4A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 2017 Stabbing: No arrests have been made Property: Continued from Page 1A Burgess and Jantes said they helped the injured man and applied pressure to his wound until emergency per- sonnel arrived. He also suf- fered cuts above his left eye and on both lips. Astoria Police found the man and woman near Bay Street minutes later. Police searched the scene and inter- viewed multiple witnesses before eventually bringing the two in for questioning. The couple was identified as Nick- olys A. Glaser, 23, of Spring Valley, New York, and Erika N. Rasmussen, 21, of Oche- lata, Oklahoma. The wounded man, iden- tified as Aaron Lee Ashby, 50, of Port Townsend, Wash- ington, was taken to Colum- bia Memorial Hospital shortly after 7:30 p.m. Police said Ashby was treated for an injury that was not life-threat- ening and admitted overnight for observation. Another man, Clinton Holman, 32, of Astoria, was taken to the hospital after Colin Murphey/The Daily Astorian Emergency personnel attend to a stabbing victim in Asto- ria near the Doughboy Monument Monday night. allegedly being kicked repeat- edly. Police said Holman was treated and released. Astoria Police said the altercation reportedly started after Ashby allegedly touched Glaser’s dog inappropriately. Ashby also reportedly also assaulted Holman. No arrests have been made. “This is a very com- plex, convoluted situation involving numerous people,” Astoria Police Deputy Chief Eric Halverson said in a state- ment. “Detectives will be working on collecting sur- veillance video from the area, and following up with wit- nesses in an attempt to deter- mine exactly what happened. We would ask that anyone who believes they witnessed this incident, who has not already spoken with police, contact Detective Ken Han- sen at the Astoria Police Department.” Melisa McKinley, 21, of Seaside, said she could sense people in the group were under the influence of intoxicants. “I could tell they were definitely on something,” she said. “They were just chilling and then decided to fight.” When police and emer- gency personnel left the scene after 8:30 p.m., the partygoers returned to the restaurant for the baby shower. “That was crazy,” McKin- ley said. “This will be one memorable baby shower. That’s for sure.” Cannon Beach: Petition outlines grievances Continued from Page 1A opportunity to write to them or come to offer any different ideas.” A petition outlining griev- ances with the plan started cir- culating about a week ago. As of Monday, the petition had 114 signatures, though many who signed live outside of Cannon Beach. The petition, started by Voyages Toy Co. owner Jer- emy Clifford, argued that timed parking would “neg- atively impact the relax- ing atmosphere” of the town, “increase traffic congestion when cars need to be moved,” and “not allow visitors enough time to enjoy the restaurants and browse through the local shops.” Clifford said there hasn’t been any evidence to show that higher turnover would lead to higher sales in a town like Cannon Beach. “We want people to come out to the beach and then come into town to shop and eat in our restaurants. Three hours isn’t enough time to do that,” Clifford said. “Believe me: I want to make more money. And if I thought for one minute I thought the time limit would bring more cus- tomers in my store I’d support it, but I don’t believe it.” In a year where sales across all businesses have been down due to an unusu- ally harsh winter, Clifford said business owners object to experimenting during the city’s busiest season. “The summer here is our Christmastime for other retailers,” Clifford said. “Best practices tells us you don’t do tests like this during your bus- iest season. If there are going to be negative impacts, you don’t want them to be huge.” Clifford and others who signed the petition are pleased the city is postponing the plan to get feedback from the com- munity. Ultimately, Clifford said he fears timed parking signage and an increase in parking tickets from viola- tions would negatively impact the quaint, small-town visitor experience — as well as their desire to ever return. “If (employees parking on Hemlock) is the problem you are trying to solve, then that’s a different problem to solve. Let’s all agree on that because I want the customers to have easy access to my stores,” Clifford said. “But the park- ing problem in Cannon Beach is larger than that. It’s con- nected to housing, commut- ing, city infrastructure — it will take many years.” Clearing up confusion In an effort to clear up con- fusion about the city’s inten- tion with timed parking, City Councilor George Vetter spent last week walking, measuring and counting all the parking within a five-minute walk of the corner of Morris’ Fireside at Hemlock and Second. In total, Vetter counted spaces for 835 cars the size of a Dodge Grand Caravan. Of those spaces, about 100 are affected by timed parking, he said. Since his experiment, he said he has been speaking with some concerned business owners about what he found. “My goal was to present the facts,” Vetter said. “The negative reactions from peo- ple seemed like they were fearing something they didn’t know all the facts about. So I wanted to inform them and let them decide.” Vetter said that having a higher turnover rate would give more people a chance to park downtown, which in turn would increase the num- ber of possible customers for businesses. The City Coun- cil voted unanimously for the pilot program in May. “Everybody likes conve- nience. And the most con- venient place is Hemlock,” Vetter said. “This is a way to have more people use down- town for parking to shop and eat downtown. And employ- ees and beachgoers who use parking for eight to nine hours a day have 735 other options. “It’s not easy to make money in this town,” he added. “You’ve got to maxi- mize whatever you can.” High priority According to the city’s citizen survey last year, the community designated park- ing a high priority. Vetter said timed parking is the culmina- tion of six months of conver- sations about solutions. While Vetter still has confi- dence is the city’s test run, he said pushing back implemen- tation until after the July 10 council meeting will give the community additional time to communicate with councilors and offer alternatives. “There should have been involvement with the business community ahead of time,” he said. “We didn’t not do our duty, but we didn’t take it to the point necessary to achieve better results.” Parks fee: Lodging tax increase also mulled Continued from Page 1A the city’s approximately 3,200 residential water meters, a pro- cess Estes estimated could take close to six months to accomplish. The Parks and Recreation Department faced a $100,000 budget shortfall this year and is struggling to find ways to sustain itself into the future. The city opted to cancel some free community programs and the City Council has contin- ued to discuss solutions to the department’s money woes. In addition to a water meter fee, the City Council has also dis- cussed increasing the lodging tax. At Estes’ suggestion, coun- cilors agreed to combine fur- ther discussion of the water meter fee with a discussion of the lodging tax at its meeting July 17. This way, Estes said, there could be a full review of the amount of revenue both options could generate. ‘Make it fair’ Astoria resident Judy Woodward said parks are very important, but she objected to “unfair fees and taxes.” “If you must add a tax to the water bill to fund parks and rec that doesn’t have a connection to public works or our water bill, make it fair,” she said during a public com- ment period. “Base it on water usage, but don’t expect a sin- gle-person household to sub- sidize the operation and main- tenance of parks and rec for multiperson households.” Joshua Bessex/The Daily Astorian The city is considering new fees and taxes to help parks. City Councilor Bruce Jones said he agreed. Originally, he had supported the proposed $3 per water meter, per month fee. He says adding the fee to water bills is efficient and cost-effective since a collec- tion system is already in place through the water billing sys- tem. But, he added, it isn’t his intent to put the burden more on one group of Astorians by charging per meter versus per unit, he said. City Councilor Cindy Price, who has pushed for the fee as a way to quickly raise money for the parks department, said she agreed. City Councilor Zetty Nem- lowill continued to be the only councilor against the pro- posed fee. She echoed the concerns of resident Roger Lindsley who argued Mon- day night that the Parks and Recreation Department’s ser- vices are not connected to the water and sewer services pub- lic works provides. The bill- ing through the Public Works Department reflects the actual costs of essential services, Lindsley said. He was against adding a fee to an “essential city service” to fill the “bud- get shortfalls of an unrelated department.” Voluntary fee Nemlowill told the coun- cil Monday she could sup- port a voluntary fee. If a fee is charged, she said it isn’t fair to only target residents. Busi- nesses should also pay, she said. In previous discussions, other councilors had wanted to avoid double-charging busi- ness owners who also lived in town. Estes emphasized that the financial issues faced by the Parks and Recreation Depart- ment are not the result of mis- management by parks staff. It is a situation a long time in the making, he and others have said. Since 1975, the depart- ment has added 42 additional parks to its roster and cur- rently maintains 310 acres of parks, trails and natural areas as well as a number of pro- grams and facilities — includ- ing the Astoria Aquatic Cen- ter — while being severely understaffed. Until recently the department did not oper- ate under a master plan to help guide its decisions. Parks Director Angela Cosby said she has already begun to lose key staff mem- bers and worries about los- ing more. Any decision at this point would be helpful, she said, since it would give the department a guarantee of future money. Several people asked the City Council to consider a smaller increase to the lodging tax. The council is considering an increase from 9 percent to 12 percent. Skip Hauke, exec- utive director of the Asto- ria-Warrenton Area Cham- ber of Commerce, suggested an increase to only 10 or 10.5 percent. If the council went with an increase to 12 percent, “I think we’d be the highest on the coast,” he said. Warrenton has a 12 percent lodging tax, but that ends up applying mostly to camping and trailer spaces, he said. The lodging tax has been touted as a long-term way to generate money for the depart- ment, while the water meter fee was considered a short- term option, to be reviewed a year after implementation. ‘It’s definitely a safety problem’ Continued from Page 1A Signs Olvey’s property feels like a cross between an art project, a museum and a political protest. His signs spell out a one- man crusade against societal dilemmas and ills in general and the city government, legal system and media in particular. The signs, some of them small essays, detail his complaints against all of these groups as well as illu- minate problems with the house, problems he blames on the city. For the most part he favors black or blue type against a white background and reserves bright col- ors for decorative ele- ments. There are exceptions, though. One sign on high- light-bright yellow paper states, “Termite trained to dig drench for climbing gas line.” Nearly every letter is in a different color. Olvey’s concerns are interspersed with a colorful collection of objects: plas- tic fish flutter on a line over- head, a magnifying glass points down at a miniature can labeled “Dirty Old Man Repellent,” a small statue of an ostrich leans over with its head stuck in the sand on the dashboard of one of the four cars rusting in his yard and is labeled, “Astoria City Council.” ‘D’ in Derelict The signage and decor are fairly new, said Olvey’s nearest neighbor, Harry Staples, whose house is so close to Olvey’s the men could open their windows and almost pass a cup of sugar back and forth if they wanted to. Before the signs, there was a lot more trash and the yard was even more over- grown, Staples said. He has nothing against Olvey per- sonally, but he believes the property, without a doubt, qualifies as a nuisance. “It’s definitely a safety problem,” he said. “If his house caught on fire, which it is certainly prepped to do, I wouldn’t have much time to react and it certainly would take mine right with it.” He can tell stories about the feral cats and large river rats the property attracts and the damage some of these animals have done to sur- rounding properties. In 2014, Olvey attempted to purchase an undeveloped lot adjacent to his property from the city. His offer was denied after Staples and a handful of other neighbors and concerned Astorians showed up at a public hear- ing and spoke against the sale. “Mr. Olvey capitalized the ‘D’ in derelict building ordinance,” one neighbor testified. Sinking into the ground Olvey claims a sewer the city installed at the front of his house has caused his yard to flood and his house to sink and made it impos- sible for him to make the improvements the city desires. “Every year that house goes farther down into the ground,” he said. On the phone, he describes local policymakers and law enforcement as “crooks.” He addresses a letter on his property to the “concerned citizens of Astoria.” “More of you are cheats, liars and thieves than are not,” he writes. Farther down he adds, “You peo- ple are great at judging oth- ers while the leaders you look up to are …” and, in a numbered list, he details the ways leaders have kept Americans alienated from Cuba, feigned “concern for rainforests while having them cut down at an alarm- ing rate to provide for our needs,” framed innocent men and women — among other things. The city says it isn’t aware of any sewer com- plaints filed by Olvey. Sta- ples believes Olvey might have a point on this issue, but, he added, it’s a decades- old grievance now. “It’s not an ideal situ- ation by any means,” Sta- ples said about the sewer. Olvey’s house essentially became the lowest point and the drainage point when it was installed; Staples’ house became the second lowest point. But, Staples added, he doesn’t quite see how an engineering issue resulted in the overflowing trash, the broken-down cars, the neglected house and the unkempt yard. Native son Modern-day Astoria is not a place where Olvey feels at home. When he was younger, he said he felt like he knew every inch of the city. Now he sees problems everywhere. Olvey doesn’t live in the house in Alderbrook anymore. He lives in War- renton, but his mother, a slight, quiet woman with a tidy bloom-filled yard, still lives across the street from his sign-filled property. She says her stepson has always treated her well. A sign near Olvey’s front porch, nearly hidden, says simply, “And leave my mother ALONE!” “The only reason I kept that house was because of her,” Olvey said after he learned of the City Council’s decision Monday night. He doesn’t plan to pay the city’s fines or fix up his property. Instead, he thinks he could have grounds for a lawsuit. But he doesn’t trust Oregon lawyers, and he has not talked to any out-of-state attorneys yet. The process approved by city councilors Monday is a long one. It could take up to a year to finalize a sale of the property through the Clat- sop County Sheriff’s Office. At any point before the pub- lic auction Olvey could con- tact the city, pay the fines and keep his property. If the public auction occurs, he will still have 180 days after the sale to try to redeem the property. “This is really very sad,” City Councilor Cindy Price said before the council voted. Olvey, a former long- shoreman who was born in Seaside and lived his life in Clatsop County, did not attend the City Council meeting. He is 77 years old, he has high blood pressure, diabetes and “a bad ticker,” he said. Public speaking is not something he can do. He said his property speaks for him. Colin Murphey/The Daily Astorian One neighbor said ‘Mr. Olvey capitalized the ‘D’ in derelict building ordinance.’