A6 THE ASTORIAN • THuRSdAy, FEbRuARy 17, 2022 Tourism: It’s important to bring as many people to the table as possible Continued from Page A1 Reid hopes to use the network’s existing audi- ence and marketing tools to encourage environmental stewardship and limit some of the negative impacts of travel, such as traffic. The county has renewed a contract with the cham- ber’s Lower Columbia Tour- ism Committee, allocating $95,000 for tourism market- ing. The money comes from lodging taxes. One method is asking visitors to take a pledge to respect the local community. The Oregon Coast Visitors Association has guidelines with its code of the coast, which details tide pool eti- quette, hunting and fishing rules and other topics. Reid suggested further sharing the pledge through social media and advertising campaigns and attaching it to hotel confirmations. “Done well, (campaigns) are not just for tourists. They’re for locals, too,” he said. “We start to see our environment that we’re liv- ing in differently, as well. We start to reappreciate how special it is and we treat it differently, as well. And so we set the tone, we set the expectation and everybody wins,” he said. He also hopes to address transportation issues associ- ated with tourism, such as cars crowding communities like Cannon Beach. At this point, the groups are focus- ing on messaging around carpooling and encourag- ing tourists to use public transportation. Reid said he is optimistic about the programs and the collaboration between stake- holders and emphasized the economic significance of the Bonamici: ‘Hopeful for a better future’ Lydia Ely/The Astorian A coffee cup lid is stuck in the grass at the edge of Coffenbury Lake. tourism industry. Travelers spent $115.8 million in the Astoria-War- renton area in 2019, and $63.5 million in 2020, a decrease due to COVID-19, according to an economic analysis by Dean Runyan Associates. County Commissioner Pamela Wev said she sup- ports opportunities for vis- itors to have experiences that connect them to the environment. One example is the region’s Trailhead and Beach Ambassadors pro- gram, launched in 2020, where volunteers patrol popular sites like tide pools watching for mistreatment and offering their local knowledge. “We’ve been taking a look at other places in the county that attract a lot of tourism to the natural environment, to have ambassadors there to say, ‘OK, you’re getting on a trail, do you have water? Do you have a map?’ And being able to supply them with the information that they need, about how far a trail is and how long it is and how dif- ficult because we don’t nec- essarily want to mark all that stuff,” she said. Wev said she’s inter- ested in expanding volun- teer opportunities for visi- tors, too. “We know there are peo- ple who would be willing to come out for a weekend and spend a few hours pulling up noxious weeds, and maybe we’ll give them something in return,” she said, sug- gesting hotel or restaurant vouchers as options. “We’re working on all that, and hoping that we can create an environment that people come to, not just to lay in the sun, because we’re finding out that a whole lot of people really want to do other things. And if some of that can be in service to the environment, then they’re even more interested,” she said. Emily Akdedian, the North Coast stewardship coordinator for Trailkeepers of Oregon, organizes volun- teer team cleanups and trail maintenance. She said people often travel from Portland, Salem, Eugene and southern Wash- ington state specifically to volunteer for the program. This year has already had a strong showing, but Akde- dian hopes sustainable tour- ism initiatives will get vaca- tioners interested, too. “I know people are really interested in regener- ative travel ideas. And our coastal trails, I think espe- cially during the pandemic, were hit so hard by visita- tion,” she said. “I think that also kind of jump-started these conversations about, ‘OK, well, then how do we get more folks involved in actually taking care of the trails, because they need it so badly.’” ‘Leave it better’ The North Coast Tourism Management Network will be hosting the trailkeepers and other community groups Cruise ships: A number of riverboats are also slated to visit Continued from Page A1 Continued from Page A1 Bonamici said she works on the House Com- mittee on Education and Labor, which seeks to provide school meals that are healthy and age-ap- propriate. She encouraged Mickelson to write a let- ter to the school board or talk with school adminis- trators about his concerns. “Thank you for bring- ing that up … I will take that to heart when we work on the school nutri- tion programs,” she said. Ian O’Brien, the high school’s assistant prin- cipal, who helped coor- dinate the event, asked Bonamici to talk about how what the students say and ask may make an impact. The congresswoman recalled a time when stu- dents testified at the state Legislature about the mixed messages they were receiving at school — they were learning about the importance of nutrition in class while there was unhealthy food in the vending machines. She considered the stu- dent voices to be influ- ential in the legislative process. “That’s what we do as representatives, is we represent people, and we write legislation and pass it,” she said. “ ... We listen to our constituents, who are the people we repre- sent, and we bring those ideas with us.” Asked how she felt about Oregon lifting the indoor mask mandate at schools and other places at the end of March, Bonamici encouraged everyone to listen to health experts as the coronavirus pandemic continues. “It’s been a difficult time, but I’m really hope- ful for a better future, and I know you are all going to be part of that,” she said. later this month at a public meeting to discuss potential volunteer opportunities for tourists. Karen Olson, the net- work’s manager, said it’s important to bring as many people to the table as possible. “The sustainable tour- ism vision is that not only will people not do harm, but they will fall in love with the coast, and that they will want to leave it better than they found it,” she said. “There’s all kinds of angles and initiatives and ways to work that out.” The network addresses some issues directly. After visitors left human waste at campgrounds and on trails last year, the network cre- ated an interactive, online map of public bathrooms that is accessible through QR codes posted at popular sites. Since its publication last summer, Olson said the site has been visited around 9,000 times. Olson said that the bath- room map is one of the few short-term projects. Most of the challenges associated with tourism will require management over the long haul. “People aren’t going to stop wanting to visit, and so the challenges change the dynamics of the com- munities for those who live there, and that’s not always smooth sailing,” she said. “So I think it’s the message that helping tourism, helping visitors experience the coast in a sustainable way is bene- ficial for all of us.” “We’re not in this alone, and we’re all going to work and try to make it easier for people to do the right thing,” she said. Hailey Hoffman/The Astorian The Regatta rode out parts of the coronavirus pandemic at the Port of Astoria. The high expecta- tions come as the past few cruise ship seasons were derailed by the coronavirus pandemic. Two cruise ships docked at the Port in 2021, but both were crew-only vessels waiting out pan- demic restrictions. The loss of cruise ships during the pan- demic took a financial toll on the Port, which can see over $1 million a year in revenue from the visits. “The cruise ship industry is extremely important to the econ- omy of this area, this city, this region,” Frank Spence, the president of the Port Commission, said. “ … Hopefully we will regain that because all of the businesses and certainly our gov- ernment is looking for- ward to coming out of this epidemic and mak- ing some money.” While the Port waits for oceangoing vessels to arrive, a number of riverboats are planning to visit the city at the 17th Street Dock start- ing in March. “It’s been a roller coaster. It’s really been unbelievable, and I really feel bad for (the cruise lines). To con- tinue to modify and adapt protocols to artic- ulate how serious they are and how safe the ship is, is very expen- sive,” Conner said. “ ... It’s been very, very difficult but, right now, I think we are all seeing some day- light at the end of the tunnel.” Protest: The disruption mirrored far-right protests at other state capitals Continued from Page A1 Lyles was facing more than a dozen felony charges for his role in the Dec. 21, 2020 protest against COVID- 19 restrictions as state law- makers opened a special ses- sion on pandemic response. The protest turned violent and led to property damage and assaults on police and journalists. The plea agreement was announced as Lyles was about to stand trial. Pros- ecutors dismissed charges that involved riot, assaulting police and additional counts of unlawful use of a chemi- cal irritant. In an interview with The Astorian after the court pro- ceeding, Lyles acknowl- edged that he used bear spray at the protest. “A hundred percent, I did that,” he said. Lyles said a video will surface that exonerates him of some of the other charges. He praised his attorney, Spencer Todd, and said the state did not do its job and “took 14 months of my life.” “Regardless of a person’s politics, the system’s fair for everybody — or it should be Dirk VanderHart/Oregon Public Broadcasting Oregon State Police declared an unlawful assembly at the Oregon State Capitol on Dec. 21, 2020 as far-right protesters stormed the building. fair for everybody — and this is not a guy getting away with something,” Todd said. “This is a guy taking respon- sibility and accountability for the conduct that he actu- ally did.” In the months after the murder of George Floyd by Minneapolis police in 2020, Lyles was often among the counterdemonstrators at Black Lives Matter protests on the North Coast. At local demonstrations and on social media, he aligned with oth- ers on the far right who were vocal in their support of for- mer President Donald Trump and critical of pandemic restrictions. The disruption at the special session in Salem in December 2020 mirrored far-right protests at other state capitals tied to pan- demic response and Trump’s November 2020 election defeat. The protests were precur- sors to the Jan. 6, 2021 insur- rection at the U.S. Capitol meant to delay the electoral vote count in Joe Biden’s presidential victory over Trump. Several others have pleaded guilty to charges linked to the Salem protest. The state House of Repre- sentatives also voted last June to expel Mike Near- man, a Republican from Polk County, who opened a west- end door to the Capitol and allowed protesters inside. Lyles said he was among the protesters who breached the Capitol thanks to Near- man. At the time, the Cap- itol was closed to visitors as a precaution against the pandemic. Nearman, the first state lawmaker in Oregon his- tory to be expelled, pleaded guilty in July to first-degree official misconduct.