Blake Inscore To Be Guest Speaker At Sister Cities International Summit in Japan; Delegation Will Visit Iwate Prefecture

Thumbnail photo: A delegation from Rikuzentakata celebrates the inaugural Kamome Festival in Crescent City in 2023. | Photo by Jessica Cejnar Andrews

Blake Inscore called his guest speaker role at a Sister Cities International Summit in Japan his “last big push for tourism as well as for our community” before he moves onto the next chapter of his life.

Part of the World’s Expo 2025 in Osaka, Inscore said every U.S./Japan Sister City was invited to attend the summit, which will be held from Sept. 16-19. His opportunity to re-tell the story of Crescent City’s evolving friendship with Rikuzentakata not only puts it on as large a world stage as the Tokyo Olympics did back in 2021, it represents what many Sister Cities don’t have.

“Sister Cities International has been very intrigued and they want us to show how a Sister City can work together with government-to-government relationships,” Inscore told the Crescent City Council on Monday. “[Many Sister Cities] don’t have a city council or a mayor or anybody else that’s engaged with wanting to see this happen. And, frankly, this is a win for us.”

Continue reading Blake Inscore To Be Guest Speaker At Sister Cities International Summit in Japan; Delegation Will Visit Iwate Prefecture

Crescent City Leaders Reaffirm Support For Permanent Mining Ban On North Fork Smith River

Thumbnail image shows map of the proposed 58,000-acre expansion of the Smith River National Recreation Area. | Image courtesy of Sen. Jeff Merkley’s office.

More than eight years after the Obama Administration issued a 20-year mining ban for the North Fork Smith River in Oregon, the Crescent City Council reaffirmed its support for legislation that would make that prohibition permanent.

Four councilors on Monday agreed to draft a letter to U.S. Sens. Jeff Merkely and Ron Wyden, who represent Oregon, reminding them that the Smith River is where Del Norte County’s drinking water comes from and that they’ve advocated for protecting its headwaters for more than a decade. Councilor Daran Dooley was absent.

But though Grant Werschkull, executive director of the Smith River Alliance, said such legislation is necessary for the January 2017 mineral withdrawal order to be permanent, he’s not sure if it will be approved this year.

Continue reading Crescent City Leaders Reaffirm Support For Permanent Mining Ban On North Fork Smith River

CCPD Helps Curry County Sheriff Apprehend Man Suspected Of Abusing Children

Thumbnail photo by Ken Lund via Wikimedia Commons. Creative Commons License

Crescent City Police Chief Richard Griffin credited the purchase of a Cellebrite Forensic Analyzer for being able to help the Curry County Sheriff’s Office track down a Texas man suspected of abusing children.

Appearing before the Crescent City Council on Monday, Griffin said that Curry County Sheriff John Ward had posted a press release to his agency’s Facebook page, thanking Crescent City for helping with the forensics in a recent Internet Crimes Against Children Taskforce case.

According to Ward’s press release, he and Sgt. Zane Van Zelf arrested 32-year-old Matthew Arthur Anderson at his home in the central part of Curry County on Aug. 7. Gold Beach Police Sgt. David Vershall assisted them.

Continue reading CCPD Helps Curry County Sheriff Apprehend Man Suspected Of Abusing Children

Crescent City Council Recap, Aug. 18, 2025

Thumbnail photo: Construction began on the Fred Endert Municipal Pool’s roof on Monday. | courtesy of Andrew Goff

Councilman Daran Dooley was absent. Among the items discussed at Monday’s Crescent City Council meeting:

CDBG grant: City Councilors authorized staff to establish a new fund for the $1.8 million it received in 2024 Community Development Block Grant dollars.

According to City Manager Eric Wier, about $300,000 of that money will go toward the Family Resource Center of the Redwoods for its Pacific Pantry program while another $1.5 million will be used to establish a business loan program.

Continue reading Crescent City Council Recap, Aug. 18, 2025

‘I’m His Right Hand’; Sandy Moreno Stays On As CCHD’s Financial Advisor

Thumbnail photo by Paul Critz

Sandy Moreno successfully convinced three harbor commissioners that she’s “imminently qualified” to stay on as financial advisor. 

But her justification last week for why she denied access to a U.S. Department of Agriculture document to a member of the public nearly resulted in the ejection of another member of the public from the Crescent City Harbor District’s Aug. 13 meeting when she protested.

“To have a person that you’re employing telling you they are the boss is heinous. It’s just heinous and it’s inappropriate,” Stephanie Abrams said when she was allowed to speak.

Continue reading ‘I’m His Right Hand’; Sandy Moreno Stays On As CCHD’s Financial Advisor

Elder Suspect In May 28 Shooting Near Safeway Is Sentenced; Son’s Case Continues Through Juvenile Court, DA Says

Thumbnail: Russell Walters Jr. and Russell Walters Sr. | Photo courtesy Crescent City Police Department

While his son continues to go through the legal system, Russell Walters Sr. will be out on probation soon, Del Norte County District Attorney Katherine Micks confirmed.

Walters pleaded guilty to accessory after the fact for helping his son, 17-year-old Russell Walters Jr., evade arrest following a shooting at the Jedediah Smith Shopping Center on May 28, Micks told Redwood Voice Community News on Tuesday.

There was no viable evidence to support additional charges against Walters Sr., the district attorney said. 

Continue reading Elder Suspect In May 28 Shooting Near Safeway Is Sentenced; Son’s Case Continues Through Juvenile Court, DA Says

(Updated) Harbor District To Proceed With H Dock Repairs; Plan Will Allow Boats To Moor There Again

Photos: Crescent City Harbor’s H Dock took the brunt of the energy from Kamchatka tsunami that struck early July 30. | Photo courtesy of Mike Rademaker

Updated at 3:44 p.m. Tuesday: H Dock is level again, Crescent City Harbormaster Mike Rademaker told Redwood Voice Community News on Tuesday.

Commissioner Rick Shepherd manned his boat and donated his crew to pump water into totes, creating a counterbalance force to relieve the strain from the “stacked-domino” arrangement left by last months’ tsunami. This was the strategy Moffatt & Nichol Vice President Rob Sloop recommended at a special meeting on Aug. 8, according to Rademaker.

“While it will likely be a year or more before power and water service are restored, the dock is at least usable,” he said via text message, adding that the Dandy Fish Company donated the totes. “Currently, Harbor District crew is on site using sledgehammers to flatten the damaged metal hinges so the dock can remain serviceable until permanent repairs are made.”

Continue reading (Updated) Harbor District To Proceed With H Dock Repairs; Plan Will Allow Boats To Moor There Again

Departure of Pathologist May Mean Increased Costs for Autopsies in Del Norte, Sheriff Says

Del Norte County Board of Supervisors Budget Workshop, Aug. 5

Though it wasn’t part of his original budget request, Del Norte County Sheriff Garrett Scott told supervisors to be prepared for autopsy costs to increase. 

The pathologist the sheriff’s office had contracted with was forced to go on medical leave suddenly and will likely not be able to return to work, Scott said. As a result, the coroner’s budget will likely “double at least,” he said.

“My point to the Board was that that budget line we’ve had for a number of years — getting an autopsy done for $1,500 per — that ship has sailed,” Scott told Redwood Voice Community News. “That will not be an option any longer, and so I just wanted to make sure they were aware because I’ll have to ask for a bigger allocation to that budget line from the general fund. They weren’t aware of it before because we had no idea this was coming.”

Continue reading Departure of Pathologist May Mean Increased Costs for Autopsies in Del Norte, Sheriff Says

LRT Shows Del Norte A Loverly Time; My Fair Lady Opens Friday

Thumbnail: Rebecca and Phillip Dyke are Eliza Doolittle and Henry Higgins in LRT’s production of “My Fair Lady.” | Photo by Heather Polen

(Updated at 2 p.m. to correct an error. General admission tickets to My Fair Lady are $20, NOT $70.)

Rex Harrison may be iconic as Henry Higgins, having played the phonetician into the 1980s, but Phillip Dyke says his version will be different.

“I’m more of a singer than he is, that’s one major difference,” he told Redwood Voice Community News. “It’s always hard to critique your own work, but one of the things I try to do as an actor for any role is not spend too much time looking at the work of other actors who have performed the roles previously because I don’t want to be copying the work they’re doing.”


Dyke will star alongside his wife Rebecca in Lighthouse Repertory Theatre’s production of My Fair Lady, which will open on Friday. LRT’s interpretation of Lerner and Lowe’s musical will be a return to the organization’s old stomping grounds at the Crescent Elk Auditorium, it’s also the first time LRT has taken on such a large-scale production since their performance of Honk in 2016.

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Del Norte Supes Say Contracting With CSAC Grants Initiative Will Be A Strategic Advantage

Thumbnail photo by Paul Critz

An endorsement from two of its members convinced Del Norte County supervisors that partnering with an initiative tied to the California State Association of Counties will be a strategic advantage when pursuing state and federal grant dollars.

The CSAC Grants Initiative and its partners, Washington D.C.-based consulting firm, the Ferguson Group, will provide grant-writing services to Del Norte County as part of its $75,000 contract. It will also help the county figure out how to match its projects with specific grant programs.

It’s an approach District 2 Supervisor Valerie Starkey said she appreciated.

Continue reading Del Norte Supes Say Contracting With CSAC Grants Initiative Will Be A Strategic Advantage

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