»INSIDE THURSDAY SEPT. 9 2021 COMING UP ROSES BRIAR MANSION HISTORIC ROSE AIRBNB OPENS AS AN PAGE 8 ART FOR THE SKY PAGE 5 ROD RUN RETURNS PAGE 6 149TH YEAR, NO. 31 DailyAstorian.com // THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2021 $1.50 Schools urged to curtail activities Caution could help slow the spread of coronavirus By GARY WARNER Oregon Capital Bureau Schools should cancel or curtail some extracurricular activities to help Oregon maintain what appears to be the beginning of a decline from record high numbers of COVID-19 infec- MORE tions, Gov. Kate INSIDE Brown said . County Multiple fore- reports three casts over the past new virus week showed a peak deaths • A6 in the two-month surge of infections driven by the highly contagious delta variant. Hospitals remain nearly full and virus case reports are still 12 times what they were in early July. The fragile ebb in the worst of the crisis will be challenged by the fl ood of students See Schools, Page A6 Dean Guernsey/The Bulletin The co-owners of Sparrow Bakery in Bend, Whitney, left, and Jessica Keatman, are shown with their sons, Brooks and Abel, at the Scott Street bakery location, which is closing due to a worker shortage. Workers in short supply amid year of job growth Labor shortage, housing complicate economic recovery Gearhart fi rehouse bond off ballot By SUZANNE ROIG The Bulletin B Complaint by residents delays vote past November By R.J. MARX The Astorian GEARHART — A bond measure to fi nance a new fi rehouse will not be on the November ballot because a court hearing on a complaint challenging the $13 mil- lion request extended past the election fi l- ing deadline. Clatsop County Clerk Tracie Krevanko said she would pull the bond measure from the ballot after speaking with the secretary of state’s offi ce about the timing of the legal challenge. In the complaint fi led in Circuit Court by residents Jack Zimmerman and Harold Gable in late August, the two asked the court to suspend the bond measure until costs for the project are determined. See Firehouse, Page A6 Quake sensor could off er up early warning By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Astorian A new monitoring station could give Astorians precious extra time to prepare for an earthquake . At a meeting Tuesday night, the City Council approved the installation of a seismic sensor on city property off Pipe- line Road near a Verizon cell tower. See Sensor, Page A6 Hailey Hoff man/The Astorian Masudur Khan is a Seaside hotelier. Seaside hotelier navigates pandemic uncertainty By ETHAN MYERS The Astorian EASIDE — When Masudur Khan came to the coast and got involved in the hotel indus- try, he saw a problem with how employees were hired and managed. Workers were brought on for the busy tourism season and then laid off in the winter. There was often no loyalty in either direction. “I found that wasn’t the right way to do it because we are a team and family,” Khan said. As he took over Seaside Lodging LLC and came to over- see more than a dozen hotels along the coast, he made it a pol- icy not to lay off workers. The result was low turnover and high retention rates for more than a S decade. When the coronavirus pan- demic struck , many in the hospi- tality industry laid off workers. Khan said he had to furlough around half of his employees. As government restrictions to contain the virus lifted and hotels welcomed back more guests , many have reported a signifi cant labor shortage, which has disrupted the recovery . But Khan has, for the most part, eluded that issue and said he was able to hire back the majority of his furloughed employees. “There is a huge demand and this is a market for the employee,” he said. “So I had to sit down with my management team and say, ‘OK , look at their See Hotelier, Page A3 ‘IT SHOULD BE A PRIORITY FOR INDUSTRY LEADERS LIKE ORLA AND EVERYBODY TO BRING THE WORKFORCE BACK AND MAKE THEM CONFIDENT IN THE HOTEL INDUSTRY.’ Masudur Khan | Seaside hotelier END — With record job growth in Oregon, Whitney Keatman never imagined she would have problems fi nding workers for her Scott Street location of Sparrow Bakery. And she didn’t. It was getting them to stay that has plagued her longtime Bend business. In the past year, Keatman, a co-owner, made 117 job off ers, and most were accepted. But after just three months, only about 42 workers remained. The bakery needed a mini- mum of 20 workers at the Scott Street location, and by the end of this sum- mer, there were six. So she made a hard decision: She will close the bak- ery at the Old Iron Works Arts District. “We’ve been struggling for seven years with moments of success,” Keat- man said. “Over the years, we’ve had on-again and off -again good manag- ers. When you don’t have the right management, you have a hard time retaining workers. “It’s common for people to come and begin training and then get another job off er that competes with wages,” Keatman said. “There’s no allegiance. It’s a competitive market for employers.” During a year of record job growth , employers like Keatman have had the hardest time fi nding workers to fi ll positions. Across the state, compa- nies, particularly in the leisure and hospitality industries, are struggling to fi nd workers. The hospitality, hotel, restau- rant and tourism-related industries added 6% more jobs this year, econ- omists say. Hiring is more compet- itive than ever as employers raise wages and off er signing bonuses, referral bonuses, improved bene- fi ts, even subsidies for housing. But those incentives also have to com- pete against federal unemployment benefi ts, an increase in household income from federal stimulus funds and retirements. See Workers, Page A3