The daily Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1961-current, April 05, 2018, Page 7A, Image 26

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    7A
THE DAILY ASTORIAN • THURSDAY, APRIL 5, 2018
Port: Agency sees potential for
development at East Mooring
Continued from Page 1A
Built by feds
Local groups appealed to
the federal government after
World War II for help building
a boat basin to relieve conges-
tion and add moorage for the
fishing fleet.
“It was estimated that some
3,000 craft would benefit ini-
tially from the above-requested
improvement, which would
provide berthing space for
1,000 at one time,” Col. Ralph
Tudor, a district engineer with
the U.S. Army Corps of Engi-
neers, wrote in a 1946 recom-
mendation for the project.
The basin, surrounded
by rock breakwater and two
wing jetties, was constructed
in the late 1940s. The proj-
ect included a 945-foot cause-
way that runs above the basin
to the breakwater, with walk-
ways down to the docks where
boats moor.
“All facilities within the
basin would be operated and
maintained by the Port of
Astoria without profit and
open to all on equal terms,”
Tudor wrote.
Ownership was under a
joint partnership that included
the city and Port. In 1968, the
Astoria City Council vacated
its right of ways in the basin at
the request of the Port.
“The Port wanted dispen-
sation to do things out there,”
Astoria City Manager Brett
Estes said.
The Port began lobbying
Congress in the late 1980s to
repair the deteriorating break-
water surrounding the basin,
said Bill Cook, the Port’s for-
mer deputy director. Congress
spent more than $20 million
in the early 2000s rehabil-
itating the breakwater. The
rehab stopped at the transition
between the breakwater and
the causeway, which the Port
has struggled to maintain.
In 2009, state bridge inspec-
tors found the causeway in
serious condition and ordered
it closed to vehicle traffic. The
Port made about $150,000 in
repairs and opened the road-
way up temporarily. But sev-
eral years ago, the causeway
Neal Maine
A red-winged blackbird protects its territory from an elk in Clatsop County wetlands.
Birds: Could help mark Earth Day
Continued from Page 1A
“Red-winged blackbirds
have been in that habitat for-
ever. It seemed to fit the char-
acter of Cannon Beach,” said
Neal Maine, a wildlife pho-
tographer who serves on the
12 Days of Earth Day com-
mittee. “They are a part of
the downtown, which is kind
of rare to have a bird colony
right in the central part of the
community.”
The committee, which
organizes a variety of envi-
ronmental activities through-
out April in honor of Earth
Day, decided it wanted to
propose the idea to the city
as a formal way to honor
the 100th anniversary of the
Migratory Bird Treaty Act,
a landmark federal law that
protects dozens of species of
birds. Adopting the bird offi-
cially would take a vote from
the City Council. Dozens
of cities have adopted simi-
lar designations around the
country.
While negotiating which
bird should be proposed for
the title, the tufted puffin was
considered. Cannon Beach is
the home of the largest tufted
puffin colony on the Ore-
gon Coast, with several fes-
tivals and fundraisers held in
their honor. Between that and
the wide array of puffin par-
aphernalia available down-
town, the black, white and
orange bird has become the
town’s unofficial icon.
But there are many rea-
sons the red-winged black-
bird has an edge. Puffins are
seasonal, nesting at Haystack
Rock for only a few months
of the year, and are not very
accessible unless “you are
strategic about seeing them,”
Maine said.
Red-winged blackbirds
are what people in the com-
munity see every day, and
serve as a better representative
of the area’s ecology, Maine
said. Designating these birds
would also be historically sig-
nificant, as many of them live
on the Little Pompey Wet-
land — a marsh named after
the son of Sacagawea from
the Lewis and Clark Expedi-
tion by Cannon Beach Ele-
mentary School fifth-graders
more than 20 years ago.
“It’s the idea that every
bird counts, even common
ones like red-winged black-
birds,” Maine said. “We
have a tendency to go for
the rare and unusual. This is
more about celebrating the
‘common.’”
Haystack Rock Awareness
Program Director Melissa
Keyser also serves on the
committee and said while her
program is naturally partial to
tufted puffins, she embraces
the red-winged blackbird as
an official bird.
“It’s the perfect bird to
highlight because it is often
overshadowed by the puf-
fin,” Keyser said. “While the
puffins are incredibly special
and important, we also want
to give credit to another spe-
cies. When you are really
immersed in the environment
here the bird that you see is
the red-winged blackbird. We
could have gone with the puf-
fin, but the blackbird was a
little more indicative to this
place.”
Puffin or otherwise, the
larger message is to bring to
light the importance of pro-
tecting bird habitat. Post-
ers of the bird with the cap-
tion “They are all canaries”
are being circulated around
town to raise awareness. The
phrase plays off the old adage
“a canary in a coal mine,” ref-
erencing a time when canar-
ies were used as early detec-
tors for carbon monoxide in
mining tunnels.
“They are our measur-
ing stick to the quality of our
environment,” Maine said.
“When the birds start dying,
that’s when you know you’ve
got a problem.”
Colin Murphey/The Daily Astorian
The section of the mooring basin occupied by sea lions is
off limits to the public for safety reasons.
closed again to vehicles.
Bruce Johnson, the state
bridge engineer, said the Port
still has more than 30 struc-
tural pieces above and below
water needing repair before
the causeway could reopen to
traffic. The state has also pro-
vided the Port with an estimate
of $4 million to replace the
entire bridge, although John-
son cautioned that the actual
price could be two to four
times more.
“There’s no way to know
unless you do the actual design
and engineering,” he said.
About a year ago, the state
told the Port the entire cause-
way could be shut down in the
next two years to all traffic —
vehicle and pedestrian — if it
isn’t fixed, Knight said.
“We’re going to have to
wrestle as an organization,”
Knight said of the heavy
investment needed at the
basin. “Is this something we’re
going to tackle? Is it some-
thing we’re going to sit on, or
is this something (for which)
we need to engage a lot more
people?”
Planning for the future
The Port also owns sev-
eral acres around the basin on
either side of 36th Street. But
any plans the Port has would
have to pass muster with the
city, which adopted build-
ing and height restrictions in
the Civic Greenway portion
of the Riverfront Vision Plan
between 16th to 39th streets.
The Port can get exceptions
if the agency presents a mas-
ter plan that is approved by the
Astoria City Council.
Kevin Cronin, a former
Astoria community develop-
ment director contracted by
the Port to search and apply for
grants, said he is seeking one
this summer for a master plan
at the East Mooring Basin.
Port Commissioner Bill
Hunsinger, who is also a com-
mercial fisherman, said the
Port should go to Washington,
D.C., to seek more federal sup-
port for fixing the basin.
“If we had maintained that
(marina), our fishing industry
would probably have been out
there,” he said, adding the Port
should get the fishing industry
behind any pitch.
Commissioner Dirk Rohne
said the Port should look into a
public-private partnership.
The Port is creating a stra-
tegic plan to cover all of its
properties. That plan should
include language about the
need to explore such options
to improve the ailing basin,
Knight said.
“Once it’s fixed, it’s a heck
of an opportunity,” he said. “It
was designed to have … like
1,500 slips for boats. That was
the original intent. So it cer-
tainly could be a moneymaker.
It certainly could be a money
generator.”
CLASSIFIEDINDEX
CLASSIFIEDS
NOTICES
MARINE
Special Notices ............................. 104 Boats for Sale................................. 251
Public Notices ............................... 107 Boating Parts & Accessories ..... 254
Announcements .......................... 110 Boats Wanted ................................ 257
Boat Trailers ................................... 260
PERSONALS
Marine Supplies & Equip. .......... 266
Lost & Found ................................. 181 Boat/RV Storage ........................... 269
Personals ........................................ 184
Fund-raisers ................................... 188 RVs & Trailers
RVs & Travel Trailers ............ 301-307
AUTOMOTIVE
Campers, Utility Trailers .... 310-313
Antiques/Classic Vehicles ......... 201
Automobiles .................................. 204 REAL ESTATE
SUVs/Trucks .......................... 207-210 Open Houses ................................. 501
4WD .................................................. 213 For Sale ................................... 504-513
Vans .................................................. 216 Lots & Acreage .............................. 516
ATVs/Motorcycles ........................ 219 Income Property .......................... 519
Truck/Auto Parts .......................... 222 Manufactured Homes ................ 522
Detailing ......................................... 225 Commercial Property ................. 525
Tires & Wheels ............................... 228 Real Estate Wanted ..................... 531
107 Public Notices
Occasionally other
companies make
telemarketing calls off
classified ads. These
companies are not affiliated
with The Daily Astorian and
customers are under no
obligation to participate.
If you would like to contact
the attorney general or be put
on the do not call list, here
are the links to both of them
Complaint form link:
http://www.doj.state.or.us/
finfraud/
181 Lost & Found
Child’s/Youth’s glasses found in
downtown Astoria on Saturday
afternoon. Light blue frame, ear
pieces are brown.
Warby Parker Brand
(503)338-6508
204 Automobiles
110 Announcements
Rummage/Bake Sale
April 7th 9am-4pm
April 8th 8:30am-3pm
Star Of The Sea Auditorium
14th & Grand, Astoria
www.DailyAstorian.com
If You Live In
Seaside
or Cannon Beach
DIAL
503-325-3211
F OR A
Daily Astorian
Classified Ad
2012 Honda Civic EX
Excellent condition, great gas
mileage 72,000 miles,
blue, automatic
$12,000/OBO 503-440-2055
504 Homes for Sale
Beautiful house in Astoria
with nice view overlooking
Columbia River! Equipped
with solar panels.
Open house available.
For inquiries call
(503)440-8918
Classified ads work hard
so you don’t have to.
Call 503-325-3211 to
place your ad today!
RENTALS
Properties for Rent ............. 601-613
Rooms & Roommates................. 616
Commercial Rental ...................... 619
Vacation Rentals .......................... 622
Storage Space ............................... 628
Wanted to Rent ............................ 634
RV/Mobile Home Space ............ 637
PETS/LIVESTOCK
Animal Boarding .......................... 701
Feed-Hay-Grain ............................ 704
Pets & Supplies ............................. 710
Horses & Tack ................................ 713
MISCELLANEOUS
Fuel, Heating & Firewood ......... 807
Furniture & HH Goods ................ 810
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES TV & Electronics ........................... 811
Business Opportunities ............. 643 Antiques & Collectibles ............. 813
Business for Sale .......................... 644 Jewelry ............................................ 814
Arts & Crafts ................................... 816
HELP WANTED
Help Wanted .................................. 651 APPLIANCES & EQUIP.
Work Wanted ................................. 652 Tools & Heavy Equipment ........ 851
Lawn & Garden Equipment ...... 854
SERVICES
Appliances ..................................... 860
Childcare/Adult Care .................. 661 Medical Equip. & Supply ........... 866
Services ........................................... 664 Farm Equipment .......................... 923
504 Homes for Sale
PUBLISHER’S NOTICE
All real estate advertising in
this newspaper is subject to
the Fair Housing Act which
makes it illegal to advertise
“Any preference, limitation
or discrimination based on
race, color, religion, sex,
handicap, familial status, or
national origin, or an intention
to make any such preference,
limitation or discrimination.”
Familial status includes
children under the age of 18
living with parents or legal
custodians; pregnant women
and people securing custody
of children under 18. This
newspaper will not knowingly
accept any advertising for
real estate which is in
violation of the law. Our
readers are hereby informed
that all dwellings advertised
in this newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity basis.
To complain of discrimination
call HUD at 1(800)669-9777.
The toll free telephone
number for the hearing
impaired is 1(800)927-9275.
613 Houses
for Rent
Brand New
4bed/3bath, large garage,
patio, fireplace, fenced yard.
$2250/mo
33377 Dorymen Lane
Warrenton
503-791-2228
651 Help banted
Dental Office in Warrenton
Oregon seeking skilled
Hygienist. 1-2 days a week
Please call 503-861-8718
Norma’s in Seaside hiring hosts
and servers.
Please apply in person at
20 N Columbia
T.Paul’s Supper Club and
T.Pauls Urban Cafe
Now Hiring
Apply within
Astoria
WE GETRESULTS
DANIELLE
CALL
TODAY TO PLACE YOUR AD
5033253211
or 800-781-3211 x231
Email: classifieds@dailyastorian.com
Web: www.dailyastorian.com
THE DEADLINE FOR CLASSIFIED ADS
is 1 p.m. the day before your ad is scheduled to run
All classifieds require pre-payment
651 Help banted
Fisheries Biological
Technician
Assist Juvenile Salmon
Research
Details & Apply
www.OceanAssoc.com
Full-Time Employment
Chief Operations Officer. Nat’l
non-profit, 12 FT staff, 4
program areas. Seeking
seasoned executive to manage
internal functions. Details
www.fosterclub.com/employ-
ment.
Seaside
Emerald Heights
Fully remodeled large duplex.
2 bedroom/1 bathroom. All
new appliances, hardwood
floors, fireplace, w/d hookups.
$1050/month
2&3/bedrooms also available
(503)325-8221
Please leave a light on or install
motion detector lights to make
your carrier’s job easier. Thanks!
Full-Time Employment
Cottage Keeper in
Cannon Beach is seeking
FT experienced construction
worker to start immediately.
Please email experience
and references.
Cannon Beach, OR
503-436-2306
cottagekeeper@gmail.com
THE DAILY ASTORIAN
Classified Ads work hard for you!
WE DELIVER!
651 Help banted
Full-time sales position open.
Great opportunity for a
motivated individual.
Hourly+commission/bonuses.
Full benefits.
Warehouse/delivery must be
able to lift 50lbs+ Pay DOE
Apply at
1535 Commercial
Astoria
Housekeeping positions
available immediately.
Previous experience
preferred.
Pick up application at The
Tides on the corner of
Avenue U and Beach Drive.
2316 Beach Drive
Seaside, OR
EVERYTHING is coming up results
when you use a classified ad!
The Columbia River
Estuary Study Taskforce
is looking for a part time
Financial and
Administrative
Assistant to work in our
Astoria office.
For job announcement
please visit
www.columbiaestuary.
org
Applications are due by
April 15th, 2018.