»INSIDE THURSDAY APRIL 7 2022 WOMEN IN BREWING PAGE 8 ‘ICONIC ’ ASTORIA PAGE 6 HOME AND CHEF TOUR RETURNS WASHINGTON NUP COAST CLEA L SET FOR APRI PAGE 11 PENINSULA ARTISTS OPEN STUDIOS PAGE 13 149TH YEAR, NO. 120 DailyAstorian.com // THURSDAY, APRIL 7, 2022 City to review homeless camping $1.50 LIGHTSHIP RETURNS Lightship Columbia has returned from dry dock in Portland and is temporarily at Tongue Point. Caroline Wuebben, of the Columbia River Maritime Museum, said the museum hopes to have the ship back at the 17th Street Dock and ready for the public in May. See more photos online at dailyastorian. com A list of places to come later By NICOLE BALES The Astorian The Astoria City Council expects to review a camping ordinance in the com- ing weeks that outlines the time and manner for when someone can sleep on public property. Since recent federal court rulings and state legislation, police can only enforce illegal camping on public property if there are adequate shelter spaces avail- able for people to sleep. In the absence of adequate shelter space, Astoria plans to detail the time, place and manner someone can sleep outdoors. The time and manner portion of the ordinance will detail the overnight hours people can sleep and the items they can keep with them to stay warm and dry. During a City Council meeting Mon- day night, Police Chief Geoff Spald- ing said the ordinance will reference a second document that would identify places people can sleep. “I suspect that that’s going to take a substantial amount of time to actually vet some of those locations, if any of them become practical,” Spalding said. In the meantime, the city can move forward with the rest of the ordinance. “By doing this, I think this would also give us some fl exibility that if we do identify certain locations that we could always add an additional location or remove a location if it becomes prob- lematic, as opposed to having to come back and make an ordinance modi- fi cation every time that the list gets updated,” the police chief said. Lydia Ely/ The Astorian See Homeless camping, Page A6 Port adopts waterfront master plan A signifi cant step toward redevelopment By ETHAN MYERS The Astorian The Port of Astoria Commission voted Tuesday to adopt the waterfront master plan. A collaboration between the Port and the city, the plan seeks to tackle redevel- opment between Pier 1 and the Astoria Bridge in Uniontown. Over the p ast eight months, the Port and the city, along with Walker Macy — the landscape architec- ture, urban design and planning fi rm that was hired to craft the plan — collected input from an advisory committee, stake- holders and the public. At a Port workshop several weeks ago, Walker Macy gave Port c ommission- ers a fi nal look at the draft and a chance to make suggestions . On Tuesday, in the Port Commission’s return to in-person meetings during the coronavirus pan- demic, c ommissioners voted 4 to 0 to sign off on the plan. Commissioner James Campbell was not present at the meeting. The City Council will look to adopt the plan in early May . The plan could feature a new hotel to replace the Astoria Riverwalk Inn, the opportunity for private development of marine industrial uses on Pier 1 and con- cepts for a market hall, fi shing village and boardwalk around the West Mooring Basin. See Port, Page A6 Piano trio adjusts performance over Russia concerns ‘Siege of Leningrad’ not part of festival By ABBEY McDONALD The Astorian The Liberty Theatre and Hermitage Piano Trio have made adjustments to the Third Dimension Festi- val in response to recent events in Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The festival, planned for June 11 to June 26, includes performances from the Grammy-nominated group and special guests. It will also host the fi rst Astoria Interna- tional Chamber Music Competition, open to all artists between 18 and 30. See Trio, Page A6 The Hermitage Piano Trio released a photo standing with Ukraine. Labor commissioner a workplace referee Several candidates competing in May By GARY WARNER Oregon Capital Bureau It’s Oregon’s mystery political job. One of fi ve elected executive offi ces — alongside governor, secre- tary of state, treasurer and attorney general. The position has been around since 1903 — with diff erent names. It has no term limits — one man served 24 years. Four Republicans and three Democrats held the job before it became a non par- tisan offi ce with the 1996 election. The mystery offi ce? Commissioner of the Bureau of Labor and Indus- tries, commonly referred to by its acronym, BOLI. Often, the job is called by its original name, l abor c ommissioner. Val Hoyle dropped her re election bid for labor com- missioner to run for the 4th Congressional District seat of retiring U.S. Rep. Peter DeFazio, D-Springfi eld. The vacuum left by Hoyle’s departure from the race drew three veteran political candidates. • Yamhill County Com- missioner Casey Kulla switched from the Demo- cratic primary for governor to the BOLI race. • Portland employee rights attorney Christina Stephenson, who placed second in a 2020 run for state House District 33, fi led the day after Kulla. • On the last day to fi le for offi ce, former Rep. Cheri Helt, R-Bend, jumped into the race. Rounding out the fi eld are Cornelius forest man- agement businessman Aaron Baca, Aloha banker Brent Barker, Oregon City truck driver Chris Henry and Greenhorn laborer Robert Neuman. If one can win more than 50% of the vote in the May election, the race is over — there would be no run off in November. With seven candidates and three with political track records, it’s a longshot that the winner won’t be determined until the November election. The BOLI job is part workplace referee, part civil rights enforcer, part job training promoter, part government information desk and complaint box. There’s a $31 million budget for the offi ce — not a lot by state government standards. The job pays $77,000 — less than the See BOLI, Page A3