SNOWY WEATHER Ways to improve your job search success PAGE A2 INSIDE 146TH YEAR, NO. 172 DailyAstorian.com // WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2019 ONE DOLLAR 1949-2019 Decision nears on data center feasibility Developer sets a deadline for early May By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian Mark Cox hopes to decide by early May whether the data center and tech- nology incubator he’s proposed at the North Coast Business Park in Warrenton is feasible. Clatsop County last year approved a $1.2 million sale of 67 acres to Cox’s company, Agile Design, which hopes to develop the project on 19th Street across from Costco . Cox has pitched the project as bring- ing a new, transformative industry to the region, including up to 76 local jobs with an average wage of $75,000. Data centers have been rapidly expand- ing in the Pacifi c Northwest because of an abundance of cheap water and power. Cox’s site is also part of the Clatsop Enterprise Zone providing three- to fi ve- year property tax breaks on new projects. See Data center, Page A7 Bradley W. Parks/Oregon Public Broadcasting Oregon Secretary of State Dennis Richardson poses for a portrait in 2017. Oregon Secretary of State Richardson dies of cancer TAKE THE SURVEY A Republican who broke Democratic dominance Agile Design has posted an online survey at agiledesign.net/datacenter to gather public feedback about the proposed data center in Warrenton By JEFF MAPES Oregon Public Broadcasting Deputy director sues housing authority Claims punishment for whistleblowing By BRENNA VISSER The Daily Astorian A top administrator for the Northwest Oregon Housing Authority who was put on administrative leave last spring is suing the organization and its executive director . In a lawsuit fi led on Monday, Teresa Sims, the deputy director, alleges that she has faced retaliation from Todd Johnston and the housing authority for speaking out about mismanaged public funds and unlawful hiring practices. Sims is seeking nearly $1 million in emotional and economic damages. In May, Sims was placed on paid leave while the housing authority investigated whether she falsifi ed records to allow her son and fellow employee, Benjamin Natividad, to receive public housing assis- tance while he was renting from his uncle. ennis Richardson, the fi rst Republican to hold the Ore- gon secretary of state’s offi ce in nearly four decades, died Tuesday night following a battle with brain can- cer, his offi ce announced this morning. Gov. Kate Brown will appoint Richardson’s successor, who must be a Republican. But under the Oregon Constitution, that appointee cannot ascend to the governorship in the case of a vacancy, as is the normal chain of lineage. The next in line of succession is now Oregon Treasurer Tobias Read, a Democrat. Richardson, 69, in 2016 became the rare Republican to win statewide offi ce in Oregon in recent decades. A trial attorney from Jackson County, he served 12 years in the Oregon House before he unsuccessfully ran for gover- nor in 2014. The name recognition he earned in that race — against Democratic incum- bent John Kitzhaber, who resigned amid a scandal just weeks into his new term — helped set Richardson up for a suc- cessful campaign for secretary of state. “He really thought you should be a moral actor in the world,” said former state Rep. Peter Buckley, an Ashland Democrat who often clashed with Rich- ardson on policy but came to admire him as a person. “He was always tre- mendously hardworking and a skilled advocate for his positions.” “There’s just not a person down here (in state government) that doesn’t have respect and regard for Dennis Richard- D AP Photo/Timothy J. Gonzalez Dennis Richardson, the fi rst Republican to win a statewide race in 14 years, pumps his fi st at an election night event at the Salem Convention Center in 2016. son,” said former Republican Rep. Julie Parrish, who managed his campaign for secretary of state. “He’s an honest broker.” Brown ordered that fl ags be lowered to half-staff in honor of Richardson. “Regardless of what side of the aisle his colleagues sat on, we all knew Den- nis’ kind heart guided his career of ser- vice to the people of Oregon,” Brown said in a statement. “His reputation for perseverance not only guided him through the fi ght with cancer, it also gave us all reassurance that he was fi ghting cancer with the same determi- nation he brought to work every day.” Other tributes also quickly poured in. U.S. Rep. Greg Walden, an Oregon Republican , praised Richardson as a “wonderful public servant, and a deeply loving husband and parent. Dennis’ quiet competence and civility is such a rarity in today’s world.” State House Speaker Tina Kotek, a Portland Democrat, called him “a man of integrity and a dedicated public servant.” Richardson, who didn’t turn to pol- itics until his 50s, freely admitted that he struggled as a young man to fi nd his sense of direction. His fi rst marriage ended in divorce while he was serving as an Army helicopter pilot in Vietnam. He returned home having a “diffi - cult time trying to fi gure out what I was going to do with my life, where I was See Richardson, Page A7 See Lawsuit, Page A7 Astoria hires a new fi re chief Crutchfi eld spent career in Coos Bay By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Daily Astorian Astoria has a new fi re chief. Dan Crutchfi eld, the bat- talion chief of the Coos Bay Fire Department, will take over the job on March 15. Interim Fire Chief Richard Curtis has led the depart- ment since September fol- lowing the retirement of for- mer Fire Chief Ted Ames. Curtis will stay on through the end of “Frankly, I really March to help ease like that he comes the department’s from an Oregon transition. The City coastal community,” Council approved Estes said of Crutch- an amendment of fi eld. “He under- a personal services stands what it’s Dan contract with Curtis like to live in this Crutchfi eld in January to keep environment.” him while the city He believes continued to look for a fi re Crutchfi eld will be a good chief. fi t for the community and City Manager Brett Estes the city. He described had anticipated the fi re chief Crutchfi eld as possessing position could be diffi - a “can-do” personality and cult to fi ll given the unique said he is well-respected demands of the job. The within the fi re department city worked with a recruit- and the city of Coos Bay. ment agency to fi nd possible See Chief, Page A7 candidates. Warrenton eyes master plan for Spur 104 zone change Commissioners walk back an earlier decision By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Daily Astorian WARRENTON — Walking back an earlier decision, the City Com- mission will now require a master plan to accom- pany a zone change to res- idential properties between U.S. Highway 101 and Spur 104. The city will pay for the plan and lead a pub- lic workshop to develop it over the next 90 days. At a prior meeting, the commissioners voted 4-1 to approve a zone change to allow mixed commercial use at the wedge of proper- ties. Mayor Henry Balen- sifer voted against the zone change because of ongo- ing concerns about how further development could exacerbate traffi c issues in the area and impact more than just the people who already live there. He See Warrenton, Page A7