A6 THE ASTORIAN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 2022 Morrisey and Solem announce City Council campaigns in Seaside time we’ve made great progress and pushed for- ward with major updates SEASIDE — Seth Mor- to the vacation rental ordi- risey, who opted not to run nance and other important for reelection to land use issues,” he said. the City Council in “If elected, I 2020, has launched look forward to a council campaign once again serv- for the November ing the citizens of election . Seaside as a city H e will be run- councilor .” ning for the at-large Seamus McVey Ward 3 and Ward 4 Seth Morrisey will also seek the seat held by City Ward 3 and Ward 4 seat. Councilor Dana Phillips. After speaking with McVey facilitates a recov- Phillips and confi rm- ery clinic working with ing she was not seeking people struggling with reelection , Morrisey sub- addiction , mental illness and homelessness . mitted his paperwork . Duane Solem, a post- A Seaside High School graduate, Morrisey stud- man, has announced he ied business at Lane Com- is running for the Ward 1 munity College and Port- seat . City Councilor Steve land State University. He Wright is giving up the is co-founder and presi- seat to run for mayor. “The reason I’m run- dent of Morrisey Produc- tions and Oregon Web ning is because I speak to people on my route in Solutions. Morrisey won his fi rst regards to how they feel race for City C ouncil in and they basically let me 2014, fi lling the two-year know that they’re not seat of Rafael “Stubby” being represented,” Solem Lyons. He was reelected in said. “I just want to jump in 2016, running unopposed. and be part of our commu- “I opted not to run for nity and put my best foot reelection in the fall of forward for everybody.” Solem said he grew 2020 to spend more time with my wife and two up in Las Vegas, Nevada, young children,” he said . where he lived and worked “After a brief hiatus I was in the tourism industry for appointed to the Seaside almost 40 years. “My background is Planning Commission in from the casino indus- 2021.” During that time, he try, and one of the things said, he learned more about I know is the tourist side the city’s zoning ordi- as well as being a home- nances and building codes. owner here in Seaside,” he “In a short period of said. By R.J. MARX The Astorian Lydia Ely/The Astorian Teresa Retzlaff looks over plant starts growing in a greenhouse at 46 North Farm in March. Farmers: ‘This is a year where we really need community to step up’ Continued from Page A1 I’ve seen elements of all of these things, but I’ve never seen them all in one year. It was crazy. It was really unexpected.” Farmers in the area have gotten to know what grows well in a coastal environ- ment. However, with the weather becoming harder to predict, they aren’t as sure which crops will prosper. “I feel like all my pre- vious experience just like fl ew out the window,” Ret- zlaff said. “And I’m like, ‘I have no idea what’s going on here.’” Plants that are indige- nous to the N orth C oast should be doing well in their natural environment. But the unusual weather has aff ected the entire local eco- system, not just farms. Ret- zlaff said birds are strug- gling to fi nd berries in the wild that are late and fl ock- ing to crops instead, deplet- ing harvests even further. Kelly Huckestein, who owns Spring Up Farm in Knappa, said fl uctuat- ing temperatures through- out spring have led to crops being severely delayed and not as robust . This is the fi rst year her yields will not increase after seven years. There is more exhaus- tion and fatigue among the farmers in her circle this year after trying to adapt to the diff erent weather conditions. Julie Hackett, who started Laughing Rabbit Farm in Astoria last year, had begun to hope this was just an unusual spring for the coast when the weather became exceptionally cold and the rain soaked her fi eld. At farmers markets, peo- ple who had lived in Asto- ria all their lives told her the season was returning to what it had been 30 to 40 years ago, she said. Huckestein has been told the same thing, but extreme weather like last year’s heat wave and this year’s late snow makes her think the future is going to be unpredictable. “I think it’s just going to be more and more diff erent weather and that farmers are going to defi nitely feel that fi rst or more severely than a lot of other folks on the coast,” Huckestein said. Some farms, especially smaller ones, have had fi nancial diffi culties after losing their crops or having smaller harvests this year, Retzlaff said. Larger farms tend to have insurance that helps them with crop loss, but smaller farms have to take that fi nancial loss. “This is a year where we really need community to step up and help,” she said. “That’s the best way you can do it is to just go out and support farms econom- ically because that helps us get through these years that are really challenging.” Haefker: Terms are also expiring for mayor, Ward 1 Continued from Page A1 I took the old buildings that were closest to my house, and I fi xed them up because it improves the street and there was a need for housing.” Over the years, Haefker said he has been an active participant in City Council, Planning Commission and Historic Landmarks Com- mission meetings. Haefker said he is run- ning for Ward 3 because he feels connected to down- town and believes in civic duty. At this point in his life, he said he feels ready to give back in that way. He said his core priori- ties are downtown vitality, housing and the arts. “I understand the hous- ing issues pretty well fi rst- hand and doing my best being creative, trying to do what you can with what you have,” Haefker said. “And sometimes it works for some people’s agenda and sometimes it doesn’t. But that’s how we have to be with this quirky infrastruc- ture and inventory. We’ve got to work with that.” He added that housing is a complex issue. “We’re not going to solve it,” he said. “We can help improve it.” Along with Ward 3, terms are also expiring for the mayor and Ward 1, which covers part of the Port of Astoria, Uniontown and the western edge of downtown. Mayor Bruce Jones and City Councilor Roger Rocka, who represents Ward 1, do not plan to seek reelection in November. Sean Fitzpatrick, who owns Wecoma Partners and serves on the Astoria Plan- ning Commission, is run- ning for mayor. The election fi ling period extends through Tuesday . Copeland: ‘District has been expanded in the past’ Continued from Page A1 Commons, said he has had good dialogue with the city about the situation. He said he is energized by the support that the City C ouncil showed after a pre- sentation he gave during a work session on Friday. He thinks the problem can be resolved if there is a desire to make it happen. “The district has been expanded in the past to enable specifi c projects like the Lib- erty Theatre , and if council remains supportive this just means spending a bit more time ironing out wrinkles,” Davis said in a text message. Congregants at First Pres- byterian Church, which later formed the nonprofi t Cope- land Commons, purchased the building in 2019 with a plan to renovate and provide housing. Davis told the City Coun- cil on Friday that he expects the nonprofi t will sign a devel- opment agreement with Inno- vative Housing Inc., a Port- land nonprofi t, in the coming weeks. Innovative Housing renovated the former Waldorf Hotel next to City Hall into the Merwyn Apartments. Davis said the group intends to apply for low-in- come housing tax credits to help complete the project. While the details and costs are still estimates, he said the group appears to have a fund- ing gap of about $1.5 million. Davis said there is urgency on the nonprofi t’s part to fi ll the gap and move the project forward, and asked how the city could assist. The City Council unani- mously supported exploring how to support the project. The building, which used to serve as a boarding house, is blighted and would need to be gutted and rebuilt, according to Davis. There are also plans to build a sec- ond, attached building on the empty lot to the east, which is also owned by the church group. Davis said that together, the two buildings could pro- vide more than 60 units tar- geted for people who earn between 30% and 80% of the area median income. 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