SEASIDESIGNAL.COM • COMPLIMENTARY COPY OUR 109th YEAR • January 9, 2015 SEEDS OF CHANGE JOSHUA BESSEX PHOTO Dorothy Wing listens via video link during her arraignment in Clatsop County Circuit Court Jan. 2. Wing, the mother of the 2-year-old girl who died in Seaside Dec. 20, is facing charges of murder by abuse, manslaughter and criminal mistreatment. Mother, friend plead not guilty to murder More charges have been fi led in the death of Evangelina Wing, 2 By Kyle Spurr KATHERINE LACAZE PHOTO Karla Gann, managing director of the South County Community Food Bank, prepares volunteer Chuck Carlson for his weekly bread run to Safeway for the food pantry. Except for an electrical inspection and a little more organiz- ing, the food bank was on the verge of being operational last week. The opening date was scheduled for Jan. 7. EO Media Group A Seaside mother and her live-in boyfriend plead- ed not guilty Jan. 2 to charges accusing the couple of murdering the woman’s 2-year-old daughter at their home Dec. 20. Dorothy Ann Wing, 24, and Randy Lee Roden, 26, appeared via video link from Clatsop County Jail for an arraignment in Clat- sop County Circuit Court. See Murder, Page 6A Food pantry opens its new permanent site By Katherine Lacaze Seaside Signal The city of Seaside plans to harvest 50 to 60 acres of timber from its property in the watershed of the Neca- nicum River’s south fork in order to buy more watershed property. JOSHUA BESSEX PHOTO Conor Huseby, Randy Lee Roden’s defense attorney, listens during Roden’s ar- raignment in Clatsop County Circuit Court Jan. 2. “We have been looking around at opportunities to increase our ownership of the watershed,” said Seaside Public Works Director Neal Wallace. “To be quite frank, there is only one way to raise additional funds to purchase land, and that is through the (city’s Watershed Enhance- ment Fund). ... We feel this is a good place to start.” See Timber, Page 7A KATHERINE LACAZE PHOTO PAID PERMIT NO. 97 ASTORIA, OR The city of Seaside plans to harvest timber from about 50 to 60 acres of timber from its property in the watershed for the Necani- cum River’s south fork. The city is contracting with consulting for- ester Mark Dreyer who will contract with a logging company to clear cut nearly 50 acres in one area, the edge of which is pictured above, and about 10 acres in another area. The city selected the two areas because they’re removed from the main body of the Necanicum River and the project should clean up a large bound- ary edge while requiring virtually no major road building. PRSRT STD US POSTAGE T Seaside Signal City plans to harvest timber in watershed Goal is to accumulate more watershed property Crews of volunteers spent the past several weeks moving equip- ment and food from the pantry’s he South County Com- temporary location, at the former munity Food Bank her- Coastal Research & Maintenance alded the new year with building, to the new, 2,100-square- a transition that marks foot building north of the Seaside both an end and a be- School District’s bus barn. RM JLQQLQJ IRU WKH 6HDVLGH QRQSUR¿W Russell Construction completed organization. ¿QDO WRXFKHV RQ WKH EXLOGLQJ7KH It’s the end of a years’-long pantry passed a plumbing inspec- search for a permanent site for the tion last week. food pantry and the beginning of an The pantry closed its temporary era in the pantry’s new building. site, which the organization rented For Managing Director Kar- for several months from Bank of OD *DQQ UHDFKLQJ WKLV ¿QLVK OLQH WKH3DFL¿FDWWKHHQGRI'HFHPEHU is a relief, especially after it kept Volunteers distributed food from a creeping farther away for several truck outside the new building in months. the interim before obtaining an oc- “It’s been stressful for me,” she cupancy permit. said. The stress came from having to Long time coming The food bank’s board of di- juggle patrons’ needs at the food bank’s temporary site and still rectors discussed the need for a oversee the start-up at the new site. new building for several years and “This time it feels good, because started seriously pursuing the idea we know we don’t have to do this more than two years ago. When the all again for a very long time,” she property where the previous food pantry stood was sold, the pantry said. Pending a successful electri- ERDUG ZDV IRUFHG WR ¿QG DQ DOWHU cal inspection Tuesday, the food native. The Seaside School District bank’s new permanent site at 2041 donated two portable classrooms N. Roosevelt Drive was scheduled from the former Cannon Beach El- ementary School. to open this week. By Katherine Lacaze With about $65,000 in hand, the board in June launched its operational and capital fundrais- ing campaign, themed “Imagine a Community Without Hunger.” The organization received several donations and grants. Community organizations, including the Ameri- can Legion Post 99 and the Seaside Rotary Club, held fundraisers ben- H¿WLQJ WKH IRRG SDQWU\ %XVLQHVV es and individuals donated about $100,000 in in-kind services. “It goes on and on and on as far as how people have come through,” said board member Mary Blake. The food pantry exceeded its goal, raising about $210,000, in addition to the initial $65,000 and in-kind donations. Blake said the board was on budget for the rough- ly $350,000 project, which includ- HG EX\LQJ WKH ODQG UHWUR¿WWLQJ the portable buildings and buying some new equipment. An open house will be held soon to recog- nize contributors. Resuming operations Last year, the pantry distributed thousands of pounds of food to an average of 470 families a month. See Pantry, Page 8A South County Communi- ty Food Bank volunteer Adrienne Panzer sorts through bottles of sham- poo, soap and mouth wash to stock the shelves at the food pantry’s new location on North Roos- evelt Drive north of the Seaside School District bus barn. Panzer is one of numerous volunteers who have worked during the past few weeks to get the food bank’s new site operational by Jan. 7. KATHERINE LACAZE PHOTO Cub Scouts honor deceased veterans with boughs Local pack places swags at headstones in cemetery By Katherine Lacaze Seaside Signal Seaside’s local Cub Scouts made sure veterans weren’t overlooked this holiday season by placing handmade hemlock swags at the headstone of each veteran buried in the Ever- green Cemetery. About a dozen mem- bers of Pack 540 craft- ed the simple but elegant swags during their last den meeting and at the group’s Christmas party in mid-De- cember. Immediately after the party, Scouts and their families went to the ceme- tery, south of Seaside east of U.S. Highway 101, to place the decorations. “We want the boys to learn good citizenship, and part of that is honoring the people that have come be- fore them and been good citizens, and certainly some of them have paid a lot higher price than others,” said Pack 540 Committee Chairwoman Laurie Kautz. Using a map provided by Stan Gandy, scoutmaster for Troop 642 and a mem- ber of Seaside’s American Legion Post 99, the boys and their families identi- ¿HGWKHJUDYHVRIDERXW veterans buried in the cem- etery. Kautz said it is typical for the Cub and Boy Scouts WR SODFH ÀDJV DW WKH YHWHU ans’ headstones for Memo- rial Day. She decided to do something similar for the Local Cub Scouts, from left, Hunter Kautz, Julian Bannon and Angel Bannon help place swags on the head- stones of veterans buried in Seaside’s Evergreen Cem- etery. Pack 540 members handmade the swags during their den meeting and holi- day party in December and then went to the cemetery with their families to place them on the headstones. SUBMITTED BY LAURIE KAUTZ holidays. While wreaths are more common for veterans’ gravesites, Kautz opted for a simpler variation so the ¿UVW WKURXJK ¿IWKJUDGH Cub Scouts could to the project with little help from the adult leaders. See Scouts, Page 3A