DailyAstorian.com // TUESDAY, JANUARY 16, 2018 145TH YEAR, NO. 141 ONE DOLLAR CANNON BEACH Fire board debates levy Board members worried about ‘tax fatigue’ By BRENNA VISSER The Daily Astorian Photos by Colin Murphey/The Daily Astorian A logging truck crosses over a bridge spanning Little Humbug Creek on U.S. Highway 26 near Seaside. STATE BRIDGES BATTLE AGE, WOOD ROT Structural problems cited on three local crossings By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian everal aging highway bridges in Clatsop County require significant work to remain viable. The state Department of Transportation rated crossings of U.S. Highway 101 over Ecola Creek, U.S. Highway 26 over Lit- tle Humbug Creek and Oregon Highway 104 over the Skipanon River as structur- ally deficient in the 2017 report on bridge conditions. A structural deficiency does not mean a bridge is unsafe, but that it needs signif- icant work to the deck, superstructure or substructure. The rating is used to help rank projects in the state bridge program. Region 2, spanning the Oregon Coast from Astoria to Florence and the entire Willamette Valley, has slightly more than 1,000 state-owned bridges, more than any other region of the state. Of those, 32 are considered structurally deficient. Plans are underway to replace the Highway 101 crossing over Ecola Creek and the Highway 26 crossing over Little Humbug Creek in the coming years. Both were built in the 1950s and handle thou- sands of cars per day. Both also stand on wooden substruc- tures, along with more than 200 other bridges built in Oregon between 1930 and 1970. Nearly three-quarters of those tim- ber-supported bridges are in Northwest Oregon. “In the ’30s and ’40s and ’50s, as kind of a cost-cutting measure, there were a lot S CANNON BEACH — Cannon Beach Rural Fire Protection District board mem- bers delayed a vote Monday on whether to put a modified levy on the May ballot that would raise property taxes, citing concerns that voters would not support a tax increase. The change would more than double the rate to $0.35 per thousand of assessed property, up from $0.1488. It’s a difference between paying roughly $14 a year on a $100,000 home versus paying $35. The fire district would bring in about $385,000 a year, compared to the $141,469 since voters last approved the levy in 2013. Fire Chief Matt Benedict proposed modify- ing the levy, which is put up for a vote every five years and pays for the salary, benefits and other costs of the fire chief, into an oper- ational levy to allow funding for two fire- fighter paramedics. Funding the positions would help the dis- trict respond to a growing number of med- ical calls in an area where firefighters are often first on scene before ambulances can arrive, Benedict said. Funding would also help address the decline in volunteer fire- fighter recruitment and a backlog of fire inspections. But board members were weary of intro- ducing a tax increase so soon after vot- ers approved a $99.7 million bond in 2016 to relocate Seaside schools. Board member Garry Smith said he feared voters may have “tax fatigue.” “We have to be careful with how we sell this to the public if we are going to ask them to pay a few more hundred dollars a year on their property,” Smith said. “We should explore other avenues before jumping into taxes.” More surveys The Old Youngs Bay Bridge is one crossing in the area that has had significant work done in recent years. THE CROSSINGS U.S. Highway 101 over Ecola Creek U.S. Highway 26 over Little Humbug Creek Oregon Highway 104 over the Skipanon River of timber bridges built,” said Bruce John- son, the state’s bridge engineer. “Because of the moister climate in Region 2, that timber rots pretty quick.” The state estimates more than 90 per- cent of timber bridges have exceeded their designed lifespans of 50 years. Repairing timber has become a major and continu- ally increasing portion of the state’s main- tenance resources as the bridges age. Of the 298 distressed bridges in the region, 56 have structural timber elements. The state is mostly phasing out the use of timber in bridges, replacing elements piece by piece during maintenance until a bridge replacement can be completed, Johnson said. Daniel McFadden, a local bridge main- tenance coordinator whose crews main- tain around 400 regional spans, said most of those bridge replacements will be with prestressed concrete, used in most newer bridges. A crossing of Highway 26 east of Little Humbug Creek was replaced in 2014 with prestressed concrete. “It’s hard to replace with steel here, if it’s not prepared correctly,” McFadden said. “It will rust just like timber will rot.” Board members agreed that the needs of the fire district have outgrown the revenue generated from the tax. But some said more research should be done into the problems Benedict described before asking voters to pay more. “What’s the value in rushing to put this out in May?” said board member Mark Mor- gans., adding he wants to see more study done on how often paramedic services would be needed from local firefighters. “We need to take a look at how frequently that occurs.” Smith agreed more surveys to gauge pub- lic interest and education about the issues should be done. He also suggested the dis- trict start looking at merging with neighbor- ing districts as a way to share resources and cut costs. Board member Mark Mekenas said he would prefer the district look at work- ing with the city to raise the lodging tax or institute a food and beverage tax. See BRIDGES, Page 7A See LEVY, Page 7A Amtrak gives new assurances on automatic safety braking Technology could have stopped derailment By TOM BANSE Northwest News Network Amtrak’s CEO has given Oregon and Wash- ington state officials a timeline for when the company will activate automatic safety brak- ing systems in the Pacific Northwest. This is the technology many experts believe could have prevented last month’s deadly train derailment south of Tacoma. Amtrak told state legislators it’s working to activate what’s known as positive train control in the entire Cascade corridor “as soon as possi- ble.” Installation was already in progress before the Dec. 18 train wreck because of a looming national deadline at the end of this year. Amtrak Senior Government Affairs Manager Rob Eaton said sensors and radio links track- side, on locomotives and on a central server still need to be integrated. “The testing and interaction of all three of these elements will take place during the second and third quarters of the year, after which PTC will be placed into operation,” he said. Only then according to Washington state officials will passenger service resume on the faster bypass track along Interstate 5 where last month’s derailment happened. AP Photo/Elaine Thompson See AMTRAK, Page 7A The engine from an Amtrak train crash onto Interstate 5 in December is checked by workers.