146TH YEAR, NO. 181 DailyAstorian.com // TUESDAY, MARCH 12, 2019 ONE DOLLAR Warrenton teen dies from the flu By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian Katie Frankowicz/The Daily Astorian Visitors to Oswald West State Park pause on a rocky shoreline within the Cape Falcon Marine Reserve. Researchers still learning about Cape Falcon Marine Reserve One of five in Oregon Seaside might ban plastic bags By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Daily Astorian S tate researchers have used volunteer fishermen, underwater cameras and scuba divers to uncover the lives of the creatures who call Cape Falcon Marine Reserve home. Cape Falcon, located between Arch Cape and Manzanita, is the newest of the state’s five marine reserves — protected areas off the Oregon Coast that include sites like Cape Perpetua south of Newport and Redfish Rocks south of Bandon. Monitoring work began in Cape Falcon in 2014 and restric- tions on fishing and develop- ment did not go into effect until 2016. There are still a lot of unknowns, from how differ- ent species use the rocky reefs and soft bottom habitat in the reserve to what the long-term effects of protecting the area might be. The state is in the middle of developing a management plan, the last of Oregon’s marine reserves to get a plan. State resources are tight, but the plan will include both state and community priorities for the protected marine site. It is hoped Locals are grieving after the loss of Tim- othy Pior, 15, a Warrenton High School freshman who died Sunday from complica- tions related to the flu. Hundreds gathered at Gateway Commu- nity Church on Sunday to honor Pior, who was active in athletics and theater. He is survived by his mother and father, Jonathan and Candy Pior; siblings, Elizabeth, Nico- las, Victoria, Alexandria and Josiah; and grandparents, Weldon and Dorothy Pior. Pior participated in wrestling, football and soccer, as well as the high school’s choir department. He was well-known in local acting circles, most recently playing Tevye in the high school’s production of “Fiddler on the Roof.” He also acted with the Penin- sula Association of Performing Artists. Matthew Kelley, a representative for the family, told KATU the family is heartbro- ken but heartened by the community sup- port. No one in the family thought the ill- ness would turn deadly, he said. “We’d been talking the night before about making plans to go to the movies the next day or two when he was feeling bet- ter,” Kelley told KATU. The family will hold a public service for Pior at 3 p.m. Sunday in the Warrenton High School gymnasium. The family has created a GoFundMe page in Pior’s honor. Donations will go toward Pior’s passions, including high school athletics, the choir and local arts groups. For more information, visit tinyurl. com/timpior Ban also under discussion in Gearhart By R.J. MARX The Daily Astorian Katie Frankowicz/The Daily Astorian Lindsay Aylesworth, ecological research project leader for the state’s marine reserves program, prepares video equipment during a tour last spring at Cape Falcon. CAPE FALCON MARINE RESERVE A Nature Matters lecture on marine reserves is scheduled for Thursday at Fort George Brewery’s Lovell Showroom. Doors open at 6 p.m. the plan will help attract outside research interests and resources for work the state does not have the capacity to do. “Frankly what we want is for (the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife) to have more capacity because all the things they are doing are great, but they have very limited funding and staffing for all of these big things,” said Nadia Gardner, a local volunteer with the Friends of Cape Falcon Marine Reserve. It’s one reason why the group exists, she said. The group coordinates vol- unteer efforts like annual sea- bird surveys with the Audubon Society of Portland. Last year, the group led a small boat tour to give people a chance to see the reserve from the water. See Reserve, Page A3 SEASIDE — Seaside Brewing Co. owner Jimmy Griffin has already made the switch. He’s now one of the restau- rants on the North Coast to voluntarily use paper straws and biodegradable to-go containers. Griffin was among more than two dozen supporters of a single-use plas- tic bag ban in Seaside. At Monday’s City Council meeting, he was joined by advo- cates from Seaside and around Clatsop County, who described a threat to ocean wildlife and habitat. Marc Ward, the co-founder of Sea Tur- tles Forever, a nonprofit which conducts monitoring of endangered sea turtles and researches the effects of marine debris in the Pacific Ocean, said the situation is dire. “Our culture is changing slowly,” Ward said. “The slight inconvenience somebody might have by having to bring their own bag is outweighed by the dire situation on a global level.” See Ban, Page A5 Cannabis cafes could be coming A bill is being debated in Salem By KRISTIAN FODEN-VENCIL Oregon Public Broadcasting Jeremy Robbins broke his neck in a bicycle acci- dent 20 years ago. He’s in a wheelchair and has been prescribed cannabis for chronic pain and spasms. The trouble is, he lives in public housing, which means he’s not allowed to smoke his medicine at home. “I just don’t under- stand how come there isn’t a space provided where me and a lot of other folks like me can go, and we can imbibe in this medicine and also have a community where we can support each other,” Robbins said. He told a public hear- ing in Salem that the state is being inconsistent — allow- ing bars all over the place, but not cannabis cafes. Oregon cannabis busi- nesses are trying to normal- ize the use of their prod- uct with Senate Bill 639 in Salem this session. The initial effort would have allowed customers to consume cannabis at cafes, including by smoking it, but that is already changing. The push to allow canna- bis consumption has come from marijuana patients, like Robbins, as well as businesses interested in fill- ing a niche. Buying cannabis has been legal in Oregon for years now. But unless a consumer owns their own home, there’s hardly any- where legal to smoke it. Not in a park, not on a public street and not in most rental housing. Sara Kemple man- ages The Dispensary on 52nd, a cannabis shop in See Cannabis cafes, Page A5 Kristian Foden-Vencil/Oregon Public Broadcasting Sara Kemple manages The Dispensary on 52nd, a cannabis shop in southeast Portland. She says tourists come to Oregon to try marijuana and leave sadly disappointed because there’s hardly anywhere they can legally smoke.