Garlic fries, fudge, bird houses & art COAST WEEKEND • INSIDE DailyAstorian.com // THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 2019 146TH YEAR, NO. 236 $1.50 Port Commission moves toward fi ring Knight Majority sours on director By EDWARD STRATTON The Astorian The Port of Astoria Commission could fi re Jim Knight, the agency’s embattled executive director, after a majority lost confi dence in his leadership. After a private executive session Tues- day afternoon, each commissioner pub- licly shared their opinion of Knight in front of a packed room. Frank Spence, the com- mission’s president, and Commissioner Bill Hunsinger and Commissioner Dirk of Astoria,” Rohne said. “While Jim Rohne voiced support for removing Knight may not have caused all the Knight. Port’s problems, he is certainly not Commissioner Robert Stevens the Port director who can move it called the move rushed and possibly forward.” corrupt, while Commissioner James Knight hired Kyle Busse, an Campbell said the public had only employment attorney, who advised Jim Knight heard one side of the story about the Port attorney Eileen Eakins over the director’s performance. phone that he and Knight would pre- “From the local fi nancial advisory com- fer to not respond off the cuff at the meeting. mittee to the outside consultant who pre- Knight, who could not be reached for com- pared the Port of Astoria’s strategic plan, we ment, will likely respond at the Port Commis- have an abundance of evidence of the fail- sion’s next regular meeting on June 18 . ures of Jim Knight to effectively lead the Port The special session follows a 3-2 vote Closing gaps on Oregon Coast Trail earlier this month to anonymously survey employees about their experience at the Port. Rohne called for the survey based on the rec- ommendation from an ad-hoc committee of fi nancial and economic development profes- sionals, he said. The call for a survey also came shortly after the release of comments by Matt McGrath, the Port’s former director of opera- tions who resigned in April, detailing Knight as incompetent, dishonest and incapable of running the agency. See Port, Page A6 Seaside takes lead in plastic bag ban First city in the county to take action By R.J. MARX The Astorian Better connections for area hikers By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Astorian W ork is underway on the North Coast to close two gaps on the Oregon Coast Trail. The gaps — where a landslide at Ecola State Park near Cannon Beach cut a trail in half and a spot outside Oswald West State Park near Manza- nita where hikers must walk the high- way between segments — have taken years to address. They are two of the fi rst signifi cant breaks hikers com- ing from the north encounter on the nearly 400-mile t rail. State trail planners estimate over 20 gaps exist on the route, rang- ing from natural hazards like bay and river crossings to interruptions caused by private lands and public Photos by Katie Frankowicz/The Astorian ABOVE: A state Department of Corrections crew works to clear brush along a new trail route at Ecola State Park, where a landslide cut off access. BELOW: A new trail in the works across private land will connect the south Neahkahnie Trailhead to Manzanita, closing a gap on the Oregon Coast Trail. gaps opening and closing,” said Robin Wilcox, senior park and trails planner for the Oregon Parks and Recreation Department. In 2017, state legislators directed the department to close previously identifi ed gaps on the trail. Last year, Gov. Kate Brown prioritized the development of an action plan to address safety and connectivity issues and suggest fi xes to the gaps. Across the route, fi xes are under- way and trail maintenance will occur along certain sections this summer. A big step roads. Some are more recent develop- ments, like the landslide at Ecola. “The coast is a really dynamic environment and there’s always new The work that will close a gap between the popular south Neah- kahnie trailhead down to Manzanita and the next section of the Oregon Coast Trail is a big step for the local community. Hikers have had to bridge this break by walking U.S. Highway 101’s narrow and sometimes almost nonexistent shoulder. See Trail, Page A5 SEASIDE — The City Council took the fi rst step Monday night to a single-use plastic bag ban . Residents from throughout the region — from Long Beach, Washington, to Arch Cape — came to support a ban. And by night’s end, the crowd, including three fi fth-graders from John MORE Meyer’s Heights Ele- INSIDE mentary School class, Single-use erupted in applause bag ban after a unanimous vote . passes in The new o rdinance Salem would prohibit plastic carry-out bags, simi- Page A2 lar to state legislation approved in Salem on Tuesday. Retailers may charge customers a rea- sonable pass-through cost — no less than 10 cents a bag — for a recyclable paper bag or reusable bag . The penalty for vio- lating the ordinance would be a fi ne of up to $100 . Fifth-graders Mariliz Leon-Mejia, Madeleine Menke and Theia McCarthy recommended that consumers embrace reusable bags . “Plastic bags are not very good for the environment,” the students said. “And neither are straws. We need to take a break from plastic bags. And that break starts now. ... If we stop using plastic bags, we will make the environment bet- ter for all of us.” See Ban, Page A6 Cap-and-trade bill clears hurdle Johnson removed for committee vote Recovery allies speak the language of addiction Mentors do outreach By DERRICK DePLEDGE The Astorian Trista Boudon will mark three years sober on June 19. For recovering alcoholics and drug addicts, sobriety dates carry weight, like a birthday or a wedding anniversary. But Boudon does not carry hers alone. The 30-year-old mother of two uses the tools she learned to stay sober to help others as a recovery ally, an outreach program at Clatsop Behavioral Healthcare. Boudon and Rose Ander- son, 44, a recovering alcoholic, reach out to people whose drink- ing and drug abuse has left them homeless, in and out of hospital emergency rooms or locked up in the county jail. “We don’t give up. If you’re still breathing, there is an oppor- tunity there to do something dif- ferent,” Boudon said. “I love the phrase, ‘Are you tired?’ “Are you tired? Because, you know, there is a different way to do this.” They help people make the diffi cult call to a detox cen- ter. They might go with them to their fi rst Alcoholics Anon- ymous meeting. They fi nd safe See Mentors, Page A5 Colin Murphey/The Astorian Trista Boudon, left, and Rose Anderson are recovery allies for Clatsop Behavioral Healthcare. Among their stops is the lunch for the homeless at Peoples Park by Filling Empty Bellies. By AUBREY WIEBER Oregon Capital Bureau SALEM — Democrats appear to have the support to move forward on a mas- sive environmental plan to price carbon after a week of turmoil and uncertainty. House Bill 2020, which would imple- ment a cap-and-trade program, passed out of the Joint Committee on Ways and Means on Wednesday. It now goes to the House fl oor for a vote scheduled for Monday. It’s the most signifi cant piece of legislation still in the works with the session ending in two weeks. The legislation — and the 116th amendment proposed on it — passed out of committee on a 13-8 party-line vote. State Senate President Peter Court- ney temporarily sat in on the commit- tee for Sen. Betsy Johnson, D-Scap- poose, the committee’s co-chair, who has been a vocal opponent of the bill and has warned it would destroy the state’s economy. See Cap and trade, Page A3