DailyAstorian.com // WEDNESDAY, MARCH 6, 2019 146TH YEAR, NO. 177 ONE DOLLAR CHARTER FLEET FACES EXTINCTION Port could get state help, but with strings Agency looks to update strategic plan By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian Photos by Luke Whittaker/Chinook Observer Local marine repair shops have felt the impact of fewer charter boats on the water. ‘It was a slow winter,’ said John Kalander, right, the owner of West Coast Propeller Service. Strange weather, shorter fishing seasons to blame The Port of Astoria may get more help from the state to fix its crumbling infra- structure, but only with close state over- sight, according to the agency’s strategic planner. The state has loaned the Port nearly $19.7 million through Business Oregon’s Infrastructure Finance Authority since 2001. The Port began updating its 2010 strategic business plan nearly two years ago after hearing the state was unlikely to loan any more money without an update. Mary McArthur, the executive director of the Columbia-Pacific Economic Devel- opment District, expects to have a draft in May. The Port has been criticized for not focusing enough on maintenance or stick- ing to strategic plans. There is lack of con- fidence and trust in the Port, McArthur told Port commissioners during a Tuesday meeting. “I’m going to recommend some rela- tively significant strings in terms of over- sight of the Port for the next two to four years,” she said. “What I’m thinking there is that this will give you that muscle, that leverage to say, ‘We are just going to focus on what comes out of that strategic plan. We’re going to commit to it. If things come up that want to steer us off course … we know that Business Oregon’s going to yank our chain and pull us back.” See Port, Page A7 By LUKE WHITTAKER Chinook Observer W ARRENTON — In the 20th-century heyday of recreational salmon fishing on the Colum- bia River, marinas were jammed with bustling charter fishing vessels. Today, you’re lucky to count more than 20. The extinction of the charter fish- ing fleet has played out over the past 30 years, punctuated by strange weather and increasingly shorter fish- ing seasons. “We’re a dying breed,” said Gene Kane, owner of Tackle Time Bait and Charters. “It’s a dying thing.” Since opening in 1983, the Warren- ton-based bait and charter business has had a front-row seat to the industry’s ebb and flow. “Over the past 36 years, we’ve seen the good, the bad and the ugly,” Kane said. “After the first El Niño in 1994, we had to borrow money just to stay here. Most everyone else went down.” Limited seasons on sturgeon and salmon — two of the most popular fisheries on the river — have left a painful scar. “Our sturgeon used to be a year- around fishery,” Kane said. “It went to several years with no fishing, then catch and release only,” he said. “It’s only been the last cou- ple years that we’ve been able to get 10 days spread out. Something is bet- ter than nothing, but it puts pressure on fishermen. See Fleet, Page A7 Linda and Gene Kane have operated Tackle Time Bait and Charters in Warrenton since 1983. Seaside planners back construction of Grocery Outlet A ‘turn pocket’ will help with traffic By R.J. MARX The Daily Astorian Sea Breeze Charters owner Pat Schenk has watched the Ilwaco charter fleet dwindle from 150 boats to less than 20 today. SEASIDE — With a new plan to widen and restripe the roadway, the Seaside Planning Commission gave its unanimous OK Tuesday night for a new 18,000-square-foot Grocery Outlet. A 175-foot-long “turn pocket” along U.S. Highway 101 southbound into Ave- nue N will satisfy the state Department of Transportation and the Planning Com- mission’s requirement for a left-turn lane, representatives of Main & Main Capital Group said on behalf of Grocery Outlet. The turn pocket will be developed before the new store opens. “What we’ve done over the last month is worked with ODOT to come up with something that will work,” Main & Main’s Dan Dover said. See Seaside, Page A7 Legislature to pay $1 million for harassment at Capitol Settlement of labor complaint By AUBREY WIEBER and CLAIRE WITHYCOMBE Oregon Capital Bureau SALEM — The state Legisla- ture will pay $1 million to nine vic- tims of harassment at the Capitol, settling a complaint by state labor officials that has put a cloud over the session. In a deal announced Tuesday afternoon, legislative leaders also agreed to push harder and by cer- tain deadlines to reform work behavior at the Capitol. The settlement followed pri- vate talks between top legislators and representatives from the state Bureau of Labor and Industries. The bureau said in January that it found substantial evidence that not only were employees and legis- lators themselves harassed, but that state Senate President Peter Court- ney and House Speaker Tina Kotek, as well as administrators responsi- ble for responding to harassment allegations, were ineffective in han- dling their complaints. “We sincerely apologize to the women who suffered harm during their time in the Capitol,” Kotek and Courtney said in a joint statement. Eight women, who were not identified in the settlement, will share in noneconomic damages of amounts ranging up to $415,000. State Sen. Sara Gelser, D-Corvallis, Pamplin Media Group Former state Sen. Jeff Kruse, R-Roseburg, resigned amid sexual harassment allegations. will get $26,000 for legal fees and other expenses but didn’t seek dam- ages, according to the labor bureau. The settlement was announced hours after Courtney, a Salem Dem- ocrat, said he was taking medical leave for 10 days, which his staff said wasn’t connected to the harass- ment settlement. The scope of harassment was put into full public view in early January when then-Labor Com- missioner Brad Avakian released the results of his monthslong investigation. But the settlement also required the labor bureau, now led by former legislator Val Hoyle, to acknowl- edge its own investigation was flawed. In a statement Tuesday, the bureau said its process “was polit- icized in a manner that inhibited both sides from participating thor- oughly in the investigation.” See Settlement, Page A7