A6 THE ASTORIAN • SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 2022 Council: Local elections have attracted more outside money Continued from Page A1 address riverfront development and how to respond to a more vis- ible homeless population. Jones said housing will likely be the biggest challenge and pri- ority for the rest of the year and for the new council next year. The City Council is consid- ering whether to move forward with a workforce housing project at Heritage Square. The proposal would include units for people undergoing mental health and substance abuse treatment. While the idea has drawn support from the community and city council- ors, it has also provoked some strong reaction . The mayor said the proposal gives the city an opportunity to address aff ordable and workforce housing. Jones said the city will also be meeting with leaders in the busi- ness community to discuss what can be done to help address hous- ing shortages for workers earning higher wages. In the meantime, he hopes to see other housing projects, including developer Cary John- son’s plan for apartments near Tongue Point, make progress. Other priorities include work- ing with the Port of Astoria on creating a new waterfront master plan in Uniontown to spur eco- nomic development . Jones said there will also be focus on getting the city’s Parks and Recreation Department on a sustainable path. The City Council has sup- ported closing Sprouts Learn- ing Center, the city-run day care, at the end of June. Staffi ng has reached a critical shortage and the center operates at an unsus- tainable fi nancial loss. City Councilor Roger Rocka and City Councilor Joan Herman have also indicated they will not pursue new terms in November . Herman, the only woman on the council, was elected in 2018 to represent Ward 3, which cov- ers most of downtown. The former reporter at The Astorian and college instructor said she made the decision not to run again about a year ago, citing her age and health. However, she said her commitment to serving the city has not wavered. “Four years is a good run,” Herman said. “I think it would be good for a new person to come in with fresh eyes and have a shot at it. I imagine, especially with the Heritage Square project, there will be considerable inter- est in the positions open on the council.” Rocka represents Ward 1, which covers part of the Port of Astoria, Uniontown and the west- ern edge of downtown. He was also elected to the council in 2018 and ran with a plan to only serve one term. The former executive director of the Astoria-Warrenton Area Chamber of Commerce has a dinner theater in California. “It’s really time for someone younger and energetic to step in and continue the work,” he said. Astoria: ‘This seems to me like we’re playing from behind’ Continued from Page A1 there is not adequate shel- ter space , cities can adopt an ordinance that details the time, place and manner someone can sleep on pub- lic property. Since there are few shel- ters on the North Coast, the city plans to update a camp- ing ordinance. Spalding said some cities have identifi ed areas where people can sleep between 9 p.m. and 7 a.m. Some have allowed people to sleep on sidewalks if they leave at least 5 feet of space, while o ther parts of the city are off -limits. Some cities allow tents, he said, and some only allow sleeping bags. Spalding said the police department is prepared to bring a draft ordinance based on examples from other cit- ies to the City Council. “However, the hard part of this one, of course, is who is going to make certain decisions as to what areas are off -limits, and what areas would we allow someone to sleep,” the police chief said. An expulsion zone ordi- nance — also referred to as an exclusion zone — is an enforcement tool designed to address people who repeatedly commit low- er -level violations in partic- ular parts of the city. Under the ordinance, people who commit a num- ber of these types of crimes in the same area would be temporarily excluded . Similar ordinances have been approved in Lin- coln City, Salem, Bend and Medford. Depending on the city, the expulsion can range from 90 days to six months, Spalding said. More s erious crimes, like sex off enses or assault, would result in immediate expulsion. Downtown, Ninth Street Park and the Astoria River- walk are examples of places where people might be excluded . “It’s not something that we as a police depart- ment can arbitrarily pick an area,” Spalding said. “It will Lydia Ely/The Astorian Quality of life issues are a concern in Astoria. always be based on some data that seems to indicate that there is a higher-than- usual level of negative activ- ity that’s occurring in a par- ticular area that we feel we need to address.” The police chief said sim- ply arresting or citing people doesn’t always alter behav- ior. If expelled by the court, people would be subject to trespass if they return. The City Council also supported converting the police department’s part- time community service offi - cer position into a role that handles quality of life issues and homelessness. Astoria police and Clat- sop Behavioral Healthcare, Clatsop County’s mental health and substance abuse treatment provider, are in the initial stages of developing a program that would embed a clinical staff er in the police department. The offi cer position could work directly with that clini- cian and handle some crisis calls together in an eff ort to be more proactive than reac- tive, Spalding said. “Right now, there’s not the capacity within the police department to be able to fully engage with the social ser- vice agencies,” City Man- ager Brett Estes said . “And when the social service agen- cies are stepping up and add- ing more positions to part- ner with us, we’re needing someone on our receiving end to be able to move for- ward with that.” Other options supported by the council included ordinances to handle RVs, aggressive panhandling and abandoned grocery carts. The City C ouncil also supported the police depart- ment’s work in creating a program where people who commit lower -level off enses would be diverted from the court to a support group where they can do commu- nity service in lieu of paying fi nes . Mayor Bruce Jones said it is critical to identify parts of the city where people can- not camp, like the Garden of Surging Waves near City Hall and the Astoria Nor- dic Heritage Park under con- struction off Marine Drive. “It’s great to fi nd that if you search far and wide there are some cities that have been able to fi nd some workarounds and some ways to at least regain some of their public spaces and some quality of life for their com- munity despite what the state L egislature has done and despite what the courts have ruled,” he said. City Councilor Joan Her- man supported the prioriti- zation of options, but also shared a sense of frustration. “I feel small communi- ties, cities, are pretty much being left to fi t the bill for these huge societal prob- lems, both literally and fi gu- ratively,” she said. While City Councilor Roger Rocka supported some of the ideas, he ques- Fitzpatrick: Hopes to hear input, concerns from people Continued from Page A1 “I love Astoria,” Fitzpat- rick said. “My heart is here.” He said he started attend- ing City Council meetings regularly in 2003. From then, his involvement in the city grew, leading to his appointment to the P lanning C ommission in 2013. H e has served as the commission’s president and vice president. Fitzpatrick is a found- ing member of the Friends of the Astoria Armory and the founding president of the Kiwanis Club of Warrenton. He sees his years of civic engagement as training for being mayor. “I had thought about run- ning for City Council, if that came fi rst, but the people that ran, I supported,” he said. “I didn’t feel like I needed to run against these people.” Instead, he threw his sup- port behind them. Fitzpatrick said he also supported for- mer Mayor Arline LaMear and Jones during their may- oral campaigns . After hearing about Jones’ decision — and being urged by several people to run — Fitzpatrick decided it was time to pursue the role . If elected, he said he wants to make progress on issues such as housing and child care. One of the biggest ques- tions before the City Council is a workforce housing pro- posal at Heritage Square that would include units for peo- ple undergoing mental health and substance abuse treat- ment. The project has drawn support in the community and on the City Council, but also a lot of criticism. While Fitzpatrick has publicly raised questions about the proposal, he said he does not plan to base his campaign on the issue. “That is not why I’m running,” Fitzpatrick said, pointing toward Heritage Square . However, he said his over 40 years working in the housing industry gives him perspective. He has owned over 100 rentals in Astoria and has rented to more than 1,000 people, he said. “And I have provided housing to people with men- tal health and addiction issues since 1983,” he added. “So, I am familiar with the unique situation that provid- ing housing to these people creates.” While Fitzpatrick does not know child care like he knows housing, he is eager to get a better handle on the barriers many providers have faced . He said the issue is close to his heart, and one he strug- gled with as a single father for several years. The city has opted to close Sprouts Learning Center, the city-run day care, at the end of June because of staffi ng and fi nancial challenges. The closure is a signifi cant blow to parents because child care options remain scarce. By announcing his intent to run early, Fitzpatrick said he hopes to hear input and concerns from people in the community so he is better informed on city issues by the November election . tioned whether they were the best step forward. “This seems to me like we’re playing from behind,” he said. “It just seems to me that if we can focus our eff orts on establishing a place where people can camp and can park — where we would have sanitary facilities, restrooms, staffi ng with the help of our social service agencies so that it would be safe for the women that are escaping from abu- sive relationships and so on — then that would eliminate so many of the problems we’re trying to deal with on an individual basis.” ‘Survive or thrive’ Social services a dvocates echoed Rocka’s comments. Teresa Barnes, the exec- utive director of the Astoria Warming Center, and Billie Delaney, the warming cen- ter’s coordinator, took issue with the tone of the work ses- sion and ideas like an expul- sion zone ordinance. “They talk about people not feeling safe, and it wasn’t the people who are living in their cars, it wasn’t the peo- ple who are actively fl eeing domestic violence, and don’t have anywhere to be to be safe,” Barnes told The Asto- rian. “It was the people who have to witness people’s bro- ken down RVs or walk by people who are living on the sidewalk not feeling safe.” Barnes and Delaney said they felt like the tone was a departure from eff orts of the city’s homelessness solu- tions task force, which they say has acknowledged that criminalizing homelessness is ineff ective and that there is a need for more shelter space. “When the problem that they’re trying to address is visibility of unhoused peo- ple instead of the fact that people are without hous- ing, then you are focus- ing on criminalizing home- lessness and not solving it,” Delaney said. “Because the focus is to make those people less visible, not get them the resources they might need to survive or thrive.” But Rocka said he may con- sider a second term if he sees the race take a negative turn. L ocal elections, he said, have attracted more outside money and negative campaigning in recent years. He pointed to races for the county Board of Com- missioners in 2020 and the Clat- sop Community College B oard in 2021 as examples. “If I saw that happening in the council race, that might move me to run again because I wouldn’t want our council worked in that way,” Rocka said. “I just don’t think that serves anyone in the city or the county to have that kind of election campaign again. “It just breaks my heart that that’s happening here.” Child care: ‘This really saddens me that it’s come to this’ Continued from Page A1 “I’ve always emphasized that this is a top priority for me to maintain the service. And it pains me to say this now, but I think we’re at that point where it’s unsustain- able for the city to continue to provide the service. Espe- cially when this import- ant service is coming at the expense of other equally, or more important, commu- nity health programs, espe- cially those for our youth that would benefi t so many more people. “I hate having to make that choice. It’s a terrible choice to have to make, but I don’t see any way out of it.” The city opened the day care a decade ago because of the need for child care in the community, and it remains one of the few of its size that provides care for infants. The center, formerly known as Lil’ Sprouts Acad- emy , relies heavily on low- er-paid, part-time labor, which has been especially challenging to hire and retain during the coronavi- rus pandemic. It has also continued to pull resources away from other services the parks department off ers. In an attempt to make operations more sustain- able, the city requested pro- posals in October from par- ties interested in forming a public-private partnership. There were no responses by the December deadline, but in the days following, an interested group approached the city and formed into the nonprofi t Clatsop Promise. Trudy Van Dusen Citovic, a co-owner of Van Dusen Beverages who serves on the Clatsop Com- munity College Board, was one of the people behind the nonprofi t. She had hoped that through a partnership, the nonprofi t could focus on raising funds to oper- ate while the city contin- ued to own and maintain the facility. However, the nonprofi t stepped back after realiz- ing the plan was not fi nan- cially viable. Citovic told The Astorian in January that even with the assistance the city was willing to provide on rent, the nonprofi t esti- mated the child care pro- gram would need an addi- tional $300,000 to $400,000 per year. Since October, Jonah Dart-McLean, the city’s parks director, said the parks department lost more staff , which forced the city to close a prekindergarten classroom that served the day care’s oldest children in November. Dart-McLean told the City Council on Wednes- day that the parks depart- ment’s operations manager, recreation coordinator and administrative assistant all work to provide support to child care as needed. “We are really down to a critical threshold as far as our staffi ng is concerned where it’s an hour-by-hour question of how we’ll need to move staff members or the children from diff erent rooms in order to have suf- fi cient care and oversight during the day,” Dart-Mc- Lean said. While the city plans to move away from directly providing child care, it will continue to focus on ways to provide support to other potential providers. City Councilor Tom Brownson said that during his time on the City Coun- cil he has watched the parks department struggle to fi nd new ways to fund all of its activities. “I think there has to be a bigger solution for this. We’re just too small to con- tinue to take this on,” he said. “It’s always been a struggle, and it’s just not going to get any easier. “This really saddens me that it’s come to this.” facebook.com/dailyastorian 2021 READERS’ CHOICE AWARDS VOTE NOW! WWW.DISCOVEROURCOAST.COM