8A KMUN show discusses Port petition By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian The Committee to Restore, Revitalize and Reorganize the Port of Astoria, which - has starting collecting signatures. event today, with former Port Commis- sioners Ric Gerttula, Jack Bland and Jim Bergeron appearing on KMUN Coast Community Radio on the “Fridays with Jim” program to talk with host Jim Wilkins about the measure. “Unfortunately, for many years the expectation has been that bringing on a new executive director will somehow reform a dysfunctional Board of Com- missioners,” read a question-and-an- swer document written by members of the committee. “Obviously this has not worked. This is not the role of an exec- utive director and has resulted in several each time a manager tries to redirect the commission to follow good governance practices and strategic plans. “Only by changing who has over- sight of the commission can we expect to change this culture of micro- and self-serving management.” The initiative petition on the Secretary - ESTAR asks: “Shall the Port of Astoria restore, revitalize and reorganize into a locally coordinated, governor appointed Board of Commissioners?” - ber on ORESTAR is 17199. It must gather signatures equal to 15 percent the number of Clatsop County voters who voted for governor in 2010, about 2,200. The committee must submit its signa- to the May 19 election, giving them until around Feb. 19. If there’s a ballot measure A “yes” vote, says the ballot measure summary, changes the name of the Port of Astoria to the Port of Clatsop County, and changes the selection of the Port’s commissioners from election by Clat- sop County voters to appointment by the governor. A “no” vote retains the present form of elected government. If the initiative petition becomes a ballot measure in May or in subsequent elections and is passed by voters, the - ed by the governor from a list of names submitted by each of the city councils in Astoria, Warrenton, Gearhart, Seaside, Cannon Beach, along with the Clatsop County Board of Commissioners. Other raise money, and that personal interests often trump the needs of the entire tax- payer district of Clatsop County. - didates from the list of recommended names — a maximum of two from each city council and from the county com- mission — to serve four-year terms, the terms initially being staggered. Existing Port commissioners would serve out the remainder of their terms and could apply for reappointment. The governor would also have the power to remove a Port commissioner for malfeasance. All other Port district authority, in- cluding existing bonding authority, would remain the same. Arguments for, against candidates would be performed by no Former Port commissioners and South County mayors have voiced their displeasure with the Port’s management in letters to the editor, while existing Port commissioners and attendees at Port meetings have criticized the committee’s efforts to make representatives appoint- ed by the governor rather than elected by voters. The ports of Portland and Coos Bay are the other two state-appointed commissions in Oregon. The Clatsop County Democrats over- whelmingly passed their own two reso- lutions in November, one opposing the idea of making Port commissioners ap- committee contends that the current elec- toral process is a popularity contest based on name recognition and the ability to commissioner positions from county- wide to match county commissioner districts. In its question-and-answer sheet, the committee said that the nonpartisan Price: Renovation of libray is another sensitive policy issue Continued from Page 1A sent of the City Council. LaMear has said that the council could discuss the mat- ter as part of a conversation on developing council rules. A work session on new council rules has been scheduled after the council meeting Tuesday. Price sees some urgency. “The thing is, there are a lot of appointments available right now,” she said. “And standard of service that we within our budgetary and, I guess, geographical con- straints?” For a new councilor who has made transparency a pri- ority, the drunken-driving is- sue may present some thorns. While, legally, Price does on the DUII issue, a few critics have implied she faces at least - cause of her husband’s advo- cacy, a notion Price dismisses. Price said she has had a longtime interest in public safe- ty and justice. She and Marquis board talking about the mix of race, justice and politics sur- rounding former football star O.J. Simpson’s murder trial. “I just don’t think of it as a There’s zilch.” Library location Another sensitive policy issue before the City Council is the renovation of the library. LaMear, a former librarian, has supported an expansion of the library into the vacant, pri- JOSHUA BESSEX — The Daily Astorian Cindy Price has served several roles at KMUN including on the board of directors and interim general manager in 2001. Price now volunteers as a radio host about once a month hosting Wednesday Afternoon Music. vately owned Waldorf Hotel, also known as the Merwyn. Price said she has told the mayor that she needs more de- tail about the plan. “My basic position is: not enough infor- mation,” she said. “I really do just need more information.” hear more about the structural stability of the Waldorf Hotel, see architectural renderings of the library expansion, and view an analysis of potentially increasing the library’s budget. Price said she might enter- tain other ideas, such as the one- time talk of a land swap with the American Legion to relocate the library to Heritage Square. “I don’t want another hole in the ground,” Price said, cleanup at the former Safe- way site at Heritage Square. “So if the Merwyn is going to be demolished or torn down at any point, I would really prefer that not be done until rebuilding (of the library) is going to start immediately.” Making appointments Price, like Councilor Drew Herzig, believes mayoral ap- pointments to the city’s boards and commissions should be subject to the advice and con- those things right now, with three-to-four year terms, it’s kind of equivalent to stacking the Supreme Court. “So I trust that she will listen to us, take our sugges- tions, and work it that way.” A ‘salonical’? Doug Thompson, a former councilor who used to repre- sent Ward 3, appreciated that Price was holding the “salon- icals” to get public feedback. “She’s a smart person,” he said. “And I think she’s going about it in a very deliberate fashion. And that’s all you can expect. She’s a volunteer.” So exactly what is a “salo- nical”? “It just means political sa- lon,” Price said. “And I liked the idea more than ‘meet and greet,’ which always sounds to me more like, I don’t know, meat and potatoes or some- thing.” Field: Bleachers will stay standing Continued from Page 1A accidentally left out of the original transfer. The school board also needed to transfer the bus barn property adjacent The bill of sale doc- uments that the proper- ty now belongs to CMH. Hoppes said the district, which has already handed over the keys, has to clear all its remaining belong- ings by Feb. 13 or March 2 —mostly clothes, white- boards, tires and other odds and ends — and still has to hand over construc- THE DAILY ASTORIAN • FRIDAY, JANUARY 16, 2015 Schools: Crafting the budget is like playing Whac-A-Mole Continued from Page 1A Attendees included board members and super- intendents from Astoria, Knappa, Warrenton and Clatsop Community Col- lege; representatives from the Northwest Regional Education Service District (NWRESD); Head Start and other youth programs; and parents. “We have a desire to dream big,” said Super- intendent Mark Jeffery of the Warrenton-Hammond School District, adding that $7.875 billion over the 2015-17 biennium for edu- cation is the benchmark to help schools in Oregon ex- pand and invest. The 2013-15 biennium included $6.65 billion for the state school fund, 39.7 percent of the state budget and a 14.6 percent increase from the previous bienni- um. However, it was a far cry from the 2003-05 bien- nium, when the state school fund equaled 44.8 percent of the budget. “We would like to see that upward trend contin- ue,” said Jeffery about last biennium’s increase in ed- ucational funding, pointing out some stark realities about Oregon’s priorities: It spends 88 percent of the national average per pupil on K-12 education, ranks 46th in state expenditures on K-12 as a percentage of state taxable resources and is 49th in student-to-teach- er ratio, with six more stu- dents per teacher than the national average. Increases felt, needed Astoria School Board Chairman Martin Dursse said that from 2008 to 2012, his district cut $2 million from the budget. The addi- tional money the last two years helped decrease class sizes, add instructional days for students and purchase new technology, he added. But to make future invest- ments, such as aligning its curriculum with the new Common Core State Stan- dards and promoting career and technical education, it needs money to invest. Jeff Leo, who serves as superintendent and princi- pal of the middle and high schools in Knappa, said his district cut more than $743,000 over the same period in a much small- er district, including the equivalent of 10 full-time employees. To keep its class offerings, it has had to blend multiple grades together and freeze staff years. To update its curricu- lum, it has had to ask for $30,000 a year from the Knappa Schools Founda- tion for materials. “But we can only do that for so long.” Leo and Jeffery both said that $7.5 billion for the 2015-17 biennium would help. But that doesn’t take into consideration the de- ferred maintenance dis- tricts have put off to save money over the years, said Jeffery. “Really, none of us are operating on sustainable budgets,” he said. “You things get frightening.” Competing needs The governor’s pro- posed 2015-17 budget, released last month, in- cluded $6.914 billion for education, including $240 million for the statewide introduction of full-day kindergarten and a focus on early learning and helping third grade. School lead- ers have said that amount could lead to budget, staff and program cuts. The budget from the chairmen of the Oregon House and Senate, re- leased earlier this week, upped the ante to $7.24 billion including full-day kindergarten — an im- provement, said Jeffery, but still not enough. “This is going to be a Sen. Johnson, later echoed by Rep. Boone. “We are zero sum in terms of reve- nue.” Crafting the budget is like playing Whac-A-Mole, added Johnson, with com- peting needs for money constantly popping up and taking away from anoth- er. The governor’s budget, she added, focuses on pre- kindergarten to third grade to the relative exclusion of other groups, up to commu- nity colleges. “It is the May revenue forecast that is the north budget is put together,” said Johnson, adding that the legislators will almost cer- tainly be done by July. The legislators told the audience to keep engaged through interest groups such as the Confederation of School Administrators, Oregon Community Col- leges Association and the NWRESD. The Oregon Legislative Information System, they said, provides a way to keep up-to-date on legisla- tive developments. OLIS can be found at http://bit. ly/15d7jee tion drawings for the site. Bleachers stay up CMH will initially use the - mer John Warren Field for parking, construction begin- ning in the spring. The bleachers of John War- ren Field, said Hoppes, will also stay standing, for when they have events such as con- certs. John Warren Field was eyed in 2011 as a possible lo- cation of the Reba McEntire concert for Astoria’s bicen- tennial celebration — with a turnout of around 6,000, it was one of the largest concerts in EDWARD STRATTON — The Daily Astorian The Astoria School Board voted Wednesday night to final- ize a bill of sale to Columbia Memorial Hospital on the John Warren Field and adjacent bus barn and practice field. county history. The idea was dropped because the school board forbade alcohol sales on school property. JOSHUA BESSEX — The Daily Astorian Rep. Deborah Boone, left, and Sen. Betsy Johnson listen to community concerns during the legislative forum at the Capt. Robert Gray School Thursday. Mater: There is a precedent for the removal of commission members Continued from Page 1A Mater leads an engineering - tion by Kitzhaber to the com- mission, which oversees the Oregon Department of Trans- the Oregon Senate in May. Although commission mem- is precedent for their remov- al. When Neil Goldschmidt became governor in 1987, he members to resign — which replacements who were con- the same factors that led to her opposition last summer remain today. “There is no ambiguity in the Berth 2 project being connected to coal,” said Mater, who was the last of more than 40 who “Anybody who says this proj- ect is not a coal project … is not correct.” Mater said when she vot- ed against state funding for the project last summer, neither Am- bre Energy nor the port provided documentation to back a stated commitment of $3 million. “They simply did not in- wherewithal,” she said. She also said the proposed renovation was not ready for construction, as the Connect Oregon guidelines require. She said the Department of State Lands informed the port that a renewed lease would be re- quired for Berth 2, “because the current lease did not accommo- date transloading options.” Ambre Energy ran into a road block when the Depart- ment of State Lands, in a sepa- rate matter, rejected a permit for a coal-loading dock Ambre En- ergy seeks at the Port of Morrow in Boardman. The dock would enable coal mined in the Pow- der River Basin in Wyoming and Montana and taken via rail to Boardman to be loaded onto barges headed for Clatskanie. Ambre Energy is appealing that decision, which will come before an administrative law judge on Dec. 7. During much of the hear- ing, the commission also heard mostly familiar arguments for and against the Port of St. Hel- ens project. A few say that renovation of the 70-year-old dock would en- able the port to handle oceango- ing cargoes of all types and cre- ate jobs and economic activity. Others say that the project is a proxy for the debate over coal exports, and that coal and train public health questions. Mater, in a brief interview after the hearing, said she does not know which way the Feb. 19 vote will go. Joining her last summer against funding for the Port of St. Helens project were mem- bers Dave Lohman of Medford and Alando Simpson of Port- land. Baney and Susan Mor- gan, a Douglas County com- missioner, voted for funding the project. Their action left $40.3 mil- lion divided among 36 other projects, including renovation of Berth 1 at the Port of St. Helens for shipments of crude oil. “Some commission mem- bers do believe that once the review panel has given its bless- ing, this commission has no au- thority to go back and look at the details,” Mater said. “I certainly did not feel that way. This is at a higher level. I have done the best I can.” She said the review panel - cluding Tony Hyde, a Columbia County commissioner who tes- who advocate for funding.