»INSIDE THUR SDAY JULY 8 2021 E A SIGHT TO SE E, CARNAHAN CULLABY LAK KS OFFER DELIGHTS COUNTY PAR PAGE 8 EUM SEASIDE MUS RETURNS REFRESHED EXPLORE ASTORIA’S E ART SCEN ORS EXHIBIT HON INDIGENOUS LOCALS SLAW FOR SUMMER GATHERINGS PAGE 10 PAGE 6 PAGE 4 PAGE 2 IN TOKELAND! 149TH YEAR, NO. 4 DailyAstorian.com // THURSDAY, JULY 8, 2021 $1.50 State seeks county’s help on homeless camps Abandoned vehicles, trash on forestland By NICOLE BALES The Astorian Photos by Hailey Hoff man/The Astorian Todd Fox moves around the yard of City Lumber. The local hardware store has experienced numerous shortages throughout the past year. Global pandemic causes supply chain disruptions Some businesses living shipment to shipment By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Astorian W ith mask mandates lifted, people’s lower faces have reappeared. Toilet paper is usually in stock in North Coast gro- cery stores and local coronavirus case numbers have dropped signifi cantly. But the pandemic is still exerting its infl uence in other ways . Across businesses, it’s been hard to keep some items in stock because of supply chain disruptions and labor issues tied to the pandemic, but also because companies elsewhere are shifting how they do business or have run through their back stock. The Pet Works on 14th Street saw brisk business during the height of the pandemic last year. Now, however, they’re having trouble sourcing pet travel crates as factories in southern China weathered a recent heat wave that required production to temporar- ily shut down and there is less ship- ping container space amid an increased demand for goods. “Most everything you see (in the store) probably has some component that comes out of China,” said Nick Thompson, the manager at The Pet Works. “China can only produce so much stuff .” He thinks also about how wholesal- ers still had plenty of product stocked at warehouses ahead of pandemic peaks last year. Even as factories shut down and tra- ditional supply chains faltered, stores like The Pet Works could still get what they needed. Now, that source has The state Department of Forestry is asking Clatsop C ounty for help in addressing abandoned vehicles and trash left behind from homeless camps on forestland. During a county Board of Commis- sioners work session Tuesday, the depart- ment’s Astoria District presented the chal- lenges and costs associated with cleaning up and removing vehicles, RVs and trash. Since 2019, the state has spent more than $50,000 on cleanup costs. So far this year, nearly $10,000 has been spent cleaning up two sites. Ty Williams, the district operations coordinator for the Astoria District, said the department started budgeting for cleanup costs in the past two budget cycles. He said the increasing costs are becoming unsustainable. “Not only is this illegal practice unsightly, but it brings with it a possibil- ity of contamination to soils and streams,” Williams said. “There’s also a risk to our employees or the recreating public from dirty needles and other contaminants. During certain times of the year, there is also a fi re risk from this behavior. “This problem is not unique to just ODF. Many of our fellow forestland owners, as well as communities around See Camps, Page A6 City scraps scooter plans Lumber prices have skyrocketed across the country due to supply chain issues. run dry and wholesalers and retailers alike are more often living shipment to shipment. Thompson said they’ve had to diversify the brands they carry and then call around to their diff erent ven- dors to see what’s coming in. Fortu- nately, the market for new crates is not huge right now — especially as prices have started to creep up — and the store planned ahead for its busy season. Still, Thompson added, “It’s just a matter of us playing the shell game and fi guring out who has what in that week — if anyone has anything that week.” Across the street, Gimre’s Shoes has seen major delays in shoe ship- ments. Customers may not be able to fi nd the brand, style or size they want and it might be a long time before owner Pete Gimre is able to get it in for them. He’s been told this situation could continue into next year. It is not a unique problem right now, though, he said. Across busi- nesses, he’s heard some version of the same story. ‘It’s been a challenging year’ City Lumber has seen shortages in products throughout its hardware store and lumberyard, said owner Jeff Newenhof. The pandemic was a major reason, but not the only one. “There are all sorts of reasons, excuses — hurricanes in the Gulf Coast, ice storms in Texas, chemi- cal plant explosions in the Midwest A unanimous vote by the City Council By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Astorian Electric scooter company Bird won’t be building a nest in Astoria. The City Council decided not to pro- ceed with a possible pilot program for the pay-to-ride vehicles in a unanimous vote at a meeting Tuesday night. Bird needed permission to use city rights of way to stage scooters downtown and had proposed launching an initial test run of around 75 scooters in Astoria. A company representative touted the scooters as a low-cost option for com- muters and tourists, but city councilors were worried about safety risks and other problems that could arise, especially during the busy summer months. See Supply chain, Page A6 See Scooters, Page A6 Professor biking to give back A modifi ed Astoria Regatta returns Rojas-Galván begins monthlong fundraiser By GRIFFIN REILLY The Astorian Somewhere in Oregon, a bandit is on the loose. Fernando Rojas-Galván, a Spanish instructor at Clatsop Com- munity College, is set to ride 1,600 miles around Oregon in July to raise money for student textbooks, a journey he’s labeling the “Bandit Biking for Books.” Sponsored by the c ollege f oun- dation, his goal is to raise $150,000 upon returning to Astoria at the end of the month. The goal represents enough money to provide at least one textbook to each student each term of the upcoming school year. Rojas-Galván took the fi rst strides of his trip in Seaside on Monday . His motivation ? The belief his trip can showcase the power and importance of an often-overlooked route to higher education — one that he almost neglected . “Though I had always consid- ered community college a sec- ond option, it was the only option I could truly aff ord. But looking See Professor, Page A6 Festival was canceled in May By ALYSSA EVANS The Astorian Mitch Eckhardt Mara Dowaliby, the 2019 Astoria Regatta queen, passes her crown on to Annalyse Steele, the 2020 queen. The Astoria Regatta will be held as an “abbreviated festival” in August. The festival was canceled in 2020 because of concerns about the coronavirus pandemic. In May, organizers announced this year’s festival would also be canceled, but they reconsidered the decision. “Just a few weeks earlier, the Astoria Regatta Board of Directors had canceled the historic event for the second year in a row,” Melissa Grothe, a Lewis and Clark Elemen- tary School teacher and president of the Astoria Regatta Association, said in a statement. “However, as COVID-19 infections have fallen and pandemic restrictions have lifted, the board reconsidered its earlier decision.” The Aug. 14 festival will include a memorial service and a boat parade. The memorial ser- vice will begin at 11 a.m. at the Seamen’s Memorial at Maritime Memorial Park. The program will recognize the region’s maritime history. It will also honor mem- bers of the U.S. Coast Guard, U.S. Navy, commercial fi shermen, river and bar pilots and others who work in maritime industries. See Regatta, Page A6