A2 THE ASTORIAN • SATURDAY, JULY 17, 2021 IN BRIEF New assessment released on relocating county public works facility A new assessment for relocating the Clatsop County public works facility found that the Warrenton Fiber sort yard is the best choice. The county wants to move the public works facility on Olney Avenue out of the tsunami inundation zone. Consultants from Mackenzie, a Portland-based engi- neering and design fi rm, narrowed down the poten- tial sites to the sort yard near Lewis and Clark and the North Coast Business Park in Warrenton. A preliminary analysis indicated that the sort yard site would have lower overall development costs, or roughly $56.1 million compared to $56.6 million for the business park. Additionally, the size of the sort yard site allows for future growth and storage areas, and it would not present a loss of property tax revenue and a loss of job creation. The county had previously identifi ed the sort yard for the relocation, but neighbors have opposed the move. The consultants presented the new assessment at a work session of the county Board of Commissioners on Wednesday. According to County Manager Don Bohn, “it’s not the end of the process — it’s just another step.” Port of Astoria raises marina fees The Port of Astoria Commission has voted to raise marina rates. In August, the annual rates for recreational and commercial boats will increase $2 each year until 2023. The seasonal and off season monthly rates will increase $1 each year until 2023. Daily seasonal rates, as well as daily and monthly trailer parking rates, will also go up. The Port found it necessary to raise the fees in order to “cover increased operational costs and ongoing cap- ital costs for dredging and pile replacements.” The commission’s vote on Tuesday was unanimous. Jury awards Port of Astoria damages in Pier 3 lawsuit A jury has awarded the Port of Astoria $36,750 in a lawsuit against Marathon Fisheries for damages caused to Pier 3. The lawsuit claimed a fi shing boat owned by Mar- athon Fisheries, based in Lincoln County, struck Pier 3 and caused a large portion of the dock to fall into the Columbia River in July 2018. The Port was seeking $147,000. Knappa lands state funds for school bond The Knappa School District has landed a $4 million state grant to boost the $14 million capital bond it will ask voters to approve in November. The school district had counted on receiving the funds from the state, Superintendent Bill Fritz said. The current scope of work proposed by the district assumes an $18 million budget. The district will only receive the state money if the bond passes. — The Astorian DEATHS July 14, 2021 In SWEENEY, Brief Christy Kathrina Walker, 67, of Astoria, died in Astoria. Deaths Caldwell’s Luce-Lay- ton Mortuary of Asto- ria is in charge of the arrangements. July 13, 2021 RINER, Louann L., 86, of Longview, Wash- ington, formerly of Asto- ria, died in Longview. Caldwell’s Luce-Lay- ton Mortuary of Asto- ria is in charge of the arrangements. She was the daughter of Ray- mond and Marion Luce, the prior owners of the funeral home. July 9, 2021 NIEMI, Gary Harold, 78, of Westport, died in Westport. Groulx Fam- ily Mortuary in Rain- ier is in charge of the arrangements. ON THE RECORD Criminal mischief On the • Miles Joseph Record Hunsinger, 55, of Astoria, was arrested at Fourth Street and Marine Drive for crim- inal mischief in the third degree. PUBLIC MEETINGS PUBLIC MEETINGS MONDAY Astoria City Council, 7 p.m., City Hall, 1095 Duane St. TUESDAY Clatsop County Board of Commissioners and Planning Commission, 10 a.m., work session, (electronic meeting). Astoria Historic Landmarks Commission, 5:30 p.m., City Hall, 1095 Duane St. Seaside Planning Commission, 6 p.m., work session, City Hall, 989 Broadway. Gearhart Small Business Committee, 6 p.m., (electronic meeting). 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. First phase of Naselle hatchery rebuild complete “We still have enough for our coho program. We take extra eggs knowing we’re going to have these problems in the summer,” Foreman said. By LUKE WHITTAKER Chinook Observer NASELLE, Wash. — Cool, clear and clean water from Crusher Creek has begun pooling in a cement sediment settling pond above the Naselle Fish Hatchery. The recently constructed pond represents the comple- tion of the fi rst phase of an ambitious three-phase series of changes slated over the next few years to modernize the aging hatchery, fi rst con- structed in 1979. “The phase included the new settling ponds, distri- bution box and the pipe- line ( from Crusher Creek) to the new intake, ” said Brady Foreman, a specialist at the hatchery. Both sediment settling ponds — one for Crusher Creek and one for the Naselle River — will serve a funda- mental role in the raising of future salmon runs. “They keep the mud and solids out of the rearing units and incubators. It’s especially important for the incubators to keep the eggs clean, so they don’t suff ocate,” Foreman said. The antiquated infrastruc- ture supporting the h atchery has become inadequate over time, Foreman explained, leading to a juggling act among staff to patch problems while preserving fi sh runs sea- son to season. The half-acre ponds — rid- dled with cracks and prone to algae growth and “dead spots” — are unsuitable for use in the summer due to the defi cien- cies, leading to crowding in the limited raceways. The pump house, which houses the generator and a series of pumps necessary for providing fresh water, is unre- liable and often diffi cult to maintain. The pipes beneath the hatchery — now rusting after more than 40 years under- ground — leak in places, causing sinkholes and soft spots. Although each phase is important, some of the most impactful changes for the hatchery, including a new pump house and weir, will occur in the second phase, anticipated in 2023. “We’re going to have mod- ern pumps and generator that won’t be breaking down on us. We’re not going to have to worry if all the fi sh are going Steelhead come to local lakes Luke Whittaker/Chinook Observer Brady Foreman, a specialist with the Naselle Fish Hatchery, talks about the infrastructure changes coming over the next few years. to die when a power out- age happens,” Foreman said. “This is the big one. This is the one we really need.” Replacing the failing infrastructure could change the trajectory for the hatchery and future local salmon runs. “We’ll be able to catch more fi sh and operate it more effi ciently. That’s the goal here,” Foreman said. “We’ll be able to catch most of our hatchery fi sh to bring them into the hatchery and keep them off the spawn- ing grounds (and from mix- ing with the wild fi sh). That’s the big thing now. We need to protect the wild fi sh. If we can keep the hatchery fi sh off the spawning grounds upstream, and keep them from mix- ing with the wild fi sh, the wild genes are going to be stronger.” Known for coho T he Naselle h atchery is known for prolifi c coho pro- duction, but has also ramped up Chinook production from 800,000 to 4 million over the past few years. “Right now, we get a huge number of fi sh back. Our hatchery is usually fi rst or second in coho returns in the whole state. We do a lot of Chinook now, too. Our goal is to do 5 million Chinook. T his year we released 4 million. We do about 1.4 million coho and 500,000 chum and 75,000 steelhead.” Raising separate salmon species in an “old-style” sys- tem poses unique challenges that will be alleviated with the hatchery upgrades. “We increased our produc- tion before our infrastructure, so we defi nitely need to get it done,” Foreman said. “We have these huge returns of coho and Chinook coming in Ilwaco secures money to protect drinking water City hopes to preserve watershed at Indian Creek By BRANDON CLINE Chinook Observer ILWACO, Wash. — The city’s hopes of protecting its drinking water source and preserving hundreds of acres of land as a community forest took a huge step forward this month. On July 1, the Washing- ton State Department of Ecol- ogy announced that it is off er- ing Ilwaco a $500,000 grant and a nearly $2 million loan for the Bear Ridge Commu- nity Forest Watershed Protec- tion Project. City Councilor Matt Lessnau, who’s spearheading the project for the city, said the grant and loan off er is a “big chunk” of funding that, once formally accepted, will go toward the acquisition of the land and surrounding tim- ber deeds to make the project a reality. The city plans to protect its drinking water source, the Indian Creek w atershed, by purchasing land and sur- rounding timber deeds and preserving the area as a com- munity forest. The two tim- ber deeds the city is working to purchase total 178 acres, and another 210 acres of watershed area outside of city management would also be purchased. Ilwaco is working on the sale with The Trust for Public Land, a nonprofi t specializing in land conservation, and for- estry consultant Ben Hayes. The city previously VOLUNTEER PICK OF THE WEEK Sinclair Young Anatolian Shepherd COPYRIGHT © Entire contents © Copyright, 2021 by The Astorian. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS MEMBER CERTIFIED AUDIT OF CIRCULATIONS, INC. No cowboy dreams here; He’d rather be a sidekick or maybe a butler. Compadre is his middle name. Printed on recycled paper 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 at the same time and we have to separate the wilds ( naturally spawning fi sh) . It’s hard to do in the old system. The new system is going to be great. We’ll be able to work it every day with less staff and the fi sh are going to be treated better.” The hatchery has had close calls due to crumbling infra- structure, from leaking pipes to power failures. In one emer- gency, fi sh had to be evacu- ated by truck to the nearby Nemah h atchery. Extreme weather con- ditions bring extra stress to hatchery crew, particularly the ice storm in February and the historic heat wave in June. “You never know when the alarm is going to happen. We had that ice storm and I was on standby a couple days,” Foreman said. “The storm covered the pump switches with a layer of ice. I couldn’t restart the pumps because they were covered in ice. I couldn’t thaw it out. I had to bring in a generator.” Those controls are now safely housed in a covered distribution box, part of the fi rst phase changes. The summer heat is espe- cially problematic for the hatchery, where salmon and trout thrive in cooler water. The heat issues reached an apex in late June when tem- peratures soared above 100 degrees in part of Pacifi c County. “We had a high water tem- perature of 73. We lost a lot of fi sh,” Foreman said. “We struggle here with pathogens, bacteria and parasites, espe- cially in the summertime.” Fortunately, a back up plan, including an extra abundance of coho eggs, was already in place, since the hatchery suf- fered a similar fate in the drought of 2015. Anglers in select local lakes may have noticed a new species casting a bigger shadow than the typical trout. Hundreds of adult steel- head, surplus from the Naselle h atchery, have been planted in Black Lake and Radar Lake over the past two years, part of a plan to provide new fi sh- ing opportunities for local sportsmen. “Now we’re releasing sur- plus big adult steelhead when they come back,” Foreman said. Foreman has helped spear- head the plantings . “When (we) have more fi sh than we need for eggs, we try to release those in the lakes so people can have a shot at catching them. We like to provide as many new fi sh- ing opportunities as we can.” The steelhead stockings started in 2019, but became more frequent over the past year. “Last year, we had hun- dreds of surplus fi sh,” Fore- man said. Steelhead and rainbow trout are the same species, but rainbow are freshwater only, and steelhead are anadro- mous, meaning they migrate to sea. Unlike most salmon, steelhead can survive spawn- ing, and can spawn in multiple years, according to the Wash- ington Department of Fish and Wildlife . The annual Black Lake fi shing derby was can- cel ed the last two years amid COVID -related precautions, but young fi shermen in 2022 will have their fi rst chance to reel in a 10-plus pound steel- head, a jump up from the jumbo rainbow trout that occasionally exceed seven pounds. “It’s going to be an inter- esting fi shing derby next time around,” Foreman said. Sometimes the surplus steelhead are donated to tribes, food banks or used for nutrient enhancement, while others will now live out their fi nal days in local lakes. “If we can have one kid catch a 12-pound steelhead in the spring, it’s worth it,” Fore- man said. Sponsored by Bayshore Animal Hospital CLATSOP COUNTY ANIMAL SHELTER 1315 SE 19th St., Warrenton • 861- PETS www.dogsncats.org Noon to 4pm, Tues-Sat received a $600,000 grant from the U. S. Department of Agriculture in 2020, as part of the USDA Community Forest and Open Space Conserva- tion Program, that will also go toward the purchase. Ilwaco also received $721,000 for the project from the s tate Legisla- ture this spring as part of its $6.3 billion capital construc- tion budget. The third time was the charm for the city when it came to the Ecology grant and loan . In 2020, the city was awarded a $3.4 million loan, and had applied but been denied twice a $500,000 grant that it was able to secure during this funding period. The success came after Ilwaco and its partners said they needed to do a better job of explaining to Ecol- ogy why purchasing and con- trolling the timberland within the watershed will protect the water source. All told, Ilwaco has been off ered $1.8 million in grants and $1.9 million in loans — at a 1.6% interest rate — for the project so far.