DailyAstorian.com // TUESDAY, JANUARY 25, 2022 149TH YEAR, NO. 89 $1.50 Grad rates take a dip Disruptions from the coronavirus pandemic By ETHAN MYERS The Astorian Graduation rates at high schools in Clatsop County took a dip after the first full academic year of the coronavirus pandemic. The data from the Oregon Depart- ment of Education showed the Astoria School District with an 82.8% graduation rate for the 2020-2021 school year, com- pared to 90.9% after the previous school year. “While we strive to support each stu- dent to reach a high school diploma and disappointment can be felt when those goals are not met, as a district, we cel- ebrate the successes of those who over- came unprecedented obstacles and chal- lenges to reach this achievement,” Astoria Superintendent Craig Hoppes said in an email. “What made the 2020- 2021 (school year) difficult was that most of the students tried to complete school remotely and any time there is a barrier with engagement, student education will suffer.” Graduation rates had been steadily climbing in the school district until last school year’s decline. “The effects of the (coronavirus) pan- demic upon the educational programs of the district were significant,” Hoppes said. “ ... The high school is working to meet the needs of all students and in par- ticular students who have fallen behind over the last couple of years.” The state’s report showed the War- renton-Hammond School District with a 70.8% graduation rate, compared to 73.9% the previous year. Lydia Ely/The Astorian A common area in the women’s side of a sober living house will eventually host an office. ‘We’re really trying to give a few people this chance to make this work’ A sober living house to open in Warrenton By ERICK BENGEL The Astorian W ARRENTON — At a tucked- away residence in the south- west part of the city, people who have struggled with drug and alco- hol abuse will have a chance to rebuild their lives. Last year, Clatsop Behavioral Healthcare purchased a two-story duplex to serve as a sober living house. The men’s side has four bedrooms to rent, the women’s side three. The extra room in the women’s unit will become an upstairs office, where peer recovery allies will work during the week. People in varying states of recovery and employment plan to move in over the next few weeks. They can live in the house for up to a year. To qualify, an applicant must be involved in a Clatsop Behavioral Healthcare drug-and-alcohol recov- ery service, been sober for at least 30 days, and have enough money — from $250 to $350 a month, depending on the room size — for the program fee. Tenants can come from anywhere on the substance abuse spectrum, from alcoholism to opioid addiction. “I don’t care if you’re coming right out of prison,” said Trista Boudon, who leads the agency’s recovery ally and peer sup- port team. Clatsop Behavioral Healthcare, the county’s mental health and substance abuse treatment contractor, co-runs another sober living house — a four- plex on Agate Street in Astoria — with other social services agencies. That house is designed as a safe space for sin- gle mothers in addiction recovery, and doesn’t have many of the same tenant requirements. As a sober living site owned and operated solely by Clatsop Behavioral Healthcare, the Warrenton facility is a first for the agency, which bought the property for $650,000. Half a million came from an Oregon Health Author- ity grant, while the rest came out of the agency’s reserves. The interior has been refurbished, including new floors. The com- mon areas will have new and donated couches and other furniture; the kitch- ens, new supplies and ceramic cook- ware. Both upstairs and downstairs will boast a flat-screen TV. The facility follows a modified Oxford House model, in which peo- ple who live together create fellowship around sharing responsibilities and sup- porting each others’ sobriety. See Sober living, Page A8 See Grad rates, Page A8 Knappa man finds success on YouTube Caron tries to decipher macroeconomics By NICOLE BALES The Astorian itting behind the wheel of his car, a pair of blue fuzzy dice hanging from the rearview mir- ror, Simon Caron delivers his daily talks on macroeconomics. Caron works in retail sales at an Astoria lumberyard and has no formal education in economics. What started as trying to under- stand the financial collapse that led to the Great Recession in 2007 became a hobby and grew into an obsession. Since launching his YouTube channel — Uneducated Economist — in 2017, he has gained more than 84,000 subscribers. Caron said he started the chan- nel after someone suggested he share his knowledge online. He never expected to have a large fol- lowing. He certainly did not expect the videos to change his life. “I was really just looking for a place to kind of pour my thoughts out and maybe keep track of them like a journal or something like that,” Caron said. As he talked more about lum- ber and building supply, he caught the attention of real estate agents, S Simon Caron contractors and others with indus- try ties. His audience continued to grow slowly until he came across another economics YouTuber, George Gammon. Caron said he formed a relationship with Gam- mon after recommending his chan- nel to his subscribers. While Gammon’s channel was new at the time, it grew to an audi- ence of 342,000 subscribers. And after Gammon had Caron on his show, Caron’s subscribers soared. Caron was stunned to find him- self onstage at an economics con- ference hosted by Gammon in Houston, Texas, earlier this month. He was invited to speak along with others including Ron Paul, a for- mer Republican congressman and presidential candidate from Texas who has libertarian views, and Robert Kiyosaki, an author of pop- ular personal finance books. Caron said he had been follow- ing some of the speakers years before starting his channel. “I’m like, how the world did I end up here?” he said. Caron’s quest to understand macroeconomics and explain it to others in layman’s terms grew out of years of his own financial struggle. He graduated from Knappa High School in 1995 and has spent much of his career working in con- struction and retail in the lumber and building supply industry. Caron bought a house in 2007 after his wife became pregnant with their first child. While he had heard about the possibility of a financial collapse, he did not think it would affect him. By the end of the Great Reces- sion, Caron had trouble find- ing work and bills started pil- ing up. His home later fell into foreclosure. See Caron, Page A8 Lindsay Cobb Pyrosomes are starting to wash up on beaches in Clatsop County. Each tube is actually a collection of small animals that works as one to move through the water and feed on small particles like phytoplankton. Pyrosomes spotted again on local beaches Roughly the size and shape of a pickle By KATIE FRANKOWICZ KMUN The pyrosomes are back. Sort of. Typically found in tropi- cal or subtropical waters, pyro- somes made a dramatic appear- ance on the North Coast in 2017 when unusually warm waters off the Oregon and Washington state coastlines encouraged a sur- prising expansion north. They clogged fishing gear and washed up in small piles on beaches. Before 2014, it was rare to see them off Oregon, and never in such quantities. In the past week, people have reported seeing some pyro- somes again on beaches in Clat- sop County. Researchers have also started to notice them more in ocean waters off Newport. It is possible recent storms and strong currents have swept them in. See Pyrosomes, Page A8