Government has drones on hold Seaside spring sports previews PAGE 2A PAGES 12A, 13A 142nd YEAR, No. 195 TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015 ONE DOLLAR Great Ocean has big dreams, little reality Ideas span Columbia, West Coast 3URSRVDOIRU7RQJXH3RLQWLVQ¶WWKH¿UVW huge; we can’t afford it. The number is more than it (would) cost to buy the U.S. Citizenship and Immigra- Tongue Point.” By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian tion Services. Each investor can earn Chen wouldn’t reveal the offer his citizenship by investing at least made by Great Ocean or a counter- Earlier this month, The Dai- LQWRDTXDOL¿HGSURMHFWDQG offer by the Port. ly Astorian reported on a proposal creating or preserving 10 full-time ³7KHUHKDVEHHQQRVSHFL¿FRIIHU by Capt. Huy Ying Chen of Great jobs. Chen has said his proposal can QR VSHFL¿F GLVFXVVLRQ DERXW ZKDW Ocean Capital Holdings to develop create thousands, with a priority on that offer would be,” the Port’s Ex- a private shipping terminal at North hiring locally and building the in- ecutive Director Jim Knight said late Tongue Point, an international air- frastructure needed to accommodate last week, adding that he hasn’t spo- port on the Astoria Regional Airport, such a massive leap in employment. ken with Chen in at least a couple of a homeport for cruise ships and a 30- Chen said Great Ocean offered weeks. acre tourist center. the Port of Astoria an undisclosed The Port pays about $350,000 a But negotiations on Tongue Point, sum in exchange for the remaining year to lease the property through WKH¿UVWGRPLQRLQWKHFKDLQRILGHDV ¿YH\HDUVRILWVOHDVHRQDFUHV 2019. As a government agency, it appear to be falling victim to a lack of North Tongue Point with Missou- doesn’t pay any property taxes to of communication. la, Mont.-based Washington Devel- Clatsop County. In 2009, the last Chen, a Taiwanese-American opment Company. year property taxes were paid on from the Puget Sound area, is the After Great Ocean’s offer, Chen North Tongue Point, it brought the head of Great Ocean, a federally ap- said, “the Port gave us a number, FRXQW\ proved EB-5 regional center through EXWXQRI¿FLDOO\7KHLUQXPEHULVWRR In 2014, the appraised land value Talks in Longview never developed By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian Capt. Huy Ying Chen of Port’s leased property was more than $6.2 million, along with more than $1.7 million in improvements by the Port and/or Washington Develop- ment Company. That’s not including the millions in improvements by ten- ants at North Tongue Point such as 3DFL¿F&RDVW6HDIRRGV'HO0DU6HD- foods, J.E. McAmis and others. See GREAT OCEAN, Page 14A GIMME SHELTER Astoria on target for portable homes By KYLE SPURR The Daily Astorian P YJ]$GGDPVNQRZV¿UVWKDQGZKDWDVKHO- ter with four walls can mean to a home- less person. As a teenager 15 years ago, Addams was homeless with his mother on the Big Island of Hawaii. A church gave them a tent and sleep- ing bags. Eventually, Addams and his mother moved into a house made from construction scraps. It was a huge difference, he said. “It didn’t have any electricity, but it was a step up,” Addams said. Addams uses his past experience as motiva- tion for his newly formed project Hvgz Portable +RPHOHVV6KHOWHUVDQRQSUR¿WJURXSWKDWEXLOGV portable shelters for people in need of a dry, warm place to sleep and keep their belongings. The 20-square-foot shelters are built for Northwest terrain with four durable wheels. The shelters keep the homeless drier and warmer than in a tent or no shelter at all. Since starting the Long Beach (Wash.) Pen- insula-based group in November, Addams’ ef- fort has gained national attention through fea- tures in Seattle and Portland media outlets. “It was pretty overwhelming,” Addams said of the recent attention. “I started getting emails left and right. I have a heart condition already New frontier See SHELTER, Page 14A JOSHUA BESSEX — The Daily Astorian HOW TO HELP Those interested in donating to Hvgz Portable Homeless Shelters can visit http://bit.ly/1I0OcFl or www.hutsfor- hope.org Great Ocean Capital Hold- ing’s and Capt. Huy Ying Chen’s main website, goastoria.us, or goshipline.com, reads like Great Ocean already owns 500,000 square feet of temperature con- trolled storage, a shipping fleet, refridgerated containers and in- land barges. The group’s ideas range from bringing produce down the Co- lumbia on barges from as far east on the Columbia and Snake rivers as Lewiston, Idaho, to shipping it up the Pacific Coast from as far south as San Antonio, Chile. But Great Ocean largely doesn’t exist beyond a rented of- fice in Kirkland, Wash., and a string of Port officials who said they’ve had nothing but talks. “I spoke to him a few years ago, and a few months ago,” Gen- eral Manager Kim Puzey of the Port of Umatilla said, adding that he’s had conversations with Chen over the past decade. With so many container ship- pers leaving Portland, Puzey said, he’d love to have another outlet to the world market. Hanjin Shipping Co. left the Port of Portland in February. The Oregonian reported that Hanjin moved 1,600 contain- ers a week at the port’s Terminal 6, including most of Oregon’s ag- ricultural exports to Asia. “What Chen’s providing is a route for Umatilla to get to LA or the Puget Sound without using Portland,” Puzey said, adding that there’s a lot of exports sitting idle upriver. Great Ocean is a federally ap- proved regional center through the EB-5 Immigrant Investor Pro- gram, created by Congress in 1990 to spur foreign investment. An im- migrant investor can put $500,000 into a qualified project to create 10 full-time jobs, in exchange for their citizenship. TOP: Pvgz Addams stands outside a portable homeless shelter in his front yard in Ocean Park, Wash. As a teenager, Addams was homeless with his mother on the Big Island of Ha- waii. Addams uses his past experiences as motivation for his newly-formed project, Hvgz Portable Homeless Shelters, a nonprofit group that builds portable shelters for people to sleep in and keep their belongings. ABOVE: The Hvgz portable shelter comes with about $150 worth of survival equipment including water, a solar shower, a propane stove and a sleeping bag. The floor of the shelter is covered with a soft mat and the walls are insulated. There are more than 600 such centers around the U.S., and they’ve been used on projects as close as two hotels in downtown Portland financed partially by EB-5 money and developed by Williams/Dame & Associations. But Chen said his is the first such EB-5 project for international shipping. A main part of Great Ocean’s proposals in the Astoria-War- renton region is to make North Tongue Point a privately owned shipping terminal for packing and loading products barged down the Columbia River on Marine High- ZD\ ZKLFK IROORZV ,QWHUVWDWH DQG XS WKH 3DFLILF &RDVW RQ See IDEAS, Page 4A State IT project management understaffed JRQ¶V FKLHI LQIRUPDWLRQ RI¿- cer in the wake of the Cover 2UHJRQ ¿DVFR $OWKRXJK WKH SALEM — Oregon has strategy is a positive step, au- taken steps over the last year GLWRUVIRXQGWKH&,2¶VRI¿FH to prevent major information has taken more than a year to technology project failures develop the model and still such as Cover Oregon, but KDV QRW ¿QLVKHG LW 2QH UHD- the effort remains under- son is the agency where the staffed and incomplete, ac- CIO works, the Department cording to an audit released of Administrative Services, Monday. does not have enough em- Auditors also concluded ployees assigned to the proj- the new project management ect. strategy would not prevent Michael Jordan, who was many of the common prob- FKLHI RSHUDWLQJ RI¿FHU IRU lems that arose with state the state and director of DAS IT projects over the last 10 until March 5, agreed with years. PRVW RI WKH ¿QGLQJV -RUGDQ Auditors at the Secretary agreed the chief information RI 6WDWH¶V 2I¿FH UHYLHZHG RI¿FHU¶V RI¿FH ZDV XQGHU- a new project management staffed, and pointed out in a model developed by Ore- Feb. 24 written response that By HILLARY BORRUD Capital Bureau Associated Press File Michael Jordan was the former chief operating officer for the state and director of DAS until March 5. the agency had asked for 12 more employees in the next two-year budget starting in July. Without additional em- ployees, Jordan estimated his DJHQF\ ZRXOG ¿QLVK GHYHO- oping the new project man- agement strategy by summer 2017. However, Jordan took issue with the auditors’ rec- ommendation for clear con- sequences when IT projects fail to meet goals during the development process; Jordan wrote that it was also import- ant to be “supportive and col- laborative.” 7KH *RYHUQRU¶V 2I¿FH initially asked for more time so that George Naughton could write “an enhanced re- sponse” to the audit after Jor- dan resigned March 5, said 6HFUHWDU\ RI 6WDWH¶V RI¿FH spokesman Tony Green. Kris- ten Grainger, a spokeswoman See IT, Page 4A