Page 12A SEASIDESIGNAL.COM • COMPLIMENTARY COPY OUR 110th YEAR • October 28, 2016 Find your Halloween haunt Spooky events from Gearhart to Cannon Beach By Lyra Fontaine EO Media Group ‘Tis the season of cozy sweaters, crisp weather and Hal- loween festivities. Events from Gearhart to Cannon Beach offer frightful fun on the spookiest weekend of the year. With live entertainment, costume contests, pumpkin deco- rating and even selfi e sticks, there are many ways to get in the Halloween spirit this year. Family-friendly fun in Seaside, Gearhart Halloween happenings abound in Seaside. On Friday, Oct. 28, join a pumpkin decorating contest at Flash From the Past in the Carousel Mall from 3 to 5 p.m. Winning entries will be displayed at Pig ’N Pancake. Downtown Seaside businesses offer face painting, col- oring, airbrush tattoos, crafts and an aquatic touch tank starting at 10 a.m. on Saturday, Oct. 29. Beach Books offers Halloween story time at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. The celebration continue with a free, all-ages Halloween Dance Party at McMenamins Sand Trap Pub in Gearhart. Live music by the Bond Street Blues Band plays from 7 to 10 p.m. On Monday, Oct. 31, families can trick-or-treat at downtown Seaside businesses and participate in the kids’ costume contest at Flash From the Past, both from 2 to 5 p.m. Boos and brews COURTESY SEPRD Thor Bailey gets into the Halloween spirit at the Sunset Empire Park and Recreation Department Thriller and Fall Fun Fest on Oct. 25. The event helped bring in almost 200 pounds of food for the South County Community Food Bank. The Seaside Elks Lodge “Boos, Blues and Brews” event on Friday, Oct. 29 will have a costume party, comedian and juggler, surprise entertainment, and live music from the Ted Vaughn Blues Band. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. See Halloween, Page 9A Seaside cautiously OKs School blueprints: Bond pot production sites fi rst, design to follow Astoria warehouse fi re hits home Architects wait for result of November vote By R.J. Marx Seaside Signal PAID PERMIT NO. 97 ASTORIA, OR PRSRT STD US POSTAGE A warehouse fi re in Astoria at a marijuana processing site this week left an impression in Seaside. At Monday’s City Council meeting, councilors expressed concern that recreation- al growing and processing facilities would be properly monitored for safety, including ex- tracts, oils and ether. “I do have a concern in light of what hap- pened in Astoria this week,” Councilor Tita Montero said prior to a vote amending adminis- trative rules for the production, wholesaling and processing of recreational marijuana. The licensing of medical marijuana produc- tion facilities is already included in city code. But when Seaside’s City Council voted to allow licensing of recreational marijuana retail shops a year ago, they left out three aspects of the Ore- gon Liquor Control Commission administrative rules: production, wholesale and processing. Without an amendment to include recre- ational processing and production, City Planner Kevin Cupples said, Seaside would be ineligi- By R.J. Marx Seaside Signal DANNY MILLER/EO MEDIA GROUP Fire and police responded to a blaze at inside marijuana-extraction company Higher Level Concentrates on the corner of Industry and Portway streets in Astoria. ble for a share in state marijuana tax revenues, and could preclude the city from levying a 3 percent tax on its sale. Before voting, councilors asked what over- sight the city would have over production fa- cilities to prevent incidents like the explosion at High Level Concentrates on Astoria’s west end, which injured three and shut down nearby businesses. See Pot, Page 9A As Election Day nears, one man outside of the Seaside School District will be carefully watching the $99.7 million bond vote. The architect for the proposed Seaside School District K-12 campus is keeping a close eye on the vote which will decide the project’s fate. If voters approve the 30-year bond, Broad- way Middle School and Seaside High School would phase out classes in their current struc- tures and move to the new campus adjacent to Seaside Heights Elementary School. Gearhart Elementary School would also close and re- locate at an annex to the Heights school. “The plan is once the bond passes to get started on the design of the project,” Steve Olson of Dull, Olson & Weekes said in early October. The major difference between this year’s plan and that of 2013, which his fi rm also de- signed, is maintaining Seaside Heights Ele- mentary School, Olson said. “The original plan was to build a new elementary school rather than reusing the existing building.” So far, his team has worked with the district in coming up with enough preliminary infor- mation to determine the overall Steve Olson size of the project. “The drawing is a test fi t, how the land might fi t on the site,” Olson said. “We don’t have a fl oor-plan layout how the school would actually look inside. That would all be determined after the bond passes.” Drawings illustrate the existing Seaside Heights Elementary School, which would be enhanced with a classroom addition. New buildings to the south include a high school, middle school, gymnasium and cafeteria. Main entryways for the middle and high schools are shown, as well as roadways, bus drop-off areas, parking and athletic fi elds. Salmon, steep slopes The 80-acre site was a gift earlier this year from Weyerhaeuser Co. The upper portion of See Architects, Page 7A An ‘Election’ where everyone is the winner Performances come at timely moment By Katherine Lacaze For Seaside Signal In the middle of a conten- tious election cycle, a group of Seaside High School students are exploring this keystone of America’s democracy through a satirical lens with their produc- tion of “The Election,” aimed at providing the community some much needed comedic relief. “You’ll laugh, you’ll cringe, you’ll laugh some more,” se- nior Bekah Cox said. “It should be fun for everyone and they will be able to relate to it on some level.” In the play, which opens Nov. 4, Cox’s character, Chris- ty Martin, is a preppy, polished know-it-all who decides to run for student body president against Mark Davenport, a completely unprepared fellow student who only wanted to pad his resume for college ap- plications and expected an un- contested victory. Their con- tentious race is sparked by the fi ctional school’s student body president resigning in disgrace, à la Richard Nixon. Several of the play’s themes are applica- ble to the real world of politics at every level of government. Cox, a veteran of the high school’s drama program, de- scribed her character as “al- most Hillary Clinton, but not quite,” adding her fellow cast mates often joked she would See ‘Election’, Page 10A KATHERINE LACAZE/FOR SEASIDE SIGNAL The cast and crew for Seaside High School’s fall play “The Election” are preparing to open Nov. 4.