149TH YEAR, NO. 152 DailyAstorian.com // TUESDAY, JUNE 21, 2022 Festival returns $1.50 Library director to step down Pearson has served in role since 2016 By NICOLE BALES The Astorian Jimmy Pearson, who has served as director of the Astoria Library since 2016, will step away from the role on Friday. Pearson called the move a semi retire- ment and a bittersweet decision. “(The coronavirus pandemic) no doubt has caused all of us to reevaluate our lives and where we’re at,” he said. “And it’s time. “I’m feeling very proud of what we’ve accomplished here as a team. We were open during the pandemic for people.” City Manager Brett Estes said Pear- son’s vision has given insight to what the library can look like in future years. “Jimmy over the years has been able to bring new life and energy into the library and has been great to work with,” Estes said. “I’ve enjoyed working with him and having his opinions on how the library could become a new and reinvig- orated place.” See Pearson, Page A6 Photos by Lydia Ely/The Astorian CLOCKWISE FROM TOP: The festival featured the traditional raising of the maypole. • Festival attendees shopped at the Darkmoon Faire booth. • People danced around the maypole on Saturday at the Astoria Scandinavian Midsummer Festival at the Clatsop County Fairgrounds. The annual festival returned as an in-person event after pandemic disruptions. • People danced while the band Varelse played Scandinavian folk music. SEASIDE Upgrades planned for busy intersection The goal is to enhance safety and traffi c fl ow By R.J. MARX The Astorian SEASIDE — Improvements are planned at U.S. Highway 101 and Broadway to help enhance safety and traffi c fl ow in the busy intersection . The $5.2 million eff ort is one of eight projects selected for the State- wide Transportation Improvement Pro- gram’s e nhance funding from 2024 to 2027. Projects in this category are aimed at reducing congestion and improving freight mobility on state highways . “This project is years in the making See Intersection, Page A6 First lady of Cathlamet has a mission Olson fi nds her voice through poetry By PATRICK WEBB Chinook Observer C ATHLAMET, Wash. — Dayle Olson is a quiet dynamo. If on trial for being a poet, she would blissfully plead guilty, inevitably in a rhyming couplet. “I have found the best time to write is in the quiet of the morn- ing,” she said. “This is when my writer’s mind is most nimble and receptive. I keep a notebook and pencil next to the chair where I have my morning coff ee, then let my mind fl oat as I watch the river from the window. If a chain of words starts to string together in my head, I listen. If I like the pos- sibilities, I write it down and let the rest of the poem follow.” Editing is fi ne tuning. “They usually don’t change much. Sometimes they don’t change at all. They come out like a baby, fully formed, with all their fi ngers and toes. Sometimes I read them to David, and sometimes he suggests a word to change.” David Olson, her wed-later- in-life husband, is the mayor of Cathlamet, but would rather be a Shakespearean actor — quoting Polonius before exiting off stage to tackle budgets and potholes. “This above all: To thine own self be true.” Thus in Cathlamet, a blue-col- lar riverfront community of 572 with a Scandinavian fl avor and a l ibertarian bent, the delightfully old-fashioned writer is leading the fray. It is far from a one-woman campaign. Websites like Poetry Wahkiakum, created during COVID restrictions, and now in-person gatherings, are exempli- fying the power of verse to bring people together to share the joy of words. Patrick Webb/Chinook Observer See Olson, Page A6 Dayle Olson, of Cathlamet, acknowledges that her career in radio polished the clarity of her diction and helps when reading poetry out loud.