County Commissioners

Chuck Whiteman Chairman & District 3
Brian Shinn Vice Chairman
Chris SeubertCommissioner
(509) 243-2060 ext.386
PO Box 250
Asotin, WA 99402
(509) 243-2060
Fax: (509) 243-2005

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Washington State Home Page

Lewis Clark Valley Chamber of Commerce

Mark Losh CEO / President
528 Main Street
Lewiston, ID 83501
509.758.7712

City of Clarkston
Asotin County

WA State Listings For County:
Updated 11-16-2025

I Primary Emergency Provicers


Astoin County Sheriff Department

Sheriff John Hilderbrand
127 2nd Street
PO Box 130
Clarkston, WA 99403
(509-243-4171
Fax 509-243-4719

Asotin County Emergency Services

Nick Bacon County Emergency Manager
PO Box 250
Asotin, WA 99402
(509) 243-2088
(208) 780-7225
Fax: (509) 243-2087

Whitman Regional 911 Center

(Whitman and Asotin County)
Mark Janowsk
Emergency Communications Center
2325 NE Hopkins Court
Pullman, WA 99163
509) 332-2521

II Hospitals and Other Emergency Services


St. Josephs Medical Center

415 6th Street
Lewiston, WA 83501
(208-743-2511)

Tri State Hospital

Public Contact
1221 Highland Ave
Clarkston, WA 99403
(509-758-5511)
(509)758-3566 (Fax)

Asotin County Health Dept.

Administrator D. Brady Woodbury, MPH
102 1st street / PO Box 306
Asotin, WA 99402
509-243-3344
Fax- 509-243-3345

County Fire District #1

Noel HardinFire Chief
2314 Appleside Blvd
Clarkston,WA 99403
509-758-5181
Fax: 509-758-5860


Asotin Fire Department

Chief Shawn Balzer
207 2nd St
Asotin, WA
(509) 243-3473


Clarkson Fire Department

Fire Chief Darren White
820 5th St
Clarkston
(509) 758-8681

East Region EMS/TC Council

Rinita Cook
Chair Doug Bly
123 Ohme Garden Road Suite B
Wenatchee, WA 98801
509.664.4032

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Radio Reference Online

III Social Services


American Red Cross

Greater Idaho Chapter
Nicole Sirak IrwinRegional CEO
Rusty Devereaux Disaster Coordinator
5371 W. Franklin Road
Boise, ID 83705
Phone: 208-947-HELP (4357)
Fax: 208-947-4371

Twin County United Way

Kristin Kemak Chief Executive Officer
2207 E. Main St.
Lewiston, ID 83501
p. 208.743.6594
c. 208.790.0080
f. 208.743.7004

Lewiston Morning Tribune

Nathan Alford, Publisher
505 C Street
Lewiston,ID 83501
(208) 743-9411

III Asotin County Government


County Commissioners

Chuck Whiteman Chairman & District 3
Brian Shinn Vice Chairman
Chris SeubertCommissioner
(509) 243-2060 ext.386
PO Box 250
Asotin, WA 99402
(509) 243-2060
Fax: (509) 243-2005

City of Clarkston

Mayor Monika Lawrence
& The City Council
Clarkston, WA 99403-2696
(509) 758-5541

Asotin City Hall

Mayor Dwayne Paris
130 2nd St,
Asotin, WA 99402
(509) 243-4411
Fax: (509)243-1223
Police Department
Chief Monte Renzelman
130 2nd St,
Asotin, WA 99402
(509) 243-4411
Fax: (509)243-1223

V Television & Radio & Other Public Interst


KLEW-TV Channel 3CBS
KLEW-DT Channel 32 CBS
Fisher Broadcasting
News Contact
2626 17th St,
Lewiston, ID 83501
Tel 208-746-2636
Fax 208-746-4819

KUID-TV Channel 12

"Idaho Public Television"
Ron Pisaneschi General Manager
1455 North Orchard Street
Boise, ID 83706
208-373-7220

KRFA-FM 91.7

Format Classical
KWSU 1250 AMNews
KZUU 90.7 Format Variety
Washington State University
Kerry Swanson Station Manager
National Public Radio
The Edward R. Murrow College of Communication
Washington State University
PO Box 642530
Pullman, WA 99164-2530
(509) 335-6500

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Avasta Utilities

Inquiries
Customer Service, MSC-34
PO Box 3727
Spokane, WA 99220-3727
1-800-227-9187

Northwest Power Pool

7505 NE Ambassador Place, Suite R
Portland, Oregon 97220
(503) 445-1078
fax (503) 445-1070
Northwest Power Pool
Link Resource Director

City of Lewiston
Nez Pierce County
Manager Robin Turner- Airport Manager
406 Burrell Ave
Lewiston, ID 83501
208-746-7962
Lewiston-Naz Perce County Airport
Specs From Air NAV Com

Port of Clarkston

Chris Rasmussen Executive Director
404 Linden Dr.,
Lewiston, ID 83501
509.758.5272

VI Maps Of Adams County


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Governor Pete Wilson

State Capitol
Salem, Oregon

Governor Neil Goldschmidt

State Capitol
Salem, Oregon

Governor Booth Gardner

State Capitol
Olympia,WA
Honorary Field Investigator
US Department of HUD 1986-1996
In 1986 I worked in conjuction with business, civic, and social groups in Seattle who helped reform Washington State's DSHS-GAU program and input ideas into the Office of Congressman Mike Lowry. Congressman Mike Lowry went on to co-sponsor the Stewart Mc Kinney Homeless Assistance Act of 1987. The exchange of information between cities and states began in earnst in 1987.

In 1987 Mr. James Harris of Oregon's homeless program in the Department of Community Services proposed the construction of the I-5 Corridor interstate network between San Diego, CA and Seattle, WA. Governor Neil Goldschmidt of Oregon, Governor Dukemejian of California assigned Chrisine D. Reed and Washington State appointed DSHS Secretary Jules Sugarman and many others agreed to participate in the construction of the I-5 network. I was asked to do the field work for this networking program which continues as of July, 1994.

Not long after 1987 Governor Bamburger of Utah, the Govenor of Colorado, Governor of New Mexico, portions of Nevada, InterAgency Council on Homeless, Governor of Florida, and General Willie Scott of Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs and other joined the program and made CHAPS a national directory in 14 states.

The networking activity was origionally a small published list of homeless shelters and contacts. In 1988 we recieved a national news article in Seattle Post Intelligencer. CHAPS publications influenced national legislation in CSBG, Food Stamps, and other area. CHAPS became a computerized directory service about 1991 and expands at the request of those using the system.

Chris Walters Author,

107th US Congress
US Codes Passed By US Congress
Operational Audits a 15 year survey of social services and indigent health care authorized by the Western and Southern states was deferred to the 107th US Congress which assisted in creation of Title 42 USC 11301 Homeless Act; Title 7 USC 2011 Food Stamps; Community Service Block Grants; and Welfare Reform Act of 1996

Associated Press Homepage
Transient Surveys Shelters
NATIONAL NEWSARTICLE
Sunday, November 20th, 1988
Seattle Post Intelligencer
Associated Press
MEDFORD, ORE- In his wandering from San Diego to Seattle Chris Walters has surveyed homeless shelters and developed ideas about how to make them better.

"I'm not doing just a survey" says Walters from a phone
booth in Stockton, California."I live there. I'm a homeless person too."


James Harris, Manager of Oregon's Homeless Program, says Walters has provided information about the needs and movements of the homeless and transients on the I-5 Corridor - information that officials wouldn't get otherwise

"I think he's doing a public service".

Walters said he worked in security for 10 years as a clerk in a bank in Florida before hitting the road. After a six month stint as a motel clerk in 1986, he was back on the road again. "If you were looking at me, you couldn't tell I was homeless." He said on the telephone."You would assume I worked in a bank or something. The only thing that would give me away would be my disintegrating tennis shoes."

His office is a notebook he carried in a small duffle bag along with a change of clothes and a few personal items.

In His travels he distributes his reports on homeless shelters
to city managers, county supervisors, social-service
departments, Congressmen, Senators, Libraries, and Newspapers

He applauds a decision in California to open National Guard Armories as shelters on cold nights and would like to see other states do the same. "It keeps people from freezing to death, " he said. Walters ranks Oregon first in the West in helping homeless men to go back to work, followed by Nevada, Arizona, Washington, and California.

He said the short time a person can stay in a shelter makes it harder for him or her to settle down and get a job. "When a homeless person is in Medford and his five days are up, he's not going to starve to death or freeze to death at night,"

Walters said, "He's going to go north to Roseburg or south to Redding. Most homeless move around because the homeless system is set up to encourage them to move around. He would like to see shelters allow one 30 day stay a year, so people can get a job and start a life for themselves.

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Replies From King County 2011
From Burcham, Shad Shad.Burcham@kingcounty.gov
To"afterdarkportal@gmail.com" afterdarkportal@gmail.com
Date Fri, Sep 16, 2011 at 1:51 PM
Subject Changes to Afterdark Portal for King County OEM

Please delete Jeff Bowers and Heather Kelly from the King County OEM employee listing. Please add Bryan Heartsfield as the Assistant Director in place of Jeff Bowers.

Thanks!
<.br> Shad Burcham
Emergency Management Program Manager III
King County Office of Emergency Management
shad.burcham@kingcounty.gov
3511 NE Second Street
Renton, WA 98056-4192
Office Phone: 206-296-3830
Desk Phone: 206-205-4072
Fax: 206-205-4056

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Washington State Home Page
Update & Replies To Public & Private Concerns
Endorsement From FEMA 2005

Mary Margaret Walker
NIMS Integration Center
DHS/FEMA
Washington, DC

From: Fluman, Al
Sent: Monday, February 27, 2006 6:16 PM
To: Walker, Mary-Margaret
Subject: RE: NIMS Related Research Project

It ties to NIMS is the following ways:

Preparedness:
Any emergency management related preparedness activity is tied directly to NIMS. This preparedness tool (listing of key contact personnel by state and county) is a valuable planning activity and an important resource for response and recovery activities.

Communications and Information Management: The web-based contact list is an extremely valuable response and recovery tool especially for resource management during and after an incident. Plus, the tool will be made available on a CD for use if the internet is down during an incident. An emergency manager in a county could pull out the CD or the printed version of the CD and use the information.

Resource Management: See above, the tool can be used by logistics personnel in a county emergency operations center for potential contacts of resources statewide.

As for interoperability … the definition of interoperability in its basic form is the ability of a system to use parts or equipment of another system … while we may be stretching things a bit with this tool under the basic definition of interoperability … the key contact list from all counties in the state has various uses in all phases of emergency management + it can be used in its CD form or printed form during an actual event. The data from this tool/system can be used in various other systems (resource management/emergency operations plans/etc.)

Hopefully this will help. Al.

Governor of Washington State

State of Washington
Office Of The Governor/Elect
Olympia 98504-1001

MIKE LOWRY
Governor/Elect

Janurary 5, 1993

Mr. Chris Walters
c/o 325 - 13th St., Room 205
Salem, Oregon 97301

Dear Chris:

Thank you for your recent advice. I greatly appreciate information from all sources. In this time of growing polarization, I wante to bring people and ideas together from all sides, to find solutions that will work for everyone.

I've put together several transition teams to deal with a wide range of issues, including your area of concern. I've sent your information to that team. If they need further information, or have a question regarding your information, they will be contacting you.

Thanks again for your thoughts. I know that by working together, we can made Washington State a leader in economic growth, natural resource preservation, education, health care, and all other issues of concern to our citizens.

Sincerely,signed
Mike Lowry