DailyAstorian.com // TUESDAY, MARCH 13, 2018 145TH YEAR, NO. 181 PREPARING YOUR PETS Cannon Beach launches new disaster response team for animals C See PETS, Page 4A Oregon looks to end waiver trials Defendants waived rights to get out of jail By BRENNA VISSER The Daily Astorian ANNON BEACH — Bob Kroll has spent most of his life treat- ing animals in distress. Some- times that meant working as a veterinar- ian in an emergency clinic. Other times, it meant treating severe seizures in dogs at his practice in Clackamas. But as Kroll enters into retirement, the longtime second homeowner may be tackling his toughest challenge yet — designing a plan to save the four-legged friends of Cannon Beach. This spring, Kroll is teaming up with the city to launch a Disaster Animal Response Team — a volunteer group with the mission to assist pets and pet owners during an emergency. With Kroll at the helm, part of the team’s role will be to recruit volunteers who can be trained in proper animal han- dling and basic pet medical care. As it grows, another goal will be to set up a network of animal shelters in conjunc- tion with human shelters for misplaced or stranded animals. The idea came to fruition after Kro- ll’s wife, a retired nurse, attended a Med- ical Reserve Corps meeting a little over a year ago in Cannon Beach, where dozens of retired doctors and nurses train for a natural disaster. When it came time from Kroll to retire, she asked the leaders of the group if they could use a veterinarian. “It turns out the answer was ‘yes,’” Kroll said. The group will join a growing trend of animal preparedness in Oregon, but is a first for Clatsop County. “A lot will be about education, like how we tell people to prepare with a go-bag — it’s the same kind of thing for your pet,” Kroll said. “You want to pack some food and water, prescriptions, ONE DOLLAR By DERRICK DePLEDGE The Daily Astorian Bob Kroll, who is helping launch the Disaster Animal Response Team, plays with his dog, Betty, at his Cannon Beach home. Photos by Colin Murphey/The Daily Astorian ABOVE: Pets playing on the sand is a common sight near Cannon Beach. BELOW: Two visitors to Cannon Beach walk and play with their pets. Kristin Medina’s drunken-driving trial was quick and efficient. She did not object when the prosecutor asked a Seaside police officer to describe how she failed a field sobriety test. She did not challenge the results of a breath test that put her blood alcohol content at 0.23 percent, nearly three MORE ONLINE times the legal limit. Read House Bill 4149 at bit.ly/2FO0Fl5 She did not offer a sin- gle word in her defense. Medina wasn’t even in court. As a condition of release after her October 2012 arrest, Medina, who lived in Washington state, signed a waiver of appearance for trial. When she did not show up, the criminal justice system moved on without her. “We’ll catch up with her at some point, I would assume,” Circuit Court Judge Cindee Matyas said after finding Medina guilty of misdemeanor drunken driving in January 2013. With an overcrowded jail and a signifi- cant share of defendants who live outside the North Coast, Clatsop County has rou- tinely required people accused of misde- meanors to waive their right to appear at trial as a condition of release. But the state Legislature, concerned the waivers are too high a price to get out of jail, has overwhelmingly voted to ban the practice in Oregon. “I think the most important thing the state does is the criminal justice system, because it’s where the full power of the state is on one person,” said Kirk Winter- mute, a criminal defense attorney in Asto- ria who urged the Legislature to change the law. “And if that person is not there to answer that, and they’re not there to ques- tion their accusers, I think that’s pretty significant.” District Attorney Josh Marquis predicts the change will make it easier for defendants to wriggle out of con- victions by never showing up for court and — if caught years later — claiming they were denied the right to a speedy trial. Judge Paula Brownhill, the presiding judge of the Circuit Court, cautions that the potential impact may be overstated. In 2017, defendants in Clatsop County signed waivers in 372 misdemeanor cases, but only 11 led to trials where the defendant was not in court. “We have a lot of defendants sign waivers of appearance as a condition of release, but we don’t try very many of them,” the judge said. See WAIVER TRIALS, Page 3A Sandpiper Square sold to Salem investor New owner pledges to ‘preserve what is already there’ By BRENNA VISSER The Daily Astorian CANNON BEACH — Sandpiper Square, the iconic shopping complex that anchors downtown Cannon Beach, has been sold to Salem-based entrepreneur and investor Roger Yost for $4.2 million. Yost purchased the property from Coaster Properties LLC, the company that developed the complex in 1973 along with other well-known prop- erties like the Coaster Theatre Playhouse, Mariner Market and the U.S. Bank Building. Yost is a former marketing executive at Jantzen, a Port- land-based swimwear com- pany, who lived in Arch Cape for nearly 30 years before pur- chasing and restoring land- mark Salem properties like the Reed Opera House, Cap- itol Center and Alessandro’s Restaurant building in 2003. All three were sold in the last three months in an attempt to move back to his coastal roots, Yost said. “I didn’t build any sand- castles, but I definitely have watched many be built,” Yost joked, referring to the town’s long-running Sandcas- tle Day celebration. “I’ve had a long connection with Can- non Beach. When I sold my house in Arch Cape, I instantly regretted it.” Yost said he intends to keep almost everything about Sand- piper Square as is. Part of what made the sale attractive, he said, was the building’s The Daily Astorian See SQUARE, Page 4A Sandpiper Square hosts community traditions like the holiday lamp-lighting ceremony.