What are they reading? FRIDAY EXTRA • 3C 142nd YEAR, No. 223 Letting the steelhead go WEEKEND EDITION FRIDAY EXTRA • 2C FRIDAY, MAY 8, 2015 ONE DOLLAR $UWFXOWXUHEULGJHWKH3DFL¿F Maori artists from New Zealand explore the coast Grant funding increased, scope narrowed to balance costs By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian T he past week has seen an indigenous culture travel 7,000 miles across the Pa- FL¿F 2FHDQ IURP 1HZ =HDODQG WR the mouth of the Columbia River to share their art and culture. Six visiting Maori clay artists, as part of a 10-day cultural ex- change organized through Clatsop Community College, have spent this week on the North Coast tour- ing, meeting with local dignitaries, bonding with Chinookans and even trying to pique the interest of local high school students about their backgrounds and art. On Thursday night, they were RI¿FLDOO\LQWURGXFHGWRWKHFRPPX- nity with the opening of the “Uku- Aotearoa: Spirit of Materials” art exhibit running until July 30 at the CCC Arts Center, 1799 Lexington Ave. The event was attended by members of the Chinook Nation, other regional tribes and the Maori, who all exchanged gifts and songs. The Maori were showered with gifts from the local community. “I’m a real advocate for the indigenous people,” said CCC ce- ramics instructor and indigenous Hawaiian artist Richard Rowland, a central organizer in the exchange along with staff and college faculty, By DERRICK DePLEDGE The Daily Astorian Senior citizens will probably have to wait until Christmas before they can enjoy a remodeled Astoria Senior Center. 7KH FLW\ KDG KRSHG WR ¿QLVK WKH improvements at 11th and Exchange streets by August, but construction bids came in higher than anticipated. So the city went searching for more grant money and narrowed the scope of the project, eliminating ren- ovations in the basement. See CENTER, Page 12A Hello, tufted SXI¿QV See MAORI, Page 12A MORE INFO From 6 to 8:30 tonight, the visiting Maori artists and Clatsop Community College writing instruc- tor Nancy Cook give a free public presentation, “Uku-Aotearoa: The Spirit of Materials,” at the CCC Performing Arts Center, 588 16th St. in Astoria. This presentation will include a community conversa- tion that examines critical issues surrounding cultural landscape, collective and individual vision and the value of myth and memory. The Maori are also lead- ing hands-on workshops firing local art and their own in a traditional paper kiln on-site at the CCC Arts Center from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. today and Saturday. Senior Center redo gets go-ahead Photo courtesy of Laurel Fleet From left, visiting indigenous artists Colleen Waata Urlich, Eddie Daughton, Carla Ruka, Clatsop Com- munity College instructor Richard Rolwand, Shoalwater Bay Tribe Councilwoman Mechele Johnson, Rhonda Halliday, Baye Riddell, Dorothy Waetford and Todd Douglas took in the Pacific Northwest for- ests around Willapa Bay as part of their cultural exchange to the region. After a greeting by the Chinook Nation at Fort Columbia, Wash., the visiting Maori clay artists, including, from left, Baye Riddell, Dorothy Waetford and Carla Ruka, took part in the Long Beach Loyal- ty Days parade. Fire Mountain students enjoy Earth Day at Haystack Rock By ERICK BENGEL EO Media Group CANNON BEACH — The four- month nesting season of Haystack 5RFN¶V WXIWHG SXI¿Q FRORQ\ EHJDQ early last month, and seven students from Arch Cape’s Fire Mountain School spent their sunny Earth Day morning, April 22, welcoming them back after the birds’ eight-month ex- cursion over the sea. Melissa Keyser, the Haystack Rock Awareness Program’s educa- tion coordinator, led the students — Genevieve “Gigi” Gardner, 5; Otto Submitted photo See PUFFINS, Page 11A Long Beach dog park plan hits end of leash City Council tries to weigh money for parks for dogs, people By NATALIE ST. JOHN EO Media Group LONG BEACH, Wash. — In 2011, Long Beach City Council members began talking about establishing a dog park. For a while, “dog park” was even on a list of goals that was displayed in City Hall. City officials like the idea of being a “dog-friendly city.” At a November 2014 council meeting, they shared an Everett Herald article, “Northwest’s Long Beach Peninsula is a Perfect Pet Getaway” that claimed that Adrift Hotel guests “can step out onto the beach and let your dog roam off-leash, as is possible in many other locations on the peninsu- la.” But the poster in City Hall has been taken down. The park is not any closer to being built, leashes are now required on the beach, and a new city policy that prohibits dogs on city ath- letic fields has eliminated the largest traffic-free public space where citizens could play with their dogs. In recent interviews, city RI¿FLDOVVDLGDODFNRISROLWL- FDOZLOODQGGLI¿FXOW\¿QGLQJ DON’T MISS OUT! Subscribe to the Daily Astorian E-mail Newsletters and stay informed on the topics that matter most to you. Visit www.DailyAstorian.com/Newsletters and sign up today! says cities usually don’t get serious about dog parks un- til citizens start pushing for them. What it takes to build a park Chinook Observer file Dogs used to be allowed to play on the beach off-leash, but now leashes are required on public land. This pup is competing in a previous year’s Doggie Olympics. a suitable property have pre- vented the project from mov- ing forward. Ellen Escarcega, chair- woman of the Seattle group Citizens for Off-Leash Areas, “We need a safe area for humans and animals to be free, and not break leash laws,” said Councilman Ste- ven Linhart on April 23. Lin- hart and Councilman Mark Perez have been perhaps the most vocal supporters of the project. Both men say the park would improve quali- ty-of-life for peninsula res- idents and create an added draw for dog-owning tour- ists. See DOG PARK, Page 8A