4A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, AUGUST 29, 2017 Harvest: ‘This is very rare on the Coast Guard helps Oregon Coast to own your own watershed’ respond to Harvey Continued from Page 1A The watershed, the source of Astoria’s drinking water, is easy to find on a map. Sur- rounded by private timber- land 10 miles southeast of Astoria, it is a rare, solid swath of emerald in a land- scape that is otherwise a patchwork of brown clearcut and green forest. The water here once fed the city’s booming canneries and now supplies its brew- eries. And the city owns the entire thing: about 3,700 densely forested acres, 32 miles of stream and tributar- ies, Bear Creek Reservoir, Middle Lake and Wickiup Lake. “This is very rare on the Oregon Coast to own your own watershed,” Hayes said as he stopped his truck and looked around. Full ownership pro- vides a host of benefits, but also poses unique chal- lenges. While the city doesn’t need to worry about activi- ties upstream contaminating drinking water, it does have to be extra cautious when pursuing any road mainte- nance or forestry work. truck drivers take corners slow when they’re hauling logs out and contractors know they’re working within a dif- ferent set of parameters. “We’re making sure that the logging that we do does not affect water quality,” Nel- son said. “In a normal for- estry situation, they don’t shut down when it’s raining hard and we do that. We don’t let them haul or do any kind of logging in the wintertime.” Astoria also entered a car- bon-credit program two years ago — the city was essen- tially paid to not aggressively harvest for the next 20 years. Cook said the city received $2.2 million and has since sold an additional $40,000 worth of carbon credits. The city is still able to harvest at its normal rate, and already harvests less than it could. This money helped pay for a new ladder truck for the Astoria Fire Department. The rest of it, along with money from this year’s timber har- vest, went into the city’s capital improvement fund, which is available for an city department. Though it looks somewhat like a traditional clearcut now, Astoria Public Works will soon plant new trees in the thinned parcels. Coast Guard personnel from Sector Columbia River in Warrenton, along with Air Station Port Angeles and Sector Puget Sound, have deployed in response to Hur- ricane Harvey. An MH-60 Jayhawk heli- copter from Sector Columbia River was sent to Air Station San Diego to help cover for aircraft deployed to Texas, where the Coast Guard has rescued more than 1,450 people. The Coast Guard has 20 helicopters in the region conducting rescues, along participating items and receive a code to enter for a CHANCE TO WIN! 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Log with crews on land and water. “This is an all-hands response that involves per- sonnel and support from across the country,” Capt. Sean Cross, incident man- agement chief of the Coast Guard’s 13th District, said in a release. “Our crews train using standardized pro- cedures on identical assets regardless of their home unit. This facilitates response flexibility by allowing us to mix and match crews and assets from different loca- tions in time of crisis such as this.” The Daily Astorian BUY ANY 5 Ownership Some Astoria residents criticized the city after a solicitation for bids for this year’s harvest appeared on the City Council’s consent calendar in March, rather than as an item on the regu- lar agenda. Items on the con- sent calendar are considered routine — adopted by a sin- gle motion — and are usu- ally not discussed in detail by city councilors. Items on the regular agenda, however, receive more of an airing and are open for public comment. In response, the City Council asked city staff to hold a pub- lic meeting to provide people with more information. The harvest is routine, staff would later emphasize, and necessary to building and maintaining a healthy water- shed. The city harvests at the watershed every year under high standards set by the For- est Stewardship Council, of which Astoria has been a member for at least a dozen years. Astoria harvests less than 25 percent of the growth in the watershed, staff said, a very low percentage. Astoria has enjoyed full ownership of its watershed since the 1950s and began acquiring pieces of it as early as the 1890s. Other coastal towns and cities in Oregon are trying to achieve the same feat of full ownership, but it’s a difficult and expensive undertaking. Earlier this year, Oregon Public Broadcasting reported that the state Department of Environmental Quality scrapped a report that linked private industrial forests and activities on such lands to risks for drinking water qual- ity on the Oregon Coast, fol- lowing pushback by the Ore- gon Department of Forestry and the timber industry. Rockaway Beach, a small town of just over 1,300 peo- ple south of Manzanita, struggles with water quality. Jetty Creek, the town’s pri- mary source of water, flows through industrial timber- land. Most of the watershed has been logged in recent years and clearcut hills rear up behind the town. Sediment and debris tied to logging operations often clog up the water and can interfere with the disinfection process. Res- idents receive frequent alerts about harmful chemicals in their water, OPB found. The city isn’t logging for the money, Hayes said after the thinning harvest was com- pleted in August. He stood on the road above where the thin- ning occurred: A parcel now open, dominated by piles of snags, smaller logs not worth hauling out and the remaining trees. Harvests like this are intended to open up the for- est canopy and decrease the threat of fire, creating a more diverse — and, therefore, more resilient — forest. It is important work, Hayes said. “Especially with climate change, because we don’t know what’s going to happen here.” 1 99 Limit 2 lb WITH CARD AND COUPON This coupon must be presented at time of purchase. Offer Valid with Card and Coupon. COUPON CANNOT BE DOUBLED. Coupon valid thru 9/5/17. Limit 2 Jumbo Cantaloupe This coupon must be presented at time of purchase. Offer Valid with Card and Coupon. COUPON CANNOT BE DOUBLED. Coupon valid thru 9/5/17. 99 ¢ ea WITH CARD AND COUPON Signature Cafe ® Whole Chicken 5 99 ea WITH CARD AND COUPON This coupon must be presented at time of purchase. Offer Valid with Card and Coupon. COUPON CANNOT BE DOUBLED. 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