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About The daily Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1961-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 23, 2017)
SEASIDE POISED FOR A RUN AT A STATE TITLE SPORTS • PAGE 10A DailyAstorian.com // MONDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2017 145TH YEAR, NO. 81 Food bank shake-up leads to a temporary closure South County nonprofi t feeds the hungry By R.J. MARX The Daily Astorian SEASIDE — Board members and Karla Gann, the former regional man- ager of the South County Food Bank, have two dif- ferent accountings of a split that could leave hundreds of South County residents hun- gry over the holidays. Gann said she and staff were approached by board members Friday afternoon, ordered to relinquish their keys and locked out of the Roosevelt Drive building. ONE DOLLAR South Clatsop County Food Bank Regional Manager Karla Gann at the food bank in August. “They said, ‘You’re fi red, you’re gone. Give me your keys and leave.’ They did it in the worst possible way,” Gann said. Gann blamed the clo- sure on months of board Colin Murphey The Daily Astorian See FOOD BANK, Page 3A Marijuana debate still blazing in Cannon Beach Portland hotelier outduels the Port Param could take over Astoria Riverwalk Inn By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian Colin Murphey/The Daily Astorian Chris Hess at the Five Zero Trees store in Cannon Beach on Friday. Owners of the store are planning a soft opening in a few weeks as two other recreational marijuana retailers look at opening stores in Cannon Beach. City councilors to review rules, comprehensive plan By BRENNA VISSER The Daily Astorian C ANNON BEACH — Almost a year has passed since residents narrowly voted to allow recre- ational marijuana sales . But as retailers apply to open stores , conversations about appropriate locations and procedure have MORE INSIDE Marijuana retailers eye Cannon Beach Page 7A unsettled the community . T hree marijuana retailers have sub- mitted land use compatibility statements to operate . Each are at different stages of the permitting process. But one — Five Zero Trees at 140 S. Hemlock St. — has been inspected by the Oregon Liquor Control Commission and is expected to open within the next few weeks, pending the city’s approval of a business license. Earlier this year, controversy sur- rounding the Hemlock Street location led city councilors to reevaluate an ordi- nance that spells out where and how mar- ijuana shops can operate . The issue came up after Matt Ennis, a resident at 140 S. Hemlock, told the city at a July meeting that his landlord planned to evict him to rent the commercial space under him to Five Zero Trees. Councilors voted 3-2 to maintain the ordinance, which prohibits marijuana stores in mixed-use buildings to adhere to Clatsop County Circuit Court Judge Dawn McIntosh has given Param Hotel Corp. a choice between either a seven-year lease on the Astoria Riverwalk Inn or up to $4 million in damages against the Port of Astoria. Param’s attorney, Colin Hunter, said the company plans to take over the lease of the hotel in November 2018, after the term of Astoria Hospitality Ventures ends. “The judge and jury have now spoken with one voice to confi rm that Param is enti- tled to the benefi t of the bargain it reached with the Port back in 2015,” Hunter said. “At its core, this case has always been about the opportunity to run the Riverwalk Inn, a truly unique hotel property with enormous potential.” A jury last week awarded the $4 million to Param, fi nding the Port had breached a contract and that Port Executive Director Jim Knight had knowingly made fraudulent mis- representations to Param’s owner, Ganesh Sonpatki. McIntosh held a hearing Friday on Param’s pending claim for specifi c perfor- mance, a legal remedy used when mone- tary damages are not adequate. McIntosh said she would accept a suggestion that the Port enforce Param’s seven-year lease at the end of Hospitality Ventures’ remaining year. Param would also have to pay what was promised in the breached contract to sat- isfy former operator Brad Smithart’s debts to the Port, Astoria and Clatsop County. Any remainder would go to Smithart, who See MARIJUANA, Page 7A See HOTELIER, Page 7A New librarian takes helm at college Checking out books and more By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian an McClure was an adver- tising major at the Uni- versity of Oregon when a research librarian visited his “Info Hell” class, a rite of passage for those entering the School of Journalism and Communication. The librarian showed the class LexisNexis Congressio- nal, one of the foremost reposi- tories of c ongressional records. About one-third of the class didn’t pay attention, McClure said, but he was enthralled. D “I just thought, ‘Wow; that’s so profound that this guy has this ability to affect so many lives at once, for those of who cared to pay atten- tion to it,’” he said. “I think until then, in my mind, librar- ians were very tied to what I had witnessed at the public library, which was really a lot of checking out books.” After earning a bachelor’s in journalism, McClure real- ized advertising didn’t fi t his personality. He later earned a master’s in library and infor- mation studies. He landed this year at Clatsop Community College as the new director of the Dora Badollet Library. Originally from Eugene, McClure left at 19 and didn’t return until his 30s to attend school. In his youth, he worked as a waiter, baker, bike mes- senger and salesman of musi- cal instruments and cameras, positions he later used to work his way through college. After the University of Oregon, McClure and his wife, Noelle, who works in fi ne art collection man- agement, moved east as she pursued a master’s in studio art Edward Stratton/The Daily Astorian See McCLURE, Page 3A Dan McClure was recently hired as director of Clatsop Community College’s Dora Badollet Library. START YOUR PATH TO RECOVERY TREATMENT FOR ALCOHOLISM • DRUG ADDICTION • MENTAL HEALTH ISSUES O P E N N O W ! C A L L T O D AY 9 7 1 . 6 0 6 . 0 2 8 0