A2 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, MAY 18, 2021 IN BRIEF Kindergarten event planned at Astor Elementary Incoming kindergarten students will get to preview life at Astor Elementary School. The event for incoming students who will be 5 by September will be held from 3 to 5 p.m. on Thursday. The students will get a chance to play on the school playground, draw with sidewalk chalk and participate in other activities hosted by the school. Information will also be available about how to reg- ister children for kindergarten at Astor. Registration is open on the school’s website. In general, the Astoria School District is expecting a large class of incoming kindergartners. All activities at the Thursday event will occur out- side. Masks must be worn as a precaution against the coronavirus. — The Astorian Coast Guard suspends search for Oregon fi sherman lost overboard GRAYS HARBOR, Wash. — The U.S. Coast Guard suspended the search Friday for a 47-year-old man who reportedly fell overboard while fi shing for halibut 28 miles northwest of Grays Harbor. The man was identifi ed as Jason LaBrie, of Ore- gon City. Fishermen aboard the 26-foot vessel Defi ance II activated an emergency position indicating radio bea- con after realizing LaBrie was missing. — Chinook Observer Earthquake strikes west of Port Orford A 4.1-magnitude earthquake shook the bottom of the Pacifi c Ocean around 8 a.m. Sunday, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. The quake struck about 100 miles west of Port Orford. It was the 10th-strongest earthquake off the Oregon Coast in 2021 so far, coming about two-and- a-half weeks after three separate quakes set just as many still-unbeaten records for the year. The strongest among them hit magnitude 5.4. — The Oregonian DEATHS May 17, 2021 In LINDSLEY, Brief Eileen, 74, of Astoria, died in Astoria. Caldwell’s Deaths Luce-Layton Mortuary of Astoria is in charge of the arrangements. May 16, 2021 DIAMOND, Louis Elliott III, 67, of Gearhart, died in Gearhart. Cald- well’s Luce-Layton Mor- tuary of Astoria is in charge of the arrangements. May 12, 2021 WAGNER, Kathleen, 76, of Astoria, died in Astoria. Hughes-Ransom Mortuary is in charge of the arrangements. MEMORIAL Wednesday, May 19 Memorial STEVENSON, Rose- mary — Graveside ser- vice at 11 a.m., Ocean View Cemetery, 575 S.W. 18th St. in Warrenton. Ste- venson, 98, of Longview, Washington, formerly of Astoria, died in Longview. Hughes-Ransom Mor- tuary is in charge of the arrangements. ON THE RECORD Theft On Record • Beth the A. Scherf, 51, of The Dalles, was arrested Saturday at Fred Meyer in Warrenton for theft in the fi rst degree. PUBLIC MEETINGS TUESDAY Clatsop County Board of Commissioners, 10 a.m., work session, (electronic meeting). Miles Crossing Sanitary Sewer District Board, 3 p.m., budget meeting, 34583 U.S. Highway 101 Business. Port of Astoria Commission, 4 p.m., (electronic meeting). Astoria Historic Landmarks Commission, 5:30 p.m., City Hall, 1095 Duane St. Seaside Planning Commission, 6 p.m., work session, 989 Broadway St. Seaside School District Board, 6 p.m., (electronic meet- ing). WEDNESDAY Youngs River Lewis & Clark Water District Board, 2 p.m., budget meeting, 34583 U.S. Highway 101 Business. Seaside Tourism Advisory Committee, 3 p.m., 989 Broad- way St. Seaside Tree Board, 4 p.m., 989 Broadway St. Cannon Beach City Council, 6 p.m., work session, (elec- tronic meeting). THURSDAY Clatsop Care Health District Board, 3 p.m., budget review meeting, (electronic meeting). Seaside Transportation Advisory Commission, 6 p.m., 989 Broadway St. PUBLIC MEETINGS Established July 1, 1873 (USPS 035-000) Published Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday by EO Media Group, 949 Exchange St., PO Box 210, Astoria, OR 97103 Telephone 503-325-3211, 800-781-3211 or Fax 503-325-6573. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Astorian, PO Box 210, Astoria, OR 97103-0210 DailyAstorian.com Circulation phone number: 800-781-3214 Periodicals postage paid at Astoria, OR ADVERTISING OWNERSHIP All advertising copy and illustrations prepared by The Astorian become the property of The Astorian and may not be reproduced for any use without explicit prior approval. COPYRIGHT © Entire contents © Copyright, 2021 by The Astorian. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS MEMBER CERTIFIED AUDIT OF CIRCULATIONS, INC. Printed on recycled paper Subscription rates Eff ective January 12, 2021 MAIL EZpay (per month) ...............................................................................................................$10.75 13 weeks in advance ...........................................................................................................$37.00 26 weeks in advance ...........................................................................................................$71.00 52 weeks in advance ........................................................................................................ $135.00 DIGITAL EZpay (per month) .................................................................................................................$8.25 Education district eyes space at recreation center Potential move from Astoria to Seaside By R.J. MARX The Astorian SEASIDE — The Sunset Empire Park and Recreation District and the Northwest Regional Education Service District are in talks to lease a portion of the Sunset Recre- ation Center . The former Broadway Middle School would be “the ideal hub for our ser- vices,” wrote Dan Goldman, the superintendent of the e ducation d istrict. The education district is in the process of selling the 29,000-square-foot Clat- sop Service Center loca- tion in Astoria and is seek- ing space to lease, Goldman said. They hope to down- side to a 7,600-square-foot space in the Sunset Recre- ation Center. “It would be a signifi cant downsize, but it’s what we need now,” Goldman said at a park district board meeting last week. “We’re looking to actually get in a space that not only is a better fi t for us in terms of size, but also pro- vides us an opportunity to do what ESD does best.” The education district is seeking classroom space for preschool programs, com- munity meetings and offi ce space. The district brings additional school resources to students and school dis- tricts in Clatsop, Tillamook, Washington and Columbia counties. “We provide what you would consider a co-op of services across school districts,” Goldman said. In Clatsop County, this R.J. Marx/The Astorian A former classroom is being used for temporary storage at the Sunset Recreation Center. includes technology and administrative support , early learning, migrant educa- tion, child care and special education. “I am struck by the align- ment in our organizations’ visions,” Goldman wrote to the park district in a March letter. “We lead our commu- nity toward a healthy, active lifestyle and foster a sense of community through inclu- sive, sustainable, educa- tional and recreational pro- grams. ... The colocation of our services will undoubt- edly multiply our respec- tive capacities to serve Clat- sop County children and families.” Areas of interest to the education district at the for- mer middle school include three classrooms along the southwest corner of the building, the computer lab adjacent to the library, administrative offi ce space and a counseling room. These spaces would be used to provide programs and services to children and families in the community. “We shift resources to where there is the greatest need,” Goldman said. The lease would likely include installation of tem- porary doors and walls to secure their part of the prop- erty. Restrooms in the west hallway could be shared. The education district will be leaving the Astoria location at the end of June. If a deal doesn’t come together immediately, the district is “prepared to be remote for a little while,” Goldman said . “We really like this option for the reasons I stated,” he said. “But if the park district felt like it couldn’t move forward, we’ll be OK.” Board member Su Cod- dington viewed the proposal positively. “What an oppor- tunity in having purchased this building, to have oppor- tunities like this,” she said. “I am grateful to them for being interested.” Board member Michael Hinton said he would enjoy working with the education district. “I think they would be a healthy partner for us,” he said. “I would like, at an appropriate time, to have Skyler (Archibald, the park district’s executive director) begin some kind of negoti- ation so we can defi ne the lease.” Supreme Court ruling will not make unanimous jury requirement retroactive By CONRAD WILSON Oregon Public Broadcasting The U.S. Supreme Court ruled 6-3 on Monday that non unanimous juries are not retroactive. Last year, the high court found they were unconsti- tutional, ending the prac- tice in Oregon, which at the time was the lone state that allowed juries to con- vict people of most felonies without unanimity. In writing for the court’s conservative majority, Jus- tice Brett Kavanaugh said applying the court’s earlier ruling retroactively “would potentially overturn decades of convictions,” adding that “conducting scores of tri- als years after the crimes occurred would require sig- nifi cant state resources.” The court’s conserva- tives also noted their rul- ing applies to federal cases. “States remain free, if they choose, to retroactively apply the jury-unanim- ity rules as a matter of state law in state post-conviction proceedings,” Kavanaugh stated . The ruling could have tossed out convictions for anyone convicted by a non unanimous jury, eff ec- tively sending their case back to the local prosecu- tor’s offi ce that originally fi led the charges to deter- mine how to proceed. The case the justices ruled in Monday, Edwards v. Vannoy, involved Louisiana prisoner Thedrick Edwards. He was sentenced to life in prison after being convicted by a non unanimous jury and has since argued that prose- cutors intentionally excluded Black jurors from the case. In Louisiana, there are about 1,500 known non unan- imous jury cases, and in Ore- gon there are about 300. In both states, the practice is based in discrimination. Voters in Oregon passed it in 1934 at a time when the Ku Klux Klan was popu- lar and anti-immigrant sen- timent was high. In Louisi- ana, the law was directly tied to Jim Crow laws and aimed to make it easier to convict Black defendants so white landowners could maintain a cheap post-slavery labor force. In l ast year’s decision in Ramos v. Louisiana, the Supreme Court took the unusual move of overturning precedent to fi nd non unani- mous juries were unconstitu- tional. Justice Neil Gorsuch said then that the justices simply got it wrong in 1972 when they ruled on Apo- daca v. Oregon, allowing the practice of non unanimous juries in state criminal cases to continue for decades. “Every judge must learn to live with the fact he or she will make some mis- takes; it comes with the ter- ritory,” Gorsuch wrote. “But it is something else entirely to perpetuate something we all know to be wrong only because we fear the conse- quences of being right.” Judge Elena Kagan wrote the dissent for the court’s three liberals. “Citing centuries of his- tory, the c ourt in Ramos termed the Sixth Amend- ment right to a unanimous jury ‘vital,’ ‘essential,’ ‘indispensable,’ and ‘fun- damental’ to the American legal system,” Kagan wrote. “The c ourt therefore saw fi t to disregard stare decisis and overturn a 50-year-old precedent enabling states to convict criminal defendants based on non unanimous verdicts. And in taking that weighty step, the Court also vindicated core principles of racial justice.” Kagan stated the majority failed to follow its own prec- edent by not considering the Ramos ruling a “watershed” event, legally speaking. “The result of today’s rul- ing is easily stated,” Kagan wrote. “Ramos will not apply retroactively, mean- ing that a prisoner whose appeals ran out before the decision can receive no aid from the change in law it made.” Second Amendment sanctuaries facing court test By LINDSAY WHITEHURST and ANDREW SELSKY Associated Press SALEM — The fi rst court test of whether local govern- ments can ban police from enforcing certain gun laws is playing out in a rural Ore- gon county, one of a wave of U.S. counties declaring itself a Second Amendment sanctuary. The measure that voters in Columbia County narrowly approved last year forbids local offi cials from enforcing most federal and state gun laws and could impose thou- sands of dollars in fi nes on those who try. Voters in Clat- sop County rejected a similar measure. Second Amendment sanc- tuary resolutions have been adopted by some 1,200 local Andrew Selsky/AP Photo Firearms are displayed at a gun shop in Salem. governments in states around the U.S., including Virginia, Colorado, New Mexico, Kansas, Illinois and Florida, according to Shawn Fields, an assistant professor of law at Campbell University in North Carolina who tracks them. Many are symbolic, but some, like in Columbia County, carry legal force. The movement took off around 2018, as states con- sidered stricter gun laws in the wake of mass shoot- ings, including a high school shooting near Parkland, Florida, that killed 17 peo- ple and made survivors into high-profi le gun control activists. After President Joe Biden took offi ce, conservative lawmakers in several states proposed banning police from enforcing federal gun measures, and at least one proposal in Arizona has been signed into law. The movement hasn’t yet faced a major legal chal- lenge. The Oregon case was fi led by Columbia County under an unusual provision in state law that allows a judge to examine a measure before it goes into eff ect. No timeline has been set for a court hearing. “This will allow the court to tell us whether the county can actually decline See Guns, Page A8