»INSIDE 149TH YEAR, NO. 26 WEEKEND EDITION // SATURDAY, AUGUST 28, 2021 $1.50 County to use Camp Rilea as virus testing site Partnership between the county, hospitals By GRIFFIN REILLY The Astorian WARRENTON — Camp Rilea will serve as a coronavirus testing site. In a partnership between Clatsop County, Columbia Memorial Hos- pital in Astoria and Prov- idence Seaside Hospital, the armed forces training center will host testing by appointment fi ve days a week starting Sept. 6. Margo Lalich, the county’s interim public health director, made the announcement during a county Board of Commis- sioners work session on Wednesday. “We wanted a central- ly-located place that would be able to accommodate traffi c instead of having to move between diff erent locations, as we’re doing now in Seaside and Asto- ria,” said Tom Bennett, a county spokesperson. “This will provide us a single place where we can do the testing. We also hope to add vaccinations at the same site also.” MORE INSIDE Virus hospitalizations could peak on Labor Day • A2 In recent weeks, the county P ublic H ealth D epartment and local hos- pitals had reported a short- age of polymerase chain reaction tests, which are considered the most reli- able for the virus. Offi - cials had urged residents to avoid seeking tests unless they were exhibiting severe virus symptoms in order to relieve pressure on hospitals and other health care providers . Bennett, however, said an unexpected shipment of testing supplies now allows for more tests in the short term, though the county still wants to reserve sup- plies for people with advanced symptoms and the medically vulnerable. The county has more than 20 local outbreaks, Lalich told commissioners on Wednesday, but s he did not disclose any locations or other details . See Testing, Page A7 County commissioner wants governor to lift vaccine mandates In a letter on Tuesday, Bangs, who represents the mostly rural eastern por- tion of the county, said she By ERICK BENGEL was particularly concerned The Astorian for support staff , custodi- ans, bus drivers and teach- Clatsop County Com- ers’ aides at schools. missioner Courtney Bangs “In rural Oregon, vac- has penned a letter to Gov. cine hesitancy is real and Kate Brown object- many hard work- ing to the gover- ing Oregonians nor’s vaccine man- will be required to dates to contain the choose between coronavirus , argu- the vaccine and ing that local agen- their personal free- cies and industries dom (and, thus, should be the fi nal job),” she wrote to Courtney decision-makers . Brown. “As you Bangs Alarmed by can imagine, many the spread of the will choose per- delta variant, which has sonal freedom. led to a surge of virus “It is important that cases and hospitalizations even during a pandemic, across Oregon, Brown government is respectful has required teachers and of individual rights and other staff at K-12 schools freedoms. In my opinion, and health care work- we need to reject the type ers to get vaccinated by See Commissioner, Page A7 mid-October. Bangs wrote letter to Gov. Brown Photos by Hailey Hoff man/The Astorian Housing is the ultimate goal for Clatsop Community Action’s homeless liaisons. ‘It is a home visit, but their home is outside’ For homeless liaisons, the outreach is often personal By ERICK BENGEL The Astorian t’s shortly after 8 a.m. on the Astoria Riverwalk, just east of the trolley stop near Safeway. Cheryl Paul and Jodi Anderson, the homeless liaisons of Clatsop Community Action, stroll toward the bushes and greet a 44-year- old man who emerges from a small, makeshift shelter . “Anything going on?” Paul asks him. “Oh, just the same,” he said , clutching a small coff ee in one hand, a bag of tobacco in the other. He’s broke and waiting for the beginning of the month . For much of the last three years, he’s been homeless. Paul tells him he’s high on the list to get into the Merwyn Apart- ments, the renovated aff ordable housing complex downtown . “Really?” he said . “You may be next, so you need to make sure that you’re check- ing in with them,” Paul said . “OK ,” he said . He’s in the queue for a studio apartment, as long as he follows through with the property man- ager. “Please check in with her, OK?” Paul urges. “Uh-huh.” “And then we’ll help you after that, you know?” Paul said. “Don’t spend all your time down here and not check in and miss your apartment ... ” “OK .” I Cheryl Paul, left, and Jodi Anderson stop at the Garden of Surging Waves. “ ... because she can’t get a hold of you, you know? Got it?” He said he planned to head that way after he fi nishes his coff ee. The conversation is casual, but Paul’s drift is intentional, struc- tured. She is helping the man, who has autism, map out his day, break it down into little missions that, taken together, could make his life better, or at least prevent it from getting worse. Paul, the former coordinator of the Astoria Warming Center, a seasonal, low-barrier homeless shelter, has known him for about three years, when he became a frequent overnight guest. Ander- son met him when she served dinner there. Paul reminds the man it is “shower day,” a thrice-a-week By GRIFFIN REILLY The Astorian The Astoria Riverfront Trolley, struggling to fi nd volunteers, will suspend operations starting Sunday . “It’s a very tough deci- sion,” said Frank Kemp, the trolley’s maintenance coordinator. Operators cited a shortage of volunteers, who expressed concern for their health amid the rapid spread of the delta variant of the coronavirus , as the primary reason . The trolley, one of Asto- ria’s most popular attrac- tions, resumed in July after a 16-month hiatus. Bob Miller, an operator , said the suspension is espe- cially painful for those who worked so hard to get Old 300 back up and running. “This hurts. We were hav- ing so much fun out there,” Miller said. Even before the delta variant’s spread, however, See Homeless, Page A3 ‘WE’RE TALKING ABOUT 1,000 PEOPLE WHO ARE STAYING IN A PLACE NOT MEANT FOR HUMAN HABITATION.’ Viviana Matthews | executive director of Clatsop Community Action Transit district OKs cuts to bus routes Riverfront trolley to suspend service Operators point to a lack of volunteers service where he can wash up and get some fresh clothes at the warming center. S he and Ander- son want him to look nice when he visits the Merwyn. And later that day, they tell him, there would be pizza at Ninth Street Park furnished by Filling Empty Bellies. But, she tells him, make sure you check in with the Merwyn so that apartment doesn’t go to someone else. “I want you, you, you to be housed,” Paul encourages. “He’s kind of special to us,” Paul said afterward. She and Anderson worry about him. He may become frustrated, not show up at all. Changes take eff ect next weekend By ETHAN MYERS The Astorian Colin Murphey/The Astorian The Astoria Riverfront Trolley will suspend service starting Sunday. Miller said the trolley had diffi culty fi nding as many volunteers as before the pandemic. “The numbers are what they are. We’re look- ing at hospitalizations and things with the delta variant and suddenly there’s con- cern,” he said. “We’re look- ing out for our people and we’re looking out for our passengers.” The trolley typically ends seasonal service in mid-Sep- tember, so operators are not optimistic service will return in 2021. “If things get better, we’ll be back,” Miller said. “B ut I don’t have a lot of faith in that. ” The Sunset Empire Transportation District has approved cuts to several bus routes on the North Coast due to a shortage of drivers. The transit district’s board voted unanimously Thursday to make the changes. “It has gone beyond critical (regarding) the amount of drivers that we have currently employed and the lack of applica- tions currently coming in for drivers,” Jeff Hazen, the transit district’s execu- tive director, said . “It has gotten to the point where our drivers are working six and seven days a week. “They are burning out. It is aff ecting their health, so we are having a lot of sick calls and that just makes matters worse. What we are doing now is not sustainable.” Most of the cuts are to weekend routes, including See Bus routes, Page A7