SEASIDE BOYS’ THREE-PEAT COMES UP SHORT SPORTS A10 146TH YEAR, NO. 180 Ocean conditions appear to be improving Waters are cooler and more productive By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Daily Astorian ONE DOLLAR DailyAstorian.com // MONDAY, MARCH 11, 2019 Creative liberties clasSroOms experiment with plastic art The ocean is still warmer than nor- mal, but things appear to be looking up in West Coast waters — for now. An annual status report on ecosystems in the California Cur- rent by the National Oceanic and Atmo- MORE spheric Administra- INSIDE tion found there are indications the ocean Razor waters off California, clamming Oregon and Washing- shut ton state are cooler down and more productive by toxin than they were during Page A2 a marine heat wave that began in 2014 with a mass of warm water nicknamed “the B lob” and per- sisted through 2016. Fish landings and revenue rebounded strongly in 2017 compared to 2016, with record hake landings and increases in crab leading the way, along with a bump in squid . Landings in other fi sheries, however, did not see the same boost. See Ocean, Page A7 Rep. Mitchell hears calls for more money Lawmaker appeared at a town hall on Sunday Katie Frankowicz/The Daily Astorian Bronson Brim examines a piece of plastic during an art project with his class from Simply Kids Preschool in Astoria. Material salvaged from the beach By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Daily Astorian By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian State Rep. Tiffi ny Mitchell faced calls during a town hall at Clatsop Community College on Sunday to push her colleagues for more education funding and taxes on corporations. Mitchell’s town hall came as the state Legisla- ture is crafting a two-year budget . The budget of the Joint Committee on Ways and Means, released last week, includes nearly Tiffi ny $8.9 billion for K-12 Mitchell education, an 8 percent increase and enough to cover service levels. B ronson Brim examined the broken wedge of black plastic a friend handed him. “What’s this?” the preschooler asked, turning it over so the let- ters “DVD” were suddenly visible, stamped on one side. “A shark fi n for you!” his friend exclaimed. Because — indeed — the former DVD tray was broken into the approx- imate shape of a shark fi n. Brim turned back to an old window on the table in front of him and considered where to place the fi n. He and his classmates from Sim- ply Kids Preschool in Astoria collab- orated with the Bumble Art Studio’s preschool program last week to cre- Colorful plastic pieces, some familiar, are sorted by color in buckets and used in art murals in Bumble Art Studio’s preschool classroom in Astoria. ate murals on windows using odds and ends of plastic that washed up on local beaches. The art is part of a larger Trash Talk Project created by the Haystack Rock Awareness Program in an effort to educate the public about the issues of plastic pollution in marine envi- ronments and to keep the plastic from ending up in landfi lls. In the program, discarded , ocean- warped plastic becomes wearable jewelry, art or even window murals encased in resin. The plastic the preschoolers sorted through was collected during the Hay- stack Rock Awareness Program’s marine debris surveys in Cannon Beach and from local beach cleanups . Familiar items surfaced as the chil- dren sifted through buckets of plastic, on the hunt for the perfect pieces and colors to fi ll in a design of a bee buzz- ing among fl owers and honeycombs on their windows. There were old soap bubble wands, bucket handles, a pink spoon, milk caps. “By tying in the items that they recognize with the concept that it’s marine debris that we picked up off the beach — maybe even things they recognize from their own visits to the beach — next time they go, they’ll be See Plastics, Page A7 See Mitchell, Page A7 Ballet director comes back to her roots Sundstrom began dancing in Astoria By BRENNA VISSER The Daily Astorian Lisa Sundstrom, who directs the training company of the Oregon Ballet Theatre, didn’t always love ballet. In fact, when she was fi rst taking classes her mom signed her up for in Asto- ria as a kid, she didn’t like it very much at all. She was shy, and wasn’t a huge fan of leotards and tights. “It made me feel exposed,” she said. But as she progressed, Sundstrom began connect- ing with and taking more of an interest in dancing. Before she knew it, she was spending all of her free time in the studio, traveling to summer intensives and eventually attending bal- let school in California. She was on track to become a professional ballerina. “I felt like I was with my people for the fi rst time,” Sundstrom said of going to ballet school her senior year of high school. “I never fi t in with Astoria. I always felt like I was different, going to the studio every day while everyone else was playing sports.” Astoria was the beginning of that dream. So it was par- ticularly special for Sund- strom, who is now the direc- tor of OBT2, the theater’s training company, to come back to her roots on Saturday to collaborate with the studio that trained her. Over the weekend, OBT2, composed of danc- ers who are on the cusp of a Brenna Visser/The Daily Astorian See Sundstrom, Page A7 Lisa Sundstrom, the director of OBT2, grew up in Astoria.