A2 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2021 IN BRIEF Nehalem woman killed in crash on Highway 26 A Nehalem woman was killed Friday morning in a two-vehicle crash on U.S. Highway 26. Leah Brown, 30, was driving a 1998 Ford Explorer westbound near milepost 11 at about 7:20 a.m. when the vehicle crossed the centerline and struck a semitruck, according to Oregon State Police. Brown was pronounced dead at the scene, police said. The highway was closed for four hours after the crash. Public invited to review tsunami evacuation plan An online open house and survey allows people to suggest changes to Clatsop County’s Tsunami Evacu- ation Facilities Improvement Plan. The plan will consider existing routes — for walk- ing and biking trails, for example — and look to improve tsunami evacuation facilities along them while dovetailing with the county’s Natural Hazards Mitigation Plan. To view online, go to: storymaps.arcgis.com/ stories/90bd871c0b984496902d0339247565e2 R.J. Marx/The Astorian Veterans gathered Saturday to dedicate a Vietnam War memorial in Seaside. Coast Guard rescues hiker at Olympic National Park A 26-year-old hiker who had gone missing for sev- eral days was rescued in Olympic National Park on Sunday. The hiker had become stranded in a steep ravine in the park’s southeast region, according to the U.S. Coast Guard. After a park search-and-rescue team found the hiker on Sunday afternoon, the Coast Guard Air Station Port Angeles sent a rescue helicopter. As backup, Air Sta- tion Astoria sent an additional aircrew that eventually lifted the hiker out of the chasm. — The Astorian DEATHS Sept. 18, 2021 In DOWTY, Brief Joan D., 84, of Astoria, died in Asto- ria. Ocean View Funeral & Cremation Service of Astoria is in charge of the arrangements. GODDARD, Susan Colleen, 62, of Seaside, died in Seaside. Cald- well’s Funeral & Crema- tion Arrangement Center in Seaside is in charge of the arrangements. Sept. 17, 2021 BROWN, Leah Marie, 30, of Nehalem, died near Seaside. Ocean View Funeral & Cre- mation Service of Asto- ria is in charge of the arrangements. Sept. 13, 2021 DEMPSEY, Douglas, 56, of Seaside, died in Tualatin. Hughes-Ran- som Mortuary is in charge of the arrangements. KOCH, James, 75, of Seaside, died in Port- land. Hughes-Ransom Mortuary is in charge of the arrangements. SMITH, Eliz- abeth, 94, of Sea- side, died in Seaside. Hughes-Ransom Mor- tuary is in charge of the arrangements. Sept. 12, 2021 NIELSEN, Emma, 99, of Astoria, died in Asto- ria. Hughes-Ransom Mortuary is in charge of the arrangements. HARRISON, Billy, 73, of Seaside, died in Seaside. Hughes-Ran- som Mortuary is in charge of the arrangements. Assault ing false information to a On the • Johnnie Rae Record Cot- police offi cer and crimi- nal mischief in the third degree. DUII • Vincent Ole Rulien, Jr., 59, of Redmond, was arrested Sunday on U.S. Highway 26 near mile- post 21 for driving under the infl uence of intoxi- cants, reckless driving and driving without a valid license. PUBLIC MEETINGS TUESDAY Astoria Historic Landmarks Commission, 5:30 p.m., City Hall, 1095 Duane St. Seaside Planning Commission, 6 p.m., work session, City Hall, 989 Broadway. Seaside School District, 6 p.m., (electronic meeting). WEDNESDAY Astoria Parks Board, 6:45 a.m., City Hall, 1095 Duane St. Clatsop County Board of Commissioners, 6 p.m., (elec- tronic meeting). Knappa School District Board, 6:30 p.m., (electronic meeting). THURSDAY Sunset Empire Transportation District Board, 9 a.m., (electronic meeting). Cannon Beach Planning Commission, 6 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 Continued from Page A1 Many of us are close friends 70 years later. “When the war in Vietnam got really intense the guys were being drafted or they enlisted in various branches of the service. Out of 54 boys in my class, 17 of them were sent to Vietnam. The war was very unpopular, but they did their duty and came back to a hostile country where they were blamed and shamed. They’ve come through it and they deserve the respect and gratitude they needed. This is what we’ve given them through the memorial.” Kent Pollock, who came from Phoenix, Arizona, for the dedication, said he was amazed at how many of his classmates are remembered on the wall, including his brother, Craig Pollock, Class of 1965. In 2016, Hansen teamed with Jennings, Crayton Mor- ris, John Alto and others to launch a fundraising eff ort and make sure each of Seaside’s Vietnam veterans received recognition. They painstak- ingly sought out all those who had attended the high school who had served in the war. Seltzer Park, on the east side of Sunset Boulevard in the Cove, was chosen as the memorial site for its historical connection to the community, view of the beach and acces- sibility to visitors. The City Council gave its blessing to the project. The city’s Public Works Department cleared, exca- vated and installed the mon- ument in March 2020. They later added sidewalks, land- scaping and wheelchair accessibility. Designer Tony Goiburn, of OM Stone, created the mon- ument using laser sketching and weather-coated the gran- ite before installation. “I’ve done big giant ones and really tiny tree memori- als,” Goiburn said at the ded- ication. “And they all mean something to me. This was a very wonderful project because not only those names — and we went through the list of names a million times — but their stories came out.” Karl Marlantes, the Sea- side High School grad who went on to write about his decorated war service in “Matterhorn: A Novel of the Vietnam War,” described the city in the ‘60s. “When we grew up, everybody talked about their fathers and their uncles being in the service,” Marlan- tes said. “We call it the mil- itary today, but we saw it as the service. You felt like you were part of the republic. And just like you have to pay taxes to make the roads work, sometimes you have to serve to keep the republic safe. And that’s what we felt.” Seaside’s high participa- tion in the war was “unique to this little town,” he said. “The percentage of kids that went over there was huge. There’s fi ve or six dead from this tiny little city, which is really unusual.” Marlantes was awarded a Bronze Star, two Navy Com- mendation Medals for valor, two Purple Hearts and 10 air medals. He also writes candidly about his struggle with post-traumatic stress disorder. “You heard people say, ‘Oh, gosh, you’re a Vietnam veteran, welcome home,’” Marlantes said. “And quite frankly, it sounded a little hollow to me sometimes. It’s a little bit lame, you know. I came home, as all of you did, and it wasn’t a very good welcome.” In Seaside, it was diff erent. “There was this feeling that we were always part of this community and always welcome,” Marlantes said. “The girls and the women were always there for us and our friends were always there for us. And that’s what this is all about. Our friends, our neighbors, our classmates who we went to school with. They were always there for us. And now this is a mon- ument to that solidarity and that love and that friendship.” Hotels: Visitor numbers remain strong ON THE RECORD ton, 45, of Warrenton, was arrested Friday on N.W. Warrenton Drive for assault in the fourth degree constituting domestic abuse. Theft • Phillip Arthur Schulte, 45, of Warren- ton, was arrested Sun- day at Walmart for theft in the second degree, giv- Memorial: ‘The percentage of kids that went over there was huge’ 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 Continued from Page A1 City staff will review plans, but the plans do not need to be vetted by city boards in public hearings. Bensel is courting the global hotel and hostel com- pany Selina to manage the property once the medical building is remodeled. Selina took over management of the Commodore Hotel on 14th Street after developer Joe Barnes purchased the build- ing that houses the hotel and Street 14 Cafe in 2019. The biggest challenges the 15th street hotel proj- ect faces is fi nding enough parking spaces to meet city requirements and fi tting in a trash enclosure. All sur- mountable, Bensel said . Home2 Suites Meanwhile, plans for a much larger hotel on the South Slope are still pro- gressing despite no physical changes at the building site itself yet. Astoria Hotel Investors, a Kansas City, Missouri-based development group, plans to build a four-story, 90-room Hilton-brand hotel at the site of the former Bayside Sentry Market. Discussions about building a hotel on the property have been ongoing since 2018, but developer John Ferguson, a partner with Astoria Hotel Investors, has given several diff erent hoped-for starting dates over the years. One cause for the delay is that developers are consider- ing shifting from a wooden framework to steel. They are concerned about both the cost of timber and ongoing supply chain issues tied to the pandemic, Ferguson said. The city is also requir- ing Astoria Hotel Inves- BUSINESS HAS BEEN BRISK FOR MANY CONTRACTORS, AS WELL. WHEN THOSE CONTRACTORS COME FROM OUT OF THE AREA FOR A JOB, THEY OFTEN NEED HOTEL ROOMS. BENSEL RECENTLY HAD A CREW OUT FOR PAINTING WORK. THERE WERE NO HOTEL ROOMS AVAILABLE FOR THEM. tors to upgrade a waterline to the site to meet fi re code requirements for lodging businesses, negotiations that have slowed progress on the project. There have been several waterline upgrade require- ments put on other hotels in Astoria recently, includ- ing the Bowline, a boutique hotel in a repurposed sea- food processing plant along the Columbia River, accord- ing to city engineer Nathan Crater. That hotel, which opened this summer, was one of the few hotel proposals in Astoria in recent years not to experience major pushback from residents who feel the city has enough hotels. “We would defi nitely like to get started ASAP,” Fer- guson said. “It’s in our best interest to get started. … Please be assured we are defi nitely moving forward on this thing.” As it is designed now, the Home2 Suites hotel will be built on the land, but the developers also own acreage that extends out into Youngs Bay. At the start of the proj- ect, they said they did not have an interest in building over the water. “If the market were to get better, we obviously have that 11 acres out in the bay,” Ferguson told The Astorian. “That’s always something we could look at for sure, but it would be later on.” Fairfi eld Inn N ext to the Astoria Riv- erwalk on the other side of the hill, the former Ship Inn restaurant still stands and the Fairfi eld Inn and Suites remains an architectural ren- dering rather than a reality. Hollander Hospitality had oral arguments in front of the state Land Use Board of Appeals earlier this month after the city denied a one- year permit extension . When it was fi rst pro- posed, the Fairfi eld project prompted fi erce public back- lash and renewed interest in developing stricter city code amendments to guide how waterfront properties are developed. After numerous con- tentious public hearings throughout 2018, a major plan revision and an appeal to the City Council, developer Mark Hollander received approval for the project at the end of 2018. Then the prop- erty sat. In 2020, Hollander applied for a one-year permit extension. He argued that the pandemic made it impossible to get necessary fi nancing to begin work on the hotel. His appeal was shot down. He appealed to the state, which sent the matter back the city. When Hollander applied for an extension again this year, he was denied again. The City Council said Hollander was using the coronavirus pandemic as an excuse and had simply dragged his feet on the proj- ect. Hollander appealed the matter to the state. The hote- lier has argued the city is not able to pass judg ment on any motives for asking for the extension. Hollander declined to comment on the appeal or any plans he might have for land near the Astoria Bridge that he leases from the Port of Astoria, land where he could build another large hotel. The Home2 Suites and 15th Street hotel projects are in motion as visitor num- bers remain strong despite the pandemic and, in many cases, because of it. Hotels, which suff ered early in 2020 amid local shutdowns and statewide restrictions, have seen visi- tors return. On posts to rental groups on Facebook, peo- ple reported trouble fi nding a room for the night as they passed through Astoria. State campsites were booked and beaches were busy. It hasn’t just been tour- ists in need of a place to stay, Bensel said. Business has been brisk for many contractors, as well. When those contractors come from out of the area for a job, they often need hotel rooms. Bensel recently had a crew out for painting work. There were no hotel rooms available for them.