One last ride on the trolley Gull girls soar to win NORTH COAST • 3A SPORTS • 7A 143rd YEAR, No. 114 MONDAY, DECEMBER 7, 2015 ONE DOLLAR Blaze destroys three Seaside homes By R.J. MARX The Daily Astorian SEASIDE — In the aftermath of a Sunday morning bla]e on 11th Avenue, ¿re investiga- tors from throughout the county are meeting this morning to determine a cause, Seaside Division Chief Chris Dugan said. “It’s ¿re marshal, chiefs and of¿cials from throughout the county,” Dugan said. “It’s such a large ¿re, there will be a lot of work as far as doing the investigation.” The American Red Cross Cascades Region provided temporary lodging and assistance for 14 adults and two children affected by the ¿re. Fast-moving blaze Fire departments and emergency person- nel from Seaside, Cannon Beach, Gearhart, Astoria and Hamlet responded to the alarm Sunday morning at 2:33 a.m. Ultimately more than 50 ¿re¿ghters responded to the fast-moving ¿re which destroyed three homes and badly damaged a fourth. Three other homes nearby had minor Firefighters respond to a blaze in Seaside that destroyed three homes. David Doney For The Daily Astorian See BLAZE, Page 10A Plenty of parks, not enough time Seaside wants room to grow City planners look at several sites to expand By KATHERINE LACAZE EO Media Group Joshua Bessex/The Daily Astorian People walk along the playground of Alderbrook Park during a parks tour Saturday morning. The tour covered several locations from the Alderbrook Lagoon to the Ocean View Cemetery in Warrenton. Parks and rec director leads tour of Astoria’s 63 parks, sites By ERICK BENGEL The Daily Astorian T SEASIDE — By state law, Seaside’s urban boundaries are re- quired to expand to accommodate a growing population. But what will growth look like in 20 years? Rather than projecting two de- cades ahead, the Planning Com- mission is considering a more con- servative approach expansion by looking at a 14-year projection for the city’s future land needs. This approach would allow the city’s potential expansion to have less of an impact on the South Wa- hanna Road area, whose residents comprise a majority of the opposi- tion to the project. For a 14-year land-needs analy- sis, the city needs to apply to bring an additional 141 acres into the urban growth boundary, consul- tant Don Hanson of Otak, told the commission last week. To satisfy the city’s projected population in 20 years, an analysis showed about 208 acres. “We can back our 20-year de- mand down to where it would be a 14-year demand and go with that,” City Planner Kevin Cupples said. This would show the state that the city is considering public input and testimony, he said. “And then we can re-evaluate that seven years down the line, or 10 years down the line.” he Astoria Parks and Recreation Depart- ment maintains 63 sites in the community — parks, trails, restrooms, facilities and cemeteries — but dedicates only three full-time employees to the task. Citywide and beyond, the department’s maintenance crew mows the lawns, whacks the weeds, trims the trees, rakes the leaves, clears the litter, cleans the bathrooms, inspects the playgrounds, empties the garbage cans, removes the vagrant camps, replaces the facility equip- ment, keeps the community halls habitable and performs 150 cemetery burials a year. “It’s quite an undertaking,” Angela Cosby, parks and recreation director, said. Joshua Bessex/The Daily Astorian Since the commission started considering the expansion, mem- bers focused on the Southeast Hills site, to the south and east of Spruce Drive and Wahanna Road. They See PARKS, Page 5A Pam Pearce, manager at the Astoria Aquatic Center, talks during a tour of the center Satur- day morning. The center was the first many stops on the parks tour. See SEASIDE, Page 10A Dispersing the impact Artist e[plores writing as he ¿nds his inner child From a family of teachers, out pops an artist C Dani Palmer/EO Media Group Bill Steidel poses with his new children’s book, “Whose Move,” at his gallery in Cannon Beach. ANNON BEACH — The bell overhead chimes as a woman in a yellow raincoat steps inside Steidel’s Art, a smile on her face as she tells her friend “You have to see this. I’ve bought some of his pieces. I love them.” Bill Steidel, 88, is well- known for his art, but that isn’t all he does. Culminating a de- cades-long work in progress, Steidel released his ¿rst pub- lished children’s book this fall titled “Whose Move.” The book is a story about a boy and dragon, accompanied and enhanced by Steidel’s il- lustrations. “The stories have been around for years and years,” he said. Steidel has drawn since he was in elementary school. His third-grade teacher would let him draw in class, where he’d focus on fairy tale themes. A junior high teacher encouraged him to enter contests. He won consecutive years and went on to encourage him to go to col- lege for art, which he did at the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn. His parents were acade- micians. Many in his family, including siblings, became ed- ucators. “All of a sudden out pops a child that doesn’t want to do anything but draw pictures,” he said. “They told me they didn’t know what to do with me.” But they “backed me up” when he chose a different path. After college, he illustrat- ed his ¿rst book with Simon and Schuster. Eventually, with “itchy feet,” he ended up See STEIDEL, Page 10A