»INSIDE THURSDAY MARCH 4 2021 TIME FOR A WALK EXPLORE THE TRAIL AIRPORT DIKE PAGE 8 DENT ASTORIA RESI T BOOK RELEASES FIRS HART, ENJOY GEAR WALKS SEASIDE ART COZY UP WITH CHOWDER PAGE 10 PAGE 6 PAGE 4 10AM DAILY CASINO OPEN AT 148TH YEAR, NO. 106 DailyAstorian.com // THURSDAY, MARCH 4, 2021 $1.50 CORONAVIRUS County tackles vacation rental rules Discussions started in South County By NICOLE BALES The Astorian GOING GREENER Clatsop County is tackling rules around vacation rentals, considering some big-ticket policy items that could increase restrictions . During a county Board of Commis- sioners work session in February , the county set the table for discussions , lay- ing out ways to tighten short-term rental ordinances as well as potential policies to consider down the road. Cities on the North Coast have strug- gled to balance the growth in vacation rentals as the region becomes a more popular tourist destination. Pockets of the county have also felt the same pressures. Many of the questions and policy sug- gestions came out of quarterly commu- nity discussions the county started host- ing last summer. The virtual discussions began in Cove Beach in July to promote dialogue after strife over vacation rentals. The meetings were expanded to Arch Cape and Clatsop Plains. See Vacation rentals, Page A6 TOP: Garrett Lyle, from Elemental Energy, installs the fi rst solar panel on the roof of the Astoria Co+op on Wednesday afternoon. The 51-kilowatt solar array is expected to generate about a third of the grocer’s electricity. RIGHT: Co-op general manager Matt Stanley looks at the new solar panels. BELOW: Elemental Energy installs solar panels on the roof. Photos by Hailey Hoff man/The Astorian Resources limited for crisis response Mental health director, sheriff outline challenges By NICOLE BALES The Astorian Amy Baker, the executive director of Clatsop Behavioral Healthcare, and Sher- iff Matt Phillips on Tuesday outlined the limitations of getting people in mental health crisis the help they need. The Astorian has reported on several incidents over the past year that played out in public view, including two deaths after interactions with police. Some people in the community have called for directing more resources to a mobile crisis team, like the CAHOOTS model in Lane County, where mental health professionals respond to crisis calls . See Crisis repsonse, Page A6 Port signs fi shmeal processor to a long-term agreement New plant planned at Airport Industrial Park By EDWARD STRATTON The Astorian The Port of Astoria Commission has agreed to a lease with Scoular at the Airport Industrial Park in War- renton that could take the grain-and- feed trading company through 2061. Scoular, based in Omaha, Nebraska, plans to spend around $10 million building a plant along 12th Place next to the a irport turn- Astoria reopens hearing on hotel City must decide by end of May MORE INSIDE By EDWARD STRATTON The Astorian Astoria adds Buoy Beer, Scoular to enterprise zone • Page A2 ing seafood scraps from local pro- cessors into fi shmeal for aquacul- ture and pet food. “This is the largest development project that the Port’s undertaken in certainly since my tenure, and the largest one in the last 10 years or so,” said Matt McGrath, the Port’s deputy director . The lease initially pays the Port more than $2,000 a month, includ- ing rent credits. It jumps to $4,000 a month in 2022 and escalates to Edward Stratton/The Astorian The Astoria City Council reopened the hearing on a con- troversial hotel along the Colum- bia River after the state ordered another review. Over the summer, the city denied an extension of building permits for the four-story Fairfi eld Inn and Suites that developer Mark Hollander wants to build at the site of The Ship Inn restaurant. Hollander’s hotel had been approved in 2018. But he made little progress before seeking a See Port, Page A6 Developer Mark Hollander hopes to build a four-story Fairfi eld Inn and Suites at the site of The Ship Inn, a former seafood restaurant vacant since 2017. See Hotel, Page A6