The daily Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1961-current, April 19, 2016, Page 4A, Image 4

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    SPORTS
4A
Photos by Gary Henley/The Daily Astorian
Astoria’s Skadi Freyr set a meet record, as well as a
25-foot PR in the javelin Saturday.
THE DAILY ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, APRIL 19, 2016
Astoria’s Natalie Cummings, left, and Charity Fleck of Ilwaco were
both honored with Athlete of the Meet awards for girls’ track events.
More photos from the invite at DailyAstorian.com
Seaside sprinter Juneau Meyer was a winner every
time he stepped on the track during Saturday’s Daily
Astorian Invitational.
Daily Astorian Invitational Athletes of the Meet honored
The Daily Astorian
Athletes of the Meet awards were
handed out Tuesday for Saturday’s
Daily Astorian Invitational, hosted by
Seaside High School.
Nine athletes were recognized for
their efforts in the 28th annual track
meet.
Outstanding athletes for the girls’
track events went to Astoria’s Natalie
Cummings and Kaylee Mitchell, and
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meters, with a meet record in the

Bergeron had the same double in
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events.
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records in all four of her events: the
high jump, long jump, triple jump and
pole vault.
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a meet record and personal best by 25
feet) and the shot put.
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took part in both relays, as Astoria
Ilwaco’s Charity Fleck; and the Lady
Fishermen made it a clean sweep in
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to sophomore Darian Hageman and
junior Skadi Freyr.
The Outstanding athletes for
boys’ track were awarded to Brandt
Bergeron of St. Stephen’s Academy
of Beaverton, and Juneau Meyer of
Seaside.
Emmy Carrizales of Banks and
Mont Child of Molalla were the Out-
Loggers scorch the Dragons
SCOREBOARD
Sophomore Paris Vanderburg started and
pitched four innings, striking out four with
KNAPPA — The Knappa softball team two hits allowed. Sophomore Jaden Miethe
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Sophomore Mikayla Rethati led Knap-
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Knappa improves to 7-2 in the North- pa’s offense, going 3-for-3 with four RBIs.
ZHVW/HDJXHZKLOHWKH'UDJRQVGURSWR Kaitlyn Truax added three RBIs for Knappa,
overall. The Loggers outscored Delphian which plays a nonleague game at Clatskanie
today.
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TODAY
Baseball — Tillamook at Astoria, 5
p.m., Aiken Field; Portland Christian
at Warrenton, 4:30 p.m.; Knappa at
Clatskanie, 4:30 p.m.; Ilwaco at Rain-
ier (2), 3 p.m.
Softball — Seaside at Astoria, 5
p.m., CMH Field; Portland Christian
at Warrenton, 4:30 p.m.; Knappa at
Clatskanie, 4:30 p.m.; Ilwaco at Rain-
ier (2), 3 p.m.
WEDNESDAY
Baseball — Banks at Seaside, 5
p.m.
Track — Seaside, Tillamook at Asto-
ria, 3:30 p.m.; Warrenton Invitational,
3:30 p.m.
Boys Golf — Astoria at Tillamook,
11 a.m.
The Daily Astorian
Astoria downs Mooks in eight
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error and a walk.
A passed ball put runners at second and
TILLAMOOK — Astoria bounced back
from a doubleheader loss to Scappoose last third with no outs for the Cheesemakers.
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Friday with a 9-7, extra-inning win at Til-
lamook Monday, in Cowapa League soft- have ended it, but Tillamook’s runner at
third left for home plate without tagging
ball action.
Back-to-back hits by Astoria in the top up, and the Fishermen easily turned a dou-
of the eighth scored two runs to give the ble play and got out of the inning.
And the Fishermen quickly took advan-
Lady Fishermen the victory, which snaps a
tage of the Mooks’ miscue.
four-game losing skid for Astoria.
In the top of the eighth, Taylor Mickle
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three innings before giving up four runs in reached on a bunt base hit, and scored on a
double by Rylee DeMander, and DeMander
the fourth.
$VWRULDVFRUHGWZRLQWKH¿IWKWRUHWDNH came in moments later on a single by Cait-
a 5-4 lead, but Tillamook answered with lyn Hougham.
Astoria pitcher Libby DiBartolomeo
three runs in the bottom of the inning to
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grab a 7-5 advantage.
The Lady Fish responded with two runs ¿YHZDONVUHWLUHG7LOODPRRNLQWKHHLJKWK
to pick up the win.
of their own in the sixth to tie the game.
Astoria returns to action today, when
Astoria had runners at second and third
in the top of the seventh, but failed to score. the Lady Fish host Seaside for a single
In the bottom of the seventh, Tilla- game at 5 p.m. at CMH Field.
PREP SCHEDULE
The Daily Astorian
TRACK
Daily Astorian Invitational
at Seaside High School
Schools: Astoria, Banks, De La
Salle, Estacada, Faith Bible, Ilwaco,
Jewell, Knappa, Molalla, Naselle,
North Marion, Rainier, St. Paul, St.
Stephen’s, Seaside, Warrenton.
Athletes of the Meet
Girls’ Field: Skadi Freyr, Astoria;
Darian Hageman, Astoria
Girls’ Track: Natalie Cummings,
Astoria; Charity Fleck, Ilwaco; Kaylee
Mitchell, Astoria
Boys’ Field: Emmy Carrizales,
Banks; Mont Child, Molalla
Boys’ Track: Brandt Bergeron, St.
Stephen’s; Juneau Meyer, Seaside
Girls
(Top 3 each event)
100: 1, Natalie Cummings, Ast, 12.87.
2, Charity Fleck, Ilw, 12.92. 3, Kim Jor-
dan, Banks, 13.35.
200: 1, Charity Fleck, Ilw, 26.86. 2,
Natalie Cummings, Ast, 26.87. 3, Syd-
ney Radigan, SSA, 28.13.
400: 1, Jamie Borchers, Banks,
both winning relays.
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long jump and triple jump.
Child won the shot put and had a
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There were “lots of great perfor-
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competitors,” said Seaside coach
Jeff Kilday. “Thanks everyone for an
enjoyable meet. Many personal bests
and great competition by everyone.”
1:02.41. 2, Gennavieve Marion, NM,
1:03.49. 3, Cameron Stone, SP,
1:03.63.
800: 1, Kaylee Mitchell, Ast, 2:22.43.
2, Audrey Bever, Mol, 2:36.04. 3, Cam-
eron Stone, SP, 2:36.31.
1,500: 1, Kaylee Mitchell, Ast,
4:58.91. 2, Hannah Hart, Est, 5:24.18.
3, Eliza Bannister, Ilw, 5:29.96.
3,000: 1, Brianna Loughridge,
Mol, 11:38.82. 2, Hannah Hart, Est,
11:41.38. 3, McKenzie Burnett, Ast,
12:08.34.
100 Hurdles: 1, Elizabeth McMullen,
Ilw, 16.70. 2, Desirae DesRosiers, Mol,
16.78. 3, Andrea Harris, Ast, 17.22.
300 Hurdles: 1, Taylor Owens, War,
49.79. 2, Janni Kristensen, Rai, 49.75.
3, Monica Wenlund, Est, 50.76.
400 Relay: 1, Astoria, 50.96. 2, Mo-
lalla, 52.59. 3, Banks, 52.73.
1,600 Relay: 1, Ilwaco, 4:19.39. 2,
Astoria, 4:20.54. 3, Banks, 4:24.03.
Discus: 1, Rachel Bring, Mol, 127-5.
2, Meghan McGrath, Mol, 111-10. 3,
Halie Korff, Ast, 110-10.
Javelin: 1, Skadi Freyr, Ast, 130-1. 2,
Halie Korff, Ast, 120-10. 3, Taylor Cos-
ner, Ast, 107-11.
Shot Put: 1, Skadi Freyr, Ast, 40-9. 2,
Rachel Bring, Mol, 39-1. 3, Halie Korff,
Ast, 37-0.
High Jump: 1, Darian Hageman,
Ast, 5-7. 2, Janni Kristensen, Rai, 4-10.
3, Gracie Nelson, Banks, 4-8.
Long Jump: 1, Darian Hageman,
Ast, 17-7.75. 2, Desirae DesRosiers,
Mol, 16-0.5. 3, MarDelSol, NM, 15-5.5.
Triple Jump: 1, Darian Hageman,
Ast, 38-5.5. 2, Jessica Wheeler, Est,
34-3.5. 3, Logan Robinson, SP, 32-
5.25.
Pole Vault: 1, Darian Hageman, Ast,
10-9. 2, Kylie Wells, Banks, 9-6. 3,
Shrida Sharma, Ast, 8-6.
Boys
100: 1, Treyton Bierly, Mol, 11.66. 2,
Jacob Olson, Ast, 11.76. 3, David Mar-
tinez, SP, 11.89.
200: 1, Juneau Meyer, Sea, 23.58.
2, Treyton Bierly, Mol, 23.66. 3, Gavin
Thrower, Mol, 24.11.
400: 1, Juneau Meyer, Sea, 53.56.
2, Blake Markham, Banks, 54.81. 3,
Dennis Zapata, NM, 54.93.
800: 1, Brandt Bergeron, SSA,
1:59.50. 2, Lucas Caruana, Ast,
1:59.88.3, Jackson Januik, Sea,
1:59.93.
1,500: 1, Brandt Bergeron, SSA,
4:27.72. 2, Hunter Thompson, Sea,
4:28.94. 3, Rafi Sibony, Sea, 4:30.79.
3,000: 1, Bradley Rzewnicki, Sea,
9:24.85. 2, Lucas Caruana, Ast,
9:51.51. 3, Bryce Moon, Rai, 9:54.75.
110 Hurdles: 1, Levi Carreon,
Banks, 16.58. 2, William Garvin, Sea,
16.60. 3, Michael Kee, Ast, 17.35.
300 Hurdles: 1, William Garvin,
Sea, 43.54. 2, Mitchell Merritt,
Banks, 44.61. 3, Austin Stein, War,
45.15.
400 Relay: 1, Seaside, 45.78. 2,
Molalla, 46.38. 3, Estacada, 46.56.
1,600 Relay: 1, Seaside, 3:35.80. 2,
Astoria, 3:40.06. 3, Ilwaco, 3:44.18.
Discus: 1, Tim Barnett, Ast, 124-7.
2, Sean Hinson, Jwl, 118-2. 3, Cody
Kirkman, Nas, 117-7.
Javelin: 1, Mont Child, Mol, 168-5.
2, Sean Hinson, Jwl, 151-4. 3, Riki
Thompson, Ilw, 145-4.
Shot Put: 1, Mont Child, Mol, 50-
2. 2, Zander Arnold, Ast, 45-6. 3, Tim
Barnett, Ast, 43-10.5.
High Jump: 1, Emmy Carrizales,
Banks, 5-10. 2, Tyler Kemper, Banks,
5-10. 3, Jaxson Smith, Sea, 5-8.
Long Jump: 1, Taylor Barnes, Sea,
19-11.75. 2, Jaxson Smith, Sea, 19-
8.75. 3, Emmy Carrizales, Banks,
19-4.
Triple Jump: 1, Austin Salley, Mol,
42-0.25. 2, Brian Westman, NM, 41-
7.5. 3, Emmy Carrizales, Banks, 41-6.
Pole Vault: 1, Raiden Bowles, Sea,
13-0. 2, Beck Cameron, Banks, 10-0.
3, Bryan Falls, Rai, 9-0.
Rentals: Code enforcement actions may begin this week
Continued from Page 1A
Vacation rentals are treated
like hotels and motels and
are only allowed in commer-
cial zones. The main differ-
ence between vacation rent-
als and homestay lodging is
that homeowners must occupy
and manage homestay lodg-
ing, rather than hire managers
to do the job.
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paying license and hotel-room
taxes and seven that are poten-
tial zoning violations. The city
expects to begin code enforce-
ment actions this week.
The trouble spots repre-
sent a tiny fraction of the city’s
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yet city councilors do not want
vacation rentals and second
homes to drive up home prices
and exacerbate Astoria’s hous-
ing shortage.
Pondering changes
City councilors, who will
soon consider potential devel-
opment code changes to pro-
mote affordable housing, are not
yet ready for new regulations on
Drew
Herzig
Zetty
Nemlowill
short-term rentals, but could be
moving in that direction.
“I think it is very, very
important for Astoria to keep
Cindy
Price
this down as much as we possi-
bly can. I mean, really strictly,
because we are a working city
and we want to stay that way
as long as we possibly can,”
Councilor Cindy Price said.
Price, however, would
wait until the city has com-
piled more data on the hous-
ing inventory and brought on
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before making development
code changes.
Councilors Drew Herzig
and Zetty Nemlowill are inter-
ested in acting sooner.
“I really don’t want us to
just sit here and say, ‘Well,
there’s nothing we can do at
this point.’ We’re going to end
up with half a city of empty
houses,” Herzig said.
Nemlowill, who served
on the Planning Commission
before being elected to the City
Council, would consider ban-
ning homestay lodging from
residential neighborhoods. She
said she has seen homeown-
ers use homestay lodging as
a “loophole” and a “vacation
rental in disguise” because of
the lack of city enforcement.
“I don’t want to have a
problem on our hands like
Gearhart, and then have to deal
with cleaning up that mess,”
she said.
Smithart:&LW\¶VPRVWUHFHQWVWDWHPHQWKDVGHEWDW
to place a lien on the hotel since the
property is owned by the Port.
Smithart operates the Arc Arcade
According to a city chronology,
the city has been sending updated downtown but does not appear to
statements to Smithart via regu- have the assets to pay the debt to the
ODU DQG FHUWL¿HG PDLO VLQFH WKH 3RUW city. A Circuit Court judgment, how-
severed Smithart’s lease at the Riv- ever, could help the city recover some
erwalk Inn last summer. The certi- money, as well as send a message to
¿HG OHWWHUV WKH FLW\ VDLG KDYH EHHQ other hoteliers that the city is serious
returned since January.
about delinquent hotel-room taxes.
Smithart and his company, Hos-
The debt in the city’s most recent
pitality Masters, had a tumultuous
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Smithart could not immediately relationship with the Port after taking
over the former Red Lion near the
be reached for comment.
While other hotels have fallen :HVW (QG 0RRULQJ %DVLQ LQ
behind on taxes, Smithart’s case is The Port chose Smithart and Seth
unusual because the city is unable Davis, his former partner, over more
Continued from Page 1A
experienced hoteliers, and an early
pattern of late tax reports and pay-
ments devolved into a default and
eviction showdown last year.
In June, the Port Commission
agreed to shift the remainder of Smi-
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hotelier Ganesh Sonpatki, who prom-
ised to satisfy Smithart’s debts. But
the Port’s agreement with Sonpatki
was never executed, and the Port
Commission in September granted
attorney William Orr and developer
Chester Trabucco short-term operat-
ing rights to the Riverwalk Inn.
The Daily Astorian/File Photo
Sonpatki has sued the Port, alleg- Smithart owes the city nearly $120,000 in back taxes for the Astoria
ing fraud and breach of contract.
Riverwalk Inn.