A2 THE ASTORIAN • THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2022 IN BRIEF ECOLA ELK State fi shery managers fi nalize salmon and steelhead seasons Oregon and Washington state fi shery managers have fi nalized seasons and regulations for the Colum- bia River summer and fall recreational salmon and steelhead fi sheries. Upriver summer steelhead’s forecast of 99,700 is below average, requiring conservative retention regulations. There will be no directed sockeye fi shery in the Columbia River downstream of the Wenatchee River confl uence, due to a forecast of 19,200 Wenatchee River sockeye, which is below the escape- ment goal. Retention of adult hatchery Chinook will open June 16 for the summer season and is expected to continue through June 22 downstream of Bonneville Dam. Hatchery steelhead retention will be allowed June 16 to July 31 from the Astoria Bridge upstream to The Dalles Dam. Chinook retention seasons start Aug. 1 with mark-selective rules at Buoy 10 through Aug. 24 and closures of salmonid angling upstream of west Puget Island when Chinook retention is prohibited. In response to a low forecast for upriver summer steelhead, there is a one hatchery steelhead daily bag limit when open, area-specifi c retention closures and thermal angling sanctuaries in portions near the mouth of the Columbia River and other tributaries. Fishery managers add fi shing days on river Fishery managers have adopted additional fi shing days on the Columbia River beginning Thursday. Downstream of Bonneville Dam, the additional season will be from Thursday to May 22 and June 4 to June 15. Bag limit is two adult hatchery Chinook or steel- head salmonids per day, one Chinook maximum. Shad can also be retained. The open area includes the Tongue Point/Rocky Point line upstream to Beacon Rock, with bank angling only from Beacon Rock to Bonneville Dam. The additional fi shing days follow a projected return of over 161,800 upriver-origin adult spring Chinook, exceeding the preseason forecast by 38,900 fi sh. — The Astorian Investigators looking into fatal crash in Ilwaco ILWACO, Wash. — Investigators are piecing together a crash near the Ilwaco Fuel Dock that left a woman and two teenagers dead. The driver was identifi ed as Kimberly A. Pickering, 39, of Long Beach, her daughter Mya A. Edwards, 15, of Ocean Park, and a friend, Nevaeh A. Longcrow, 15, of Ilwaco. The crash occurred sometime between the late- night hours last Thursday and the early-morning hours on Friday. According to law enforcement offi cers, who responded to the scene at about 6 a.m. on Friday, the vehicle was noticed by a port worker who observed tires protruding from the murky water. — Chinook Observer DEATHS May 10, 2022 Deaths MASSEY, Robert Buren, 58, of Warrenton, died in Portland. Ocean View Funeral & Cre- mation Service of Asto- ria is in charge of the arrangements. May 9, 2022 BONNER, Glenda Marie, 83, of Sea- side, died in Seaside. Caldwell’s Luce-Lay- ton Mortuary of Asto- ria is in charge of the arrangements. CHO, Hiram Syd- ney Kalino, 52, of Asto- ria, died in Astoria. Caldwell’s Luce-Lay- ton Mortuary of Asto- ria is in charge of the arrangements. May 8, 2022 ALVA, Jorge Mota, 46, of Seaside, died in Seaside. Caldwell’s Funeral & Cremation Arrangement Center of Seaside is in charge of the arrangements. JOHNSON, Gail, 70, of Warrenton, died in Warrenton. Hughes-Ran- som Mortuary is in charge of the arrangements. ON THE RECORD DUII On the Record • Felipe Hernandez-Garcia, 19, of Spokane, Wash- ington, was arrested on Tuesday at W. Marine Drive and the Astoria Bridge for driving under the infl uence of intoxicants and reckless driving. THURSDAY Seaside Civic and Convention Center Commission, 5 p.m., 415 First Ave. Gearhart Planning Commission, 6 p.m., City Hall, 698 Pacifi c Way. PUBLIC MEETINGS (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 A rare contested race for appeals court judge Ortega facing a challenge from Day By ZANE SPARLING The Oregonian Voters will encounter something unusual while fi lling out their May bal- lot for one seat on the Oregon Court of Appeals this year: a choice. Judge Darleen Ortega, who has served on the appellate court since 2003, is facing a challenge from Vance Day, a former Oregon Republi- can Party chairman whom the Oregon Supreme Court suspended from his role as a Marion County judge in 2018 for making false statements. Day says the real reason behind his suspension was his religious opposi- tion to gay marriage, which became apparent when he refused to marry same-sex couples. The statewide race for a six-year term is the fi rst real electoral test for Ortega, who at 59 is the fi rst woman of color and the only Latina to serve on Oregon’s second-highest court. The incumbent says that while non- partisan judges are elected to deter- mine the facts, not represent constitu- encies, the absence of people of color from positions of power can omit important perspectives, such as when the 13 Court of Appeals judges confer as a group. “As a result, I think the process is missing key information, resulting in biased outcomes,” Ortega said in a written reply to questions. “My expe- riences as a Latina from a challeng- ing background, along with my com- passion, help me to be curious about things that others miss, and regularly help me to deepen the conversations we have at the court as we apply the law.” For his part, Day, 61, says he will bring ideological diversity to the appellate court. Describing himself as a strict constructionist who interprets the Constitution as it was originally intended, Day claims that Ortega and other judges have embraced an “equity doctrine” that picks winners and losers. “You can’t have a justice system which views those in the system dif- Darleen Ortega Vance Day ferently depending upon their color, their experience or whether they’re an oppressor or an oppressed person,” he said. “Our laws should be applied to all people in all places at all times equally.” Single-candidate races featur- ing only the incumbent judge are the norm in the Oregon judiciary, as most judges choose to retire midterm, allow- ing the governor to handpick their suc- cessors, who can then run as an incum- bent during the next election. While the court itself does not track con- tested races, they are exceedingly rare, although defense attorney Kyle Krohn made them less so in recent years. Krohn lost to incumbent Judge Rex Armstrong in 2018. Incumbent Judge Joel DeVore also defeated Krohn in the May 2020 primary. In both cases, the incumbents won handily. Adrian Brown, a former assistant U.S. Attorney in Oregon, triumphed over attorney Rima Ghandour in another hotly-contested judgeship in Multnomah County Circuit Court in 2020. This year’s face-off has also led to an unusual degree of fund raising. Cam- paign fi nance records show Ortega has taken in $81 ,000 . Day has collected $59 ,000 . Ortega had never reported raising any money for any of her three a ppeals c ourt campaigns. Day had never raised more than $1,150 for any of his judi- cial campaigns, state records indicate. Day, whose family has lived in Ore- gon for generations, has a history of generating controversial headlines. The Oregon Supreme Court’s deci- sion to suspend him followed a recom- mendation from the state’s Commis- sion on Judicial Fitness and Disability. The ruling was spurred by controver- sies regarding Day’s refusal to marry same-sex couples and a portrait of Adolf Hitler that was part of a large art display in the Veterans Treatment Court over which Day presided. Felony gun charges and misde- meanor misconduct charges, which centered on allegations that Day had let a felon handle a gun, were dismissed at the last minute in 2018 after a key wit- ness refused to testify. Day says Oregon’s gun laws were “weaponized” against him for his views on gay marriage. “My actions infuriated those, frankly, who had anointed themselves as the arbiters of right or wrong,” he said. “The justice system must not become a political punishment and reward system.” Ortega has occupied a spot near the limelight for years as an appeals court judge who also wrote fi lm criticism for two Portland newspapers. She’s also a law instructor who has pushed to let Oregon students attain their law license via practical experience as an alternative to the bar exam. After nearly two decades on the bench, Ortega says she remains one of the most productive and engaged judges on the court and is dedicated to breaking down the barriers people from marginalized populations face in the legal system. “We fi rst have to recognize the bar- riers to true equity, which means active looking and listening, followed by acknowledgment and real systemic change,” she said. “No one has done more to increase diversity of thought and perspective in the judiciary than I have.” County Public Health Department discloses virus cases among staff PUBLIC MEETINGS Established July 1, 1873 Lydia Ely/The Astorian Elk grazed in the meadow at Ecola State Park in May. 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 By ERICK BENGEL The Astorian The Clatsop County Pub- lic Health Department on Tuesday disclosed three coronavirus cases among department staff . The virus cases did not interrupt public health oper- ations, Margo Lalich, the department’s interim direc- tor, said. The employees who con- tracted the virus did so inde- pendently of each other and are now back at work. No one showed up at the depart- ment with symptoms, Lalich said. “It’s hard, particularly when you work in a health- care setting, because staff feel very committed and obligated to show up for work because they’re care- takers, right? They take care of other people,” Lalich said. “But we are adamant with our policy in public health that, if anyone pres- ents with any symptoms of any sort, they report to their supervisor and they don’t come to work. And we are uncompromising in wearing masks.” All public health staff have been vaccinated and boosted. These measures 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 WANTED Alder and Maple Saw Logs & Standing Timber Northwest Hardwoods • Longview, WA Contact: John Anderson • 360-269-2500 don’t make a person immune from the virus; they provide protection from severe ill- ness and other adverse out- comes, she said. “We’re doing the best we can because we’re pub- lic health, and we need to be healthy and well to take care of the public,” Lalich said. COVID-19 is increas- ingly presenting “like a really nasty head cold,” with symptoms that include fever, fatigue and brain fog, she said. In June 2020, Michael McNickle, who at the time was the director of the Pub- lic Health Department, dis- closed that he had tested pos- itive for the virus. He called it “a teachable moment because it shows that any- body can get COVID.” The new virus cases at the Public Health Department were disclosed as cases have risen in the county. On April 1, Gov. Kate Brown lifted the COVID-19 emergency declaration. The state’s indoor mask mandate had gone away a few weeks earlier. Daily v irus case counts remained relatively low in Clatsop County until late April and early May, when they began climbing into the double digits. As of May 4, the county had seen 4,727 virus cases and 50 deaths, accord- ing to the Oregon Health Authority. “Without masks, and with people gathering the way they’ve always gathered in the past, inevitably we’re going to have more commu- nity spread, just like we’re seeing more fl u and just the common cold,” Lalich said. “And so this shouldn’t be a surprise to anyone.”