DailyAstorian.com // TUESDAY, MAY 10, 2016 143RD YEAR, NO. 219 ONE DOLLAR Maeve Kennedy Grimes Scott Somers $1 million county lawsuit goes to trial Dispute arose after ballot errors, county clerk’s iring By KYLE SPURR The Daily Astorian Erick Bengel/The Daily Astorian Jerry Boisvert, a member of the Lower Columbia Youth Soccer Association board, stands where the new playground equipment will go up at the Warrenton Soccer Complex. PLAYING IT BACK Warrenton Soccer Complex remains a true team effort By ERICK BENGEL The Daily Astorian W ARRENTON — The Warrenton Soccer Complex is getting a play- ground — and, as beitting the site’s history, the new feature has been a team effort. The equipment won’t be the standard playground fare: A spinning ring for kids to ride on called a “Supernova”; a spring-mounted toy called a “Hopper,” which resembles a souped-up teetotaler; a rotating device called a “Spica”; and a structure of rope-covered cables called a “Spacenet.” The parts will be assembled within the next few weeks, said Jerry Boisvert, a member of the Lower Columbia Youth Soccer Association board, which man- ages the complex. A local busi- ness may also donate a swing set, he added. A playground is “something we’ve always desired because we have so many kids here on Saturday mornings,” he said. “My dream is that everybody who’s helped out on the ield will bring their kids, and we’ll have a ribbon-cutting, and all the kids’ll run down the hill and go play on the toys,” he said. “That’s kind of my hope.” Erick Bengel/The Daily Astorian The memorial for Harold Snow, one of many volunteers who made the Warrenton Sports Complex possible, is getting raised to road level so it can be seen by more passers-by. A smaller play structure already exists on ield No. 1, but it may get removed after the new playground is set up. To bring them closer to the play equipment, the 5- to 10-year-old soccer players will play their games on Field No. 2 instead of Field No. 1. Meanwhile, the parking lot — which, like ield No. 1, sits atop a decommissioned, clay- capped landill — is undergo- ing a major renovation to make it more driver-friendly. And the granite monument to volunteers, including Harold Snow — who helped conceive, fund and build the four-ield soc- cer complex, and who died in 2008 — will be raised to road level, making it more visible to passers-by. Partnerships The history of the Warren- ton Soccer Complex is one of collaboration between the soc- cer association and local donors, sponsors and other partners. And the playground — to be built between ields 1 and 2 — con- tinues that tradition. Last year, the city of War- renton gave the association a $25,000 grant — pass-through funds from the Quincy Robinson Trust — plus the land to build on. “We thought that was unbe- lievably generous,” Boisvert said. “They’ve been unbeliev- ably supportive.” The county donated the sand from their nearby sandpit, and Gilbert Gramson — a princi- pal at Sandridge Construction in Warrenton, and former city manager and mayor — hauled it across the street. Nygaard Log- ging agreed to donate cedar chips for the playground bed. Phil Gaffney, superintendent at Big River Construction, lev- eled the sand, excavated the play areas and installed a new drain- age line. When Gaffney attended Astoria High School, Boisvert was his soccer coach. “I’ve grown up working on the soccer ields, playing on the soccer ields, since I was 4 years old,” said Gaffney, who worked for the soccer association in high school. “I don’t have a whole lot of free time, but when I do, and they need something done, I’m more than happy to go out and help out when I can.” See COMPLEX, Page 10A ‘My dream is that everybody who’s helped out on the field will bring their kids, and we’ll have a ribbon-cutting, and all the kids’ll run down the hill and go play on the toys. That’s kind of my hope.’ Jerry Boisvert member of the Lower Columbia Youth Soccer Association board Former staffers ile suit against mental health agency Federal claim alleges retaliation, discrimination By DERRICK DePLEDGE The Daily Astorian A former case manager and a pro- gram supervisor at Clatsop Behav- ioral Healthcare have iled a federal lawsuit against the mental health agency, alleging that top adminis- trators failed to take action against a co-worker who made homophobic remarks and engaged in other inap- propriate conduct. Richard Holmes, a case man- ager who worked with chronically mentally ill patients at risk of hos- pitalization and jail, alleges that administrators forced him to endure homophobic slurs and sexually explicit comments from a female case manager. Holmes, who is gay, resigned in April 2015 after he claims administrators denied a trans- fer request to another unit. Colleen Studinarz, a program manager who was Holmes’ super- visor, was ired after the agency accepted Holmes’ resignation. Stu- dinarz says the agency told her she was not an “organizational it” and had shown “resistance to communi- cation,” but she claims she was retal- iated against for validating Holmes’ concerns about a hostile work envi- ronment and calling for a formal investigation. The lawsuit, iled in U.S. District Court in Portland in April, alleges discrimination and retaliation and seeks damages. The suit names Sumuer Watkins, the agency’s exec- utive director; Nick Benas, the director of business operations; and Lois Gilmore, the human resources manager. “It is our policy not to litigate in the press,” Benas said in an email. “We vigorously oppose any claims or allegations made against our agency.” Former Clatsop County Clerk Maeve Kennedy Grimes’ $1 million lawsuit against the county is heading for trial later this month. The former clerk claims she was unlaw- fully ired after errors were discovered on the November 2014 general election ballot. Her lawsuit contends former County Man- ager Scott Somers ired her due to whis- tleblower retaliation. Karen Vickers, the county’s attorney, requested the case be dismissed, claiming the lawsuit did not reach whistleblower standards. The former clerk never reported any mismanagement, any abuse of author- ity or any violation of law, according to Vickers. “Plaintiff made several errors, and because she disagreed with her boss about how best to correct the errors, she claims she was a whistleblower,” Vickers wrote in court documents. “Disagreement with a supervisor does not equal whistleblowing.” Judge Philip Nelson denied the county’ request Monday in Clatsop County Circuit Court. The trial is set to begin May 24. “It’s going take a jury to decide,” Nelson said. See LAWSUIT, Page 10A Activists release video of cormorant shootings Animal welfare group wants to stop federal killing of birds By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian Showing Animals Respect and Kindness, a nonproit animal welfare group, released video Monday showing federal agents shoot- ing double-crested cormorants at the mouth of the Columbia River. The video shows agents in a boat taking aim at locks as they ly overhead, picking them out of the sky a few at a time. Activists hope the footage will help with their campaign to stop what they describe as a “taxpayer-funded cormorant slaughter.” Wildlife Services, an agency under the U.S. Department of Agriculture tasked with protecting natural resources against wildlife, was contracted by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to shoot cormorants and oil their nests. According to a story in National Geo- graphic, Wildlife Services has killed at least 2 million mammals and 15 million birds since 2000, from coyotes and cougars pre- dating on livestock to feral pigs and birds endangering air trafic. To lower predation on endangered juve- nile salmon migrating downstream, the Corps started last year trying to cut the num- ber of birds on East Sand Island from 13,000 to 5,600 over a four-year period. The agency estimates East Sand Island holds the larg- est double-crested cormorant colony in the See VIDEO, Page 10A ONLINE http://bit.ly/1TAH1ob See AGENCY, Page 10A