A6 THE ASTORIAN • THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2021 Gary Peterson Photography People use wheelchairs to navigate Fort Stevens State Park. Accessibility: A huge fi rst step to showing people what accessibility and inclusivity in recreation can look like Continued from Page A1 trails, but they are often little more than a short paved path from a park- ing lot to a viewpoint, said Jennifer Wilde, the director of outreach and development at Adventures With- out Limits . “Some people want to go for a longer hike than that, especially if you’re going to drive a couple hours to a place,” she said. “If people go to Fort Stevens, they want to see the shipwreck, they want to see the b attery, they want to get on the water at Coff en- bury Lake. The trails in the park are nice and extensive, but extending that to identifying the other activ- ities that people are doing in the park and the small steps that can be taken to make those more accessi- ble for people that may face barri- ers otherwise.” One of those small steps, accord- ing to Wilde, is to improve imag- ery and visual descriptions of sites and trails rather than labeling them as accessible under the Americans with Disabilities Act. More elab- orate descriptions that display a broader understanding of the spec- trum of comfort that many with disabilities have, she said, can give people a better understanding of what to expect from a recreational experience. Events like the one at Fort Ste- vens are a huge fi rst step to show- ing people what accessibility and inclusivity in recreation can look like, García Fullana said. “This particular event is allow- ing for the word to spread and state that there is a need for activities like this, because there is an interest in participating,” she said. “Especially living in Oregon.” ‘THIS PARTICULAR EVENT IS ALLOWING FOR THE WORD TO SPREAD AND STATE THAT THERE IS A NEED FOR ACTIVITIES LIKE THIS, BECAUSE THERE IS AN INTEREST IN PARTICIPATING. ESPECIALLY LIVING IN OREGON.’ Inés García Fullana | Person who has spent her life using a wheelchair, living with spina bifi da, a congenital defect in the spinal column Firehouse: Vote set for the November ballot Dix: ‘I would give anything if this didn’t happen’ Continued from Page A1 Continued from Page A1 Hartmann, who placed her mother with Hughes-Ransom Mortu- ary & Crematory in Asto- ria, describes the day her mother died as the worst of her life. “I spent the entire weekend with my mother. She struggled for two days until she fi nally passed,” said Hartmann, who lives in Warrenton and works as a night audi- tor. “I just wanted every- thing to go smoothly and have everything taken care of so I didn’t have to feel at loose ends. And she just made it feel like it was no big deal. “I would give anything if this didn’t happen,” she said. Dix fi ts the descrip- tion of Clatsop County’s 13th virus death of the pandemic. The Astorian is aware of other potential virus deaths based on informa- tion from families and indicators from funeral homes during the surge linked to the delta vari- ant. While some virus deaths have been publicly reported soon after they happen, there have been lags of days, weeks and even months for others. Columbia Memo- rial Hospital in Asto- ria has also said that sev- eral patients who did not have the virus have died because they were unable to be transferred to other hospitals for specialized care due to the number of virus patients. Local deaths — whether linked to the virus or not — have put pres- sure on funeral homes. Hughes-Ransom, for example, shared 18 death notices with The Astorian over the weekend cover- ing Aug. 16 to Saturday. formal contracts subject to bond approval,” Zimmerman wrote in response to ques- tions from the newspaper. The City Council turned to Highlands Lane after potential obstacles for the project at the High Point location. The city is working with planners to bring the 30-acre Cottages at Gearhart subdi- vision off Highlands Lane into the city’s urban growth boundary in a land swap for acreage in the city’s “no-build” zone near the ocean. The developers, Cot- tages at Gearhart LLC, must also receive city approval for a subdivision containing four units per acre, twice as many as permitted by the county. If the 20-year bond mea- sure is approved by vot- ers, the fi rehouse could see a four- to six-month design process in 2022 with con- struction starting in 2023. The city estimates the bonds would cost property own- ers $1.052 per $1,000 of assessed value per year. At this point in the pro- Hailey Hoff man/The Astorian Gearhart is considering a new fi rehouse off Highlands Lane. cess, a city likely wouldn’t have fi nal architectural drawings, geotechnical data or other details for such a project, City Attorney Peter Watts said . “All of that work would only occur after voters have authorized the bonds neces- sary to build the building,” he said. “I have never seen the kind of information they are requesting included in a ballot title.” Normally in a ballot title challenge, Watts said, the challengers provide an alternate ballot title to the court that they want the court to adopt. The judge can confi rm the city’s bal- lot title, order the alternate to be used or a combination of the two. Because of the word limit of the ballot summary, it is impossible for the city to address every possible issue, Watts said. The idea is to inform voters of what the bonds are going to be used for and how much is authorized . “Those are the items that would inform a voter so they could decide whether to vote ‘yes’ or ‘no,’” Watts said. “My goal as the city attorney is simply to inform the voters so they can make an informed decision on the question.”