A3 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2021 Nurses: ‘It is extraordinary what they do’ Continued from Page A1 The school district hired medical instructional assis- tants at each school to assist with the school nurses’ duties during the day. “It’s certainly a chal- lenge, but there’s lots of support from the district and we all work together as a team,” Johnson said. The constant com- munication with parents has been key to keeping schools open to in-person classes. “I talk with parents con- stantly, pretty much every day,” Johnson said. “There is always somebody that doesn’t feel good, or we have to follow up because (a student) hasn’t been at school … Overall, most families are pretty respon- sible about keeping kids home and calling to tell us what is going on.” ‘Responsible for hundreds of patients’ They also work closely with the Clat- sop County Public H ealth D epartment . Along with weekly meetings to give schools a chance to ask questions, the health department provides a retired school nurse that they can call at any point during the week. By following the guid- ance and protocols , John- son and Brown will often send several sick students home throughout the day in order to deter any spread of Continued from Page A1 Photos by Lydia Ely/The Astorian School nurse Tara Johnson stands at the entrance to a gym that has been repurposed as a lunch room where students all face the same direction at Astor Elementary School. the virus . “When we think about infrastructure and ratios, and staffi ng shortages, we tend to go to clinics and hospitals,” Margo Lalich, the county’s interim public health director, said during the news conference. “But when you really think about it, our school nurses aren’t responsible for two, three, four or fi ve patients. T hey’re responsible for hundreds of patients every single day. “It is extraordinary what they do, particularly in extraordinary times like this, and that we actually do as well as we do is just remarkable.” Students sit on social distancing markers during a music class at Astor Elementary School. Squid: ‘This is a dynamic resource and it could grow’ Continued from Page A1 In general, demand for market squid has been high. Fishermen landed more than 32 million pounds in the United States in 2019 for a value of about $16.4 million, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s fi sheries database. Market squid are short- lived and, even without the pressures of fi shing, the pop- ulation replaces itself each year, according to NOAA Fisheries. “As a result, market squid populations can handle a rel- atively high amount of fi sh- ing pressure,” the agency concluded. Most of Oregon’s land- ings have come to Coos Bay, Newport and Winchester Bay. Among the few Ore- gon fi shermen who have started to participate in the local fi shery, there is a strong desire to maintain it as just that: local. But many of the boats are from farther afi eld, seine ves- sels from California, Wash- ington state and Alaska that faced downturns in the Cal- ifornia market squid fi sh- ery and Alaska’s her- ring and salmon fi sheries and were looking for new opportunities. As many as 40 vessels participated in Oregon’s market squid fi shery last year and 32 participated this year. Murphy: Has been working since she was 8 That’s more than the fi sh- ery can support, Mulkey and others believe. Troy Buell, the fi shery management pro- gram leader with the Ore- gon Department of Fish and Wildlife, has heard that a bet- ter vessel range might be 20 to 30 boats. “This is a dynamic resource and it could grow in the future,” Buell told the panel on Friday. “It seems to be more robust now than it has in the past.” “There could be a day where a bigger fl eet could be supported,” he added, “but that’s pretty hypothetical at this point.” Mulkey thinks the sweet spot might be closer to 15 or 20 boats. He sees little room for the larger operations more typ- ical in California, where a boat might be able to sit on the fi shing grounds for days, attracting squid with fi sh- ing lights, while other boats associated with the vessel take deliveries to buyers. Spawning grounds In Oregon, the spawning grounds can be very small and appear to be focused more in certain areas. One large light boat could monopolize a fi shing ground, Mulkey argues. For Josh Whaley, a fi sh- erman based in Brookings, there is a defi nite desire to fi nd ways to “keep most of the fi shery here.” Local fi shermen also won- der how profi table the fi shery really is to participants com- ing from elsewhere. Mulkey might only land squid two or three days in a month, but he is close to the fi shing grounds and he burns far less fuel in a summer than he did when he was going after shrimp. For Whaley, market squid has worked as a bridge fi sh- ery between the end of the Dungeness crab season and the beginning of the shrimp season. The boat Whaley operates, the Miss Emily, fi shes for Da Yang Seafood, in Astoria, and the processor encouraged Whaley to enter the market squid fi shery. There was good money to be made, the processor said. It is beginning to pencil out now, Whaley said. Still, the fi shery remains supple- mental for him, not a staple, not yet. Mulkey has made mar- ket squid a much larger part of his business plan. So far, WANTED Alder and Maple Saw Logs & Standing Timber Northwest Hardwoods • Longview, WA Contact: John Anderson • 360-269-2500 he feels like the huge initial investment he had to make to outfi t a boat for the fi shery — around half a million dollars — has been worth it. Despite the many unknowns, he is optimistic about the future of Oregon’s market squid . “I feel like there’s been squid here the entire time,” Mulkey said. “They just weren’t being harvested.” Seated at the center of an endless fl ow of informa- tion, she has gotten to know the community in a way few have the chance. That knowledge has a dark side. Working at the sheriff ’s offi ce means putting a face to the people who turn up in the reports, including the victims. Early on in her time there, a man struck a woman with his car downtown. He was arrested for driving under the infl uence of intoxicants and went to prison. After the incident, the dead woman’s family came into the offi ce to pick up her eff ects and saw her pic- ture on the front page of the newspaper. “And all of a sudden, they just start scream- ing, ‘That’s her!’ ‘That’s our daughter!’” Murphy remembered. “And that just sent chills down me.” These were not charac- ters in a crime story, but real people whose lives were damaged . Another guy who had gotten a DUII had to lose his concealed handgun license . He came into the sheriff ’s offi ce and dropped it off . Then he went up into the hills and killed himself. His widow showed up to retrieve his belongings. She was nice and pleasant, Mur- phy recalled. Then Mur- phy saw her minutes later in the freezer section of Safe- way in Astoria and realized she had yet to learn how to switch from talking to vic- tims in a professional set- ting to making conversation with them in public. “I think we were both surprised to see each other, and weren’t really sure what to say,” she said. The hardest report she has had to proofread was about a lady whose young daughter had been killed by the family Rottweiler. Mur- phy had a daughter around that same age. Her supervi- sor asked her if she needed help fi nishing the report. Murphy declined. “But it was hard,” she said. The job, she said, “does have that emotional toll on you.” Murphy has been involved in public ser- vice since she was young. She served in the U.S. Coast Guard for about a decade, one of the fi rst women stationed at Tilla- mook Bay. She met her hus- band, Jay, there in the early 1980s. They now live in Brownsmead. Her career at the sher- iff ’s offi ce began as a part- time gig under Sheriff John Raichl at the substation in Svensen, where she orga- nized community events like the bicycle rodeos — a safety fair that teaches lit- tle bicyclists how to ride and older ones how to navi- gate traffi c — and the Every 15 Minutes program, an anti-drunken driving eff ort aimed at high schoolers. Murphy’s husband is on the sheriff ’s offi ce’s Under- water Recovery Team, and her son was once a cadet at the agency. Murphy has worked since she was 8, when she sold spudnuts — pota- to-based donuts — door to door. She has worked in occupational health and for the U.S. Census Bureau. Along the way, she has made time to travel on cruise ships and has seen about 30 countries. When it comes to careers, she said, “No mat- ter what you do, fi nd some- thing you enjoy.” CONCEALED CARRY PERMIT CLASS WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 10TH, 6 PM Best Western 555 Hamburg Ave, Astoria Multi-State $80 Oregon Only $45 Oregon included no-fee Shaun Curtain 360-921-2071 or email: ShaunCurtain@gmail.com | www.ShaunCurtain.com Coastal Living Come Join Us! One of the most unique Cafes in the world. 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