A4 THE ASTORIAN • TuESdAy, MAy 26, 2020 OPINION editor@dailyastorian.com KARI BORGEN Publisher DERRICK DePLEDGE Editor Founded in 1873 JEREMY FELDMAN Circulation Manager JOHN D. BRUIJN Production Manager CARL EARL Systems Manager GUEST COLUMN Remembering a North Coast character R oughly 30 years ago, I was in my shop attempting to bore a hole through a piece of steel plate when my next-door neighbor, Doug Bracher, wandered in. “You need to put a little oil on that,” he said. “Oil?” I was new to the neighborhood and thought perhaps he was toying with me. “Of course,” he said, with a per- fectly straight face. So I did. Eventually, I came to realize the science behind his little tip: the oil makes drilling easier because it reduces fric- tion. That means the bit will cut better and last MARK longer. MIZELL Quite a number of construction-related tips would follow in the years that Doug and I were neighbors, but I wouldn’t come to fully appreciate his significant contri- bution to building projects on the North Coast until after he died. Bracher was the building superinten- dent for Mittet Construction Co., out of Astoria, for many years. Robert E. Lee recalls going to work for Bracher: “After graduating from Sea- side High School, I headed for Hawaii. Eventually I came back home and started looking for construction work. I asked a friend what he thought of Mittet’s lead man. My friend said, ‘Well, the guy’s kind of an ---hole, but he’s a good guy to work for.’ “So I applied and got hired,” Lee said. “I wasn’t quite sure what to think of Doug and he probably didn’t know what to think of me. I was young and dumb. I was tan and had hair down to my shoul- ders. Doug had a crewcut and would start each day with a big cigar hanging out of his mouth. “I can remember several times when Doug would pull up to the job site and immediately he’d start yelling, ‘Where’s that g-d hippie?’ referring to me, of course. Eventually, though, the guy began to grow on me.” Bracher supervised the building of one of Astoria’s most iconic struc- tures — the Columbia River Maritime Museum. Columbia River Maritime Museum Doug Bracher helped build the Columbia River Maritime Museum in Astoria. Lee remembers working for Bracher on that project. “Al Mittet didn’t believe in spending money renting equipment, so we had to make do,” he explains. “Doug devised a pulley system using a bicycle wheel. That’s what we used to hoist lum- ber off the ground. Seventeen hundred sheets of plywood. Even the glue lams (laminated beams) were hauled up using Doug’s bicycle wheel. A crane was used to set the beams in place, but that was it. “It got pretty windy up there some- times,” Lee said. “I had worked high- rises in Hawaii, but working in the wind on top of that Maritime Museum was really something. “Doug worked hard and he expected the same from his crew, but he had a good sense of humor. I remember one time a couple steelworkers were eye- ing the pile of cedar shingle scraps that was beginning to accumulate next to the museum project. Anytime they asked about them, Doug pretended that he was planning on taking the shingles home to his place. Eventually he allowed himself to be talked into parting with the shin- gles and the two guys hauled them away. What Doug didn’t mention was that the shingles had been treated with flame retardant,” Lee said with a grin. “Once they figured that out, they decided to play a little trick on Doug. They took out an ad in The Daily Asto- rian advertising free firewood at the Maritime Museum building site. Any- one interested in the free wood needed to talk to Doug Bracher. We got quite a few interruptions thanks to that ad.” Retired laborer, Rick Hessel, also remembers Bracher’s sense of humor. “Sometimes things would slow down between big jobs, but Doug would always do his best to keep us work- ing. Al Mittet had a special relationship with AT&T, so sometimes Doug would send us out to build ‘AT&T high-rises,’ as Doug put it. In reality we were pour- ing slabs of concrete for phone booths,” Hessel said, smiling. “Doug was smart as hell,” said Bracher’s stepson, Jay Bandonis, who now lives in the house where Doug once lived. “He was a real innovator,” he con- tinues. “He just didn’t have the edu- cation. But his genes went on down through his kids and grandkids. His son became a business executive, his daughter a teacher, and her son earned a doctorate.” In addition to overseeing the con- struction of the Maritime Museum, Bracher was also the superintendent on a number of other building projects on the North Coast, including the Astoria Library, the U.S. Bank building in Asto- ria and the Illahee Apartments. “Doug worked hard and he played hard,” Lee said. Bandonis remembers the drinking. He says it eventually led his mom to give Doug the ultimatum. “To his credit, though, Doug quit right then and there,” Bandonis said. “He quit cold turkey, the same way he quit smoking.” “Doug was a good dad. I was closer to Doug than I was to my own father. He would come to all my games. He even came to my games in college when I played baseball for Linfield,” he said. “After Doug retired, he and my mom got very involved in the Hayshak- ers Square Dance Club in Warren- ton. In fact, the two became square dance club officers at the state level,” Bandonis explains. “They did a lot of square dance-related travel together,” he said, “including trips to Hawaii and Australia.” Bracher was a member of the Greatest Generation. “He was stationed at Battery Russell when it was shelled by a Jap- anese submarine,” Bandonis said. “He was interviewed quite a few times about that experience. Eventually, he became a warrant officer, serving in the Euro- pean Theater. He was right in the thick of things.” When my family and I moved in next door to Doug and his wife, June, 30 years ago, he had just planted the front acre of their place with fir seedlings. They’ve since turned into a healthy little forest. Thanks to Bandonis and his wife, Diane, the 4-acre property continues to look like a park. Doug would be pleased. Doug Bracher was a 50-year mem- ber of the carpenters union, a decorated World War II veteran and lifetime mem- ber of the Seaside American Legion. He died in 2005, at the age of 86. In his obituary, people were invited to plant a tree in his memory. I’m sure the offer is still good. Mark Mizell is a retired English teacher who taught at Seaside High School. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Unnecessary danger L ocal authorities are failing to ensure that vacation rentals are in compliance with the basic health standards required of all public lodging. These standards exist to protect visitors, our workers and our communities. This lack of enforcement represents an unnecessary danger to pub- lic health and safety. Oregon Health Authority is the exclu- sive state regulatory body that sets pub- lic health standards and regulates travel accommodations. It is the only agency mandated and authorized to license, administer and enforce existing health regulations and statutes for all lodging. As required by law, every hotel, motel and bed-and-breakfast is currently licensed and inspected annually, via local public health, to ensure they meet these existing public health and safety laws. In contrast, and unlike most lodging that operate in commercial zones, vaca- tion rentals are located primarily in our residential neighborhoods, and are not being licensed or regulated by our public health authorities, as required by law. This is illegitimate selective enforcement of the law. It also creates a significant shortfall in public health protections at a time when these protections are needed most. Until there is uniform public health licensing and oversight across all lodging providers, a gaping hole exits in our pub- lic health safety net. Contact your local official and demand that existing health and safety protection laws be enforced equally across all lodging providers. STEPHEN MALKOWSKI Seaside So useless I have received the recent letter from President Donald Trump. The letter is about our stimulus payment. The Depart- ment of Treasury, Internal Revenue Ser- vice, was the address sending the letter. The letter inside has “The White House,” and it’s from the president. No way did he compose this letter — but of course, it is all about what he has done for us. He states, “We hope this payment pro- vides meaningful support during this period.” I think of all the people who can’t pay rent or feed their children. This check does not go that far. Then I had to be sub- ject again to his awful signature. How much did this letter cost America? So useless. A. DIANE FINUCANE Warrenton Enough already L et’s be clear, the Breakers Point and Chapman Point homeowners asso- ciations are appealing Cannon Beach’s foredune management plan so they can level our state-owned dunes for their bet- ter views. Attempts to convince us this is about dune stewardship are laughable. Now Cannon Beach must not only pay for legal defense against their two law- suits, but during a pandemic — unbeliev- able, even for these two groups. Caleb Whitmore says “… it’s not destroying the dunes, it’s trying to man- age a man-made problem” (“Homeowners appeal new Cannon Beach dune policies,” The Astorian, April 30). Breakers Point was built on an active foredune, along the mouth of an estu- ary. The man-made problem is that own- ers expect their views to remain con- stant in an ever-changing environment. Rather than trying to manage nature, own- ers should manage their wildly unrealistic expectations. The Chapman Point HOA’s appeal is especially high-handed. They twice agreed to a prohibition against dune grad- ing for views: upon approval of the subdi- vision, and in each lot’s deed restrictions. Raging against European beach grass is a red herring. During the City Council’s science presentation, Sally Hacker stated dune grass accounts for only 10% of dune height (bit.ly/2A00Oka), while Jonathan Allan’s report emphasized sand patterns change (bit.ly/2AWdR6K). For instance, during the 1990s, Break- ers Point’s area had a sand deficit. Cer- tainly 20 years of bulldozing dunes and pushing sand seaward also contributed to larger dunes to the north. Enough already. Our dunes, anchored by nonnative beach grass, protect our town. Accept the changing dunes and views and rescind your legal actions. DIANNA TURNER Cannon Beach Hurry, hurry P resident Donald Trump, aka The Donald, keeps it up. Now he states that leading the world in virus cases and deaths is a badge of honor. (What? Really?) And what a great idea to get a bleach injection. Actually, a great thrifty idea, gets rid of the virus, clears up cholesterol and cleanses the needle upon withdrawal. In a recent claim, he said he was once named Michigan “Man of the Year” — totally false. How could we expect much more from a person who probably thinks that Roe vs. Wade was a choice for Gen. George Washington crossing the Dela- ware. Hurry, hurry November. HOWARD GILBERT Astoria