»INSIDE m inessJournal.co CoastRiverBus Volume 16 • FREE Chronicling Published Monthly ss in the Colum the Joy of Busine workers tinue hunt for businesses con North Coast variety of hiring incentives November 2021 light: Industry Spot Inside: ering Some are off esses Catering busin Issue 11 bia-Pacifi c Region Page 8 a pivot Pandemic disrupted events Page 4 to it Getting back A return to fi tness classes Page 6 ABBEY McDONALD The Warrenton Fred Meyer has posted hiring signs on its doors and at the gas station. Menagerie opens in Astoria A new local goods shop Page 14 DailyAstorian.com // TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2021 149TH YEAR, NO. 60 $1.50 SEASIDE Frustration builds over homeless campsite Residents petition the city to remove RVs and cars By R.J. MARX The Astorian SEASIDE — Residents who live near a homeless camp off Necanicum Drive came to the City Council last week with an urgent plea. “City Council has off ered greater pro- tection to the homeless individuals than to the residents, business owners and homeowners that live here in Seaside,” said Roxanne Veazey, who presented a petition from dozens of residents asking the city to remove the camp. Veazey voiced concerns about the city allowing the homeless on beaches, at restrooms, under bridges, in the woods and panhandling at markets downtown . “Most residents thought that the situa- tion would be resolved,” she said. “But in six months, all we have accomplished is meetings for the sake of meetings.” Veazey and others want the city to prohibit overnight camping in the lot off Necanicum. See Homeless camp, Page A3 Photos by Lydia Ely/The Astorian Stanley and Rebecca Roberts are in a dispute with the city over a beach house off Hemlock Street. Appeal reveals clash in Cannon Beach over oceanfront development A proposed beach house has drawn statewide concern City water transmission line repaired Some residents still advised to boil water By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Astorian By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Astorian ANNON BEACH — City Councilor Mike Benefi eld had just hit a metaphorical wall. Why, he wondered aloud at a meet- ing in early November, was the City Council even looking at an easement request from Stanley and Rebecca Roberts? The couple wanted to use an unde- veloped public right of way to access their property. The private drive they proposed was a far cry from the access they had previously suggested — a raised, curving road that looked C more like a highway overpass than a driveway. But the request arrived as the couple continued to fi ght the city in front of the Oregon Court of Appeals over a beach house they want to build . The access, city councilors noted, is for a house that has not met city stan- dards and that doesn’t yet exist . The City Council will have to con- sider access, but many unanswered and thorny questions about the future of the project remain. Chief among them is what the implications will be for the city’s oceanfront development rules if the couple prevails . The Roberts’ property sits where Hemlock Street, Cannon Beach’s main north-south corridor , climbs steeply and takes a few quick, snak- ing curves. The couple has owned the 5,394-square-foot lot for two decades. Their property is right above the beach and the view is fantastic. Iconic Haystack Rock rises to the north. But the slope off the property and those curves leading up to it have some con- cerned about the feasibility and safety of new development . The Roberts’ immediate neighbor to the south is an undeveloped city- owned lot called Inspiration Point, purchased in the early 2000s with the help of the public to preserve green space along the coastal cliff . To the north is land and a replica of a historic cabin once owned by famed former Gov. Oswald West. The owners and caretakers of the property, Haystack Rock LLC, claim, among other things, that the Roberts’ proposal would impact the historical nature of the site and also diminish the intent of Inspiration Point. See Clash, Page A2 Astoria repaired a broken waterline over the weekend, but several outlying water districts are still under boil water notices. The Willowdale Water District and the John Day Water District are waiting on test results, but expect to con- tinue under boil water notices through Tuesday afternoon. The Fernhill Water District and the Olney-Walluski Water Association could not be reached for information. C ity staff on Friday reported a break at the transmission pipe that delivers water to Astoria and other water districts from the Bear Creek watershed . The break was the result of a minor joint failure and heavily saturated soil fol- lowing days of heavy rain and stormy weather. People and businesses were asked to conserve water since it was possible the break could take several days to repair. The city had an estimated fi ve days worth of water stored in reservoirs. Crews ended up fi xing the problem in 24 hours, however. One of the issues in the dispute involves the city’s oceanfront setback standard. See Waterline, Page A3 Ilwaco woman recalls Cold War stunt An adventure or an ordeal? By PATRICK WEBB Chinook Observer I Patrick Webb/Chinook Observer Sharon Petersen looks over mementos of the two weeks in 1961 she and her family spent in a bomb shelter to simulate survival after a nuclear war. LWACO, Wash. — Ask Sharon Petersen what she was doing 60 years ago, and you’ll get a know- ing smile. And then the memories fl ow. As a young mother of two, she was taking part in an unusual radio station stunt that refl ected the tense history of the era. November 1961 was a key moment in the Cold War, which pitted the world’s two super- powers, the United States and the Soviet Union, in standoff s which could have led to nuclear annihilation. Earlier that year, Cuban exiles backed by the U.S. government had failed in an armed invasion of the island in a fi asco which became known as the Bay of Pigs. In August, the Soviets had erected the Berlin Wall, a literal version of what British leader Winston Chur- chill had earlier called an I ron C ur- tain between Eastern European Communist nations and the free West. Against this background of international tensions, nations around the globe were consider- ing whether humans could survive a nuclear war. That led to the cre- ation of fallout shelters, marked with distinctive yellow and black triangles, that now mostly exist only in museums. See Petersen, Page A3