3A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2016 Port puts off talk of leaving CREST Task force has come under fire over dam removal project By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian Pamplin Media Group Secretary of State candidate Dennis Richardson. Accord- ing to the latest DHM poll, Richardson leads Avakian by a margin of 32 percent to 27 percent. Poll: Measure 97 losing support, Richardson gaining Corporate sales tax slipping By JIM REDDEN Capital Bureau A corporate sales tax mea- sure is continuing to lose sup- port as Tuesday’s election approaches, according to a new poll commissioned by FOX-12. The poll also shows Kate Brown is on track to be elected Oregon governor, so the likely defeat of the Measure 97 cor- porate tax increase means she’ll face a big state budget deficit next year. The poll, conducted by Portland’s DHM Research, shows that 53 percent of voters oppose Measure 97, while just 40 percent now support it. The level of support had been as high as 60 percent in a DHM poll conducted in September, but it had declined to 45 per- cent by early October. Measure 97 would impose a 2.5 percent tax on corpora- tions with more than $25 mil- lion a year in Oregon sales. It would raise $6 billion per biennial budget cycle. Oregon is facing a $1.4 billion deficit in the next two-year budget. The fight over the corporate sale tax measure already has broken state campaign spend- ing records. With a week to go before Election Day, support- ers had reported raising over $13 million this year, mostly from public employee unions. Opponents had raised over $25 million, primarily from corpo- rations. The fundraising record was previously set during the fight over GMO labeling in 2014, when opponents and proponents raised a combined $29 million. In another closely watched race, the poll shows Repub- lican Dennis Richardson has an opportunity to break the streak of Democratic domi- nance in statewide elections dating back to 2002 by defeat- ing Brad Avakian for secretary of state. According to the poll, Richardson leads Avakian by a margin of 32 percent to 27 per- cent. Richardson is favored by nonaffiliated voters by a mar- gin of 30 percent to 22 per- cent. He also has slightly more support from Democrats than Avakian has from Republicans — 12 percent to 9 percent. More than 40 percent of voters are still undecided, however, meaning the final vote could go either way. In a more predictable result, the poll shows Brown, a Dem- ocrat, with a 9-point lead over Republican Bud Pierce in the governor’s race. No Republi- can has been elected governor in Oregon since Vic Atiyeh in 1982. The winner will serve out the remaining two years of former Gov. John Kitzhaber’s term. He resigned amid an ethics scandal in February 2015, and Brown, who was then secretary of state, suc- ceeded him. Likewise, the poll shows Democrat Hillary Clinton in a strong position to defeat Republican Donald Trump in Oregon. In the presiden- tial race, Clinton is leading Trump by a margin of 41 per- cent to 34 percent, the poll found. Clinton’s 7-point lead is smaller than President Barack Obama’s 12-point victory in 2012 and 16-point victory in 2008. The poll found 72 percent of Democrats plan to vote for Clinton, compared with 65 per- cent of Republicans who plan to vote for Trump. Eleven per- cent of voters are undecided and 3 percent may skip the race. The poll of 504 Oregon voters was conducted from Oct. 25 through Saturday. It has a margin of error of plus or minus 4.4 percentage points. To see more detailed find- ings, visit http://tinyurl.com/ hfc3kl3. The Capital Bureau is a collaboration between EO Media Group and Pamplin Media Group. The Port of Astoria Com- mission voted unanimously on Tuesday to table discus- sion on the agency’s mem- bership in the Columbia River Estuary Study Task- force — after commission- ers had opined on the group. Commissioner Bill Hunsinger, who had called for the discussion Tues- day, said not all commis- sioners had a chance to review materials handed out by Warrenton business- man Pat O’Grady at the last meeting. O’Grady, who has railed against CREST at Port and Warrenton City Commis- sion meetings, handed out materials regarding CREST, including a report into the recently scrapped Eighth Street Dam removal project. The report, requested by the Warrenton City Commis- sion and performed by Port- land attorney Akin Blitz, was critical of the plan by CREST and the Skipanon Water Control District to remove the dam as obsolete. Hunsinger also accused Jim Knight, the Port’s exec- utive director, of campaign- ing on behalf of CREST, because of recent com- ments Knight made in The Daily Astorian. Knight said CREST is rarely used by the Port, but has provided qual- ity work. CREST has come under heat from commission- ers Hunsinger and Stephen Fulton for perceived issues with the group’s work on habitat restoration projects at the Astoria Regional Air- port and in Warrenton. Ful- ton has served on CREST’s board and works for War- renton Fiber, a vocal oppo- nent of the dam removal project on the Skipanon River. He has been removed from CREST’s board and accused by its chairman — Scott Lee, who is also the chairman of the Clat- sop County Board of Com- missioners — of serving the interests of his employer in a campaign against the task force. Before voting unani- mously to table discussion on the Port’s membership in CREST, Port commis- sioners spoke about its per- ceived issues. “It would seem to me that we have an agency run- ning on real loose reins,” said Commissioner James Campbell. Campbell said an organi- zation with a $5 million bud- get should have a board that meets more than four times a year and is more involved in directing the organiza- tion. He said the organiza- tion seems to do some good, providing technical assis- tance the Port doesn’t have the staff to cover. Fulton said he agrees with Campbell that four ‘It would seem to me that we have an agency running on real loose reins.’ James Campbell Port commissioner board meetings a year are not enough, and with Hunsinger that all Port commissioners should read O’Grady’s mate- rials. Fulton said the Port needs to let the facts come out before making any decision. “I don’t support CREST any more than anyone else,” said Port Commission Chair- man Robert Mushen, the agency’s representative on the CREST board. “But I think resigning from CREST is the wrong way to solve it.” Mushen agreed with Campbell, saying the Port, as a member of the CREST board, needs to help hold the organization’s feet to the fire on transparency. In other news from Tues- day’s meeting: • The Port Commission approved a license agreement to allow the U.S. Coast Guard to repair the taxiway its heli- copters use at the airport. The Coast Guard, which leases space for Air Station Asto- ria from the Port, needed a license agreement in order to spend federal money improv- ing Port property. • The Port Commis- sion approved a contract for pre-dredging sediment analy- sis at the West End Mooring Basin. The marina has long faced shoaling, with some boats bottoming out and tip- ping over during low tides. When asked by Hunsinger what CREST has done for the Port, Knight said the group prepared the sediment anal- ysis plan in preparation to award a contract for sampling. CREST was going to oversee sampling, Knight said, but the Port saved $5,000 by going with Advanced Remediation Technologies, Inc., out of Canby. HEALING OREGON with KINDNESS and COMPASSION STATE REPRESENTATIVE • Enhance education • Create jobs • Increase government accountability • Improve healthcare “I am running for House District 32 to bring new ideas to the state and bring forth the kindness and compassion my constituents feel is needed to solve problems.” - Dr. Bobek Paid For By: Friends of Bruce Bobek Campaign brucebobek.com NOV 2 – NOV 15, 2016* $ 2.00 off PIE FROM OUR DELI Save when you pre-order your holiday pies $ 2.69 /lb. MARY’S TURKEY Free-range & non-GMO Buy one get one free! 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