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About The daily Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1961-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 28, 2018)
PORT REPORT 2018 SUMMER PORT OF ASTORIA AT THE MOUTH OF THE COLUMBIA www.portofastoria.com Pier 2: The USS Portland arrives at the Port of Astoria in April 2018. Weathering the wait after the storm Interview: Matt McGrath, Director of Port Operations, Port of Astoria he Port of Astoria’s Central Waterfront has three major piers where various enterprises have plied their trade over the last century. The aging docks are as ubiquitous as the ships and workers that transport the various products and raw materials all over the world. Pier 2, like its next door cousins, is a relic from the past, a legacy of the “Greatest Generation” which fought in WWII but also built the infrastructure across the US during the 1940s to support the larger war effort. The Pier 2 “manifest sheet” reads from the annals of history and has seen its share of logging ships, troop carriers, cruise ships, and more recently a brief visit from the USS Portland, a new naval class of ships to fight the war on terrorism. Pier 2 has seen better days. It suffers from around the clock, continuous tidal action along the Columbia River, periodic but frequent storms off the Pacific, and the omnipresent North Coast climate, which is a powerful punch of Mother Nature and regular wear and tear from ship traffic. It’s a critical piece of infrastructure that is on life support borrowing time before the next storm inflicts more damage. The symptoms are insidious erosion of the “substructure” that supports the pilings, decking that is inadequate for most cars, let alone truck loads, and fire trucks and pilings that are subsiding and need regular inspections and replacement. As Matt McGrath, Director of Operations said recently, “this is pure and simple, a public safety necessity to ensure the infrastructure can do its full-time job.” Without a functional system of infrastructure in place, it becomes difficult to encourage long-term investment in Port property to rebuild or expand facilities, create new jobs, increase product distribution, and for the Port to generate substantial revenue to reinvest in the same infrastructure and operations. Pier 2 is also a lead actor in an export-focused local economy that supports hundreds of jobs in the fish processing industry. The Port has three major seafood processing tenants - Bornstein Seafoods, DaYang Seafoods and Astoria Pacific Seafoods. This industry has seen tremendous growth over the last decade. This industry is also a key driver in the local economy and is a “batch” business sector for future growth identified in Advance Astoria, the city’s economic development strategy. For any strategy and business to be successful, there needs to be social, human, and physical capital working together in concert. When one of those critical pieces is not there, the business can fail or it can look elsewhere to operate. The fish processing industry like any other industry, must have the infrastructure in place to be sustainable and successful over time. T The diagnosis for Pier 2 is a complete replacement of the decking and precise replacement of substructure and pilings based on exacting marine engineering and erosion control. In 2016 the Port was awarded a $1.6M Connect VI grant from the Oregon Department of Transportation (ODOT) to replace the decking and has been working with the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to use up to $1.8M to replace failing substructure components that were damaged from the 2015 storm. The Port has worked tirelessly with FEMA on determining the scale of the project - the areas that were damaged by the 2015 storm, compared to normal wear and tear, and conducting engineering studies to determine the best approach to rebuilding Pier 2. Matt McGrath says more than anything else it takes patience to get all of the required paperwork to FEMA before the project can be bid by local contractors. “The waiting game is tortuous and takes loads of perseverance to weather the storm after the real one.” Three years in from the 2015 storm, the Port hopes to weather the storm of paperwork and have everything lined up for construction in 2019. Hopefully, Pier 2 has a little more patience in it and can wait for a much-needed shot in the arm. The diagnosis for Pier 2 is a complete replacement of the decking and precise replacement of substructure and pilings based on exacting marine engineering and erosion control.