149TH YEAR, NO. 36 DailyAstorian.com // TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2021 $1.50 Vietnam memorial dedicated in Seaside Small town made large sacrifice By R.J. MARX The Astorian Photos by Katie Frankowicz/The Astorian Plans for a 90-room, Hilton-brand hotel on the South Slope are still going forward. Hotel projects in the works Developers eye downtown, South Slope By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Astorian See Memorial, Page A2 Heat shrinks hop yields A controversial riverfront hotel project in Astoria is waiting on a verdict from the state after developers failed to land a permit extension from the city, but two other hotel proj- ects are moving forward. Both are located in zones where hotels are allowed as an outright use: a large Hil- ton-brand hotel at the base of the South Slope and a smaller hotel behind Fort George Brewery downtown. A local property development group, Rose Tree LLC, which also owns the former Home Bak- ery building in Uppertown, plans to turn the former Angel Medical building on 15th Street behind Fort George into a 13-room hotel. Neighbors of the yet unnamed hotel include the brewery, a den- tal office, Coast Community Radio, a bed-and-breakfast, res- idential homes and a massive rhododendron that rears up at the edge of the property. Larry Bensel, of Rose Tree LLC, hopes to start remodel work in November and have the hotel open in time for the peak tourism season next year. Bensel briefly considered SEASIDE — Veterans, their families and residents gathered Saturday under a downpour at the Cove for the dedication of the Vietnam War Veterans Memorial in Seltzer Park. The granite monument stands at the south edge of the park and pays homage to the 113 people from Seaside who served in the war. “These are all veterans that went to Viet- nam, and the families of veterans and fam- ilies of the KIA (killed in action),” Mark Hansen, who helped organize the project, said. Ky Jennings, the co-organizer, said he was among 17 students in the Class of 1963 to serve in the war. “We lived in a time of peace, being post- World War II kids, and we like to say, ‘it was magic,’” Jennings said. “We knew each other so well, most of us having gone through 12 years of school together when Seaside was a small town community. Predictions of a below-average harvest By BRAD CARLSON and SIERRA DAWN McCLAIN Capital Press A former medical building on 15th Street will be the site of a new, smaller-sized hotel. turning the building into a rehab center — an easier switch than a hotel because it would have been considered a similar use to what had existed before. But, he said, “I didn’t want to be the guy that put a drug rehab center downtown.” A hotel seemed like a bet- ter fit for the neighborhood. He does not expect it to draw the same criticism as the four-story, 66-room Fairfield Inn and Suites proposed by Hollander Hospital- ity at the site of the former Ship Inn restaurant on the waterfront. “It’s a cute enough, small enough property and project,” Bensel said of his hotel proposal. “All it’s going to do is improve the area.” Rose Tree LLC does not plan to knock down the medical building, only remodel it, Bensel noted. The building is located in zoning that allows for lodging. See Hotels, Page A2 Growers are in the thick of hop har- vest across the Pacific Northwest, where lower-than-average yields are predicted because of heat waves that scalded the region in June and July. Across Washington state, Oregon and Idaho, the nation’s main hop-grow- ing region, high temperatures brought losses, smaller hop cones and increased spider mite pressure. However, growers say the challenges were mild compared to 2020’s wildfires, windstorms and mar- ket disruptions. “Heat waves, the delta variant — what’s next?” said Steve Carpenter, the chief supply officer for Yakima Chief Hops, a grower-owned dealer handling nearly 40% of the U.S. crop. “At least within our company, though, we’re seeing a good crop coming in and very encour- aging numbers in terms of shipments. It encourages me that we’ve maybe come around the corner.” See Hops, Page A5 Social services worker helps reduce language barriers Hernandez serves as a bilingual case manager By ERICK BENGEL The Astorian M arcelo Hernandez stepped into his job as a bilingual case manager at Clatsop Com- munity Action in summer 2020. At that time, the nonprofit had taken on a new function doing wraparound services when people tested positive for the coronavirus. Hernandez and other staff were helping exposed and infected individuals and fami- lies around Clatsop County ride out two weeks in quarantine. They moved homeless people from Seaside’s Helping Hands facility into hotels, did the same for tourists who caught COVID- 19 while visiting, brought meals to them and to families in iso- lation, even transported people via emergency vehicles because public transit was off limits to virus cases. It was a busy time. “We coordinated, all the team here — not just me, all the team,” Hernandez said. When COVID-19 vaccines became available earlier this year, the need for wraparound services began to wane. “We were happy — it was decreas- ing a lot,” he said. Then the state lifted many virus restric- tions, vaccinated and unvacci- nated alike began to reenter the world and the more contagious delta variant arrived, followed by a surge of new virus cases. “And we start again,” he said. As a social services worker, Hernandez helps people find assistance with rent, utilities, food, medical issues, transpor- tation — the immediate needs that, once met, allow for other forms of fulfillment. “Small things make big changes,” he said. To a role already designed to touch people’s lives in diffi- cult and desperate moments, the virus added a new and urgent dimension. Hernandez has cli- ents many months behind in rent, for example, because their jobs disappeared during the pandemic. Hernandez serves as a trans- lator for the local Latino com- munity at the COVID-19 test- ing site at Camp Rilea Armed Forces Training Center in War- renton. He’s also been on the frontlines of the mass vaccina- tion effort, translating between health care workers and vaccine recipients at county-run clinics. See Hernandez, Page A5 Erick Bengel/The Astorian Marcelo Hernandez, a bilingual case manager at Clatsop Community Action, outside the Astoria office.