WEEK 7 OF HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL • SPORTS EXTRA • INSIDE 147TH YEAR, NO. 48 WEEKEND EDITION // SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2019 $1.50 Warrenton fi re chief resigns amid probe Demers served since 2013 By EDWARD STRATTON The Astorian Warrenton Fire Chief Tim Demers has resigned as the city faces a state investi- gation over unsafe fi refi ghting practices . Demers, who led the Warrenton Fire Department since 2013, submitted a let- ter in September announcing his resigna- tion effective Tuesday. Demers’ resigna- tion was not specifi cally related to the state inves- tigation, said City Man- ager Linda Engbretson, who described it as a retirement. Demers could not immediately be reached Tim Demers for comment. The state Occupa- tional Safety and Health Administra- tion received an anonymous complaint about safety issues in the Warrenton Fire Department and opened an investigation in August , said Aaron Corvin, an agency spokesman. The complaint alleges the fi re depart- ment did not hold required safety meet- ings, maintain safety information or require proper training and equipment for fi refi ghters. “Firefi ghters are exposed to respi- ratory hazards because the fi re chief requires fi refi ghters to enter burning structures without the proper” protective equipment, one of the allegations stated. The complaint further alleges that Demers stored expired and turned-in pre- scription drugs in his offi ce without lock- ing up or otherwise controlling them. Demers , who had more than three decades of experience in fi refi ghting, had applied last year to be fi re chief in Aurora, according to the Canby Herald. “I can’t tell you what Tim’s issues are,” Engbretson said. “There was a com- plaint fi led with OSHA regarding some OSHA concerns, and we completed that process with the investigator.” Engbretson declined to comment fur- ther until the city receives the fi ndings of the investigation, which she expects by the middle of November . Photos by Hailey Hoff man/The Astorian Proposed codes for the Urban Core would restrict further development over the river. River views, property rights compete in Urban Core Last section of Riverfront Vision Plan By EDWARD STRATTON The Astorian storia had nearly fi nished draft- ing code amendments for the Urban Core, the fi nal section of the Riverfront Vision Plan guid- ing development along the Columbia River. But a heated debate over a pro- posed Fairfi eld Inn & Suites caused many to rethink development standards along the waterfront and put the down- town changes on ice. Now the city, mostly fi nished with other portions of Riverfront Vision Plan, is brushing off guidelines for the Urban Core that try to strike a balance A Steve Fick owns Fishhawk Fisheries and a historic building at the end of Fourth Street. He said his freedom to develop will be restricted under the proposed codes for Urban Core. See Urban Core, Page A8 See Fire chief, Page A8 Hospital, nurses reach new contract Peter Pan owners fi nd a buyer Sale could close in November By EDWARD STRATTON The Astorian A federal mediator brokered deal And her recipient was not the only person who benefi ted from the donation. Mitchell was part of a paired exchange that allows people to swap kidneys among pairs of people who want to donate but are incompatible with the person they want to help. In this case, fi ve people, who she will likely never meet, were matched to donors. The donations went to people across the U.S. Two of the kidneys went to people on the East Coast, along with one to the M id- west, Texas and the Pacifi c Northwest, said David Nelson, the l iving d onor c oordinator for Legacy Transplant Services. Pat and Jim Radich, the owners of Peter Pan Market, have found a buyer. Pat Radich said the prospective buyer is planning to keep the Peter Pan name and acquiring all the existing equipment. The couple have been liquidating grocer- ies at the store and plan a future sale of memorabilia. “We are expecting no problems with the deal, but we haven’t closed yet,” she said. The Radiches did not confi rm the iden- tity of the buyer. The Astorian reached out separately to the buyer, who declined to comment until the deal closes Nov. 30. The Radiches, both 71, recently announced they would retire, close and sell the venerated hilltop deli and grocery store on Niagara Avenue, citing medical issues and the inability to fi nd others to help run the business . They purchased the store in 1981 from BernaDean and Gary Lenhard, who relocated to Bend. Pat Radich ran the operation, adding a popular deli and catering service. She was joined by her husband after his retirement from the Georgia-Pacifi c Wauna Mill a decade ago. See Mitchell, Page A8 See Peter Pan Market, Page A8 By EDWARD STRATTON The Astorian Nicole Bales/The Astorian Nurses and administrators at Colum- bia Memorial Hospital have tentatively agreed to a new three-year contract , end- ing a monthslong labor dispute. Hospital a dministrators and the Ore- gon Nurses Association, a union repre- senting more than 130 nurses at the Asto- ria hospital, began negotiating seven months ago to replace a three-year con- tract that expired in May. The two sides struggled to reach an agreement, with signifi cant disputes over pay, benefi ts, staffi ng and the docking of hours based on low patient counts. Nurses held pickets, marches and other public events, claiming the hospi- tal is stockpiling profi ts for a new cam- pus amid dangerously low staffi ng See Nurses, Page A8 State Rep. Tiffi ny Mitchell and David Nelson, the living donor coordinator for Legacy Transplant Services. ‘It’s an incredible feeling’ Rep. Mitchell donates a kidney By NICOLE BALES The Astorian PORTLAND — State Rep. Tiffi ny Mitch- ell hopes the small risk she took donating a kidney will pay off in dividends for some- one else. “It’s an incredible feeling to know that I saved another human being’s life even though I may never know them,” she said at a press conference Friday at Legacy Good Samaritan Medical Center. Mitchell went into surgery Wednesday to remove a kidney that was fl own across the country to the East Coast for a transplant .