10A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 24, 2016 Coast Guard: Majority of disabled Housing: Urling calls received come from Buoy 10 suggested relaxing carport, garage rule Continued from Page 1A Several operations special- ists, trained to be the eyes, ears and voices of the Coast Guard, immediately keyed in, hyperfo- cused on inding more informa- tion and dispatching rescuers. Eyes The command center, the Coast Guard’s version of a 911 dispatch center, is illed to the brim with radio, satel- lite and other communications equipment. Manning the command cen- ter at all times on 12-hour shifts are teams of operations special- ists overseen by command duty oficers. During their shifts, they are in charge of handling search and rescue, pollution, security and other cases along the coast from Paciic City to Queets, Washington, and the Columbia upriver to Lewiston, Idaho. “Our role here is to roll out any type of response efforts,” said Petty Oficer 1st Class Dar- lene Harrison, an operations unit controller who oversees the planning search and rescue missions. “That’s a pretty big weight to have on your shoulders,” she said, adding sometimes she has to track tens of cases concurrently. Next to Harrison on Friday sat Lt. j.g. Issac Yates, a unit sit- uation controller providing situ- ational awareness of the Coast Guard’s assets and weather con- ditions. Backing them up were Petty Oficer 2nd Class Kasey Tarbox, breaking in Yates, a recent transfer from Maryland. Overseeing all of them Fri- day was Lt. Kristen Caldwell, a command duty oficer who stays in the secure command center 24 hours at a time. Ears Harrison said cases often start in the command center’s two radio rooms. One person monitors radio trafic along the coastline. The other tracks com- munications from the mouth of the Columbia upriver. Both send out broadcasts to mariners about weather conditions, restrictions and obstructions in the water, such as logs loating down the river. Siems said he listens for excited voices and key terms like “mayday,” “help,” “taking “Unless people are hon- est and ask to get a business resist the idea of placing license and pay the transient residential and commercial (room) tax, we really have structures side by side. But no way of knowing about it “we’re in a different envi- until the neighbors start com- ronment now,” he said, “with plaining — if there’s a rea- much of the emphasis on son to complain,” he told the trying to create affordable commission. housing.” Kujala said, “It sounds like Urling also suggested the people want a mechanism in city allow him to relax a rule order to have this as an option requiring duplexes and multi- rather than not have anything, ple-family dwellings to have but it needs to be licensed and either a carport or a garage. regulated, or have some type And, he said, if the com- of permit.” mission wanted to • During pub- be really aggres- lic comment on the sive on the issue, hiring criteria for they could stop a new city man- allowing sin- ager, Ken Yuill, gle-family dwell- who serves on the ings in high-den- Planning Com- sity residential mission, urged zones. the City Commis- “I don’t know sion to hire City how palatable you Recorder Linda Mark may ind it, but Engbretson, the Kujala it would, I think, city manager pro have a really good tem, for the perma- effect in terms of providing nent position. opportunities for more mul- “I’m a very strong sup- tiple-family dwellings,” Url- porter of taking care of peo- ing said. ple who take care of us,” Yuill said. “In this situation, I’m In other business: totally in line that you picked • The commission directed the correct person for the pro Urling to come up with con- tem, and I would like to see cepts for regulating homes that person become the new used as vacation rentals. city manager.” City staff has received an Engbretson was increasing number of inqui- appointed pro tem when ries about where and how former City Manager Kurt such rentals can be operated Fritsch resigned in late June. in Warrenton, Urling wrote in Engbretson’s interim role a staff report. lasts four months, per the city However, “the develop- charter; however, that time- ment code is silent on the line can be adjusted, City issue,” neither prescribing a Attorney Hal Snow said. zoning district where vacation The commission adopted rentals would be permitted a resolution laying out direc- outright or by commercial use, tives for inding Fritsch’s nor laying out operating stan- replacement, but Kujala said dards and criteria, he wrote. the commission doesn’t nec- The city believes that essarily need to go further “some unquantiied number in the hiring process at this of property owners” are using point. their structures as short-term “I don’t think we’re in rentals, though the city hasn’t any hurry, myself,” Kujala received any complaints so said. “I think we’re doing far, he wrote. very well.” Continued from Page 1A Photos courtesy of U.S. Coast Guard The U.S. Coast Guard’s command center at Air Station Astoria includes rooms to moni- tor radio traffic along the coastline from Queets, Washington, to Pacific City, and up the Columbia River to Lewiston, Idaho. a positioning beacon and life jackets. “Our chances of inding you with a life jacket on is 99 per- cent,” Harrison said, adding the odds are drastically lower for those trying to tread water in the on average 54 degree water. Always Ready An unofficial illustration made from the U.S. national animal incorporates the multiple skillsets of operations specialists with the U.S. Coast Guard, who oversee the agency’s response to emergencies using advanced com- munications, information-gathering and cartography. on water” and “I see a lare” to assess whether someone is in an emergency. “You can hear the excitement level,” he said. Helping the command cen- ter are tools such as Rescue 21, a network of radio towers span- ning the coast and Columbia and allowing operators to communi- cate with and ping the position of people in distress. Special- ized software helps the opera- tors guess the position and sur- vivability of people in the water. Buoy 10 Over the last three years, Sector Columbia River’s com- mand center has handled more than 1,800 calls, more than 40 percent of those are disabled vessels. “I would say the major- ity of our disabled calls come from Buoy 10,” Caldwell said. “They run out of gas. They’re out there ishing and not paying attention.” Activity spikes during the Buoy 10 summer salmon ish- ery in August, which lures thousands of isherman out on the water from Tongue Point to the mouth of the Columbia. Much of the Coast Guard’s work during Buoy 10 is preven- tion. As part of Operation Make Way, radio operators in the radio room send out broadcasts telling boaters to move for large vessels navigating the Colum- bia’s thin commercial channel. Hundreds of auxiliarists pro- vide free boat inspections and patrol as part of a community watch. Caldwell said the Coast Guard continually cautions boaters to be prepared when they go out on the water by getting their boats checked and carrying a powerful radio, The command center ulti- mately handled 12 cases Fri- day. The person in the water near Ocean Park turned out to be crab pots. The Coast Guard sent its helicopter back shortly after takeoff, when the disabled vessel on Grays Harbor bar was towed to safety by a good Samaritan. Each case the command cen- ter handles is followed by at least an hour of paperwork, Caldwell said, “but that’s our job.” What especially angers the operators in the command cen- ter are hoax callers, which cost the Coast Guard thousands of dollars to respond to and divert attention away from real emer- gencies. Sector Columbia River has a continuing issue with a person placing hoax calls from near Megler Mountain in Paciic County. “We pretty much know when it’s him,” Caldwell said. “People could die because of it. We don’t like it.” Hospice Volunteers Needed In the absence of a cure, care makes all the difference Seal: Ribbon seals ‘are known to be exceptional travelers’ Continued from Page 1A white lines wrapping around their bodies, could only be the same species as the one seen on the peninsula. But ribbon seals are usually found high up in the North Paciic Ocean, in the Bering and Okhotsk Seas and even in the Arctic Ocean. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration conirmed this identiication later in the day. Now there’s another data point charting the varied journeys of ribbon seals outside of their usual hunting grounds. It’s a connect-the- dots with very few dots. The last time anyone reported a sighting in Wash- ington was four years ago, near Seattle. Before that, in the 1960s, a ribbon seal was reported down in California. “They are known to be exceptional travelers,” said NOAA wildlife biologist Michael Cameron, who works with the agency’s Marine Mammal Lab and the Alaska Fisheries Science Center in the Polar Ecosystems Program. But these longer trav- els usually take place when the animals are younger, and the seal in Surfside looked like a healthy adult male to Cameron. “It’s not uncommon for sub-adult animals, marine mammals, to make long migra- tions until they’re old enough to breed,” Cameron said. An adult ribbon seal this far south, however, “is more unusual.” Ribbon seals normally stick to the far north seas, mov- ing with the ice. They are rel- atively solitary, according to NOAA biologists, spending much of their time in the open ocean and hauling out on ice loes. Not a sign of the times The sighting of a rib- bon seal in Surfside proba- bly doesn’t point to anything larger, like shifting climate change patterns or troubles with ribbon seal populations in the Bering Sea, Cameron said. “It’s interesting from a nat- ural life history perspective,” he said. But it’s not something wildlife biologists are going to rush out and research. NOAA has radio-tagged a number of ribbon seals in the Bering Sea; none of those have made the journey down here, yet. The worldwide population of ribbon seals is believed to be between 200,000 and 240,000 — an estimate based on surveys conducted in the 1970s. According to NOAA, Siberia and Alaska Natives have hunted the seals for many generations and currently take less than an estimated 200 seals each year. Soviet seal- ers hunted for ribbon seals as well. During this time, from the 1960s to the 1980s, the Bering Sea population is thought to have declined from 80,000 or 90,000 animals, to 60,000. The program Cam- eron is involved with — the Polar Ecosystems Program — is, according to NOAA, “actively studying and moni- toring ribbon seals to support a more reliable assessment of their status” and to discover more about their life cycles and health and any threats they face. Safe zones: Committee spent years working on signs, developing routes Continued from Page 1A Inspired by blue lines indi- cating tsunami safe zones in areas of New Zealand, the markings are accompanied by signs notifying pedestrians and vehicles that they are leaving the tsunami hazard zone. Wierson said the blue lines raise daily awareness, reduce the number of signs needed and allow people to plan their own evacuation route. “If people don’t have a map, they will see it with signs and by the mark in the pave- ment,” he said. The emergency prepared- ness committee has worked on the blue line project for about a year and a half, chair- woman and founder Karo- lyn Adamson said. The com- mittee has spent many years working on signs and devel- oping routes. “We’ve made a lot of prog- ress, but we still have a long way to go,” she said. Make a Difference Volunteers hold a special place in the hearts of our patients and their families. Volunteers serve hospice patients in a variety of ways including respite care, companionship, listening to concerns and other loving acts. Apply by Sept. 23 to be a hospice volunteer. Participation in a 20-hour training program (Oct. 3-7, 2016) is required. Call our Volunteer Coordinator at 503-325-4321 for more information and an application. Lower Columbia Hospice serves patients and families in Clatsop County. 2111 Exchange St., Astoria, Oregon • 503-325-4321 www.columbiamemorial.org • A Planetree-Designated Hospital