A2 THE ASTORIAN • THURSDAY, JUNE 24, 2021 Astoria resumes water shut-off s IN BRIEF Downtown association hires interim director Practice suspended during pandemic The Astoria Downtown Historic District Association has hired former Astoria City Councilor Jessamyn West as interim executive director. The association opted to hire West as an interim direc- tor following a failed search for a permanent executive director. West will start on July 1. “I am incredibly honored to be stepping into the interim position but also nervous,” West said in a statement. “I really look up to (former director) Sarah Lu (Heath) and remember saying how her shoes were going to be challeng- ing to fi ll when congratulating her on her new position.” Heath took a job with the Columbia-Pacifi c Eco- nomic Development District this spring after 4 1/2 years with the downtown association. West, who is part owner of the Oddfellows Building in Astoria and director of the Astoria Arts and Movement Center, had been appointed to the City Council to fi ll a vacancy in 2019. She opted not to run for election in November when her term was set to end. “As many other businesses know, this is a challeng- ing time to secure employees, and we are fortunate to have found such a solid leader in the community who could step in and continue the work of the (downtown association),” said Julie Kovatch, the board president. Surfer dies after being found in the water near Short Sand Beach A surfer died Saturday after being found in the water unconscious at Short Sand Beach. Emergency crews were called at about 1:20 p.m. after someone walking along the beach saw a man fl oating in the water unconscious and not breathing. When crews arrived, bystanders were performing CPR. The man was taken to the parking lot by a util- ity task vehicle. From there, the man was taken to Prov- idence Seaside Hospital by ambulance, where offi cials say he was pronounced dead. Two people injured in crash on Highway 101 Two people were taken to a hospital Sunday after- noon following a crash on U.S. Highway 101 near Can- non Beach. Police say a vehicle was heading southbound when the driver crashed into a vehicle that was stopped and waiting to turn left. The driver and passenger of the vehicle that was rear- ended were taken to the hospital by ambulance. Warrenton approves budget WARRENTON — The City Commission on Tuesday approved the budget for the fi scal year that starts in July. The budget is $49.5 million, up from $42.2 million this fi scal year. The city said the increase is due to a conservative budget approach taken last year during the coronavirus pandemic. Most of the impact from the pandemic came from a loss in lodging tax revenue. Warrenton had planned to increase water rates by 5% and sewer by 4% in 2020 to help pay for the increased cost of ser- vices, but canceled the increases because of the virus impacts. The city decided to delay increases again. — The Astorian DEATHS June 22, 2021 In HILL, Brief Sanford, 84, of Astoria, died in Astoria. Hughes-Ransom Mor- Deaths tuary is in charge of the arrangements. RICHMAN, Gene Neal, 73, of Warrenton, died in Warrenton. Cald- well’s Luce-Layton Mor- tuary of Astoria is in charge of the arrangements. June 21, 2021 GOULART, Tami, 51, of Hammond, died in Hammond. Hughes-Ran- som Mortuary is in charge of the arrangements. SMITH, Douglas, 57, of Astoria, died in Asto- ria. Hughes-Ransom Mor- tuary is in charge of the arrangements. SMITH, Martha, 89, of Astoria, died in Asto- ria. Hughes-Ransom Mor- tuary is in charge of the arrangements. June 19, 2021 GARCIA, Javier, 34, of Portland, died in Sea- side. Hughes-Ransom Mortuary is in charge of the arrangements. ON THE RECORD Unauthorized use of DUII On a the vehicle Record • Alex J. Heckes, 23, of • Matthew D. Coman, 36, was arrested Saturday on U.S. Highway 30 in Astoria for unauthorized use of a vehicle. Chinook, Washington, was arrested Sunday on U.S. Highway 101 for driving under the infl uence of intox- icants and reckless driving. PUBLIC MEETINGS THURSDAY Sunset Empire Transportation District Board, 9 a.m., budget hearing and board meeting, (electronic meeting). Clatsop County Recreational Lands Planning Advisory Committee, 1 p.m., (electronic meeting). Cannon Beach Planning Commission, 6 p.m., (electronic meeting). 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 By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Astorian People with past due water and sewer bills in Astoria are going to have to pay as city leaders end certain emergency mea- sures tied to the coronavirus pandemic. The City Council voted Monday to end the city’s suspension of late fees and service disconnection as the economy reopens and more people return to jobs and normal life. Approximately 40 accounts in the city have past-due balances that exceed 30 days and have yet to arrange a formal payment plan with the city. Letters to these accounts will go out by the end of June informing them of their options to pay the outstanding balance. Any accounts that hav- en’t paid in full or estab- lished payment plans with the city by late August will have their water turned off Hailey Hoff man/The Astorian Astoria draws drinking water from the Bear Creek watershed. at the end of that month and face the city’s usual collec- tions process, City Manager Brett Estes said. Other cities have resumed normal water billing, Estes noted. Warrenton resumed water shut-off s on overdue accounts in March . The city had implemented a similar DIGITAL EZpay (per month) .................................................................................................................$8.25 the city’s fi nance department works with people on pay- ment options. The other councilors agreed. “I think that our staff works well with people, so we’ll give them the oppor- tunity to catch up and move forward,” City Councilor Tom Hilton said. Warrenton city manager to retire By NICOLE BALES The Astorian WARRENTON — City Manager Linda Engbretson announced her retirement Tuesday night after more than 25 years with the city. Engbretson, the former city recorder, was hired as the interim city manager in 2016 following the resig- nation of former City Man- ager Kurt Fritsch. Fritsch left amid a con- troversy over the Eighth smooth transition. Street Dam, and Engbret- “I have spent the last son was off ered 26 years as an the position per- employee of the manently later that c ity of Warren- year. ton, the last fi ve as Her retirement is the city manager,” eff ective Sept. 30. Engbretson said Engbretson said during a C ity C om- her retirement was mission meeting. Linda planned. She said “It has been one of Engbretson she is willing to con- the greatest honors tinue on an interim of my life to serve basis until a new city man- the public in this commu- ager is hired to ensure a nity. I was born in Asto- ria, but Warrenton has been my community. I am truly grateful to the citizens, the commission and the incred- ible staff for their support over the years.” Mayor Henry Balensifer recognized Engbretson for taking the helm during a hectic and transitional time for the city. “It’s a sad day for War- renton,” Balensifer said. “And we thank you for what you’ve done.” Sex ed: Curriculum never reviewed Continued from Page A1 mittee’s decision does not have an immediate impact on the teaching of the “My Future-My Choice” program . The curriculum, used in Knappa for the past decade, is taught in the spring and will not be taught again until next spring. Fritz is planning a formal review of the cur- riculum in the fall. Under the school district’s policies, the sex education curriculum is supposed to be reviewed every two years . This has never happened, Fritz told the school board. Parents can choose to opt their children out of the program. Craig Weaver, the school board chairman, and board members Michelle Finn and Cullen Bangs voted in favor of overturning the commit- tee’s decision. Board mem- bers Will Isom and Ed John- son said that while they did not fully agree with aspects of the state curriculum, they were opposed to suspending the program in part because of the upcoming review. Oregon schools are required to teach a health and sex education program that meets certain state standards or risk losing critical funding. There are no substitute cur- riculums available that meet state standards, the Knappa curriculum committee noted in its decision last week. An alternative would be to cre- ate something in Knappa from the ground up, but there are concerns about the small school district’s capacity to take on that kind of a project, Fritz told the school board. ‘No place in a classroom’ People who spoke against the curriculum Monday said that what was being taught was inappropriate and out of line with their values. Christopher Morey, the president of the Knappa Par- ents Organization, called for the suspension of the entire curriculum, pend- ing the review in the fall. He wants members of the Knappa Parents Organization to be included on the review board and said the school district should create a new curriculum that is “in line with the community and its standards.” On their Facebook page, the Knappa Parents Organi- zation described the original discussion by the curriculum committee as a “Transgender Curriculum Hearing.” nurse with Columbia Memo- rial Hospital and a longtime resident of Knappa, pushed back against the group’s claims to represent a majority of Knappa parents. She also spoke about her own experience treating stu- dents who came from the Knappa community to the hospital’s emergency depart- ment. Some were pregnant or in abusive situations. “And they were afraid to tell their parents and in talking to these young peo- ple what we found out is they really lacked education,” Oien said. ‘IT’S HARD TO RESPECT YOUR PURPOSE IF IT’S CLOUDED WITH THE DISRESPECT OF OTHERS.’ Courtney Bangs | Clatsop County commissioner Morey said sex education is rarely a popular topic. “What is being included in modern sex ed, however, would have been considered indecent, even borderline criminal, only a generation ago,” he said. Sex education is just one topic the organization plans to tackle including account- ability among school district administrators and pandem- ic-related masking and social distancing, Morey told The Astorian later. Casey Wray, a Knappa resident and member of the Knappa’s Parents Organiza- tion, was more specifi c about her concerns with the state curriculum . She referenced issues she had with two chap- ters where basic sex acts are defi ned. “These subjects have no place in a classroom,” she told the school board. “This is a very uncomfortable expe- rience for these kids.” Barbara Oien, a former 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 suspension of late fees, pen- alties and service disconnec- tions to assist people during the pandemic. But there is a point where the city has to return to nor- mal procedures, Astoria City Councilor Roger Rocka said. He said he was confi dent about returning to normal operations because of how WANTED Alder and Maple Saw Logs & Standing Timber Northwest Hardwoods • Longview, WA Contact: John Anderson • 360-269-2500 One young woman was fi ve months pregnant and didn’t know basic anatomical terms. “I think the topic of sex education overall is very dif- fi cult for parents to do,” she added. “It’s diffi cult for the school district to do. It’s dif- fi cult for husbands and wives to talk to each other about it and I think the more educa- tion the kids have, the better.” As she spoke, Oien was interrupted by shouts from the audience and was not able to fi nish her statement. The school board did not intervene and her time ran out. Other speakers had not been interrupted . Clatsop County Commis- sioner Courtney Bangs, a Knappa resident, attended the meeting. She told The Asto- rian she has known Oien for years. In a post on her Face- book page published Tuesday morning, Bangs pushed back at the people who had inter- rupted Oien. “When you bully or heckle you lose your voice,” she wrote. “It’s hard to respect your purpose if it’s clouded with the disrespect of oth- ers. You can enact change through process and deco- rum. When decorum is lost, ears will close to your voice.” ‘Not a road we want to go down’ Isom, who, along with serving on the school board is the executive director of the Port of Astoria, expressed his concerns about the Knappa Parents Organiza- tion. In a statement he read Monday, h e noted that he is a very conservative person with his own opinions and concerns about the state sex education curriculum. However, he said, there are many ways for people to bring issues to the school district’s attention: call- ing administrators, attend- ing school board meetings or even contacting board mem- bers directly. With the exception of one person who spoke to the school board more than a month ago, Isom said he had not previously heard from anyone in the group about issues with curriculum. The meeting Monday was his fi rst time seeing many of the people at a school board meeting. He also referred to threat- ening comments made at the curriculum committee’s fi rst meeting and in comments online. Isom recalled one person had said, “This is just the tail of the snake, we can go all the way up to the head of the snake and cut that off .” Online, another per- son warned that “you’re not going to like the outcome if this actually continues.” The Knappa Parents Organization did not publicly denounce, condemn or oth- erwise separate themselves from these comments, Isom said, adding, “This is scary stuff and not a road we want to go down.” Still, he acknowledged that he agreed with many of the statements made by the organization, particularly that it is possible to teach children to be tolerant of ideas without teaching them those ideas, and that every- one is deserving of respect. But, he concluded, par- ents in Knappa do not need the Knappa Parents Orga- nization in order for their voices to be heard.