142nd YEAR, No. 250 TUESDAY, JUNE 16, 2015 ONE DOLLAR Signs BREAKING GROUND of life at old YMCA Creative design agency and art center planned By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian Photo courtesy of Clatsop Community College Community leaders from Clatsop Community College, Clatsop County, city of Astoria and state Rep. Deborah Boone, second from left, broke ground on the Patriot Hall Redevelopment project Saturday. College’s Patriot Hall will be turned into modern gym, academic hall By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian B y the end of this month, construction crews will start dismantling Clatsop Community College’s Patriot Hall. Community leaders gathered at the college Saturday to break ground on the 15-month project to redevelop the 94-year-old relic into a modern gym and academic hall by fall term 2016. Members of the college’s gov- erning board, college President Lawrence Galizio, Astoria Mayor Arline LaMear, Seaside Mayor Don Larson, Clatsop County Com- missioner Lianne Thompson and state Rep. Deborah Boone donned their hardhats and dug in. Look- ing on were architects from SRG Partnership and general contractors from P&C Construction. Steve Anderson, the project manager with P&C Construction, said demolition begins later this month on Patriot Hall and lasts throughout the summer. “We’ll try to get it ‘dried in’ by the end of this year,” Anderson said. The goal, he said, is to have a steel frame up and the exterior work done by October, and the entire building done by September 2016. Anderson said there will be a Web camera placed on Columbia Hall to provide a time lapse of construction, similar to the company’s project at the Astoria Sports Complex. The former YMCA at the corner of 12th and Exchange streets will VRRQKDYHDQHZLQÀX[RIOLIH Noel Weber, who runs Classic Design Studio in Boise, Idaho, pur- chased the building in May from James K. Russell and will turn it into a creative design agency and art cen- ter. Weber said he heard about the building from artist friends in Asto- ria and saw it was available when he and his sister, Anna, who makes signage for local businesses through Astoria Design Studio, were on their way to the Blue Scorcher Bak- ery Cafe. “The awareness of it just kind of organically happened,” he said. The new storefront, he said, would be an expansion of what he does in Boise, including small production runs of posters, books, printed clothing, accessories, light- ing, furniture, textiles and other housewares. He and his sister will also do sign work out of the loca- tion. “We will also offer our diverse facilities to artists, designers and in- dividuals, helping them realize and produce small and large-scale proj- ects,” Weber said in a release about the project. See OLD YMCA, Page 10A Oregon pot regulation bill moves to vote See PATRIOT HALL, Page 10A Photo/rendering courtesy of Clatsop Community College The Patriot Hall Redevelopment will keep some of the exterior ele- ments of the building while creating a new academic building inside. Labeling, packaging and testing standards outlined By HILLARY BORRUD Capital Bureau “At one time in Astoria, not too long ago, there was a great fear that there would be a wall of condos on the water- front,” City Councilor Zetty Nemlowill said. “And I feel very proud that, after to- night, that’s never going to happen.” The City Council’s 4-1 vote was an acknowledgment the development re- strictions in Bridge Vista are an improve- ment over previous land use and zoning rules, which were more permissive. But the sentiment among residents who spoke before the council and the Plan- ning Commission over the past several months was uniformly in favor of greater restrictions. “I feel it’s very important — and the people are very clear on their will — that we listen to them and respect their wish- es,” said Councilor Drew Herzig, the only councilor to vote against Bridge Vista. SALEM — A legislative commit- tee working to implement Oregon’s new legal pot system voted unani- mously Monday to send a key bill to the full Legislature for a vote. The legislation spells out how the state will set standards for labeling, packaging and testing of marijuana, and gives the Oregon Liquor Control Commission authority to enforce regulations on the legal pot indus- try. It would also regulate Oregon’s existing medical marijuana program DQG DOORZ HOHFWHG RI¿FLDOV LQ FLWLHV and counties that voted against Mea- sure 91, the November initiative to legalize marijuana for adults, to pass bans on recreational and medical marijuana businesses. The bill would not restrict the ability of adults to grow recreation- al marijuana for their own use, nor would it prohibit medical marijuana cardholders from growing marijua- na for themselves or other patients whom they supply directly. Lawmakers on the House-Sen- ate committee that produced the bill worked for months to reach a compromise, and more than once it appeared their work might be de- railed by disagreements. The latest hurdle arose last week, when Senate Minority Leader Sen. Ted Ferrioli, R-John Day, sent an email to oth- er lawmakers saying that he would not support the bill under consider- ation unless it allowed city councils and county commissions to prohibit medical and recreational retailers. See BRIDGE VISTA, Page 10A See POT, Page 10A Photos courtesy of the Clatsop County Historical Society ABOVE: A historical photo shows the former Astoria High School below a quarry on Jerome Avenue, where Clatsop Community Col- lege was established in 1958. RIGHT: A historic photo of the Patriot Hall gym shows its elevated running track, since covered by wood- en paneling. The redeveloped Patriot Hall will once again feature an elevated indoor running track. Astoria council OKs Bridge Vista Some had sought greater development restrictions By DERRICK DePLEDGE The Daily Astorian The second part of Astoria’s new plan- ning blueprint along the Columbia River is complete. The City Council voted Monday night to adopt the Bridge Vista phase of the Riv- erfront Vision Plan, a balance that protects iconic views of the Astoria Bridge and the old White Star Cannery boiler while rec- ognizing Uniontown’s history as a work- ing waterfront. Bridge Vista — from Portway Street to Second Street — is the second leg of a four-pronged plan to guide future de- YHORSPHQWDORQJWKHULYHU7KHSODQ¿UVW Drew Herzig Zetty Nemlowill approved in 2009, is the city’s response to development pressures before the reces- sion that had alarmed many residents. Last year, the City Council endorsed &LYLF*UHHQZD\WKH¿UVWOHJZKLFKFRY- ered 16th Street to 41st Street. The Urban Core — from Second Street to 16th — and Neighborhood Greenway — from 41st to Alderbrook Lagoon — are still on the drawing board.