»INSIDE THURSDAY DEC. 9 2021 , Once l os n t d u o f w no CT ERED ARTIFA 1901 RECOV SEUM ILWACO MU DONATED TO PAGE 8 AST CREATES ASTORIA DUO O-FRIENDLY HOLIDAY TREAT RECIPES 149TH YEAR, NO. 70 DailyAstorian.com // THURSDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2021 $1.50 CANNON BEACH Food tax survives recount New tally shows a one-vote shift to ‘yes’ By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Astorian SALUTE TOP: A salute is given after the laying of the wreath by World War II veteran John Sefren in Seaside on Tuesday as people remember the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941. RIGHT: Members of the American Legion Post 99 hold the American fl ag at the Necanicum River in Seaside during a remembrance of Pearl Harbor. Photos by R.J. Marx/ The Astorian CANNON BEACH — A recount has not changed the outcome for a food tax meant to raise money for city infrastruc- ture and emergency services. The tax continued to pass by only a handful of votes following a recount Wednesday morning by Clatsop County elections offi cials in Astoria. The fi nal vote on the controversial measure stands at 380 to 374 — a one-vote shift to “yes” from the last count. Certifi cation of the recount now goes to the Oregon Secre- tary of State’s O ffi ce. Patrick Nofi eld, who owns Escape Lodging in Cannon Beach and asked for the recount, said he was disappointed. But, he added, “I think the main thing is not to be reactive. I think we just need to sit down and fi gure out what it is.” The tax proposal divided the commu- nity. W ith such a close margin after elec- tion night in November, Nofi eld felt a recount was justifi ed. He remains concerned about an inci- dent where city offi cials opened a ballot drop box in front of City Hall in Octo- ber. City Manager Bruce St. Denis has defended the action, saying people had shoved several ballots into the side of the box and city staff wanted to make sure the ballots were protected from the rain. He and Karen LaBonte, the city’s public works director, unlocked the box and put the ballots inside. County elections staff say St. Denis and LaBonte did not violate any rules. “They did not break any laws and they are under oath,” County Clerk Tra- cie Krevanko said. Granted, she added, it probably wasn’t a wise decision on their part given the controversy around the tax. The incident continues to trouble some in Cannon Beach, including Nofi eld. At a City Council meeting Tuesday night, several people voiced their con- cerns about the opening of the ballot drop See Food tax, Page A6 Safety concerns cause schools to cancel classes Seaside, Ilwaco respond to incidents By R.J. MARX and BRANDON CLINE The Astorian and Chinook Observer Two local school districts canceled classes this week as precautions after threats and misbehavior involving students. School administrators sus- pended all classes in the Sea- side School District on Tues- day after a possible threat was sent to a Seaside High School student over social ‘(PRE-PANDEMIC), YOU COULD DEESCALATE SITUATIONS AND YOU COULD BUILD BRIDGES BETWEEN GROUPS. THAT’S JUST NOT HAPPENING RIGHT NOW.’ Amy Huntley | Ocean Beach School District superintendent media. Police later deter- mined it was not a credible, localized threat. Ilwaco High School closed on Wednesday to address concerns over an unusually high number of incidents of misbehavior among students. Schools across the coun- try are on edge after a mass shooting at a high school in Oxford, Michigan, in late November left four students See Schools, Page A6 Infi ll on commissioner’s lot causing headaches Newton faces a potential fi ne By ETHAN MYERS The Astorian WARRENTON — A property owned by City Commissioner Rick New- ton was fl agged by the city after he accepted infi ll from a city-approved construction project. During the summer, Big River Construction removed the infi ll — a mixture of materials — from a road reconstruction project on S.W. Alder Avenue, and after communicating with New- ton, dumped it at his property on First Avenue. Newton and his girlfriend, co-owner Patty Cardinaletti, had planned to build housing units on the lot. “There was some con- fusion on what the material was actually supposed to be,” Scott Hazelton, the city’s planning director, said. “It was interpreted by the build- ing offi cial that it was going to be gravel only — that it was going to be waste rock on the property — and not the mud, silt, sand, every- thing that is there now.” See Infi ll, Page A6 The 11th Streets stairs are ‘pigeon steps’ — shallow, narrow steps set on the city’s hilly sidewalks. Homeowner told to remove structures at 11th Street stairs O’Neel did work without a permit By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Astorian A homeowner who built part of a fence and deck on city property at the top of the 11th Street stairs with- out a permit will need to take it all down. Billie O’Neel said she wanted to keep deer out of her garden at her Jerome Avenue house, create a level place for her husband to walk and cover an unsightly retaining wall that belongs to the city. But she built into a public green space and a city right of way to do it — taking advantage, O’Neel said, of good weather and the sudden availability of workers and supplies. After the fact, in an attempt to bring the work into compliance with city code, O’Neel submitted a request to use the public property next door. But city staff noted multiple issues with what O’Neel had built and rec- ommended that city leaders deny her request. O’Neel decided to take the mat- ter to the City Council. At a meeting Monday night, the c ouncil agreed with staff and denied her application. The city will work with O’Neel on a reasonable timeline to remove the por- tions of the fence, deck and an arbor that intrude on city property and setbacks, according to City Engineer Nathan Crater. The city is also investi- gating other code violations associated with O’Neel’s work on her property. “I’m really sorry this has come to this impasse,” City Councilor Joan Herman told O’Neel, “but it would not have happened if the proper permits had been sought to begin with.” O’Neel, an Arkansas res- ident, has been renovat- ing the house in prepara- tion for a move to Astoria. Herman was sympathetic to O’Neel’s eff orts to improve her home and said she understood working within the city’s codes could be frustrating, but she and other city councilors bris- tled at O’Neel’s character- ization of interactions with See Stairs, Page A2