful family sustaining jobs protecting our parks and public lands and ensuring greater access to nature for all. We'd love to hear from you ahead of the forum, and welcome you to submit your questions in advance. 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 2 Unsubscribe I Manage Preferences I View as web page 3