The daily Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1961-current, August 16, 2016, Page 9A, Image 9

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    9A
THE DAILY ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, AUGUST 16, 2016
WORLD BRIEFLY
L EGAL N OTICES
AB5266
Trusteeʼs Notice of Sale
OREGON TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE T.S. No: L547993 OR Unit Code: L Loan No: 33110555/NOSACK
AP #1: 18748/6J1080636CA00402 Title #: 8607910 Reference is made to that certain Trust Deed made by
ANGELA M. NOSACK as Grantor, to RURAL HOUSING SERVICE OR ITS SUCCESSOR AGENCY as
Trustee, in favor of UNITED STATES OF AMERICA ACTING THROUGH THE RURAL HOUSING SERVICE,
SUCCESSOR IN INTEREST TO FMHA UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE as
Beneficiary. Dated November 16, 2004, Recorded November 16, 2005 as Instr. No. 200513917 in Book ---
Page of Official Records in the office of the Recorder of CLATSOP County; OREGON covering the following
described real property situated in said county and state, to wit: EXHIBIT “A” Beginning at the Southwest
corner of the J. A. McIntosh tract, said point being 1223.9 feet North and 208.8 feet East of the standard
quarter Section corner on the South line of Section 36, Township 8 North, Range 6 West, Willamette
Meridian, County of Clatsop, State of Oregon; thence North 18° 00' 00” West 28.8 feet to the North right of
way line of U.S. Highway 30 as formerly located; thence North 48° 52' 00” West 597.6 feet along said North
right of way line to the true point of - beginning of the tract hereby conveyed; thence North 39° 57' 00” East
104.4 feet along the Westerly line of that parcel described in : Book 840, pages 239 and 240, Clatsop County
Records, to a point on the South line of that tract described as Parcel 1 in Book 350, page 114, Clatsop
County Records; thence North 49° 00' 00” West 12.00 feet to the Southwesterly corner of that tract described
as Parcel I in Book 350, page 114, Clatsop County Records; thence North 39° 57' 00” East 24.53 feet to the
Southeast corner of that tract described as Parcel 2 in Book 350, page 114, Clatsop County Records; thence
North 49° 00' 00” West 60.67 feet along the Southerly boundary of that tract described as Parcel 2 in Book
350, page 114, Clatsop County Records, to the boundary of property conveyed by Jack Robinson and Minnie
Robinson to Oren Tweet, et ux; thence South 43° 07' 00” West 53.00 feet along said Tweet property to the
Southeast corner thereof; thence following said Tweet property line North 47° 50' 00” West 24.00 feet to a
point; thence South 15° 20' 00” West 84.63 feet to a point on said former right of way line of U.S. Highway 30;
thence South 48° 52' 00” East 64.33 feet to the point of beginning. EXCEPTING that part conveyed by
Grantor herein to the State of Oregon for highway purposes. Both the beneficiary and the trustee have
elected to sell the said real property. The property will be sold to satisfy the obligations secured by said Trust
Deed and a Notice of Default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.735(3); the default
for which the foreclosure is made is Grantor's failure to pay when due, the following sums: 11 PYMTS FROM
09/16/13 TO 07/16/14 @ 460.71 $5,067.81 22 PYMTS FROM 08/16/14 TO 05/16/16 @ 738.60 $16,249.20
TOTAL LATE CHARGES $220.69 MISCELLANEOUS FEES $4,305.34 Sub-Total of Amounts in Arrears:
$25,843.04 Together with any default in the payment of recurring obligations as they become due. ALSO, if
you have failed to pay taxes on the property, provide insurance on the property or pay other senior liens or
encumbrances as required in the note and Trust Deed, the beneficiary may insist that you do so in order to
reinstate your account in good standing. The beneficiary may require as a condition to reinstatement that you
provide reliable written evidence that you have paid all senior liens or encumbrances, property taxes, and
hazard insurance premiums. These requirements for reinstatement should be confirmed by contacting the
undersigned Trustee. The street or other common designation if any, of the real property described above is
purported to be: 49229 HIGHWAY 30, WESTPORT, OR 97016 The undersigned Trustee disclaims any
liability for any incorrectness of the above street or other common designation. By reason of said default, the
beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by said Trust Deed immediately due and
payable, said sums being the following, to wit: Principal $98,943.03, together with interest as provided in the
note or other instrument secured from 08/16/13, plus subsidy recapture in the sum of $23,699.13 and fees
assessed in the amount of $4,844.84, plus accrued interest due thereon, and such other costs and fees are
due under the note or other instrument secured, and as are provided by statute. WHEREFORE, notice is
hereby given that the undersigned trustee will, on October 3, 2016, at the hour of 10:00 A.M. in accord with
the Standard Time, as established by O.R.S. 187.110, INSIDE THE MAIN LOBBY OF THE CLATSOP
COUNTY COURTHOUSE, 749 COMMERCIAL STREET, ASTORIA, County of CLATSOP, State of
OREGON, (which is the date, time and place set for said sale) sell at public auction to the highest bidder for
cash the interest in the said described real property which the Grantor had or had power to convey at the time
of execution by him of the said Trust Deed, together with any interest which the Grantor or his successors in
interest acquired after the execution of said Trust Deed, to satisfy, the foregoing obligations thereby secured
and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that
the right exists under O.R.S. 86.778, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to have
this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the Trust Deed reinstated by paying the entire amount then due
(other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any
other default complained of in the Notice of Default, that is capable of being cured by tendering the
performance required under the obligation of the Trust Deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering
the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in
enforcing the obligation and Trust Deed, together with trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the
amounts provided by said
O.R.S. 86.778. It will be necessary for you to contact the undersigned prior to the time you tender reinstatement
or payoff so that you be advised of the exact amount, including trustee's costs and fees, that you will be
required to pay. Payment must be in the full amount in the form of cashier's or certified check. The effect of
the sale will be to deprive you and all those who hold by, through and under you of all interest in the property
described above. In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and neuter, the
singular gender includes the plural, the word “Grantor” includes any successor in interest to the Grantor as
well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance, of which is secured by said Trust Deed, and
the words “trustee” and “beneficiary” include their respective successors in interest, if any. The Beneficiary
may be attempting to collect a debt and any information obtained may be used for that purpose. If the Trustee
is unable to convey title for any reason, the successful bidder's sole and exclusive remedy shall be the return
of the monies paid to the Trustee, and the successful bidder shall have no further recourse. Without limiting
the trustee's disclaimer of representations or warranties, Oregon law requires the trustee to state in this notice
that some residential property sold at a trustee's sale may have been used in manufacturing
methamphetamines, the chemical components of which are known to be toxic. Prospective purchases of
residential property should be aware of this potential danger before deciding to place a bid for this property at
the trustee's sale. If available, the expected opening bid and/or postponement information may be obtained
by calling the following telephone numbers (s) on the day before the sale: (888) 988-6736 or you may access
sales information at salestrack.tdsf.com DATED: May 18, 2016 CHRISTOPHER C. DORR, OSBA #992526
By: CHRISTOPHER C. DORR, ATTORNEY AT LAW DIRECT INQUIRIES TO: TD. Service Company
Foreclosure Department 4000 W. Metropolitan Drive, Suite 400 Orange, CA 92868 (800) 843-0260 Free legal
assistance: Oregon Law Center Portland: (503) 473-8329 Coos Bay: 1-800-303-3638 Ontario: 1-888-250-
9877 Salem: (503) 485-0696 Grants Pass: (541) 476-1058 Woodburn: 1-800-973-9003 Hillsboro: 1-877-726-
4381 http://www.oregonlawcenter.org/ and Oregon Law Help Site (providing more information and a directory
of legal aid programs) http://oregonlawhelp.org/ORJindex.cfm and Oregon State Bar Lawyer Referral Service
503-684-3763 or toll-free in Oregon at 800-452-7636 http://www.osbar.org
http:J/www.osbar.org/public/ris/ris.html#referral and information on federal loan modification programs at:
http://www.makinghomeaffordable.gov/ TAC: 1416 PUB: 08/16/16, 08/23/16, 08/30/16, 09/06/16
Published: August 16th, 23rd, 30th, and September 6th, 2016
BUSIN ESS D IRE CTORY
Y OU R GU ID E TO LOCAL PROF E SSIONAL S
A RBORIST
B OAT R EPAIR
Bigbyʼs Tree Service
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Clatsop Power Equipment
34912 Hwy 101 Bus, Astoria
1-800-220-0792 or 503-325-0792
ISA CERTIFIED ARBORISTS
•Pruning
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•Stump Grinding
•Excavator/Brush Rake
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B UILDERS
V EGETATION
M ANAGEMENT
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(503)791-0767
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•Licensed •Bonded • Insured
(503)325-7406 * CCB#55284
•Excavator mounted Flail Mower
•Brush raking •Lot clearing
•Scotch broom Removal
•chipping •Invasive Species removal
•Levey/Dike mowing
•Low impact Logging.
(503)791-0767
bigbys tree service.com
L AWN & G ARDEN
bigbys tree service.com
Affordable rates.
Dejesus Landscape Maintenance
•One time clean ups & year round
maintenance. •hedges •pruning
•Pressure washing •gutters
•weeding •bark •dumping service
CCB#158562
LIVE OUTSIDE ASTORIA? To place
your ad in the Daily Astorian
Classifieds, simply dial:
1-800-781-3211
Itʼs fast and itʼs toll free!
ARBOR CARE
TREE SPECIALISTS
ISA Certified Arborists
ISA Board-Certified
Master Arborist
ISA Tree Risk Assessment
Qualified
Comprehensive Service,
Pruning/Removal,
Stump Grinding/Hazard Evaluations
(503)791-0853
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Care for Your Trees
(503)791-5329
Call for an Appointment
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•Hauling•Gutter & Storm-Cleanup
(503)325-2445 •Free Estimates
Pedroʼs Lawn Care
Variety of Services
•Pressure Washing
• Moss Removal
•Gutter Cleaning
•Painting
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•Fence Work
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•Free Estimates
503-739-5475
Affordable rates.
CCB#158562
Deanʼs Tractor Service
Field Mowing, Brush Cutting,
Driveway Grading,and Rototilling.
503-791-1170
pioneerdan@charter.net
Specialty
Services
We urge you to patronize the local
professionals advertising in
The Daily Astorian Specialty
Services. To place your Specialty
Services ad, call 325-3211.
P ROFESSIONAL S ERVICES
Terry Marshall Bookkeeping Service
(503)298-0750
•Payables •Receivables •Payroll
•Quarterly Reporting
Oregon Construction Contractor's Law requires that all those who advertise remodeling, repair or construction services be registered with the Construction Contractor's
Board. Registration means contractors have bonds and insurance on the job site. For your protection, be sure any construction contractors you hire are registered. If they
are not, or if you are a contractor who wishes to register, call Construction Contractor's Board in Salem, OR 1-503-378-4621.
Associated Press
Analysis: Trump
nation-building view not
in line with Bush
Russian warplanes
take of from Iran to
target IS in Syria
MOSCOW — Russian warplanes took off
on Tuesday from a base in Iran to target Islamic
State ighters and other militants in Syria, Russia’s
Defense Ministry said, marking a major develop-
ment in the country’s civil war, now in its sixth year.
Russia has never used the territory of another
country in the Middle East for its operations inside
Syria, where it has been carrying out an aerial cam-
paign in support of President Bashar Assad’s gov-
ernment for nearly a year. The announcement sug-
gests cooperation on the highest levels between
Moscow and Tehran, both key allies of the embat-
tled president.
It comes a day after Russia’s defense minister
said Moscow and Washington are edging closer to
an agreement on Syria that would help defuse the
situation in the besieged northern city of Aleppo.
Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu said
the agreement would “allow us to ind common
ground and start ighting together for bringing
peace to that territory,” adding that Russian repre-
sentatives are “in a very active stage of talks with
our American colleagues.”
A U.S. oficial said, however, that discussions
with the Russians are still ongoing and no agree-
ment is close. The oficial spoke on condition of
anonymity because of the sensitivity of the talks.
WASHINGTON — Donald Trump says that
as president he would end “our current strategy
of nation-building and regime change” because
they don’t work. His dislike for nation-building
is shared by many, including none other than
the target of his criticism, President Barack
Obama.
In fact it was Obama’s predecessor, Repub-
lican George W. Bush, who committed the U.S.
to large-scale nation-building projects in Iraq
and Afghanistan. Obama discarded that strategy
while trying to keep enough U.S. inluence there
to prevent those two countries from crumbling.
Obama’s approach may not have worked, but it’s
not Bush-like “nation-building.”
And while the Republican presidential nom-
inee argued against nation-building in a foreign
policy speech Monday, he advocated for some-
thing even more grandiose: seizing Iraq’s oil
wealth in the aftermath of the U.S. invasion in
2003 that toppled Saddam Hussein.
“I have long said that we should have kept
the oil in Iraq,” he said in Youngstown, Ohio.
“I said, ‘Keep the oil. Keep the oil. Keep the
oil. Don’t let somebody else get it.’” It would
have required U.S. troops to protect the oil,
he said, but the beneit would have been clear
today.
Flood maps: ‘The cities and
the county have a lot at stake’
Continued from Page 1A
be subject to high-force winds
and wave impact, Hansen said.
The county, she added,
has already mailed letters to
property owners in unincor-
porated areas who will see a
portion of their land added to
the lood plain on the revised
maps.
A separate set of prelim-
inary lood plain maps is
undergoing a technical review
funded by the cities of War-
renton and Astoria, Clatsop
County, the Port of Astoria
and Diking District No. 9. The
stakeholders argue the maps
exaggerate the lood risk and
would force property own-
ers into paying extra in lood
insurance.
MORE ONLINE
Maps online: http://maps.co.clatsop.or.us/applications/index.html
Click on “Map Layers” tab and select “Draft FEMA Revisions 2016.”
‘A lot at stake’
The next step is a 90-day
appeal period, which David
Ratté, lood plain engineer
with FEMA Region X, said
he anticipates will begin in
late September or early Octo-
ber when the agency pub-
lishes notiications in two local
papers of record.
Assuming FEMA doesn’t
receive any signiicant appeals,
the agency will issue a letter of
inal determination to the com-
munities either late this year or
early next year.
Then follows a six-month
adoption period for commu-
nities to update their lood
plain ordinances. When the
six months is up, the lood
insurance rate maps become
effective.
Wingard urges anyone with
concerns about the maps to
raise them during the appeal
process so the hearings on the
ordinances during that crucial
six-month window can play
out uninterrupted.
“Hopefully, folks will
understand that the cities and
the county have a lot at stake,”
Wingard said.
Housing: Task force could have
recommendations ready by November
Continued from Page 1A
The task force has seen
24- and 25-unit affordable
housing concepts for the RV
Park on Haskell Lane and
the downtown Spruce Street
parking lot, and a nine-unit
design for affordable housing
at the former Cannon Beach
Children’s Center in Tolovana
Park. In a inal report to the
council, the task force might
not suggest housing in down-
town, but may recommend
using small park model homes
as one portion of affordable
housing on the city-owned RV
Park. Consultant Terri Sil-
vis estimated the parking lot
option would cost about $4.5
million, the children’s cen-
ter property $1.7 million and
the RV Park about $5 million.
The numbers assume each
square foot is $150 and the
city leases land to a real estate
developer. Task force mem-
bers discussed opportunities
for local funding and private
investors.
Narrowing options
The task force agreed
that putting affordable hous-
ing on the downtown Spruce
Street parking lot was a “poor
option” and “unrealistic,” cit-
ing downtown businesses that
need parking. The concept of
housing at the children’s cen-
ter may be reconsidered to
include the entire property,
including the Tolovana Arts
Colony building across the
street.
In June, former Mayor
Mike Morgan and former City
Planner Rainmar Bartl sug-
gested tiny, factory-built park
model homes as an alternative
concept for affordable hous-
ing at the RV Park.
The task force agreed to
consider replacing some of
the affordable housing units
in the concept design with
park model “tiny homes” that
could work for individuals or
couples.
“You’re getting at the vari-
ety of needs that you’ve iden-
tiied, some more expensive
and some more quick and
affordable,” Silvis said of the
park model cottages.
City Planner Mark Barnes
said the RV Park is already
zoned and permitted for park
model homes, though the city
would need to allow long-
term tenants.
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“Of the options we’ve
talked about, that is by far the
fastest,” he said.
The cost of park models,
which would take up 12 RV
spaces, would be lower than
new construction.
Response
Resident Ed Johnson said
that people in the commu-
nity who might be affected by
affordable housing at the RV
Park or at the children’s cen-
ter should be contacted before
the task force makes a inal
recommendation.
“There’s some bigger
issues that I wish were being
addressed, particularly those
people most closely associ-
ated with the intended plans
that you have on the table,”
Johnson said.
Several residents said it
was business owners’ issue
and some local businesses pro-
vide housing for employees.
Resident Phil Massebeau
said the focus should be on
inding a private party to build
housing.
“We could make it easier
for an apartment complex to
come in but why do we have
to put one in the RV Park, the
most populated part of Can-
non Beach with full-time resi-
dents?” he said.
Resident
Jan
Sie-
bert-Wahrmund said keeping
the community sustainable is
dificult.
“I know we don’t have
much water in our water-
shed to take on much more
growth,” she said.
The affordable homes
would be available for those
who make about 70 to 100
percent of the area median
income.
“I think it’s so critical that
this gets done,” City Manager
Brant Kucera said. “We’re the
only ones trying to do this and
I’d hate to see this go down in
lames because it feels like the
square foot cost is too much.”
The task force could pro-
vide a report with recommen-
dations to the City Council by
November.