A2 THE ASTORIAN • SATURDAY, MARCH 19, 2022 IN BRIEF County records virus deaths A 71-year-old woman, who was unvaccinated against the coronavirus, died on March 6 at Colum- bia Memorial Hospital in Astoria, Clatsop County said. No other information was immediately available. A 57-year-old man from the county died last fall from the virus, the county reported. The man, who had underlying conditions, died on Nov. 21 at Legacy Emanuel Medical Center in Portland, according to the Oregon H ealth A uthority. He was not vaccinated against COVID-19, the county said. The h ealth a uthority, meanwhile, reported sev- eral coronavirus cases for the county over the past several days. The health authority reported fi ve new virus cases on Thursday, six new cases on Wednesday, four new cases on Tuesday and fi ve new cases last weekend. Since the pandemic began, the county had recorded 4,564 virus cases as of Thursday. GETTING READY Three-vehicle crash temporarily closed Highway 26 A Seaside man was fl own to a Portland hospital on Wednesday with serious injuries after a three-ve- hicle crash on U.S. Highway 26 near Quartz Creek. The 66-year-old man, heading west in a Nis- san Maxima, veered into the eastbound lane and crashed into an oncoming Kenworth log truck, Ore- gon State Police said. The Nissan then collided with a Ford F-250 pickup truck. Neither truck driver was injured. The crash, which occurred at about 6:45 a.m., closed the highway for about three hours, police said. — The Astorian Ilwaco community center, forest win federal funding LONG BEACH, Wash. — The proposed Dylan Jude Harrell Community Center at the Port of Ilwaco will receive $1.2 million in federal assistance. Claire Bruncke, the executive director of the community center, said the newly secured funds “defi nitely helps us to move forward with our timeline.” The design calls for a 36,000-square foot cam- pus-style facility constructed in three phases. Another $1.6 million in federal money will go to the Bear Ridge Community Forest, an Ilwaco proj- ect that aims to protect the city’s drinking water and preserve hundreds of acres of land. The money is part of an omnibus federal spend- ing package. — Chinook Observer DEATH In Brief Death March 18, 2022 SARKIE, Delbert Joel, 88, of Astoria, died in Asto- ria. Caldwell’s Luce-Layton Mortuary of Astoria is in charge of the arrangements. ON THE RECORD Attempted murder alleged to have occurred On the Record • Thomas Squier in November. Whiteford, 60, of Oregon City, was indicted this week for attempted mur- der, two counts of sec- ond-degree assault, two counts of strangulation, fourth-degree assault and menacing. The crimes — all listed as instances of domestic violence — are alleged to have occurred earlier this month. Assault • William Allen Han- ning, 37, of Deer Lodge, Montana, was arrested on Sunday at Colum- bia Memorial Hospital in Astoria for fourth-degree assault and second-de- gree disorderly conduct. He allegedly assaulted a nurse at the hospital. Burglary • Calvin Toi North, 28, of Salem, was indicted on Wednesday for fi rst-de- gree burglary and fi rst-de- gree theft. The crimes are Theft • Danielle Laurel Carl- son, 32, of Astoria, was indicted last week for fi rst-degree theft, second-de- gree theft, three counts of second-degree forgery and computer crime. The crimes are alleged to have occurred between September and November 2020. • Samuel Joe John- son, 32, of Astoria, was arrested on Tuesday at Walmart in Warrenton for second-degree theft and possession of heroin. DUII • David James Curry, 41, of Vancouver, Wash- ington, was arrested on Wednesday at W. Marine Drive and Portway Street in Astoria for driving under the infl uence of intoxicants and reck- less driving. He was also cited for refusing to take a Breathalyzer test. PUBLIC MEETINGS MONDAY Astoria City Council, 7 p.m., City Hall, 1095 Duane St. PUBLIC MEETINGS Established July 1, 1873 (USPS 035-000) Published Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday by EO Media Group, 949 Exchange St., PO Box 210, Astoria, OR 97103 Telephone 503-325-3211, 800-781-3211 or Fax 503-325-6573. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Astorian, PO Box 210, Astoria, OR 97103-0210 DailyAstorian.com Circulation phone number: 800-781-3214 Periodicals postage paid at Astoria, OR ADVERTISING OWNERSHIP All advertising copy and illustrations prepared by The Astorian become the property of The Astorian and may not be reproduced for any use without explicit prior approval. COPYRIGHT © Entire contents © Copyright, 2022 by The Astorian. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS MEMBER CERTIFIED AUDIT OF CIRCULATIONS, INC. Printed on recycled paper Luke Whittaker/Chinook Observer Sea Breeze Charters owner Steve Sohlstrom walks past the bow of the F/V Sea Breeze this month. Fishermen are getting ready for the recreational ocean fi shing season. Bradford Island listed as a Superfund site A dumping spot for the Army Corps By MONICA SAMAYOA Oregon Public Broadcasting The U.S. Environmen- tal Protection Agency des- ignated the Columbia Riv- er’s Bradford Island and its surrounding waters as a Superfund cleanup site on Thursday. Environmental, conserva- tion and health groups, along with tribes, lawmakers and state agencies, are calling the listing a huge win, after spending almost three years asking the federal govern- ment to list the contaminated site for top-priority cleanup. The Superfund listing, announced by EPA Admin- istrator Michael Regan, will now require federal reg- ulators to apply the high- est cleanup standards to the area. Having Superfund sta- tus will mean more federal funding and strict timelines for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to clean up the pol- lution it dumped at the site. The Superfund process also includes opportunities for the public to comment on cleanup plans. At a press conference on the listing announcement, Gov. Kate Brown said she hopes the Superfund listing will mark a turning point in the history of the area and the people who depend on it. “Oregon, along with the Yakama Nation and the state of Washington, have worked for over 20 years to see some forward progress in address- ing this injustice,” Brown said. Bradford Island, located near Cascade Locks, was used by the Army Corps in the 1930s as a dumping site while the agency was con- structing Bonneville Dam. That marked the beginning of four decades of dumping debris and electrical equip- ment that contained highly toxic chemicals like polychlo- rinated biphenyls, known as PCBs, directly into the river and contaminating the island and surrounding waters. Once PCBs are pres- ent in the environment, they do not break down easily and can build up in the tis- sues of fi sh. PCBs have been known to have harm- ful eff ects on human health, and fi sh consumption is one of the most common ways the toxic chemical enters the human body. Both Oregon and Washington state health agencies have issued health advisories warning people to Oregon Department of Enviromental Quality An aerial view of Bradford Island located near Cascade Locks on the Columbia River. ‘THE FISH CAUGHT IN THIS AREA STILL CONTAIN THE HIGHEST LEVELS OF CANCER CAUSING PCBS IN THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST. SO THIS IS AN OVERDUE UNDERTAKING.’ U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley avoid eating resident fi sh at Bradford Island because of high PCB levels. The area is important to the Yakama Nation and many other tribes in the region for traditional hunting and fi sh- ing grounds. The tribes have expressed concern about the high levels of contamination in the area. “The Yakama Nation and our partners worked hard to get the site added to the Superfund list because, even after two decades of work at the site, contamination in res- ident fi sh remains alarmingly high,” Yakama Nation Fish- eries Regional Superfund Project Manager Rose Lon- goria said in a press release. “The decision to add Brad- ford Island to the Superfund list is a major fi rst step in get- ting EPA and the Corps to expedite cleanup actions.” The Army Corps began cleaning up the area during the 1980s, but progress was slow. Those eff orts ultimately came to an end in 2007 after the agency removed contam- inated sediment along Brad- ford Island’s shoreline. Then in 2011, the Oregon Depart- ment of Environmental Qual- ity took tissue samples from resident fi sh and found con- tamination levels were still too high for the health of res- ident fi sh and people who eat them. During that time, both the Army Corps and the Depart- ment of Environmental Qual- ity were working together under a v oluntary c leanup p rogram agreement in which the Army Corps paid the department’s oversight cost for their participation. But that agreement was termi- nated by the Army Corps in September 2019, which led the department to join envi- ronmental groups and state leaders in pursuing Super- fund listing. Now, the Army Corps will still be responsible for the cleanup process, but with Superfund status, the EPA will oversee the cleanup and require a legally enforceable agreement . U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley, an Oregon Democrat, said the environmental damage has gone on for too long and has aff ected tribal fi shing waters, fi sh ecosystems and human health. “The fi sh caught in this area still contain the high- est levels of cancer causing PCBs in the Pacifi c North- west,” he said. “So this is an overdue undertaking.” Advocates fi rst urged the EPA to list Bradford Island VOLUNTEER PICK OF THE WEEK Barnabus 5 year old Basset Hound Blend On this boy’s bucket list: To love and live happy and to enjoy lots of carefree walks. 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But in 2020, the Trump a dministra- tion did not consider listing the area. Last summer, the same groups urged the Biden administration to uphold its commitment to environmen- tal justice and list the site for federal cleanup. The EPA will now assess the full extent of contamina- tion in the area and look at alternative strategies for the longer-term clean up goals. The agency will also work with the Army Corps to create a formal agreement for how cleanup will move forward. The Corps did not immedi- ately respond to a request for comment. Yakama Nation Tribal Councilman Gerald Lewis said although the tribal mem- bers appreciate the EPA list- ing Bradford Island, their hope is more than getting EPA’s involvement. “For the Yakama Nation our goal is simple: clean, healthy fi sh that is safe to eat,” he said. Other tribes that include Bradford Island in their tra- ditional hunting and fi shing grounds are Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs, Nez Perce Tribe, Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians of Oregon, Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reser- vation, Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde and the Cowlitz Indian Tribe. See Petfinder.com Sponsored by Bayshore Animal Hospital CLATSOP COUNTY ANIMAL SHELTER 1315 SE 19th St., Warrenton • 861- PETS www.dogsncats.org Noon to 4pm, Tues-Sat