9A
THE DAILY ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 2017
Pot: ‘There’s just not
a whole lot of historic
data to draw upon’
WORLD IN BRIEF
Associated Press
Battered Florida tries to assess
scope of Irma’s destruction
MIAMI — Aid rushed in to hurricane-scarred Florida early
Tuesday, residents began to dig out, and officials slowly pieced
together the scope of Irma’s vicious path of destruction across
the peninsula.
Even as glimmers of hope emerged from parts of the state
forecasters once worried would be razed by the storm, the fate of
the Florida Keys, where Irma rumbled through with Category 4
muscle, remained largely a question mark. Communication and
access were cut and authorities dangled only vague assessments
of ruinous impact.
“It’s devastating,” Florida Gov. Rick Scott said after emerging
from a Monday fly-over of the Keys.
A Navy aircraft carrier was due to anchor off Key West to help
in search-and-rescue efforts. Drinking water supplies in the Keys
were cut off, fuel was running low and all three hospitals in the
island chain were shuttered. The governor described overturned
mobile homes, washed-ashore boats and rampant flood damage.
A stunning 13 million people, two-thirds of the third-largest
state’s residents, plodded on in the tropical heat without electric-
ity, and nearly every corner of Florida felt Irma’s power. In a part-
ing blow to the state before pushing on to Georgia and beyond, the
storm caused record flooding in and around Jacksonville, causing
untold damage and prompting dozens of rescues. It also spread
misery into Georgia and South Carolina as it moved inland with
winds at 50 mph, causing flooding and power outages.
St. Martin’s residents struggle
with desperate conditions
PHILIPSBURG, St. Martin — Dominga Tejera picked her
way around fallen palm trees rotting in mud as she returned home
after a nine-hour workday as a hospital janitor on a Caribbean
island that until recently seemed like paradise.
She collapsed into a small plastic chair that has served as a
makeshift bed since Hurricane Irma ripped the roof from her
home as it pummeled St. Martin as a Category 5 storm.
“It’s sad when you come home to this,” she said as she began
to cry. “You try to stay strong in public, but once inside, you
break.”
Hundreds of people across an island shared by Dutch St. Mar-
tin and French St. Martin are trying to rebuild the lives they had
before the hurricane hit, celebrating little things like a rare eve-
ning breeze that clears the stifling air amid a widespread power
outage and laughing as a radio announcer cheerfully announces,
“The dentist is open!”
But many like Tejera are struggling to maintain a semblance
of the life they had before Irma as they fight off hunger and thirst.
Oil will keep flowing, but UN
sanctions hit Pyongyang hard
TOKYO — North Korea will be feeling the pain of new
United Nations sanctions targeting some of its biggest remaining
foreign revenue streams. But the Security Council eased off the
biggest target of all: the oil the North needs to stay alive, and to
fuel its million-man military.
Though the United States had proposed a complete ban, the
sanctions by the U.N. Security Council to punish North Korea for
its sixth nuclear test cap Pyongyang’s annual imports of crude oil
at the same level they have been for the past 12 months: an esti-
mated 4 million barrels. Exports of North Korean textiles are pro-
hibited, and other nations are barred from authorizing new work
permits for North Korean workers, putting a squeeze on two key
sources of hard currency.
The measures were approved unanimously Monday.
The measures to punish Pyongyang for its Sept. 3 nuclear test
also ban the country from importing natural gas liquids and con-
densates, and limit the import of refined petroleum products to 2
million barrels a year.
That could be a significant restriction.
Bangladesh slams Myanmar for
‘atrocities’ against Rohingya
COX’S BAZAR, Bangladesh — The Bangladeshi prime min-
ister was traveling Tuesday to struggling refugee camps that have
absorbed hundreds of thousands of Rohingya fleeing violence in
Myanmar in recent weeks — a crisis she said left her speechless.
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina lambasted Myanmar for “atroc-
ities” that she said had reached a level beyond description.
“I have no words to condemn Myanmar,” she told lawmak-
ers Monday night, noting that Bangladesh had long been protest-
101 Legal Notices
101 Legal Notices
AB6468
CITY OF ASTORIA
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
The City of Astoria Historic Landmarks Commission will hold a
public hearing on Tuesday, September 19, 2017 at 5:15 p.m., in
the City Hall Council Chambers, 1095 Duane Street, Astoria.
The purpose of the hearing is to consider the following request(s):
1.Exterior Alteration EX17-07 by Rickenbach Construction, Inc,
to add 392 square foot addition for cooler storage on the south
façade and awning over existing seating area on the south
façade at #1 8th Street in the A-2, Aquatic Two Development
zone.
2.Exterior Alteration EX17-08 by Jim Forrester to replace wood
around storefront windows, adding river rock to kick plate,
rebuilding transom windows at 155 11th St and 119 11th St in the
S-2A, Tourist Oriented Shorelands zone.
3.Exterior Alteration EX17-09 by Ron and Muriel Jensen to add
a vertical lift to the side of the front porch on the front façade of
existing single family dwelling at 659 15th Street in the R-3, High
Density Residential zone.
4. New Construction NC17-05 by Brian And Terri Oksen, for
new construction of a 2,079 square foot single family dwelling
and a 338 square foot garage adjacent to historic structures at
910 Grand Ave in the R-3, High Density Residential zone.
For information, call or write the Community Development
Department, 1095 Duane St., Astoria OR 97103, phone 503-338-
5183.
The location of the hearing is accessible to the disabled. An
interpreter for the hearing impaired may be requested under the
terms of ORS 192.630 by contacting the Community Develop-
ment Department at 503-338-5183 48 hours before the meeting.
The Historic Landmarks Commission reserves the right to modify
the proposal or to continue the hearing to another date and
time. If the hearing is continued, no further public notice will be
provided.
THE CITY OF ASTORIA
Anna Stamper
Administrative Assistant
Published: September 12th, 2017
Continued from Page 1A
AP Photo/David Goldman
Jean Chatelier walks through a flooded street from Hur-
ricane Irma after retrieving his uniform from his house to
return to work Tuesday at a supermarket in Fort Myers, Fla.
ing the persecution of Rohingya Muslims in Buddhist-majority
Myanmar.
Regardless, “they are sending Rohingya to Bangladesh
afresh,” she said, as more continued to stream across the border.
“Women are being raped and tortured, children are being killed,
and houses are being set on fire” in Myanmar’s Rakhine state.”
At least 313,000 Rohingya have arrived since Aug. 25, when
Rohingya insurgents attacked police posts, prompting Myan-
mar’s military to retaliate with what it called “clearance opera-
tions” to root out the rebels.
Russia says Syria government
controls 85 percent of country
HEMEIMEEM AIR BASE, Syria — Russia’s military said
Tuesday that Syrian troops have liberated about 85 percent of the
war-torn country’s territory from militants, a major turn-around
two years after Moscow intervened to land a hand to its embat-
tled long-time ally.
Russia has been providing air cover for President Bashar
Assad’s troops since 2015, changing the tide of the war and giv-
ing Syrian and allied troops an advantage over opposition fight-
ers and Islamic State group militants.
Speaking to reporters at the Hemeimeem air base in Syria’s
province of Latakia, Lt. Gen. Alexander Lapin said Syrian gov-
ernment still must clear the remaining 15 percent, approximately
10,425 square miles, from the extremists.
Syrian troops, along with strong support from Iranian-backed
ground fighters, have in recent weeks pushed IS militants out of
central Homs province, near the border with Lebanon, and are
now fighting them in the oil-rich Deir el-Zour province in the
east.
Russian air power has been instrumental in recent successes
of the Syrian military. With Damascus facing major battlefield
defeats, Moscow signed a deal with the Syrian government in
August 2015 to deploy an air force contingent and other military
assets at the Hemeimeem base, in the heartland of Assad’s Alaw-
ite religious minority.
Mexico diplomat talks
immigration in California trip
LOS ANGELES — After a day huddling in California’s cap-
ital on immigration, trade and climate, Mexico’s top diplomat
is hitting Los Angeles to close out a two-day visit to the immi-
grant-friendly state.
Mexico Foreign Relations Secretary Luis Videgary’s trip to
California comes at a critical time in relations between his coun-
try and the United States and amid uncertainty over the future of
a program that protects roughly 800,000 young immigrants who
are living in the United States from deportation.
In Los Angeles, Videgaray will announce support for those
young immigrants — hundreds of thousands of whom are Mex-
ican. He’ll also meet with community and business leaders and
tout a program providing immigrant mental health services. He
travels to Washington on Wednesday, where he plans to implore
members of Congress to continue the program that President
Donald Trump says will be terminated in six months if lawmak-
ers do not act.
“We strongly hope the U.S. Congress will act promptly to pro-
vide certainty and a permanent solution to these young people
that want to stay in America,” he said Monday in Sacramento
before meeting with about 25 participants in the Deferred Action
for Childhood Arrivals Program.
Mexico last week announced plans to create a special job
bank for those affected and support their educations. The country
will also assist them with legal aid, Videgaray said.
101 Legal Notices
101 Legal Notices
report issued in May, the first
where a marijuana-specific
forecast was included. “While
Oregon has now collected just
over a year’s worth of taxes,
there have been substantial
changes during this time that
complicate any analysis.”
For one thing, there have
been policy and regulatory
changes on the state level.
Back in July 2015, when
those 21 and older could first
purchase marijuana legally
in Oregon without a medi-
cal marijuana card, marijuana
was initially taxed at a 25 per-
cent rate.
There are also significant
“upside and downside risks”
when it comes to recreational
marijuana, state economists
say — meaning that the pre-
dictions economists make
could greatly exceed or fall
below expectations.
Among the downside
risks: regulatory “changes” or
“bottlenecks” that could pre-
vent companies from being
able to get licensed or get
their products tested quickly.
Sales prices could also fall
sharply. Prices have fallen
about 20 percent annually
since legalization in Colorado
and Washington state, state
economists say. And since
recreational marijuana taxes
are based on sales price, that
could affect state revenues as
well.
One risk that can be hard to
assess: the chance that the fed-
eral government may change
its policy toward recreational
marijuana and either halt or
curtail the business in states
that have legalized the drug.
On the other hand, sales
could increase if marijuana
use becomes more conven-
tional or “gains broader social
acceptance,” and the state’s
seed-to-sale tracking system
could reduce black market
sales.
And then there are the lit-
tle things.
Classification
For example, the North
American Industry Classi-
fication System, which the
U.S., Canada and Mexico use
to classify businesses so they
can track economic data, has
yet to catch up with the legal
cannabis industry.
Beau Whitney, an Ore-
gon-based economist and
business consultant who has
studied the recreational mari-
juana industry, says that he has
petitioned Canada and Mex-
ico — which have legalized
medical marijuana on the fed-
eral level — to create a code
that corresponds to marijuana.
State economist Josh Leh-
ner says that his office — the
Oregon Office of Economic
Analysis — consults with
101 Legal Notices
state agencies, such as the
liquor control commission
and the revenue department,
as well as private businesses,
to get a sense of where things
may be headed.
Whitney said that’s a
smart move.
“There’s just not a whole
lot of historic data to draw
upon, so they really need peo-
ple in the industry to help
them out, to let them know
where the movement in the
market is, what the consump-
tion patterns are and all that,”
Whitney said.
Meanwhile, the state’s
employment
department
is still trying to get a better
sense of just how many peo-
ple work in legal cannabis
outfits, whether that’s tending
to plants or making extracts.
Jobs estimate
Brian Rooney, a regional
economist with the Oregon
Employment
Department,
says that in order to estimate
cannabis employment, one
can start with a broad range.
For the lower bound of
the range, state employment
economists can use infor-
mation that businesses are
required to report, per unem-
ployment insurance law, to
the government.
Using that data and indus-
try classification recom-
mendations from the U.S.
Department of Labor, state
employment
economists
believe that in Oregon, the
lower bound for legal mari-
juana employment is about
3,500 people as of late May.
On the higher bound of
the range, the employment
department uses the number
of people with active permits
from the Oregon Liquor Con-
trol Commission to work with
marijuana, which as of late
May numbered about 12,000.
It’s likely that not everyone
who currently has a permit is
working in the industry.
The employment depart-
ment has also created its own
database of Oregon com-
panies that are known to be
marijuana-related.
Since Oregon’s econ-
omy is about 60 percent the
size of Washington’s, which
recently estimated that about
11,000 people are employed
in that state’s legal canna-
bis economy, about 7,000 to
8,000 people might be a rea-
sonable but rough estimate
of how many people work in
the legal industry in Oregon,
Rooney says.
The average wage in the
legal cannabis industry in
late 2016 was about $25,340,
according to the employment
department.
The Capital Bureau is a
collaboration between EO
Media Group and Pamplin
Media Group.
101 Legal Notices
AB6463
Trustee’s Notice of Sale
TS No. OR08000166-16- 1-FT APN1 28038 012 80930CC 04500 TO No 8686605 TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Reference is
made to that certain Trust Deed made by, HARRY JOHNS + JEANNE TUCKER , as Grantor to U.S. BANK TRUST COMPANY, NATION-
AL ASSOCIATION as Trustee, in favor of U.S. BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION as Beneficiary dated as of March 22, 2005 and record-
ed on April 26, 2005 as Instrument No. 200504834 and re-recorded on June 15, 2005 as Instrument No. 200506829 and re-recorded
March 22, 2017 Instrument No 201702204 of official records in the Office of the Recorder of Clatsop County, Oregon to-wit: APN: 28038
0112 80930CC 04500 PARCEL NO. 1: BLOCK 122, JEFFERS GARDENS, RECORDED AUGUST 14, 1924 IN BOOK 8 OF PLATS,
PAGE 37, EXCEPT THE NORTH HALF THEREOF CONVEYED TO F.O. TAYLOR AND WIFE BY DEED RECORDED IN BOOK 135 AT
PAGE 11, DEED RECORDS, IN THE COUNTY OF CLATSOP, STATE OF OREGON. PARCEL NO. 2: BLOCK 120, JEFFERS GAR-
DENS, RECORDED AUGUST 14, 1924 IN BOOK 8 OF PLATS, PAGE 37, EXCEPT THE NORTHERLY 208.5 FEET OF SAID BLOCK
CONVEYED TO ANNA MARIE KUIVALS AND HUSBAND BY DEED RECORDED IN BOOK 184 AT PAGE 485 DEED RECORDS, IN
THE COUNTY OF CLATSOP AND STATE OF OREGON; AND BLOCK 121, JEFFERS GARDENS, RECORDED AUGUST 14,
1924 IN BOOK 8 OF PLATS, PAGE 37, CLATSOP COUNTY, OREGON. EXCEPT THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED TRACT: THAT POR-
TION OF BLOCK 121, JEFFERS GARDENS, RECORDED AUGUST 14, 1924 IN BOOK 8 OF PLATS, PAGE 37, CLATSOP COUNTY,
OREGON DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: BEGINNING AT THE NORTHEAST CORNER OF SAID BLOCK 121; THENCE SOUTHERLY
ALONG THE EASTERLY LINE OF SAID BLOCK, A DISTANCE OF 225.5 FEET TO A POINT;
THENCE NORTHWESTERLY TO A POINT ON THE WESTERLY LINE OF SAID BLOCK TO A POINT 188 FEET SOUTH OF THE
NORTHWEST CORNER OF SAID BLOCK; THENCE NORTHERLY ALONG THE WESTERLY LINE OF SAID BLOCK A DISTANCE
OF 188 FEET TO THE NORTHWEST CORNER THEREOF; THENCE SOUTHEASTERLY ALONG THE NORTHERLY LINE OF SAID
BLOCK TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING. TOGETHER WITH AN EASEMENT OF EVEN WIDTH FOR THE BENEFIT OF PARCEL 1
AND 2 OVER AND ACROSS THE EASTERLY 12 FEET OF BLOCK 121. NOTE: THIS LEGAL DESCRIPTION WAS CREATED PRIOR
TO JANUARY 1, 2008. Commonly known as: 35198 ORCHARD LN, ASTORIA, OR 97103 Both the Beneficiary, U.S. Bank National
Association, and the Trustee, Nathan F. Smith, Esq., OSB #120112, have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations
secured by said Trust Deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes. The default for
which the foreclosure is made is the Grantor’s failure to pay: Failed to pay payments which became due Monthly Payment(s): 12 Monthly
Payment(s) from 01/01/2015 to 12/01/2015 at $1,205.46 2 Monthly Payment(s) from 01/01/2016 to 02/01/2016 at $787.65 12 Monthly
Payment(s) from 03/01/2016 to 02/01/2017 at $790.51 6 Monthly Payment(s) from 03/01/2017 to 08/01/2017 at $1,095.13 Monthly Late
Charge(s): 08/09/2017 By this reason of said default the Beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said
Trust Deed immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to-wit: The sum of $55,204.96 together with interest thereon at
the rate of 6.29000% per annum from January 9, 2015 until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all Trustee’s fees, fore-
closure costs and any sums advanced by the Beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said Trust Deed. Wherefore, notice is hereby given
that, the undersigned Trustee will on December 27, 2017 at the hour of 01:00 PM, Standard of Time, as established by Section 187.110,
Oregon Revised Statues, Front Entrance, Clatsop County Courthouse, 749 Commercial Street, Astoria, OR 97103 County of Clatsop,
sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the Grantor had or had power
to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said Trust Deed, together with any interest which the Grantor or his successors in
interest acquired after the execution of said Trust Deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses
of sale, including a reasonable charge by the Trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Re-
vised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the Trust Deed reinstated by payment to the Beneficiary
of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with
the costs, Trustee’s or attorney’s fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance
required under the obligation or Trust Deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. Without limiting the Trustee’s
disclaimer of representations or warranties, Oregon law requires the Trustee to state in this notice that some residential
property sold at a Trustee’s sale may have been used in manufacturing methamphetamines, the chemical components of which are
known to be toxic. Prospective purchasers of residential property should be aware of this potential danger before deciding to place a bid
for this property at the Trustee’s sale. In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular
includes plural, the word “Grantor” includes any successor in interest to the Grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation,
the performance of which is secured by said Trust Deed, the words “Trustee” and “Beneficiary” includes their respective successors
in interest, if any. Dated: By: Nathan F. Smith, Esq., OSB #120112 Successor Trustee Malcolm & Cisneros, A Law Corporation
Attention: Nathan F. Smith, Esq., OSB #120112 c/o TRUSTEE CORPS 17100 Gillette Ave, Irvine, CA 92614 949-252- 8300 FOR SALE
INFORMATION PLEASE CALL: Auction.com at 800.280.2832 Website for Trustee's Sale Information: www.Auction.comISL Num-
ber 33911, Pub Dates: 09/05/2017, 09/12/2017, 09/19/2017, 09/26/2017, THE DAILY ASTORIAN.
Published: September 5th, 12th, 19th, and 26th, 2017.