A2 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, DECEMBER 21, 2021 IN BRIEF Cyclist killed after being hit by motorist on Highway 101 near Seaside A bicyclist was struck and killed Saturday night on U.S. Highway 101 south of Seaside. Zane Belshe, 59, of Seaside, was riding on the northbound shoulder just after 6 p.m. when he was hit by a gray Nissan Frontier driven by a Seaside man, Oregon State Police said. Police said the driver failed to drive within his lane. Belshe was pronounced dead at the scene. The incident is under investigation. Police said the highway was closed for 4 1/2 hours after the crash. Boone seeks to fi ll vacated Senate seat Deborah Boone, a Democrat with a political history stretching from her days as a Clatsop County commis- sioner to the Oregon Legislature, says she wants to fi ll the state Senate District 16 seat vacated by Betsy Johnson. Johnson resigned last week to focus on her cam- paign for governor as an independent. Boone, who is from Hamlet, represented House District 32 as a state representative from 2004 to 2019. Boone told Pamplin Media Group she is interested in returning to Salem as an appointed senator, serving out the rest of Johnson’s unexpired term. Boone said she would not run for the Senate seat in next year’s election. “I’m only interested in running for the interim, to fi ll out the rest of that term,” she said. — Pamplin Media Group Housing authority seeks to fi ll seat The Northwest Oregon Housing Authority is seek- ing applicants to fi ll an open seat on its board. The person chosen will represent Clatsop County for a four-year term and meet once a month with fel- low commissioners in Clatsop, Tillamook or Colum- bia county. The agency oversees federal programs that help people in need of housing assistance in the three counties. Application forms can be found on the coun- ty’s website or at the county manager’s offi ce at 800 Exchange St., Suite 410, in Astoria. Applications should be submitted to the county manager’s offi ce. County seeks to fi ll vacancies on budget committees Clatsop County is looking to fi ll vacancies on sev- eral budget committees. Positions are available on the budget committee that makes spending recommendations to the county Board of Commissioners. Other slots are open on road district, Westport sewer and 4-H budget committees. More information is available on the county’s web- site and through the county manager’s offi ce. The deadline to apply is Feb. 10. County commissioners will make the appointments. — The Astorian DEATH Dec. 17, 2021 OWENS, Julie Lynn, 59, of Seaside, died in Sea- side. Caldwell’s Luce-Layton Mortuary of Astoria is in charge of the arrangements. In Brief Death MEMORIAL Wednesday, Dec. 22 Memorial HAYWARD, Joseph Orlo — Viewing from 1 to 4 p.m., Caldwell’s Luce-Layton Mortuary, 1165 Franklin Ave. A celebration of life is planned for the spring; details to follow on the Ocean Crest Chevrolet Buick GMC Cadillac Facebook page. ON THE RECORD Unlawful use of a weapon was arrested on Sunday On • John the Milton Record Ewen, at Exchange and 14th Jr., 65, of Astoria, was indicted last week for unlawful use of a weapon, two counts of menacing and recklessly endanger- ing another person. DUII • Rene Elizabeth Don- nelly, 44, of Astoria, streets in Astoria for driv- ing under the infl uence of intoxicants. • Miguel Gutierrez Blanco, 37, of Salem, was arrested on Saturday on U.S. Highway 101 near milepost 9 for DUII and reckless driving. PUBLIC MEETINGS TUESDAY Port of Astoria Commission, 4 p.m., workshop, (electronic meeting). Cannon Beach Planning Commission, 6 p.m., (electronic meeting). PUBLIC MEETINGS Established July 1, 1873 (USPS 035-000) Published Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday by EO Media Group, 949 Exchange St., PO Box 210, Astoria, OR 97103 Telephone 503-325-3211, 800-781-3211 or Fax 503-325-6573. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Astorian, PO Box 210, Astoria, OR 97103-0210 DailyAstorian.com Circulation phone number: 800-781-3214 Periodicals postage paid at Astoria, OR ADVERTISING OWNERSHIP All advertising copy and illustrations prepared by The Astorian become the property of The Astorian and may not be reproduced for any use without explicit prior approval. COPYRIGHT © Entire contents © Copyright, 2021 by The Astorian. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS MEMBER CERTIFIED AUDIT OF CIRCULATIONS, INC. Printed on recycled paper Judge refuses to declare state forest logging unlawfully harms coho salmon Expert testimony expected next year By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press PORTLAND — A fed- eral judge has refused to declare that logging activities in the Clatsop and Tillamook state forests have unlaw- fully harmed threatened coho salmon. Though U.S. District Judge Michael Mosman has rejected a motion by envi- ronmental groups to declare that timber sales in those state forests violate the Endan- gered Species Act, his rul- ing doesn’t put an end to the litigation. The Center for Biologi- cal Diversity, Cascadia Wild- lands and the Native Fish Society have a strong case they’ll succeed on the mer- its, but at this point, their evi- dence of illegal take isn’t beyond dispute, Mosman said. The plaintiff s must prove that logging road construction caused landslides that harmed streams enough to kill or injure coho salmon, he said. “You just can’t get there from here without something Rick Swart/Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife Coho salmon swim in an Oregon creek. more,” Mosman said at the conclusion of oral arguments on Thursday . However, the judge has agreed to revisit the issue after hearing expert testi- mony next year from the environmental nonprofi ts and the s tate , as well as Tilla- mook County and the Oregon Forest & Industries Council, which have intervened in the lawsuit. Amy Atwood, an attorney for the environmental non- profi ts, argued that fi ndings from the National Marine Fisheries Service, numerous studies and documentary evi- dence all prove that landslides from logging roads adversely Jail: Will be a more rehabilitative environment Continued from Page A1 use because of coronavirus restrictions — and a long history of overcrowding . The new jail, designed to have 148 beds, will allow the county to house inmates who normally wouldn’t qualify for the county’s pre- trial release program but who still get sent back into the community shortly after they’re booked . “This will certainly put us in a position to where we won’t have to make forced releases,” Phillips said. The Astoria jail has one exam room. “It literally used to be a closet,” Phillips said. The new one will have a medical suite with two exam rooms, as well as a mental health interview room. At the current jail, vis- itors talk to inmates from a tight row of stools. The upgrade will include private booths for visitors. The new jail will also have a kitchen where staff can prepare and serve break- fast, lunch and dinner on site. Inmates now eat from pre made meal trays. Among the most signif- icant upgrades: The wing that used to house the juve- nile detention center will become an intake unit where jail staff can hold inmates in Lydia Ely/The Astorian Counterweights are lifted by a crane behind a wall mural from the former Oregon Youth Authority juvenile detention facility. one-person cells when they fi rst enter the premises . At intake, they can be monitored, their condition assessed. Deputies can see if the person is ill or detox- ing from drugs or alcohol, or has drugs that need to be removed. “If someone is going through withdrawal, it’s pretty awkward to be laying in a day room or in a dorm with a bunch of people who DIGITAL EZpay (per month) .................................................................................................................$8.25 are feeling well,” Phillips said. The new jail will be a more rehabilitative environ- ment for inmates , he said. “People have to remem- ber that every person that comes into this jail is some- one’s family member — mother, brother, sister, son, daughter — and that most of the people that come into the jail are members of our community,” Phillips said. “And oftentimes, it could be the person check- ing your groceries, pumping your gas, it’s the person that built your house, that cycles through the jail.” The facility, he said, will give law enforcement bet- ter tools to take care of these community members. “And hopefully to get them to a place where they don’t have to come back and visit us, ” he said. Coach: The trial had been reset for March Continued from Page A1 In a court fi ling, Samuel- son argued that the woman’s claims were a response to the fact that he had expressed concerns with the school dis- trict superintendent about her behavior toward a parent. The fi ling also said the woman had “problematic” boundar- ies with a high school student. Samuelson once served on the Jewell School District Board. The evidence that was destroyed was body camera footage of interviews Clat- sop County Sheriff ’s Offi ce personnel had conducted with witnesses. P rosecutors prematurely signed off on a form that allowed the sher- iff ’s offi ce to dispose of the footage. “I’m embarrassed by it,” District Attorney Ron Brown said, adding, “It was not an intentional, sinister thing where, ‘Oh yeah, we’re going to tube this.’ We thought we had a strong case.” Paul Charas, the deputy district attorney handling the case, said, “Any evidence is crucial.” “Obviously some (evi- dence) helps more than oth- ers, but a video recording … there’s little left up to inter- pretation,” Charas said. If the state destroys poten- tially exculpatory evidence, the case can be dismissed, Brown said. When the lost footage became known ear- lier this month, Charas fi led a motion to dismiss, writing that “it is in the best interest of justice.” “Part of the job of a prose- cutor is to ensure that all par- ties get a fair trial,” Charas said. In the lead-up to a trial that was expected to start in November , the d istrict a ttor- ney’s offi ce produced evi- dence — copies of text mes- sages — that had not been Subscription rates Eff ective January 12, 2021 MAIL EZpay (per month) ...............................................................................................................$10.75 13 weeks in advance ...........................................................................................................$37.00 26 weeks in advance ...........................................................................................................$71.00 52 weeks in advance ........................................................................................................ $135.00 aff ect coho salmon. “It’s apparent from our photography that sediment was delivered,” Atwood said. “Our contention is that fi ne sediment is always harmful.” If the environmental non- profi ts convince the judge that the Oregon Department of Forestry’s management resulted in unlawful take, it could have implications beyond state forestland. Sim- ilar logging activities on pri- vate forestland could then also be vulnerable to lawsuits. Attorneys for the defen- dants and intervenors coun- tered that the environ- mental plaintiff s have not established a suffi cient causal link between the Department of Forestry’s logging authori- zations and the alleged take of coho salmon. “They just haven’t done the who, what, where, when and how,” said Jay Waldron, Tillamook County’s attor- ney. “Landslides occur in Til- lamook County every day. It doesn’t automatically result in take or habitat modifi cation.” The fact that sediment has entered streams alone isn’t enough to prove that coho salmon were killed or injured in violation of the Endangered Species Act , said Deanna Chang, an attorney for the state government. “They have not estab- lished that landslide occurred due to any activities of ODF,” she said. “Not all steep slopes are prone to landslides. Not all areas to be harvested are on steep slopes.” Chang said the court briefs fi led by the plaintiff s are not suffi cient for the judge to rule that Department of Forestry violated the law. To make such a conclusion, he must consider expert testimony from both sides, she said. “It’s not just the introduc- tion of sediment to a stream,” Chang said. “It has to have an adverse impact on listed species.” WANTED Alder and Maple Saw Logs & Standing Timber Northwest Hardwoods • Longview, WA Contact: John Anderson • 360-269-2500 entered during discovery. Charas argued that the evi- dence wasn’t new — the mes- sages are referenced in the discovery materials — but copies of the texts themselves had only recently surfaced. As a result, Richard Cohen, Samuelson’s Port- land-based attorney, said he would need to change his defense strategy. The trial had been reset for March . Cohen and Samuelson could not be reached for com- ment on the dismissal of the charges. “We’re just sick about it, is really the way to put it,” Brown said. “And I feel bad for the victim, and,” he sighed, “it’s very frustrating.” Courtney Ann Guenther Aug. 21, 1982 - Dec. 22, 2001 “Don’t worry about the future, He’s got it under control”. ~ I love you. I miss you. Love always forever and ever and ever ~ Dadio