DOWNSIZED SCHOOL LIBRARY RANKLES SOME IN WARRENTON • PAGE 3A DailyAstorian.com // WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13, 2016 143RD YEAR, NO. 200 ONE DOLLAR Accused murderer Smith is on suicide watch Defense lawyers describe ‘dire mental state’ Jessica Smith is taken to her seat in the Clatsop County Court- house for a status hearing in May. By KYLE SPURR The Daily Astorian Accused murderer Jes- sica Smith is on suicide watch Joshua Bessex The Daily Astorian after trying to kill herself in jail following her last court appearance in March. Smith, whose mental state is a key element in her trial, apparently made a serious sui- cide attempt by ripping open the veins of one of her wrists, her lawyers reported in a court ¿OLQJ7XHVGD\ Court records show Tilla- mook County Jail staff found Smith March 30 in a pool of her own blood. She was taken to a hospital, where she received medical treatment. When she returned to jail, she tried to tear out her stitches and cause additional injury to her other wrist. Last week, Smith was transferred back to Clat- sop County Jail, where she remains on suicide watch. Smith, 42, of Vancou- ver, Washington, is accused of drugging and drowning her toddler and attempting to kill her teenager in a Cannon Beach resort in 2014. See SMITH, Page 9A WARRENTON STUDENTS READY THE ‘SALMON CANNON’ Fisheries class has ORWVRI¿VKUHDG\ for the river The Daily Astorian The Warrenton-Hammond School Board could vote next month on whether to re- move Native American imagery entirely from the Warrior mascot or to remove the feather and spear running through the redesigned logo. By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian W ARRENTON — Clip- pers in hand, a line of Warrenton High School students spent their last class 0RQGD\ VQDWFKLQJ VDOPRQ ¿Q- gerlings out of plastic buckets DQGVQLSSLQJRIIWKHDGLSRVH¿QV the ubiquitous mark of a hatch- HU\UDLVHG¿VK The students, part of Steve 3RUWHU¶V ¿VKHULHV ELRORJ\ FODVV are preparing more than 20,000 salmon for release in the Ski- panon River starting next month from Warrenton High Fisher- LHV ,QF D QRQSUR¿WIXQGHG DQG mostly student-operated hatchery. Warrenton’s hatchery received 20,000 Chinook, 6,000 coho and 500 steelhead eggs late last year from Big Creek Fish Hatchery near Knappa through the Salmon Trout Enhancement Program. After losing between 3,000 to 4,000 as eggs early on, students DUH FOLSSLQJ WKH ¿QV RI ¿VK a day, hoping to release them all between community events next month and graduation in June. Warrior mascot changes, more to come? Warrenton School Board to vote on Native American images By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian Salmon assignment “If you screw up in this class, things die,” said Porter, who puts prospective students through a panel interview and essay the year before they can enter the yearlong program at the Fisheries Research and Rearing Facility. Porter puts his trust and the operation of the hatchery mostly in the hands of those students, whose assignment is fairly VWUDLJKWIRUZDUG .HHS WKH ¿VK alive as they grow from incubat- LQJHJJVIULHVDQG¿QDOO\¿QJHU- lings ready to be released into the wild, where they will face numer- ous wild and man-made threats during their life’s quest to return upstream to spawn. Joshua Bessex/The Daily Astorian 'XULQJ WKH ¿UVW SDUW RI IDOO Gabe Karr tosses a salmon into a tank after clipping its fin at the Warrenton High School Fisheries semester, before the salmon Research and Rearing Facility Monday. eggs come from the hatchery, he takes younger students through ‘If you screw up in this class, things die.’ the biology of salmon and their habitats. Meanwhile, veteran Steve Porter See SALMON, Page 12A teacher of fisheries biology class who puts prospective students through a panel interview and essay the year before they can enter the yearlong program at the Fisheries Research and Rearing Facility ‘Tired’ convention center seeks upgrades After 25 years, director says the center must grow to compete By R.J. MARX The Daily Astorian WARRENTON — The Warrenton-Ham- mond School District could remove all Native American imagery from the district’s Warrior mascot. Superintendent Mark Jeffery recommended Tuesday that the school board vote on the issue at next month’s meeting. The move comes in advance of a Native American mascot ban enacted in 2012 by the state Board of Education that becomes effec- tive next calendar year. The district has already been removing the more offensive imagery on campuses, elimi- nating a man in a headdress that used to adorn some merchandise and replacing a basket- ball-dribbling caricature in the Warrenton High School gym with a mural of Clatsop-Nehalem tribal members rowing a canoe on the Colum- bia River. Still standing are such relics as Native American-themed pads at Warrenton Grade School, where the mascot is the Braves, and a purple statue in front of the high school com- prised of 1,000 fused warriors made by stu- dents in the 1970s. The Board of Education passed an excep- tion to the ban, allowing districts to pursue sponsorship agreements with the nearest fed- erally recognized tribe, which Warrenton had pursued with the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde. But Jeffery said the issue was unsettled at the state level, and that Grand Ronde could cancel a sponsorship agreement with two weeks notice. In February, he recommended the district avoid jumping through the hoops to NHHSDPDVFRWWKDWVRPHSHRSOH¿QGRIIHQVLYH remove Native American imagery entirely and go with the Warriors mascot and purple-and- white color scheme for all schools. More than a name Seaside Civic and Convention Center General Manager Russell Van- denberg went before the Seaside City Council Tuesday to present a nearly $15 million dollar renovation plan. Another plan at more than twice WKH FRVW IHOO ÀDW ODVW \HDU DIWHU UHV- idents and businesses objected to a proposed sales tax to fund its pur- chase. A sales tax is “off the table,” according to Vandenberg, who said The center, which holds 1,200 people, was built in 1971 and reno- vated in 1991. But for some people who spoke at Tuesday’s board meeting, changing the imag- ery is not enough. Theresa Enyart, a former employee of the district for eight years and part Native Amer- ican, said her family was offended by the PDVFRW ZKHQ WKH\ ¿UVW PRYHG WR:DUUHQWRQ which she said should uproot the entire War- rior nickname. See CENTER, Page 12A See MASCOT, Page 9A Steele Associates Architects LLC Proposed renovation plans for the exterior of the Seaside Civic and Convention Center. funding options would be discussed at future meetings. The need for a renovation is a result of the center’s age and to keep up with the times, he said.