Local teams score big in Beach Brawl How many lambs do ewe see? SPORTS • 9A PAGE 7A TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2015 142nd YEAR, No. 155 ONE DOLLAR A promise of perpetual care THE VOTE THAT KILLED State Rep. Betsy Johnson was Dems’ dissenting vote in 2014 By PETER WONG EO Media Group/Pamplin Media Group JOSHUA BESSEX — The Daily Astorian Leaves and branches cover gravesites at the Ocean View Cemetery in Warrenton Jan. 26. The last full-time worker at the cemetery was cut in 2013 for budget reasons. Ocean View Cemetery upkeep a casualty of the recession SALEM — Democrats in the Oregon Legislature wasted no time Monday in using their larger majori- ties to advance three issues that died by a single vote in the past two years. Legislative committees took up ELOOV RQ WKH ¿UVW GD\ RI WKH session that Senate Majority Lead- er Diane Rosenbaum, D-Portland, GHVFULEHG DV ³XQ¿QLVKHG EXVLQHVV´ from the previous two-year cycle. They were: • Automatic voter registration for people 18 and older, unless they choose to opt out, when they obtain or renew driver’s licenses. The House Rules Committee heard House Bill 2177, which unlike 2013, See VOTE, Page 4A Oscar B soon to be underway By DERRICK DePLEDGE The Daily Astorian W ARRENTON — Steve Jurgensen and his wife, Dottie, were out at Ocean View Cemetery Friday afternoon with a lawn mower and weed trimmer, carefully tending to their son, Charlie’s, gravesite. When the couple purchased the plot from Astoria after their son died at 24 in 2006, the cemetery was in much better condition. But budget cuts caused the city’s Parks and Recre- ation Department to eliminate staff and scale JOSHUA BESSEX — The Daily Astorian back upkeep. :KLOH WKH FLW\¶V ¿QDQFHV KDYH UHFRYHUHG Leaves cover a cracked grave marker at the Ocean View Cemetery in Warrenton Jan. 26. with the economy, the cemetery remains a left- Leaves and over stain of the recession. branch- “The last couple of years the weeds — when es cover WKHJUDVV¿QDOO\VWRSVG\LQJ²WKHGDQGHOLRQV gravesites are like really tall,” said Jurgensen, a retired at the Ocean electrician who lives in Astoria. “The moss is View Ceme- ridiculous. It’s taking over.” tery in War- The city not only has a moral obligation to renton Jan. maintain Ocean View; it has a contractual one. 26. Ocean People pay $1,660 on average for the burial and View is perpetual care of their loved ones. mowed twice Persistent complaints about the cemetery’s a month appearance have been heard at City Hall. during the City Councilor Russ Warr, who owns Asto- spring and ria Granite Works, which makes grave markers, summer. insisted that improved maintenance at Ocean View be included in the city’s goals for the com- JOSHUA LQJ¿VFDO\HDU BESSEX The Daily Astorian See CEMETERY, Page 12A Westport ferry closes for a week to ready for new boat By KYLE SPURR The Daily Astorian WESTPORT — The ferry land- ings on each side of the lower Co- lumbia River are closed this week as crews prepare for the arrival of a brand new ferry later this month. The Ferry Wahkiakum, serviced by Wahkiakum County since 1962, is being replaced Feb. 27, with a larger ferry that is being constructed on Whidbey Island, north of Seattle. The new $5.7 million ferry will be named the Oscar B after former skipper and owner Oscar Bergseng. It is the last ferry operating on the lower Columbia River. In preparation of the new ferry’s arrival, Legacy Contracting Inc. of Salem is busy upgrading the ferry landings in Westport and Puget Is- land. &RQVWUXFWLRQ ZRUN VWDUWHG ¿UVW on the Oregon side of the riv- er, where crews are replacing the See FERRY, Page 12A Hop, skip, jump honors jump-rope advocate Good for the heart, soul: Kids turn jumping rope into charity By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian In 1981, physical ed- ucation instructor Kar- en Larson brought Jump Rope for Heart to John Jacob Astor Elementary School. She kept it going until cancer took her vi- sion and forced her into retirement in 1999. “She was my PE teach- er,” said current Astor PE teacher Brian Babbitt to the gathered kids during a Tsu- nami Skippers jump-rope team exhibition and the kickoff of the 2015 fund- raiser Wednesday in Astor’s main gym. Babbitt brought the event back in 2010 after a hiatus. “She was very passion- ate about jumping rope,” said Babbitt, one of many PE teachers nationwide who organize Jump Rope for Heart at their respec- tive schools. “She did some jump-roping events here at Astor School, and we’re just going to continue to do it in her memory. It’s part of our tradition.” See LARSON, Page 12A Submitted photo Physical education teacher Karen Larson from Astor El- ementary accepted an award in 1987 from the American Heart Association’s Oregon affiliate for her school’s stu- dents raising the most per capita. The 175 students at Astor that year raised $6,461, or $36.92 per pupil. JOSHUA BESSEX — The Daily Astorian Emma Meyer and Annika Wunderlich, members of the Tsu- nami Skippers, perform while jumping double Dutch during a Jump Rope for Heart assembly at John Jacob Astor Elemen- tary Wednesday. Turning the ropes are coach Stacey Dundas, right, and co-coach Violoa Soprano, left.