143rd YEAR, No. 40 TUESDAY, AUGUST 25, 2015 ONE DOLLAR OFF THE MAP County agencies work to challenge FEMA À ood maps By ERICK BENGEL The Daily Astorian Joshua Bessex/The Daily Astorian Tiffany Boothe, the administrative assistant at the Seaside Aquarium, left, and research assistant Dalin D’Alessandro, right, perform a necropsy on a sea lion corpse that washed ashore on a Seaside beach in August . SEAL.S.I. MARINE SCENE INVESTIGATION Strandings bring out experts, volunteers See MAPS, Page 10A GMO debate a ‘wicked’ problem By McKINLEY SMITH The Daily Astorian W hen they received the call for a sea lion trapped in a net, Keith Chandler and Tiffany Boothe scrambled to brain- storm how to safely free a trapped animal weighing upward of a hundred pounds. During the car ride to the scene, they strategized. “We geared up everything we could think of to help us corral this thing,” Chandler said. But their patient wasn’t at all what they expect- ed. The animal at the beach was a fur seal, not a sea lion, and it was no colossus — it was a baby. They cut away the netting and the fur seal swam away. “We get up there, it’s about the size of a dachs- hund, maybe a little bigger — it’s just a little guy! So it was really easy to deal with it,” Chandler said. “That was gratifying to know that, right then, he wouldn’t have lived if we hadn’t have done that.” Between 2001 and 2009, the National Ocean- ic and Atmospheric Administration Fisheries re- corded 588 cetacean strandings in the Northwest. Cetaceans are whales, dolphins and porpoises. In that region during the same period, 5,193 pinni- peds — seals, sea lions and walruses — were also stranded. Chandler, manager of the Seaside Aquarium, is the eyes and ears of the Oregon Marine Mammal Stranding Network on the N orth C oast. He works in conjunction with Deborah Duf¿ eld, a professor of biology at Portland State University who heads up the network in their territory, which stretches from WARRENTON — Five Clatsop County agencies looking to chal- lenge the Federal Emergency Man- agement Agency’s preliminary À ood maps of the Columbia River believe that more work is needed to correct FEMA’s data and draw more accu- rate maps. As part of an intergovernmental agreement, the cities of Warrenton and Astoria, Clatsop County, the Port of Astoria and Diking District No. 9 have agreed to share the costs of an in-depth analysis and technical review of FEMA’s draft À ood maps for the North Coast. The ¿ ve parties are acting with some urgency: If FEMA’s prelimi- nary À ood maps are allowed to stand and become the of¿ cial À ood maps of the North Coast, riverfront prop- erty owners may be forced to pay thousands of dollars in À ood insur- ance that they do not need and, his- torically, have not needed — all be- cause FEMA miscalculated the À ood risk along the river. By ERIC MORTENSON EO Media Group Julia Parish, executive director of the University of Washington’s Coastal Observation and Seabird Survey Team, said reports of dead common murres spiked about a month ago. ST. LOUIS — The national debate over labeling food that contains geneti- cally modi¿ ed organisms is a “wicked” problem that cannot be solved or arbi- trated by science, an Iowa State Univer- sity sociology professor said. Carmen Bain, speaking in July to 20 journalists attending the National Press Foundation’s “Food, From Farm to Ta- ble” fellowship in St. Louis, said GMO labeling is inherently a political and so- cial issue. Science is either ignored or embraced in the debate, depending on which side it appears to substantiate. Bain has an unusual vantage point in the argument. Although not a crop scientist or biologist, she is part of an interdisciplinary team at Iowa State that is developing new transgenic soybean cultivars. Her role is to study the issues surrounding consumer, business and social acceptance of GMOs. The work has led her to conclude GMOs and GMO labeling are “proxy” issues for broader political, economic and ethical concerns such as pesticides, sustainability and corporate control of agriculture. And for some GMO oppo- nents, labeling is a matter of political opportunism, she said. “Many of them had other issues, but GMOs resonates with a broader public, and they want to take advantage of it,” Bain said. Anti-GMO activists frame the is- sue in “rights-based language” such as choice and transparency, which “reso- nates with key American values, cultur- al norms and trends,” Bain said. They are having some success be- cause consumers want their purchases to align with their values, she said, and consumption becomes political practice as a result. Bain’s remarks came as the U.S. House of Representatives passed a bill that prohibits state and local govern- ments from enacting their own man- datory GMO labeling laws but allows creation of a USDA-certi¿ ed voluntary national standard. The bill, H.R. 1599, passed with bi-partisan support, 275- 150, but faces an uncertain reception in the Senate. See BIRDS, Page 7A See GMO, Page 7A Joshua Bessex/The Daily Astorian Portland State University research assistant Dalin D’Alessandro packs up samples after perfor ing a necropsy on a s ea l ion corpse. Tillamook to the L ong B each, Wash., P eninsula and along the Columbia River to just upriver from Port- land . Boothe, administrative assistant at the Seaside Aquarium, volunteers for the network as well. Most often, they deal with pinnipeds. A collaboration The stranding network is a collaboration be- tween volunteers who study marine mammal stranding events, report relevant ¿ ndings to a national database, protect stranded marine mam- mals from harassment, assist live animals caught in debris or ¿ shing gear and conduct educational outreach about marine mammals. Marine mammals are federally protected un- der the Marine Mammal Protection Act, so indi- viduals must be certi¿ ed to handle live or dead animals. Most of the time, they aren’t directly involved in rescues like the young fur seal’s liberation. The bread and butter of their work involves necrop- sies to gather data and public outreach to protect stranded animals. One of the smelliest jobs Chandler has come up against was a dead ¿ n whale that wound up in Portland. “Dr. Duffield called me and asked me how I got things done because no one up there was cooperating, so I foolishly told her that if it was here, I could deal with it because I know all these people here that can help me,” Chan- dler said. “She got an ocean-going tugboat and towed it down here. Then I had to deal with it.” How does a 0-foot ¿ n whale wind up so far upriver? “It had been caught on the bow of a car haul- er,” Chandler said. “The ship hit this whale out in the ocean — and the whale had been dead a long time before that, it just got wedged under there — so it went all the way up the Columbia, push- ing this whale, and as soon as the ship stopped the forward momentum stopped and the whale popped up.” See INVESTIGATION, Page 10A Why are North Coast beach birds dying? Warmer waters, toxic algae may be among factors Grucella, Santarsiere and fellow beachgoers came to the aid of the dying bird, constructing a plat- form made of tennis shoes and plastic dog waste bags for the injured animal. A lifeguard provided a blan- ket and box for transport before Cannon Beach po- lice delivered the bird to wildlife rehabilitators for care. By DANI PALMER EO Media Group CANNON BEACH — Judi Grucella and her friend Jane Santarsiere visit Cannon Beach every year. Dead birds spread out on the beach were an unexpected sight. Wendy McLaughlin of Astoria also “noticed there were a lot of dead birds,” at least 20 around Haystack Rock, as she and her hus- band, Tracy, walked along the beach. “I thought it was weird,” she said. Wendy McLaughlin/Submitted Photo Cannon Beach visitors Judy Grucella, Jane Santarsiere and Linda Petchell worked together to save a seabird by making a platform out of tennis shoes and dog waste bags to carry it to a lifeguard station on Thursday . Grucella, a Bend resi- dent, noted they saw ¿ ve dead birds in their short walk Thursday and encoun- tered one so weak it could barely lift its head. “We went to the lifeguard sta- tion and said, ‘Hey, there’s a bird alive and still strug- gling.’” Not the norm