Osprey score a win Shaving dunes down to size SPORTS • 4A NORTH COAST • 3A 143rd YEAR, No. 87 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2015 ONE DOLLAR DA fights probation release process By KYLE SPURR The Daily Astorian FISH TAKE A DIP Astoria drops below Newport in commercial catch By DERRICK DePLEDGE The Daily Astorian A storia slipped below Newport last year as the dominant West &RDVWSRUWIRUFRPPHUFLDO¿VK- ing. Newport landed 124 million SRXQGVRIFRPPHUFLDO¿VKWKHWK highest mark by quantity in the na- tion, while Astoria netted 122 mil- lion pounds, the 12th highest. Westport, Washington, came in at 100 million pounds, or 13th highest. 7KH FDWFK ¿JXUHV ZHUH UHOHDVHG today by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which FRPSLOHV DQ DQQXDO ¿VKHULHV UHSRUW that includes the quantity and value RIFRPPHUFLDO¿VKHU\ODQGLQJV Astoria had been the top West Coast port by quantity — and the 10th highest in the nation — since it overtook Los Angeles in 2012. “I think it touches every corner of Clatsop County,” said Jim Knight, the executive director of the Port of Astoria. “Every part of our commu- nity is tremendously impacted be- FDXVHRIWKH¿VKLQJLQGXVWU\´ The commercial catch in Asto- ria last year also declined in value. &RPPHUFLDO ¿VKHU\ ODQGLQJV ZHUH worth $43 million, compared to $50 million in 2013. The value of the commercial catch in Astoria was the 29th highest LQWKHQDWLRQDFFRUGLQJWRWKH¿VKHU- ies report, down from the 21st high- est in 2013. Newport also experienced a de- cline in value last year. The commer- cial catch was worth $53 million — 23rd highest in the nation — down from $55 million in 2013, or 19th highest. Westport had a higher value catch — $64 million, 15th highest in the nation — than Newport and Astoria, and was off only slightly from a $65 million haul in 2013. Ilwaco-Chinook, Washington, The Clatsop County District $WWRUQH\¶V 2I¿FH LV FKDOOHQJLQJ D state law that allows those on felo- ny probation to be released early for complying with terms of their super- vision. The earned discharge process, created by the state Legisla- ture in 2013, is meant to re- ward people, often drug court graduates, who have paid their restitution and completed treat- ment programs. Josh Marquis People have to serve at least half of their sentence before becoming eligible. However, Clatsop County Dis- trict Attorney Josh Marquis said the ODZDFWXDOO\JLYHVSUREDWLRQRI¿FHUV more authority over sentences than judges or prosecutors. Besides the question of authority, See CHALLENGE, Page 10A WAVE POWER Photos by Joshua Bessex/The Daily Astorian ABOVE: The fishing vessel, The Ocean Beaut, floats up the Columbia River in September. TOP: Crews unload a fishing boat at Bornstein Seafood Wednesday. Columbia River, according to Hobe Kytr, the administrator of Salmon For All, continue to be concerned The commercial fishing catch in Astoria declined by quantity last year about the policies put in place by and slipped below Newport as the dominant West Coast port. The catch former Gov. John Kitzhaber to phase also declined in value. RXW¿VKLQJRQWKHPDLQVWHPDQGE\ • 2014 Newport: 124 million pounds/$53 million value bird and sea lion predation and com- Astoria: 122 million pounds/$43 million value SHWLWLRQIURPVSRUW¿VKHUPHQ • 2013 The nation’s top commercial Astoria: 159 million pounds/$50 million ¿VKLQJSRUWE\TXDQWLW\IRUWKHSDVW Newport: 127 million/$55 million several years has been Dutch Harbor, • 2012 Alaska. Last year, according to the Astoria: 170 million pounds/$39 million ¿VKHULHVUHSRUW'XWFK+DUERUODQG- Newport: 80 million pounds/$37 million ed 762 million pounds of commer- • 2011 Astoria: 144 million pounds/$44 million FLDO¿VK Newport: 79 million pounds/$44 million The highest value has come from • 2010 New Bedford, Massachusetts. Last Astoria: 101 million pounds/$31 million year, the commercial catch in New Newport: 57 million pounds/$31 million Bedford was worth $329 million. Source: NOAA Fisheries The NOAA Fisheries report IRXQG WKDW FRPPHUFLDO ¿VKHUPHQ FDXJKWELOOLRQSRXQGVRI¿VKLQ had 27 million pounds in commer- from $30 million. :KLOH WKH FDWFK ¿JXUHV IRU $V- the United States last year valued at FLDO¿VKODQGLQJVODVW\HDURIIIURP 37 million pounds in 2013. The value toria are weighted toward offshore $5.4 billion, down from 9.9 billion of the catch was $25 million, down ¿VKHULHV JLOOQHW ¿VKHUPHQ RQ WKH valued at $5.5 billion in 2013. COMMERCIAL CATCH Company hopes to harness the motion of the ocean at Camp Rilea By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian WARRENTON — A wave-ener- gy company from Boston, hopes to harness the waves off the coast of Camp Rilea for electricity and desal- inized water. The Oregon Wave Energy Trust, D QRQSUR¿W SURPRWLQJ ZDYH HQHUJ\ hosted Bill Staby, the co-founder and CEO of Resolute Marine Energy, at Warrenton’s El Compadre restaurant Wednesday to explain the test his com- pany hopes to launch in summer 2017. The presentation pulled in a URRPIXO RI ¿VKHUPHQ HYHU FRQ- cerned about losing access to the valuable crabbing grounds off the coast of Camp Rilea Armed Forces Training Center and equipment be- ing tied up with wave-energy tech- nology. See POWER, Page 10A 2USKDQHGFXE¿QGVPHUF\DQGDSSOHVOLFHV Cute but still wild, little bear will be reared in hope of eventual release By NATALIE ST. JOHN EO Media Group BEAR RIVER, Wash. — 7KH +D]HQ IDPLO\ ¿UVW QR- ticed the unexpected visitor wandering along their quiet country road Oct. 17. The next day, the tiny black cub was back again, peek- ing into Erica and Bruce Ha- zen’s kitchen through a glass door that — appropriately — looked out on the Bear River. That evening, Bruce’s father, Warren Hazen, who lives just up the hill, watched as the cub stood alone in the rain, looking for a way into the warmth of his son’s home. The youngest member of the family, 2-year-old Huxley, asked his parents to let the bear come inside. To Warren Hazen, the cub seemed lonely and hungry. “He looked like he was looking for company,” Ha- zen explained, as he poked red apple slices in through the holes in a big, barrel-shaped FDJH ¿OOHG ZLWK KD\ ,QVLGH an adorable, slightly under- fed furball kept one wary eye trained on the humans as he gobbled up his snack. After the mama failed to appear for two nights, it be- came clear the cub was proba- bly an orphan. “Something happened to his mother,” Warren Hazen said. “She could have been hit out on the highway. She could have been shot by a hunter.” Though it’s illegal to shoot female bears, it does happen from time to time, Hazen said, and the appearance of the cub coincided with the opening of bear season. See CUB, Page 10A Natalie St. John/EO Media Group This young cub, who was found wandering near the Bear River, is probably an orphan, but Fish and Wildlife staff let him spend a night in the trap, to give his mother one last chance to find him. He has been taken to a wildlife reha- bilitation facility.