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City Council votes unanimously to accept Homepage as news media

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The Olsen Report

News organization eligible to attend executive sessions

The Lincoln City City Council voted unanimously Monday to accept the findings of an independent hearings officer and declare Lincoln City Homepage a legitimate media outlet eligible to attend executive sessions.

The 5-0 vote ends a 10-month process that included an Oregon Government Ethics Commission (OGEC) investigation confirming Homepage as a qualified and viable news representative; dismissal of the case by OGEC due to jurisdiction issues; Council development of an application process for new media; and the hiring by Council of a third-party hearings officer to review the matter and share his findings.

In his report to Council, attorney Dan R. Olsen of Portland, determined:

“Lincoln City Homepage very likely qualifies as ‘news media.’ Representatives of Lincoln City Homepage, therefore, are eligible to attend executive sessions of local governing bodies, subject to the limitations set forth in ORS Chapter 192, including that such representatives not disclose information specified as confidential.”

VIEW THE OLSEN REPORT

Although not on the initial agenda for its regular Council session, Mayor Dick Anderson and councilors Diana Hinton, Rick Mark, Diane Kusz and Judy Casper voted Monday to accept Olsen’s recommendation to recognize Homepage as a bona fide news source and approve its application to attend executive sessions.

Councilor Riley Hoagland, who said he had not seen the confidential report, abstained. Councilor Mitch Parsons, who opposed the hiring of a hearings officer in addition to Homepage’s compliance with a newly developed application process, was excused.

Council then voted to make public and not redact any of Olsen’s report, with only Casper objecting. Council reiterated that a no disclosure agreement be made clear at the start and/or end of the special sessions, and that any Homepage representative other than Publisher Justin Werner or Executive Editor Jim Fossum provide verification of their affiliation with the news organization.

Under its newly adopted media policy, Council cannot hold an executive session while there is an application pending.

Citing the need to avoid a perception of bias, the Council opted on March 11 to forego consideration of an agenda item to hear a short presentation from Werner and review his organization’s application in favor of obtaining outside consultation. Under state law, recognized media is allowed to attend but not record or report on discussion in executive sessions.

Prior to that, in mid-January, an OGEC investigation found that Homepage qualified as legitimate media and was barred from a Council meeting last summer in violation of state law.

“There is a preponderance of evidence that a representative of the news media [Werner] was excluded from attending an executive session held by the Lincoln City City Council in violation of ORS 192.660(4),” OGEC Compliance and Education Coordinator Diane Gould said.

However, citing jurisdiction issues, OGEC’s Board of Directors bypassed its own investigation’s findings and dismissed the case in late January.

Homepage maintained it was illegally excluded from attendance at a June 4, 2018, special session under Oregon public meetings law because it regularly covers Council meetings and local government and corresponds regularly with City officials to report the news.

The findings countered City claims that Homepage did not meet screening criteria as a media representative and needed to gain approval or give advance notice for attendance at the executive session.

Homepage has already been recognized as news media by Apple News, Google News, Facebook, the Lincoln County Board of Commissioners, the Lincoln County School District, Lincoln County Public Health, the Department of Human Services, the Oregon School Activities Association, the U.S. Department of Justice, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, the U.S. Coast Guard, the Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians, Samaritan Health Services, the National Weather Service, various local, county, state and federal law enforcement agencies and more.

Over the past 28 days, from March 12 through April 8, Homepage  reached 63,291 people on Facebook. Nearly 26,000 people viewed Homepage’s Facebook posts last week alone.

Homepage has experienced more than half a million hits in the past year with tens of thousands of users from across the United States and is projected to exceed one million by the same time next year.

Top 10 cities by user over the past year

Taft Team Page: Meet the Tigers’ 2019 spring sports squads

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Taft High WInter Sports

Photos by Cohen & Park Portrait Studio

Baseball

Head coach: Matt Hilgers

Assistant coaches: Jason King, Tom Nelson

Tyee Fisher, Sr., Outfield/Pitcher

Cody Knott, Sr., Infield/Pitcher

Kameron Kessler, Sr., Infield/Catcher/Pitcher

Bleiz Kimbrough, Sr., Infield/Pitcher

Eli DeMello, Jr., Infield/Catcher/Pitcher

Trenton Fisher, Jr., Infield/Outfield

Trenton Hall, Jr., Outfield

Jordan Hall, Jr., Infield/Pitcher

Lucas Hindman, Jr., Infield/Pitcher

Darius Smith, So., IInfield/Outfield

Fco Ramos, So., Infield

Ethan Thomas, So., Infield

Graden Kehr, So., Infield

Kaden Hindman, Fr., Catcher/Infield

Softball

Head coach: Sandy Stuart

Assistant coaches: Ryan Gates, Tom Trunt

Makena Cole – So. – 3B and OF

Emma Coulter – Jr. – Pitcher

Olivia Coulter – Fr. – 2B and OF

Hailee Danneker – Jr. – Catcher

Addie Gates – Fr. – 3B/Utility

Lily Hatton – Fr. – 2B/Utility

Kyla Knott – So. – OF

Kayla Lininger – So. – SS/Utility

Chloe Peterson – Fr. – Utility

Caitlyn Rundstrom – Sr. – 1B and OF

Claira Tolan – So. – OF/Utility

Corey VanDamme – Jr. – 1B and OF

Cindy Gutierrez – So. – Utility

Lilly Salsbery – Sr. – Utility

Track and Field

Coach: Sam Moore

Boys

Kevin Acosta

Tristan Beach

William Calderon

Sam Cortes

Prestyn Cummings

Alex Del Valle

Rafael Del Valle Perez

Caleb Diaz-Cortes

Cayden Edmonds

Elin Fitch

Genaro Flores

Jose Flores

JJ French

Edson Fuentes

Clayton Helfrich

Joram Hoff

Zander Hryczyk

David Jin

Josef Kavadas

Tanner Landry

Adam Lascano

Juan Jose Lupercio-Rubio

Brayan Mateo-Perez

Jacob Mayoral

Micah McLeish

Logan Mclendon

Clay Nelson

Mauricio Rivas

Degan Sawyer

Mad Scott

Roger Sneed

Austin Winters

Ayden Woodard

Kaden Wright

Brigido Zacarias

Girls

Alexia Almaraz

Kaydince Beach

Kealy Boyd

Kayla Brown

Sabrina Campos

Mya Cooper

Keanna Davis

Autumn Ellis

Kowarko Grace

Sammy Halferty

Charlotte Huppert

Kadence James

Taye Johanson

Elizabeth Kirkendall

Ella Knott

Brie LeBoeuf

Isabell Mackie

Devine Mathews

Grace Mcgowan

Kyah Neeley

Shelline Nerup

Avery Nightingale

Jaelyn Olmeda

Brooke Orendorff

Lilly Parker

Jordyn Ramsey

Ana Ortiz-Reyes

Lucy Reyes

Nicole Reyes

Savannah Russo

Rachel Scheuing

Aubrey Sciarrotta

Riley Senner

Rylee Senner

Maleah Smith

Boys Golf

Head coach: Andy Morgan

Assistant coaches: Dean Konecny, Kenny Morgan

Sr. William Brooks

Jr. Jonathan Freilinger

Fr. Zac Wil

Fr. Julian Maiden

Fr. Ethan Unruh

Fr. Eston Whistler

Girls Golf

Head Coach: Heather Hatton

Assistant Coaches: Lauren Sigman, Jazmyn Logan, Kyle Baker, Rick Hatton

Olivia Baker, Sr.

Violet Palermini, Sr.

Lydia Prins, Sr.

Sammy Halferty, Jr.

Grace Cawley, So.

Veronica Jin, So.

Emma Kirkendall, Fr.

JV Baseball

Name Grade
Darius Smith 10
Jacob Mayoral 12
Justice Kane 12
Jorda Hall 11
Sam Anderson 12
Devon Lindquist 12
Afton Dean 9
Logan Christianson 11
Jose Flores 10
Kaden Hindman 9
Graden Kehr 10
Josiah LaFrenz 10
Fco Ramos 10
Lucas Hindman 11
Ethan Thomas 10

JV Softball

Name Grade
Hataya McNair 10
Lucy Reyes 9
Kahliah Moroyoqui 9
Libertie Daniels 9
Marisol Martinez 10
Aryanna Kane 9
Charlotte Lunstedt 9
Cindy Gutierrez 10
Lily Hatton 9
Ariel Taylor 10
Jada Ellis 9

 

Tigers open league season with 7-3 home win over Rainier

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Junior Eli DeMello deals to the plate Tuesday in Taft’s 7-3 league win over Rainier (Photos by Lon French)

Taft senior Bleiz Kimbrough collected two hits and mopped up in relief of junior starter and winner Eli DeMello as Taft High opened its inaugural season in Special District 2 with a 7-3 home baseball victory over Rainier.

“We played a solid game all around today,” Taft coach Matt Hilgers said. “We have been working on taking advantage of opportunities and we did a very good job of that.”

Kimbrough, senior Cody Knott, junior Trenton Fisher and sophomore Darius Smith drove home runs, and all four players joined DeMello, senior Tyee Fisher and freshman Kaden Hindman by scoring for the Tigers, who tallied two runs in the first, one in the second and four in the third to build a 7-0 lead.

“We had a good approach at the plate against one of the better pitchers we have seen this year,” Hilgers said. “We played solid defense and threw strikes from the mound. Rainier battled back against us and we did a good job of putting our foot down and holding them off to get the win.”

Kenny Tripp and Hunter Boulch had two hits each for Rainier, which teamed for nine against DeMello, who went 5 2/3s innings with three walks and four strikeouts and survived a three-run fifth.

Taft improved to 5-6 overall in an error-free performance that dropped Rainier to 4-4. The Tigers return to the diamond for a 3 p.m. Friday league doubleheader against Warrenton.

“While this was a good win, we are now looking at our next game,” Hilgers said, “We have to stay focused on the next opponent and come out with this same energy all day Friday.”

Taft 7, Rainier 3

RAINER             AB  R  H BI  TAFT               AB  R  H BI
Joey Tripp          4  1  1  1  Trenton Fisher      3  1  0  1  
Kenney Tripp        4  0  2  0  Eli DeMello         4  1  1  0  
Jorden Kangas       2  0  0  0  Cody Knott          2  1  0  1  
Austin Cantrell     3  0  1  1  Tyee Fisher         2  1  0  0  
Logan Keizur        3  0  1  0  Bleiz Kimbrough     2  1  2  1  
Jayden Robb         2  0  1  0  Darius Smith        2  1  1  1  
Hunter Boulch       3  1  2  0  Kaden Hindman       2  1  1  0  
Tanner Chapman      3  1  1  0  Fco Ramos           3  0  1  0  
Preston Setzer      1  0  0  0  Ethan Thomas        2  0  0  0  
 Tyler Nelson       1  0  0  0                                    
TOTALS             26  3  9  2  TOTALS             22  7  6  4

RAINER                  000 030 0 -- 3  
TAFT                    214 000 x -- 7  

LOB--Rainer 6, Taft 4. E--Kenney Tripp (2), Joey
Tripp, Preston Setzer, Jorden Kangas. 2B--Tanner Chapman,
Eli DeMello. HBP--Preston Setzer, Bleiz Kimbrough.
SACF--Trenton Fisher, Cody Knott. SACB--Tyee Fisher, Ethan
Thomas, Kaden Hindman, Darius Smith. SB--Jorden Kangas, Tyee
Fisher, Cody Knott.

 RAINER                     IP    H    R   ER   BB   SO   HR
Austin Cantrell (L)       6.00    6    7    1    0    6    0
 TAFT                   
Eli DeMello (W)           5.67    9    3    3    3    4    0
Bleiz Kimbrough           1.33    0    0    0    0    0    0

PB--Kaden Hindman. WP--Austin Cantrell (2). SO--Joey Tripp,
Preston Setzer, Jorden Kangas, Hunter Boulch, Tyee Fisher
(2), Ethan Thomas, Fco Ramos, Kaden Hindman, Darius Smith.
BB--Jayden Robb, Jorden Kangas (2).

Seventh-inning uprising lifts Rainier past Taft softball team

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Taft junior catcher Hailee Danneker (File photos by Lon French)

Five errors and 10 strikeouts were the recipe for a difficult outing Tuesday as the Taft High softball team fell to Rainier 11-4 in its Special District 1 debut.

“It didn’t feel great to lose our league opener, but we are moving forward,” Taft coach Sandy Stuart said. “Rainier has a good program and strong softball players.”

Junior catcher Haiiee Danneker had two hits, an RBI and a run to lead the Tigers at the plate, while freshman Olivia Coulter scored twice as Taft remained within striking distance until a seven-run, seventh-inning uprising by Rainier.

“We competed hard for the first half of the game and then a series of mental errors and mishaps led to issues and runs,” Stuart said. “Our bats didn’t fully wake up until late in the game.”

Both teams stand 7-4 with Taft scheduled to return to action at 3 p.m. Friday in a home league doubleheader.

“We have had an unfortunate series of injuries, illness and lack of focus and commitment recently and we are hopeful that we can overcome that quickly,” Stuart said. “We have a lot of games to play still this season.”

Rainier 11, Taft 4

RAINIER              AB  R  H BI  TAFT              AB  R  H BI
R Schimmel            4  2  1  1  Hailee Danneker    3  1  2  1  
P Kellar              4  2  3  1  Addie Gates        3  1  1  0  
J Larsen              4  1  2  2  Chloe Peterson     3  0  0  0  
T King                4  0  0  0  Emma Coulter       4  0  0  0  
E Melvin              3  2  1  1  Olivia Coulter     3  1  1  2  
J Knox                3  1  1  1  Claira Tolan       3  0  1  0  
K Brusco              4  0  0  0  Lily Hatton        3  0  0  0  
A Crape               1  0  0  0  Kayla Lininger     3  0  1  0  
 R O'Brien            3  1  2  0  Kyla  Knott        3  1  1  0  
K Howell              3  2  0  0                                    
TOTALS               33 11 10  6  TOTALS            28  4  7  3

RAINIER                       000 220 7 -- 11 
TAFT                          000 003 1 --  4  

LOB--Rainier 7, Taft 6. E--R O'Brien, Chloe
Peterson (3), Claira Tolan, Corey VanDamme. 2B--E Melvin,
Hailee Danneker. HBP--K Howell, Addie Gates, Hailee 
Danneker, Chloe Peterson. SB--P Kellar, R Schimmel, Addie
Gates, Claira Tolan.

 RAINIER                     IP    H    R   ER   BB   SO   HR
T King                     7.00    7    4    3    0   10    0
 TAFT           
Emma Coulter               7.00   10   11    6    5    7    0

PB--Hailee  Danneker (2). WP--T King (2), Emma Coulter (3).
SO--A Crape, K Brusco (3), K Howell, E Melvin, J Larsen,
Addie Gates (2), Kayla Lininger, Lily Hatton (2), Chloe
Peterson (3), Claira Tolan (2). BB--J Knox, E Melvin, P
Kellar, R Schimmel, J Larsen.

Superintendent Gray: LCSD complaint process

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As I near the last quarter of my first year as the Superintendent of the Lincoln County School District I have realized that many of the community members in this county are unaware of how to voice their concerns. I wanted to take a moment to outline the process publicly so members can act accordingly if there is an issue that has not been resolved at a building level. Many issues can be resolved properly at the building level, but not all.

The policy is outlined on our website and can be found in a couple of ways.  1) The link is on the footer of each page: Public Complaints, or 2) use the Contact Us section and click on the Public Comment section for Public Complaint Procedure.

The procedure is as follows:

Public Complaint Procedure Initiating a Concern: Step One Any member of the public who wishes to express a concern should discuss the matter with the school employee involved. The employee shall respond within 5 working days.

The Building Principal/Site Supervisor: Step Two If the individual is unable to resolve a problem or concern with the employee, the individual may file a written, signed complaint with the building principal/site supervisor. The principal/site supervisor shall evaluate the complaint and render a written decision within 10 working days after receiving the complaint.

The Superintendent or Designee: Step Three If Step 2 does not resolve the complaint, within 5 working days of the decision from the principal, the complainant, if he/she wishes to pursue the action, shall file a signed, written complaint with the superintendent or designee clearly stating the nature of the complaint and a suggested remedy. A form is available, but is not required. The superintendent or designee shall investigate the complaint, confer with the complainant and the parties involved and prepare a report of his/her findings and conclusion and provide the report in writing to the complainant within 10 working days after receiving the complaint.

The Board Chair: Step Four If the complainant is dissatisfied with the superintendent or designee’s findings and conclusion, the complainant may appeal the decision to the Board chair in writing within 5 working days of receiving the superintendent or designee’s decision. The Board chair, on behalf of the School Board, will review the complainant’s appeal, the superintendent’s or designee’s findings and conclusion, and any other evidence deemed appropriate before rendering a written or electronic decision within 10 working days after receiving the appeal. The Board may review the record in executive session if the subject matter qualifies under Oregon law. The Board chair’s decision will address each allegation in the complaint and contain reasons for the district’s decision. The Board chair’s decision will be final. The complaint procedure set out above will not be longer than 90 days from the filing date of the original

Look to the website www.lincoln.k12.or.us for more elaboration on the process and for the related policies KL Public Complaints, KL-AR (1) – Public Complaint Procedure and KL-AR (2) – Appeal to the Deputy Superintendent of Instruction.

I share this information not to increase complaints, but to emphasize that there is a process and we are here to support families and want to know about anything that we can do better.

Thank you for allowing us to share this information.

Dr. Karen Gray, Superintendent of Lincoln County School District

Gomberg: The Future of our Coastline

Days in the Capitol are punctuated by passionate debates on large issues, and persistent work on local problems. Last week we scored a quiet victory.

The Seismic Rehabilitation Program is a state competitive grant that provides funding for rehabilitation of critical public buildings. Money is available to help fix or relocate seismically vulnerable schools. But ironically, it has long been policy to not accept applications from schools in the tsunami inundation zone. I have been persistently arguing that children along our coastline deserve the same consideration as any other child in Oregon. Last week at my urging, the department overseeing grants voted to start rule-making to remove this prohibition.

Seismic grants for schools, unfortunately, is just one aspect of an alarming larger problem.

A state agency called the Department of Geology and Mineral Industries (DOGAMI) is responsible for using best available science to determine the extent of a potential tsunami in the aftermath of a coastal earthquake. But state statutes also detail that once the line is drawn, critical facilities including police and fire departments, schools, college buildings, or hospitals cannot be constructed within the inundation line. See ORS 455.446.

Certainly we don’t want to build new schools in dangerous places. But at the same time, we have to ask what the economic ramifications are of this policy. How will they affect your insurance costs or the resale value of your home?

Said another way, who will buy a house in a neighborhood too dangerous for a police station? Who will start a business in an area where fire stations are not allowed? How do aging schools affect our community’s future?

I want us to prepare for a natural disaster. I don’t want to create an economic disaster in the process.

On Thursday I led a panel of coastal legislators, House and Senate, Republican and Democrat, that advocated for updating our statutes. House Bill 3309 with the dash-two amendments would remove the prohibition on building new structures and instead instruct DOGAMI to provide advice, assistance, and methods to mitigate risk. See ORS 455.447(4).

As we each prepare our families for a major earthquake, we also know that science is helping us better understand what to expect and innovations in engineering and architecture will help us better withstand that event. At the Hatfield Center in Newport, the new Marine Science Building is designed not only to survive the quake and wave, but also offer a safe haven for nearby workers or visitors. Innovation and preparation should be encouraged, not precluded.

We need to be well prepared for an eventual seismic event at the Coast. But I will continue to actively oppose any limitation or disinvestment of our communities by state agencies as they allocate scarce state resources.

To learn more about the inundation zone and evacuation plan for your area, click here.

A group visited my Salem office recently representing the local forest products industry. “How do you check with your constituents before making a vote?” one asked me.

The honest answer is that when we are voting on as many as fifty measures in a day, it simply isn’t possible to communicate on each issue. Instead I have to rely on my experience, my values, and my 30 years of involvement with our coastal and rural communities.

Not every vote is difficult or controversial. But many are. I encourage constituents to write me and read hundreds incoming emails each day. I attend community events even during session (I was at a Nestucca High School fundraiser in Pacific City last Saturday). I meet with community groups to answer questions (Last Friday I was the speaker for the Newport Chamber of Commerce). I do regular radio programs (Visit KCUP/BOSS online to hear the podcast of last Wednesday’s hour interview). And I hold monthly video town halls with Senator Roblan. (On Friday at our community colleges).

Finally, I send this newsletter to over 7,000 readers. We work to provide detailed information and help you understand the big issues – while also highlighting our talented kids and local artist displays in the Capitol. Two weeks ago, we offered the pros and cons of major rent control proposals. In coming weeks I’ll be writing about schools, taxes, PERS, and climate change. And I’ll still be letting you know about our gifted students.

Enjoy the week and as always, please let me know if I can be of help in any way.

Warm Regards,

Representative David Gomberg
House District 10

email: [email protected]

phone: 503-986-1410
address: 900 Court St NE, H-471, Salem, OR, 97301
website: http://www.oregonlegislature.gov/gomberg

Wright, Jin win individual titles, help Taft to relay runner-up finishes

Taft senior David Jin (File photos by Lon French)

Junior Kaden Wright won the 100-meter dash and senior David Jin the 300-meter hurdles to pace the Taft High boys to a third-place finish Saturday in the Mark Dean Tillamook Invitational track and field meet.

Taft junior Kaden Wright

Freshmen Aubrey Sciarrotta and Kadence James were second in the 200-meter dash and high jump to lead the girls to a fifth-place showing for the Class 3A Tigers.

Class 4A Tillamook won the boys meet and 6A Century the girls title in a meet that included 3A Perrydale and 2A Nestucca and Neah-Kah-Nie.

Taft senior Mad Scott placed second with a personal-best throw in the discus, while freshman Mateo-Perez Brayan was third in the 200 meters, freshman Samuel Vasquez third in the 400 meters, and senior Micah McLeish third in the 3,000 meters.

Taft’s 4×100 meter boys relay team of Wright, Jin, Brayan and William Calderon, and 4×400 team of Jin, Wright, Jacob Mayoral and Logan Mclendon posted runner-up finishes.

Taft sophomore Rylee Senner was third in the 100- and 200-meter dashes, and senior Savannah Russo third in the javelin.

Taft will return to the track Thursday for a Special District 3 meet at Salem Academy.

Complete Individual Results

Team Standings

Boys
1. Tillamook 139
2. Century 132
3. Taft 87.33
4. Nestucca 68.33
5. Perrydale 38
6. Neah-Kah-Nie 7.33
 Girls
1. Century 151
2. Tillamook 91
3. Perrydale 90
4. Neah-Kah-Nie 58.5
5. Taft 56
6. Nestucca 40.5

Chinook Winds slot machine player wins $1.5 million jackpot

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Chinook Winds Winner

An unidentified woman won a slot machine jackpot of more than $1.5 million early Saturday morning at Chinook Winds Casino Resort.

A photo shared with Lincoln City Homepage confirms a progressive slot machine jackpot win of $1,585,455.05 shortly after midnight at the casino, 1777 NW 44th St. in Lincoln City.

According to an eyewitness who wished to remain anonymous, a woman wagered the maximum $3 bet on a Monopoly slot machine and was immediately whisked away by security.

“Somebody’s life just got changed,” the bystander said. “Not mine, but, hopefully, they needed it.”

The image, whose metadata included a digital timestamp and location information verifying that the photo was authentic, shows a gray box with the wording:

Call Attendant

Jackpot Handpay

$1,585,455.05

Chinook Winds staff on duty at 1:30 a.m. said it was unable to comment on the win, stating, “We can neither confirm or deny.”

Chinook Winds Casino winner

According to tax calculations, the winner should take home nearly $850,000.

In Oregon, gambling wins under $600 are exempt from income tax. Since it is over that amount, the winner is looking at approximately $155,000 in state taxes.

They will have 25 percent of the jackpot automatically withheld by Chinook Winds to be given to the federal government. That would amount to $396,363.76 and doesn’t cover total taxes owed on the win.

Having joined the highest tax bracket, the winner must pay about 34.56 percent tax, so they will owe 9.56 percent or $151,569 to the feds.

The Federal Insurance Contribution Act (FICA) tax that funds Social Security and Medicare is another 2.74 percent, or $43,419.

The breakdown doesn’t take into consideration filing status or whether the person lives in another state or a number of other factors, but the individual(s) should pocket approximately $839,474 when Oregon and the IRS are done.

Tax Type Marginal Tax Rate Effective Tax Rate 2018 Taxes*
Federal 37.00% 34.56% $547,868
FICA 2.35% 2.74% $43,419
State 9.90% 9.76% $154,695
Total Income Taxes 47.05% $745,981
Income After Taxes $839,474
Retirement Contributions 0
Take-Home Pay $839,474

Source: SmartAsset

Sophomores Smith, Ramos hit; Kimbrough hurls Taft to 11-1 win

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Photos by Eric DeMello

Sophomores Darius Smith and Fco Ramos had two hits apiece in support of senior starter Bleiz Kimbrough as Taft High needed just five innings to put away Dayton 11-1 in a nonleague home game.

Bleiz Kimbrough
Senior Kimbrough blazes through the opposing lineup Friday

“We played one of our better games today and it showed with the scoreboard,” said Taft coach Matt Hilgers after all nine Tiger starters collected at least one hit in an error-free effort that improved the team to 4-6 and snapped a three-game losing skid.

Kimbrough averaged a strikeout per inning while surrendering just four hits, while Taft stole six bases, including two each by seniors Tyee Fisher and Cody Knott in a game shortened by the state’s 10-run mercy rule.

Junior Eli DeMello drove home two runs for the Tigers, while Knott, Smith and freshman Kaden Hindman knocked in one each as Taft scored four runs in the first inning and six in the fourth.

“We committed zero errors this game, which might be the first game of the year for us that we have reached this accomplishment [Taft also did not commit an error in a 15-0 victory over Elmira],” Hilgers said. “We also added to this an 11-hit effort from the plate in a manner of five innings. We were pleased to see a solid effort heading into the start of league play next week.”

Dayton fell to 3-5-1 with the defeat.

The Tigers return to the home diamond for their Special District 2 opener at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday against Rainier.

“Everyone is starting off next week looking to do the same thing and that’s win,” Hilgers said. “Right now, we are focused on what we can do to get better before our game on Tuesday.”

Taft 11, Dayton 1

DAYTON             AB  R  H BI  TAFT             AB  R  H BI
Garret Doran        2  0  0  0  Trenton Fisher    2  1  1  0  
Gavin Arce          3  0  1  0  Eli DeMello       3  0  1  2  
Liam Munoz          1  0  0  0  Cody Knott        3  2  1  1  
Jarin Miquez        2  0  1  0  Tyee Fisher       2  2  1  0  
Kaden Fergus        2  0  0  0  Bleiz Kimbrough   2  0  1  0  
Dylan Lane          2  0  0  0  Darius Smith      2  2  2  1  
Kobin Oliveria      1  1  0  0  Kaden Hindman     3  0  1  1  
Dawson Ashley       2  0  0  0  FCO Ramos         3  1  2  0  
Zeke Hodges         2  0  2  1  Ethan Thomas      3  2  1  0  
                                  *Lucas Hindman  0  1  0  0  
TOTALS             17  1  4  1  TOTALS           23 11 11  5

DAYTON                   001 00 --  1  
TAFT                     400 61 -- 11 

LOB--Dayton 4, Taft 7. E--Zeke Hodges (2),
Kobin Oliveria, Gavin Arce, Kaden Fergus. 2B--Tyee Fisher,
FCO Ramos. HBP--Kobin Oliveria. SB--Tyee Fisher (2), Trenton
Fisher, Darius Smith, Cody Knott (2).

 DAYTON                      IP    H    R   ER   BB   SO   HR
Gavin Arce (L)             3.00    7    5    2    2    2    0
Zeke Hodges                1.00    4    5    0    2    0    0
Kaden Fergus               0.00    0    1    0    3    0    0
 TAFT                  
Bleiz Kimbrough (W)        5.00    4    1    1    2    5    0

PB--Kaden Fergus. WP--Zeke Hodges (2), Gavin Arce, Kaden
Fergus. SO--Dawson Ashley (2), Kobin Oliveria, Garret Doran,
Dylan Lane, Ethan Thomas, Bleiz Kimbrough. BB--Liam Munoz,
Garret Doran, Tyee Fisher, Bleiz Kimbrough, Eli DeMello,
Trenton Fisher (2), Darius Smith, Cody Knott.

Longtime nemesis Dayton hands Taft softball team home loss

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(File photos by Lon French)

Less was at stake but the competitiveness was the same Friday in a rainy renewal of a former West Valley League softball rivalry.

Perennial power and longtime nemesis Dayton used a flurry of runs over a five-inning stretch to close out the game for a 13-6 road victory between former conference counterparts.

“Unfortunately, today’s game is one of those that makes you frustrated and wanting to start over,” Taft coach Sandy Stuart said. “We started off strong. We were tough on defense and came out swinging. Our momentum just didn’t last.”

The defending Class 3A State champion Pirates, who compete this season in the newly aligned PacWest Conference, improved to 5-3, while the Tigers fell to 7-3. Dayton and Taft traded two-run regular-season home victories last season in the West Valley League’s final year of existence before the Pirates ended the Tigers’ season with a two-run win in the State quarterfinals.

“We had quite a few hits today; we just couldn’t string them together with runners on base,” Stuart said. “That is something that Dayton was able to do. They put the ball in play with runners on and that made the difference.”

Sophomore Makena Cole went 3-for-4 and scored a run to lead the way offensively for the Tigers.

“One highlight was Makena finding her groove at the plate,” Stuart said.

Junior catcher Hailee Danneker and sophomore infielder Claira Tolan had two hits each.

Danneker tripled and Tolan and freshman Addie Gates doubled for Taft. Gates scored twice and joined Danneker with two RBIs.

Taft junior starter Emma Coulter, who struck out six, was tagged with the loss after surrendering 12 hits and five walks as the Pirates scored six times in the third to erase a 3-0 Taft lead.

Dayton scored two runs in the fourth, fifth and seventh innings and another in the sixth before the Tigers rallied for three in the bottom half of the frame to make it 11-6.

The Tigers return to the home diamond for their SD1 opener at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday against Rainier.

“We are getting there,” Stuart said. “We are a strong team and will continue to push on going in to league play next week. We have so many games left to play this season. We know we need to learn what we can from a loss like this one and make sure that we are centered on our core goals going forward.”

Dayton 13, Taft 6

DAYTON               AB  R  H BI  TAFT             AB  R  H BI
J Hill                5  2  2  0  Hailee Danneker   4  2  2  1  
E Elliott             3  1  1  2  Addie Gates       3  2  1  2  
S Cicerone            4  3  1  0  Emma Coulter      4  0  1  0  
C Jacks               5  4  3  3  Chloe Peterson    4  1  1  0  
M Fluke               4  0  2  4  Olivia Coulter    4  0  0  1  
J DeSmet              4  0  1  1  Claira Tolan      3  0  2  0  
T Ashley              5  1  2  1  Kayla Lininger    2  0  0  0  
A Rhea                4  0  0  0   Corey VanDamme   2  0  0  0  
B Oliveira            3  1  0  0  Makena Cole       4  1  3  0  
*G Wauters            0  1  0  0  Kyla  Knott       4  0  1  0  
TOTALS               37 13 12 11  TOTALS           34  6 11  4

DAYTON            006 221 2 -- 13 
TAFT              300 003 0 --  6  

LOB--Dayton 9, Taft 9. E--T Ashley, S
Halvorson (2), C Jacks, J DeSmet, Addie Gates (2), Olivia 
Coulter, Hailee  Danneker, Corey VanDamme. 2B--S Cicerone, C
Jacks, J DeSmet, M Fluke, Addie Gates, Claira Tolan. 3B--T
Ashley, C Jacks, Hailee Danneker. SACF--M Fluke. SB--E
Elliott, C Jacks.

 DAYTON                       IP    H    R   ER   BB   SO   HR
M Fluke                     7.00   11    6    5    2    3    0
 TAFT            
Emma Coulter                7.00   12   13    7    5    6    0

PB--S Cicerone (2). WP--Emma Coulter. SO--T Ashley (2), J
Hill, A Rhea (2), B Oliveira, Kayla Lininger, Olivia 
Coulter, Chloe Peterson. BB--S Cicerone, E Elliott (2), J
DeSmet, B Oliveira, Addie Gates, Claira Tolan.