A7
THE DAILY ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, JANUARY 8, 2019
Council: ‘We’re going to be civil and respectful’
Continued from Page A1
Moore and others who
attended the standing-
room-only meeting were
pleased with the turnout
and the quality of the appli-
cants for the vacancy .
Once the Ward 4 selec-
tion process was over, the
new council’s fi rst meeting
was taken up primarily with
routine business.
West’s
appointment
involved a lengthy public
process, but other appoint-
ments happened more
swiftly. Jones announced
his choices for a variety of
other city boards, decisions
he had discussed with the
other councilors, he said.
There were 17 applica-
tions alone for open seats on
the Planning Commission
— one of them belonged to
Price. Jones appointed her
to fi ll one of the seats.
The end of the meeting
involved a tense exchange
between Jones and Sarah
Jane Bardy, a downtown
business owner and mem-
ber of the city’s Design
Review Committee, over
testimony she gave against
a hotel project Jones had
voted to approve. But,
overall, Jones said it was a
successful — if diffi cult —
fi rst meeting.
Jones looks forward to
working with the new coun-
cil, saying his fellow coun-
cilors are passionate and
knowledgeable about the
city with great reputations
for working collaboratively .
“Given the national
political climate, I feel very
strongly that it’s import-
By CATHERINE LUCEY,
LISA MASCARO and
JILL COLVIN
Associated Press
Colin Murphey/The Daily Astorian
Joan Herman, right, takes the oath of offi ce as Astoria city councilor.
ant for us at the local level
to really set the example
for how political discourse
should take place,” he said .
“I know that all of us, even
though we will disagree and
have split votes on things,
we’re going to be civil and
respectful.
“I couldn’t be more
happy about the character
of my colleagues because
I know that that will be the
case and I do want people
to be able to look to Asto-
ria City Council and say
there’s where local gov-
ernment is happening right,
and that’s what it should
be at the national level as
well.”
Colin Murphey/The Daily Astorian
Roger Rocka is sworn in as city councilor by former Mayor
Arline LaMear.
Port: Service ‘has worked in other parts of the country’
Continued from Page A1
SeaPort Airlines had
previously operated a pas-
senger service from Asto-
ria Regional Airport to
Portland and Seattle. But
the carrier ended service
once state subsidies went
away and passenger fares
couldn’t support the fl ights .
The airport still receives
Trump, Democrats
taking border wall
fi ght to prime-time TV
calls periodically from peo-
ple wanting to get to and
from Portland, but interest
often cools once they hear
the price, said Gary Kobes,
the airport manager.
“That’s the reality for
most rural locations,” he
said. “If you look at the
area around Portland, any-
thing that’s within an hour
and a half driving time of
Portland doesn’t have any
scheduled service, and
sometimes it’s up to two
and a half hours driving
time.”
Kobes will bring the
association’s
proposal
before the Port Commis-
sion. The grant application
is due this month and needs
the formal support of at
least one entity with an air-
port, Jacobs said.
Getting support for the
grant is not a high proba-
bility, and the state could
decide to use the fuel tax
money elsewhere, Jacobs
said.
“I think if the right things
come together,” he said, “it
could provide a useful ser-
vice that has worked in
other parts of the country.”
WASHINGTON
—
Making his case on prime-
time TV, President Donald
Trump is stressing human-
itarian concerns at the
U.S.-Mexico border as he
tries to convince the Amer-
ican people he must get
funding for his long-prom-
ised border wall before end-
ing a partial government
shutdown that has hun-
dreds of thousands of fed-
eral workers facing missed
paychecks.
Trump is delivering his
fi rst Oval Offi ce address
tonight, and then visit-
ing the southern border on
Thursday, as he tries to put
pressure on resistant Dem-
ocrats. His administration is
also discussing the idea of
declaring a national emer-
gency to allow him to move
forward with the wall with-
out Congress approving
the more than $5 billion he
wants.
Trump’s
evening
remarks will be followed
by a rebuttal from House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi and
Senate Minority Leader
Chuck Schumer, who have
strongly opposed the wall
and have repeatedly called
on Trump to reopen the rest
of government while bor-
der negotiations continue.
Television networks air-
ing Trump’s remarks have
committed to sharing the
response.
Trump and other admin-
istration offi cials have said
the situation at the border
has reached a crisis point,
both on security and human-
itarian grounds. But crit-
ics say the security risks are
overblown and the admin-
istration is at least partly to
blame for the humanitarian
situation. While the num-
ber of illegal border cross-
ings is down from 1.6 mil-
lion in 2000 to less than
400,000 last year, the num-
ber of families coming over
the border has risen sharply.
Many are seeking asylum,
which is greatly straining
the system.
The partial government
closure, now in its 18th day,
is the second-longest in his-
tory. With no end in sight,
Trump’s self-proclaimed
deal-making skills are com-
ing under scrutiny. Trying to
increase the heat on oppo-
nents, the administration
has emphasized the human-
itarian issues in recent days,
with Vice President Mike
Pence and top aides making
the case on television.
“The passion you hear
from President Trump, his
determination to take this
case to the American peo-
ple, as he will tonight in his
national broadcast from the
Oval Offi ce, comes from
this president’s deep desire
to do his job to protect the
American people,” Pence
said Tuesday on ABC’s
“Good Morning America.”
He also appeared on CBS
and NBC.
Pence also said the idea
of an emergency declaration
remains a possibility. Such a
move would certainly draw
legal challenges, and Trump
— who told lawmakers he
would be willing to keep
the government closed for
months or even years — has
said he would like to con-
tinue negotiations for now.
No. 2 House Demo-
cratic leader Steny Hoyer
of Maryland said Tuesday
that he believes Trump does
not have legal authority to
declare a national emer-
gency and unilaterally build
a Southwest border wall.
Doing so “certainly could”
be an abuse of power, he
said.
Leaders of the nonpar-
tisan National Governors
Association made pub-
lic a letter Tuesday sent to
Trump and congressional
leaders a day earlier, calling
on them to reopen the gov-
ernment, saying “shutdown
should not be a negotiating
tactic as disagreements are
resolved.”
CLASSIFIEDINDEX
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PERSONALS
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