A2 THE ASTORIAN • THURSDAY, JULY 28, 2022 IN BRIEF Governor’s debate will be livestreamed by The Astorian The three leading hopefuls in the race to become Ore- gon’s next governor will appear live at a forum at 2 p.m. Friday from the Mt. Hood Oregon Resort in Welches. Republican nominee Christine Drazan, Democratic nominee Tina Kotek and unaffi liated candidate Betsy Johnson are all scheduled to debate. The forum is hosted by the Oregon Newspaper Pub- lishers Association. Questions will come from editors of newspapers across Oregon. The forum will be moder- ated by Pamplin Media Group President Mark Garber. The debate will be livestreamed at www.dailyasto- rian.com County offers online dashboard on housing Clatsop County has set up an online dashboard ded- icated to providing information on housing in the area. In addition to reports and studies about housing on the North Coast, the dashboard features web apps: • The Aff ordable Housing Web App lists existing housing options in incorporated and unincorporated areas, the county said. • A Housing Development Web App shows hous- ing projects — from aff ordable and workforce to mar- ket rate — in development throughout the county, the county said. The dashboard is available via the coun- ty’s website at: www.co.clatsop.or.us/county/page/ clatsop-countys-housing-dashboard County unemployment rate unchanged in June Clatsop County’s unemployment rate was 3.9% in June. The seasonally adjusted rate was the same as May and down from 6% in June 2021. The state unemployment rate was 3.6% in June, according to Oregon Employment Department, the same as the national rate. Warrenton police chief appointed interim city manager WARRENTON — Police Chief Mathew Workman was appointed to take over as city manager on an interim basis. The City Commission voted unanimously on Tuesday night to have Workman take over for Linda Engbretson, who is retiring, until a full-time city manager is hired. The city is expected to choose its next city manager on Friday. Engbretson’s last day is Aug. 5. — The Astorian Design changes for new Ilwaco community center ILWACO, Wash. — Design plans for the Dylan Jude Harrell Community Center at the Port of Ilwaco have changed. The community center will now consist of one large building rather than four smaller ones. Previously, the community center had been designed to be a campus-style facility with four buildings that housed educational services, a gymnasium, a swimming pavilion and a multiuse fi eldhouse. — Chinook Observer MEMORIALS Saturday, July 30 In CAMPBELL, Brief Barbara Ann — Celebration of life from 1 to 3 p.m., Astoria Elks Lodge, 453 11th St. Memorial ON THE RECORD DUII occurred at the Mini Mart On the Record • Steven Lawrence on Marine Drive. Ban- Alvillar, 39, of Ham- mond, was arrested on Monday at W. Marine Drive and Hume Ave- nue for driving under the infl uence of intoxicants and reckless driving. • Eric Charles Ban- fi eld, 55, of Longview, Washington, was arrested on Friday for DUII, attempted assault in the second degree, reckless driving and a hit-and- run related to property. The hit-and-run allegedly fi eld was arrested near the intersection of W. Marine Drive and U.S. Highway 101. • Trina L. McDonald, 55, of Vancouver, Wash- ington, was arrested on July 21 on U.S. High- way 30 west of the bor- der between Clatsop and Columbia coun- ties for DUII, reckless driving and fourth-de- gree assault. McDon- ald allegedly caused a three-vehicle crash. PUBLIC MEETINGS THURSDAY Sunset Empire Transportation District Board, 9 a.m., 900 Marine Dr., Astoria. Columbia River Estuary Study Taskforce Council, noon, (electronic meeting). Port of Astoria Marina Advisory Committee, noon, El Tapatio restaurant, 229 W. Marine Dr. Cannon Beach Planning Commission, 6 p.m., City Hall, 163 E. Gower Ave. 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. 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Seaside extends length of stay for homeless camping Permits available for a six-day span By R.J. MARX The Astorian SEASIDE — The City Council extended the length of stay as part of the city’s pro- gram for temporary homeless camping. Campers will now be able to receive permits for a six-day span, eliminating a require- ment for the daily move-in at 8 p.m. and move-out at 8 a.m. “If they’re abiding by our rules and regulations, why should we keep making them move in and out?” City Councilor Dana Phillips said Monday. Homeless campers at the designated city-owned lot off Alder Mill Lane described the diffi culty of unpacking and breaking down tents only to pitch them hours later. Hav- ing to move vehicles and seek parking only to have to move again proved expensive and unnecessary. There’s nothing reasonable about asking people to move their home every single day, City Councilor Tita Montero said . Montero proposed a six consecutive day stay. “Then we can measure who is living there in a reason- able fashion,” Montero said. “We can defi ne what ‘doing it right’ means. Doing it right means you throw your gar- bage in the bins we provided. It means you don’t leave gar- bage behind when you check out. It means that you don’t do drugs or alcohol. It means you are not off ensive or dan- gerous. Rather than penalize R.J. Marx/The Astorian Seaside has made changes to homeless camping rules. 25 people for the actions of two, we can just say to those two people, ‘You have lost the ability to live in the camp.’” Elizabeth Davis, who described herself as a resi- dent and RV camper at the site experiencing temporary homelessness, said the policy limiting stays to one night has negatively impacted her fami- ly’s life. “The gas required to con- stantly move our RV in order to comply with the ordinance is an undue burden, about the cost of renting a house by the end of the month,” Davis said. “That actively thwarts my ability to save or get into a place.” Wear and tear on her vehicle leads to expensive mechanical problems not eas- ily fi xed, which occur more often and sooner, Davis said. “Certainly the instability created by the current ordi- nance and the way that it is enforced makes it inherently diffi cult to have a normal household stability or rou- tine that most people take for granted in their daily lives,” she said. Mill Ponds camper Michael Howard said that despite working 30 hours a week, he could not aff ord housing. He, like others, sought a longer length of stay. “I’m on a three-year wait- list for housing,” Howard said. Camper Jeanne Faller said she was homeless as a result of COVID, mold exposure and osteoporosis. “I’m too sick to get up every single day and walk,” Faller said. “ I can try, but I end up back in the emergency room.” The overnight limits had come in an eff ort to prevent a repeat of an encampment at the city-owned lot at 10th and Necanicum, Mayor Jay Bar- ber said. “We had people moving in and the fi rst six or seven camp- ers really self-governed them- selves, kept the place clean,” he said. “Within weeks, there were 20 campers, and then 30 campers, then 40 campers in chaos. And our concern was that we don’t want to see that happen. You have to move out so that we don’t see an RV park and a 10th and Necani- cum established in the neigh- borhood where the problems would come again.” Extending the length of stay for homeless campers is the least burdensome enforce- ment approach, Community Service Offi cer Paul Knoch said. “I think one day out is critical, though, because it’s a temporary camping pro- gram,” he said. “Public works needs to clean up the area. We don’t want a 10th and Necani- cum-type setup.” According to the new pol- icy, participants must check out on Thursday by 10 a.m. and are allowed to return after 4 p.m. when the gates are reopened. Those who do not comply with camp rules may be denied entry or issued a citation to appear in court. Campers found to be repeatedly in violation of the ordinance and deemed to be a nuisance will be excluded from camping in the city. “I’ll be going into Mill Ponds every single day to make sure campers are tidy,” Knoch said. “I know what a clean and tidy camp looks like. If there’s trash just start- ing to spread out, I can have contact with that individual. Our presence won’t change even if they don’t have to move out every day. We just won’t be having these daily fi ghts and struggles. And I also believe we’ll have more people who are currently not participating in the program.” Barber, Phillips, Montero, City Councilor Steve Wright, City Councilor Tom Horn- ing and City Councilor Randy Frank approved the policy , which went into eff ect imme- diately on a temporary basis. Additional tweaks to the camping ordinance included a prohibition on camping in aquatic or wetland areas, as well as wording that would have permitted homeless camping on private property in residential areas. Camping on nonresiden- tial private property camping requires property owner per- mission and participation in the permit process. Lot-size requirements will be a topic of future policy discussions. ‘Murder hornets’ get a new name Entomologists suggest northern giant hornet By DON JENKINS Capital Press The Entomological Soci- ety of America has asked sci- entists, government offi cials, media and the public to call Asian giant hornets, popu- larly known as “murder hor- nets,” by a new name. The society adopted northern giant hornet as its common name for the world’s largest wasp. Wash- ington State Department of Agriculture entomologist Chris Looney proposed the name. “Northern giant hornet is both scientifi cally accurate and easy to understand, and it avoids evoking fear or dis- crimination,” Jessica Ware, the president of the Ento- mological Society, said in a statement. Until now, the hornet, sci- entifi cally known as Vespa Karla Salp/Washington State Department of Agriculture An Asian giant hornet, now known as a northern giant hornet. mandarinia, has not had an offi cial common name, though Asian giant hornet has long been established in scientifi c papers. Entomologists have gen- erally shunned “murder hor- nets,” saying the name’s sensationalistic, though the name has caught on. The society has been reviewing names of insects. The society’s guidelines dis- courage names linked to geography or ethnicity, or that would make people view the insect as loathsome. Last year, the society dropped gypsy moth in favor of spongy moth, the fi rst product of its Better Com- mon Names Project. The society also accepted Looney’s proposal to name Vespa soror the southern giant hornet. It does not have a popular name, though it is also described in scientifi c papers as a giant hornet. The two large hornet spe- cies overlap in southern China. The northern giant hornet ranges north to Japan and the Korean Peninsula. The south- ern giant hornet ranges south to Vietnam and Cambodia. Northern giant hornets have been found in north- west Washington state and just across the border in Brit- ish Columbia, but nowhere else in North America. Offi cials in both countries are trapping for the invasive species and hope to keep it from being established. The hornets swarm bee hives during what scientists call their “slaughter phase.” Eff orts to reach Loo- ney for comment Monday after the announcement were unsuccessful. In an earlier interview, he said that he pro- posed northern giant hornet to avoid confusion with yet a third hornet species, Vespa veluntina. That hornet has reached Europe and is commonly known there as the Asian hornet. The similarity between Asian giant hornet and Asian hornet apparently led a Washington resident to report an Asian giant hornet sighting on a United King- dom website. The confusion delayed fi nding and eradicating a nest in Whatcom County in 2020, according to the state agricul- ture department. The society accepted a third proposal from Loo- ney to call Vespa veluntina the yellow-legged hornet for a distinguishing anatomical feature. All 22 species of hornets are from Asia. Looney said using the term “Asian” to describe any one of them was not distinctive.