7A
THE DAILY ASTORIAN • WEDNESDAY, JULY 25, 2018
Rescue crews search for missing
in Greek wildfires; at least 79 dead
By COSTAS KANTOURIS
and ELENA BECATOROS
Associated Press
Edward Stratton/The Daily Astorian
Tiffani Seitz, left, is co-owner of the South Bay Wild
Seafood Market & Restaurant.
Market: Grand opening
currently set for October
Continued from Page 1A
The decor is steeped in
maritime and fishing his-
tory. Signaling flags hang in
the front windows. A black
cod pod has been turned
into a chandelier. Count-
ers and tabletops come from
bin boards used to separate
catches on a boat.
“We’re trying to repre-
sent the different fisheries,”
Tiffani Seitz said of the nets,
pots, buoys and other tools of
the fishing trade on display.
A sign from boatbuilder
The Beebe Co. hangs above
the upstairs bar, where fish
nets help form the railings
around the dining area. A sal-
vaged door from the New
Carissa, a freighter that ran
aground near Coos Bay in
1999, sits in a back storage
room waiting to be displayed.
Rob Seitz , an Alaska
native, moved to the North
Coast in 1992 after oil from
the Exxon Valdez spill
affected Cook Inlet where
he had fished. Tiffani Seitz
worked in the local restaurant
industry and by 2009 earned
a welding certificate from
Clatsop Community College,
later teaching courses to high
schoolers.
The two left in 2011 for
Morro Bay, where they had a
chance to buy a fishing boat
and be a part of the Califor-
nia Groundfish Collective, an
effort to sustainably harvest
fish populations that had col-
lapsed along the state’s coast-
line. After purchasing their
vessel and starting South
Bay Wild in 2013, the couple
began processing their own
catches, selling directly to
restaurants and markets and
even sending live seafood
to restaurateurs around San
Francisco.
“We founded South Bay
Wild to get vertically inte-
grated to help pay for the new
sustainability
measures,”
Rob Seitz said.
But the couple eventually
found the fishery in Califor-
nia financially unsustainable
and left the collective, mov-
ing back to Astoria last year.
They saw a sign advertising
rental space in the Mary &
Nellie Building, where Mar-
cus and Michelle Liotta had
recently begun a restoration
and recruitment of tenants
after buying the ailing down-
town landmark.
The seafood market opens
Tuesdays, and the restaurant
Wednesdays. On Sundays,
if Rob Seitz is in from fish-
ing for shrimp and ground-
fish, the family takes over the
restaurant, making fish tacos.
“It seems like it gives
us more control over a roll-
er-coaster industry,” Rob
Seitz said of running the mar-
ket and restaurant.
The family is still finish-
ing out the restaurant and
expanding into a storefront
next door. They’re holding
off on a grand opening until
early October, when their
fishing friends will be done
with the salmon season in
Alaska.
MATI, Greece — Res-
cue crews were searching
Wednesday through charred
homes and cars for those
still missing after the deadli-
est wildfires to hit Greece in
decades decimated seaside
areas near Athens, killing at
least 79 people and sending
thousands fleeing.
There was no official indi-
cation as to how many peo-
ple might be missing, and
some took to social media
and Greek television stations
with appeals for information
on their loved ones.
Survivors described dra-
matic scenes of people flee-
ing to beaches and being
AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis
A man stands next to his burned house and car as he
speaks on his cellphone in Mati, east of Athens.
forced to swim out to sea
despite gale-force winds and
high waves to escape chok-
ing smoke and flaming pine
cones raining down into the
water.
Fire service spokeswoman
Stavroula Malliri said the
death toll had increased by
five to 79. There were fears
it would increase further as
rescue crews gradually went
through the hundreds of burnt
homes, while others searched
the coastline and the sea.
More than 280 firefight-
ers were still in the area to
the northeast of Athens in
the wider Rafina area, dous-
ing the remaining flames to
prevent flare-ups. A further
200 firefighters backed up
by a water-dropping helicop-
ter were tackling the second
forest fire west of the capital,
near Agioi Theodori, where
local authorities pre-emp-
tively evacuated three com-
munities,
a
children’s
summer camp and three mon-
asteries overnight, according
to the fire department.
Flags across Greece flew
at half-staff after the prime
minister declared three days
of national mourning.
Movies: Private sponsors step up
Continued from Page 1A
But sponsors have since
stepped up. This year, local
service organizations banded
together to host the Easter
egg hunt at Tapiola Park. Last
summer, sponsors provided
the funds to show two mov-
ies at Fred Lindstrom Park.
This year, the department
gained three sponsors for the
program.
Through all the bud-
get upheavals, another mov-
ies-in-the-park program has
continued unchanged: “Parks
After Dark” at McClure
Park. The Astoria Parks Recre-
ation and Community Founda-
tion charges attendees $5 per
ticket and shows throwback
adult or teen-oriented films
like “Raiders of the Lost Ark”
and “Back to the Future.”
The McClure Park show-
ings are sponsored this sum-
mer by the Astoria Co-op
Grocery, Astoria Downtown
Historic District Association
and the Liberty Theatre, with
beer for sale donated by Fort
George Brewery and pizza
donated by Baked Alaska.
Each showing at McClure
Park may draw 50 to 75 peo-
ple. It costs around $500 to
put on, said Tammy Loughran,
treasurer for the foundation.
After technical difficulties
and poor sound quality during
a showing of “Indiana Jones”
last week, the foundation
plans to hold a free showing of
the movie in the next week or
two, Cosby said.
With the different focuses,
both movie programs are
important to the Parks and
Recreation Department’s mis-
sion. McClure, off Eighth
Street, and Fred Lindstrom,
at the top of the hill on Niag-
ara Avenue near the Peter Pan
Market, are neighborhood
parks. The movie nights are
a way to get people into the
parks and interacting with
their community, organizers
say.
Warming center: Opened for 80 nights during past season
Continued from Page 1A
“To me that means the Plan-
ning Commission that was lis-
tening to the neighborhood
concerns last year … feels
we’ve made tremendous prog-
ress in addressing their constit-
uents’ concerns,” he said.
Board members can now
get to work soliciting cash
donations, recruiting and train-
ing volunteers and re-establish-
ing arrangements with local
restaurants and businesses for
food donations.
The warming center could
be one of the few options for
people this year. The North
Coast experienced a rela-
tively minor winter, said
Board Member Annie Mar-
tin. But it is unlikely warm-
ing centers in Warrenton and
the nearby Long Beach Pen-
insula in Washington state will
be open this year. If the win-
ter is harsher this year, Martin
expects they will be at capacity
in Astoria every night the cen-
ter is able to be open.
The warming center opened
for 80 nights during the past
season and served 161 people,
according to a head count con-
ducted by staff.
The Planning Commis-
sion is still working on a code
amendment that would estab-
lish how and where warming
centers operate in Astoria. The
commissioners hope including
emergency shelters in city code
could make it easier to establish
and operate the facilities in the
long term, while also minimiz-
ing the impact on the neighbor-
hoods where they are located.
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4WD .................................................. 213 For Sale ................................... 504-513
Vans .................................................. 216 Lots & Acreage .............................. 516
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Truck/Auto Parts .......................... 222 Manufactured Homes ................ 522
Detailing ......................................... 225 Commercial Property ................. 525
Tires & Wheels ............................... 228 Real Estate Wanted ..................... 531
107 Public Notices
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PETS/LIVESTOCK
Sweet short hair black tuxedo,
thin white line on nose. Found
Saturday, 11th Ave Seaside.
503-738-3103
251 Boats for Sale
1988 16’ Four Winds, Runabout
inboard motor, excellent shape.
For pictures call. $3,995
503-502-4269
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504 Homes for Sale
Lost Keys
Left on a bench by the Maritime
Museum on the RiverWalk
Jaguar key with remote fob on
plain black key ring.
(971)865-6101
WE GETRESULTS
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604 Apartments
Studio Apartment in
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591 12th Street
Astoria, Oregon
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Starting $13/hr
651 Help Wanted
The City of Cannon Beach is
seeking qualified applicants for
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I. This position may assist all
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as general maintenance and
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or.us/jobs for full details.
Clatsop CASA Program
is seeking a 12 hr/wk
Office Manager
For qualifications, a complete
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WorkSource Oregon,
Employment Division,
503-325-4821.
Apply at 482 Fleet Street
in Hammond
Monday-Friday 8am-1pm
Warren House Pub
in Cannon Beach
is now hiring kitchen staff
Needed: Motivated
enthusiastic person to join our
hardwood floor team.
Learn a new trade.
No experience necessary.
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Send resume or inquiries:
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