DailyAstorian.com // WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 2016 144TH YEAR, NO. 14 ONE DOLLAR Inn seeks OSU Extension Service expands space to create marina village Port begins talks on Chinook Building, Seafare restaurant By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian Danny Miller/The Daily Astorian Joyce Senior, SNAP Education Program coordinator, passes out recipes after teaching a group a healthy smoothie recipe Tues- day at the Bob Chisholm Community Center in Seaside. New agents extend expertise locally in ishing, forestry, more The Port of Astoria Commission on Tues- day voted to enter negotiations with Asto- ria Riverwalk Inn operators William Orr and Chester Trabucco on leasing the adjacent Chinook Building. Commissioners John Raichl, James Campbell and Robert Mushen were support- ive of the project. Orr’s brother-in-law, Com- missioner Stephen Fulton, recused himself because of the conlict of interest. Com- missioner Bill Hunsinger, calling in from Alaska, abstained from the vote but came out in opposition to the proposal, accusing the Port’s administration of diverging from the agency’s previous direction and trying to postpone a decision. The proposal would have the Port lease the Chinook Building to Marina Village LLC, for $6,000 a month. The company would take over the leases and maintenance. Staff estimates the Port makes $4,200 a month on leases in the building, which include seafood market Northwest Wild Products, the Asto- ria Yacht Club and professional ofice space. See INN, Page 7A By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian urrounded by a lunchtime group, Joyce Senior blended together a simple fruit smoothie with bananas, strawberries, yogurt and orange juice, handing out samples, recipes, seasonal food guides and nutritional advice Tuesday. Senior, an extension agent for Oregon State University, is tasked with helping educate the more than 20 percent of Clatsop County res- idents who use the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, known as food stamps, how to eat well on a budget. She is one of several Extension Service agents in the county serving as a conduit between rural communities and the university. Local Extension Service agents oversee the popular 4-H youth and Master Gardener pro- grams, along with child care referrals and edu- cation about coastal hazards from tsunamis and earthquakes. In recent months, the university has added Senior and two other agents work- ing with forestry and ishing, the county’s two largest industries. Patrick Corcoran, an extension agent with the Oregon Sea Grant working on coastal haz- ards, described the program as an extension cord extending the reach of the university’s research. Oregon State is one of 73 land-grant universities in the U.S., providing research, education and the extension of its expertise into rural communities. “Our thing is rural areas,” Corcoran said. “We bring a little bit of the university’s oomph S Courtesy of Oregon State University Oregon State University Extension Service forestry and natural resources agent Val- erie Grant measures a tree’s diameter in the woods near Astoria. Grant provides forestry educational programs in Clatsop, Tillamook and Lincoln counties. to the rural” environment, while assessing the needs of rural residents. Eating on a budget Senior meets the community at senior cen- ters, farmers markets and other places where food and people mingle, sharing resources on how to ind local produce, and recipes for cooking at home. “I really, truly believe that every human being has the right to have a healthy meal every day,” she said. Originally from Costa Rica, Senior has a bachelor’s in nutrition from Costa Rica Univer- sity, a Ph.D. in food technology from Clemson University and speaks English and Spanish. She started in March, replacing Kristin Frost Albrecht as the federally funded out- reach coordinator for the university, which has the contract to share healthy habits with peo- ple using the supplemental nutrition program. More than half of families in the county are eli- gible for the supplemental nutrition program and free and reduced-price lunches based on income. Senior said she is still learning the commu- nity and is building relationships with the Com- munity Health Advocacy & Resource Team, North Coast Food Web and similar groups, try- ing not to duplicate efforts. Find her Thursdays at the River People Farmers Market in Astoria. Forest knowledge Valerie Grant grew up in the forests of Humboldt County, California. Her family has worked for three generations as timber fall- ers, log truck drivers and heavy equipment operators. See OSU, Page 10A ‘Our thing is rural areas. We bring a little bit of the university’s oomph to the rural.’ Patrick Corcoran extension agent with the Oregon Sea Grant working on coast hazards Ditching design review In Oysterville, residents torn as county swaps board with examiner By DAVID PLECHL EO Media Group SOUTH BEND, Wash. — Like its boom- town past, Oysterville’s Design Review Board is now history. With the thunk of a gavel, Paciic County commissioners Frank Wolfe and Steve Rog- ers voted to end the board’s 40-year reign as arbiter of all things Oysterville during a pub- lic meeting Monday in South Bend. Com- missioner Lisa Ayers was not present. “It seems to me there’s different inter- pretations of what we’re trying to do here,” Wolfe said. “The county has realized that we need to go in a different direction.” From now on, Oysterville residents who want to build or modify existing buildings will need to seek approval from a hearings examiner. See REVIEW, Page 10A Risking death for the perfect photo The dangers of going too far to capture a memory By ZACH URNESS Statesman Journal PACIFIC CITY — The pic- ture is breathtaking. A future bride and groom stand on a rock shaped like a pedestal above the Paciic Ocean. Her dress lows in the wind, he holds her close, and the blue expanse of the Ore- gon Coast spreads out behind them. It’s the perfect engagement photograph. And it’s become one of the most sought-after images by professional, ama- teur and iPhone-wielding pho- tographers, many of whom visit after discovering the pic- ture on social media websites such as Instagram. Just one problem. The “Pedestal Rock” is on a notorious sandstone bluff at Cape Kiwanda State Natu- ral Area, which is fenced off and bordered by signs warning people not to go there. Seven people have died in the area since 2009. Six fatal falls have taken place during the past two years. Rescue efforts by the local ire dis- trict and U.S. Coast Guard cost upward of $21,000 per hour, often topping out near $106,000. Yet people continue to lood past the fence and signs. Adults, teenagers, grandpar- ents, photographers and even parents with small children disregard the warnings. “We’re not seeing much confusion about what the cur- rent signs and fence mean,” said Chris Havel, spokesman for the Oregon Parks and Rec- reation Department. “Even people who are aware of the deaths walk right past the fence and signs into that area. They appear conident that what happened to other people won’t happen to them.” See RISKY, Page 7A Zach Urness/Statesman-Journal via AP Visitors walk past the fence guarding the bluffs at Cape Kiwanda State Natural Area in Cloverdale. Everyone from photographers to families ignore warnings in order to get the perfect photo at the Oregon Coast’s deadliest cape, where six people have died in the last 18 months.