DailyAstorian.com // TUESDAY, MARCH 17, 2020 147TH YEAR, NO. 112 $1.50 CORONAVIRUS County declares emergency Crab festival off, museums close By NICOLE BALES The Astorian Clatsop County declared an emergency over the coronavirus as the threat of an outbreak disrupted life on the North Coast. The declaration, through May 1, enables the county to take emer- gency actions and helps qualify for state and federal aid to combat the spread of COVID-19. Emergency actions could involve curfews, limits on public gatherings, mutual CORONAVIRUS UPDATES Clatsop County Emergency Management will be sending updates about the outbreak via Clatsop Alerts. People can text “CLATSOPCOVID” to 888777 to receive updates. aid agreements and redirection of county funds. County Manager Don Bohn said “there’s a lot of coordinated muscle movement with this whole endeavor,” and that the county is taking direction from the Oregon Health Authority and the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “We’re not only dealing with the broader public issues, we’re also dealing with how we want to conduct county business during this interim period,” Bohn said at a special session of the county Board of Commissioners on Mon- day afternoon. Hailey Hoff man/The Astorian See Emergency, Page A6 Lucia Chambers thoroughly wipes down tables and chairs at the Blue Scorcher Bakery & Cafe on Monday morning. Columbia Memorial Hospital concerned by coronavirus rush Fire chief warns of gaps Pagers failed to activate By NICOLE BALES The Astorian Hailey Hoff man/The Astorian Visits have spiked at the Columbia Memorial Hospital emergency room as fear of the coronavirus has grown. Testing remains an issue CORONAVIRUS By EDWARD STRATTON The Astorian S taff at Columbia Memorial Hos- pital have seen a spike of people coming to the emergency room in Astoria and its urgent and primary care clinics with upper respiratory infec- tions, as the fear of coronavirus grows . Clatsop County had not reported any cases of COVID-19 by Monday after- noon, but public health offi cials and hospital administrators are preparing for a potential outbreak. With a tenuous supply of corona- virus tests and hospitals around the U.S. and the world increasingly over- whelmed, local doctors are trying to prevent a similar run on their limited resources. “Of course, we are concerned about being overwhelmed,” Dr. Kevin Bax- ter, the chief medical offi cer at Colum- bia Memorial, said in a statement from the hospital. “But we are calm and pre- pared. That is why we are asking people to self-quarantine and follow the direc- tions put forth by the” federal Centers For information on the coronavirus, call 211 or visit cdc.gov/coronavirus. If you are having a medical emer- gency, call 911. Dr. Kevin Baxter Judy Geiger for Disease Control and Prevention. The CDC advises people who think they have been exposed to COVID-19 to call a health care provider for med- ical advice, rather than showing up unannounced and potentially infecting others. Symptoms of coronavirus include fever, cough and shortness of breath. Emergency warning signs include shortness of breath, persistent pressure or pain in the chest and blueish lips or face. The hospital, required by law to assess the health of every person com- ing into the emergency room, has been examining and sending home patients to recuperate . “This is no different from any other fl u season in that if you are not feeling well, you should stay away from oth- ers,” Baxter said. As of Monday afternoon, Colum- bia Memorial had only tested 10 peo- ple for COVID-19 . On Friday, the hos- pital only had about 350 testing kits in reserve, with no guarantee of how quickly they’ll be replenished if used, CEO Erik Thorsen said. “We are still maintaining that for a commercial lab test like that, that there will still be screening criteria,” he said. “We’re going to focus on the moder- ate to high-risk patients until the tests become more available to us.” “All we have heard is … whoever makes the kits is ramping up produc- tion. But there has not been a defi nitive ETA on the ‘when’ for those kits.” CANNON BEACH — At least six pag- ers for Cannon Beach fi refi ghter s , includ- ing the fi re chief’s pager, did not activate for a three-alarm fi re in Seaside in Febru- ary because of poor reception. Now, Marc Reck- mann, the fi re chief, sets his pager up in a window- sill where he knows he will get reception. Other fi refi ghters do the same in their homes. Reckmann said pag- Marc ers don’t always go off in Reckmann the fi re district’s building, either. When they do, it can be diffi cult to understand, so they wait for a text from dispatch. The Seaside dispatch center, which han- dles emergency calls for agencies in Sea- side, Cannon Beach, Gearhart and Ham- let, said the text system was created as a backup for when pagers don’t activate. Reckmann, however, said a text does not always wake fi refi ghters up in the mid- dle of the night when there is a call like a pager does. “This system is broken,” Reckmann said. “This is now a public safety issue and a fi refi ghter safety issue that our pagers are not going off … Somebody’s going to die because our pagers don’t go off.” See Hospital, Page A6 See Fire chief, Page A2 Heated yoga rises to the top New studio at fi refi ghter museum By EDWARD STRATTON The Astorian T he red brick Fire Station No. 2 building at the corner of 30th Street and Marine Drive has had many different lives, from beer storage and condensed milk pro- duction to an active fi re station and a fi refi ghter’s museum. Now a hot yoga studio has taken up residence in the top fl oor. Djordje and Trudy Citovic, along with Jamie Savva, are the partners behind Fire Station Yoga, a new purveyor in the growing trend of heated yoga classes. After relocating to Astoria, Djordje Citovic said, he grew tired of traveling to the Portland area to take hot yoga classes. The region’s other hot yoga studio on Main Ave- nue in Warrenton closed several years ago. He acquired an infl atable dome from the United Kingdom — inside which yogis can hold heated classes — but needed a place to put it. Fire Station Yoga See Heated yoga, Page A2 Fire Station Yoga’s classes happen inside a heated, infl atable dome.