147TH YEAR, NO. 28 DailyAstorian.com // TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 2019 Water district votes to dissolve $1.50 BACK TO SCHOOL Oversees dam and other property By NICOLE BALES The Astorian The Skipanon Water Control District board has voted to dissolve. For more than a half-century, the water district has had over- sight of three federally financed flood-control structures on the Ski- panon River — the Eighth Street Dam, the Middle Control Structure and the Cullaby Lake Water Con- trol Structure. “The district seeks to cooper- atively and transparently do this process of dissolution,” Tessa Scheller, the board’s chairwoman, told Clatsop County commission- ers on Wednesday night. “We haven’t done it before. We don’t know anybody around who has, but we want to do it coopera- tively and transparently.” The water district — gov- erned by an elected board — is in no hurry and wants to plan for the orderly transition of assets and responsibilities, Scheller said. She told commissioners the dis- trict owes no money and owns no property. The county will likely become responsible for the Cullaby Lake structure, while Warrenton will likely take control of the Eighth Street Dam, Monica Steele, the interim county manager, said. The Middle Control Structure was decommissioned. “(It is) pretty unusual to have the government go away, but we want to do it well, probably because we invested so much in the process. We don’t just want to walk away from it, which we obviously could by just simply resigning,” Scheller said in an interview. “We really do wish the county and city of Warrenton well in man- aging these two last dams,” she said. “I hope very much the Eighth Street Dam will go away and be turned into a bridge like planned, and I think the county will be just fine operating the little Cullaby dam.” Edward Stratton/The Astorian Warrenton-Hammond School District used part of its Measure 98 funding on a back-to-school night for incoming ninth graders at Warrenton High School. Schools invest to keep students coming back New money to improve graduation rates By EDWARD STRATTON The Astorian EASIDE — Chelsea Archibald was working as a pastry chef at the Stephanie Inn in Cannon Beach when she saw a listing for a new culi- nary teacher at Seaside High School and decided to take a chance. Now in her second year, Archibald runs four daily classes in one of the high school’s most popular programs. Seaside’s investment in a culinary instructor was part of around $750,000 a year added to the budgets of Clatsop County school districts by Measure 98, a voter-approved initiative to improve graduation rates, add career-technical classes and expand students’ access to college credits. As school districts invest, they are S Chelsea Archibald Chelsea Archibald, top left, was hired as a full-time culinary instructor at Seaside High School using Measure 98 funds meant to support career-technical learning opportunities. also creating school improvement plans to secure even bigger pots of money from the Student Success Act. The new gross receipts tax is projected to add $1 billion a year in funding for K-12 initia- tives statewide. Oregon voters passed Measure 98 in 2016 to help improve the state’s dismal graduation rate of 74%, the third-worst in the U.S. The measure added $170 mil- lion over the past two years earmarked for dropout prevention, career-techni- cal courses and expanded college credit opportunities. The state’s graduation rate increased to 78.7% statewide last year, the fifth year of improvement but still nearly 6% behind the national average. Measure 98 New and improved programs have popped up at school districts around the county — construction in Jewell, See Back to school, Page A6 See Water district, Page A5 Instructor gets keys to auto program Rowing toward history Vocational classes in Warrenton Ditton hopes to row alone across the Pacific Ocean By EDWARD STRATTON The Astorian By LUCY KLEINER The Astorian Last week, a small yel- low boat flanked with color- ful doodles of cartoon sea ani- mals silently moved down the Columbia River. On board was one passenger, Lia Dit- ton, who navigated and rowed the five-day trip from Portland to the Hammond Marina in Warrenton. Next spring, that little boat and navigator will attempt to do something even more impressive: row across the Pacific Ocean. Alone. “I’m on a mission to be the first woman to row the North Lucy Kleiner/The Astorian WARRENTON — For the past nine years at South Medford High School, James Veverka helped develop an auto- motive program that taught students the ropes of working on cars and eventually sent them to work at local auto shops and dealerships. Veverka aims to do the same in his new position as automotive and metal fabrication instructor at Warrenton High School. See Veverka, Page A5 Professional ocean rower Lia Ditton prepares her row boat at the Hammond Marina. Pacific,” Ditton said. “Possi- bly the first person to row land to land.” But first, she has to master the Oregon Coast. Ditton, 39, is professional boat racer, sailor and ocean rower from London. She first sailed across the Atlantic solo at 24 as part of her fine arts degree. In 2010, she rowed across the Atlantic Ocean with a partner in 74 days. “I’d never felt so connected to the ocean,” she said. “I’ve spent a lot of time on it. It’s my life, it’s my career, but for the first time I felt really part of it. “The oars are like these extensions of your arms. You feel the ocean. You suddenly learn that water has different textures, different conditions.” And so she set her sights on solo-rowing across the larg- est and deepest ocean in the world. “Every year, somebody goes out there and fails,” she said of the North Pacific cross- ing. “As a navigator, I started to be really curious about why that might be.” What Ditton found is that the last 50-mile segment before boats reach the West Coast is the hardest of the entire trip. The only two peo- ple, both Frenchmen, who previously rowed across the North Pacific required help from a tow on that final leg. Ditton’s goal is to cross the ocean — 5,500 nautical miles from Japan to San Francisco — without any assistance. See Rower, Page A5 Edward Stratton/The Astorian The Warrenton-Hammond School District used Measure 98 funds to help hire James Veverka and start developing an automotive and metal fabrication program in a new shop going up next to Warrenton High School.