A7 THE DAILY ASTORIAN • FRIDAY, FEbRuARY 22, 2019 Study: Number of certified child care centers in county declining Continued from Page A1 child care facilities in Clat- sop County, though the list only covers organizations that want to be included. The number of certi- fied child care centers in Clatsop County appears to have declined in recent years, according to Eva Manderson, director of Northwest Regional Child Care Resource and Refer- ral, which primarily works with providers in Clatsop, Columbia and Tillamook counties on professional development and licensing. Many issues play into this decline, she said. Child care can be costly to provide, with payroll at the top of the list. Often centers struggle to pay staff more than the mini- mum wage and still keep costs low for parents. High staff turnover is a com- mon concern. State licens- ing requirements are con- stantly changing, but in recent years, there has also been an increase in new requirements. Then there are changes to providers’ personal lives. “People will often go into child care because they want to be home with their kiddo, so they take on other kids, and that works,” Manderson said. But then the provider’s child grows up, and maybe they decide it’s time to close. Lil’ Sprouts, run by the city in Astoria, is one of the few facilities in the region that offers programs for children as young as 6 weeks old. In recent years, it has become one of the city’s primary child care providers. Erin Reding, preschool recreation coordinator at Lil’ Sprouts and Port of Play, said the closure of a large center in Warrenton several years ago seemed to hit the county especially hard. High cost For parents, child care easily costs hundreds of dollars a month, even with Colin Murphey/The Daily Astorian Stephanie Seehawer, left, plays with a child under her care at Lil’ Sprouts. state or Coast Guard sub- sidies to help ease the bur- den. People often turn to family and friends for help with babysitting. Heidi Sather’s fam- ily relocated to Astoria last summer, following her husband, who serves in the Coast Guard. Sather planned to go back to work in social services and started looking at child care options months ahead of the move. As a state contrac- tor working in the Ore- gon Department of Human Services’ self-sufficiency office, Sather tells cli- ents often, “If you know you’re going back to work or school, start looking for child care now. Don’t just put your name on a wait- list and wait. Keep call- ing. If there’s a full-time care option available, but you only need part time, you might as well secure full time while it’s there.” It was advice she found herself following before the move to Astoria. The fam- ily arrived at the end of June and her youngest son started at Lil’ Sprouts in early July. “To me it is the best place I could have gotten him in,” Sather said. For Sather and her fam- ily, a Coast Guard subsidy helps, but child care is still a major cost. “It’s tight on the budget, but I see the long-term benefits,” she said. With her youngest cared for and her oldest now in second grade and enrolled in after-school programs, she is free to start her career again and contribute finan- cially to the household. But it’s a juggling act that many parents struggle with, espe- cially those in tighter finan- cial situations. “You could be going to work and pay half of what you make to child care,” she said. At that point, some cou- ples ask themselves if it makes more sense for one parent to remain at home. “Availability of child care plays a critical role in the lives of Oregon’s fam- ilies with young children, including if, where and when parents work,” Megan Pratt, an associate professor and the lead author of Ore- gon State’s report, said in a statement. “There’s also a grow- ing understanding of the central role stable, quality child care plays in support- ing a child’s early develop- ment, providing the foun- dation for lifelong learning and well-being.” The study, commis- sioned by the Oregon Early Learning Division, did not delve into questions of affordability or quality of care, two factors that play a major role in how par- ents are able to access child care. Instead, it focused on the number of slots available. Quality For one local group, in particular, quality and affordability are chief concerns. Dan Gaffney, a retired Seaside principal, has been involved in looking at ways to provide preschool and early learning services in Clatsop County for years. He helped start Clat- sop Kinder Ready after his retirement, working as the group’s coordinator. He left that role in 2017 to focus on a feasibility study to look at providing sub- sidized, high-quality pre- school slots in Clatsop and Tillamook counties. The feasibility study fol- lowed the Pay for Success model, which posits that services like quality pre- school are an investment that can lead to a cascade of benefits and cost savings elsewhere in a child’s life and development. Educators see the long- term effects and differences between children who receive good early educa- tion and care and those who don’t, Gaffney said. Quality preschool is key to preparing children for what comes next, help- ing them develop important social and emotional skills, he said. Providers can also intervene earlier on learn- ing or behavioral issues that may otherwise place a child in special education later. Lack of access to early care disproportionately hits lower-income and minority families hardest. Gaffney’s feasibility study is now complete and he is moving into a second phase. His team’s work will be taken on by the regional Northwest Early Learning Hub to further investigate child care needs and bar- riers in Clatsop, Columbia and Tillamook counties. Gaffney hopes the move will put the three coun- ties in a good position if more state money for early learning services becomes available. Gov. Kate Brown pitched a budget plan in November that added $38.3 million for child care as part of an overall funding package for schools and education. The money would go to increasing the availability of infant and toddler child care and provide more sup- port for early childhood educators, among other measures. “Let’s get ourselves in position,” Gaff- ney reasoned. “If there is more money, we’re shovel-ready.” School: Rogozinski has shown an ability to think outside the box Continued from Page A1 “I’m very humbled to have the vote of confidence in the work we’ve done,” Rogozinski said. He credited his staff with much of the success the grade school has experienced during his tenure. He was brought in to replace Jan Schock, principal for 15 years, and improve academic rigor, while Porter was brought in to improve behavior. The grade school has since experienced a rapid, sustained growth in enrollment and aca- demic performance. School board members said that track record played into his selection. “Out of the applications, his stood out,” said Dan Jackson, a board member. “But then in the interview, we knew he was the one.” Rogozinski came into his interview with a specific plan to continue improving the school district, said Darlene Warren, Debbie Morrow Newly chosen Superintendent Tom Rogozinski, left, with Warrenton- Hammond School Board member Greg Morrill. a board member. Neal Bond, recently appointed to the school board to replace Stacey Brown, said Rogozinski’s vision for the district aligned with the school board’s. Rogozinski has shown an abil- ity to think outside the box on education and empower teachers, said Debbie Morrow, the board’s chairwoman. “Listening to him talk about education, you can see him get really excited about it, his pas- sion for not only seeing students succeed, but for taking challenges and finding a way to engineer suc- cess,” said Greg Morrill, a board member. Rogozinski, originally from Pittsburgh, has 26 years in edu- cation. Before Warrenton, he was principal at several K-8 Catholic schools, including Holy Trinity Catholic School in Beaverton and St. Mary Star of the Sea Catho- lic School in Astoria until its clo- sure in 2011. He first became a principal at Gallup Catholic School in New Mexico, where he previously taught algebra and precalculus. While at Holy Trinity, Rogoz- inski commuted on weekends to Astoria, where he lives with his partner, Peggy Boisvert, and two stepsons. Applying to Warrenton, Rogo- zinski didn’t know if the Catholic background would hurt his candi- dacy, but he knew Heyen and Jef- Taxes: ‘I have a feeling we’re going to take additional actions’ Continued from Page A1 Inn owes $125,837.40 in unpaid lodging taxes, pen- alties and accrued interest. Representatives of the Shilo Inn did not immedi- ately respond to questions. City Manager Linda Engbretson said the city received a call Thursday from Shilo Inn represen- tatives, who left a mes- sage requesting a payment plan, but Engbretson was not able to reach anyone when she called back. “I’m willing to hear what they propose,” she said, “however, they have consistently been late and have not met pre- vious arrangements as agreed.” Mayor Henry Balen- sifer said that the hotel has yet to take any steps to pay Warrenton has sought lodging taxes from the Shilo Inn. the taxes owed. “I have a feeling we’re going to take additional actions,” he said. “This isn’t a simple fact of … say, your personal income tax where you don’t pay it one year and it compounds over the years. We’re talking about money that was never theirs to begin with.” Balensifer could not speak to any past issues with collecting taxes from the hotel, but said utility billing has always been “a cat-and-mouse game” for the city. During his time as a city commissioner, he often heard from staff that the hotel was behind on paying city utility bills, or paid them only at the last minute. “It’s a strange business model,” he said. The Shilo Inn company, founded by Mark S. Hem- street in 1974, has faced tax payment issues in Clatsop County before. In 2016, Seaside filed a law- suit against the company for more than $100,000 in unpaid lodging taxes at the Shilo Inn Seaside Ocean- front Resort. fery and was convinced to apply, he said. Warrenton at the time was struggling with enrollment, sparse funding during the Great Recession and a lackluster aca- demic reputation. There were challenges in the way the grade school was being operated, Rogozinski said, but he got a good sense of the team he had in place. “It wasn’t a job that was by any means doable by one per- son,” he said of the grade school’s improvement. “But a lot of the framework was in place.” Rogozinski would have been a great candidate for any number of positions, and he was relieved the school district hired him, Jef- fery said. “Working with him over the past six years, I got to take his measure and really see what he’s capable of,” he said. “I honestly believe that he is the one to help this district get to the next level in this push to be the best district in the state.” Seafood: ‘It’s kind of hard to run a business on a month-to-month lease’ Continued from Page A1 announced the businesses were closing and convert- ing to Hurricane Ron’s. He had issues finding help at the restaurant and tiki bar, and reached out about leasing out the spaces, Cordero said. Holboke’s offer provided a backup plan for Neva and Cordero, who have been on tenuous footing with the Port of Astoria, owner of the Chi- nook Building. “We couldn’t get our lease renewed with the Port of Astoria,” Cordero said. “They would only give us a month-to-month lease. It’s kind of hard to run a business on a month-to- month lease, so we figured we had to diversify.” The two parties have been at loggerheads regarding plumbing, bathrooms, trash and other operational issues. The two sides reached a detente after developer Ches- ter Trabucco — amid a bid with partner William Orr to take over the adjacent Astoria Riverwalk Inn — agreed to manage the Chinook Build- ing. But after their bid failed, Trabucco bowed out. In the latest salvo, the Port locked the bathrooms in the Chinook Building because of mechanical issues and has been forcing customers into a port-a-potty, Neva said. “I think it’s just another way of them jabbing at me,” he said.