A6 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, APRIL 12, 2022 Vacation rentals: County has held more than 20 meetings where short-term rentals were addressed Continued from Page A1 R.J. Marx/The Astorian Strategies listed from the county housing study. Surplus: County and city leaders have faced criticism for the pace of their response Continued from Page A1 Patty Jo Angelini, the county’s public aff airs offi - cer, said the county started working with the Associa- tion of Oregon Counties and Angelo Planning Group, a Portland-based company, early last year to identify tools to help alleviate the aff ordable housing shortage. “Over the last year, local cities have been forming committees, looking into solutions and listening to concerns of residents and local businesses,” Angelini said in an email. “Although the county is limited in what we can do, we want to do all that we can do.” The expressions of inter- est will be reviewed by the county and cities . County s taff will make recommen- dations to the county Board of Commissioners . Eight of the proper- ties are located in Asto- ria. One is the site of the former Darigold B uilding on the corner of Ninth and Duane streets. The others are vacant neighboring par- cels located between Olney Avenue and Astoria Middle School. The county has three properties in Warrenton, including more than 14 acres off of Ridge Road, 11 acres to the north of S.W. Ninth Street and east of Juniper Avenue, and about 3 acres of off S.W. 11th Street. The smaller property is almost fully covered in sig- nifi cant wetlands, and the others have portions cov- ered by wetlands. In Seaside, the county has two neighboring parcels zoned industrial. One has access from N. Holladay Drive near 24th Avenue, the other has access from U.S. Highway 101. Two other properties in Seaside sit along Neawanna Creek. One is off of 12th Street and the other is near Fifth Avenue. The property near Fifth does not have direct access and has devel- opment constraints, so it has been identifi ed as a poor candidate for aff ordable housing. Astoria c ity c ouncilors plan to review possible sites with county leaders during a city work session next Friday. The county plans on con- vening county and city lead- ers at the Clatsop County Fairgrounds on May 18 to discuss aff ordable housing, micro-housing and home- less services. Housing has been a sig- nifi cant public policy issue for the past several years. A countywide housing study released in 2019 found that while there was suffi cient supply, much of the hous- ing stock serves the second home and vacation rental markets, leaving a lack of housing for residents to buy or rent. County and city leaders have faced criticism for the pace of their response to the housing crunch. The county’s announce- ment on surplus property came a week after the Asto- ria City Council backed away from a workforce housing project at Heritage Square over concerns about the cost and vocal commu- nity opposition. Nuisance complaints, many clustered in the Cove Beach area, soon began to crop up. A handful of short- term rental owners claim that some complaints have been baseless or exagger- ated. These opposing views have been aired in a slew of town halls and county com- mission meetings. Since late 2019, the county has held more than 20 meetings where short-term rentals were addressed. Last summer, county commissioners approved a moratorium on issuing new short-term rental per- mits. The freeze went into eff ect in September and was extended in December. The moratorium is set to expire on April 28, the day after the board is scheduled to hold a second hearing on the issue. Based on direction from county c ommission- ers, county staff has recom- mended that the board allow short-term rentals in four commercial and 12 residen- tial areas, from rural lands around Astoria to Clatsop Plains to coastal communi- ties like Cove Beach, just north of the county line. Last month, a divided Planning Commission voted to recommend that the board permit short-term rentals in only six of those areas, zoned either commercial or multifamily residential, and remove rentals from other residential zones, including Cove Beach’s Coastal Resi- dential zone. “The properties in ques- tion here — 16 diff erent zones — were zoned the way they were for a rea- son,” Christopher Farrar, the Planning Commission’s vice chairman, said. “And in most cases — not all — but in most of the cases, it’s rural residential kind of living. It’s not business.” Planning Commissioner John Orr found persuasive an opinion written by Dan- iel Kearns, a Portland land use attorney retained by Cove Beach residents, that reads: “Because STRs are not listed as a permitted use in the Coastal Residential z one, they are presumptively not allowed. ” Pointing out that the coun- ty’s Land and Water Devel- opment and Use Code spe- cifi cally allows short-term rentals in Arch Cape, Kearns writes: “A long-standing (tenet) of zoning code inter- pretation is that, where a use is specifi cally listed as allowed in one zone, but omitted from the list of uses in another zone, it is pre- sumed to not be allowed in Lydia Ely/The Astorian Houses overlook the ocean in Cove Beach. the other zone.” Asked about the claim that the county has been issu- ing permits in violation of its own code, Patty Jo Angelini, the county’s public aff airs offi cer, said in an email that, if the board adopts the zon- ing changes, “these amend- ments will address (Kearns’) allegation that the county is illegally permitting STRs in zones other than Arch Cape.” Kearns writes that, in Cove Beach, “approxi- mately 30% of the homes are operated as STRs, which is far beyond a healthy or nor- mal proportion.” The Planning Commis- sion also recommended making short-term rentals, currently allowed with no public notice or public hear- ing, into a conditional use. That process would require a public notice, a public hear- ing and other steps. This change would apply to Arch Cape, as well. Another option for the board to consider, though the Planning Commission rejected it, is to approve the county staff ’s direction — 16 zones, plus Arch Cape — but cap the number of short- term rentals permitted in the future. Disallowing short- term rentals in the residen- tial zones that the Planning Commission objected to would lead to a phasing out of the rentals that already operate in them as owners’ licenses expire. Gail Henrikson, the county’s community devel- opment director, said the Planning Commission’s rec- ommendation would elimi- nate more than half of short- term rentals — 109 of the 186, using September’s fi g- ures — operating in unincor- porated areas , including in places where neighbors have not raised complaints. The county staff report said the Planning Com- mission’s recommendation would have a fi scal impact of up to $561,994. This fi gure includes at least a $499,181 loss in lodging taxes . ‘Illogical, unethical, immoral’ Charles Dice, a Cove Beach resident and leader in the push to remove short- term rentals from residen- tial neighborhoods, wrote in a letter to the Planning Com- mission that allowing rentals in residential zones “benefi ts only one group — the prop- erty owners of STRs.” For the county commis- sioners to allow them, he wrote, “seems to be illogical, unethical, immoral, and (a) great example of bad gover- nance and of dismissing the ‘will of the people’ in favor of the fi nancial interests of a special interest group.” Nancy Chase has been renting her Cove Beach bun- galow since the early 1990s, long before internet plat- forms simplifi ed the oper- ation. “At that time, no one seemed to have a prob- lem with you renting your house,” she said. She said short-term rent- als provide an option for families who want to have an aff ordable vacation at the coast for a few days. If the county bans vaca- tion rentals in her area, one possible outcome, she said, is that she sells the property once her license expires. Another, she said, is that she fi nds a longer-term renter. Get to The Point. Expert Service. Guaranteed. Trust your vehicle safety to the professionals at DEL’S O.K. TIRE Salon: ‘I am just really excited’ Continued from Page A1 she knows to take care of this business, and this busi- ness will take care of her.” Matson approached Carl- son at the beginning of the year with her off er. While it caught Carlson by surprise at the time, she has had long- time dreams of running her own business, and it was an easy decision. “I am just really excited. It’s overwhelming,” she said. “I just want to jump in to try to fi nd my groove and get everything down in the system.” As for Matson, the pan- demic left her feeling like it was time to put down the clippers and see the world. She plans to tour around the ‘WE DON’T CARE WHETHER YOU ARE A NEW CLIENT, AN OLD CLIENT, WHETHER YOU ARE 2 YEARS OLD OR 82.’ Cheryl Matson country in her van. Refl ecting back on her years at the salon, Matson recalls the pleasant inter- actions with clients and an emphasis on putting her employees fi rst. “I was always a people person, so I will miss those interactions daily,” she said. In a region with stiff com- petition and many other salons, Matson credits a large part of Third Dimension’s success to their policy of accepting both walk-ins and appointments. The result is several hun- dred paying clients each week. “We don’t care whether you are a new client, an old client, whether you are 2 years old or 82,” Matson said. Matson does not expect that mantra to change under Carlson, who wants to keep the same structure, with an eye for a more modern look. “Don’t change it if it ain’t broken,” Matson said. Spring Tire Sale VALID NOW through APRIL 23 RD , 2022 Burgener: Unanimously supported Continued from Page A1 “It has been a pleasure meeting and getting to know the staff and community of Warrenton, and I look for- ward to serving as the next city manager,“ Burgener said. Over the past week, the city held several staff and community receptions with Burgener, as well as panel interviews by commu- nity leaders, public admin- istrators, city department heads and the C ity C ommis- sion. Burgener was the only fi nalist . The feedback was posi- tive and unanimously sup- ported the potential hiring of Burgener, the city said. Prior to holding the top post in Stanfi eld, Burgener was the city administrator in Ada, Minnesota, and the fi nance manager and admin- istrative services manager for the Utah Department of Transportation. Burgener will take over for Linda Engbretson, who announced her retirement last year but agreed work on an interim basis until her replacement was hired. 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