A7 THE DAILY ASTORIAN • WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 30, 2019 Hotel: Developers describe it as ‘boutique, with luxury amenities’ Continued from Page A1 In their conditional use appli- cation, the hotel developers pro- posed a solution: valet parking. This would allow them to tightly pack up to 30 cars in a parking lot across from the hotel. The lot had previ- ously been used by processing plant employees. The intention is not to gouge guests with valet parking costs, Turner said. Instead, the valet park- ing option “was a very creative solution to what we knew was a big problem.” The hotel will likely charge a small parking fee for the service. Developers are still examining other options, including purchasing a lot farther away, but they hoped that including valet parking would be enough to get the project approved by the Planning Commission. Commission President Sean Fitzpatrick said this kind of valet parking is untested in Astoria. “I’m not saying we shouldn’t allow it or shouldn’t consider it,” he said. “I’m saying we don’t know how it would work.” But newly appointed Commis- sioner Patrick Corcoran said this kind of parking is an approach that, depending on how it works out, may become a model to address parking problems elsewhere in the city. Other details about the hotel have not been publicly released . Even the name has not been decided on yet, Turner said. Developers describe the hotel as “boutique, with luxury amenities.” Renovating the processing plant to create a hotel will not increase the footprint of the original building, nor its height. Since the building is not historic , renovation details will be handled directly by city staff and will not undergo a public design review. The hotel falls under the Urban Core, the fi nal piece of the city’s Riverfront Vision Plan, which guides development along the river. But the Planning Commission is in the middle of developing codes and guidelines for the area. The hotel project was evaluated under exist- ing codes. As a condition of approval, developers will need to improve the section of the Astoria River- walk that runs in front of the build- ing. Processing plant operations and frequent forklift traffi c resulted in extreme wear and tear along the popular riverfront trail. Word of the hotel project fi rst broke publicly last October, around the same time the city was consid- ering another hotel proposal — a new four-story Marriott-brand hotel by developer Hollander Hospitality at the base of Second Street . That project, the Fairfi eld Inn and Suites, went through several redesigns, multiple hearings, multiple denials and multiple appeals before it was approved in December by the City Measles: ‘I think we gave into fear right away because of having such a young child’ Drilling: Governor made it an issue during her campaign Continued from Page A1 Oregon’s fi rst moratorium on drilling took effect in 1989 after the Exxon Valdez oil spill in Alaska’s Prince William Sound. Since then, state legislators have renewed it every decade, said Brian Doherty, a Portland attorney who lobbies at the Capitol for the petroleum association. Senate Bill 256 — sponsored by three coastal legislators — would make the moratorium permanent. The c hief sponsors, state Sen. Arnie Roblan, Rep. David Gomberg and Rep. David Brock Smith, modeled the legislation after a law in California. Washing- ton has no moratorium on oil and gas drilling, despite Gov. Jay Ins- lee’s opposition to exploration off that state’s shore. During a hearing Tuesday in the Senate Committee on Envi- ronment and Natural Resources , Roblan, the committee’s chairman, said the committee could send the legislation to a Senate vote soon. There was no opposition to the proposal during the hearing . Oregon’s oil and gas reserves off the coast would meet nationwide demand for about a week, accord- ing to an estimate by Ocean a, a marine conservation organization. The Oregon Coast is not seen as a promising place to fi nd large quantities of oil and gas, said Bob Tippee, editor of Oil & Gas Jour- Continued from Page A1 Two confi rmed cases of mea- sles in Hawaii were in unvacci- nated children who traveled to the Big Island from Washington state, a top Hawaii public health offi cial said. The viral illness is highly con- tagious and can remain in the air for up to two hours. Some 90 per- cent of people exposed to measles who have not been vaccinated will get it, said Clark County public health director Alan Melnick. “We have an exquisitely con- tagious disease, that can be really severe and we have a prevention for it that’s cheap, incredibly effec- tive and incredibly safe,” he said. “We wouldn’t be dealing with this if we had vaccination rates up.” So far, 31 of the 35 confi rmed patients in Clark County had not been vaccinated against measles. And the region has been identifi ed by health experts as an anti-vac- cination hot spot. Clark Coun- ty’s vaccination rate is 78 percent, well below the 94 percent level necessary to protect people who can’t get vaccinated for medical reasons. Melnick blames misinforma- tion shared on social media for the California State Lands Commission A drilling platform sits off the coast of California. nal. For most companies, the cost of drilling would likely outweigh the potential for production, he said. “I suspect most operators would fi nd the risk excessive in relation to the potential reward,” he said. Nevertheless, the proposal by the Trump administration has fueled debate over the moratorium. Gov. Kate Brown made it an issue during her re-election cam- paign last year. In October, she issued an executive order continu- ing Oregon’s ban for the rest of her term, which ends in 2022. “Oregon has been a consistent leader in environmental justice and stewardship, and legislative action is imperative in solidifying a pros- perous future for our coast,” said Jason Miner, the governor’s nat- ural resources policy manager, at the Senate hearing Tuesday . “Our marine fi sheries, iconic scenery and pristine environment are true embodiments of what makes the Oregon Coast worth defending.” The Oregon Capital Bureau is a collaboration between EO Media Group, Pamplin Media Group and Salem Reporter. area’s lower than normal rates. “What keeps me up at night is worrying that we’re going to have a child die from this, something that’s completely preventable,” he said. That’s a worry shared by many parents, especially those with newborn infants. The vaccine is generally not given to children younger than 1. Vancouver resident Megan Jasurta hasn’t felt comfortable leaving the house with her son, 11-week-old Tristan. “He’s on house arrest,” she said. Jasurta’s other two kids, who are 3 and 6, are both up to date on their shots, but she still has them wash their hands when they come home and change into new clothes before seeing Tristan. “I think we gave into the fear right away because of having such a young child,” she said. For now, her family is avoiding crowded areas and even decided to delay their daughter’s birthday party. She knows some people in her community choose not to vac- cinate their kids, and she says it’s not worth putting her family at risk. Noelle Crombie of The Orego- nian contributed to this report. TAX SEASON SPECIAL Est. 1987 Jan 31 st 35 Council in a 3-2 vote. The Fairfi eld project became a campaign issue in city elections and a source of controversy in the com- munity. A crowd usually turned up at every meeting to speak against the project. The hotel proposed by the Adrift and Buoy developers met with a very different reaction . Initial news of their plans drew praise from res- idents, who pointed to the track record of the people involved to improve old buildings, involve the community and provide well-pay- ing jobs. At the Planning Commission hearing Tuesday, despite concerns about parking, no one spoke against the project. 15% Off Now Apri thru l ON ALL FURNITURE % off 1 DAY ONLY Up To % 75 off Over 30 years in Clatsop County! 15th Clearance Items Annual January SALE! Almost the Entire Store! 1116 Commercial, Astoria, Or (503)325-5720 Hours: MON-FRI: 8-6PM SAT: 9-5PM SUN: 10-4PM Appliance & Home Furnishings “We Service What We Sell” 503-861-0929 Follow us on Facebook & Instagram 529 SE MARLIN AVENUE , WARRENTON, OR EXCLUDES FOOD, CONSIGNMENTS, LAYAWAY. LIMITED TO STOCK ON HAND