DailyAstorian.com // Tuesday, March 16, 2021 148Th year, NO. 111 $1.50 CORONAVIRUS Wyden touts stimulus package Oregon Democrat visits Astoria By EDWARD STRATTON The Astorian U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden said he sees bet- ter days ahead after the passage of a $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief bill. The American Rescue Plan Act will pro- vide checks of up to $1,400 for individuals, extend a $300 weekly fed- eral unemployment boost into September and create a new tax waiver on the first $10,200 of unemploy- ment benefits received by many Americans. The act also expanded the child tax credit for a U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden year, creating a guaran- teed source of unrestricted income for families that is expected to halve the national rate of childhood pov- erty. It invests nearly $20 billion into vac- cinations, $25 billion into rental and utility assistance and $350 billion into state, local and tribal relief. “This relief package is an essential booster shot for Oregon, and for our schools and our workers and our small businesses and our health,” the Oregon Democrat said at a virtual town hall for Clatsop County resi- dents hosted at The Astorian. “I think this bill gives us a chance to see better days ahead.” See Wyden, Page A6 Photos by hailey hoffman/The astorian Some students returned to Astoria High School on Thursday. Schools face uncertainty amid return to classrooms Pandemic-era changes could continue next school year By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Astorian North Coast Grub ends deliveries Some backlash over business model By EDWARD STRATTON The Astorian North Coast Grub, a delivery service that launched in February, has stopped taking food deliveries. Owner Jakki Millo said she was no longer able to find local drivers follow- ing a backlash to her company’s business model. She is advertising for drivers and said the service could return. Millo expanded to the North Coast amid a rush of other delivery companies. Slurpalicious, an online ordering plat- form that started over the summer, had recently begun deliveries. Global deliv- ery giant DoorDash announced it would launch later this year. A year after they had to leave school abruptly because of concerns about the spread of the corona- virus, many Astoria middle school and high school students returned to class- rooms last week. The return, approved by the school board in February, only allows students on campus for a limited number of hours each week. But it puts the school district on track to comply with Gov. Kate Brown’s executive order calling for Oregon’s students to resume full in-person or hybrid classes. “One year later, thanks to the work and smart choices of Oregonians to slow the spread of COVID-19 in our communities, I am so pleased to see over 174,000 students back in the learn- ing environment that serves them best: in-person instruction,” Brown said in a statement Friday. “While parents can keep their chil- dren in distance learning if they choose, this order will give every Oregon stu- dent the option to return to school this year.” The shift back to some in-person learning hints at a return to normalcy. The rate of positive cases in Clatsop County remains low and school leaders anticipate that an announcement from the state later this week may further Due to social distancing guidelines, school buses can only carry a limited number of students. MORE INSIDE Knappa teacher tests positive for virus • a2 county reports new virus cases • a6 ease restrictions, allowing even more students to return. Still, North Coast school districts expect other markers of the pandemic — like masks and social distancing — to continue into next school year. In fact, they are planning on it. But nothing is certain. Stimulus money The school districts have received federal stimulus money, and will receive even more. That money, phil- osophically at least, is intended to go toward boosting educational opportuni- ties and addressing inequalities among students’ access to education because of the pandemic. But if certain distancing require- ments and other restrictions continue, districts say they will likely have to put some of the money to basic operations like staffing and transportation. Even now, not all students who would like to return to school are able to do so. In Astoria, for example, the phys- ical size of classrooms and state guide- lines on social distancing constrain how many students can attend. Astoria also faces significant trans- portation hurdles. The school district has long struggled over the years to hire enough drivers and secure the neces- sary number of buses, but pandemic-re- lated restrictions have exacerbated the issue. See Schools, Page A6 See North Coast Grub, Page A2 A hometown trooper was never alone Eaton reflects on changing attitudes to law enforcement By PATRICK WEBB For The Astorian ASELLE, Wash. — Lonnie Eaton has patrolled a million miles. In his 30-year career with the Washington State Patrol, the trooper has had the highs of chasing free- way speeders at 100 mph and the lows of comforting grieving accident survivors. He began his career in Kelso, patrolling Interstate 5 in 1991. At N Patrick Webb/For The astorian Washington State Patrol Trooper Lonnie Eaton has been a familiar fixture patrolling Pacific and Wahkiakum counties in his Chevrolet Tahoe, likely covering more than 30,000 miles a year. He retired on the exact 30-year anniversary of starting with the agency as a cadet. two of his first three fatal wrecks, he was assigned as the lead investigator. “You just try to be a good human,” he said. “It’s a hard thing to deal with. It’s a sad time and you have just got to try to help.” But once he left the scene, he found comfort in his faith. “There’s always someone else with me,” said Eaton, a deacon at the Naselle Assembly of God. Freeway patrol was a rush. “If you haven’t hit 100 mph, you are having a bad day,” he laughed. “I enjoyed that.” Eaton was transferred to Ray- mond in 1999. Soon after, the detach- ment moved to Naselle, where he had graduated from high school in 1985. It meant he and his wife, Kim, could raise their two children in a support- ive environment. He coached sports and savored community liaison work See Eaton, Page A6