143RD YEAR, NO. 220 DailyAstorian.com // WEDNESDAY, MAY 11, 2016 ONE DOLLAR SPORTS: KNAPPA BASEBALL CLINCHES ANOTHER NWL TITLE PAGE 7A ‘Hatfi elds and McCoys’ as rental showdown nears Gearhart city leader wants to grandfather more properties By R.J. MARX The Daily Astorian Chad Sweet GEARHART — Changes may be ahead in Gearhart’s short-term rental rules. Gearhart City Administrator Chad Sweet has proposed maintaining the city’s comprehensive plan, which limits tourism. However, he recommended lifting a pro- posed limit of 35 vacation rental permits. “Allow homes renting short-term 90 days to apply for a permit, set the permit- ted limit at the number that apply,” Sweet wrote. “The community can adjust the number of available permits in the future, or let the permits phase out to zero over time. As homes are sold or conveyed, the permit will be lost.” Sweet asked the Gearhart Planning Commission to drop a proposed seven-day rental block requirement, which, he said “will be very diffi cult to administer.” He also sought an exemption to 24-hour managed properties, such as some condominium units. “Only units that are not managed by 24-hour staff should be included for safety and impact,” Sweet wrote. Sweet also recommended the rules only apply to the city of Gearhart, not the neighborhoods of the Palisade and Highlands . A deep divide The Planning C ommission — which is meeting Thursday — is weighing a short-term rental registry, with limits on the number of guests per bedroom, off- street parking spaces and septic system capacity. See GEARHART, Page 10A A gap in public health County needs more than double the staff and money to fully serve residents By KYLE SPURR The Daily Astorian F Warrior in name, change in image Warrenton to change Native American ties to all mascots Joshua Bessex/The Daily Astorian Birth-control information at the Clatsop County Public Health Department. PUBLIC HEALTH HELP WANTED By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian 23.5 CURRENT Community partnership development Health equity and cultural responsiveness Policy and planning Communications Emergency preparedness and response Assessment and epidemiology NEEDED Totals: 9.8 See GAP, Page 10A Clinical preventive services Prevention and health promotion Full-time positions for public health capabilities and programs Environmental health Public Health 3.0 Public health modernization stems from a national trend to address new challenges in an era of chronic diseases and various social determinants of health. The American Journal of Pub- lic Health last month coined the phrase “Public Health 3.0,” that refers to the public health system upgrading to a modern approach that focuses more on social barri- ers and chronic diseases. A century ago, public health grew with the creation of anti- biotics and vaccines. The jour- nal refers to that early period as “Public Health 1.0.” In the 1980s, the Institute of Medicine defi ned core functions that have since helped departments suc- cessfully treat diseases such as infl uenza and tuberculosis. That result of defi ning baseline func- tions is described as “Public Health 2.0.” “This seminal report was enormously infl uential in shap- ing and re-energizing pub- lic health,” an American Jour- nal of Public Health editorial reads. “However, there was lit- tle emphasis on how public health leaders might work across Warrenton’s football helmet with the W logo. Communicable disease control or Clatsop County Pub- lic Health to fully serve the county’s 37,000 popu- lation, it would need 2 1/2 times the staff and funds. The department recently completed a self-assessment that showed it would have to spend more than $2.4 million annually on about 25 full-time equivalent positions to be fully operational. It currently spends $1.1 million each year on about 10 FTEs. Public Health Director Brian Mahoney compiled the self-as- sessment as part of a statewide public health modernization effort. Each health department in the state is reviewing capacity, capability, spending and costs. The self-assessments will be compiled into a plan for a public health modernization bill in the 2017 l egislative session. “This is a long-term view of where we would like the pub- lic health effort to be going,” Mahoney said. Warrenton refi nes ballot initiative standard Higher threshold would apply for some measures By DERRICK DePLEDGE The Daily Astorian WARRENTON — Ballot initiatives that would require supermajority or dou- ble majority voter approval to change city law or take government action will fi rst have to win voter support by the same margin. The Warrenton City Commission agreed Tuesday night to adopt the higher standard. The threshold will apply to citi- zen ballot initiatives and measures referred to voters by the City Commission. Supermajority or double majority requirements are meant to make it more diffi cult to change the law or more than $100,000. take a government action. A The charter amendment double majority, for example, is a response from residents requires a majority vote among who had opposed a potential more than 50 percent of regis- land swap between the city tered voters, a high bar. and Warrenton Fiber at Tansy The new standard will pre- Point. vent such requirements from Yuill hopes to qualify the being enacted by majority charter amendment for the vote. November ballot. “If you want to create a Last year, when Yuill’s Henry double-majority requirement, group fi rst announced a signa- Balensifer you’re going to have to get ture drive, Mayor Mark Kujala a double majority to get that in the law,” had said the charter amendment would be said City Commissioner Henry Balen- “very limiting to the City Commission.” sifer, who introduced the change. “The petition is not directed against the The Warrenton Property Protection commission,” Yuill said. “This is solely a Committee, led by Ken Yuill, has col- group that felt that this needed to go to the lected signatures for a charter amend- voters, to get the voters’ decision on that. ment that would require double -ma- “By them passing that,” he said of jority voter approval before the city the City Commission’s decision Tuesday transfers or disposes of assets valued at night, “I don’t know where we’re at.” WARRENTON — The Warren- ton-Hammond School Board voted Tuesday to move away from Native American imagery in its mascots, in advance of a statewide ban that becomes effective next year. The Warrior mascot at Warrenton High School will be redesigned to be non-native. The mascot will replace the Warrenton Grade School mascot, the Braves. Superintendent Mark Jeffery reiterated concerns that, despite an exception recently passed to the mas- cot ban, the issue is not settled. If the district does not comply, it could lose state funding, which Jeffery has said is about 65 percent of Warrenton’s budget. The state Board of Educa- tion voted to ban Native Ameri- can mascots in 2012. Under pres- sure from the Oregon Legislature, the board voted 4-2 earlier this year to allow an exception if districts got the sponsorship of a federally rec- ognized tribe. Vice Chairwoman Angela Bowen said the Board of Education had been “bullied” by the Oregon Legislature into acting against their consciences. Warrenton had been pursuing a possible agreement with the Confed- erated Tribes of Grand Ronde, which last month signed a sponsorship agreement with the Banks School District regarding their mascot, the Braves. Banks will have a redesigned logo approved by Grand Ronde, and incorporate local Native American history curriculum designed by the tribe into social studies classes. Jeffery said all it would take is a change in the governor’s offi ce or tribal council in Grand Ronde to end the exception, adding the sponsoring tribe could nix the agreement with two weeks’ notice. Similar concerns led the Three Rivers School District in Grants Pass to move away from the Fort Vannoy Elementary School Indians and Fleming Middle School Rogues earlier this year. “I think it’s important to note that, however we feel about keeping imag- ery, there’s a lot of district resources spent working through this,” board member Greg Morrill said. “I think we’ve got a lot more important things you could be doing.” See MASCOT, Page 10A