WEEKEND EDITION // SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2021 149TH YEAR, NO. 32 $1.50 CORONAVIRUS Deaths tied to care homes Six deaths detailed in state outbreak report By ERICK BENGEL The Astorian Photos by Katie Frankowicz/The Astorian A student picks out his locker at the new Astoria Middle School building during an open house on Wednesday. Back to school in another abnormal year Parents struggle to decide what’s best for children A See Back to school, Page A7 See Deaths, Page A7 Knappa preschool shuts down over virus By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Astorian t the last minute, Tania Regier’s daughter decided her desire to see her friends outweighed her dislike of wearing a mask to school. Regier’s three children spent much of the last school year enrolled in the Warrenton-Hammond School Dis- trict’s online academy. For her family, it felt safer and — as shifting coronavirus case metrics dictated how and when schools were able to open for in-person classes — more predictable. This year, two of Regier’s children will return to classes in Warrenton school buildings. It’s a decision Regier left largely up them, but it was an uncomfortable call — a discomfort she knows she shares with other parents who debated whether to send their kids back to in-person school. Virus c ase numbers rose sharply in Clatsop County over the summer with the arrival of the highly contagious delta variant, and the number of COVID-related hospi- talizations and deaths ticked upward . At the same time, parents and educators grappled with growing concerns about the students left behind in online classrooms, the diffi culty in teaching young students from behind a mask, and other issues associated with trying to educate during a pandemic. “As parents, our general consensus is we don’t know,” Regier said. “We don’t know what we don’t know. We’re all hoping we made the best decision, but we don’t know.” Six of the coronavirus deaths recorded in Clatsop County this summer were tied to care homes, which were identifi ed early in the pandemic as among the most vul- nerable to the spread of the virus. Five of the deaths were residents at Clatsop Care Memory Community in Warrenton, where 37 virus cases have been reported since early August. The other death was a resident at Neawanna By The Sea in Seaside, where there have been four virus cases since mid-August. New program closed until Sept. 20 By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Astorian Eighth grader Eva Henley checks in and tours the new Astoria Middle School building on Wednesday ahead of the fi rst day of school. ‘AS PARENTS, OUR GENERAL CONSENSUS IS WE DON’T KNOW. WE DON’T KNOW WHAT WE DON’T KNOW. WE’RE ALL HOPING WE MADE THE BEST DECISION, BUT WE DON’T KNOW.’ A new preschool program at the Knappa School District has shut down until Sept. 20 after a student tested positive for the coronavirus. The school dis- trict was also told MORE another preschool INSIDE student was con- Astoria sidered a close Aquatic Center contact in a sepa- temporarily rate virus case. closes after The preschool virus case • A7 closure impacts 18 children who were enrolled in the Knappa Early Learning program, which launched on Sept. 1. Precise contact tracing would have been diffi cult. With the way the program is run and given how preschoolers inter- act with each other, anybody could have been in contact with anybody else, Super- intendent Bill Fritz noted. Tania Regier | parent of Warrenton students See Preschool, Page A7 County looks to improve broadband in Jewell A three-phase plan to expand internet access By ERICK BENGEL The Astorian Clatsop County may partner with Jewell School District to bring broadband to a rural region of the county where internet service is slow, spotty and often nonexistent. At Wednesday’s county Board of Commissioners work session, Steve Phillips, the Jewell superin- tendent , proposed hiring the fi rm Oregon Coast Wireless, which upgraded internet service in Tilla- mook County. Before Phillips took a lead role in addressing the inferior inter- net in Jewell and Elsie , the county had worked with a consultant on the issue and stakeholders had weighed in. Tillamook and Clatsop counties both have sparsely populated areas with weak internet service, Phil- lips noted , and he argued that what worked in Tillamook could work in Clatsop. Jewell’s main internet provider is CenturyLink, which won’t accept new customers in the area, Phillips said. “Frankly, the service they do provide is hit-and-miss because they’re so maxed out,” he said. Less than 40% of people in that part of the county enjoy reliable internet, according to a 2020 sur- vey of Jewell School District fam- ilies. “It’s tough out here,” Phillips said. He estimates that, if the commu- nity follows Tillamook’s model, the cost of internet per home will fall in the $65-a-month range. R es- idents in Jewell and Elsie typi- cally pay between $80 and $120 a month , he said. Hailey Hoff man/The Astorian See Broadband, Page A7 Rural areas in Clatsop County often suff er from the lack of reliable internet.