7A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • FRIDAY, JANUARY 19, 2018 Voters: Trump earned 41 percent of county’s votes Continued from Page 1A “So I was hopeful for that,” she said. “And I have not been disappointed.” Bridgens would like Trump to place more emphasis on education, particularly school vouchers. She sees a small vic- tory in the appointment of Val- erie Huber, an advocate for abstinence education, to a top post with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Like many Trump voters, she also wants the president to follow through with his cam- paign promise to build a wall on the border with Mexico. “I’m still hopeful about the national security and building the wall to keep the drugs out and the illegals out of our coun- try that do so much damage,” she said. Her advice to Trump’s doubters? “I believe they should take an honest look at the successes that he’s had that help all of us, and put aside their ideology and just look at putting Amer- ica first, as he puts it,” she said. Some Trump voters blame Republicans who control Con- gress for not acting fast enough on Trump’s agenda, like repealing the federal Afford- able Care Act, or Obamacare, which could be politically costly if Republicans lose the Senate or House to Democrats in the midterm elections in November. “It’s been disappointing that we haven’t been able to get Congress going on a lot of things that need to be done that are good for everybody. Good for America, I guess that’s the main thing,” Seppa said. “I’m disappointed in that.” Self-inflicted wounds Many of Trump’s troubles since his inauguration have been self-inflicted, from pick- Trumpville Vote tally by precinct Precinct/location Trump Clinton 1 Astoria 2 Astoria 3 Astoria 4 Astoria 5 Astoria 6 Astoria 7 Astoria 8 Astoria 20 Cannon Beach 21 Chadwell 22 N. Clatsop 23 S. Clatsop 24 Elsie 25 Gearhart 26 Hamlet 28 Jewell 29 John Day 30 Knappa 31 Lewis & Clark 35 Necanicum 36 Olney 37 Seaside 38 Seaside 39 Seaside 40 Seaside 43 Stanley Acres 44 Svensen 45 Arch Cape 46 Walluski 47 Warrenton 48 Warrenton 50 Westport 52 Hillcrest Total 146 176 282 173 225 106 203 149 228 266 348 460 78 337 97 181 152 457 409 141 214 271 316 250 288 57 270 50 151 1,025 308 156 168 8,138 299 433 471 242 489 278 464 235 561 141 222 416 66 492 102 114 134 356 268 99 120 371 406 368 368 55 203 113 155 713 236 108 154 9,252 Clatsop County reliably votes for Democrats in presidential elections. Donald Trump was among the most polarizing Republican candidates ever to run for president, yet the billionaire businessman attracted 41 percent of the vote in 2016. PACIFIC Chinook 101 Rive m bia 2 Hammond 3 47 48 Warrenton 1 For Trump r 4 29 5 6 7 Astoria 30 44 8 Knappa 30 46 4 409 30 50 31 22 Westport 52 P a ci f i c Ocea n 202 101 23 21 Gearhart 39 25 38 Seaside 43 36 40 CLATSOP 37 28 202 35 Jewell 101 26 20 103 Cannon Beach 26 Tolovana Park 45 24 26 53 2 miles TILLAMOOK Source: Clatsop County ing diplomatic fights with allies like Britain and Austra- lia to reality show-style Twit- ter feuds to shockingly coarse descriptions of poverty in Haiti, El Salvador and Africa. For Clinton h. Was e. Or 401 Col u Precinct results WAHKIAKUM Derrick DePledge and Alan Kenaga/EO Media Group Kurt Donnaku, who lives in Brownsmead and serves as a Republican precinct com- mitteeman for Knappa, was a reluctant Trump voter. Donnaku likes Trump’s drive to reduce regulation and rescind some of Presi- dent Barack Obama’s execu- tive orders, turning those issues back to Congress, where he believes they belong. “Every time I start feel- ing good about Trump, then he shoots his mouth off and just says ridiculously stupid stuff,” he said. “He tends to be a bully with the name-calling and third-grade stuff. That’s, I guess, what gets me.” Donnaku’s advice for the president? “Get rid of his Twitter account.” Activists: Event on Saturday House: No longer has ‘good bones’ Continued from Page 1A Continued from Page 1A values through rallies, meet- ings, canvassing and social media campaigns. About 15 people lead the group, nearly 500 subscribe to its weekly email updates and nearly 900 follow it on Face- book. The group offers lead- ership training and has dif- ferent teams such as Oppose Bigotry and Vote the Future. Nearly all of its funds come from member donations. “Some of us are expe- rienced activists. Some of us never considered being activists until the last pres- idential election,” Vanasse said. “We’ve been build- ing the boat while sailing. Everything has been a sur- prise because we’re building things so rapidly.” A year into Trump’s pres- idency, the activists offer lit- tle to no praise of his perfor- mance. They are particularly troubled by the threat to the Deferred Action for Child- hood Arrivals program, fund- ing cuts to the U.S. Depart- ment of Housing and Urban Development, reductions to national parks and mon- uments and the attempted repeal of the Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare. Vanasse described her political mood as a constant state of “low-level dread.” “The reason 2017 was, to me, even worse than I expected it to be is that the truth has been undermined more than I expected it to be. The self-serving interests have been blatant,” she said. “There’s so many of them that you forget about them, and you forget about some horrifying thing two weeks ago or two months ago.” Trump and his allies have taunted progres- sive activists as sore losers unable to accept the election results. In turn, activists have con- ceded that their messages likely will never sway the president. “I don’t see that the pres- ident looks beyond his base, and we’re not part of this base,” Vanasse said. They do, however, feel like they’ve made an impact on Congress. The most sig- he told commissioners. “It’s a cadaver.” ‘Beyond repair’ Colin Murphey/The Daily Astorian A demonstrator dressed as the Statue of Liberty waves to passing vehicles at a September protest. nificant victory might be the pushback against the Obamacare repeal. Congres- sional offices were flooded with calls about the topic, while town halls were more lively than they’ve been since conservatives in the Tea Party movement fought the health care law in 2010. “I think Indivisible and groups like it send a very clear message to Oregon pol- iticians on where we stand,” said Lee, who has joined demonstrations in Portland in the past year. Voter registration A recent internal survey of more than 30 Indivisible fol- lowers produced a range of ideas and even some mixed reviews about the organiza- tion’s effectiveness and open- ness. One thing the major- ity of respondents agreed on, though, was the need to focus on the midterm elections in November. The group may have already made some strides on that front. From November 2016 to November of last year, Clat- sop County voter registration increased more than 7 per- cent, the fourth-largest spike in the state, according to sta- tistics from the Oregon Sec- retary of State’s Office. The county hadn’t seen a positive change in voter registration in odd-numbered years since 2003. Indivisible’s views align more with the Democratic Party, and some of its mem- bers also are involved with Clatsop County Democrats. But the organization does not view itself as a political oper- ation as much as a political advocacy campaign. Flex- ibility is one of its greatest strengths, Vanasse said. “We’re sort of not entrenched in the meritoc- racy of a political party,” she said. “I believe Indivisible is a force to be reckoned with for that reason.” The group expects to add to its political efforts this year. It will endorse can- didates and ballot mea- sures and push for election reforms such as county voter pamphlets in off-year elections. Event on Saturday This Saturday, Indivisi- ble will host an event called Turn the Tide Regional Sum- mit at Fort George Brewery’s Lovell Showroom. It will fea- ture nearly 14 hours of guest speakers, workshops, a ques- tion-and-answer session for prospective candidates and a community dance. Vanasse believes civic engagement has risen on the North Coast in the past year. Since Trump won’t face vot- ers again until 2020, though, she is hoping that energy will be focused on more immedi- ate goals. “We’re very focused on midterm elections, get- ting out votes and getting good candidates,” she said. “There’s a lot more to be done to get our democracy on track than changing the name in the White House.” The Alameda building is just over three stories tall, painted purple and backed up against a hill in the slide zone. In addi- tion to being listed as historic, it is also located in the Union- town-Alameda National Regis- ter Historic District — a “dou- ble whammy” when it comes to decisions about its future, City Planner Nancy Ferber said. The Osborns described the property before they bought it in June as a “slum” oper- ated by an absentee landlord where “drug use was common- place.” Over the decades, the house had turned into a warren of small, oddly-shaped apart- ments and fell into disrepair. In one picture, a raccoon pokes its head through a hole in the wall. The Osborns, who live in a home they built next door, esti- mated it would cost just under $700,000 to rehabilitate the building. They say it is unlikely they’d be able to make enough income back in rent to justify the expense or convince a bank to finance the restoration. An engineer they hired to conduct a structural assessment concluded that the foundation was “beyond repair” and the building’s framing had dete- riorated. In October, the city deemed the site a safety hazard and dangerous to occupy. The building didn’t pose an imme- diate threat to public health or safety, however, and a review was necessary if the Osborns wanted to demolish it. The Osborns knew about some of the issues with the building before they bought it. They said they reported it as derelict several times to the city, but saw no changes occur. They decided to buy it anyway when it went up for sale. They didn’t want to risk another neg- ligent landlord taking it over. If their appeal to the City Council is successful and they are allowed to demolish the structure, they have no imme- diate plans to build anything in its place. What about the Merwyn? LJ Gunderson, presi- ‘The history of development of that neighborhood is very closely tied to working class housing and boarding houses that are really massive structures.’ Rachel Jensen Lower Columbia Preservation Society’s president dent of the Historic Land- marks Commission, can think of other buildings that peo- ple have told her are dead. The Waldorf Hotel next to City Hall, also known as the Merwyn, for one. She recalled how several years ago many of the same people who came to sup- port the Osborns’ demolition request told her, “If you let them tear down the Merwyn, you’re not doing your job.” At the time, reports and studies concluded that the Waldorf could not and should not be saved. Things are very different now. Earlier this month, the Planning Com- mission approved a condi- tional use permit submitted by a Portland-based nonprofit to turn the hotel into 40 work- force housing units. “When I see what hap- pened to the Merwyn, and it’s going to have life and it’s going to provide more afford- able housing and stuff that we need, and it wasn’t torn down, I think that’s awesome,” Gun- derson said on Wednesday. “Although you may not like where I may vote on this,” she added, “I’m doing what you echoed to me several years ago with the Merwyn.” But some of the commis- sioners asked: What are the odds that an angel — like the one that showed up to save the Waldorf — would sweep in to save the Alameda building? Later, Wendy Osborn said the hotel was not a fair com- parison. Unlike the Alameda building, the hotel’s founda- tion is solid, as is the foun- dation of the historic Francis Apartments on Franklin Ave- nue that are in the process of being restored. “They have good bones,” she said, “and this building no longer does.” Time to pull the plug? The Osborns looked into getting access to a city right of way on one side of the prop- erty. Ted Osborn has men- tioned an option where some of the building could be salvaged and moved into this right of way. The decision to vacate the right of way is a City Council call. In her analysis of the Osborns’ application, Ferber wrote that the couple should first exhaust all options to save the structure through relocation or sale of the building and that they should explore other cre- ative ways to slash the cost of rehabilitation. It wasn’t clear if the Osborns had looked at incentives like historic tax credits, she wrote. Finding a way to turn the building back into usable apart- ments “in a high density res- idential area would add to the city’s historical heritage of pro- viding unique workforce hous- ing options,” Ferber wrote. Board members of the Lower Columbia Preser- vation Society agreed and spoke against Ted Osborn’s application. “The history of develop- ment of that neighborhood is very closely tied to working class housing and boarding houses that are really massive structures,” Rachel Jensen, the society’s president, said Thurs- day. “As we lose those it really changes the character of the neighborhood and housing in that area. … We’re not deny- ing that the structural integ- rity of the building has been undermined and needs to be addressed but we don’t believe it’s as far gone as he says it is.” In the end, the property might need to be demolished, she said. “No one’s saying that it might not come to that, but is it time to pull the plug?”