DailyAstorian.com // MONDAY, AUGUST 7, 2017 145TH YEAR, NO. 26 CLATSOP COUNTY FAIR FAIR-LY PHOTOGENIC ONE DOLLAR Bill could stabilize the crab fi shery Extends agreement between three states By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Daily Astorian Photos by Colin Murphey/The Daily Astorian Thousands of people attended the Clatsop County Fair in Astoria last week. The event featured live music, 4-H competi- tions, entertainment and a wide variety of rides and games. Find more photos online at DailyAstorian.com Dungeness crab fi shermen can heave a sigh of relief. A bill that advocates say will lead to much-needed stability for the West Coast’s valuable Dungeness crab fi shery passed the U.S. Senate Friday and now heads to the president’s desk for signature into law. The bi partisan bill permanently extends a tri-state agreement between Washington state, Ore- gon and California to manage the multi mil- lion dollar fi shery. “The Dungeness crab fi shery is an economic pillar of our coastal communi- ties, supporting thousands of fi shing and processing jobs,” U.S. Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Washington , who introduced the bill in 2014, said in a statement. “By pre- serving the t ri-s tate a greement, we can sus- tainably manage our crab fi sheries for many years.” West Coast Dungeness crab is unique in being one of the few fi sheries on the ocean See CRAB, Page 7A Port seeks to protect airspace LEFT: The barn at the fairgrounds in Astoria was full of animals and their human owners for the 4-H competitions . RIGHT: People marveled at the rides and games at the fair. BELOW: Children and adults took advantage of the rides . Agency concerned about development near Astoria airport By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian WARRENTON — The Port of Astoria is looking to change Warrenton city code to protect the space around the Astoria Regional Airport from potential development. Airport Manager Gary Kobes recently laid out a proposal by a subcommittee of the Port’s Airport Advisory Committee to replace a section of the Warrenton code with a public use airport zone developed by the state Department of Aviation. “Over time, one of the problems with airports is encroachment of developments around critical areas of the airport,” Kobes said. “The zone change part would deal with keeping at bay inappropriate uses like res- idential uses below the traffi c pattern and around the approaches.” He said the Port is also trying to establish a D epartment of A viation-model safety and compatibility overlay zone to protect the six approaches to runways from obstacles such as trees that can force pilots to approach from a higher altitude. See PORT, Page 7A A personal perspective on highway vehicle accidents Starr responds to wrecks on Highway 30 By JACK HEFFERNAN The Daily Astorian I n 1993, Al Starr was involved in a serious car crash and injured his neck. At just 34 years old, he believed his working days might have been over. “You play the hand you’re dealt,” Starr said. “I didn’t think anyone would hire me.” That turned out to be true, but Starr discovered his road back to the workforce a few years later when he founded a company called Afford- able Towing and Repair. Now operating in its 17th year, it responds to accidents on U.S. Highway 30 from Astoria to Knappa. “Now I’m a workaholic again,” Starr said. Starr, 57, of Astoria, has lived in Clatsop County his entire life. He washed trucks out of high school, but the accident left his neck partially disabled. Now a veteran at accident scenes, Starr is able to analyze situations, including when a person may be going into shock, rather quickly. “Some of the stuff that hap- pens brings me back to old memories,” he said. Tight schedule Starr keeps a dispatch radio handy that indicates when he must respond to an accident. When a call comes in, he puts all other tasks aside. “Everybody wants some- thing every second,” he said. “You run a pretty tight schedule.” Though he used to receive at least a couple of calls a week, the quantity of wrecks Starr responds to has subsided a bit. He theorized the heavier traffi c in the area nowadays may be limiting the number of high-speed collisions. Starr has developed rela- tionships within the Asto- ria Police Department, Ore- gon State Police and Clatsop County Sheriff’s Offi ce. He once even allowed police to train in the yard where he stores wrecked cars. One of their main priorities at accident scenes is to open the road to traffi c as soon as possible, Starr said. As the years have fl own by, they’ve See STARR, Page 7A Al Starr