Happy Independence Day! Fido’s Day at Fort Clatsop 147TH YEAR, NO. 2 DailyAstorian.com // THURSDAY, JULY 4, 2019 $1.50 City drops plans to sell Mill Pond property Neighbors want to protect unobstructed views By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Astorian Astoria leaders are abandoning efforts to sell property in Mill Pond Village after neighboring property owners offered to donate money to help the city decommis- sion the lots instead. The city has paid more than $64,000 in homeowners association fees on the 12 overwater lots since the property was donated in 2012 by the creator of Mill Pond Village, Portland developer Art DeMuro. The city had budgeted an addi- tional $13,000 to cover fees this fi scal year. DeMuro hoped the eventual sale of the lots could help fund future city projects, such as the Garden of Surging Waves or the redevelopment of Heritage Square downtown. However, the city has strug- gled to sell the lots, which are smaller than other lots in Mill Pond Village and costly to develop, requiring the construc- tion of two overwater piers before any homes could be built. Since the City Council voted to list the property again last year, the city has not received a single offer. The lots were listed for sale for $90,000. On Monday, the City Council gave City Manager Brett Estes the go-ahead to TIMBER SALE TAPS INTO ANXIETY OVER LOGGING ON THE NORTH COAST Photos by Katie Frankowicz/The Astorian Property owners who live west of U.S. Highway 101 between Arcadia Beach and Hug Point worry that a proposed state timber sale uphill of them could impact their drinking water. A 70-acre state clearcut planned near Arcadia Beach By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Astorian I See Mill Pond, Page A6 Oregon’s unique jury law under scrutiny Supreme Court, voters could end nonunanimous verdicts By DERRICK DePLEDGE The Astorian Dennis Sturgell was convicted of sex- ually abusing a young woman during an alcohol-and-cocaine fueled binge that played out in August 2015 at a Warrenton bar, a fi eld at a wooded property in Naselle, Washington, and an Asto- ria hotel room. The Hammond fi sh- erman was sentenced in January to more than 13 years in prison for sod- Dennis omy, unlawful sexual Sturgell penetration, sex abuse and bribing and tamper- ing with a witness. While the jury was unanimous on bribery and tampering, the verdicts on the sex crimes were split, most at 11-1, with one of the sodomy counts at 10-2. Had Sturgell’s trial been held across the Columbia River in Washington state, instead of Astoria, it could have ended in a hung jury on the sex crimes. See Jury law, Page A6 A mix of Clatsop County and Tillamook County residents rallied at Hug Point State Recreation Site outside Cannon Beach on Tuesday over concerns about a proposed state timber sale they believe could impact water quality, endangered birds, old growth and the scenic corridor off U.S. Highway 101. t could be several years before trees are cut on state land off U.S. High- way 101 between Arcadia Beach and Hug Point, but a proposed timber sale has already tapped into broader concerns about water quality, habitat conservation and tourism on the coast. The Norriston Heights timber sale would result in a modifi ed clearcut of more than 70 acres on the east side of the h ighway . The state expects to net just under $1 million — $938,550 — for the sale. Two-thirds of the revenue will go to rural fi re protection in Cannon Beach, public transit through Seaside and the Seaside School District, according to Jason Cox, a spokesman for the Ore- gon Department of Forestry. See Timber sale, Page A6 ‘PRETTY MUCH ANYBODY WHO HAS A HOUSE BETWEEN ARCADIA BEACH AND HUG POINT IS GOING TO BE AFFECTED BY THIS. THEY’RE CUTTING RIGHT UP TO OUR WATER SOURCE.’ Kristin Covert | an Astoria resident who owns property in the Arcadia Beach neighborhood with her husband Fishhawk Lake neighbors miffed by more dam fees Improved spillway could be costly By EDWARD STRATTON The Astorian BIRKENFELD — The dam holding back Fishhawk Lake, a 100-acre man-made reservoir on Fishhawk Creek surrounded by a private community, needs an improved spillway. But some residents in the community north of Birken- feld are up in arms about the price tag, estimated at $1.3 mil- lion to nearly $2 million, and the way improvements have been pushed through their homeown- ers association. Developers in the 1960s built Edward Stratton/The Astorian A major storm in 2007 nearly overtopped Fishhawk Lake and damaged a dam feeding into Fishhawk Creek. an earthen dam nearly 40 feet tall and 400 feet wide to create Fishhawk Lake as a bucolic fi sh- ing retreat and community that has since grown to around 260 property owners. The Fishhawk Lake Reserve and Community processes its own water and sewer and main- tains the dam. During heavy storms in 2007, fl oodwaters damaged homes and came within a few inches of overtop- ping the lake. “If Fishhawk dam were to fail, it would likely cause sig- nifi cant property damage,” said Racquel Rancier, a senior policy coordinator for the state Water Resources Department. The department notifi ed the reserve of the need to hire an engineer, complete an analysis and increase the spillway capac- ity, Rancier said. Engineers rec- ommended an auxiliary spill- way around the existing dam to empty extra water during fl oods. 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