A6 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, JUNE 22, 2021 Vouchers: People must fi t guidelines for emergency help Continued from Page A1 Malia Riggs/For The Astorian Miss Emerald Valley Abigail Hayes reacts after being crowned Miss Oregon. Miss Oregon: Teens will compete in Orlando Continued from Page A1 The fi ve-person judging panel included publisher Neal Robbins; 2008 Miss Oregon Danijela Radeta; former Miss Idaho pageant director Gene Hill; writer and artist Mary Anne Radmacher; and Sea- side Chamber of Commerce CEO Brian Owen. Judges selected fi ve fi nal- ists out of 18 entrants based on Thursday and Friday pre- liminaries, onstage inter- views, red carpet perfor- mance and talent. Along with Hayes, the fi nalists included Miss City of Roses Allison Burke, of Tigard; Miss Evergreen Claire Sparks, of Beaver- ton; Miss Tri-Valley Danielle Cormier, of Wilsonville; and Miss Portland-Metro Sophia Takla, of Portland. Miss Clatsop County Haylie Moon, from Can- non Beach, was named non- fi nalist interview winner and received a $250 scholarship. “This is my fi nal year com- peting as a m iss contestant,” she said. “I could not have done anyone more proud. I’m so proud of myself. I’m so proud of this community of women and the sisterhood. And I absolutely love com- peting in this program.” Miss North Coast Cait- lin Hillman, of Gearhart, said she felt great about the pag- eant. “I’m really just happy to be here,” she said . “This is my fi rst time competing in the m iss division, so it was great to be able to represent the North Coast and be here and meet so many amazing women. I’m very excited for Abigail. She’s going to be an amazing Miss Oregon.” Earlier Saturday, rein- ing titleholder Marin Gray passed the Miss Oregon Outstanding Teen crown to Moira O’Bryan, of Coos Bay, one of 11 teen contestants. “It’s pretty exciting,” Beth McShane, the program’s executive director, said. “Coos County is one of our oldest, best local programs, and they have their fi rst state titleholder.” Teens will compete in Orlando next month. As the winner , Hayes will receive a $10,000 scholar- ship and in-kind scholarship contributions from the Sher- man College of Chiroprac- tic. She will participate in the Miss America competition in December at Mohegan Sun in Connecticut. In her fi nal interview question, Hayes was asked how she would build stronger relationships with local busi- nesses and sponsors. “Looking at the 75th anni- versary of Miss Oregon, what better brand than for our brand to be hope,” Hayes said. “After a year of coming out with political tension and global pandemic I believe it’s very important that we pro- duce hope, and as Miss Ore- gon, it is my mission to help involve other organizations ... and letting them know what this organization is truly about.” Her fi rst act as Miss Oregon? “I’m going to go hug my parents and cry,” she said. Krizo: ‘This is what I’ve always wanted to do’ the Scott River Lodge in Fort Jones, California, and The Crooked Ram in Manches- ter, Vermont, among other destinations. Krizo and his wife, Abby, live with their two boys, Jon- athan, 16, and Samuel, 11, in Seaside. They met in Cannon Beach when she was working as business manager at the Ecola Bible College. Continued from Page A1 faith and your culinary skills in the industry,” Krizo said. ‘You are not a pilot’ Krizo grew up on the bor- der of California and Oregon, a mile from the small town of Tule Lake, on his family’s horseradish and barley farm. To overcome shyness, he took public speaking courses and joined the Future Busi- ness Leaders of America in high school. He was also deathly afraid of heights, so he conquered that by attend- ing aeronautical school. “When I was young, I was really shy and it was hard for me to talk to anyone,” Krizo said. “One thing that I’ve always had is drive. If I have any challenges, that becomes my main focus, not in a neg- ative way, but in a positive way.” After graduating , he went to Embry-Riddle Aeronau- tical University in Prescott, Arizona, to become a com- mercial airline pilot. A side job waiting tables sidetracked his fl ight career after he accepted a job as a cook at the Sheraton resort in Prescott. While he had diffi cult moments — the sous-chef didn’t like him much and sometimes Krizo got knives thrown at him — the industry grew on him. “I kept fi nding I had much more passion for the cooking and not as much for the fl ying,” he said. “Basi- cally, God said, ‘You are not a pilot.’” Krizo attended T he Culi- nary Institute of America in Hyde Park, New York, where he learned being a chef was a career, not just a job. He studied in Paris and worked at premier Italian restaurants in Sydney, Aus- tralia, before returning to the United States as lead line cook at a Bertrand’s, a fi ne dining French restaurant in San Diego. Krizo started Christian Chefs International in 1998, developing a curriculum and teaching culinary arts for what would become a life- time of instruction. Krizo owned the Pinehurst Inn and White Pine Restau- rant, a fi ne-dining bed-and- U.S. Sen. Jeff Merk- ley, an Oregon Democrat, said, “It’s impossible to thrive without a safe and aff ordable roof over your head. I’ve been pushing for strong responses to meet the housing crisis so many (of our ) families are fac- ing, and that have become even more dire during the pandemic, and these grants are a good piece of the solution. I will continue to do all I can to secure the resources we need to weather this pandemic and make sure all of Oregon’s families have a home they can aff ord.” The Northwest Oregon Housing Authority will administer the vouchers to people referred by a social services agency in each county. Clatsop Commu- nity Action, which operates the regional food bank and provides housing, energy assistance and other criti- cal services to low-income people, will make referrals in Clatsop County. The housing authority put a freeze on issuing new vouchers last year as part of a corrective action plan to get from “troubled” to what HUD calls a “standard per- former.” HUD defi ned the housing authority as trou- bled in January 2020 fol- lowing an audit report of the housing choice voucher program. More than 480 house- holds are on the waiting list for vouchers in Clatsop County. Most households on the waiting list are peo- ple who are single, elderly and disabled. The emergency hous- ing vouchers will not be administered to people on the waiting list. People must fi t the guidelines for the emergency help and be referred by Clatsop Com- munity Action. “NOHA is looking for- ward to working with our exceptional community partners, CAT (Commu- nity Action Team), CARE (Community Action Resource Enterprises) and CCA to expand the sup- ply of aff ordable housing,” Nina Reed, the chairwoman of the housing authority’s board of commissioners, said in an email. “This is a great opportunity to engage our services with theirs and build new relationships!” Covid: 2,756 deaths from the virus statewide Continued from Page A1 He said none of the cases tied to workplaces have reached the state’s thresh- old for disclosure, which is fi ve for workplaces with 30 or more employees. The county declined to provide any more informa- tion about the cases. As of Monday , the health authority has reported 206,850 cases and 2,756 deaths from the virus statewide. facebook.com/DailyAstorian Cooking amid the pandemic R.J. Marx/The Astorian Ira and Abby Krizo at the Christian Culinary Academy. breakfast southeast of Ash- land. “We got all sorts of great reviews, newspaper articles, but the lease came up and it wasn’t viable to pur- chase it,” he said. He joined a large cater- ing company in Portland, Catering at Its Best, as head chef. B ut throughout, Krizo believed his end goal would be a culinary school. “I believe that God has spoken to me many times. One of the times, it was so clear it might as well have been an audible voice,” Krizo said. “I knew that I was going one day to be a part of some- thing like that to train others.” Faith-based cooking He responded to an invi- tation to relocate to the North Coast in 2013 and started the Christian Culinary Academy. “The door opened up to come here, and here we are,” Krizo said. He rents the facility from the Christian Conference Center. “It is not a Bible col- lege- seminary culinary school,” Krizo said. “It is a culinary school preparing students to be professionals in the industry that they’re called to. Many students go into fi ne dining.” The program features a classical curriculum, with the participation of “The Gallop- ing Gourmet” Graham Kerr and global master chef Karl Guggenmos on the school’s advisory board. “We start off with knife skills and we get into soups, stocks, sauces and then cook- ing methods of diff erent pro- teins, meat, fi sh, poultry, sea- food, vegetables, starches ... we get into salads, appetiz- ers and desserts and breads,” Krizo said. Guest instructors come from restaurants along the coast or fl y in from other locations. “Today we had chef Tyler Benson,” Krizo said. “He actually spent quite a bit of time in Sri Lanka.” While most students come from the West, aspiring chefs come from throughout the United States and the school is approved to accept interna- tional students . Most culinary schools operate fi ve hours a day, fi ve days a week. The academy is fi ve days a week, eight hours a day, enabling students to fi ll a two-year curriculum into a one-year program. Many graduates go on to Christian conference cen- ters, Krizo said. Local restau- rants who have hired grad- uates include the Stephanie Inn, the Wayfarer, Sea Level Bakery + Coff ee and Dough Dough Bakery. Nationally, students from this year’s graduating class are headed to the Glen Eyrie Castle in Colorado Springs, Colorado, During the pandemic, career colleges were consid- ered essential, Krizo said, and the academy did not get shut down. “When COVID-19 hit a year ago, one of the things that kept me up all night was what can we do to not be a circumstance of what’s going on, but what can we do to make a diff erence,” he said. Students made hundreds of loaves daily, distributing them to food banks. When their annual chef’s dinner, typically held in the institute’s dining room, was canceled due to the pandemic, they pivoted to takeout from Cafe Dieu, with food prepared by student chefs and available from the North Coast Family Fellowship in Seaside. “The only thing the pan- demic changed for us is that it opened the door for us to be more of a support to the community through produc- ing food for the food bank and blessing the commu- nity with our Cafe Dieu take- out events,” he said. “With how well those have been received, we plan to continue both of those after the pan- demic is over.” Before a recent dinner, reservations were fi lled a week ahead of time. A wait- ing list fi lled up and the acad- emy’s student chefs served 150 guests. Krizo is looking forward to fall. “We are excited about all the applications that have already come in,” he said. There are still some spaces left. “This is what I’ve always wanted to do,” Krizo said. “Now that I’m doing it, I always want to get bet- ter. There’s always room for improvement.” • Powerful Tier 4- compliant diesel engine GET 0% APR FOR 84 MONTHS ON COMPACT TRACTORS • Premium Operator Station with ergonomic armrests and fender lights • AutoConnect™ mid-mover deck can be installed or removed in less than 5 minutes VANCOUVER NE 72ND AVE VANCOUVER, WA 17900 360-573-3171 ASTORIA 34912 HWY 101 BUSINESS ASTORIA, OR 97103 503-325-0792 www.cclawnandtractor.com 1Offer valid on qualifying purchases made between 04 May 2021 to 03 August 2021. Subject to approved installment credit with John Deere Financial. Down payment may be required. Average down payment is 10%. $13.89 per month for every $1,000 financed. 0% APR for 72 months only. Taxes, freight, setup and delivery charges could increase monthly payment. 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