A2 THE ASTORIAN • THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 2022 IN BRIEF County certifi es May election results Clatsop County has certifi ed the results of the May election. In District 3 of the county Board of Commissioners, which covers Astoria, Commissioner Pamela Wev won reelection against challenger Nathan Pinkstaff 62% to 38%. In District 5, which covers South County, Commis- sioner Lianne Thompson defeated challenger Steve Dil- lard 60% to 39%. Gearhart’s $14.5 million bond measure for a new fi re- house off of Highlands Lane failed in a 66% to 34% vote. The Knappa-Svensen-Burnside Rural Fire Protection District’s $3.6 million tax levy for enhanced emergency response passed 57% to 43%. In the Republican primary for state House District 32, which covers the North Coast, Tillamook dentist Cyrus Javadi prevailed over Glenn Gaither, a retired corrections offi cer from Seaside, 58% to 41%. Turnout in the county was 11,212 — or 36% — of 30,729 registered voters. Warrenton raises sewer, water and recycling rates WARRENTON — The City Commission voted unanimously on Tuesday to raise sewer, water and recy- cling rates. The sewer and water rates will increase by 4%, while the recycling rate will increase from $7.80 to $8.46 monthly for residential services every other week. The changes will take eff ect July 1. Port adopts new budget The Port of Astoria Commission voted unanimously on Tuesday to adopt a $14.1 million budget for the new fi scal year that starts in July. The new budget, just above the $13.6 million budget from this fi scal year, comes as the Port works toward several major development and maintenance projects along the waterfront and at the Astoria Regional Airport. Warrenton transfers old library to VFW WARRENTON — The city has transferred a former library and town hall building in Hammond to the Fort Stevens Veterans of Foreign Wars. The City Commission voted unanimously Tuesday night to transfer the building, which sits along Pacifi c Drive. The group plans to use it as a meeting space. Seafood truck breaks down in Hammond WARRENTON — A semitruck hauling processed seafood product from Point Adams Packing Co. in Ham- mond broke while leaving the facility around 10 a.m. Monday, sending a 50,000-pound container onto the road. One lane of Pacifi c Drive near Fleet Street was closed while the road was cleared. Pacifi c Drive reopened before 12:30 p.m. — The Astorian Cluster of quakes registers off coast A series of shallow earthquakes registered several hundred miles off the Oregon Coast on Wednesday morning. Don Blakeman, a geophysicist at the National Earth- quake Information Center, explained the area off shore is a seismically active zone and clusters of quakes there are common. “In this zone here, the plates are basically pulling apart or sliding past one another,” he said. “So you don’t get the vertical movement that would cause a tsunami.” The largest of the quakes was magnitude 5.6, and it happened just before 5 a.m. There were three smaller earthquakes before it and four after. — Oregon Public Broadcasting ON THE RECORD Robbery was arraigned on June 7 On • Hart the Holden Record Stone, on charges of fi rst-degree 25, of Astoria, was arraigned on June 8 on charges of fi rst-degree robbery, fi rst-degree bur- glary, unlawful use of a weapon and menacing. The crimes are alleged to have occurred in May. Burglary • Kristin Leann Loomis, 37, of Astoria, burglary and third-degree assault. The crimes are alleged to have occurred in May. Menacing • Dustyn Lee Bar- cus, 22, of Astoria, was arrested on Sunday at Fifth and Commercial streets in Astoria for menacing and coercion. PUBLIC MEETINGS THURSDAY Seaside Transportation Advisory Committee, 6 p.m., City Hall, 989 Broadway. FRIDAY Cannon Beach City Council, 8 a.m., work session, City Hall, 163 E. Gower Ave. Astoria City Council, 9 a.m., work session, City Hall, 1095 Duane St. 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 Lydia Ely/The Astorian The crew in the Beeswax shipwreck recovery party hiked to where pieces were discovered north of Manzanita. Rare fi nd: Potential to provide important info Continued from Page A1 This week, under the watchful eyes of state and marine archaeologists, a crew of sheriff ’s deputies, state parks employees and oth- ers scrambled over barna- cle-crusted rocks at low tide to haul out the pieces Andes found. In the late morning, a jet ski shot toward shore, towing precious cargo. To untrained eyes, the water-logged beam they hauled out of the surf looked like any other piece of drift- wood on the beach: smoothed by time and ocean waves. But in the hands of experts, the beam has the potential to pro- vide important information about one of the region’s ear- liest shipwrecks and one of the North Coast’s most endur- ing legends. James Delgado, a lead- ing marine archaeologist who helped spearhead retrieval eff orts, will be involved in fur- ther documenting and study- ing the timbers at the Colum- bia River Maritime Museum in Astoria. He said larger pieces retrieved from the sea caves could suggest how the ship came apart — how the wreck happened — and might pro- vide valuable clues to where the rest of the wreck is located. “Will this answer big ques- tions? Probably not,” Delgado said. “But it’s another step in a process that could potentially lead to further discovery.” Built in the Philippines, the Santo Cristo de Burgos left Manila in 1693 loaded with fi ne Asian trade goods and likely wrecked on Nehalem Spit after a journey across the Pacifi c. Almost nothing Hailey Hoff man/The Astorian Porcelain from the Beeswax wreck. is known about the fate of the people aboard. Oral traditions among tribes suggest there was some contact with sur- vivors. A tsunami that struck in 1700 further scattered the wreckage. For centuries, artifacts associated with the wreck have washed ashore on local beaches — porcelain and pot- tery, chunks of beeswax — but the fi nal resting place of the wreck remains unknown. The timbers Andes found will fi nally give marine archaeolo- gists a chance to study pieces of the galleon itself. For local groups that have searched for evidence for decades, the discovery is an exciting leap “because it’s actual physical remains of the ship,” said Scott Williams, vice president and principal investi- gator of the Astoria-based Mar- itime Archaeological Society. “It also fi ts into 19th cen- tury written accounts that there was wreckage along the cliff s,” he added. He and others had long assumed the claims were hyperbole or fl at-out lies. Shipwrecks don’t typically preserve in shallow water. But on the North Coast the 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 water is cold and — near the Columbia River outfl ow — not as salty. There are not as many of the organisms around that eat up wood. Then there are Oregon’s shifting sands. Once the timbers were buried, they would have been pretty protected. Williams was one of the experts who initially doubted Andes’ claims. When carbon dating came back showing the timbers were most likely from the Beeswax, Williams told Andes he could say, “I told you so.” The Maritime Archaeolog- ical Society suspects the lower hull of the galleon is still out there somewhere off shore. The discovery of the timbers gives them another point to swing out from and the soci- ety plans to keep looking. See Rare fi nd, Page A3 Seafood & Grill FATHER’S DAY JUNE 19 th DADS EAT FOR 1/2 PRICE! LIMITED MENU Not Valid with other coupons, promotions or happy hour Seaside 505 Broadway 503-738-3773 www.doogersseafood.com Like us on