COAST WEEKEND: ASTORIA PRIDE 2019 DailyAstorian.com // THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 2019 146TH YEAR, NO. 233 $1.50 Port Commission pursues staff survey Scrutiny after criticism of executive director By EDWARD STRATTON The Astorian A divided Port of Astoria Com- mission voted Tuesday to anony- mously survey employees about their experiences , escalating t he Port needs to fi x house Consultant previews fresh strategic plan By EDWARD STRATTON The Astorian The consultant hired to create the Port of Astoria’s strategic plan told the Port Commission the agency needs to get on stable fi nan- cial footing and address fail- ing infrastructure over the next two to four years before focusing on broader eco- nomic development goals. Mary McArthur, the executive director of the Columbia-Pacifi c Economic Development District, began work about three years ago on the business plan. She unveiled her fi nal draft Tuesday to the Port Com- mission and a room packed with interested locals . The draft will make the rounds of local governments. The business plan, an update of an outline from 2010, lays out the Port’s eco- nomic development focus. scrutiny of Jim Knight, the missioner Robert Stevens Port’s executive director . and Commissioner James Commissioner Dirk Campbell opposed the Rohne brought the motion motion. to have a consultant sur- Rohne called for an vey staff, which was investigation and staff sur- approved by a 3-2 vote. vey after Matt McGrath, Jim Knight Frank Spence, the com- the Port’s former director mission’s president, and of operations , submitted Commissioner Bill Hunsinger a letter and observations describ- voted with Rohne, while Com- ing Knight as dishonest, incom- petent and incapable of running the agency. A n ad-hoc fi nance committee also recently recom- mended an anonymous feedback loop for staff, including an annual survey. Knight questioned the process for the survey, what questions would be asked of staff and how the results would be reported to the Port Commission. “It’s a little fuzzy as to what’s the purpose of interviewing and asking the employees, my employ- ees, questions about their employ- ment with the Port,” he said. Annual, confi dential surveys are a best management prac- tice used by local governments, Spence said. See Commission, Page A6 MILITARY DOES DRY RUN FOR CASCADIA QUAKE RESPONSE A landing at Sunset Beach By R.J. MARX and EDWARD STRATTON The Astorian ith the 75th anniversary of D-Day on Thursday, the military treated Clatsop County residents to their own landing at Sunset Beach. The Navy sent two hovercraft ashore on Mon- day as part of a dry run to deliver emergency sup- plies after a Cascadia Subduction Zone earthquake and tsunami. The Air Force delivered H umvees to the Astoria Regional Airport aboard two cargo planes. W See Response, Page A6 Photos by Colin Murphey/The Astorian ABOVE: Crew members pilot a landing craft onto Sunset Beach. BELOW: A member of the military talks on a radio as a landing craft arrives on Sunset Beach during the exercise. MORE ONLINE See a video of the hovercraft landing at DailyAstorian.com See Port, Page A6 Astoria to sell more carbon credits New deal with The Climate Trust By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Astorian A plan to sell more car- bon credits from Astoria’s Bear Creek watershed could bring in around $1 million in revenue for the city. On Monday, the City Council unanimously approved an agreement with The Climate Trust, a Port- land-based nonprofi t, to pur- chase carbon credits in 2020. In 2015, Astoria entered into a voluntary carbon pro- gram. The city agreed not to aggressively harvest timber in the 3,700-acre watershed that supplies Astoria’s drink- ing water. In exchange, the city received carbon credits After suicides, some want signs on the Astoria Bridge Two men jumped from the span in May By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Astorian See Carbon, Page A5 Colin Murphey/The Astorian Emergency responders circle underneath the Astoria Bridge after a man jumped in May. After two apparent suicides at the Astoria Bridge in May , emer- gency responders and state offi cials say there is little they can do to dis- suade people from jumping off. But two local pastors believe sui- cide prevention signs could be an important fi rst step. Karen and Fred Humber, co-pas- tors at Peninsula Church of the Naz- arene in Long Beach, Washington, wrote to the Oregon Department of Transportation days after one man jumped off the Astoria Bridge and ahead of a second apparent suicide on Friday . “One death is too many,” they wrote. “A sign posted, especially more than one, can help a person pause long enough to reconsider their actions and prevent death by suicide on the bridge.” The Humbers asked if the state could post signs containing suicide prevention hotline numbers and information at regular intervals in both directions along the entire 4.1- mile span . But the answer was “no.” The Astoria Bridge is closed to pedestrians, so there is the question of who such signs would target, as well as safety concerns, said Lou Torres, a spokesman for the Depart- ment of Transportation. The signs might distract motorists and create unintended hazards, and he is not See Bridge, Page A5