148tH yEar, NO. 134 WEEKEND EDITION // Saturday, May 8, 2021 $1.50 CORONAVIRUS College crafts budget with eye on enrollment President calls decline ‘very significant’ By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Astorian Photos by Hailey Hoffman/the astorian TOP: Instead of a live audience, Astoria High School theater students performed ‘The Brothers Grimm Spectaculathon’ to a camera, two microphones and a laptop on Wednesday evening at the Astor Street Opry Company Playhouse. The play aims to combine the 209 classic fairy tales, like Rapunzel and Rumpelstiltskin, into one performance. The recording of the performance is available for $5 online and can be watched anytime on May 14 and May 15. GRIMM TALES After a uniquely challenging year, Clatsop Com- munity College leaders say they are in a strong financial position, but low enrollment remains a concern. The college, which benefited from emergency federal aid and early precautionary budget reduc- tions by college leaders, cannot sustain the lower levels of enrollment it has seen as a result of the coronavirus pandemic, Chris Breitmeyer, the col- lege president, told the budget committee this week. Still, he feels positive about the future of the col- lege. The budget presented to the committee did not add anything, he said, “but it doesn’t cut anything from our budget either.” The college’s $44.4 million spending plan, adopted by the budget committee but not yet approved by the college board, will keep the tuition cost per credit at $105. Included in the spending plan is $21.5 million in case a proposed expansion of the maritime science program, on hold because of the pandemic, moves forward. See College, Page A6 MORE INSIDE County reports new virus cases • a6 RIGHT: Senior Eli Harold as Rumpelstiltskin, left, talks with senior Sadie Wilkinson through a tin can phone. Homeless liaisons begin outreach BELOW: Freshman Aria Larsen plays Rapunzel in her tower as senior Daniel Lempke plays the prince trying to win her heart. Countywide push to help with housing By NICOLE BALES The Astorian During her first month in a new role, Cheryl Paul, a Clatsop County homeless liaison, has been getting to know the homeless population in Seaside, offering to help connect people to different housing options. During an Astoria homeless task force meeting on Thursday, Paul was credited for helping a woman in a camper find permanent housing and store the camper. Seaside Police Chief Dave Ham said the wom- an’s camper was parked on 12th Avenue and Necan- icum Drive, an area where several RVs are parked at a given time. Residents raised concerns about the number of RVs in the area during a Seaside City Council meet- ing in April. “It was great timing that she had come over that day,” Ham said. “I had actually made contact with somebody there ... and they had mentioned that they had been in contact with her. So it was neat to see that the liaison community person was out there work- ing that.” See Outreach, Page A6 Grants help museum, Craft3 Money for Lightship Columbia, entrepreneurs By EDWARD STRATTON The Astorian The M.J. Murdock Charita- ble Trust has awarded grants to a historic vessel restoration by the Columbia River Maritime Museum and new lending staff for Craft3 to help underserved entrepreneurs. The Astoria museum received $383,000, a third of the cost needed to dry dock the Lightship Columbia and open further areas of the vessel to the public. The lightship, com- missioned in 1951 and sold to the museum 40 years ago, is a national historic landmark that once guided ships into the mouth of the Columbia River. The vessel is about five years overdue for a dry dock. In October, it heads to Diversi- fied Marine in Portland, where crews will rehabilitate the hull to withstand the region’s brack- ish water. The museum has been fundraising for a $1.1 million project to maintain the hull and make areas of the ship, such as the engine room and crew quar- ters, safe for the public. Bruce Jones, the deputy director of the museum and the Astoria mayor, said the muse- um’s board has wondered peri- odically whether to keep spend- ing money maintaining the lightship. But the vessel is an integral part of the museum experience, Jones said, and was boarded by 60% of the 115,000 visitors in 2019. See Craft3, Page A6 Edward Stratton/the astorian The M.J. Murdock Charitable Trust awarded the Columbia River Maritime Museum $383,000 toward the rehabilitation of the Lightship Columbia, which heads to dry dock in October.