DailyAstorian.com // TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 2019 146TH YEAR, NO. 176 ONE DOLLAR While his family home burned in Hamlet, an 11-year-old went to get help Boy ran barefoot through the snow By BRENNA VISSER The Daily Astorian H Brenna Visser/The Daily Astorian Krista Howsden with her three children, Jaxon, Jordan and Hali’a. AMLET — No one really knows how they would react in a house fi re until it happens to them. Krista Howsden learned this the hard way in February after a nearby gener- ator caught fi re and burned down her Hamlet home. After managing to get herself and her three kids out of the home, she went into “panic mode,” she said. She remembers screaming into the distance, hoping any neighbor would hear her. Her home has virtually no cellphone service. But as Howsden frantically tried to get a call out to 911, her 11-year-old son, Jordan English, seemed to know just how to react. He was already running barefoot through the snow to get help. “I went into panic mode and I’m grateful that he didn’t,” Howsden said. At the time, English remembers not totally understanding what was going on. Before the fi re, he had been eat- ing pretzels and watching a movie, and hadn’t seen the smoke that prompted his mom to rush him and his two siblings out of the home. But after getting outside, English noticed a neighbor about a football fi eld away with his shed door open. “I thought, ‘Wait ... that person’s shed door is open. He wouldn’t leave that open if he wasn’t home,’” English said. So he started running, with his 2-year-old brother Jaxon and dog, Spooky, under each arm. “My feet were freezing ... they were numb,” he said. “I was just thinking, ‘Get help. I hope he’s there. I hope he can do something.’” See Boy, Page A7 Matt Verley/Hamlet Volunteer Fire Department Fire crews work to put out a house fi re in Hamlet in wintry conditions. ‘WHEN I SAW HIM RUNNING BACK FROM THE NEIGHBOR’S HOUSE, LOOKING LIKE A HERO, SOMETHING CAME OVER ME ... LIKE, ‘OH MY GOSH, WE’RE NOT ALONE,’ BECAUSE THAT’S HOW I WAS FEELING.’ Krista Howsden | mother of Jordan English, who ran to a neighbor to get help Property owners concerned about waterfront restrictions Some urge city to be fl exible on development By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Daily Astorian Several waterfront property owners pushed back Monday night against proposed amendments to Astoria city codes that will guide future development along the Columbia River. Jim Knight, executive director of the Port of Astoria, objected to proposals by the City Council that would more strictly limit devel- opment in the Bridge Vista sec- tion of the city’s Riverfront Vision Plan. The area stretches from Port- way Street to Second Street and includes P ort property. The city has not engaged the P ort in discussions about new codes that could restrict what the P ort hopes to develop in its ongoing effort to create new jobs , Knight said. Following public outcry over the city’s approval of a new four- story Fairfi eld Inn and Suites off Second Street , the City Council has discussed possible amendments to Bridge Vista, including a height limit of 28 feet for new buildings. The City Council’s goal on Monday was to weigh draft codes for the downtown Urban Core area, the fi nal piece of the river- front plan, which was originally intended to be more densely devel- oped. The Planning Commission is still in the process of crafting the codes. See Waterfront, Page A7 Community celebrates former Knappa wrestling coach Some have a sour taste over his departure By BRENNA VISSER The Daily Astorian BROWNSMEAD — F ormer and current wres- tlers, along with their friends and family, came to support Dan Owings, the former wrestling coach for Knappa High School, at a community dinner on Saturday. The longtime wrestling coach and two of his assis- tants resigned in January following what the school district superintendent described as “unfortunate incidents” during an away tournament in Redmond, Washington. Superinten- dent Paulette Johnson has declined to publicly detail the incidents. Nathan Truax, a 21-year- old volunteer coach, was charged with second-degree sex abuse, third-degree rape and third-degree sodomy after allegedly having sex with a 15-year-old girl on the wrestling team during the Redmond trip. In response to the sudden resignations, Gary New- berry, the Knappa Youth Wrestling c oach who used to wrestle for Owings, decided to host the retire- ment party to show Owings the community supported him. “Without him there wouldn’t be a program,” Newberry said. “It’s kind of like celebrating the ending of an era.” Owings is credited by many with helping the sport thrive in Knappa after start- ing a youth wrestling pro- gram in 1987. In 1995, he got permission to start a team at the high school on the condition he ran it with no budget, Owings said. Brenna Visser/The Daily Astorian See Coach, Page A7 Former and current wrestlers gather for a photo with former coach Dan Owings at a celebration dinner on Saturday.