DailyAstorian.com // MONDAY, MARCH 20, 2017 144TH YEAR, NO. 187 ONE DOLLAR J.C. PENNEY CLOSURE ‘It’s like losing a friend’ Store’s customers saddened by loss of local mainstay By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian Danny Miller/The Daily Astorian People walk by the J.C. Penney on Commercial Street Friday in downtown Astoria. The store is slated to start liquidating its stock April 17, and to close June 18. It is among 138 slated for closure. J.C. Penney customers expressed dismay over the closure of the local branch, which cele- brated its 100th anniversary last April. J.C. Penney Co. announced the closure of 138 stores on Friday, including Astoria’s and four others in Oregon, as the company adjusts to competition from online and niche retailers. Astoria’s store is expected to start liquidation April 17 and close June 18. Employees have not been allowed to speak with the news media, but customers shared their memories over the weekend. “It’s like losing a friend,” said Carla Pitts, who’s been shopping at the downtown store since she moved to Astoria in 1992. Susan Jackson of Warrenton said she was shocked after hearing of the closure. “I remember sitting down here selling Girl Scout cook- ies” in grade school about 30 years ago, she said. See CLOSURE, Page 7A Brewers and brew fans find bliss Danny Miller/The Daily Astorian A gillnet fisherman collects a fish into his boat in August on Youngs Bay in Astoria. Gillnet harvests trimmed in summer Commercial fishermen given fall allocation By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Bureau CORVALLIS — The Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission has voted unani- mously to curtail gillnet fish harvests, alter- ing an earlier decision that was more favor- able to commercial fishermen. Rules adopted by the commission in Jan- uary retained use of the controversial fishing method for Chinook salmon along the main stem of the Columbia River during summer, which conflicted with Washington state’s regulations for the same water body. The earlier rules also diverged from Washington’s by allocating a larger pro- portion of harvestable fish to commercial fishermen. See HARVESTS, Page 7A Da Yang violated labor laws Damian Mulinix/For The Daily Astorian Logan Marks of Stickmen Brewing chats with patrons at Pouring at the Coast Saturday at the Seaside convention center. Craft beer is the star at Seaside ‘Pouring’ event By R.J. MARX The Daily Astorian EASIDE —The “brotherhood of brewers” was on display at the Civic and Convention Center Saturday for the Pouring at the Coast Craft Beer Festi- val. Beer fans from throughout the Pacific Northwest grabbed a glass and had a sip at the fest, presented by the Seaside Chamber of Commerce. “This event is huge,” Logan Marks of Stickmen Brewing Co., based in Lake Oswego, said. “For a brewery our size, it means the world.” Marks was pouring Stickmen’s F1 IPA. “We dry-hop it twice,” he said. “It’s super S aromatic, with a nice fruity body.” Brent Nygard from RiverBend Brewing Co. poured an oatmeal stout and an IPA. A small Bend brewery with a capacity of only 5,000 barrels, Nygard said the Sea- side festival allows his brewery “to reach out and get our beers out there.” Local brews Participants from Astoria included Fort George Brewery and Public House, Buoy Beer Co., Wet Dog Brewery, Reach Break Brewing and Rogue Ales and Public House. The South County was represented by Sea- side Brewing Co., and Pelican Brewing and Public Coast Brewing, both of Cannon Beach. Dan Hamilton founded Buoy Beer in the garage of his house in Seaside. “It’s a fantastic thing to see craft beer really bring people out,” Hamilton said. “We’ve got people of all ages and all taste-bud sets.” Hamilton said Buoy Beer focuses on tra- ditional European lager beers and North- west ales. “We have some protocols in the brew house that border on philosophy,” Hamilton said. “We use extremely clean yeast strains. The brewers are very dedi- cated to making sure the beers are abso- lutely balanced.” Shaun Barrick, head brewer with Asto- ria Brewing Co., said of Astoria’s six brew- eries: “We all kind of fill a different niche in the market and get along great, so the more the merrier, as far as I can see. Craft beer is such a great boon. It helps keep dollars in local communities, it provides jobs and a great outlet for creative energy.” Barrick showcased the company’s Har- bor Coffee Cream Ale and Slack Tide IPA. Astoria fish processor docked $60,000 in fines By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian One of the most creative pouring sta- tions — and certainly the one with farthest distance traveled —was Melvin Brewing from Jackson Hole, Wyoming. Da Yang Seafoods, a fish processor on the Port of Astoria’s Pier 2, has been fined $60,000 for meal, rest period and overtime violations. The state Bureau of Labor and Industries received employee complaints in 2015 and started an investigation. Compliance spe- cialists determined that between August and October 2015, Da Yang failed to provide meal periods to 146 employees on 1,393 occasions. Da Yang also failed to provide rest peri- ods to 77 employees on 213 occasions. On 40 occasions, the company worked employ- ees in excess of 13 hours, violating maxi- mum hour requirements for manufacturing establishments. See FESTIVAL, Page 7A See DA YANG, Page 3A Far and wide Grant coordinator to focus on teen drug, alcohol abuse Castaneda to grow partners with $125,000 annual grant hen she worked for the Pacific County Health and Human Services Depart- ment in Washington state, Carly Castaneda was the youth coordinator for Well- spring Community Network, a grassroots community wellness group that received one of the nationally cov- eted grants from the Drug- Free Communities Support Program. W Castaneda said she wit- nessed firsthand the effects the grant had in helping bet- ter organize local efforts to help youths, leading to lower rates of teen drinking and more mental health counsel- ors in schools. Castaneda was recently hired as the coordinator for the same Drug-Free Com- munities grant received by North Coast Prevention Works, through which she will help better organize efforts in Astoria and War- renton to prevent teen drug and alcohol abuse. The five-year grant, worth $125,000 annually with a possible five-year extension, pays for Castaneda’s salary and to fund various partner- ships, wellness campaigns, training and education. Cas- taneda is an employee of nonprofit Warrenton-Ham- mond Healthy Kids Inc., the fiscal agent for the grant. She said much of the work will be to increase part- nerships between existing organizations and strength- ening awareness of North Coast Prevention Works. The coalition formed in 2009 and includes the Reduce Under- age Drinking Task Force, Tobacco Free Coalition, Northwest Parenting, and the Youth Suicide Prevention Task Force. The group has sponsored various substance abuse prevention events since the 2000s. Quality of life Castaneda said the grant will focus on underage drinking and marijuana use, two of the most prevalent issues locally and nationally. Cutting down on bad behav- iors isn’t about just telling See CASTANEDA, Page 7A Edward Stratton/The Daily Astorian Carly Castaneda is the new coordi- nator of a Drug-Free Communities grant to help improve drug and al- cohol prevention in Clatsop County.