4 • MARCH 2022 Continued from Page 3 industry, but I kind of enjoy that,” she said. “I don’t push limits too far, but you might hear — when I talk to vessels — Siouxsie might be in the background on channel 16. I’m sure people don’t know what’s going on there,” Steerman said. “But I think it’s import- ant to kind of mix up and diversify an industry which, for the most part, has been white men.” Steerman is the û rst woman dispatcher in the Columbia River Bar Pilots’ history, as far as their records show. FEATURE STORY Since the mid-19th century, the b ar p ilots have been guiding ships safely through the mouth of the Columbia River. Steerman compared her job to air traf- û c control at an airport, tracking the ships and coordinating their entry and exit with the pilots. In the year and a half she’s worked there , Steerman has become û uent in the technol- ogy and jargon needed to direct the pilots. The screens in her oû ce show maps of the ships in See Page 4 RIGHT: Sam Steerman’s Siouxsie and the Banshees mug sits on her desk in the Columbia River Bar Pilots dispatch offi ce. BELOW: The Columbia River is refl ected in Steerman’s offi ce window while she works at her desk. PHOTOS BY LYDIA ELY/THE ASTORIAN COAST RIVER BUSINESS JOURNAL