4A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, JUNE 27, 2017 Seaside: Marijuana taxes are expected to reach $15,000 Don Frank/Submitted Photo A $15 million renovation of the Seaside Civic and Convention Center could begin in March. Continued from Page 1A BUDGET HIGHLIGHTS experienced a bump from $5.8 million to $6.4 million, Win- stanley said. The city budget lists 30 funds overall, among them, public works, the downtown maintenance district and pub- lic safety, with a budget of $5.7 million. Comprised of fire, police, lifeguards and Munic- ipal Court, this year’s pub- lic safety fund stood at $4.3 million. Marijuana taxes, included for the first time as a public safety budget line, are expected to reach $15,000. Liquor taxes are budgeted at more than $100,000 in revenue. Health, medical and dental costs are going up across the board. The police department will see a rise of 13 percent, with retirement costs esca- lating about 8 percent. Simi- lar numbers are seen in other departments. While Seaside does not participate in the state’s Public • Seaside Library: An 11 percent increase in the book-acquisition budget • Fire: Addition of a fourth paid fireman and implementation of a water rescue program. • Building Department: Possibility of two large projects — conven- tion center renovation; new motel/hotel. • Public Works: Acquisition of a new garbage truck and the repair of the public works building roof. • Library Trust: Acquisition of a generator for the library. • Capital improvement and maintenance: community center renovation. • Convention center: $15 million renovation starting 2018. Employees Retirement Sys- tem, the city’s two employee retirement plans are also fac- ing rising costs, Winstanley added. Holding the line Councilors Dana Phil- lips, Steve Wright, Seth Mor- risey and Randy Frank, along with Mayor Jay Barber, voted to approve the budget. Coun- cilors Tom Horning and Tita Montero were absent. “It really holds the line in terms of our expenditures,” Barber said after the meeting. “I know the budget commit- tee was trying to hold steady rather than to make any big jumps. Overall, it’s a very moderate budget and I think it speaks well of the council and particularly our city manager.” Following the budget vote, councilors also approved a bid process for a construction manager-general contractor for the convention center con- struction project. Pet love: ‘It’s all in good fun. We have some big decisions to make’ Continued from Page 1A event after she noticed tension mounting in the waning two weeks of this year’s legislative session. Lawmakers are squabbling over new taxes and the compo- nents of a transportation pack- age, and emotions can rise and sink with the fate of each bill in front of them. “One of the things I noticed is when we have schoolchil- dren (in the House chamber), the dynamic changes,” Bynum said. She mentioned her obser- vation to Mandi McGowan, administrative assistant in the Chief Clerk’s Office, and sug- gested bringing babies into the Capitol to calm legislators. McGowan told Bynum that the Oregon Humane Society sometimes brings cats and dogs into workplaces during the stressful Christmas season and pitched the idea of doing the same at the statehouse. Paris Achen/Capital Bureau LEFT: Marc Miller, legislative director for Rep. David Brock Smith, R-Port Orford, holds Christopher Walken, an 8-week-old puppy up for adoption at the Oregon Humane Society, during a Snuggle Express at the Oregon Capitol in Salem Monday. The event was meant to reduce stress in the waning days of the legislative session. RIGHT: Rep. Janelle Bynum, D-Clackamas, holds Spotlight, a 9-week-old kitten up for adoption at the Oregon Humane Society, during a Snuggle Express at the Oregon Capitol in Salem Monday. Bynum organized the event as a way to reduce stress in the waning days of the legislative session. Pups and kits “Who doesn’t love pup- pies and kittens?” McGowan said. “A lot of people get cocktails after work to relieve stress.” Holding a puppy or kitten can provide the same sooth- ing effect, she said. “And hopefully, the ani- mals find homes. Everyone benefits,” she said. New cyberattack causes mass disruption globally Ukraine hit hard by intrusions By RAPHAEL SATTER Associated Press PARIS — A new and highly virulent outbreak of mali- cious data-scrambling software appears to be causing mass dis- ruption across the world, hitting companies and governments in Europe especially hard. Officials in Ukraine reported serious intrusions of the coun- try’s power grid as well as at banks and government offices, where one senior executive posted a photo of a darkened computer screen and the words, “the whole network is down.” The prime minister cautioned that the country’s “vital sys- tems” hadn’t been affected. Russia’s Rosneft oil com- pany also reported falling vic- tim to hacking and said it had narrowly avoided major dam- age, as did Danish shipping giant A.P. Moller-Maersk. “We are talking about a cyberattack,” said Anders Rosendahl, a spokesman for the Copenhagen-based ship- ping group. “It has affected all branches of our business, at home and abroad.” The attack was con- firmed to have spread beyond Europe when U.S. drugmaker Merck, based in New Jersey, said its systems had also been compromised. The number of compa- nies and agencies reportedly affected by the ransomware campaign was piling up fast, and the electronic rampage appeared to be rapidly snow- balling into a worldwide crisis. There’s very little infor- mation about what might be behind the disruption at each specific company, but cyberse- curity experts rapidly zeroed in on a form of ransomware, the name given to programs that hold data hostage by scram- bling it until a payment is made. “A massive ransomware campaign is currently unfold- ing worldwide,” said Roma- nian cybersecurity company Bitdefender, where analyst Bogdan Botezatu said that it appeared to be nearly identical to GoldenEye, one of a fam- ily of hostage-taking programs that has been circulating for months. Some analysts were calling the new form of ran- somware Petya. It’s not clear whether or why the ransomware has sud- denly become so much more potent, but Botezatu said that it was likely spreading automati- cally across a network, without the need for human interaction. Such self-spreading software, often called “worms,” are par- ticularly feared because they can replicate rapidly, like a con- tagious disease. “It’s like somebody sneez- ing into a train full of people,” Botezatu told The Associated Press. “You just have to exist there and you’re vulnerable.” The world is still recover- ing from a previous outbreak of ransomware, called WannaCry or WannaCrypt, which spread rapidly using digital break-in tools originally created by the U.S. National Security Agency and recently leaked to the web. “Data breaches and cyber hacks are one of the biggest risks facing business world- wide,” said Michelle Crorie, a partner at law firm Clyde & Co. who specializes in cyberse- curity issues. “The WannaCry attack and now Petya clearly demonstrate that hackers do not discriminate which type of business they are targeting.” This particular variant of ransomware leaves a mes- sage with a contact email; several messages sent to the address were not immediately returned. Associated Press writ- ers Vladimir Isachenkov in Moscow and Jan M. Olsen in Copenhagen, Denmark, con- tributed to this report. Number of people using Facebook reaches 2 billion Associated Press MENLO PARK, Calif. — Facebook is reaching another milestone, announcing that it now has more than 2 billion users. CEO Mark Zuckerberg says the new marker was reached early Tuesday and in a Facebook post said that he’s proud of the role his company is playing in connecting peo- ple around the world. Facebook says more than 175 million people declare they “love” something on the site daily and an aver- age of more than 800 million people hit Facebook’s like button. Facebook users will likely see a personalized video cel- ebrating the milestone in the next few days. The Menlo Park, Califor- nia, company is putting more emphasis on creating vir- tual communities within the site while it also works to reduce violent, hateful and misleading content on the service. Bynum said she knew people at the Capitol needed stress relief, but she was sur- prised there was “a lineup like a rock concert” for the event. The Oregon Humane Society provided the event for free at the Capitol. The program costs businesses a $1,000 donation fee during the Christmas season, but off- season the organization will provide the service without the fee in certain cases, sad David Lytle, a spokesman for the humane society. Par- ticipants were asked to give a donation to help home- less animals during Mon- day’s event. A final tally of how much was raised for the organization was unavail- able Monday afternoon, Lytle said. Many animals find their new homes during the Snug- gle Express, he said. The humane society maintains a web site with photos of all of the pets available for adoption. Buzz about the event spread to the Senate wing of the Capitol, where at least one senator and his staff mem- ber expressed jealousy that the Senate wasn’t invited, Bynum said. “It’s all in good fun,” Bynum said. “We have some big decisions to make before the end of the session.”