A2 THE ASTORIAN • SATURDAY, APRIL 9, 2022 IN BRIEF TAKING A BREAK Seaside man sentenced to prison for theft Damien James Arrin Ruiz, 27, of Seaside, was sen- tenced on Thursday to fi ve years in prison for several thefts and burglaries that took place in 2020 and 2021. In July 2020, he committed fi rst-degree aggravated theft at End of Trail Public House in Seaside, second-de- gree burglary at the Seaside Elks Lodge and Inca’s Inc. clothing store and second-degree theft by removing items from septic trucks. In November 2020, he committed second-degree burglary at Seaside Rentals and the Clatsop Behavioral Healthcare offi ce in Seaside. And in November, he committed second-degree bur- glary at Astoria law offi ces. Two sea gulls sit on a beach access sign at Fort Stevens State Park. Lydia Ely/The Astorian Astoria to make emergency sanitary sewer repair downtown An emergency repair to a sanitary sewer main in downtown Astoria will begin Monday. The city will close 10th Street at Commercial Street while the repairs are made. The work is expected to take three days, and the city anticipates traffi c impacts will be minimal. Immunization deadline set for schools The deadline to meet annual state school immuniza- tion requirements is April 20. Families are required to show proof of immunization for children attending school, preschool or child care. The Clatsop County Public Health Department had extended the deadline due to the challenges of the coro- navirus pandemic. The required vaccinations diff er based on age and grade. The Oregon Health Authority lists the require- ments on their website. A coronavirus vaccine is not an immunization required by the state. — The Astorian Day resigns from Pacifi c County Tourism directorship SEAVIEW, Wash. —Andi Day, the executive director of Pacifi c County Tourism, is resigning at the end of June. She will stay on while a search is made for her replacement. Day, one of Washington’s leading destination man- agement executives, is stepping aside after 10 years. She plans to reinstate her marketing consulting business and provide her destination marketing, management and development services to a wider industry base. — Chinook Observer Environmental groups fail to stop southern Oregon logging projects Environmental groups have failed to convince a fed- eral judge to block two logging and fuels reduction proj- ects on 8,000 acres of public forestland in southern Oregon. U.S. District Judge Ann Aiken has refused to issue a preliminary injunction against the U.S. Bureau of Land Management’s Bear Grub and Round Oak projects because the environmental lawsuit against them proba- bly won’t succeed. The Klamath Siskiyou Wildlands Center, Oregon Wild and Cascadia Wildlands nonprofi ts are unlikely to prevail on their claims that federal wildlife biologists improperly considered the eff ects of forest treatments on threatened spotted owls, the judge said. — Capital Press DEATHS In Brief Deaths April 7, 2022 ROEHR, Ernestine Joy, 77, of Astoria, died in Astoria. Caldwell’s Luce-Layton Mortuary of Astoria is in charge of the arrangements. April 6, 2022 ENGLISH, Ronald Vin- cent, 78, of Astoria, died in Astoria. Ocean View Funeral & Cremation Ser- vice of Astoria is in charge of the arrangements. PUBLIC MEETINGS MONDAY Warrenton Parks Advisory Board, 4 p.m., (electronic meeting). Port of Astoria Airport Advisory Committee, 4 p.m., terminal building, Astoria Regional Airport, 1110 S.E. Flight Line Dr, Warrenton. Seaside City Council, 7 p.m., City Hall, 989 Broadway. TUESDAY Clatsop County Planning Commission, 10 a.m., (elec- tronic meeting). Cannon Beach City Council, 6 p.m., work session and special meeting, City Hall, 163 E Gower Ave. Clatsop Community College Board of Education, 6 p.m., work session, Columbia 219, 1651 Lexington Ave. Lewis & Clark Fire Department Board, 6 p.m., main fi re station, 34571 U.S. Highway 101 Business. Warrenton City Commission, 6 p.m., City Hall, 225 S. Main Ave. 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 Subscription rates Eff ective January 12, 2021 MAIL EZpay (per month) ...............................................................................................................$10.75 13 weeks in advance ...........................................................................................................$37.00 26 weeks in advance ...........................................................................................................$71.00 52 weeks in advance ........................................................................................................ $135.00 DIGITAL EZpay (per month) .................................................................................................................$8.25 Steigerwald wildlife refuge to reopen after restoration Associated Press The largest habitat res- toration project along the lower Columbia River is coming to a close this spring. The Steigerwald Lake National Wildlife Ref- uge, east of Washougal in Clark County, is slated to reopen May 1 after almost two years of being inter- mittently closed to the public. The roughly $31 mil- lion project to decrease fl ooding and increase salmon and steelhead migration was funded, in part, by the Bonneville Power Administration, the Washington Department of Ecology, the National Fish and Wildlife Foun- dation, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Bonneville Environmental Foundation. Updates included removing a levee that sep- arated the Columbia River from nearby Gibbons Creek, which offi cials say reopened a natural path- way for salmon and steel- head migration and will prevent the creek from fl ooding, the Daily News reported. Before removing the levee, fi sh could only bypass the embank- ment through a fi sh lad- der, which is a series of pools built to allow fi sh to swim over obstacles like dams. The fi sh ladder was removed. The levee was con- structed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in the 1960s to prevent the Columbia River from fl ooding the refuge. How- ever, it exacerbated Gib- bons Creek’s fl ooding, which often spilled into the Port of Camas-Wash- ougal property. Oregon adds to its network of wildfi re-spotting cameras By ALEX BAUMHARDT Oregon Capital Chronicle Oregon will soon have nearly 60 cameras across the state perched on cellphone towers, old fi re towers and mountaintops, watching for forest fi res across the state. The cameras, part of the ALERTWildfi re network, help fi re departments and state agencies spot wildfi res early, predict their move- ments and slow their spread. They also allow Oregonians the opportunity to make evac- uation decisions early, based on their proximity to fi res. T he network has two dozen cameras, which will more than double with new state money. Legislators in February appropriated $4.5 million to the Oregon Hazards Lab at the University of Oregon to add at least 29 cameras across the state over the next year. Most of the two dozen cur- rently operating are in south- east and western Oregon. New cameras will be con- centrated in the Rogue Valley and in the Bend, Richmond and La Pine areas. The video streams are accessible online 24 hours a day, seven days a week, to the public and to emergency response agencies and fi re- fi ghters, who can also use a time-lapse feature to go back and trace the origins of a fi re. Additionally, artifi cial intelli- gence software in the system can detect smoke and alert fi re agencies and emergency responders. Such a forest surveillance system was fi rst implemented around Lake Tahoe in 2014 by the University of Nevada, Reno and has expanded to Oregon, California, Washing- ton state and Idaho in part- nership with state and fed- eral agencies and public universities. The Oregon expansion InciWeb Legislators appropriated $4.5 million to the Oregon Hazards Lab for more cameras. is spearheaded by Doug Toomey, a geophysicist and director of the Oregon Haz- ards Lab, where scientists study natural disasters in the Pacifi c Northwest and search for ways to use technology to monitor and mitigate them. Toomey hopes the cam- era’s will be useful to peo- ple living in areas prone to wildfi re. “You don’t have to sit and wait to see if your home is being evacuated. You can see what things look like in real time,” he said. In California, the system has allowed fi re agencies to respond more strategically to fi res when they begin to move. During the Lilac fi re in San Diego County in 2017, several fi re departments collaborated to double the size of their initial response within the fi rst 10 minutes of fl ames spreading. They could see the size of the fi re from the elevated cameras rather than waiting to assess on the ground, according to a CBS news report. Toomey said the Oregon Hazards Lab can program cameras to gray out homes or businesses upon request for privacy reasons. He said, for the most part, people living within view of the fi re cam- eras have seen the benefi ts outweigh concerns. The number of cameras in Oregon are still small in com- parison to other states that are part of the ALERTWildfi re collaborative. In California, the network has more than 1,000 cameras positioned around the state, including dozens near the border with Oregon. “It is a great start to have this money, but we have a long way to go,” Toomey said. Please ADOPT A PET! ADAM MILK American young Long Silver Hair Tabby female with green eyes A volunteer reports Milk magnifies Idling, purring in and her cuddling magnificence terrific are Adam’s strong attention, points. tuxedo--attracts He’s attention, also a good and listener oh so soft. loves who will keep all your secrets. 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