A2 THE ASTORIAN • THURSDAY, JULY 8, 2021 IN BRIEF Four people taken to hospital after crash on Highway 30 Four people were taken to the hospital Monday afternoon following a crash on U.S. Highway 30 in Astoria. Police say a vehicle crossed into the eastbound lane and struck another vehicle head-on before rolling onto its top, blocking both eastbound lanes. Both drivers and two passengers in the vehicle that was hit were taken to Columbia Memorial Hospital in Astoria. Razor clamming conservation closure to begin An annual conservation closure for razor clams begins July 15 on Clatsop County beaches. With the closure, the popular stretch of beach between Seaside and Hammond that yields more than 90% of the state’s razor clam harvest will have been closed to diggers since October. The annual conservation closure, established in 1967, runs through Sept. 30. It is intended to give young, newly set clams time to establish themselves on the beach. Last fall, the state had predicted a good harvest sea- son following that year’s conservation closure. But razor clamming was shut down because of high levels of domoic acid. Clatsop beaches remained closed into 2021 due to high toxin levels. Razor clamming remains open from Cape Lookout, south of Netarts Bay near Tillamook, to the Califor- nia border. — The Astorian Oregon heat death toll hits 116 New state fi gures show at least 116 people suc- cumbed to the harsh heat and sun that bore down on the Pacifi c Northwest from June 25 to June 28. At its peak, temperatures reached a record-shatter- ing 116 degrees in the Portland metro area. The new tally provided by the Oregon State Police on Wednesday provides no identifying details beyond the age, gender and county of residence of those who died — a stark listing of demographics that off ers few hints of the human tragedy that unfolded. A majority of the deaths occurred in Multnomah County. “Last week’s record-breaking heatwave is a harbin- ger of things to come,” Gov. Kate Brown said. “Cli- mate change is real, and it is here. We’ve been working to make sure Oregonians are prepared for these types of emergencies — and we’ll keep at it, centering the voices of those most impacted in our eff orts.” — Oregon Capital Bureau DEATHS July 6, 2021 In DAHLEN, Brief Mar- vel, 101, of Astoria, died in Astoria. Ocean Deaths View Funeral & Cre- mation Service of Asto- ria is in charge of the arrangements. HARWELL, Linda C., 72, of Ocean Park, Wash- ington, died in Astoria. Caldwell’s Luce-Lay- ton Mortuary of Asto- ria is in charge of the arrangements. July 2, 2021 KROTZER, Keith Merle, 47, of Westport, died near Knappa. Cald- well’s Luce-Layton Mor- tuary of Astoria is in charge of the arrangements. July 1, 2021 HARRINGTON, San- dra Lee, 68, of Gear- hart, died in Warrenton. Caldwell’s Luce-Lay- ton Mortuary of Asto- ria is in charge of the arrangements. MEMORIAL Thursday, July 8 Memorial HARRINGTON, Sandra Lee — Celebration of life at 2 p.m., Haystack Gardens, 148 E. Gower Ave. in Cannon Beach. ON THE RECORD DUII • Catherine Nicole On the Record • Shirley Kathleen Neil, 40, of Astoria, was Butler, 49, of Vancouver, Washington, was arrested Monday at Warrenton High School for driving under the infl uence of intoxicants. • Bill D. Demoss, 84, of Seaside, was arrested Sat- urday on N. Main Avenue in Warrenton for DUII. arrested Saturday on W. Marine Drive in Asto- ria for DUII and reckless driving. • Michael Jason Ehr- lund, 43, of Astoria, was arrested Saturday on the Astoria Bridge for DUII, reckless driving and reck- less endangerment. PUBLIC MEETINGS THURSDAY Seaside Civic and Convention Center Commission, 5 p.m., 415 First Ave. Gearhart Planning Commission, 6 p.m., (electronic meeting). Seaside Parks Advisory Committee, 6 p.m., 989 Broadway. 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 REVELERS Luke Whittaker/Chinook Observer Revelers ignited fi reworks on Long Beach in Washington state on the Fourth of July. Lawmakers OK more than $700M for housing Moves made to increase supply By PETER WONG Oregon Capital Bureau SALEM — Oregon law- makers have approved more than $700 million for hous- ing needs that go beyond the emergency prompted by the coronavirus pandemic. In addition to avoid- ing evictions and foreclo- sures, the Legislature aimed at increasing the supply of lower-cost housing, help- ing people without perma- nent shelter and reducing housing disparities faced by racial and ethnic minorities. Lawmakers went well beyond what they did in 2019, when they barred no-cause evictions of renters and required cities of 10,000 or more — plus all cities within the Portland m etro boundary — to allow for duplexes or other multifam- ily dwellings on land zoned for single-family homes. “We … have gone to great lengths to keep Ore- gonians housed through a combination of compassion- ate policy and sound invest- ments,” state House Speaker Tina Kotek, D-Portland, said in a statement summa- rizing housing legislation. “While the work we’ve done has provided more stability for Oregonians, we’ll need to maintain a crisis mindset going forward as we con- tinue to work to solve the state’s housing crisis.” The moratorium on evic- tions ended in June , though the grace period for pay- ments of past-due rent from the pandemic is extended by Senate Bill 282 to Feb. 28 . Prompted by the slowness in state and federal funds for rental assistance reaching landlords, lawmakers gave tenants a 60-day safe har- bor from evictions under S B 278 if they show proof they have applied for assistance. “Evictions and foreclo- sures can have a genera- tional devastating impact on families,” Rep. Julie Fahey, a Democrat from Eugene , said. She worked with Rep. Jack Zika, a Republican from Redmond, to craft both the state’s original assistance of $200 million to landlords and tenants during the spe- cial session in December — a month before the 2021 session got down to busi- ness — and the safe-harbor provision that passed in the session’s fi nal days. Federal aid boosted the available amount for rental assistance to around $500 million. Lawmakers reinstated a separate moratorium on residential foreclosures in House Bill 2009, which runs through September . Gov. Kate Brown can extend it by executive order once more through December if she Hailey Hoff man/The Astorian Lawmakers made a substantial investment in housing during the legislative session that ended in June. Housing supply gives advance notice. Below is a list of some of the key housing legisla- tion that passed during the session : Homelessness • $47 million for increas- ing emergency shelter capacity and navigation centers for the next cold- weather season, including $26.5 million for low-bar- rier emergency shelters in eight cities , $10.5 mil- lion for shelters in Salem and $9.7 million for addi- tional motel-to-shelter Proj- ect Turnkey sites. One of those will be in Multnomah County. • $25 million to assist communities with shelter operations and provide tech- nical assistance. • $20 million for the Behavioral Health Housing Incentive Fund. • $12 million for rental assistance and service sup- ports for permanent support- ive housing. • $10 million to Mult- nomah County for the con- struction of a behavioral health resource center in downtown Portland. • $3.6 million for provid- ers serving unaccompanied unhoused youth (HB 2544). • $1.2 million to improve the statewide data system on homelessness and service outcomes. • Expediting emergency shelter siting by tempo- rarily giving local govern- ments more fl exibility in sit- ing shelters (HB 2006). • Modernizing the state- wide housing and homeless assistance system and ensur- ing access to culturally spe- cifi c and culturally respon- sive organizations (HB 2100). • Protecting unsheltered Oregonians from fi nes or arrest for sleeping or camp- ing on public property when there are no other options (HB 3115). Tenant support • $5 million for hous- ing assistance for domestic violence and sexual assault survivors. • $4.8 million for fair housing enforcement and education to the Fair Hous- ing Council of Oregon, Ore- 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 cation on implicit and racial bias for mortgage loan pro- viders, authorizing grants and technical assistance to organizations working to increase homeownership for low-income individuals and people of color, and renew- ing the Joint Task Force on Addressing Racial Dispar- ities in Home Ownership to recommend further solu- tions (HB 2007 and SB 79). • Strengthening Oregon’s opportunity to purchase laws for manufactured home park residents (HB 2364). WANTED Alder and Maple Saw Logs & Standing Timber Northwest Hardwoods • Longview, WA Contact: John Anderson • 360-269-2500 gon Department of Justice and the Oregon Bureau of Labor and Industries. • $4.5 million to establish a long-term rent assistance fund for young adults under 25 who have been recently homeless or exiting foster care or juvenile corrections. • $3 million to sup- port community organiza- tions that are distributing rent assistance or educating tenants. • $1 million to the Ore- gon Law Center for legal assistance to renters and residents of manufactured home parks. • Requiring landlords to conduct individualized assessments and consider supplemental evidence from applicants before denying an application for housing because of criminal history (SB 291). Homeownership • $20 million for down payment assistance, half to a revolving loan fund to help homebuyers with secondary loans and half to community culturally responsive orga- nizations to increase home- ownership opportunities. • $20 million to provide fl exible funding for aff ord- able single-family construc- tion and alternative owner- ship models such as co-ops. • $10 million to create the Healthy Homes Program to provide grants for the repair and rehabilitation of homes of low-income households and communities dispropor- tionately aff ected by envi- ronmental pollution or other hazards (HB 2842). • $7 million to support manufactured home park residents with park acquisi- tion loans and home decom- missioning grants and replacement loans. • $3 million for foreclo- sure avoidance counseling services to homeowners. • $2 million to provide technical assistance and out- reach to culturally specifi c organizations to reduce bar- riers to homeownership. • $2 million to Square- One for a shared-equity homeownership pilot with tiny homes. • $1 million for a com- munity pilot program that develops accessory dwell- ing units for income-eligible homeowners (HB 3335). • Protecting homeowners from foreclosure during the pandemic (HB 2009). • Addressing racial dis- parities in homeownership by requiring additional edu- • $410 million for hous- ing construction through the Local Innovation Fast Track and Permanent Supportive Housing programs. • $100 million to preserve existing aff ordable housing. • $30 million for aff ord- able housing or land acqui- sition revolving loan funds. • $10 million for gap fi nancing for aff ordable rental housing projects that are co-located with child care or early learning centers. • $5 million for gap fi nancing to aff ordable housing projects already approved that have experi- enced unexpected increases in construction costs during the pandemic. • $4.5 million for grants and technical assistance to local governments for com- munity planning and devel- opment code updates. • $1.3 million to study the incorporation of regional housing needs analysis into state and local planning programs. • $900,000 to study local system development charges and their impact on the cost of market-rate hous- ing development (HB 3040). • Increasing the limit for the state’s agricultural hous- ing tax credit from $7.25 million to $16.75 million per biennium to increase the construction, rehabilita- tion, or acquisition of agri- culture workforce housing (HB 2433). • Requiring local govern- ments to allow the devel- opment of aff ordable hous- ing projects on land within an urban growth boundary not zoned for residential use (SB 8). • Reducing red tape for religious organizations to develop their properties for low-income housing and allowing the continuation of their property tax exemption (HB 2008). • Establishing conditions under which local govern- ments must allow land divi- sions for new middle hous- ing development (SB 458). • Requiring local govern- ments to submit informa- tion to an online inventory of surplus public lands (HB 2918). • Allowing counties to authorize owners of lots in rural residential zones to construct one accessory dwelling unit (SB 391). The Oregon Capital Bureau is a collaboration between EO Media Group and Pamplin Media Group.