2A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, AUGUST 11, 2015 Grant offered for crime Cannon Beach keeping victim services providers an eye on water demand The Daily Astorian The Clatsop County Public Safety Coordinat- ing Council is accepting proposals from providers of community-based ser- vices to crime victims. The Oregon Criminal Justice Commission is of- fering two-year grants for local nonprofit victims services entities as part of its Justice Reinvestment Grant Program. Providers offer services such as accessing safe emergency shelter, cri- sis counseling, court and medical accompaniment, safety planning and ob- taining protective orders. The grant totals $47,633 and is for an initial two years. Further funding is possible but is contingent on funding availability, demonstrated need and other factors. For more information and instructions on sub- mitting a proposal go to the “Jobs & Bids/RFPS” page of the Clatsop Coun- ty website, www.co.clat- sop.or.us. Seaside volleyball camp this week The Daily Astorian The annual Seaside Vol- leyball Camp takes place this week at Seaside High School. The camp will run from Wednesday to Friday, and is divided into two divisions: third through eighth graders (9-11:30 a.m. each day); ninth through 12th graders (3-6 p.m.). Registration starts 30 min- utes prior to both sessions. Cost of camp is $50. Scholarships are available. Watershed association parties on the dock The Daily Astorian The North Coast Water- shed Association, a nonpro¿ t partnership of four local wa- tershed councils, is partner- ing with Buoy Beer to throw a “Dock Party” on the dock near their of¿ ce, adjacent to Buoy Beer. The free event is 2 to 5 p.m. Sunday at 42 Seventh St. Buoy Beer donated the beer, which will be sold for $2 to raise money for the a ssociation. Pizza and non- alcoholic beverages will be provided. Information about the or- ganization and live music will be on tap. For online updates: www.dailyastorian.com ® ACCUWEATHER FORECAST FOR ASTORIA Astoria 5-Day Forecast Tonight Partly cloudy 56° Wednesday Oregon Weather Shown is tomorrow’s weather. Temperatures are tonight’s lows and tomorrow’s highs The Dalles 70/95 Astoria 56/73 Portland 65/88 Corvallis 58/86 Eugene 58/87 Pendleton 67/98 Salem 62/88 Albany 59/86 Thursday Burns 47/92 Medford 60/92 Partly sunny 73° 58° Friday 71° 54° Nice with intervals of clouds and sunshine 71° 54° Almanac Sun and Moon Astoria through Monday. Temperatures High ........................................... 72° Low ............................................ 58° Normal high ............................... 69° Normal low ................................. 54° Precipitation Yesterday ................................ 0.02" Month to date .......................... 0.02" Normal month to date ............. 0.26" Year to date ........................... 27.80" Normal year to date .............. 37.20" Sunset tonight .................. Sunrise Wednesday ......... Moonrise today ................ Moonset today ................. Regional Cities City Baker City Bend Brookings Eugene Ilwaco Klamath Falls Medford Newport North Bend Today Hi Lo W 95 52 s 84 53 pc 70 57 pc 87 58 pc 70 57 pc 84 46 s 89 60 pc 65 54 pc 69 57 pc 8:31 p.m. 6:10 a.m. 3:29 a.m. 6:31 p.m. New First Full Last Aug 14 Aug 22 Aug 29 Sep 5 City Olympia Pendleton Portland Roseburg Salem Seaside Spokane Vancouver Yakima Today Hi Lo W 89 55 pc 95 67 s 90 65 pc 86 61 pc 88 62 pc 72 57 pc 95 68 s 90 63 pc 99 63 s Wed. Hi Lo W 88 56 s 98 64 s 88 62 pc 88 60 pc 88 58 pc 70 59 pc 99 67 s 88 61 pc 103 63 pc Tonight's Sky: At the head of Cygnus we fi nd the double star Albireo, approximately 380 light- years away. Source: Jim Todd, OMSI Tomorrow’s Tides Astoria / Port Docks Time High 1:12 p.m. 7.4 ft. none Time 6:57 a.m. 6:47 p.m. Low -0.8 ft. 1.9 ft. Tomorrow’s National Weather Wed. Hi Lo W 88 68 s 81 65 t 79 63 s 91 63 t 85 66 s 77 59 s 97 73 s 60 48 c 91 78 pc 78 58 s 84 64 s 96 79 t 86 65 pc 87 67 s 92 77 pc 85 61 s 94 78 t 85 66 t 87 66 pc 85 66 pc 85 68 s 87 69 pc 75 60 pc 88 61 s 86 69 pc CANNON BEACH — The city of Cannon Beach is now dipping into Ecola Creek water supply — about a month ahead of schedule for the ¿ rst time in 15 years. The Public Works Depart- ment started the Ecola plant up in late July , drawing 100 gal- lons per minute to supplement water that comes from three mountain springs during the summer. “In a normal year, we’d usually make it to Labor Day weekend,” Public Works Di- rector Dan Grassick said. But it’s been a dry summer, with .85 inches of rain in June and only .66 during July, well below the 1.51 inch average. There were 21 consecutive days without rain from the end of May into June and another 21 straight from the end of June through July, according to the National Weather Service. Grassick said it became a struggle to keep the reservoirs full. It was during the middle of June that demand began ex- ceeding capacity. At ¿ rst, it was just once a week, not much to worry about, Grassick said. The reservoirs could be ¿ lled back up over a couple of days. But then two weeks passed and staff still hadn’t been able to ¿ ll the reservoir fully. With the hot, dry weather forecast to continue, Grassick said it became important to keep the reservoirs full for safe- ty reasons, in case of a ¿ re . Demand is higher on the weekends, too, when more tourists are in town, especially in late July and early August. Grassick said the bulk of the demand has been irrigation, which started a month sooner than usual with the dry weather. Alex Pajunas/The Daily Astorian A female coho salmon, sporting a worn and battered tail from scouring a redd in the gravel, rests along the bottom of the north fork of Ecola Creek Nov. 12. plan, but Grassick said July water de- that likely won’t be mand increased sig- necessary. He added ni¿ cantly year over the city would seri- year, by about 20 ously consider one percent, he noted. if Cannon Beach “The normal trend reached 50 percent has been around of what it can take 6 to 7 percent from Ecola Creek. per year for this The city has a month,” Grassick Dan water right of 1 wrote in his month- Grassick cubic foot per sec- ly report to the City ond from the creek, Council. Ecola Creek Watershed which has a À ow rate of near- Council member Jan Sie- ly 10 cubic feet per second. bert-Wahrmund asked the city Grassick said that 1 cubic about scaling back on irrigation foot covers the entire city, to save water during a Parks so reaching that high of a and Community Services meet- demand is not an issue they expect to encounter. ing in July. “We’re not in extremely “I’m very prepared to stop irrigating if asked,” public dire straits yet,” he added. But if it does come to a works employee Kirk Ander- water conservation plan, ir- son replied. rigation would be a primary Not in ‘dire straits’ target. Business owners and There have been talks of im- residents would be asked to plementing a water conservation decrease their usage. Death Aug. 6, 2015 GLEESON, Pauline Lenore, 89, of Astoria, died in Gearhart. Caldwell’s Luce-Layton Mortu- ary is in charge of arrangements. Birth Aug. 2, 2015 WULLGER, Stacey and THORNTON, Kyle, of Asto- Under the Sky Wed. Hi Lo W 95 49 s 89 50 s 68 56 c 87 56 pc 68 58 pc 84 47 s 92 60 pc 65 55 pc 68 57 c National Cities Today City Hi Lo W Atlanta 87 70 t Boston 75 67 t Chicago 80 61 s Denver 85 61 c Des Moines 83 64 s Detroit 79 60 pc El Paso 98 74 s Fairbanks 57 43 pc Honolulu 90 78 pc Indianapolis 81 59 pc Kansas City 81 62 s Las Vegas 101 79 pc Los Angeles 80 61 pc Memphis 91 71 pc Miami 91 78 t Nashville 89 67 pc New Orleans 95 78 t New York 80 70 t Oklahoma City 90 67 pc Philadelphia 82 70 t St. Louis 85 66 s Salt Lake City 90 70 pc San Francisco 72 58 pc Seattle 86 63 s Washington, DC 87 73 t Klamath Falls 46/84 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015 57° Saturday Cloudy with a couple of showers 67° Mostly cloudy, a shower in the afternoon By DANI PALMER EO Media Group Hot, dry weather Ontario 64/101 Bend 53/89 City of¿ cials tap Ecola Creek early ria, a boy, Tate Elias Thorn- ton, born at Columbia Memo- rial Hospital. Grandparents are Becky and Scott Wullger and Dinah and Richie Basti- aen of Astoria. of intoxicants at Carnahan Road and U.S. Highway 101 in Arch Cape. Assault • At 10:16 p.m. Saturday, Clatsop County Sheriff’s Of¿ ce arrested Allison Noele Beemer, 53, Seaside, for second-degree assault, menacing, reckless driving and reckless endanger- ing on the 42000 block of Elsie Deer Lane in Seaside. Estimated jackpot: $5.8 million. WASHINGTON Monday’s Daily Game: 0-2-4 Monday’s Hit 5: 09-21- 31-36-38 Estimated jackpot: $120,000 Monday’s Keno: 07-09- 21-23-24-25-29-33-55-57-58- 59-60-61-63-67-68-71-75-77 Monday’s Lotto: 01-35- 36-41-42-44 Estimated jackpot: $2.1 million Monday’s Match 4: 02- 07-09-15 work session, 7:30 p.m., regular meeting, Columbia Hall Room 219, 1651 Lex- ington Ave., Astoria. Warrenton City Com- mission, 6 p.m., City Hall, 225 S. Main Ave., Warrenton. Lewis & Clark Fire De- partment Board, 7 p.m., main fire station, 34571 Highway 101 Business. WEDNESDAY Clatsop County Board of Commissioners, 6 p.m., Judge Guy Boyington Building, 857 Commercial St. Astoria School District Board of Directors, 6:15 p.m., study session, 7:30 p.m., regular meeting, Capt. Robert Gray School third- floor boardroom, 785 Ala- meda Ave. Wickiup Water District Board, 6:30 p.m., 92648 Svensen Market Road, Svensen. On the record DUII arrest • At 5:47 p.m. Saturday, Clatsop County Sheriff’s Of- ¿ ce arrested Steven S. Preece, 43, Vancouver, Wash., for driving under the inÀ uence Lotteries Fronts Cold Warm Stationary Showers T-Storms -10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s Rain Flurries Snow Ice 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 O VER RS 3 0 YEA IN S SINES BU Mattresses, Furniture & More! APPLIANCE AND HOME FURNISHINGS 529 SE MARLIN, WARRENTON 503-861-0929 HOURS OPEN: MON-FRI 8-6 • SATURDAY 9-5 • SUNDAY 10-4 We Service What We Sell OREGON Monday’s Pick 4: 1 p.m.: 3-8-5-2 4 p.m.: 8-4-6-5 7 p.m.: 6-6-2-4 10 p.m.: 4-1-1-4 Monday’s Megabucks: 04-24-40-42-45-46 Public meetings TUESDAY Cannon Beach City Council, 4:30 p.m., exec- utive session; 5:30 p.m., work session; 163 E.Gow- er St. Warrenton-Hammond School Board, 5:30 to 7 p.m., work session, 7:30 p.m., regular meeting, War- renton High School Library, 1700 S.E. Main Ave. Clatsop Communi- ty College Board, 6 p.m., 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 MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republication of all the local news printed in this newspaper. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Effective July 1, 2015 HOME DELIVERY MAIL EZpay (per month) ................................ $11.25 EZpay (per month) ................................ $16.60 13 weeks in advance ............................ $36.79 13 weeks in advance ............................ $51.98 26 weeks in advance ............................ $70.82 26 weeks in advance .......................... $102.63 52 weeks in advance .......................... $135.05 52 weeks in advance .......................... $199.90 Circulation phone number: 503-325-3211 Periodicals postage paid at Astoria, OR ADVERTISING OWNERSHIP All advertising copy and illustrations prepared by The Daily Astorian become the property of The Daily Astorian and may not be reproduced for any use without explicit prior approval. COPYRIGHT © Entire contents © Copyright, 2015 by The Daily Astorian. SUBSCRIBER TO THE NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE MEMBER CERTIFIED AUDIT OF CIRCULATIONS, INC. Printed on recycled paper