THE DAILY ASTORIAN • WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2019 Oregon fi rst to have statewide rent control State House passed the bill Tuesday By PARIS ACHEN Oregon Capital Bureau SALEM – Oregon is about to institute the fi rst statewide rent control in the country. The state House voted 35- 25 Tuesday to cap annual rent increases to 7 percent, plus the change in the con- sumer price index, and restrict no-fault evictions. The legislation, Senate Bill 608, now goes to Gov. Kate Brown, who has said she would sign it into law. “This new law is one of many actions the L egisla- ture needs to take to address the housing crisis in Ore- gon,” said Lisa Morawski, a spokeswoman for Brown. “While it will provide imme- diate relief, we need to focus on building supply in order to address Oregon’s hous- ing challenges for the long term.” House Speaker Tina Kotek fi nally accomplished her longstanding goal to AP Photo/Andrew Selsky Supporters of a bill to ban most no-cause evictions of home renters in Oregon demonstrate on the Capitol steps in Salem in 2017. protect tenants from abusive landlords. Kotek crafted the bill to protect tenants from steep rent increases and pre- vent large-scale evictions that have displaced Orego- nians, especially in the Port- land area. But the rent limits don’t apply to rental proper- ties built within the past 15 years, a measure meant to encourage housing develop- ment in the state. The legislation allows certain no-fault evictions when a landlord wants to sell, upgrade or move into a property, but requires land- lords with larger holdings — fi ve units or more — to pay a tenant a relocation fee equal- ing one month’s rent. Tenants may sue the landlord when there is a vio- lation and receive damages equal to three months’ rent. The legislation passed mostly along party lines with Democratic Reps. David Gomberg of Neotsu, Caddy McKeown of Coos Bay and Brad Witt of Clats- kanie voting against the bill. Rep. Tiffi ny Mitchell, D-As- toria, voted for the bill. The Senate passed the bill two weeks ago 17-11. Sen. Betsy Johnson, D-Scap- poose, voted against the legislation. Debate on the bill on the House fl oor lasted for more than an hour Tuesday, with several Republicans oppos- ing it and Democrats speak- ing in favor. Rep. Ron Noble, R-Mc- Minnville, noted that the rent cap is higher than the average rent increase in Ore- gon between 2016 and 2017. Between the end of 2016 and the end of 2017, rents increased statewide by 0.8 percent, and in Portland, decreased by 1.5 percent. “What this bill purports to do is provide a solution for our problem,” Noble said. Yet the 7 percent cap would have little effect on low-income renters at risk of becoming homeless, Noble said. Meanwhile, he said, the new policy could scare off investors and prompt landlords to sell their resi- dential units to homeowners, decreasing the rental supply. Jury will decide if local charter overfi shed Rep. Mark Meek, D-Gladstone, a landlord and Realtor, presented the bill on the House fl oor , saying its aim is to protect tenants. “In some cases, some tenants did not receive rent increases; in other cases, tenants received on the level of 20 percent and 40 per- cent rent increases,” Meek said. “While I know that we can’t protect everybody and not everybody needs pro- tecting, the folks we are try- A3 ing to protect are the people who would be displaced and would be homeless.” Kotek attempted to pass tenant protections in 2017 . The legislation would have lifted a statewide ban on rent control and required land- lords to pay tenants relo- cation fees equal to three months’ rent when asking them to move out. The legislation passed in the House but couldn’t get through the Senate. Consult a PROFESSIONAL Q: My friend in Portland says she has an Advantage plan that has a zero premium. Can I get that plan? Steve Putman Plans (Part C) are A: Advantage offered by companies in specific Medicare Products service areas; these are usually defined by counties. Your primary address is considered to be in a service area. Clatsop county in Oregon and Pacific county in Washington do not have such a plan at this time. Call and I can go over which types of Medicare Plans and their costs that are available to you here. 503-440-1076 Company accused of ‘high-grading’ Licensed in Oregon and Washington putmanagency@gmail.com By NATALIE ST. JOHN Chinook Observer Neither of the Gudgell brothers was on the boat where the undercover sting took place. The Depart- ment of Fish and Wildlife subsequently served a war- rant on the charter company and spent months seeking statements and conduct- ing interviews with other Pacifi c Salmon customers. The state’s case against the brothers is based on wit- ness statements and other evidence gathered during the follow-up investiga- tion. Several Pacifi c Salmon employees were charged in separate cases that will be resolved after the Gudgell trial. Restoration? A: Restoration refers to work John R. Alcantara - Funeral Director Hughes- Ransom Mortuary Astoria: 576 12th St. 503.325.2535 Seaside: 220 N. Holladay 503.738.6622 www.hughes-ransom.com Natalie St. John/Chinook Observer The brothers’ defense attorney, Nathan Needham, asked South District Court Judge Nancy McAllister to strictly limit discussion of the sting, saying alleged activity on another boat had no bearing on the Gudgells’ case, and would bias the jury against them. McAllis- ter agreed. Last week, Pacifi c County Deputy Prosecutor Joe Faurholt called numer- ous witnesses, mostly for- mer Pacifi c Salmon cus- tomers. They included Kenneth and Gary Collen- borne, brothers from Idaho who both had long military careers. Ken Collenborne, a lifelong outdoorsman, said he and his relatives con- tacted the Department of Fish and Wildlife after wit- nessing what appeared to be wasteful, possibly illegal fi shing practices aboard the West Wind. Both men testi- fi ed that a deckhand urged them to keep fi shing after they caught their limit. Later, they allegedly saw the crew move fi sh tags to the largest specimens, then throw the smaller fi sh overboard. “None of them appeared alive to me and there were a few with their throats cut,” Ken Collenborne said. “I was glad I caught a halibut, but it bothered me that fi sh had been wasted.” Several witnesses said they were surprised to be told to catch more fi sh, but assumed the crew under- stood the rules better than they did. “They told everybody the same: ‘Pick your big- gest one. Pick the biggest fi sh.’ Everybody did it,” said Alvaro Torres, a young Tri-Cities truck driver and soda salesman who took his father fi shing for Father’s Day. According to Tor- res, the crew dumped the unwanted fi sh shortly before returning to Ilwaco. “I was like, ‘That’s a waste,’ but I didn’t know if you could do that or not,” Torres recalled. “You could see them spinning in the ocean. They were dead.” Longview resident John Gerrard went fi shing on a day when the water was so rough that his Midwest- ern relative was afraid they would die. Gerrard spent much of the trip comfort- ing the landlubbing relation, but remembered being told, “We’re gonna go another round and if we catch any- thing bigger, we can get rid of the smaller ones.” The ones they ended up keep- ing weren’t signifi cantly larger than the fi rst fi sh they caught, he said. Death in the livewell “I think we caught about three apiece, me and my buddy,” said Kelly Smith, a retired welder from Kennewick. Heinrich Luyt, a South African immigrant who now lives in Longview, said he booked the trip so he could learn the rules and tech- niques of halibut fi shing from experts. He said he was surprised when the crew packed a so-called “live- well” so full the lid wouldn’t close. “There were so many I don’t think the gills were opening and closing any- more. It was like having someone stepping on your chest,” Luyt said. He, too, testifi ed the crew over fi shed. “The 12 or 13 we were gonna keep went back into the box. The other fi sh that were already sized out got slid under the railing over the side back into the water and they just fl oated down like a leaf.” P rosecutors called for- mer deckhand Kendra Kos- kiniemi, who worked for the Gudgells while saving money for school. As she testifi ed, Koskiniemi faced her former bosses, who sat a few feet away at the defen- dant’s table. Koskiniemi said she didn’t recall any specif- ics, but acknowledged it was possible she’d thrown fi sh back while working for David Gudgell. She was among the crewmem- bers Department of Fish and Wildlife Offi cer Todd Diel- man interviewed on the day of the undercover operation. According to police state- ments, she allegedly gave evasive answers at fi rst, but decided to cooperate after realizing charges against her could potentially affect her career prospects. Koskiniemi said she remembered very little of her conversations with investigators after the trip. “I was very upset and didn’t know what was going on, and just very scared for my future as a nursing stu- dent,” she said. Needham, the defense attorney, zeroed in on the implication that fear infl u- enced her decision to talk with Dielman. “I bet this was probably the last thing you expected from an offi cer — for them to come in and say they were going to take every- thing from you,” Needham said. Faurholt said Needham had mischaracterized the encounter. The trial will likely go to jury on Thursday or Friday. Before they go into deliber- ation, the jury will be given a set of rules, provided by the attorneys and approved by the judge, that will help them decide whether the Gudgells clearly violated the law. that a licensed Embalmer performs to “restore” a deceased human body that exhibits physical trauma due to the manner of death or to repair a body that has undergone a full or partial post mortem (autopsy). While it’s not required, embalming is strongly recommended to be done simultaneously during most restorations in order to achieve the most aesthetic results. can I set my Q: How Windows 10 computer to National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Lt. Greg Bush and Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife Sgt. Tony Leonetti reviewed records at Pacifi c Salmon Charters in the Port of Ilwaco last year. give me reminders? LEO FINZI A: Click on the time and date found in the corner of your Astoria’s Best.com screen. Click the date for the We match all online prices on new Mon-Fri 10-6, Sat 11-4 computers! Astoria, OR 503-325-2300 10TH STREET Focus on Gudgell brothers Q: What is ASTORIA TRANSIT CENTER LONG BEACH, Wash. — What do two military men from Idaho, a soda salesman from the Tri-Cit- ies, a retired South Afri- can, a game warden and a local nursing student have in common? They all testi- fi ed during the fi rst week of fi shermen Robert and David Gudgell’s lengthy poaching trial. In all, the brothers, who operate Pacifi c Salmon Charters, stand accused of more than two dozen counts of second-degree unlawful recreational fi shing, a mis- demeanor, and waste of fi sh and wildlife, a gross misde- meanor. With a long list of potential witnesses, attor- neys estimate the trial will continue at least through today . The charges, fi led last spring, stem from a months long investigation of alleged halibut “high-grad- ing” aboard boats in the Pacifi c Salmon fl eet. The investigation led to almost 40 charges for six men. In June 2017, an undercover Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife enforce- ment offi cer booked a hali- but-fi shing trip with Pacifi c Salmon after getting a tip from a customer who said he witnessed so-called “high-grading” during his trip. Afterward, the offi - cer said he saw crewmem- bers encourage passen- gers to catch more than the strict one-halibut-per-per- son limit. He also said crew- members culled the larg- est fi sh and threw smaller fi sh back into the ocean. Some of the rejected fi sh were allegedly stored in unsatisfactory conditions, and some allegedly died or were killed before they were dumped. Under Washington law, halibut fi sherme n can catch one fi sh. They must keep the fi rst fi sh they catch. event. Click on the “+” sign. Enter an Event Name, and Start and Stop time or click All Day. Near the top, choose a reminder from 15 minutes to 1 week before the event. For the reminder to regularly repeat (birthday, monthly bill, etc.) click the circle with arrows at the top, and for how long to continue. Be sure to click Save in the top left corner. Q: Does Medicare cover chiropractic care? ASTORIA it does! Medicare A: Yes, covers chiropractic 503-325-3311 services. If you have secondary insurance, that can help as well! Call us today for more information or to schedule your appointment. 2935 Marine Drive Astoria, Oregon Now accepting new patients. CHIROPRACTIC Barry Sears, D.C. going out of town Q: I’m and need to stop my Daily Astorian newspaper. What are my options? T HE D AILY A STORIAN 503-325-3211 www.dailyastorian.com 949 Exchange St. Astoria, OR have several different options A: We for you if you are heading out of town. We can save your papers in a vacation pack and deliver them when you return. We can switch you to a Web subscription while you are away and you can read the paper online. You can have your delivery stopped and you can donate your missed newspapers to local schools. What ever option fits your needs, just call our circulation department at 503-325-3211 and we will take care of it for you.