DailyAstorian.com // WEDNESDAY, JUNE 21, 2017 144TH YEAR, NO. 254 ONE DOLLAR Money for gillnetters has never been tapped Glitch may mean that $500,000 might go dark By CLAIRE WITHYCOMBE Capital Bureau SALEM — A fund that was sup- posed to provide commercial fi sh- ermen $1.5 million to adjust to new regulations curtailing gillnetting in the Columbia River has never been tapped. The Columbia River Fisheries Transition Fund, a 2013 creation of the Legislature, was supposed to set aside $500,000 every two years to pro- vide fi nancial assistance to gillnetters through 2019. The money was intended to help fi shermen buy replacement gear and offset economic harm due to the expected phasing out of gillnet- ting in the lower main stem of the Columbia. The money has not been used yet, and after some of it was reverted back to the general fund due to an account- ing error at the state Department of Fish and Wildlife, the Legislature is now poised to do away with the last $500,000 installment. That leaves $500,000, a third of the amount initially intended, and it’s not immediately apparent whether gillnetters will end up applying for or receiving the money. Point of contention Gillnets are hung vertically and catch fi sh by the gills. Their use is a source of a longstanding dispute between commercial fi shermen and sports anglers. But the issue has come to a head in recent years. These days, sports- fi shers have rights to most — 70 to 80 percent — of the catches in the main stem of the Columbia, depending on the season. That’s a fact most gillnet- ters resent. See GILLNETTERS, Page 7A THE BOMBARDMENT OF FORT STEVENS 75 YEARS LATER Colin Murphey/The Daily Astorian Historian David Lindstrom looks over the site where one of the guns at Battery Russell once sat. Find more photos of Fort Stevens online at DailyAstorian.com FIRING LINE Japanese attack on Fort Stevens is a footnote in military history By JACK HEFFERNAN The Daily Astorian T oday marks the 75th anniversary of the only foreign attack on a mainland United States military installation in the p ast 200 years, and it took place in Clatsop County. Inside this frame, the 20 to 30 minute shelling of Fort Stevens from a Japanese submarine during World War II seems like a monumental moment in county and national history. But the attack did not cause any casualties or damage — save a baseball fi eld backstop and some telephone cables. No strategic decisions were altered during the war because of it. U.S. National Archives and Records Administration See FORT STEVENS, Page 7A A shell crater resulting from Japanese shelling on Fort Stevens in 1942. Oregon Promise helps Cormorants abandon graduate take next step East Sand Island home Student’s college fund drained for parents’ health costs By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian Katherine Karna’s parents had created a college fund to help pay for their daughter’s dream of becoming a fi lmmaker. But Kar- na’s plans changed when her father broke his neck and needed multi- ple surgeries, and her mother needed chemotherapy after being diagnosed with cancer. “I’m fi ne with it,” she said, add- ing her parents are both doing bet- ter. “It was obviously the best i dea. It was bit stressful, to all of a sudden have no money for college.” Instead of heading directly for Portland State University after grad- uating from Astoria High School last year, Karna attended Clatsop Com- munity College, where last week she became one of the fi rst fi ve students locally using the Oregon Prom- ise fi nancial aid program to earn a degree or certifi cate. See GRADUATE, Page 5A Some believe eagles to blame for bird exodus By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Daily Astorian Two dead birds and 14 cracked eggs are the only recent evidence that dou- ble-crested cormorants have tried to return to nesting grounds on East Sand Island since abandoning their nests there in May. This is the second time in two years that the birds have abandoned the island in the middle of their nesting season, disrupting plans by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to kill the birds to protect young salmon in the Columbia River. See CORMORANTS, Page 5A A month-old double-crested cormorant at the North Coast Wildlife Center. The Daily Astorian File Photo