A6 THE ASTORIAN • THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2021 County reports 12 new virus cases The Astorian Hailey Hoff man/The Astorian The landslide started at the end of Blue Ridge Drive, where a house burned down in December 2019. Landslide: One of several to hit area this year Continued from Page A1 funding from the Department of Labor and have a contrac- tor on-site. I will continue to engage with all the par- ties involved to make sure the federal responsibility is fulfi lled.” At the top of the slide is the broken foundation of a dere- lict house that burned down in December 2019. The Mat- sons suspect the fi re weak- ened the soil and contrib- uted to the slide. The property belongs to Paul Mossberg, who died in 2017. “I don’t even care (who’s responsible), because my house is safe, my husband’s safe, my dogs” are safe, Cheryl Matson said. “I just care that somebody comes in and cleans up this mess.” Jeff Harrington, the Asto- ria public works director, said the Department of Labor plans to have the road cleared by the end of the week. The road appears stable, and the city’s water main underneath is undamaged, he said. “Like everywhere else in town, it’s just landslide ter- rain that, with enough rain, decided to move,” Harrington said . The landslide is one of several to hit Astoria this year during a particularly wet win- ter. A slide in January east of the city trapped a passing truck and temporarily closed U.S. Highway 30. Another slide in Jan- uary sheered off part of a steep slope in Uniontown and uprooted the home of Cati Foss, leaving it wedged against a neighboring prop- erty and sitting on top of the sidewalk along Alameda Avenue. She and the neigh- bor suspect leaking pipes might have contributed to the slide. A GoFundMe account has raised more than $37,000 to help the Foss family move the house, which is now sit- ting on blocks. Foss said her family is still trying to pay off the cost of moving the house off the sidewalk and doesn’t know yet whether it can be affordably salvaged. “I’m still waiting to hear back from the insurance company,” she said. “I am trying to get a geotechni- cal engineer to kind of help speed up the process. But basically, where the house is right now, is where we’re stuck.” Cheryl Matson said her home was built on bedrock, but that she worries about the trees still perched in the land- slide zone . In addition to the slide just north of her home, state geological maps show another large historical land- slide just south of the prop- erty. Harrington said city records show two landslides occurring on Tongue Point in 1917, albeit without spec- ifi ed locations. He suspects the new slide just north of the home isn’t done moving. “That’s what concerns me, is that the whole hill- side is just one huge land- slide, you know,” Harrington said. “Because it all looks the same when you’re out on the ground.” Salmon: ‘I have a lot of faith in the fi sh’ Continued from Page A1 Under the model, changes in the ocean presented more of a threat to salmon than what they could confront during the freshwater stage of their lifecycle. It was surprising to see how much the ocean stage dominated, scientists said. The ocean is in many ways still a “blue box.” But the study’s authors had already gotten a hint of their predic- tions in real time. Though aspects of the work had yet to be fi nal- ized, researchers had already completed their model when a mass of warm water formed off the West Coast nearly six years ago. The so-called “Blob” formed in 2013 and 2014 and persisted through 2015 and 2016. Temperatures inside this warm water anomaly were recorded at nearly 3 degrees C warmer than nor- mal and it set off a chain reaction — a bomb, some scientists said — through the marine ecosystem. Salmon returns over the next few years ran the gamut from “poor” to “concerning.” “To some extent, we’ve already seen exactly what we predicted,” said Lisa Crozier, a research ecologist with NOAA’s Northwest Fisheries Science Center and lead author of the recent study. “It’s frightening.” The study does not detail what types of conservation and management actions should happen to protect salmon under shifting cli- mate conditions — that is the work that needs to hap- pen next, Crozier said. But, Richard Zabel, head of the fi sh ecology division at the Northwest Fisher- ies Science Center and one of the paper’s authors, told The Seattle Times “all alter- natives have to be on the table.” ‘Hard choices’ For decades now, there have been efforts to recover salmon with some successes along the way, the research- ers write. “However,” they con- tinue, “there are hard choices where human demands on land and water have come at the cost of wildlife. “The urgency is greater than ever to identify success- ful solutions at a large scale and implement known meth- ods for improving survival,” the study states, while also noting, “we have shown that prospects for saving this iconic keystone species in (the United States) are diminishing.” U.S. Rep. Mike Simpson, R-Idaho, recently unveiled a plan to breach four dams on the l ower Snake River by the end of the next decade in an effort to conserve salmon populations. But there are many unknowns. As climate change pressures pull certain ecological threads or unfold in ways scientists did not expect, it isn’t always clear what else starts to unravel or what knits back together in new ways. Crozier is part of a push now to delve into models that will look across marine species and their life cycles to start to build an under- standing of intersecting rela- tionships between predators and prey and how they all might shift in different ways with climate change. Despite all the terrible things that have come with the coronavirus pandemic, Crozier believes the tempo- rarily lower carbon footprint that came with decreased travel may offer an import- ant opportunity. Normally, research- ers look to quantify human impact by comparing differ- ences between years, some- thing that is hard to isolate for climate change research as human activities rush for- ward. With the pandemic, air traffi c slowed and there were fewer vehicles on the road as work and school moved into the home. “We were quieter for a while,” Crozier said, “and that’s a big deal for the ocean.” ‘Faith in the fi sh’ W hile the news is dire for salmon under the model she recently had a hand in com- pleting, Crozier is not with- out hope. The situation is not a simple black and white, she said. “It’s not really a good situ- ation, but I don’t think they’ll go completely extinct,” Cro- zier said. “I think they will change their behavior. They’ll modify things. That’s what salmon do, they change.” While salmon are resilient and adaptable, it is on humans to watch for these responses and “give nature the fl exibil- ity it needs,” she said. “I have a lot of faith in the fi sh,” she added. “I have a lot of faith that a lot of peo- ple care about these fi sh and I have a lot of faith that people will see the shared benefi ts.” Then there is everything we don’t know, things sci- entists cannot predict about salmon and how climate change alters their habits and relationships with prey and predators. There could be an “ecological surprise,” the study states, “that will reverse the historical rela- tionship between (sea sur- face temperature) and salmon survival.” “I hope for the unex- pected,” Crozier said. Risk: ‘We are seeing great progress in stopping the spread’ Continued from Page A1 “For the second time in a row, we are seeing great progress in stopping the spread of COVID-19 across Oregon and saving lives,” the governor said in a statement Tuesday. “Oregonians continue to step up and make smart choices. While these county movements are welcome news, we must continue to take seriously health and safety measures, especially as more businesses reopen and we start to get out more. As we see infection rates going down and vaccinations ramp- ing up, now is not the time to let down our guard. Continue to wear your masks, keep physical distance and avoid indoor gatherings.” Clatsop County, which has been in the high risk cat- egory for the past two weeks, is one of 10 counties that will be at lower risk through March 11. Five counties will be at extreme risk, 11 will be at high risk and 10 will be at moderate risk. Mark Kujala, the chair- man of the county Board of Commissioners, said the announcement is wel- come news for local business owners. “Many have been strug- gling with restrictions and limitations on indoor activ- ities, so it’s good news,” he said. “But if we want to stay in the lowest risk category, we can’t be complacent. “So we’ll need to continue to limit exposure risk through masking and social distanc- ing. And of course, the effort to get our community vacci- nated will continue to be the major focus in the months ahead as we navigate through this.” Counties with a popula- tion of 30,000 or more are evaluated for risk based on virus cases per 100,000 over two weeks and the test posi- tivity rate for the same period. Counties at lower risk have a case rate under 50 per 100,000 people, and may have a test positivity of 5% or less. As of Saturday, Clatsop County had 30.5 cases per 100,000 over a two-week period. Test positivity was 1.5%. Capacity for indoor din- ing at restaurants and bars in counties at lower risk can increase to 50% with a mid- night closing time. Up to 300 people can dine outdoors. Tables must be limited to eight people. Gyms, indoor pools, museums, theaters and other entertainment venues can operate at 50% of capacity. Grocery stores, pharma- cies, retail shops and shop- ping malls can operate at 75% of capacity. Churches can increase capacity to 75% indoors and 300 people outdoors. Indoor social gatherings must be limited to 10 peo- ple from four households in counties at lower risk. Out- door gatherings can have 12 people. Indoor and outdoor visits are allowed at long-term care facilities. T he county has recorded 780 virus cases since March . According to the county, 18 were hospitalized and six have died. Clatsop County reported 12 new coronavirus cases over the past few days. On Wednesday, the county reported two cases. The cases include a female between 10 and 19 living in the northern part of the county and a man in his 70s living in the southern part of the county. Both were recovering at home. On Tuesday, the county reported 10 cases. The cases include a man and a woman in their 30s, a woman in her 60s and a man in his 80s living in the southern part of the county. The others live in the northern part of the county and include two females between 10 and 19, a woman in her 20s, two men in their 40s and a woman in her 60s. The county has recorded 780 cases since last March. According to the county, 18 were hospital- ized and six have died. facebook.com/DAILYASTORIAN Consult a PROFESSIONAL Compare dual band and single band routers. LEO FINZI Astoria’s Best Wireless networking has come in many versions, succeeding versions offering higher wi-fi speeds. Older routers broadcast on a single frequency (2.4 GHz) and all devices connect using that frequency. 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