DailyAstorian.com // MONDAY, JANUARY 16, 2017 144TH YEAR, NO. 142 U.S. COAST GUARD MEMORIAL ‘For your tomorrow, we gave our today’ By ERICK BENGEL The Daily Astorian The Astoria City Council wants the pub- lic to know three things about the Astoria Library: The city will renovate the existing library at 10th and Exchange streets rather than look to build elsewhere. To pay for the project, the city will use funds and grants already avail- able, plus whatever additional money can be raised, without issuing a bond sale. And the design will be one that serves the communi- ty’s needs for many decades. Nailing down the library’s future is among the council’s top priorities for the next fi scal year , along with launching a rede- velopment of Heritage Square, increasing housing units and stabilizing the Parks and Recreation Department budget. On Friday, the City Council held a nearly nine-hour goal-setting session — facilitated by Albany City Manager Wes Hare — where they drafted a set of goals for the council to pursue. City staff will soon bring the goals before the council for discussion and pub- lic comment. The council will adopt the fi nal goals at a subsequent meeting. By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian I LWACO, Wash. — Gordon Huggins, a retired electrician’s mate with the U.S. Coast Guard, remembers the night a nosebleed saved his life. On Jan. 12, 1961, Huggins was aboard the Coast Guard’s 52-foot motor lifeboat Tri- umph, lost in rough seas along with fi ve of his fellow crewmen. He was the lone survi- vor in a tragedy that was the worst of several for the Coast Guard in the Pacifi c Northwest over the past 71 years. Huggins and other current and former Coast Guardsmen, friends and family gath- ered Saturday at the Lewis and Clark Inter- pretive Center, perched on the cliffs above the mouth of the Columbia River, to pay tribute to the lifesavers who have given their lives over the years. Triumph tragedy See CEREMONY, Page 7A Council talks goals for next fi scal year Library remodel, Heritage Square are top priorities Ceremony honors Coast Guardsmen who have lost their lives in the Pacifi c Northwest The calm waters below the memorial belied the heavy seas that have helped shape the entrance’s reputation as “The Graveyard of the Pacifi c.” Huggins remembered a much different scene when the Triumph reached Peacock Spit, motoring out to rescue two Ilwaco, Washington, fi shermen aboard the crabber Mermaid who had lost a rudder. “By the time we got out into here, we were going through 30-foot breakers,” he said. “On the way out, for some reason, I got a nosebleed. The coxswain told me ‘Go down below and see if you can get rid of it.’” ONE DOLLAR See COUNCIL, Page 7A Boatswain’s Mate 3rd Class Kaitlin Florez Boatswain’s Mate 3rd Class Austin Kettleson, from U.S. Coast Guard Sta- tion Cape Disappointment, places a memorial wreath into the Pacific Ocean below the North Head Lighthouse Saturday. The Coast Guard held an annu- al ceremony to honor the guardians who have died in the Pacific Northwest. Crew members from the U.S. Coast Guard Station Cape Disappointment manned the rails Saturday during a wreath-laying ceremony and flyover below the Lewis and Clark Interpretive Center at Cape Disappointment State Park. Petty Officer 1st Class Levi Read Linn County makes the rounds on timber suit Port will discuss options By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian The Port of Astoria will decide Tuesday whether to take part in the Linn County tim- ber lawsuit after meeting with a lawyer for the plaintiffs. The Port is one of about 130 taxing dis- tricts in Oregon — 30 in Clatsop County — named as plaintiffs in the $1.4 billion class-action lawsuit brought by Linn County against the state last year. Linn County was named the represen- tative in the lawsuit for all of the involved counties and taxing districts. Representatives from the county and its legal team have been visiting multiple taxing districts in advance of the Jan. 25 deadline for the agencies to decide whether to remain involved. Clatsop County voted to opt out of the suit last week. The lawsuit, partially funded by timber companies, claims the state breached a con- tract to maximize timber revenues on more than 700,000 acres of land deeded by 15 counties. Linn County claimed the state has See TIMBER SUIT, Page 7A Astoria actor is empowered to entertain Autistic man uses acting to express himself ike all the actors in his lat- est Astoria community drama production, Justin Ger- mond was asked to write a brief personal biography for the program. The other eight cast mem- bers who appear in “All i n t he Timing,” a Partners f or t he PAC fundraiser, submit- ted three or four sentences to describe their real-life perso- nas and list their favorite prior roles. Germond went further. He L opened up his heart. His biography, which fi lled two hand-written pages, poured out his lifelong strug- gle with a condition that means his brain appears differently wired from many around him. “Diagnosed at an early age with autism (or Asperg- er’s syndrome), Justin Ger- mond exhibited some traits of intelligence but he lacked most forms of social behavior generally shown by children his age,” he wrote, describing himself in the third person, as requested. “He failed to understand certain emotions, and thus found great diffi culty in relat- ing to others as well as not knowing how to respond to certain situations. Despite such drawbacks, Justin had a thirst for knowledge concern- ing subjects of his interest, and a love of humor.” ‘Different person’ Germond describes his enjoyment onstage as a “behavioral 180-degree turn,” an opportunity to morph from quiet and shy into “a different person entirely.” “It’s the chance to be some- one else,” he said. “That’s the allure for me — and I don’t have any stage fright.” The 28-year-old Astoria man attributes much of his success to special education programs and speech classes. He is eager to credit his mother, Becca Germond, who “never gave up on him.” She said her frustration with the lack of educational support in his early years led her to home- school her son for a while. He made his acting debut in third grade playing a rooster that had been attacked by a fork. When the Missoula See GERMOND, Page 7A Patrick Webb/ For The Daily Astorian Justin Germond