»INSIDE THURSDAY AUG. 11 2022 JAZZ AND ON OYSTERS U THE MEN K it es in the sk y FLYING HIGH AT WASHINGTO N STATE INTERN ATIONAL KITE FESTIVAL PAGE 8 PAGE 6 BEACH LL VOLLEYBA T TOURNAMEN RETURNS PAGE 12 GS ‘CLUE’ BRIN TO MYSTERY BEAC H CANNON PAGE 14 150TH YEAR, NO. 18 DailyAstorian.com // THURSDAY, AUGUST 11, 2022 $1.50 State plans to seize ferry Historic Tourist No. 2 could be crushed By NICOLE BALES and KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Astorian and KMUN The state plans to seize the historic Tourist No. 2 and pursue enforcement action against the ferry’s owner to try to recover some of the costs of emergency removal. The estimate is already over $1 million. When the ferry capsized at a fl oating dock near the Sixth Street v iewing p lat- form in late July, the priority was to con- tain the fuel leaking from the vessel . T he state has since taken the lead on a fi nal disposition of the ferry in conjunction with the city and the owner. See Ferry, Page A6 Ilwaco RV park owners sued Washington state takes legal action By KATIE FRANKOWICZ KMUN ILWACO, Wash. — The state has fi led a lawsuit against the new owners of Beacon RV P ark, alleging the owners are ignoring their tenants’ legal protections. The fi ling by the Washington Attor- ney General’s Offi ce for a preliminary injunction comes on the heels of a cease- and-desist order issued in late July. Only a few days after the order, Michael and Denise Werner of Deer Point Meadows Investments LLC ordered the demolition of several trailers at the RV park at the Port of Ilwaco. All of this follows what the state, ten- ants and local advocates say have been Lydia Ely/The Astorian Clatsop County is updating its comprehensive plan. County Planning Commission signs off on comprehensive plan update amid concerns about late changes Some involved in the process wanted more time for review Commission should have a second opportunity to review the drafts before forwarding to the Board of County Commissioners,” according to the staff n eleventh-hour legal review and modifi - reports for the plans, except for Southwest Coastal. cation of six community plans — a major Policies that the Planning Commission had part of Clatsop County’s updated compre- already approved and sent to the board had been hensive plan — has rankled people who helped removed. craft them. Some policies were general enough that they The county Planning Commission on Tuesday could apply to other zones or countywide. These voted to recommend that the Board of Commis- were moved from community plans to the land use sioners approve the draft community plans for the goals. county’s six planning areas. Other policies, such as proposed regulations and The votes, all unanimous, marked a crucial development criteria, were specifi c enough that moment in the overhaul of the county staff may move them to county’s comprehensive plan, the Land and Water Develop- which has not been fully revised ment and Use Code. COUNTY STAFF in over 40 years. The docu- A handful of policies were IS CREATING A ment will guide development deleted because they were already — from housing and transpor- elsewhere in the com- FEATURE FOR THE mentioned tation to urbanization and natu- prehensive plan. Additional poli- ral resource management — in C OUNTY WEBSITE cies were cut because the county unincorporated areas over the lacked jurisdiction over them, or THAT WILL REVEAL the policies ran afoul of state law. next two decades. The comprehensive plan County staff is creating a fea- THE FATE OF THE includes the community plans ture for the c ounty website that for six regions — Northeast, MISSING POLICIES. will reveal the fate of the miss- Clatsop Plains, Lewis & Clark ing policies. Olney-Wallooskee, Elsie-Jewell, The abrupt intervention by Seaside Rural and Southwest Coastal — as well as legal counsel stunned members of community advi- statewide land use goals. sory committees who had volunteered on the plans In recent months, the Planning Commission had over the last three years. approved all community plans except Southwest Patrick Corcoran, a member of the countywide Coastal, which the commission ran out of time to citizen advisory committee, said, “The last-minute review. striking of so much text by legal counsel felt like a Meanwhile, the Portland-based fi rm Beery, gut punch.” He praised the work of county staff on Elsner & Hammond fi nished its legal review of the the comprehensive plan and said the legal review, plans later than the county had anticipated, county which he believed should have happened much ear- staff explained. lier, was a rare process fumble. “Subsequent revisions by counsel were signif- See Plan, Page A6 icant enough that staff determined the Planning By ERICK BENGEL The Astorian A See RV park, Page A5 Chipotle, MOD Pizza on track in Warrenton The new restaurants faced lengthy delays By ETHAN MYERS The Astorian Lydia Ely/The Astorian The former Dooger’s Seafood and Grill in Warrenton has been demolished. WARRENTON — Construc- tion is underway at the North Coast Shops to prepare for the arrival of Chipotle Mexican Grill and MOD Pizza. The restaurants are set to replace the former Dooger’s Sea- food and Grill, which is being demolished after a survey revealed that the structure was not viable, Van Wilfi nger, the city’s building offi cial, said. Plans for the restaurants were announced years ago but holdups with permitting and city concerns about traffi c delayed the projects . Five Guys Burgers and Fries was originally part of the plans but the chain has since backed out, Mayor Henry Balensifer said. An eviction dispute between Atlas Investments — the owner of the complex formerly known as Youngs Bay Plaza — and Ross Stores also slowed the addition of new businesses and development, The Astorian previously reported. Dooger’s closed its Warrenton location in 2019 after 15 years. Doug Wiese, the founder of the seafood restaurant, cited diffi cul- ties in reaching an extension with Atlas at the time. As conditional approval for the new restaurants, traffi c in and out of the North Coast Shops onto E. Harbor Drive will be right-in, right-out only. “That intersection has been a key focus of ours for several years, as it has at least one near miss a week and multiple wrecks a year,” Balensifer said in a Facebook post. Pending construction, both restaurants are expected to open around the fi rst of the year, RTG Property Management, the com- pany that manages the North Coast Shops , said in a statement. But weather and supply chain dis- ruptions will dictate the timeline, Wolfi nger said. Several other new tenants are also planning to join the shopping center, the property manager said, and will be announced in the near future.