A6 THE ASTORIAN • THURSDAY, APRIL 28, 2022 Timber: Appeals court ruling can be District 5: Ideological makeup appealed to Oregon Supreme Court of the nonpartisan board has Continued from Page A1 The statute also directs that forests be managed for the greatest permanent value to the state, rather than to the counties, which means the text falls short of the clear and unmistakable intent of mak- ing a contractual promise, the ruling said. For that reason, a Circuit Court judge in Linn County wrongly refused to dis- miss the class-action lawsuit against the state government, the ruling said. “The Court of Appeals decision today is a victory for Oregon’s environment as well as for sound forest manage- ment,” state Attorney Gen- eral Ellen Rosenblum said. “The court agreed with the state’s legal position in recog- nizing that Oregon’s forests serve a full range of environ- mental, recreational and eco- nomic uses that the Depart- ment of Forestry has authority to balance in order to secure the greatest value to all Oregonians.” John DiLorenzo, an attor- ney for the counties, vowed to challenge the ruling before the Oregon Supreme Court because it “does not align with the law or the evidence we presented at trial.” The ruling doesn’t take into account the economic and social damage that rural communities have suff ered after the state government changed its logging policies without input from the coun- ties, he said in an email. Oregon’s leaders have decided the timber economy is inconsistent with their “urban values,” but the resulting problems must be addressed to bridge the urban-rural divide, DiLorenzo said. “The lack of productive become more conservative Continued from Page A1 Picasa The Oregon Court of Appeals has overturned a $1 billion jury verdict against the state government that sought to compensate counties for insuffi cient logging on state forests. employment in these com- munities has led to substance abuse, violence, lack of edu- cational opportunity and general hopelessness and despair,” he said. A jury determined the s tate violated a contract requir- ing it to maximize revenue from forestlands donated by the counties in the 1930s and ‘40s after a month long trial in 2019. State forests must be man- aged for the greatest per- manent value by law, but more than a dozen counties claimed the Oregon Depart- ment of Forestry impermis- sibly expanded that defi ni- tion beyond its original intent. In 2017, the Clatsop County Board of Commissioners voted 3 to 2 to opt out of the lawsuit, citing a need for more balanced forest management. Under language adopted in the late 1990s, the greatest permanent value was changed to include environmental and recreational considerations that restricted timber harvests, shortchanging the counties and tax districts within them of revenues, the plaintiff s claimed. Attorneys for Oregon appealed the jury verdict on the grounds that the coun- ties didn’t have an enforce- able contract that dictated how state forest offi cials must manage the nearly 700,000 acres of donated property. The law governing state forestlands pertains to matters of statewide concern that can- not be challenged in court by the counties, state attorneys claimed. As political subdivi- sions of the state government, the counties cannot sue over such state policies. Federal environmental laws enacted since the prop- erty was donated, such as the Endangered Species Act, also eff ectively limit how much timber can be extracted from state forestlands, according to state attorneys. The counties claimed that Oregon forestry offi cials weren’t obligated to create habitat for federally-protected species that resulted in log- ging restrictions. In any case, the counties said the state government can alter for- est management policies but must still pay them damages for breaching the contract. Counties provide health care and other functions under contract with the state government, so they must be able to rely on such agree- ments being enforceable, the plaintiff s said. If the coun- ties had known the state gov- ernment could re interpret the contract’s terms at will, they’d never have donated such huge amounts of forestlands. Ordinance: ‘My concern is to defend the rights of both the housed and the unhoused’ Continued from Page A1 “It’s a start,” Roxanne Veazey said. “In the long run, what they did in putting all those people in the Necani- cum lot didn’t do any service to those people. They’re not going to walk over into the bathroom to use the restroom, they’re going to use the bushes. Then they’re going to take whatever comes out of their sewage and they’re going to put it in the trash.” The ordinance is intended to protect the safety of res- idents and regulate the use of public and private prop- erty by establishing time, place and manner guide- lines for homeless camping. It puts in place a permit pro- gram for temporary overnight camping on both residential and nonresidential proper- ties. Vehicles, including vans or motor homes, would need to be registered in compli- ance with vehicle insurance responsibilities. Without locations for peo- ple to go, “then basically the public streets are fair game,” Police Chief Dave Ham said. “The fact is that if we don’t have locations to identify for somebody to go with the least impact on the commu- nity, neighbors, houses in the area, then they’re going to go wherever they please. We have to either provide shelter or we have to provide public locations for them to be able to camp.” Overnight camping per- mits, from 8 p.m. to 8 a.m., would be valid for three weeks, at which time they could be renewed. While individual parking or camping locations were not designated, proposed locations for limited numbers of permitted vehicles include parts of Shore Terrace, Neca- nicum Drive, parts of Broad- way, Avenue G and Mill Ponds Park. Camping would be pro- hibited at all public park areas, public parking lots, restrooms or publicly owned properties within residential zoning districts, along with U.S. Highway 101, Avenue U, Wahanna Drive, First Ave- nue to Avenue A, Necanicum Drive and other locations. Violators could be fi ned $25 per day. ‘Don’t push it off to somebody else’ Many in the vocal audi- ence at the City Council meeting said they were con- fused by confl icting court rul- ings and interpretations of the law. “Don’t push it off to some- body else,” James Hoff man, a resident, told city councilors. “Do your job. D o what you’re supposed to do by being in these seats. Fix it. I’m tired of seeing junk, needles, drugs, everywhere we go. I’m tired of being harassed.” The 10th and Necanicum “RV experiment” is a disas- ter, Bruce Rosebrock, a resi- dent, said. “Needles, drugs, RVs with ‘for rent’ signs, increased theft in the neighboring blocks,” he said. “Who pays for the stor- age? Who pays for the demo? Lots of unanswered ques- tions. Get this ordinance right and vote ‘no’ tonight until you have the right parameters in place. If this City Council gets it wrong and this town goes down the toilet, that’ll be quite a legacy for all of you.” Others questioned how the city would force campers to move, the expense associated with the process, daytime parking issues and the poten- tial lure of “free camping” for people from outside the area. “I don’t understand why they just get to be there for free,” Linda Iles Martin, a resident, said. “You don’t get to camp for free, everybody has to pay something. That’s just part of our civilization, of our society. And these peo- ple are trying to screw up our societal program here. You just don’t get to go camp in front of somebody’s house.” Throughout the process, city offi cials have said that without an ordinance with options for the homeless, the camp on Necanicum could not be cleared. But Josh Mar- quis, a former Clatsop County district attorney, said those interpretations were incor- rect. He challenged the tenet that the city needed to enact the ordinance before starting eviction. “I think this is a really seri- ous misunderstanding,” Mar- quis said. The C ity Council ulti- mately relied on advice from City Attorney Dan Van Thiel to proceed with the reading of the ordinance before putting it to a vote. “I’m suggesting that we get this off the table,” he said. Mixed response City c ouncilors were mixed in response. City Councilor Tita Mon- tero, an organizer and mem- ber of the homeless task force, asked for a new look at the ordinance. She said the camp on Necanicum could be cleared with or without the ordinance. “It’s our property. We have the right to put rules on anybody who was staying on that property,” she said. “I’m also very concerned that we have yet to hear from CIS (Citycounty Insurance Ser- vices), our insurance com- pany, on a review of this ordinance. We have passed an ordinance without proper review. I’m very disturbed about this.” City Councilor Dana Phil- lips also voiced concerns that more study was needed. City Councilor Randy Frank said it “was the right thing to do. ” City Councilor Steve Wright said the mea- sure was the best way to give police the tools to enforce regulations. Mayor Jay Barber and Frank, Wright, City Coun- cilor David Posalski and City Councilor Tom Horn- ing voted for the ordinance. Montero and Phillips voted against it. The ordinance goes into eff ect in 30 days. City c ouncilors agreed to consider additional pub- lic comment for amendments in a workshop scheduled for May 9 before the next City Council meeting. “My concern is to defend the rights of both the housed and the unhoused,” Barber said. “And I think we’ve got to work together to refi ne this ordinance so that it covers both bases.” an innkeeper from Sea- side who sits on the Port of Astoria’s Airport Advi- sory Committee. At a candidates’ forum at Clatsop Community College last week, Dillard noted that some issues before the county — such as homelessness and a lack of aff ordable hous- ing — have worsened over Thompson’s two terms. “I’m here because I represent change,” he told the audience. Elected in 2014, Thompson is vice chair- woman of the Colum- bia-Pacifi c Economic Development District and works with the Associ- ation of Oregon Coun- ties. Earlier this month, Clatsop County collabo- rated with the association to create a list of more than a dozen parcels of surplus county land that could be used for hous- ing, child care and other social services. “A lot of people don’t have necessarily a big-picture or a long-term view,” she said, “and I do.” In an interview with The Astorian, Dillard said he wants to support local businesses recover- ing from pandemic shut- downs. He also wants the county to move beyond an emergency mindset — for example, by resuming in-person meetings of the Board of Commissioners at the Judge Guy Boying- ton Building in Astoria. “The county building is hosting some home- less people at each of the doors, but they’re not having meetings there,” he said. “Now why is that, in April of 2022?” Dillard said he and his wife had been look- ing to get more involved in the community. About six months ago, he began attending c ity meetings in Seaside. When he learned the county’s District 5 seat was open, he chose to run . “I’m at a place in my life where I can serve, and I’m willing to devote time to the county,” he said. As in the District 3 race in Astoria between Commissioner Pamela Wev and Nathan Pink- staff , a deck mechanic, the District 5 election features an incumbent facing off against an opponent with sharply diff erent political views. In the District 1 election in Warrenton, Commis- sioner Mark Kujala, the board chairman, is run- ning unopposed. Since Thompson fi rst took offi ce , the ideologi- cal makeup of the nonpar- tisan board has become more conservative. Given the political divides in her district and countywide, Thomp- son, who at the forum did not return fi re at Dil- lard, said she is “commit- ted to building and main- taining connection and cooperation.” “If I align with one side and want to demon- ize the other side, I don’t think I’m a good com- missioner,” she told The Astorian. “So I went for the middle — the high road, the ridge line — not the swamp at the bottom of the hill.” A divisive issue in her district is the burgeoning vacation rental industry . Although the county has permitted scores of short- term rentals in unincor- porated areas, the devel- opment code does not recognize rentals as an explicit use except in Arch Cape. The Board of Com- missioners is weighing options on where to allow vacation rentals and how to regulate them. County staff , based on board direction, has rec- ommended making short- term rentals a recognized use in both commercial and residential zones. A Plan- ning Commission recom- mendation, however, would limit them to commercial and multifamily residential zones — and only as a con- ditional use — while elimi- nating them from other resi- dential zones. Before she decides on the issue, Thompson said she needs more information — for example, the extent to which rentals eat into hous- ing stock that could be used by long-term renters. People looking to ban short-term rentals in residential zones have tied the lack of avail- able housing, in part, to the region’s rental market. “There may be an impact, but I want us to have data before we take actions that have unanticipated conse- quences,” she said earlier this month . Dillard said in an inter- view that he would have approved the Planning Com- mission’s recommendation, aligning himself with the belief, expressed most vol- ubly by residents in South County’s Cove Beach neigh- borhood , that short-term rentals are prohibited by default. The Board of Commis- sioners was scheduled to discuss the issue again at a meeting Wednesday night as a moratorium on new vaca- tion rental permits was set to expire. On aff ordable hous- ing , Dillard said the county should try to create incen- tives for developers. “Is there a way where we can step in and say, ‘OK, this is some- thing that the county sees as a priority? How can we help this along?’” he said. As a commissioner, Dil- lard said he would use his position to push back against what he believes are exces- sive regulations from Salem. Asked why he should be elected, Dillard cited his diverse background, includ- ing his experience owning an IT fi rm and founding a non- profi t that serves the home- less. “I can work at the com- munity service level. I can work at the business level. I get things done,” he said. Thompson pointed to her “wide and deep admin- istrative background in government.” “Somebody can come into it and have an idea about how it works, but I know the inside way that things oper- ate,” she said. Thompson believes that, when progress on major issues is incremental, the best course of action is not necessarily to remove the person working on them. She said she has been “build- ing capacity” at the county, in particular through the networking she has done to begin bringing resources to the region . “It’s like a gardener who plants a seed, and just because it hasn’t poked through the earth and borne fruit yet, you don’t say, ‘Oh that’s worthless,’ and rip it out. You continue to nurture it so that it grows and pro- duces the results that it prom- ises,” she said. “Because I think I can promise results. I think we’re working eff ec- tively toward those. It’s just a longer-term gain.” As of Tuesday, Thomp- son had more than $11,000 in contributions. Dillard had raised more than $4,000. Consult a PROFESSIONAL LEO FINZI Astoria’s Best Fast Friendly and Affordable HP Intel i7, 16GB, 512 GB NVMe, Nvidea Mx350 $999.99 Hard Drive Differences Hard Disk Drives (HDD) use metal disks spinning at 5200 to 10000 RPM. Arms magnetically record information on those platters. They are more vulnerable to failure due to moving parts. Solid State Drives (SSD) are faster and more reliable because they have no moving parts. Non-Volatile Memory Express Mon-Fri 10-6 Sat/Sun Closed (NVMe) are the newest and fastest 77 11th Street, Suite H design. They connect directly to your Astoria, OR computer motherboard, offer Solid 503-325-2300 AstoriasBest.com State reliability and fastest speed. Q: Massage. Where do I sign up? ASTORIA A: Before your first massage, we offer a consultation Alicia M. Smith, DC to make sure you’re a good Owner fit. Insurance plans can vary in their ability to cover massage, 503-325-3311 and we’d be happy to sort out 2935 Marine Drive all of those details with you. Astoria, Oregon Give us a call! CHIROPRACTIC is the Consult Q: What a Professional section and how can it help my business? Consult a Professional A: The section in The Astorian is a great Heather Jenson and affordable way to advertise your Advertising Representative 971-704-1716 www.dailyastorian.com 949 Exchange St. Astoria, OR 503-325-3211 business and inform readers about the types of services you provide. All you need to do is come up with a question that a customer might ask about your line of expertise and then give a detailed answer to help educate them before they even walk through your door. We are offering great rates and package deals that help save you money!