A3 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, MAY 19, 2020 Parks events go virtual amid pandemic Funding future could be bleak By EDWARD STRATTON The Astorian On Sunday morning, around 600 runners would have usually taken off along the Astoria Riverwalk to raise money for the Astoria Parks Foundation. Instead, around 350 have registered to run their own routes, staying socially distanced to help avoid spreading the coronavirus. Astoria’s main parks fundraiser has gone virtual, along with the open house for a new park in Warren- ton, as parks face a funding future made bleaker by the pandemic’s impact on city budgets. Jennifer Benoit, a city staffer in Astoria and the race director for the parks foundation, said registration had already started to taper off when they decided to go virtual. “It’s defi nitely some- thing I cannot stop thinking about, because this is the big fundraiser,” she said . “I fol- low a Facebook group for race directors, and anyone who had anything coming up went virtual. “A lot of participants are from Portland and Seattle,” Benoit said. “We’re ask- ing them to run their nor- mal routes (and) use social distancing.” Astoria is creating a bud- get for the coming fi scal year while not knowing how much revenue the city will have available. At a City Council meeting last month, City Manager Brett Estes warned that it might be some time before the parks depart- ment even gets back up and running because of the lack of lodging taxes and recre- ation fees. “Our parks staff is looking at innovative ways to be able to open some parks facili- Photos by Hailey Hoff man/The Astorian ABOVE: The annual Run on the River, hosted by the Astoria Parks Foundation and Buoy Beer Co., went virtual this year because of the coronavirus. RIGHT: Warrenton has hopes for a new trailhead at Skipanon River Park. ties,” he said. “They may be different from what you have seen in the past, to get shared facilities up and running.” Clatsop C ounty began easing coronavirus-related restrictions Friday after get- ting approval from Gov. Kate Brown, allowing gath- erings of up to 25 people and the reopening of some businesses. A public bathing facil- ity like the Astoria A quatic C enter, one of the city’s most challenging parks properties, would likely not open until a fi nal phase. The city’s focus now is on expanding child care for peo- ple returning to work and set- ting up school-age day camps as school lets out for the sum- mer, said Jonah Dart-Mc- Lean, the interim director of the p arks d epartment. “We’re focused on evalu- ating our capacity and bud- get to reopen programs and don’t have a timeline for when we’d begin offering most of our former services,” he said. Warrenton has no parks department. The city’s sparse parks funding goes mostly toward part-time staff hired under the city’s Public Works D epartment in busier sea- sons to maintain properties. The city has furloughed part-time help and canceled Sunday Streets, an August event in which it planned to shut down streets to vehi- cles and encourage people to come out. Warrenton has seen increased interest in parks, with AmeriCorps intern Morgan Murray hired for the year through the Resource Assistance for Rural Envi- ronments to help the city update a parks master plan from 2008. That plan will include a new park in the Forest Rim subdivision at the corner of Willow Drive and Honey- suckle Loop. T he city is try- ing to gather input on the project through a virtual open house at tinyurl.com/ forestrimpark. The Forest Rim park and the master plan are the only two projects Kevin Cronin, the city’s community devel- opment director, sees being funded in what is sure to be a lean budget. Murray has also been documenting the trails that lace the Warrenton-Ham- mond area. Cronin is hope- ful that work will result in at least a new trailhead at the city’s Skipanon River Park, a trail atop dikes that runs along the waterway through the middle of the city . The coronavirus “pro- vides a budget shortfall, but it also puts a kibosh on any kind of momentum you have for certain projects,” Cronin said. “With Forest Rim, we really started to build some neighborhood capacity for interest and volunteerism in that park. “It really put a stop to the momentum because of the physical social distancing, but also because people just have other priorities.” Pacifi c fi sher denied protection in Oregon By MONICA SAMAYOA Oregon Public Broadcasting Endangered species pro- tections in Oregon and North- ern California for a rarely seen, forest-dwelling mam- mal were turned down last week by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. The federal agency did approve Endangered Species Act protections for the Pacifi c fi sher in parts of the Sierra Nevada, where it was listed as “endangered” with extinction. But it said such protec- tions were not justifi ed for the Pacifi c fi sher in the forests of Northern California and southern Oregon. The deci- sion rejected a 2019 proposal to list fi shers as “threatened” throughout the West Coast range. Pacifi c fi shers are pred- atory mammals related to weasels, minks, martens and otters. They are about half the size of a cat and inhabit mixed conifer-hardwood forests. The U.S. Fish and Wild- life Service decided to sepa- rate the Pacifi c fi sher into two distinct populations. Stud- ies have shown the two pop- ulations are genetically dif- ferent and are separated by a geographic gap of about 130 miles. The groups are the southern Sierra Nevada distinct population and the Northern California-southern Oregon distinct population. The decision to not extend Endangered Species Act pro- tections for the Northern Cal- ifornia-southern Oregon pop- ulation came down to a few factors. It was found to be more widespread within its range, have more diversity in ages between male to female ratios and have breeding and reintroduction success. This, along with current and pro- posed fi sher habitat conserva- tion efforts on public and pri- vate timberlands, enable this population to maintain bal- ance and withstand setbacks. A Fish and Wildlife Ser- vice offi cial in Oregon praised the timber industry as a big Raymond James Financial Services, Inc. Member FINRA/SIPC Greg Davis/Oregon Public Broadcasting Fishers are rare in the United States. reason the Trump adminis- tration was able to sidestep Endangered Species Act pro- tections for the Pacifi c fi sher throughout its range. “Voluntary conservation efforts by state and private timber owners have contrib- uted to the Northern Califor- nia-Southern Oregon popula- tion of fi sher appearing stable within a large range of suit- able habitat,” Paul Henson, Oregon’s state supervisor, said in a statement. He cited the voluntary adoption of conservation measures for fi sher habitat across 2 million acres. “The heavy lifting done by our partners greatly alleviates the need for regulation,” Hen- son said. Conservation groups said the failure to protect all Pacifi c fi shers and their habi- tat under the Endangered Spe- cies Act heightens their risk of going extinct. Noah Greenwald, endan- gered species director of the Center For Biological Diver- sity, said he doesn’t dis- agree that there are two dis- tinct fi sher populations but that the Northern Califor- nia-southern Oregon popula- tion would have been at one time part of a larger popula- tion that included all of Ore- gon and western Washington and extended into Canada. “The loss of historic range is part of what makes that population at risk and in fact the isolation of the southern Sierra population is part of what makes it endangered as well,” Greenwald said. He also said the decision to only list the southern Sierra population was purely polit- ical and a gift to the timber industry. “The fi sher, as clearly doc- umented in that fi nding, faces numerous threats including logging of its habitat, roden- ticides that are used for mar- ijuana grow operations and climate change,” Greenwald said. “There’s really noth- ing to show that the fi sher is now secure or doesn’t need protection.” Greenwald said his group is currently reviewing the fi ndings and will consider another challenge in court as most of the Pacifi c fi sher pop- ulation is in southern Oregon and Northern California. Conservation organiza- tions have been petitioning to list the Pacifi c fi sher under the Endangered Species Act since 2000. In 2004, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service issued a rule fi nding that listing was warranted but did not fi nalize the listing. In 2010, conser- vation groups sued the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to force them to complete the listing process. Again, the ser- vice proposed federal protec- tion for the fi sher in 2014, but then withdrew the proposal in 2016. Conservation organi- zations then fi led suit alleg- ing that the denial ignored the science in a politically motivated bow to the timber industry. But they’ve found little support from the current administration. Jamey Hendricks Jennifer Estner Financial Advisor Advisor Assistant Registered Representative Mark Hedeen Financial Advisor Registered Representative S TOCKS B ONDS M UTUAL F UNDS R ETIREMENT A CCOUNTS FDIC I NSURED CDS F INANCIAL P LANNING A NNUITIES #1 12 TH Street, Suite 7 · Astoria, OR 503.325.0677 Securities offered through Raymond James Financial Services, Inc. Investment Advisory Services are offered through Raymond James Financial Services Advisors, Inc.