CAPE DISAPPOINTMENT WELCOMES FIRST FEMALE COMMANDER PAGE 3A DailyAstorian.com // TUESDAY, JUNE 19, 2018 145TH YEAR, NO. 251 JUMPING IN City invests in parks workers ONE DOLLAR Addiction treatment centers shut down Astoria Pointe and The Rosebriar close By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Daily Astorian Astoria, already short on options to address addiction, has lost longtime drug and alcohol treatment centers Astoria Pointe and The Rosebriar. Local service providers and current and for- mer employees with Sunspire Health, the com- pany behind the treatment centers, confirmed Asto- ria Pointe in Uniontown has closed. The Rosebriar, a women-only sister facility located above down- town, is also closed. There was no response to a request for com- ment from Sunspire Health representatives at the company’s corporate office. Levi Starbird, Astoria Pointe’s director of operations, said he could not provide any details. Alan Evans, director of Helping Hands, a non- profit based in Seaside that operates re-entry pro- grams and shelters in several counties and plans to open a facility in Astoria, told Astoria’s homeless- ness task force at a meeting Monday he knows of ongoing negotiations for another treatment center to take over the building. “We’ll see what happens,” he said. Photos by Katie Frankowicz/The Daily Astorian See CENTERS, Page 5A Hannah McCarley watches the water during a lifeguard shift at the Astoria Aquatic Center. By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Daily Astorian Cemetery fees are going up T he Astoria Parks and Recre- ation Department hopes more detailed job descriptions and an array of wages and salaries for part- time and seasonal employees will encourage recruitment and help with retention. Small stuff and basic best practices, said Angela Cosby, the department’s director, but also steps toward sustain- ability and stability the department lacked in previous years. The City Council approved the changes Monday. Each position — from a clerk to a lifeguard — now includes eight steps and a range in pay. An employee just starting out could advance up through the ranks in as quickly as six months. The changes could impact one important group in the department’s part-time and seasonal workforce: Teens. “They’re a substantial amount of our workforce,” Cosby said. High schoolers fill numerous roles. They work as lifeguards at the Asto- ria Aquatic Center, maintain parkland and help run programs at the Recre- ation Center. They take positions that could be difficult to fill otherwise, said Maintenance still a concern By HANNAH SIEVERT The Daily Astorian Terra Patterson, supervisor of the Astoria Aquatic Center, checks in with lifeguard and recent high school graduate Hannah McCarley. Terra Patterson, the Aquatic Center supervisor. Under the changes approved Mon- day, a lifeguard could make $11.75 an hour starting out and work up to $13.50 an hour. Lead lifeguards have the opportunity to make even more. It is important for the department to provide these first-time, entry-level jobs, Cosby said. But it is equally important to provide a path up, she added. The changes to the job descrip- tions and wages add incentives to stay on for someone who finds the work suits them — whether that person is a teenager or an adult. The Astoria City Council voted Monday night to increase fees at Ocean View Cemetery by 10 percent. The fee increase will partly go toward mainte- nance costs, and partly to close the gap between what is charged for cemetery services and what the services actually cost. The city first increased fees at Ocean View by 40 percent in 2015 — after persistent complaints about the condition of the cemetery in Warrenton — and will continue to raise fees by 10 percent every fiscal year until 2022. “Fees for services at Ocean View Cemetery have fallen behind the national, state and local standards,” Angela Cosby, director of the Astoria Parks and Recreation Department, said in a memo to the City Council. “As a result, the costs of ser- vices at Ocean View Cemetery are greater than the fees charged for those services.” See WORKERS, Page 7A See CEMETERY, Page 5A State lands considers forest management options Counties or private firms could take over By CLAIRE WITHYCOMBE Capital Bureau SALEM — Oregon’s Department of State Lands is looking into whether other enti- ties, including counties or pri- vate companies, could manage certain state trust forests more cheaply than the state Depart- ment of Forestry. The Department of State Lands relies on the state’s for- estry department to manage 33,073 acres of land to generate revenue for the Common School Fund, which is essentially an endowment for public education. The state land board — Gov. Kate Brown, Secretary of State Dennis Richardson and Trea- surer Tobias Read — last week approved the department’s request to look into alternative management schemes for those forests. Interim Director Vicki Walker, who has been at the helm of the Department of State Lands since March, had sug- gested exploring other options for forest management. The idea is for the depart- ment to figure out whether it might be more economical to have independent logging com- panies or counties manage Com- mon School Fund forestland in 18 counties. “I’m trying to find the best way to run the program at low cost, keeping in mind our fidu- ciary responsibility,” Walker told the board last week. That request was prompted by the $4.8 million the forestry department has asked for in the next budget to manage those lands. That would be a $1.5 mil- lion increase from the current budget. See FORESTS, Page 5A Oregon Department of Forestry The Oregon Department of State Lands is investigating whether counties or private entities might more cheap- ly manage Common School Fund forestland. The Elliott State Forest, pictured here, is part of that land.