A6 THE ASTORIAN • THuRSdAy, SEpTEmbER 23, 2021 Change: ‘Oh, wait, there are other options’ Continued from page A1 Lilly worked as a waitress at several restaurants for over two decades. She was working at Asto- ria Coffeehouse and Bistro when she was laid off in March 2020. Shortly after she lost her job, her daughter’s school closed to in-per- son classes. A lack of child care options meant Lilly spent the early days of the pandemic as her daugh- ter’s playmate, only adding to her desire to make a career change. “It was kind of like a sense of feeling trapped because I was with my daughter 24/7,” she said. “I loved her, but at the same time, I need space to do stuff I need to do.” So Lilly finally took steps toward pursuing her longtime goal of becoming an electrician. She enrolled in classes at Port- land Community College and worked part time at Columbia Housewarmers when she was able to find a babysitter. Now over a year since her career shift, she is still taking classes remotely and hopes to land an apprenticeship in the coming months. Reflecting back on her time as a waitress, Lilly remains happy with her decision to exit the field. “I was actually elated because I wanted out of the restaurant industry for a really long time,” she said. While a number of factors led to burnout, she said the lack of respect from customers played the biggest role. “It’s pretty draining because people go in there and take out all their problems on you,” she said. “(When) people are hungry, you are basically constantly being abused and expected to smile and Continued from page A1 Ethan Myers/The Astorian Josie Lilly chose to change careers during the coronavirus pandemic. be nice to them.” The added tensions during the pandemic could be among the driving forces behind the worker shortage that has plagued so many businesses. “A lot of it lies with the way they’re treated and the people who are coming in,” Lilly said. “I know they are trying to raise people’s wages, and that definitely helps because people are more willing to take on those sorts of things if they’re making a higher wage to kind of mentally compensate them- selves for the abuse. “But I really think that stuff has to happen to bring the anxiety lev- els down, or anger levels down, to make it better for people.” Judging from her own experi- ence, Lilly also thinks the lack of affordable child care options is a barrier. As the labor shortage takes its toll, she believes it’s going to take a major effort to lure workers back. “If employers treat their employ- ees with better wages, health care, making it more stable … and find- ing a way to help them deal with the abuse in some way, that would definitely help,” she said. While Lilly sees her exit from the restaurant industry as inevi- table, she is grateful she was able to use the pandemic as a transition period in her life. “I probably would have (changed careers), but it would have probably taken me a lot lon- ger,” she said. “You get stuck in the loop of, ‘I just need to pay the bills. I just need to keep going on the same course until something (gets) derailed.’ “You only have to be like, ‘Oh, wait, there are other options.’” Causeway: ‘It was the strangest sound ever’ Continued from page A1 “The next step is A — we need to figure out a plan to restore some power back to the boat tenants down there, and then B — work- ing with Bergerson Construction to get a plan together for getting that debris out of the water,” said Isom, who said the collapse occurred on the northernmost portion of the causeway. Shelley von Colditz, who lives along the riverfront near the East Mooring Basin, said she heard a loud noise and looked out toward the causeway when it collapsed. “It was the strangest sound ever,” von Colditz said. “It sounded big. It sounded very destructive. The only thing that came to mind right away was maybe a boat hit it. But it was too loud for one of these boats.” The state had urged the Port to shut down the causeway after inspectors found rotting timber pil- ings and other problems. A fence was installed at the base of the causeway at 36th Street near the Astoria Riverwalk to keep peo- ple off the span. Locals and vis- itors now gather along the river- bank to watch sea lions. Fishermen and other boat owners have had to fashion workarounds to get to their slips. The East Mooring Basin was originally built after World War II. The causeway extends to a break- water on the Columbia River con- structed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Both the Port and the Jean Danforth The collapse knocked out power. city hope to improve the marina for redevelopment. The Port has struggled to keep up with deferred maintenance and other infrastructure challenges along the waterfront. Some mate- rials meant for fixing part of the causeway were purchased in 2019, but layoffs to the maintenance staff during the coronavirus pandemic stymied that process. The Port is looking at a grant proposal to the state for a por- tion of the cost to rehabilitate the causeway. “We have been in the process of trying to secure grant funding in order to rehab the causeway and just have not quite gotten there yet, both from a financing standpoint as well as a permitting standpoint,” Isom said. School staff: ‘The timeline was tight’ Continued from page A1 of Seaside, said over 90% of their staffs are vaccinated. “The timeline was tight, but we got on it pretty quick and gave our staff numerous different options for them,” Hoppes said. “I was, to be honest, pleased to see the large number of staff who got vaccinated based on this requirement. We weren’t sure how that was going to go, but a large number got vacci- nated based on this mandate.” Superintendent Tom Rogoz- inski, of the Warrenton-Hammond School District, said about 87% of his staff are vaccinated, but he expects the number to reach 92% by the deadline. “As far as the challenges of meeting that deadline, it was a tight window to get a two-dose vaccine … but at least in my experience, it’s very manageable,” Rogozinski said. Superintendent Steve Phillips, of Jewell, said he believes his staff will reach the 90% mark by the deadline. Superintendent Bill Fritz, of Knappa, said 92% of his staff are vaccinated and he anticipates the Shortage: ‘We got aggressive with compensation’ number reaching 95%. Fritz said the school district will lose a couple of staff members who are choosing to step away due to the mandate. “We’re saddened by that. We value all of our people, but we also understand that people need to make individual choices,” Fritz said. School districts are working closely with the county’s Public Health Department to track and respond to virus cases. “We work together to make sure that there’s consistency between the guidance and the school proto- cols, and that we’ve covered all the bases without overreacting,” said Margo Lalich, the county’s interim public health director. “We want to maintain perspective. It’s been a lit- tle bumpy — as we all expected — coming back to a new school year and yet we’re working through it.” During the news conference, Hoppes laid out the process of how the Astoria School District responds to virus cases. “We have, as the other schools do, a procedure and process we put in place where … we identify a case, we contact trace and then based on that contact tracing, we do specific phone calls or in-per- son meetings with either parents or staff members to let them know of the positive case, or for peo- ple who have come in close con- tact with them that have to quaran- tine,” Hoppes said. “Then the final step is that we inform our parents at the very end of the day of any cases within our school system for that day.” While the county has experi- enced the worst few months of the pandemic, superintendents described schools as safe for students. “Due to the safety protocols that schools have currently and have had for the last year, schools are the safest place in the commu- nity for children to be,” Fritz said. “The likelihood of COVID spread in schools is far lower than the like- lihood of spread in our communi- ties at large.” The Oregon Health Authority reported 14 new virus cases for the county on Wednesday and 15 new virus cases on Tuesday. Since the pandemic began, the county had recorded 2,146 virus cases and 26 deaths as of Wednesday. show up. If someone did show up, return my call for an inter- view, that was rare. It was a strange position to be in.” The labor shortage has hit some industries harder than others as they ramped up all at the same time after govern- ment-mandated restrictions were eased. At restaurants, reser- vations stacked up, causing long lines at the door. At hotels, book- ings soared from summer travel- ers flush with cash from govern- ment stimulus funds and pent-up demand. And at medical clinics, staffing issues thwarted outreach and hospitals delayed elective surgeries. Switching jobs prevalent recognizing that they need to focus on their workers and forge a culture of taking care of their workers. The hospitality indus- try is often an entry point into the workforce, Brandt said, and 1 in 3 Americans had their first job in a restaurant. Each summer, Sunriver Resort brings in student workers from around the globe to fill out its workforce needs, said Tom O’Shea, the resort’s managing director. This year was no differ- ent, other than the fact that only 35 of the 100 who were sched- uled to work arrived. In addition, the resort held several job fairs and boosted housekeeping salaries to $25 an hour. Still, the resort was 85% staffed this summer. “We got aggressive with compensation,” O’Shea said. “We got through the busy sum- mer. We managed to pull it off and find staff, but we did pay significantly higher wages. We all worked longer hours, but we got through the summer.” As the leisure and hospitality industry heads into the slower season, some hotels that barely had enough staff to get them through the summer are keep- ing their workers on and finding work to occupy their time before the next busy period during the Impatient customers holidays. At the Redmond Consumer Statewide, the hardest-to-fill jobs through the spring were Cellular call center, a daylong housekeeping, sales clerks, per- job fair this month netted a sonal care aides and cooks and handful of customer service rep- restaurant workers, said Damon resentatives, said Tiffany Smith, Runberg, a regional econo- the company’s call center man- mist with the Oregon Employ- ager. The company was hop- ment Department. During the ing to fill 300 positions during second quarter, which is the the job fair. With call centers most up-to-date data, 71% of in Phoenix, Portland and Red- the nearly 98,000 job vacancies mond, Consumer Cellular holds were deemed hard to fill, Run- job fairs every two weeks to fill berg said. out vacancies. “We tracked restaurant work- To lure in more applicants, ers through the pandemic and the company is offering remote found a higher than normal tran- and in-person work for part- sition to different industries,” time and full-time positions. Runberg said. “It was a dispro- New hires who stay at least 90 portionate share moving to retail, days can receive a $1,000 bonus, professional services, warehous- Smith said. ing and health care. “We didn’t get the turnout we “The pattern was they were expected, with what we’ve been moving to industries that were experiencing for the past few more stable and higher paying. months,” Smith said. “We’ve The result is the lowest wage had a big downturn in the num- ber of people applying.” jobs have the highest demand.” It’s a hard job these days to To meet the labor demands, employers have raised wages, be in front of customers. Busi- offered bonuses and tried to be nesses say that customers are flexible with hours. Brick-and- impatient with delays, lines and mortar businesses that vie with service. “We still see certain times other businesses for workers are finding themselves having to when callers are waiting lon- compete with giants like Ama- ger than normal due to the sheer zon that recently announced number of incoming calls,” said that the starting wage was more Carla Stevens, Mosaic Medi- cal’s director of than $18 an operations. hour and could ‘THE Mosaic include up to has about 70 $3,000 sign-on pANdEmIC vacant posi- bonuses. tions. For the “During the HAS SHOWN first time, the pandemic we uS THAT nonprofit com- have, for the offered most part, been WORKERS ARE pany an employee able to continue retention to offer our nor- ImpORTANT mal services bonus program TO THE without having and is offer- ing bonuses to turn anyone buSINESS to employ- away for care,” ees who refer said Elaine ANd THEy applicants, Knobbs-Sea- HAVE TO sholtz, the said Jenni- director of strat- fer Stewart, bE pAId A egy and devel- Mosaic Med- COmpETITIVE ical’s human opment at Mosaic Medi- resources WAGE.’ cal. “Our staff- director. ing capacity, Daniel Elder | The “We also plus pandemic Campfire Hotel’s general have a renewed manager restrictions, focus on our have impacted employee our ability to retention strat- send our teams out into the egies, including providing community as often as we had increased opportunities for social connection and team building to anticipated.” Businesses in the hospitality keep our connections and resil- industry that kept in contact with iency strong during these stress- their laid-off workers during the ful times,” Stewart said. Finding the right employee early days of the pandemic were able to restore their workforce, at any price is a challenge. With said Jason Brandt, the president central Oregon’s high hous- and CEO of the Oregon Restau- ing prices, it’s difficult to find rant and Lodging Association. In workers who can afford to live a survey of its members in June, where they work, Elder, of the the association said only 4% had Campfire Hotel, said. The goal enough workers. is not just to recruit but retain “So 96% of the survey the workers who are passionate respondents are dealing with a about their position, he said. worker shortage,” Brandt said. “We’ve looked at our hourly “The folks who were able to wage and where we want to hold on to their staff were the have it start,” Elder said. “To be ones that kept the relationship competitive, we need to offer alive during the volatility of the sustainable wages. Bonuses are pandemic. Even if they had to great, but they’re not sustain- furlough the workers, they kept able. We want people who have in contact and had more success bought into the business. “The pandemic has shown to bring them back online.” There’s a lot of hindsight in us that workers are important to the industry right now, Brandt the business and they have to be said. Hospitality businesses are paid a competitive wage.”