A2 THE ASTORIAN • THURSDAY, JULY 15, 2021 IN BRIEF Spence chosen new Port Commission president The Port of Astoria Commission voted 3-2 on Tues- day to elect Frank Spence as the new commission president. Spence replaces Commissioner Dirk Rohne, who is taking over Spence’s former role as secretary. Seaside banks ‘North 40’ for future park, recreation space SEASIDE — The city received almost 8 acres at the north end of the former Seaside High School cam- pus, referred to as the “North 40.” The transfer was approved in late April at a Clatsop County Board of Commissioners meeting. The property was transferred to Seaside via a quit- claim deed recorded on May 7, county property man- agement specialist Sirpa Duoos said. The land was transferred as is and no money exchanged. One year ago, the Seaside School District’s board authorized the superintendent to negotiate and execute a $3.2 million contract for the sale with Harry Henke, a registered agent of HTA Properties LLC. The 102,000-square-foot former high school sits on 12.63 acres on N. Holladay Drive. That property is still in the due diligence process, Superintendent Susan Penrod said. The land, zoned medium residential, was not included as part of the sale of the former high school. The property will continue to be used for recreation and parkland. As long as the park is used for youth recreation by the city, it remains city property. If it stops being used for those purposes, the deed reverts back to the county. Gearhart playground close to fruition GEARHART — A girl’s dream looks closer to real- ity as the city prepares to bring a playground to Pacifi c Way. When the former Gearhart Elementary School was shut down, the playground equipment was transferred to the new Pacifi c Ridge Elementary School. Ten- year-old Berkley Sturgell launched a Quarter Mile Challenge to raise funds for the city’s Play Equip- ment Fund. The goal was to collect enough quarters to stretch the length of one-quarter mile. According to Sturgell’s estimate, that was about 17,160 quarters, or roughly $4,290. Sturgell’s eff orts brought three times that, more than $12,000. With outside donations large and small, $31,000 has been raised so far, Mayor Paulina Cock- rum said at last week’s City Council meeting. — The Astorian Wildfi re burning in Tillamook State Forest A wildfi re burning in the Tillamook State Forest jumped containment lines Tuesday evening. The Game Hog Creek fi re is estimated to cover 70 acres and is burning near state Highway 6, about 22 miles northwest of Forest Grove, according to Oregon Department of Forestry offi cials. — Statesman Journal Appeals court takes on peninsula immigration case By ASHLEY NERBOVIG Chinook Observer SAN FRANCISCO — The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals will hear argu- ments this September over whether the federal govern- ment should grant a Pacifi c County resident asylum in the United States. Mario Alberto Rodríguez Casillas entered the U.S. legally in 2005 and moved to the Long Beach Peninsula, where he became a bilin- gual teaching aide for Ocean Beach School District. In 2017, seven years after his visa expired, he was detained by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in the midst of a Trump adminis- tration crackdown on Pacifi c County migrants. Rodríguez applied for asy- lum because he is a gay man and he argued he could face physical harm if he returns to Mexico. Since then, an immigration judge and the Board of Immi- gration Appeals have denied Rodríguez’s request for asy- lum. Rodríguez appealed to the 9th Circuit and his attor- ney, Luis Romero, said the court’s decision to hear oral arguments for Rodríguez’s case is notable. “It usually means the case is of signifi cant legal impor- tance or not as clean cut as the government is making it seem,” Romero said. Romero, an immigration rights attorney with Novo Legal in Seattle, can’t prom- ise Rodríguez the judges will grant him asylum. But Romero said he will make sure Rodríguez’s story gets told. With Romero’s help, Rodríguez is more hopeful he might succeed. The Executive Offi ce for Immigration Review did not immediately respond to a request for comment about Rodríguez’s case. Prepared for anything DEATHS July 13, 2021 In SABOL, Brief Richard J., 83, of Gearhart, died in Gearhart. Caldwell’s Deaths Funeral & Cremation Arrangement Center of Seaside is in charge of the arrangements. July 11, 2021 BOWSER, San- dra Yvonne, 79, of Sea- side, died in Seaside. Caldwell’s Luce-Lay- ton Mortuary of Asto- ria is in charge of the arrangements. MEMORIAL Tuesday, July 20 Memorial VOLLMER, Frank J. — Memorial at 2 p.m. at Maritime Memorial Park; the Arrow No. 2 tug will go by and give a whistle in his honor at or around that time. All are welcome. ON THE RECORD 35, of La Grande, was arrested on Tuesday in Warrenton for possession of a stolen vehicle, fail- ing to carry and present a license, fraudulent use of a credit card and identity theft. • Miles Joseph Hunsinger, 55, of Asto- ria, was arrested on Tues- day at 10th and Duane streets for disorderly con- duct in the second degree and criminal mischief in the third degree. PUBLIC MEETINGS MONDAY Astoria City Council, 7 p.m., City Hall, 1095 Duane 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 Rodríguez’s apartment is stacked with boxes, bub- ble wrap and packing tape. He is always prepared to move back to Mexico. Last summer, when the Board of Immigration Appeals denied his request for asylum, Rodrí- 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 Ever-changing enforcement Luke Whittaker/Chinook Observer In 2017, seven years after his visa expired, Mario Alberto Rodriguez Casillas was detained by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. guez was told he had 30 days to either appeal to the federal appeals court or relocate to Mexico. Rodríguez couldn’t even get through the entire letter denying him asylum. He read far enough to see the board said “no,” before the stress overwhelmed him. After that, Rodríguez said he stopped asking God for help in his case . “I said ‘God, from today on, I won’t ask you again to help me with my immigra- tion case, because I have to learn that if you decide I have to go back to Mexico, it is something that I graciously will accept because it is what you want for me,’” Rodrí- guez said. “‘I won’t ask you anymore, I won’t beg you for my case. My prayers will be for others.’” Rodríguez presented evi- dence to the appeals board that he was a protected class who had already suff ered harm in Mexico because of his sexual orientation, Romero said. Rodríguez is worried about going to a doc- tor for HIV treatment because his last doctor told people Rodríguez was HIV positive without his permission. However, the appeals board judge classifi ed what happened to Rodríguez as bullying and did not believe it would result in harm to him. The judge dismissed the realities of what it is like to be LGBTQ in Mexico, Romero said. The judge told Rodríguez if he relocated to a bigger city in Mexico, he would not face discrimination, Rodríguez said. But, while in a smaller town in Mexico people might bother a person who Falling concrete poses danger ILWACO, Wash. — Crit- ical work on Ilwaco High School’s 43-year-old foot- ball stadium got underway in recent weeks, with Ocean Beach School District offi - cials hoping the repairs can buy them enough time to identify a long-term solution and come up with necessary funds for the aging structure that has been a thorn in the side of the district since con- struction initially began in the 1970s. The school district is spending about $150,000 on the repairs, which Superin- tendent Amy Huntley said should extend the stadium’s life for another three to fi ve years. The repair work is being done by Helligso Con- struction, an Astoria-based contractor. Stadium construction began in the spring of 1977, thanks to a $1.96 million grant from a federal program in 1976 to rehabilitate the district’s facilities. A myr- iad of problems ensued not long after that work began, and construction continued throughout 1978. “When they got the grant, it was supposed to do quite a few diff erent things — the stadium, bus barn, I think they were supposed to have a pool and tennis courts,” Huntley said. As is obvious decades later, many of the projects the school district planned to use the grant dollars on never came to fruition. And stadium construction posed immediate problems . “The stadium ( the con- tractors) built was rather larger than it should have been, probably. They ran out of funding part of the way through the project and weren’t able to fi nish every- thing,” Huntley said. “What they built was something the district has really never had the resources to maintain.” Huntley, who has been with the school district for 28 years in a number of dif- ferent capacities, said the stadium’s condition has been a topic at board meetings the entire time . Some minor 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 is LGBTQ or ignore them, in a bigger city Rodríguez wor- ries he might be killed for his identity. “People in the justice sys- tem make the decisions, I think, based on what they read, but I think they need to travel a little bit or just to read more,” Rodríguez said. The U.S. State Depart- ment compiles an annual report on human rights prac- tices in diff erent countries. In the fi rst six months of 2020, Mexico had at least 25 hate crime homicides against les- bian, gay, bisexual, transgen- der and intersex people , the report said. While some legal protections exist for these groups, what appears to be happening is a societal back- lash against these changes, Romero said. Rodríguez is a visible and trusted member of the Latino and undocumented commu- nity of Pacifi c County. “People, when they have trouble, they just call me,” Rodríguez said. “When they want advice they call me, when they want to do some- thing or they don’t know what department or offi ce or place to go, they ask me and I tell them the best option.” He acts as a liaison for Pacifi c County Immigration Support. He volunteers with the organization because, without it, he doesn’t think he would have kept fi ghting for so long. The peninsula was like many agricultural areas that were “plagued” by immigra- tion enforcement, Romero said. M any Hispanic people are employed in the shellfi sh industry, in addition to work- ing in hospitality and other economic sectors. Romero began working as an immigration rights attor- ney in 2013 and witnessed the evolution of immigration rights under three diff erent presidencies. President Barack Obama’s administration ran a “well-oiled machine” when it came to deportation, Romero said. The admin- istration’s deportation pri- orities targeted people with criminal histories and more recent arrivals to the country, he said. These groups often had fewer resources and less legal standing in court and it was easier for the Depart- ment of Justice to deport them, Romero said. When President Don- ald Trump took offi ce, his administration changed pri- orities. However, even under these priorities, Rodríguez might have escaped notice from ICE during the Trump administration, because his long ties to the Long Beach Peninsula community gave him more standing in court. An article by The New York Times on Rodríguez’s case detailed the chance encoun- ter that led to his arrest. Under the Trump administra- tion, the undocumented com- munity of Pacifi c County was paralyzed because everyone was a potential ICE target, Romero said. While President Joe Biden’s administration promised decriminaliza- tion of unauthorized bor- der crossings and protec- tions for Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals recipi- ents, Romero said he doesn’t know whether those prom- ises will be kept. “Some of his policies have a lot of the Obama adminis- tration fl avor,” Romero said. The Biden administration could still choose to close the case against Rodríguez, Romero said. Now that it is scheduled to go before the a ppeals court, Romero hopes the administration will take another look at the facts and ask itself if this is a case it wants to defend in court. Ilwaco stadium repairs underway By BRANDON CLINE Chinook Observer Stolen vehicle On the Record Disorderly • Russell Dean Brooks, conduct “Success in this case would be a big win, not just for Mario, but for everyone on the peninsula who knows Mario, or is in the same posi- tion as Mario,” Romero said. Rodriguez detained by ICE in 2017 WANTED Alder and Maple Saw Logs & Standing Timber Northwest Hardwoods • Longview, WA Contact: John Anderson • 360-269-2500 Chinook Observer The school district hopes stadium repairs will be completed by fall. work has been done in the past 15 or so years, includ- ing repairing and painting some of the steel. “But those were minor repairs, and really it’s some- thing that needs concrete sealing and just all kinds of things in our marine envi- ronment. Concrete and steel don’t do well here,” Huntley said, adding that the school district has hit a “critical mass” and the stadium has started to pose safety issues. Just prior to the pan- demic, when students were still regularly using the sta- dium’s bottom-fl oor weight room, large chunks of con- crete began falling from the ceiling onto the weight room area. The school dis- trict declared the area unsafe and halted using the space, and brought in a structural engineer to examine the sta- dium, which led the district to move ahead with its repair plan. SKATE NIGHT IS BACK 5 PM to 9 PM • Friday and Saturday $3.00 admission, $3.00 skate rentals!