A6 THE ASTORIAN • THURSDAY, MARCH 4, 2021 County reports three new virus cases The Astorian Clatsop County on Wednesday reported three new coronavirus cases. The cases include a man and a woman in their 60s living in the northern part of the county and a woman in her 20s living in the south- ern part of the county. All three were recovering at home. The county has recorded 783 cases since the start of the pandemic. According to the county, 18 were hospitalized and six have died. Vacation rentals: Regulated by two county ordinances Continued from Page A1 Gail Henrikson, the coun- ty’s community develop- ment director, said the meet- ings were an opportunity to explain how the code compli- ance process works and how they prioritize and address complaints. “It was also a chance for us to hear all of the concerns that we were getting on a piece- meal basis, but just to (create) a communitywide dialogue so everybody was hearing the same thing at the same time,” she said. “And then by hear- ing that, it also gave staff a chance to begin to identify areas in the ordinance where we needed to make revisions to help us better implement and enforce it.” During the community meetings, residents explained how short-term rentals have impacted their quality of life. Many of the complaints deal with noise, parking and overcrowding . Other com- plaints are out of the county’s control. Vacation rental owners have described their efforts to be good neighbors and encourage their guests to do the same. “And they also have con- cerns about possible changes to the ordinance that may impact how they do business or even possibly eliminate the possibility of them doing business,” Henrikson said. There are two county ordi- Hailey Hoff man/The Astorian Vacation rentals in Arch Cape are required to book minimum seven-night stays. nances that regulate vaca- tion rentals. One is specifi c to Arch Cape, while the other covers the remaining unincor- porated parts of the county. Both are similar, but have a couple of key differences regarding parking and length- of-stay requirements. The Arch Cape ordinance requires a minimum sev- en-night stay, and only one reservation is allowed during a seven-day period. Street parking is not allowed. There is no limit or minimum stay requirement for other unin- corporated areas, and street parking is allowed. Commissioners directed staff to set parameters and a scope of work for an ad hoc committee to help com- bine and reconcile the two ordinances. “Those would be the two big areas where we would need to have a committee to look at it and determine how best to reconcile,” Henrikson said. “Whether it’s taking one of the ordinance provisions and recommending that to be adopted or just creating some sort of compromise between the two ordinances.” The board’s guidance on other questions could be drafted as amendments . Some of those questions include whether there should be a “three-strikes rule” — requir- ing staff to revoke a vacation rental permit after three com- plaints — and penalties for people who knowingly sub- mit false complaints. Some policy items were provided as a starting point for future discussions, includ- ing questions about capping short-term rentals, prohibit- ing them in certain parts of the county and how the lodg- ing tax is utilized. Henrikson said those items will not be included in the revisions to the ordi- nances at this time. “It was so clear to me how much everybody who wrote cared about this issue,” said Commissioner Lianne Thompson, who represents South County . “Every sin- gle person has this passion- ate devotion to community well-being. There is not a consensus on what that com- munity well-being looks like, how it’s defi ned, none of it. There’s no agreement. “My concern about estab- lishing a committee would be it would have to have a pur- view where it looked at what was state law, what were the sidebars. I’ve seen some things with citizen advisory committees that have caused me great concern. “There have been a num- ber of proposals that have been in clear violation of state law and have been termed ‘aspirational.’ Well, I don’t have an aspiration to break the state law, and I think it doesn’t help the sit- uation when anybody thinks that their will or their whim or their idea or their pas- sion, however we want to characterize it, can have the force of state law or county ordinance.” Crisis repsonse: ‘We have urban problems ... rural funding’ Continued from Page A1 Clatsop Behavioral Healthcare, the county’s mental health provider, has a mobile crisis team available to advise law enforcement, help diffuse situations, con- nect people to treatment and avoid unnecessary hospital- ization or arrest. Baker said the mobile cri- sis team is only one piece in creating an effective system of care . “We’re very proud of it, but we’re also aware of the limitations that the state cur- rently only funds us to the level to have one person working across the county at any given time,” Baker told county commissioners at a work session. “There’s a lot of discussion statewide around is it better to do co-response, which means having behavioral health experts or clinicians go out with law enforcement, or the CAHOOTS model, which is a diversion from law enforce- ment altogether, requiring 911 to carefully screen and send the CAHOOTS van out. I think there is a case that can be made for either. In this par- ticular county, given the fact that we have multiple 911 centers, co-response might be easier. “But having mobile response in and of itself is not going to help address all the behavioral health needs that we’re seeing,” she said. “We also have to have a place for folks to go. And that looks a lot like a crisis stabilization center. “I know there had been dis- cussion about the North Coast Crisis Respite Center being that crisis stabilization center. And what we have found over the years operating it is that it’s really hard to put people who are in psychiatric crisis into a treatment environment where people are living there full time at the same time. It’s sort of like what would hap- pen to your household if you brought somebody in who was really struggling and you’re trying to maintain the stability of everybody else.” the chairman of the Board of Commissioners, who rep- resents Warrenton, where the crisis respite center is located . “And many of us, I think naively so, thought that the respite center was going to address that and become the bridge between the hos- pital and jail . And I know that it hasn’t done that — and never probably was intended to be that — but it certainly is a glaring need within the community.” Baker said she would love the r apid a ccess c enter to be open 24/7, “but we don’t have the funding or the staffi ng capacity for that.” ‘IN THIS PARTICULAR COUNTY, GIVEN THE FACT THAT WE HAVE MULTIPLE 911 CENTERS, CO- RESPONSE MIGHT BE EASIER.’ Amy Baker | executive director of Clatsop Behavioral Healthcare Baker thinks the rapid access center planned for the agency’s Bond Street site in Astoria can serve more of that function and be a place for police to drop people off when they are in crisis. The open- ing of the center is dependent on when the agency can hire staff, which Baker said has been a challenge, in part due to housing. “That crisis stabilization center, I think certainly is a need,” said Mark Kujala, She said some of the big- gest barriers to providing care continue to be a lack of fund- ing and affordable and transi- tional housing. “I think one of Clatsop’s unique challenges is that we’re like a rural county, except that we have urban problems — in part due to our proxim- ity to Portland — except that we have rural funding,” she said. “So it’s kind of a double whammy there.” Baker and Phillips also addressed the state’s high threshold for civil commit- ment, which, in many cases, ties the hands of law enforce- ment, mental health provid- ers and hospitals from being able to properly assist people in crisis because they cannot force people to accept help . “The Oregon Court of Appeals certainly values lib- erty much above an individ- ual’s well-being, unless the threat to well-being is immi- nent and very serious,” Phil- lips said. “And the primary concern has always been pre- serving someone’s liberty and avoiding stigma. But I think most people would agree that someone who is suffering a serious mental illness is prob- ably not wholly at liberty or free from stigma. The con- sequence, certainly, of hav- ing a very limited civil com- mitment process is that it then diverts people to the crimi- nal justice system, which cer- tainly has greater stigma and potentially greater loss of liberty.” The sheriff said he would like to see the mobile crisis team expanded but acknowl- edged the limits of outreach. “We can reach out, and cer- tainly repetition is sometimes helpful — being consistent in reaching out to people. But sometimes we can’t legally compel someone to engage in services or to get treatment,” Phillips said. “And the hos- pitals have the same thresh- olds to work within, so it’s diffi cult.” Port: ‘We’re trying to run a lean facility here’ Continued from Page A1 more than $4,700 a month by 2026. The original term lasts 20 years, with four fi ve-year renewal options . “There’s a lot of com- ponents moving along with this,” McGrath said. “Helligso Construction is working on getting the site prepped and should be able to start work once the city of Warrenton gives the approval.” Scoular hopes to open the plant in the spring. By then, the Port will install a pressurized sewer system to cut down on tidal infi ltra- tion at the airport swamp- ing Warrenton’s wastewater treatment plant. “I think it’s very excit- ing to see the Port move forward on this,” said Dirk Rohne, the president of the Port Commission. The lease comes as Scoular is moving through the approval process to join the Clatsop Enter- prise Zone, which offers fi ve years of property tax breaks on new investments. Consult a PROFESSIONAL How can I test for my internet speed? LEO FINZI Astoria’s Best one-year extension of permits in June. He argued the coro- navirus pandemic had made fi nancing for new hotels almost impossible, making his project eligible for more time because of an economic hardship. The city maintained that Hollander had 18 months before the pandemic to start construction. City s taff noted that two other projects — the Bowline Hotel under con- struction near Buoy Beer Co. and a Hilton Home2 Suites being planned near the New Youngs Bay Bridge — proved a viable market for new hotel construction during the pandemic. Staff also cited its discretion to consider new, more restric- tive building rules inspired by a public backlash to the height and size of Holland- er’s project. The City Council upheld staff’s fi ndings. Hollander, who argued that his proj- ect was not the same as the other hotels, appealed to the state Land Use Board of Appeals, which sided with the developer. “At a minimum, the City Council was required to explain why it chose not to rely on petitioner’s evidence of poor market conditions and instead chose to rely on evidence of other hotels that petitioner explained are not similarly situated and may or may not have received fi nanc- ing,” the appeals board said. The appeals board also ruled that the city could use new, more restrictive building rules as an argument against a hotel approved prior to their adoption. If he can’t win the appeal, Hollander faces sig- nifi cantly shrinking the hotel to preserve views of the river. City Attorney Blair Hen- ningsgaard said Monday the reopened record would allow city staff to submit more evi- dence regarding the progress of the Bowline and Hilton projects from when Holland- er’s hotel was approved and when he sought an extension of permits. City Manager Brett Estes said the earliest the City Council could hold a new hearing on Hollander’s proj- ect would be the second meeting in April. The city has until the end of May to issue a new decision on Hollander’s permits. Go to the website: speedtest.net Click on the word: Go You will see the dial reading the speed of your connection. Lenovo 17.3” Notebook, Intel i3, 8GB Memory, 256GB SSD $599.99 The Download speed tells how quickly you can receive information, videos, pictures, new web pages, etc. from the internet. 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Tom Wortmann, director of corporate development and strategy at Scoular, said the new positions would include a plant manager, quality manager, fi nance manager and other skilled operators. “We’re trying to run a lean facility here, so a skilled operator is someone that knows how to run the equipment, and if it breaks, knows how to fi x the equip- ment,” he said at a recent primer on enterprise zones. “I think you’ll see a very skilled workforce we’re looking to employ here.” We have third-party financial groups that we work with, including Care Credit, Springstone, or your personal bank may offer low-interest loans. Dentistry itself is not necessarily expensive, but neglect and abuse are. Call to consult with us on your options. is the Consult Q: What a Professional section and how can it help my business? 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