A2 THE ASTORIAN • THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2021 IN BRIEF TRAINING One person injured in Gearhart fi re GEARHART — A fi re in Gearhart early Monday resulted in a burn injury as fl ames reached more than 200-feet high and torched trees. Fire offi cials said they received a call at 4 a.m. on Monday about a structure fi re in the area of Katie Court. The fi rst crews to arrive called for additional assistance after fi nding two structures fully involved. It took about 30 minutes to bring the fi re under control, James Hutchinson, the Gearhart Fire Depart- ment’s interim training offi cer, said. Crews left the residence 11 hours after the fi re was out. The cause of the fi re is under investigation. The person who was injured received burns to their foot, Hutchinson said. The American Red Cross was called to assist with displaced residents. — The Astorian Pacifi c County hits 20 coronavirus deaths LONG BEACH, Wash. — Cases of COVID-19 continued to swarm through Pacifi c County commu- nities, as the past week brought more death and severe illness to local residents of all ages. According to the Pacifi c County Health and Human Services Department, another 75 cases, eight hospital- izations and two deaths were reported over the pre- vious week as of Monday . The deaths were the 19th and 20th due to complications from the virus that the county has recorded since the pandemic began. The two deaths involving individuals in their 70s and 90s, with the most recent death before that being in their 20s. Of at least eight new hospitalizations being reported in the county in the past week, the patients severely struggling with the virus cut through generations. All told, 70 county residents have now been hospitalized because of coronavirus complications since the pan- demic began. The total number of cases recorded in the county since the pandemic began sat at 1,496 as of Monday . The number of cases, which continues to rise higher and higher, is a staggering fi gure that few likely thought was possible in the earliest months of the pan- demic, when Pacifi c County was largely spared from the sickness and death that the country as a whole was experiencing. The 20 deaths in the county outpace the 13 deaths reported so far in neighboring Clatsop County, which has a population nearly twice as large. County health director Katie Lindstrom said the county’s two small hospitals continue to have trou- ble being able to expeditiously transfer hospitalized COVID -19 patients to out-of-county hospitals to receive more specialized care. — Chinook Observer Petty Offi cer 3rd Class Diolanda Caballero The U.S. Coast Guard conducted a law enforcement training exercise in late August at the mouth of the Columbia River. SIGNS OF THE TIMES More than a dozen people protested coronavirus vaccine and mask mandates outside of Carruthers in Astoria on Tuesday evening. The restaurant announced via Facebook in August that it would require customers to show proof of vaccination against the virus. Hailey Hoff man/ The Astorian DEATHS Wyden pushing his agenda as election clock ticks Sept. 1, 2021 Mortuary in In BENTHIEN, Brief Linnea Luce-Layton Astoria is in charge of the local newspapers. Carol, 78, of Seaside, died arrangements. Senator hopes to in Seaside. Caldwell’s Aug. 28, 2021 Death: Sept. 2, 2021 extend majority ‘Voters get Luce-Layton Mortuary in KATON, Philip Dean, Astoria is in charge of the arrangements. Aug. 31, 2021 NIEMI, Lisbet Ulrika, 77, of Astoria, died in Astoria. Caldwell’s 41, of Clatskanie, previ- ously of Astoria, died in Vancouver, Washington. Caldwell’s Luce-Layton Mortuary in Astoria is in charge of the arrangements. MEMORIALS Sunday, Sept. 12, time for people to speak Memorial: Sept. 2021 if they wish 2, or they can KATON, Philip Dean provide a statement to the — A celebration of life pastor before the service 2021 will be held at 2 p.m. on and he will read it aloud. Sept. 12 at the Clatskanie High School football fi eld, located at the end of S.W. Canyon Road in Clatskanie. There will be Those wishing to send memorial fl owers can send them to the football fi eld on the day of the ser- vice by 1 p.m. ON THE RECORD Burglary left his residence during On the • Cyrus Galen Record Gra- an execution of a search benhorst, 27, of Astoria, was arrested on Mon- day evening for burglary in the second degree and two counts of tampering with physical evidence. He allegedly stole a safe from The Sea Crab House in Astoria earlier that day, warrant and was arrested at Safeway. Reckless driving • Anthony Le Hoang, 30, of Seattle, was arrested at Marine Drive and 17th Street in Astoria on Sunday morning for reckless driving. PUBLIC MEETINGS THURSDAY Clatsop County Human Services Advisory Council, 3 p.m., (electronic meeting). 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 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 the last word’ By GARY WARNER Oregon Capital Bureau EUGENE — As a for- mer college basketball player, Ron Wyden knows all about shot clocks. In basketball, the clocks hang above the backboard on each side, showing play- ers how much of the 24 sec- onds remain between taking possession of the ball and try- ing to score. Democrats are facing a shot clock now: 14 months and ticking. That’s the time of possession remaining of assured Democratic control of t he White House, t he U.S. Senate and the U.S. House before the November 2022 elections. During a masked and socially distanced interview Monday on the patio of a bak- ery , Wyden argued against letting clocks rule Congress. “I am a contrarian on the idea that you can only do legislation in odd-numbered years because elections are in even-numbered years,” the Oregon Democrat said. “The best politics is to do good pol- icy that helps people.” Wyden is well aware of the tenuous nature of Dem- ocrats’ majority, a status that includes his moving into the chair of the Senate Finance Committee, where much fed- eral spending fl ows. Democrats came out of the 2020 elections with President Joe Biden and a fragile tri- fecta of government control. History shows that the party of a new president loses seats — often dozens — in the House in the fi rst mid- term election. All 435 seats — including a new sixth one in Oregon — will be on the 2022 ballot. Only twice has the new party held or added to its majority: Democrats in 1934 amid the Depression and Republicans in 2002 after the 9/11 terrorist attacks. The Senate, with its staggered six- year terms, is harder to pre- dict, but overall history favors a turnover to the GOP. Hailey Hoff man/The Astorian U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden, shown here on the North Coast last year, is up for reelection in 2022. ‘You need 51 votes’ In the 40 years since he arrived in Washington, D.C., as a 31-year-old freshman congressman from Portland, Wyden has learned that over time, you’ll likely be on leg- islative off ense with the majority or defense with the minority. When he arrived in 1981, Republicans were on the rise. Ronald Reagan had just been elected president in a land- slide, while Oregon’s gov- ernor and two senators were both Republicans. In Oregon today, the gov- ernor and both s enators — along with four of fi ve U.S. House members — are Democrats. In his 25 years in the Sen- ate, Wyden has spent most of the time outside looking in — with 10 years in the majority and 15 in the minority. In the House, he was in the major- ity 14 out of 15 years. But the basic math remains the same. Regardless of the par- tisan breakdown of mem- bership, the most important number doesn’t change in the 100-member Senate. “You need 51 votes,” Wyden said. That coalition can be put together in diff erent ways. He’s co-sponsoring legis- lation with U.S. Sen. Mike Crapo, R-Idaho, on mental health care reform. Crapo was chair of the Senate Finance Committee when the GOP held the Senate until early January. He’s worked with U.S. Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, over the years. But he’s also ready, when needed, to push legislation through the tight partisan squeeze, as he did early this year when he guided Pres- ident Biden’s $1.3 trillion coronavirus relief package through the c ommittee and onto the fl oor for passage on a party-line 50-49 vote. He’s taking his legisla- tive shots at a rapid-fi re pace. On Tuesday, he held a virtual town hall to promote a bill he co-sponsored, The River Democracy Act, which would designate about 4,700 miles of w ild and s cenic r ivers for additional federal protection. He’s been in c entral Ore- gon to tout the state’s portion of the $1 trillion infrastructure bill passed by the Senate in August . The bill would pump billions of dollars into Ore- gon highways, water, electri- cal, internet access and edu- cational projects, as well as fund more aggressive action against drought and wildfi re. It’s now awaiting action in the House. Wyden has introduced legislation to protect domes- tic abuse victims from future intimidation by gun violence, and fund aff ordable housing rent vouchers. A bill would streamline federal drug laws so that legal marijuana businesses could have access to banking and credit. Other issues include making court records free of charge, pushing for insurance companies to pay for fans and air-conditioners under a fed- eral Medicaid program and allowing tax credits to sustain Wyden plans to keep going as long as there is a window to get laws passed. “My big three priorities now are child care, aff ordable housing and prescription drug prices,” Wyden said. They are part of what he termed the “human infrastruc- ture” support that he says is just as important as concrete for highways or stronger wire for electricity. Republicans were wrong about the aid package pro- posed by Biden because the math facing Oregon residents is not just about a paycheck, Wyden said. Part of the deci- sion of whether to take a job is the ability to have aff ord- able child care while you are working and to be able to aff ord to rent or even buy a home for your family. He believes too much money is spent on a dizzying array of prescription drug programs and prices that always put the consumer at the disadvantage. “The top of the 1% have to pay their fair share,” Wyden said. “You ask people if the wealthiest are paying their fair share, they are going to say ‘no.’” Though it’s been just over seven months since the new Congress was convened, the window to fi le to run for the 2022 election is already open- ing — it’s Sept. 9 in Oregon. Wyden said he will be on the ballot, seeking a fi fth full term. Prineville Mayor Jason Beebe is among the candi- dates who’ve said they plan to fi le to run in the Republican primary to face Wyden. It’s a seemingly uphill task to topple Wyden, who has never received less than 55% of the vote in his Senate races. But he also recalls that when he was elected to the Senate in a 1996 special election, no Democrat had won a Senate seat in Oregon since 1962. “Voters get the last word,” he said. The Oregon Capital Bureau is a collaboration between EO Media Group and Pamplin Media Group.