The daily Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1961-current, June 09, 2015, Image 2

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THE DAILY ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, JUNE 9, 2015
Bill restricting sale of student
data moves to state House
office said that there had
been “pushback” against the
bill from the industry.
SALEM — A bill that
Representatives
spent
would prevent education- less than 10 minutes dis-
al software developers cussing SB 187, with both
from selling student data sides making oblique refer-
to third-party vendors has ences to the bill’s passage as
cleared the state House Ed- a foregone conclusion.
ucation Committee — even
“I am extremely dis-
as a source inside the Attor- heartened that the bill is
ney General’s office warned going to move today,” Rep.
of increasing resistance Jodi Hack, R-Salem, said
from tech lobbyists.
before the bill’s passage.
Senate Bill 187, also “My grave concern is about
known as the Oregon Stu- whether or not the software
dent Information Protec- companies will actually be
WLRQ $FW SDVVHG ODVW willing to work with the
week with support from the state of Oregon.”
Democrats on a strictly par-
Democrats
dismissed
ty-line vote.
that argument, noting that
Proponents of the leg- SB 187 largely mirrors Cal-
islation say that today’s ifornia’s landmark online
K-12 students are mon- student information protec-
itored in ways previous tion law, which goes into
generations would find un- effect in 2017.
thinkable. Educational apps
“We’re a market. We
and other online programs (may be) a moderate mar-
require students to cre- ket, or a small market, but
ate personal accounts that we’re a market, and we
track everything from test should be looking for the
results to disciplinary re- tools that will actually for-
cords — even political, re- ward education,” Rep. Su-
ligious and socioeconomic san McClain, D-Hillsboro,
affiliations.
said during the committee
The bill, which was in- meeting. “I don’t see (the
troduced at the request of bill) taking any technology
Oregon Attorney Gener- away. I don’t see it taking
al Ellen Rosenblum, now any tools away.”
awaits a floor vote by the
Industry lobbyists of-
House. The act was passed fered testimony both for and
unanimously by the Senate against the bill. One pro-pri-
on April 21. Rosenblum’s vacy group, Common Sense
Media, rescinded its support
after the bill was amended
to allow the disclosure of
students’ personal informa-
tion for “school purposes.”
Republicans said the bill
needs more amendments.
“I was under the impres-
sion when the bill came over
here that there was more
work to be done. I don’t
know, maybe that was the
wrong impression,” Rep.
Sherrie Sprenger, R-Scio,
said.
Rep.
Greg
Barreto,
R-Cove, echoed that senti-
ment.
“With a bill like this, you
ought to have everybody
on board,” he said. “And
to pass a bad bill to get it
to the floor, I think there’s
been too many of those in
recent years.”
In a press release, Rosen-
blum praised the bill for
prohibiting
data-mining,
unless the process is used
for a legitimate educational
purpose.
“It’s scary to think we
live in a world where data
mining now starts as early
as kindergarten. We must
safeguard children’s data
against inappropriate uses,”
Rosenblum said in the re-
lease.
The Capital Bureau is a
collaboration between EO
Media Group and Pamplin
Media Group.
By ZANE SPARLING
Capital Bureau
®
ACCUWEATHER FORECAST FOR ASTORIA
Astoria 5-Day Forecast
Tonight
Oregon Weather
Shown is
tomorrow’s
weather.
Temperatures
are tonight’s
lows and
tomorrow’s
highs
Mainly clear
51°
Wednesday
The Dalles
61/89
Astoria
51/64
Portland
53/80
Corvallis
51/81
Eugene
49/82
Pendleton
60/91
Salem
51/83
Albany
50/81
Ontario
66/92
Bend
51/84
Thursday
64°
Friday
63°
53°
Saturday
Mostly cloudy and
breezy
51°
Intervals of clouds
and sunshine
64°
51°
Almanac
Sun and Moon
Astoria through Monday.
Temperatures
High ........................................... 67°
Low ............................................ 51°
Normal high ............................... 63°
Normal low ................................. 49°
Precipitation
Yesterday ................................ 0.00"
Month to date .......................... 0.51"
Normal month to date ............. 0.82"
Year to date ............................ 27.17"
Normal year to date .............. 34.18"
Sunset tonight ..................
Sunrise Wednesday .........
Moonrise today ................
Moonset today .................
Regional Cities
City
Baker City
Bend
Brookings
Eugene
Ilwaco
Klamath Falls
Medford
Newport
North Bend
Hi
89
90
71
90
66
86
98
60
65
Today
Lo W
53 t
51 s
54 c
49 s
51 c
58 t
65 pc
48 c
53 c
Wed.
Lo W
47 pc
44 s
53 c
48 s
53 s
46 t
55 t
48 s
52 s
National Cities
City
Atlanta
Boston
Chicago
Denver
Des Moines
Detroit
El Paso
Fairbanks
Honolulu
Indianapolis
Kansas City
Las Vegas
Los Angeles
Memphis
Miami
Nashville
New Orleans
New York
Oklahoma City
Philadelphia
St. Louis
Salt Lake City
San Francisco
Seattle
Washington, DC
Hi
84
75
85
86
91
78
94
68
85
83
92
91
81
91
87
87
85
80
94
86
92
88
72
81
88
Today
Lo W
68 t
59 t
66 s
60 s
69 s
63 pc
75 pc
46 c
73 pc
65 pc
70 s
72 t
66 c
72 pc
75 t
67 pc
74
t
64 t
68 pc
66 pc
72 s
64 s
60 pc
55 s
69 pc
9:05 p.m.
5:24 a.m.
1:24 a.m.
1:19 p.m.
Last
New
First
Full
June 9
June 16
June 24
July 1
City
Olympia
Pendleton
Portland
Roseburg
Salem
Seaside
Spokane
Vancouver
Yakima
Today
Hi Lo W
82 47 s
96 60 s
86 53 s
96 58 s
89 51 s
70 50 pc
92 60 s
86 52 s
100 59 s
Hi
79
91
80
85
83
67
88
80
95
Wed.
Lo W
48 s
58 s
54 s
54 s
51 s
52 s
59 s
53 s
61 s
Tonight's Sky: Last quarter moon at 8:42 a.m.
Source: Jim Todd, OMSI
Tomorrow’s Tides
Astoria / Port Docks
Time
High
8:17 a.m. 6.9 ft.
9:06 p.m. 8.4 ft.
Time
2:32 a.m.
2:33 p.m.
Low
1.7 ft.
0.8 ft.
Tomorrow’s National Weather
Hi
85
79
86
79
90
86
97
66
85
90
90
93
78
92
89
90
86
83
95
86
93
81
73
77
88
Wed.
Lo W
69 t
62 s
61 pc
56 t
67 s
62 t
75 pc
47 c
73 pc
69 s
71 s
73 c
64 pc
72 c
77 t
68 pc
73 t
68 s
71 pc
69 s
75 s
62 t
56 pc
55 s
73 s
Susan E. Marshall
Astoria
Aug. 12, 1940 — June 3, 2015
6XVDQ ( 0DUVKDOO ORYLQJ
children, Cassandra, Jessica,
mother, grandmother and sister,
Meghan, Michael II, Dillon and
passed away June 3. She fought
Abbye; and great-grandchildren
a long and courageous bat-
Mia Sunshyne, Braxtyn, Autym
and Stryker.
WOH DJDLQVW FDQFHU IRU \HDUV
6KH ZDV ERUQ $XJ
During this time she continued
to Melva and Carlton King. She
to work as the manager for long-
is survived by her sister, Sandra,
time employer, Emerald Heights
and children Wendy, Rick and
Apartments. Her grandchildren
Scott.
and great-grandchildren brought
Susan
A service has already been
the biggest joy to her life. She
Marshall
held.
was a very loving and proud
Through life’s travels she
grandmother who will be greatly
loved the community of Astoria, and con-
missed.
She is survived by her three sons Tom sidered it home. Thank you to the many
(wife Shari), Michael (wife Karyn), and friends who supported her during the good
John. She will be missed by her grand- and bad times.
Seaside
June 7, 1965 — July 18, 2014
Under the Sky
Hi
83
84
68
82
64
82
90
59
63
Brian F. Harrison, 67, died peacefully onships in Louisville, Ky., and Salt Lake
DWKLVKRPHRQ0D\LQ$VWRULD City, and the Nike World Masters Games
Ore.
in Portland. An avid self-taught
He was born to the late Faris
writer, Brian composed three
and Olive Harrison, Aug. 21,
volumes of poetry and two nov-
LQ 6SRNDQH :DVK %ULDQ
els. He enjoyed gardening, and
graduated from West Valley High
learned the hard way that bamboo
School in 1965, and earned a BA
should be planted in containers.
in sociology in 1969 and an MA
In his retirement, he continued
in sociology in 1971, both from
his quest for learning through on-
Gonzaga University. He married
line courses in genetics, microbi-
ology and archaeology.
Margaret Cobb in 1970.
Brian is survived by his wife,
Brian began his teaching ca-
Brian
Margaret; children Jeremy (Kel-
reer at St. Mary’s College in
Harrison
ly) Harrison of Lacey, Wash., and
Leavenworth, Kan. He then
Paloma (Chris Zeliff) Harrison of
worked as Parks and Recreation
director in Newport, Ore. In 1978, he was Hillsboro, Ore; grandsons Henry and Jack;
hired by Clatsop Community College to sisters Marilee Nord (Spokane, Wash.),
teach anthropology and sociology. During Jan Thorne (Spokane, Wash.), and Kath-
the summers, Brian worked as an archae- leen Jackson (Wenatchee, Wash.); and nu-
ologist, excavating at sites in Oregon, merous nieces, nephews and cousins.
The family will host a celebration of
Washington state, Alaska, Wales, Peru,
and Easter Island. He was a passionate ad- life in August in Spokane. Memorial dona-
vocate of education, and expressed pride tions may be made to Donate Life North-
in the numerous students he had taught. west (www.donatelifenw.org), a valuable
He was honored with CCC’s Faculty of organization that encourages people to
the Year award in 2001, and retired from become organ donors, or to Lower Co-
lumbia Hospice.
teaching in 2002.
Caldwell’s Luce-Layton Mortuary is in
While at Clatsop, Brian also taught
fencing classes and enjoyed competing at charge of arrangements. Please sign our
the local and national level. He partici- online guest book at www.caldwellsmor-
pated in the Fencing National Champi- tuary.com
Klamath Falls
58/82
Partly sunny
53°
Astoria
Aug. 21, 1947 — May 24, 2015
Steven Thompson
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015
64°
Brian F. Harrison
Burns
54/84
Medford
65/90
Sunshine and
patchy clouds
OBITUARIES
Fronts
Cold
Warm
Stationary
Showers
T-Storms
Rain
Flurries
Snow
Ice
-10s
-0s
0s
10s
20s
30s
40s
50s
60s
70s
80s
90s
100s
110s
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands
are highs for the day. Forecast high/low temperatures are given for selected cities.
Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms,
r-rain, sf-snow fl urries, sn-snow, i-ice.
APPLIANCE
PACKAGE DEALS
APPLIANCE
AND HOME
FURNISHINGS
529 SE MARLIN, WARRENTON
Mattresses, Furniture
& More!
503-861-0929
HOURS OPEN: MON-FRI 8-6 • SATURDAY 9-5 • SUNDAY 10-4
We Service What We Sell
A year ago this July we lost
our beloved son, Steven. He was
6WHYHQZDVDVRQEURWKHUDQG
uncle to us. His ashes were laid
to rest at the West Bay Marina
in Olympia, Wash., on Wednes-
GD\ -XO\ DPRQJ ORYLQJ
friends and family. A fitting rest-
ing place. It was the place where
he was the happiest, working on Steven Thompson
boats and being close to the wa-
ter. He left behind his mother,
Marga Mueller; his father, Den-
nis Thompson; Rick Thompson
his brother; and his niece, Chelsea
Weber. We will sorely miss him
until we are ultimately reunited
again in Heaven. Rest in peace
Steve, until we meet again. We
love you.
Birth
Death
April 15, 2015
FLAIGG, Crystal, and SPENCER, Bruce,
a boy, Aiden Henry Spencer, born at Colum-
bia Memorial Hospital in Astoria. Grand-
mother is Karen Flaigg of Seaside.
June 8, 2015
ZOESCH, Elizabeth Ione, 88, of Astoria,
died in Astoria. Ocean View Funeral & Cre-
mation Service in Astoria is in charge of the ar-
rangements.
Lotteries
OREGON
Monday’s Pick 4:
1 p.m.:
4 p.m.:
7 p.m.: 9-0-1-6
10 p.m.:
Monday’s Megabucks: 02-

Estimated jackpot: $5.5 mil-
lion.
WASHINGTON
Monday’s Daily Game: 0-3-
1
Monday’s Hit 5: 02-08-26-
33-39
Estimated jackpot: $100,000
Monday’s Keno: 02-05-10-

51-55-57-58-60-71-79-80
Monday’s Lotto: 02-08-17-

Estimated jackpot: $2.2 million
Monday’s Match 4:

Lewis & Clark Fire De-
partment Board, 7 p.m.,
PDLQ¿UHVWDWLRQ+LJK
way 101 Business.
Warrenton-Hammond
School District Board of
Directors, 7 p.m., budget
hearing, 7:15 p.m., regular
meeting, Warrenton High
School library, 1700 S.E. Main
Ave.
WEDNESDAY
Clatsop Soil and Wa-
ter Conservation District
Board, 10 a.m., annual work
plan and budget approval,
OSU Seafood Lab Center,
Room 231, 2001 Marine
Drive.
Clatsop County Board of
Commissioners, 6 p.m., Judge
Guy Boyington Building, 857
Commercial St., Astoria.
Astoria School District
Board of Directors, 6:15
p.m., study session, 7:30 p.m.,
regular meeting, Capt. Rob-
HUW *UD\ 6FKRRO WKLUGÀRRU
boardroom, 785 Alameda
Ave.
Wickiup Water District
Board, SP
Svensen
Market
Road,
Svensen.
Public meetings
TUESDAY
Cannon Beach City
Council, work session, 5:30
p.m., Cannon Beach City
Hall, 163 E. Gower St.
Clatsop
Community
College Board of Directors,
5:30 p.m., executive session
(closed to public), 6:30 p.m.,
budget hearing and regu-
lar meeting, Columbia Hall
Room 219, 1651 Lexington
Ave., Astoria.
Warrenton City Com-
mission, 6 p.m., Warrenton
City Hall, 225 S Main Ave.,
Warrenton.
The Daily Astorian
Established July 1, 1873
(USPS 035-000)
Published daily, except Saturday and Sunday,
by EO Media Group, 949 Exchange St., PO
Box 210, Astoria, OR 97103 Telephone 503-
325-3211, 800-781-3211 or Fax 503-325-6573.
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The
Daily Astorian, PO Box 210, Astoria, OR 97103-
0210
www.dailyastorian.com
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the use for republication of all the local news
printed in this newspaper.
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