»INSIDE THURSDAY MARCH 11 2021 ART WALK ASTORIA SATU RDAY SET FOR At home in PAGE 4 Astoria ANT NEW RESTAUR ZANITA OPENS IN MAN 6 PAGE ORFUL ENJOY A FLAV DINNER FRITTATA FOR PAGE 10 TE ST IS PASSIONA 8 LOCAL ARTI HING PAGE ABOUT TEAC » WIN UP TO $ 1,000 CASH! 148TH YEAR, NO. 109 DailyAstorian.com // THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 2021 $1.50 CORONAVIRUS County to remain at lower risk for virus Leaders encouraged by case counts By NICOLE BALES The Astorian Clatsop County will remain at lower risk for the coronavirus as case counts stay steady. Over the past few months, most Oregon counties have seen risk levels decline. “ This should serve as a reminder that when we follow the health MORE and safety measures we INSIDE know work against this County virus, we can truly make reports a difference in infec- new virus tion spread,” Gov. Kate cases • A2 Brown said in a state- ment Tuesday. “But, we still have more work to do before we reach the level of commu- nity wide protection we need in order to See Risk, Page A3 Toxin levels put clam digs on hold A winter spike found at beaches By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Astorian Domoic acid levels in razor clams on Clatsop County beaches spiked this win- ter, throwing the possibility of popular recreational digs into question. The elevated levels are tied for the fourth-highest ever observed on the North Coast since the toxin was discovered in the area in 1991. They are also the highest levels ever observed during the months of December and January, according to state fi shery managers. See Clam digs, Page A6 Senators advocate for exporters Hampton Lumber and others want access to ocean carriers By EDWARD STRATTON The Astorian U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden and several col- leagues are pushing the Federal Mari- time Commission to protect the access of exporters to ocean carriers amid surging demand during the coronavirus pandemic. Ocean carriers bring in highly valu- able consumer electronics, apparel, build- ing equipment and other fi nished prod- ucts from Asia to the U.S. Dancing through the pandemic After a year of restrictions, there is something like hope in the air By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Astorian F or a dancer, two weeks without regular practice can be an eternity. If you’re not working every day on strength and fl exibility, muscles begin to weaken. Your jumps aren’t as strong. Your leg can’t kick up as high. You feel shaky. What Maggie Wall, the director of the Astoria School of Ballet, calls “Elvis leg” might make an appearance — an unintentional wobbling boo- gie in the hips and knees. But for much of last year, amid ever-shifting coronavi- rus-related restrictions and con- cerns, Wall’s students and other young dancers on the North Coast were constantly starting then stopping. Some attempted to keep up through virtual les- sons, following along to videos in carpeted living rooms or on kitchen linoleum — not ideal. A year after virus restric- tions fi rst went into place, some in-person classes have since resumed and dance studios and schools that serve school-age children have started to plan performances again — many of them virtual and nothing like the productions they used to put on. The studios have made numerous changes to stay afl oat. For all, simply closing down was not an option. While there are enduring fears as they struggle to make ends meet with fewer students, fewer classes and less fl exibility about what Photos by Hailey Hoff man/The Astorian TOP: Dancers do barre warmups at the start of rehearsal at the Astoria School of Ballet. ABOVE: A ballet dancer stretches inside a taped square at Maddox Dance Studio. The fl oors are covered with tape and stickers reminding dancers to ‘mind their spacing’ to encourage social distancing while in the studio. they can offer, there is some- thing like hope in the air. “We’re still here,” Wall said, “and kids are still pursuing this.” A shift toward child care When Gov. Kate Brown announced the fi rst round of restrictions last March, the stu- dents and teachers at Encore Dance Studio in Warrenton were in the middle of getting ready for a spring recital. They had costumes ready to go. “We’re going to have a recital. I don’t care what it looks like,” Denele Sweet, Encore’s owner, decided when she realized their original plans wouldn’t work under the new constraints. So the recital, like many events since last spring, was virtual. At the time, some still thought — or simply hoped — the pandemic would be over soon. Wall and others remem- ber thinking, “We’ll be shut down for a couple weeks then we’ll be back.” But Sweet felt differently. “My gut feeling was this was going to last for a good year, if not two,” she said. She didn’t know when it would be legal to open the dance studio fully again, but she did know two things for certain: “Fitness was a no-no, but child care was a yes-yes.” i ‘As dancers we’re trained to pivot and turn and leap: Go to the fl oor, get up, turn, go the other way, change lanes. It’s constant changing and you have to be prepared. You can’t get fl ustered when the gear changes. You have to adapt and you have to adapt with grace and style.’ Denele Sweet | Encore Dance Studio in Warrenton See Exporters, Page A6 See Dancing, Page A6