8A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • FRIDAY, AUGUST 14, 2015 Interns: 38 Job Corps students are on work-based learning off-campus Continued from Page 1A At Tongue Point, Laibinis said, students and Peterson are creating plaster mock-ups for possible use on particularly cracked portions of the Col- umn’s exterior. “This is smooth but a brown color that is not common, and it’s the base color of the painting.” Laibinis said she hopes to keep the Job Corps students through the completion of the project in September and get an additional student to help re- place several of the curved win- dows atop the Column’s cupola. She estimated the scaffolding on the Column would start coming down the last week of Septem- ber. On deck With 9 acres of land, a 44,000-square-foot museum and a small maintenance staff, the Columbia River Maritime Museum appreciates Job Corps’ help, custodian Patrick Valade said. Over the past several weeks, several Job Corps seamanship students helped scour, paint and weatherize the pilot vessel Peacock, mounted for all to see along Marine Drive between the museum and Barbey Maritime Center. Now several other students are ¿xing the deck of the Light- ship Columbia, which the mu- seum bills as the only Àoating lightship museum in the coun- try. “We’re going to do the whole deck of the ship, from the stern to the bow,” said seamanship LNG: Project will cost $6 billion Continued from Page 1A The mayor and several North Coast residents used the pub- lic forum of the commission’s meeting to share their opposition to the $6 billion project, which includes a terminal on the Ski- panon Peninsula in Warrenton and an 87-mile pipeline from Washington state through Co- lumbia, Tillamook and Clatsop counties. The Federal Energy Regula- tory Commission has released a draft environmental review of the project which concludes that ad- verse impacts to the environment could be reduced if Oregon LNG follows safeguards to minimize harm to ¿sh and wildlife habitat and water quality and uses ade- quate safety features. But several other federal, state and local agencies are also reviewing the project and could raise objections. The Department of Envi- ronmental Quality has to decide whether to issue Oregon LNG a water-quality certi¿cation and a host of permits regulating air qual- ity, wastewater and stormwater. The department denied wa- ter-quality certi¿cation for the Bradwood Landing LNG project east of Astoria, which had en- countered political, ¿nancial and regulatory setbacks before col- lapsing in 2010. ‘Lethal scenario’ LaMear has taken an aggres- sive tone against Oregon LNG over the past few months. In July, she pressed U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., on his position on the proj- ect during the senator’s stop in As- toria to promote state tourism. Astoria does not have a say in either the terminal or the pipeline, but many residents oppose the project, fearing it would alter the region’s scenic character, harm the environment, and pose safety risks in an earthquake or tsunami. LaMear told the commission Oregon LNG could “threaten our very way of life.” She also said it makes no sense to locate such a project in a known earthquake zone. “Scientists tell us that the ‘Big One’ is inevitable,” she said. “What does not have to be inevi- table is adding LNG to this lethal scenario.” Other North Coast residents also asked the state to intervene, expressing no faith in the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission’s review process. “The FERC has never met an LNG terminal that they didn’t like,” said Cheryl Johnson, an activist who has been a leader in opposing the project. Don West, the general manag- er of the Cannery Pier Hotel and the owner of the Crest Motel, said the project would threaten tourism and the environment. He said visitors come for re- gion’s beauty, history and ¿shing, which could be spoiled by an in- dustrial site. “I ¿rmly believe LNG will damage tourism and our recre- ational economy beyond repair,” he said. Doug Thompson, a former Astoria city councilor, remind- ed the commission that former Gov. John Kitzhaber lost Clatsop County last November because of his policy to phase out gillnet- ting on the Columbia River. He warned that Gov. Kate Brown could face similar political con- sequences if she does not come out against Oregon LNG and the Jordan Cove LNG project in Coos Bay. ‘A lot of passion’ Earlier this year, the Depart- ment of Environmental Quality held informational meetings in Warrenton and Vernonia on wa- ter-quality certi¿cation for the Oregon LNG project. The depart- ment could seek public comments on the permits necessary for the project before the end of the year. “There’s a lot of passion around the subject,” Jane O’Keefe, the Environmental Quality Com- mission’s chairwoman, said after the public forum. “I’m impressed with the amount of good informa- tion that we’ve heard today.” Shipyard: Cleanup could cost $1.5 million Continued from Page 1A AMCCO’s operations began in the early 1920s. Last year, the shipyard was included on the National Register of Historic Places for its history of building and repairing Navy ships during World War II and the Korean War. Historical operations led to much of the contamination to the site. In 2012, the U.S. Envi- ronmental Protection Agency gave the state cleanup oversight of the site, which avoided feder- al Superfund designation. The recommendations from GSI Water Solutions would come with a price tag of about $1.5 mil- lion earmarked for cleanup. The Department of Environ- mental Quality has requested a new feasibility study draft with an option that would allow the ship- yard to remain open, according to Bob Williams, the DEQ project manager for the AMCCO site. Nina DeConcini, DEQ northwest region administrator, said the department recognizes how important the shipyard is to the community. Scott Lee, the chairman of the Clatsop County Board of Commissioners, said the board was in the process of drafting a letter to DEQ and other agen- cies. The county would like to see the shipyard remain open, Lee said, as a matter of safety for ¿shermen and others who require boat repairs. The Environmental Quali- ty Commission, the policy and rulemaking board for the depart- ment, met in Astoria Wednesday and Thursday. As part of the agenda, com- missioners and others took part in a tour of several local envi- ronmental project sites, includ- ing AMCCO. Skip Hauke, executive di- rector of the Astoria-Warrenton Chamber of Commerce, spoke in favor of AMCCO at a public forum before the commission Thursday. “I’m pleading for your help,” he said. “I need your help to save one of our most im- portant assets we have here.” He stressed the importance of ¿shing to the local economy and the shipyard to ¿shermen. “We need a shipyard. We need it badly,” he told the com- mission. “If you want to put it in context, go back to your hometowns and get rid of all the garages and the repair shops. That’s what Astoria will be like with our Àeet if we don’t have a shipyard.” Andrew Bornstein, co-own- er of Bornstein Seafoods, also spoke. He referred to the ship- yard as a “gem” and asked for collaboration. “AMCCO is desperately needed,” he said. But coming up with another draft of the feasibility study with an option to keep the business open costs money, and the op- tion may include prohibitively high costs for AMCCO. “We don’t want to spend ad- ditional money on a potentially futile request,” Bowler said. student Michael Taylor, working with classmates Angelo Luhrsen and Anthony Martinez. Taylor said he and the other students have already redone decks on ships at Job Corps. Martinez added that students have worked on the Astoria Riverfront Trolley, sanding and painting it. Martinez expects it will take a few weeks to ¿nish the deck of the 93-foot vessel. Valade said Job Corps students were out in the hot sun painting and chip- ping the Peacock for six weeks. rell Gasser, 38 Job Corps stu- dents are on work-based learn- ing off-campus, 23 of them locally. Work-based learning pro- vides an internship opportunity for students, who often practice their skills on various projects around campus. In the com- munity, they intern with the U.S. Coast Guard and nearly 20 other local businesses. Gas- ser said Job Corps likes to keep about 10 percent of its students on work-based learning at any given time. It was Job Corps students in 2006 who helped ready the Pea- cock before it was mounted in 2010. Without the Job Corps stu- dents, Valade said, repairing the vessels would be a more piece- meal effort. All around town The Maritime Museum and Astoria Column are some of the more high-pro¿le projects Job Corps students help on. But they aren’t the only ones. According to Katrina Mor- Lunches: 52 percent of Oregon students are poor enough to receive free meals Continued from Page 1A In an annual notice of po- tentially eligible schools in April, the state also identi¿ed Seaside Heights Elementary School as eligible to partic- ipate. Gearhart Elementary School, Seaside’s Broadway Middle School, Warrenton Grade School and Hilda Lahti Elementary School in Knappa were listed as nearly eligible to participate. Dupuis said in Clatsop County, the state has only received the necessary infor- mation to participate from As- toria. The deadline to submit such information is Aug. 31, Dupuis said, and she expects a rush of applications in the coming weeks. How it adds up Instead of collecting pa- per applications for free and reduced lunches, Astoria can claim a percentage of students receiving free lunches based on the percentage of pover- ty-stricken students, multiplied by 1.6 to account for other students likely eligible for the poverty program based on income, resulting in a total of 65.2 percent. The federal gov- ernment will reimburse 65 per- cent of lunches served at Astor and Lewis and Clark at $3.09 per lunch, Dupuis said, while reimbursing the remaining 35 percent at 30 cents each. Free breakfasts are reimbursed at $1.66, and paid breakfasts 29 cents. Louise Kallstrom, the district’s director of support services, said participation in lunch and breakfast are likely to increase with the subsidi- zation of lunches, which will provide the district with more revenue. Grace Laman, a school board member and a nutrition instructor, raised concerns about children double-dipping and eating too much. Linda Berger, principal at Astoria Middle School, said schools have the ability to put blocks on kids from getting meals. Kate Gohr, principal at Astor, said she doesn’t foresee lunch participation increasing much, because many kids al- ready like bringing their own. “It might change for break- fast.” State lunches For schools not part of the Community Eligibility Provi- sion, Dupuis said, then the state will be reimbursing lunches. In April, Gov. Kate Brown signed House Bill 5017, a $2.4 million budget provision to fund a mandate that all students eligible for a reduced-price lunch get them for free if they are eligible under the USDA’s eligibility requirements. In July, she signed House Bull 2545, which directs the Ore- gon Department of Education to reimburse districts for the amount students would have paid, up to 40 cents per lunch. “With the state funding, what they’re picking up is the difference between the federal free reimbursement and the federal reduced-cost reim- bursement, which is 40 cents,” Dupuis said, adding the re- duced-cost category has been removed. About 8 percent of students in Oregon are eligible for re- duced cost lunches, Dupuis said, while about 52 percent are poor enough to receive free meals. The state estimated that the change will affect nearly 6 million reduced price lunches, at a reimbursement rate of 40 cents per lunch, and cost the state nearly $2.4 million in each of the 2015-17 and 2017- 19 bienniums. Dupuis said that takes into account participation in the Community Eligibility Provision. Dupuis said the state ex- pects an 11 percent increase in free lunch programs once the co-pay goes away. The state has subsidized reduced-price breakfasts for the past six years, she said. 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