149TH YEAR, NO. 64 DailyAstorian.com // THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2021 $1.50 UNDER THE LIGHTS INSIDE HOLLY JOLLY: THE NORTH COAST CATALOG FOR LOCAL GIFTS COAST WEEKEND: TREE LIGHTINGS IN ASTORIA, SEASIDE THUR SDAY NOV. 25 2021 Lydia Ely/The Astorian J olly, holl y a nd brigh t TREE LIGHTIN GS IN ASTORI PAGE 8 People roller skate at the Astoria Armory on Saturday night. The venue reopened over the weekend after temporarily closing during the pandemic. A AND SEASID E THINGS DO THANKSG TO IVING WEEKEND PAGE 4 WATCH PENI ARTISTS AT NSULA WORK PAGE 6 THE ULTIMAT E LEFTOVERS CASSEROL E PAGE 12 Community mourns father, son after crash CANNON BEACH Voters pass food tax Donors step forward to help family By KATHERINE LACAZE For The Astorian Work begins on implementing tax CANNON BEACH — Ryan Hull, the interim direc- tor of Cannon Beach Acad- emy, can clearly picture Kobe Braxton in his mind. “He had an amazing smile that could melt you,” he said of the fi rst grader. “He was an extraordinarily confi dent young man.” Kobe was the type of kid who would try to hold doors open for others. He loved sports — especially basket- ball — and anything that let him stay active. “He also had an inquis- itive spirit, too, and he was pretty fun that way, but he knew how to read the situa- tion,” Hull said. “He was a pretty clever young man.” In many ways, Kobe mir- rored his father, Michael Braxton, who “always had that big smile and a song in his heart,” said Paul Nof- ield, owner of the Driftwood Restaurant and Lounge in Cannon Beach. Braxton, a manager at the Driftwood, died Nov. 9 after a three-car collision near Shelton, Washington. Kobe died Nov. 11 from injuries sustained in the crash. Amber Hulbert, By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Astorian CANNON BEACH — A controversial food tax has passed by only four votes. Clatsop County certifi ed the Nov. 2 elec- tion on Monday. T he measure’s slim lead held at 379 votes to 375. The margin, tight as it is, is not enough to trigger an automatic recount. However, people have until Dec. 7 to submit a request for a recount with the state. The 5% tax applies to prepared food sold at restaurants and similar businesses. Revenue gener- ated by the tax — an estimated $1.7 million annu- ally — will be split between the city and the Can- non Beach Rural Fire Protection D istrict. The city plans to use its portion of the money to help fund a new City Hall and police station. For the fi re dis- trict, the money will go toward operational costs. Consumers won’t start to see the tax on their bills until next summer. But for city staff and elected offi cials, who had been waiting for the election to be certifi ed, work on how to actually implement the tax must begin soon. “There’s a lot of work to do between now and then,” Mayor Sam Steidel said. The reasons for the tax have been debated in Cannon Beach since the measure was fi rst proposed. Now that the tax is moving forward, Steidel said offi cials need to make sure the roll- out is clear and understandable to the community. “This is something new so we want to get it right,” Steidel said. “We want to do it properly and openly.” See Food tax, Page A2 Students created a memorial for their classmate. ‘IT’S BEEN A ROLLER COASTER. ALL THOSE THINGS THAT MAKE LIFE SO BUSY AND HECTIC JUST SEEMED TO STOP. YOU JUST ARE SHOCKED AND NUMB AND CAN’T REALIZE WHAT HAS JUST HAPPENED AND WHAT HAS BEEN TAKEN AWAY.’ Ryan Hull | interim director of Cannon Beach Academy Michael’s fi ancée and Kobe’s mother, and their daughter Kaia, a kinder- gartner at the academy, also were in the vehicle and sus- tained injuries. “The father passed immediately, and his son, my fi rst grade student, Kobe Braxton, sustained injuries so that they had to put him into a medically induced coma,” Hull said. The event left a scar on both the academy and the community at large. ‘A breath of fresh air’ Nofi eld met Michael Braxton in 2015 in Buckeye, Arizona, where he also has a home. Braxton was work- ing at the Verrado Golf Club. They formed a friendship in the following years, spend- ing time with one anoth- er’s families and playing golf together. In 2018, they started discussing the idea of Braxton coming to work for the company in Oregon, and the Braxton family visited that summer. “Michael is defi nitely a professional hospital- ity person,” Nofi eld said. “He could read people and understand their ways just by looking.” In fall 2020, Braxton and his family made the move to the Oregon Coast , and he assumed the manager role at the Driftwood. “Michael fi t right in,” Nofi eld said. “He took right away to the staff , and the staff took to him. … He was one of the greatest managers I ever met in the restaurant industry. He had the heart of hospitality. He also had a heart for people.” For Patrick Nofi eld, pres- ident of Escape Lodging Co. , which owns the Drift- wood, Braxton was “a breath of fresh air.” When Braxton was hired, he sent Patrick a message thanking him for the job. “That’s the kind of guy he was,” Patrick Nofi eld said. “He always portrayed that he was positive and outgo- ing and fun.” See Crash, Page A2 A peace tree comes to Cartwright Park Ginkgo tree marks close of World War II By R.J. MARX The Astorian R.J. Marx/The Astorian Pam Fleming plants a ginkgo tree at Cartwright Park in Seaside. SEASIDE — After two years of nurturing, a ginkgo tree has found a new home in Cartwright Park. Seaside arborist Pam Flem- ing led members of the City Tree Board and the Parks Advisory Committee to the southern edge of the park for the tree planting. The tree, which marks the 75th anniversary of the close of World War II, was delivered in 2020 as Seaside joined other communities throughout the state in planting the peace tree. The seedling ginkgo and Asian persimmon trees were grown from THE TREE, WHICH MARKS THE 75TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE CLOSE OF WORLD WAR II, WAS DELIVERED IN 2020 AS SEASIDE JOINED OTHER COMMUNITIES THROUGHOUT THE STATE IN PLANTING THE PEACE TREE. seed collected from trees that sur- vived the atomic bombing of Hiro- shima in 1945 and were brought to Oregon by Hideko Tamura-Snider . The Medford resident is the founder of the One Sunny Day Ini- tiative, which along with the Ore- gon Department of Forestry and Oregon Community Trees helped distribute the trees across the state. Tamura-Snider received seeds of camphors, camellias, Asian per- simmons and ginkgo trees from the international nonprofi t Green Leg- acy Hiroshima, collected from trees that had survived the atomic bomb. See Peace tree, Page A2