149TH YEAR, NO. 106 WEEKEND EDITION // SATURDAY, MARCH 5, 2022 $1.50 Lawmakers approve forest accord Agreement between timber and environmental interests By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press Photos by Nicole Bales/The Astorian The Garlington Center in Portland. Housing project at Heritage Square modeled after similar campus in Portland Garlington Center includes health center and affordable apartments See Forest accord, Page A6 Job training package advances in Salem By NICOLE BALES The Astorian ORTLAND — Over the next sev- eral weeks, Astoria will collabo- rate with Edlen & Co. to refine a proposed workforce housing proj- ect at Heritage Square. The Portland-based developer envi- sions a building downtown that com- bines units for lower-wage work- ers with supportive housing for people in treatment for mental health and substance abuse and at risk of homelessness. While there has been a lot of scru- tiny about the concept, particularly the mental health component, the idea is not new or untested. Amy Baker, the executive direc- tor of Clatsop Behavioral Healthcare, which is partnering with Edlen & Co. on the project, said people do not need to look far to find similar developments. “I think that if you look at other programs around the state — or even Clatsop Behavioral Healthcare pro- grams — you’ll see that folks who are housed are stable,” Baker told The Astorian in January. “You just have to look to other communities to see that it’s actually worked.” The concept at Heritage Square is based, in part, on Cascadia Behavioral Healthcare’s Garlington Center cam- pus in Portland. The campus includes two build- ings that sit on a block on N.E. Mar- tin Luther King Jr. Boulevard and back into a quiet residential neighborhood SALEM — State lawmakers have voted overwhelmingly in favor of new logging standards negotiated by timber and envi- ronmental groups under the Private Forest Accord compromise. Senate Bill 1501, which enshrines the deal into law, was approved by the state House on Thursday in a 43-15 vote. The Senate on Wednesday voted 22 to 5 for the legislation. Representatives of timber and environ- mental groups struck the deal last year after a year of talks mediated by the office of Gov. Kate Brown, who convened the panel in 2020 to avoid competing ballot mea- sures on forestry regulations. “Thank you to legislators from both parties for coming together to pass this his- toric legislative package,” Brown said in a statement. “The Private Forest Accord is a perfect example of the Oregon Way — Oregonians coming together to find com- mon ground, to the mutual benefit of us all. “Together, this agreement will help to ensure that Oregon continues to have healthy forests, fish and wildlife, as well as economic growth for our forest indus- try and rural communities, for generations to come. I would like to thank everyone involved for their role in making this agree- ment a reality today.” The 44-page bill would expand no-har- vest buffers around streams, implement stricter requirements for road-building, P A $200M state investment By PETER WONG Oregon Capital Bureau The Garlington Center in Portland opened in 2018. in the Albina area. One of the buildings houses the Garlington Health Center, which pro- vides integrated health care services, such as mental health and substance abuse treatment, primary care and wellness programs. The building also has a pharmacy, community rooms and showers, washers and dryers for people who are homeless. Next to the health center is Garling- ton Place, a 52-unit affordable housing apartment building that serves Casca- dia Behavioral Healthcare clients, for- merly homeless veterans and people who qualify for the city’s North and Northeast preference policy, which gives priority to people with ties to the historically Black neighborhoods. Residents also have access to a part-time resident services coordinator and an on-site property manager. The health center and apartment building opened in 2018. The housing units were fully leased and occupied within a month. Gov. Kate Brown has praised legis- lative approval of her $200 million job training plan known as Future Ready Oregon. The plan in Senate Bill 1545 focuses on future jobs in health care, construc- tion and manufacturing, along with train- ing for people who often have been left behind in past economic recoveries. It was developed by the governor’s Racial Justice Council — which Brown formed in the aftermath of the 2020 national protests following the murder of George Floyd by Minneapolis police — plus business interests, regional work- force development panels and others. “Now, it’s time to roll up our sleeves and get to work to build a skilled and diverse workforce,” Brown said in a statement after the state House passed it on a 48-10 vote Thursday. See Garlington, Page A6 See Job training, Page A6 ‘An amazing show of community love’ Trail improved at Deadman’s Cove By PATRICK WEBB Chinook Observer CAPE DISAPPOINTMENT, Wash. — Hikers are celebrating significant safety enhancements to the trail down to Deadman’s Cove in Ilwaco. The improvements to the route to the scenic inlet in the basalt cliffs at Washington state’s south- western tip are thanks to Jon and Sara Swanson and their two sons, Blaine, 12, and Blake, 9. “The Swanson family is much appreciated for improving our stairs down Deadman’s Cave to watch the beautiful sunsets for many nights to come,” shared Keowah Iyall on the Long Beach Peninsula Friends of Facebook page. “They have already put in over 100 hours of their own time.” Deborah Bergren Mather labeled it, “an amazing show of community love.” Nellie Hux, one of the site’s most talented photographers, added her thanks. “It’s too pretty a place to keep closed,” she posted, with yet another stellar scenic photo. Nellie Hux See Trail, Page A6 Deadman’s Cove in Ilwaco is newly accessible after a yearslong safety closure.