3A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 2018 Astoria to close free RV dump station Wastewater treatment at risk By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Daily Astorian Astoria will close a free RV dump station near the New Youngs Bay Bridge by the end of the year due to staff concerns that the unmonitored site could put the city’s waste- water treatment system at risk. The dump station is a vul- nerability in a wastewater system experiencing higher annual loads, Public Works Department staff told the City Council Monday. The city does not monitor the station and does not track what gets dumped there. If the wastewater system were deemed unable to han- dle these higher loads overall, the state could require a new, technical plant estimated to cost around $50 million. Staff, hoping to extend the useful life of the system, are identifying problem spots like the dump station. They have sent flyers out to residential customers, reminding them of what should and should not be flushed down a toilet — “a toilet is not a trash can!” — and working with large indus- trial users like local breweries. Fort Stevens State Park also provides RV dump ser- vices. After the Astoria dump station closes on Dec. 31, users will be able to go there instead, staff said. City councilors voted 4-1 to close the dump station. Councilor Tom Brownson was the sole “no” vote. He advocated for delaying a deci- sion to give staff more time to study the issue and investigate a “pay to dump” solution. A handful of residents also asked the City Council to keep the dump station open. It’s not just for tourists pass- ing through, they said. Dan Sealy, who lives in city limits, uses the dump sta- tion occasionally and opposed the closure. He pointed out that public restrooms are “open portals, too.” The dump station is a small entry into the larger system, he said. “I appreciate their concern about keeping our system in good shape,” he added. “I don’t want to see us have to spend $50 million but I can’t imagine this one little RV sta- tion is what’s going to cause us to have to build the new system.” William Olson, from Svensen, also wondered what homeless people living out of their RVs will use, arguing that they will dump where it is convenient if the station isn’t open. The Fort Stevens dump station is not open all day, he said. The next clos- est public dump stations are in Rainier and Wheeler, both almost 60 miles away from Astoria. He argued that the influx of tourists in the summer and their use of restrooms in town probably has more of an overall impact than the RV dump station. But City Councilor Zetty Nemlowill was not con- vinced. She said she was speaking up for the people “who would like to be able to affordably flush their toilet in Astoria.” “It’s going to be a terri- ble inconvenience to some of the people who came here tonight and spoke very well trying to defend the closure of the dump station,” she said. “But for the greater good of Astoria, we need to do what our public works staff is rec- ommending and extend the life of our sewage treatment plant.” “I don’t think that we should continue to have an unchecked, free RV dump station so tourists can come and dump their crap so the ratepayers in Astoria have to pay more money,” she added. “That’s ridiculous.” Oregon gubernatorial campaign fundraising continues torrid pace Double the previous record By JEFF MAPES Oregon Public Broadcasting Final disclosure reports filed before today’s election show that the two major can- didates for Oregon gover- nor are continuing their torrid fundraising. Democratic incumbent Gov. Kate Brown raised more than $17 million. Republi- can challenger Knute Buehler raised $18.5 million. So far, the two have dou- bled the previous record for an Oregon governor’s race, Knute Buehler Kate Brown set in 2010. The reports cover money raised and spent up to eight days before the election. In that period, Buehler received several business-re- lated donations of up to $10,000. Brown received $100,000 from the Planned Parenthood PAC of Oregon. Abortion rights advo- cates have staunchly backed her re-election campaign. During the campaign, both candidates were heavily sup- ported by the partisan guber- natorial associations that are funded by numerous spe- cial interests. The Republican Governors Association gave Buehler nearly $3.4 million while the Democratic Gover- nors Association sent $2 mil- lion to Brown. Nike co-founder Phil Knight attracted national atten- tion by giving a total of $2.5 million to Buehler over the course of his campaign. Knight also gave another $1 million to the Republican Governors Association. Buehler was also heavily backed by the timber industry and several other busi- ness interests. Brown received more than $2 million from organized labor as well as hefty contri- butions from a Democratic women’s group, environmental organizations and a gun-con- trol group. The tally for Brown and Buehler together tops $35 million. The previous Ore- gon record for gubernatorial election fundraising pales in comparison. In 2010, Republican Chris Dudley and Democratic incum- bent John Kitzhaber together raised more than $17.7 million for their campaigns. Kitzhaber edged Dudley by a small mar- gin in the election. Supreme Court justices sound favorable to Alaska hunter with hovercraft Associated Press WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court sounded skep- tical Monday of the National Park Service’s authority to pre- vent an Alaskan moose hunter from using his motorized rub- ber boat to access remote areas of the state. The justices heard argu- ments in a case that tests the limits of the federal govern- ment’s authority in a state in which more than 60 percent of the land is federally owned. The state and moose hunter John Sturgeon are arguing that the National Park Service can- not enforce a national ban on amphibious vehicles known as hovercraft on a river in Alaska for which the state claims own- ership, even though it runs through a national conservation area. Sturgeon won an earlier round at the Supreme Court. The case stems from Stur- geon’s 2007 encounter with three park rangers who ordered AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais Alaska resident John Sturgeon walks outside the Su- preme Court on Monday. him off the Nation River within the Yukon-Charley Rivers National Preserve in northeast Alaska. The rangers told him it was illegal to operate the noisy craft that can navigate shallow water or even mud. He sued in 2011. The issue is whether a fed- eral law enacted in 1980 to pro- tect undisturbed land but also allow Alaska residents to main- tain their way of life provides an exception to National Park Ser- vice’s regulation of rivers that pass through national parks. “Well, but, I mean, the waters are very important to Alaskans’ way of life in the way they aren’t elsewhere,” Chief Justice John Roberts said, voicing doubt about the Trump administration’s reading of the law that gives the federal gov- ernment sweeping control of the waterways. Justice Department lawyer Edwin Kneedler told the court that the 1980 law is a compro- mise because it allows hunt- ing and airplane use in areas that usually are closed to those activities in national parks in other states. But Congress did not intend to allow hovercraft to be used, Kneedler said, calling them very loud and unsightly. Roberts didn’t sound per- suaded by that argument. “While you may think a hov- ercraft is unsightly, I mean, if you’re trying to get from point A to point B, it’s pretty beauti- ful,” he said. WANTED Alder and Maple Saw Logs & Standing Timber Northwest Hardwoods • Longview, WA Contact: John Anderson • 360-269-2500 A BIG THANK YOU to all my supporters Sincerely, Dulcye Taylor Allie Soliman Andrea Larson Perez Andrea Mazzerella Andrew Cier Ann Robben Dott Anna Lee Larimore Bill and Deborah Armington Bill Griesar Blair Cocking Bob Duehmig Bob Girrard Brian and Pamela Dutton Charlotte Bruhn Chris and Stacey Womak Chris Holen Christine Lolich Claudia Russell Dale Clark Darlene Story Debbie Twombly Debra Bowe Dee Saidi Dena Healy Diane Lane Dida DeAngelis Elaine Bauer George McCartin Greg and Kristy Cross Greg Lavin Isa Haveraln John & Janet Niemi Jayne Osborn Jeff and Jane Donnelly Jillian Pigg Jody Miller John and Rosemary Samp John Fenton Joy and Leif Erickson Judith P. 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