A Shocking New Total! 🤯 Our volunteers collected a staggering 42 bags of trash between Saturday and Sunday (November 2nd & 3rd) .A clean community is a healthy community. It boosts our mental and physical well-being, attracts visitors, and creates a positive atmosphere for everyone.Let’s work together to keep our community clean.👍 Every effort adds up! 🌳
Bid on a selection of experiences, art, food, wine and much more that showcases our beautiful valley and beyond!
Every dollar raised will directly benefit Thrive and enable us to carry out our mission.
Thrive Hood River would like to invite you to join us in person to get the latest scoop on our programs and projects at our annual H is for Harvest celebration on Sunday, September 29th from 3-6pm.
Check out our once in a lifetime raffle experience at Silcox Hut! Raffle tickets available online and in-person.
The Communications and Fundraising Specialist conveys Thrive’s long history of conservation work and gains financial, public and volunteer support to continue farm and forest land protections, preserve wild spaces and advance initiatives that enhance the livability of Hood River and our rural communities.
We are honored to be joining seven other nonprofit organizations as inaugural nonprofit partners. This new point-of-sale fundraising program will give locals and visitors alike an easy way to give back to the region.
Thrive Hood River has been busy this year working to protect Hood River’s farmland, forests, wild places and the livability of its cities and rural communities. Check out some of our major accomplishments this year.
Thrive Hood River clinched a victory on July 14th at the state’s land use court, blocking approval of an application for a Bed and Breakfast near Cooper Spur on forest lands owned and operated by Meadows North LLC.Â
Dear neighbors and stewards of the Hood River Valley,
Last Monday, April 3, Hood River Circuit Court Judge John A. Olson ruled in favor of Thrive’s challenge of a 2002 transfer of 640 acres of Hood River County public lands to Mount Hood Meadows in the Cooper Spur Area. The challenge will determine the fate of 1,200 acres on the north slope of Mt. Hood in the Parkdale area.
Hood River County had asked Thrive to stay this case in 2002 and enter into mediation with the County and Meadows. Mediation resulted in a deal signed by Thrive, Meadows, and the County, in which the parties agreed to the permanent protection of the North slope of Mt. Hood through a land trade. To guarantee the bargain, the parties agreed to keep pending litigation open so that either party could reactivate the litigation if the settlement’s goals were disregarded. Trust, but verify.
Two decades later, Meadows is opting out of the deal and simultaneously asking the Judge to dismiss our original challenge to the 2002 land trade. Fortunately, the Judge ruled in Thrive’s favor that our case was legitimate.
The Judge struck all of Meadows’ claims. “In my view, Thrive has the better argument,” he said.
Thrive has a long and proud record of protecting Hood River’s farmland, forest, and water supplies. We engage in dialogue, we try to solve problems, and we foster collaboration with local and state government.
In 2005, we swallowed hard, trusted Meadows, and made a deal that involved compromise. We committed thousands of hours to make that deal happen in good faith. We exhausted every possible option, but what Meadows chose to pursue unilaterally was not the deal that was struck.
This week’s ruling clears the decks for the original land trade case to be decided:
The Judge will now decide whether to undo the 2002 land trade where Hood River County paid over a million dollars to trade 640 acres of public lands in the Crystal Springs Watershed to Meadows while simultaneously, in a separate process, making those forest lands newly eligible for a massive 450-unit destination resort.
Twenty years is a long time. Memories fade. Energy can dwindle. So I recently pulled out our Summer 2001 Newsletter to remind us of what this case is all about: “A destination resort is sneaking into Hood River County, but you would have to be paying very close attention to be aware of it.” Back in 2001, local residents who attended the County Commission hearing were perplexed at the few days’ notice over this significant trade of land in our public drinking watershed and the lack of a clear public benefit to the transfer. Thrive’s 2001 newsletter stated: “[i]t is difficult to understand why the County would trade watershed land to a private party when that area provides water to about half its citizens.”
Through litigation, Thrive uncovered drawings, plans, and meetings between Meadows and former County officials to build over 450 condos and homes, a shopping mall, restaurants, and a golf course in the watershed. The discoveries we made in the litigation and a win in the Court of Appeals prompted Meadows to ask for mediation; through mediation, we made a deal whereby the parties paused all litigation while we pursued protections for the north side of Mount Hood.
For two decades, Thrive stood by its word. Now, protecting Mount Hood’s North Side means resuming our challenge of the 2002 land trade.
-Nico Salter, Executive Director, Thrive Hood River – released April 5, 2023