SEASIDESIGNAL.COM • COMPLIMENTARY COPY OUR 109th YEAR • July 10, 2015 Seaside celebrates FOURTH OF JULY in style — and partially in the dark PHOTO BY KATHERINE LACAZE Fireworks illuminate the sky above an otherwise dark Seaside during the 2015 Fourth of July fi reworks show. Olivia and Lukas Esnard having fun at the Gearhart Independence Day parade. laday Drive, Zest on BroadZay, north on Co- lumbia Street and ended on Necanicum Drive, near the Seaside Museum. The parade, Zhich Zas organi]ed by a vol- unteer group led by Gini Dideum, included 63 entries. Among the entries Zere the Seaside Po- lice Department, Seaside Fire & Rescue, Medix Ambulance Service, Providence Seaside Hospi- tal, Avamere at Seaside, Su]anne Elise and oth- er agencies and organi]ations. Three drum and bugle corps, including the Portland-based Ore- gon Crusaders, Zere spaced among the entries and provided a soundtrack of patriotic music. Businesses and individuals of all ages took part in the parade, vehicles or À oats decked out Zith American À ags, stars and stripes or other red, Zhite and blue displays to celebrate the spirit of Independence Day. Overall, everything Zent ¿ ne in terms of preparing for and running the parade, Dideum said, adding “Ze can alZays use some help.” “We learned some things this year, some things Ze can change and Ze can Zork on im- proving on,” Dideum said. Using that informa- tion, the group can “go ahead for next year and see Zhat develops.” JEFF TER HAR PHOTO See Fourth, Page 3A By Katherine Lacaze Seaside Signal T he 2015 Fourth of July celebration for Seaside brought Zith it the tradition- al festivities ² a Zell-attended parade, old-fashioned social and hordes of people — as Zell as a feZ differences — such as a spectac- ular ¿ reZorks shoZ Zithout the accompanying soundtrack and a large poZer outage. During the mid-morning hours, spectators started lining the streets of doZntoZn Seaside in anticipation for the annual parade, Zhich traveled from Necanicum Drive, south on Hol- Power outage darkens Fourth of July celebration By Katherine Lacaze Seaside Signal As the renoZned Seaside Fourth of July ¿ re- Zorks shoZ crescendoed to its ¿ nale and then died out, the commencement also marked the end of a ¿ ve-hour poZer outage that affected the en- tire city and produced negative effects for some local businesses, particularly restaurants. “It Zas a disaster, to put it simply,” said Doug Wiese, co-oZner of Dooger’s Seafood and Grille. After shutting doZn the restaurant about 5 p.m., Wiese kept on a creZ for about tZo hours, hoping the poZer Zould come back. With the early closure, thousands of dollars of income Zere lost and people Zeren’t able to Zork. Wiese estimates the restaurant lost upZards of $10,000. The total economic impact has yet to be cal- culated — some businesses Zere affected more than others. See Outage, Page 3A Gearhart councilors seek to replace city’s µGecrepit’ ¿ re station By R.J. Marx Seaside Signal PAID PERMIT NO. 97 ASTORIA, OR PRSRT STD US POSTAGE Despite the failure of a $3.75 million bond in 2006 to build a neZ ¿ re station, the Gearhart City Council took fresh steps toZard the old station’s replacement. At the Wednesday, July 1 meeting, councilors said they hope to involve a Zid- er range of voices in the discussion from the start. “I’m Zondering if it should be a broader base to begin Zith,” City Councilor Sue Lorain said. “I think go big, Zith lots of input, then go from there.” In March, replacing or renovating the ¿ re station Zas enumerated as the council’s top 2015 goal. Other goals included in- vestigating system devel- opment charges, revamping the city Zebsite and updat- ing the city’s comprehen- sive plan. When the community voted in 2006 on a $3.75 million general obligation bond measure to address the problem, the proposal included plans for a high- end building to house the police department, City Hall and ¿ re station. “Several years ago there Zas a bond issue put togeth- er by the Fire Department Zith no citi]en input at all,” City Manager Chad SZeet said. “To a lot of people it seemed to be extremely ex- pensive Zith a lot of bells and Zhistles that may not have been necessary.” SZeet is a 17-year Gear- hart ¿ re¿ ghter and current- ly serves as a lieutenant Transportation district eyeing new service options, solutions for future Agency hopes to eventually build transit hub in Seaside By Katherine Lacaze Seaside Signal R.J. MARX PHOTO Members of the Gearhart City Council are seeking a replacement for the city’s fi rehouse. Zith the department. “The decrepit building is the No. 1 concern,” he said. “HoZ do Ze take care of the com- munity in the event of a ca- lamity Zhen a building falls on top of our ¿ re trucks" It’s naturally an emergency center, but it’s Zoefully in- adequate for that.” The Sunset Empire Transportation District’s in- formation kiosk in Seaside, Zhich opened May , may be a prelude to more efforts by the public transit agency to increase its presence and services in the city. The kiosk is a good place for people to get tran- sit information, maps or tickets and passes, but in recent years, the district has recogni]ed the need for a bigger transportation facili- ty in Seaside, said Jeff Ha- ]en, the district’s executive director. A feZ years ago, the district received a match- ing grant from the Oregon Department of Transpor- tation’s ConnectOregon program to build a facility in Seaside, but Zhen the agency couldn’t muster the necessary matching funds, it had to decline the grant and temporarily abandon the project. At that time, the project involved a part- A Seaside transit center ‘is something I am going to keep my eye on.’ Jeff Hazen, Sunset Empire Transportation District executive director See Station, Page 9A nership Zith a daycare and the South County Commu- nity Food Bank, Zhich has since moved. More recent- ly, the district has consid- ered other funding options to build a Seaside transit center but nothing has ma- teriali]ed yet, and the proj- ect is entirely dependent on funding, Ha]en said. “It’s something I am go- ing to keep my eye on,” he said. As opposed to the small Seaside customer service kiosk, located at the Sea- side Factory Outlet Center on North Roosevelt Drive, the facility Zould be a one- stop transit hub that Zould have a lobby, restrooms and more Zaiting areas, as Zell as parking options for peo- ple taking longer trips. Additionally, Ha]en said, the district alZays is See SETD, Page 6A Conservancy brings seed bank violets closer to home Flowers to be used in prairie habitat restoration project By Katherine Lacaze Seaside Signal The North Coast Land Conservancy recently re- ceived a large delivery at its Circle Creek Habitat Reserve: About 16,000 early blue vio- let plants, tucked safely in beds until the À oZers are ready to be planted in the fall. 2n -une 0, 6teZardship Director Melissa Reich and the conservancy’s summer steZardship creZ guided the violets’ journey from a nurs- ery in Tillamook to the Circle Creek property, Zhere they Zill stay for the time being. Come fall, the violets, Zhich Zere groZn using seeds prop- agated from the seeds of na- tive Clatsop County plants, Zill be taken to their perma- nent homes on the Clatsop Plains and Long Beach Pen- insula. “The plants have had a long journey, and they have a long journey ahead of them,” Reich said. The journey started Zhen the conservancy gathered seeds from À oZers groZing on its salt spray meadoZ prop- erties on the Clatsop Plains. Those seeds Zere sent to the Natural Resources Conserva- tion Service’s Plant Materials Center in Corvallis, Zhere they Zere planted to make a full bed of À oZers. 2nce the À oZers had matured, the center gathered a bag of their seeds and sent them to the conservancy as part of a pro- cess knoZn as seed banking, land conservancy Executive Director Katie Voelke said. In January 2014, staff and volunteers planted about 16,000 seeds into individual containers at the NorthZest Oregon Restoration Partner- ship’s native plant nursery in Tillamook. Since the coast seeds Zere groZn in the val- ley, the group Zanted to re- adapt them to the coastal cli- mate. More than a year later, the conservancy Zent back to collect thousands of burgeon- ing shoots. “There are a feZ genera- tions involved in these vio- lets,” Voelke said of the tiny plants noZ soaking up sun- shine and rain at Circle Creek. It Zas important, she said, KATHERINE LACAZE PHOTO On June 30, the North Coast Land Conservancy brought nu- merous beds of early blue violets to the organization’s Circle Creek property, just south of Seaside. to maintain the À oZers’ coast genetics for the sake of the project. In the fall, the conservancy Zill reach out to volunteers to plant the À oZers at its prop- erty on the Long Beach Pen- insula and the Clatsop Plains. See Violets, Page 11A