A2 THE ASTORIAN • SATURDAY, JULY 27, 2019 Warrenton, Shilo Inn look to settle tax dispute IN BRIEF An agreement for $94,000 By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Astorian Warrenton Police Department Vandals spray-painted graffi ti at Warrenton City Park. Vandals leave graffi ti in Warrenton Warrenton is offering a $500 reward for information about graffi ti spray-painted at Warrenton City Park and a kayak dock on the Skipanon River. The graffi ti was found on Monday morning on a dug- out and on a large Conex box used for storage. There was also graffi ti on the pedestrian ramp leading to the SE Sec- ond Street kayak dock. People with information can contact the Warrenton Police Department at 503-325-8661 or use the online tip line at https://www.ci.warrenton.or.us/police/webform/ criminal-tips Construction to delay traffi c on John Day River Road Drivers should expect lengthy delays at John Day River Road due to construction. A culvert replacement and embankment repair at mile- post 1.4 on John Day River Road is scheduled for Mon- day through Friday. The site will be controlled by fl aggers during the day, then restricted to one lane at night. — The Astorian Ilwaco water plant in need of renovations ILWACO, Wash. — Ilwaco’s water treatment plant is in need of a makeover. At a meeting on Monday, the City Council approved a plan to rehabilitate the plant’s structure. The building is falling apart, according to city water supervisor Rick Gray. The plan calls for a $6,630 payment from the city to Gray & Osborne, the city’s engineer. Money will come from the city’s funds for water and general professional services. Gray & Osborne will study the building and provide recommendations on how and what to rehabilitate. The building, which is near the Indian Creek Reser- voir, was built more than 30 years ago. The damage is attributed to drainage issues resulting in runoff, which in turn entered the building. The water corroded some of the building’s steel columns. Gray said he noticed the structure’s damage when he was replacing light bulbs and his ladder kept sliding down. “I already have an idea how to fi x it but it’s a public building and it needs an engineer’s write-up,” Gray said. Mayor Gary Forner said the city is lucky the damage was found before a big snowfall. Gray agreed, saying the building would have “buckled.” The pair agreed the city needs to move forward on making improvements to the plant before winter. “We’ve got to get on this before winter,” Forner said. “I don’t want to lose our water plant.” — Chinook Observer CORRECTION Art misidentifi ed — “Asian Bird” by Gloria Mar- tin, which won the 2018 Mayor’s Award, was featured on page 2 of Thursday’s Coast Weekend. The work was misidentifi ed as 2018’s Best in Show by artist Kathy Samsel. ON THE RECORD Assault • Tybre Jakobe Snell, 21, of Astoria, was arrested Wednesday on S. Main Avenue in War- renton for assault in the fourth degree, violation of a release agreement and tampering with a witness. DUII • Steven Craig Jensen, 41, of Marble Falls, Texas, was arrested Wednes- day for driving under the infl uence of intoxicants and hit and run. Police say Jensen hit another vehicle from the rear on Ensign Lane in front of Astoria Ford in Warrenton. His blood alcohol content was 0.32%. Hit and run • Daniel John Arnoth, 74, of Warrenton, was cited Thursday for hit and run and driving while uninsured. Police said the hit and run occurred at the Warrenton Community Center. Police cited him at his residence. PUBLIC MEETINGS MONDAY Seaside City Council/Planning Commission, 6 p.m., work session, City Hall, 989 Broadway. Warrenton is nearing a settlement with Shilo Inn over thousands of dollars of unpaid lodging taxes. The City Commission discussed a settlement of about $94,000 at a meet- ing Tuesday night, accord- ing to City Manager Linda Engbretson. In a lawsuit fi led against Shilo Inn earlier this year, the city alleged the hotel owes more than $130,000 in unpaid lodging taxes, accumulated fi nes and inter- est. The hotel has not paid what it owes the city since July 2018, according to the complaint. Details of a potential settlement were discussed Tuesday in executive ses- sion, which is closed to the public. B ut commissioners reconvened in open session to authorize Mayor Henry Balensifer to sign a set- tlement agreement once it comes back from Shilo Inn. Engbretson expects the settlement to be fi nalized (USPS 035-000) Published Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday by EO Media Group, 949 Exchange St., PO Box 210, Astoria, OR 97103 Telephone 503-325-3211, 800-781-3211 or Fax 503-325-6573. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Astorian, PO Box 210, Astoria, OR 97103-0210 DailyAstorian.com Circulation phone number: 503-325-3211 Periodicals postage paid at Astoria, OR ADVERTISING OWNERSHIP All advertising copy and illustrations prepared by The Astorian become the property of The Astorian and may not be reproduced for any use without explicit prior approval. COPYRIGHT © Entire contents © Copyright, 2019 by The Astorian. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS MEMBER CERTIFIED AUDIT OF CIRCULATIONS, INC. Printed on recycled paper Subscription rates Eff ective May 1, 2019 MAIL (IN COUNTY) EZpay (per month) ...............................................................................................................$11.25 13 weeks in advance ...........................................................................................................$37.00 26 weeks in advance ...........................................................................................................$71.00 52 weeks in advance ........................................................................................................ $135.00 By EDWARD STRATTON The Astorian When a reporting job opened at The Astorian, Nicole Bales saw an oppor- tunity to get back to one of her passions. Bales formerly sup- ported fundraising efforts and communications for Columbia Memorial Hos- pital Foundation before making the transition back into journalism, reporting on Clatsop County g overn- ment, crime and courts. “There’s so much hap- pening locally,” Bales said. “I feel like the county is a bridge between our local politics and state politics. There’s a lot of very inter- esting stories to tell.” Bales, 24, said cates after their kids she is especially overdosed. interested in cover- “What that ing the intersection showed me was of state and local that I really enjoyed politics and differ- immersing myself ent cultures. She in these different recently reported Nicole Bales worlds,” she said. on #TimberUnity, a Bales moved to movement formed to advo- Eugene after high school cate for forestry in response to attend the University of to cap-and-trade legislation Oregon, where she majored in Salem. in journalism, history Originally from Sacra- and political science. She mento, Bales started out at worked for student publi- her high school newspaper, cations, interned for KAST the Granite Bay Gazette. In and produced podcasts one of her bigger articles, about intercultural dia- she reported on the local logue and confl ict-sensitive impact of the rising cri- reporting for the UNESCO sis in opioid abuse among Crossings Institute. athletes and other youth, After graduation, she interviewing family and took a job with the hospi- friends who became advo- tal’s foundation as a way Intern pursues stories in Astoria free lanced for Port- land-based Pamplin Media and has also interned for Blue Chalk Media as a Journalism was not at researcher and writer. the top of Lucy Klein- But, for her, the more er’s list of possible careers formative experiences when she was younger and have come from working thinking about her future. on larger projects or by The future, as far as she happenstance. was concerned, contained Two years ago, Kleiner two possible options: She was in Ecuador and would be a photog- became fascinated rapher for National by the stories told Geographic or a by an Amazon belly dancer. tour guide, a native But as a student woman named at the University of Lupe Tangoy Oregon, she began Yumbo. Kleiner to consider journal- was able to bridge ism as a possibility. Lucy Kleiner a language gap by “I saw how communicating journalism kind of com- with Lupe in Spanish and bined everything I loved,” wrote a feature about her she said of talking to peo- life. ple, getting out into the real Then Kleiner spent the world, telling stories that last year working on a matter. It seemed like a nat- group project with a for- ural outlet to talk about the mer National Geographic people and places she was editor that dove deep into learning about in her inter- climate change in the Wil- national studies classes. lamette Valley. Kleiner, 21, who grew “That introduced me to up in Beavercreek outside the scientifi c value of jour- of Oregon City and grad- nalism,” she said. She was uated this year , is working given the task of telling this summer as a reporter the story about how peo- for The Astorian by way ple who live in Eugene get of the Snowden internship their water. program offered through “It was so eye-open- the University of Oregon. ing to me to realize I didn’t Kleiner has already know where my water worked on campus publi- came from,” she said. What cations like Ethos, a stu- she produced could help dent-run arts and culture people better understand magazine. Last year, she delicate and complex sys- helped start and edit Stu- tems, introducing them to dent Travel Magazine scientifi c papers and infor- about how to travel afford- mation that may not be eas- ably as a student. She has ily accessible otherwise. been the co-editor of OR “It felt so valuable and Magazine, a journalism was so much fun,” Kleiner school publication. said. “I got addicted to that Last summer, Kleiner feeling.” By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Astorian EMERALD HEIGHTS APARTMENTS to immerse herself in the community. She didn’t ini- tially see herself staying in a small town, but said the community and lifestyle grew on her to the point where she doesn’t yearn as much for big-city life. Since moving to the North Coast in 2017, she has volunteered with the local downtown associa- tion, chamber of commerce and the Assistance League of the Columbia Pacifi c. “There’s just a lot hap- pening,” Bales said. “You can really see your impact a little bit more in small com- munities. I think younger people are moving to smaller towns at a larger rate, because they feel like they can see their impact.” New photographer ready to go pro “They were losing money, and there were a lot of issues with management A week and a half before that led to the closure,” she graduating from Western said. “Two weeks before Washington University in Christmas, they told 100 Bellingham in June , Hailey elderly folk that they had Hoffman saw the ad for the to get out in three months photographer posi- and fi nd new hous- tion at The Astorian. ing, and so that cre- Shortly after fi n- ated a whole bunch of issues.” ishing college, she Hoffman bal- interviewed for and anced the grief and was offered her fi rst stress of the resi- professional photog- dents being affected raphy job. Hailey by the closure with Originally from Hoff man pressure from the Las Vegas, Hoffman, building’s owners 22, started taking photos for her middle and not to write a negative story. “There seemed to be a high school yearbooks. “I would take lots of disconnect between them sports photos,” she said. and the owners,” Hoffman “I was down on the foot- said. “So I had these two ball fi eld in high school on sides coming at me with the sidelines, and I really very different stories.” Hoffman said she fell in enjoyed that. I was always the kid with the camera on love with local newspapers while interning as a photog- campus running around.” Hoffman earned dual rapher at the Skagit Valley degrees in visual journal- Herald north of Seattle. She ism and Spanish at West- covered everything from ern Washington, where sports to a cultural exchange she worked for every stu- between the Samish Indian dent publication . She put Nation and the Nenets, an her Spanish skills to work indigenous group in Russia. Around the time of her with the student-run The Planet Magazine, covering graduation, Hoffman was the death of a diabetic farm applying for positions in worker during wildfi re sea- digital media with a focus on photography. B ut she son in 2017. Her proudest and most said she was amazed by the diffi cult assignment came North Coast while driving during two months of across the Astoria Bridge reporting for the student-run and over the Columbia River Klipsun Magazine on the from Washington state. “It’s such a beautiful closure of a retirement vil- lage inside a historic down- place, and to be paid to live town hotel building that has here and take photos, that since been turned into mar- was just an opportunity I couldn’t pass up,” she said. ket-rate apartments. By EDWARD STRATTON The Astorian facebook.com/dailyastorian Call for Details: Adopt a Pet 1/2 off Rent on your first month! Boo SOME NEWLY REMODELED NEW APPLIANCES, NEW LIGHTS NEW CARPET/VINYL FLOOR NEW BATHROOM VANITIES & MIRRORS 2/3 BEDROOM APARTMENTS 5 year old Lab/Aussie Blend All Rents Include: Electricity · Garbage · Water Put the world on Hold; go adventuring with a stalward friend. for more information call 503-325-8221 Monday - Friday 9-5 • NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY AN AFFORDABLE PLACE TO CALL HOME Out of County Rates available at 800-781-3214 DIGITAL EZpay (per month) .................................................................................................................$8.00 by the city to pay what was owed. While Warrenton appre- ciates the extra money from late fees and fi nes Shilo Inn has paid over the years, “that’s not really what we want,” Engbretson said. “We want them to make their payments.” Warrenton is not the only city where Shilo Inn owes money . Portland fi led a law- suit against the company in February seeking $314,000 in unpaid taxes. Seaside, which had fi led against the company in 2016, again sued the hotel chain for back taxes in June. New crime, county reporter immerses herself in community Astoria, OR Established July 1, 1873 early next week. The settle- ment comes with require- ments for Shilo Inn to continue to operate in War- renton. Engbretson could not yet discuss the require- ments in detail . “There are some require- ments that if they don’t stay current then … we’ll be back where we started from and looking for the full amount (they owe),” she said. Shilo Inn has a history of late payments in Warrenton, according to the complaint the city fi led in March. 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