»INSIDE WEEKEND EDITION // SATURDAY, AUGUST 27, 2022 150TH YEAR, NO. 25 $1.50 County transfers land to Seaside Surplus property could provide housing By ERICK BENGEL The Astorian Photos by Lydia Ely/The Astorian Workers have started to remove the Tourist No. 2. State starts to dismantle historic ferry Tourist No. 2 Vessel will be crushed in place By NICOLE BALES The Astorian he state has started work to dis- mantle and remove the Tourist No. 2, a historic ferry that par- tially sank at a fl oating dock on the Columbia River in late July. Global Diving & Salvage, a Seat- tle-based company the state contracted to deconstruct the vessel, has moved equipment into the area near the Sixth Street viewing platform. Ali Ryan Hansen, a spokesperson for the Department of State Lands, T See Ferry, Page A6 A pair of adjoining lots in n orth Sea- side could become the site of aff ordable housing or social services facilities. On Wednesday, the Clatsop County Board of Commissioners authorized the transfer of a combined 1.85 acres of sur- plus county land to the city . The property transfer was signed on Thursday, Patty Jo Angelini, a county public aff airs offi cer, said in an email. In April, the county put up 15 proper- ties in Astoria, Warrenton and Seaside for expressions of interest from cities, dis- tricts and nonprofi ts seeking to develop housing, child care or social services. The transfer of the two tax lots marks the fi rst in this undertaking. The North Coast faces a scarcity of housing at all income levels. The coun- ty’s 2019 housing study predicted a need for more than 1,500 new housing units to meet demand in the years ahead. The county is handing the property over — for free — through a quitclaim deed. If Seaside or future owner fails to use the land for housing, child care or social services, the land will revert back to county ownership. A zone change may be required to use the parcels for housing, Jon Rahl, the assistant city manager , noted in a letter to the county. However, a new state law requiring local governments to permit types of aff ordable housing development on non residentially zoned land could make a rezone unnecessary, the letter said. The site, located near the old Seaside High School, could yield 18 aff ordable housing units, the letter said. The remaining 13 surplus proper- ties the county off ered up are still avail- able. Although agencies are taking a look, no other transfers have been requested, Angelini said. The Tourist No. 2 capsized and partially sank in late July. See Land, Page A6 Gray withdraws from state House campaign mook, and Democrat Logan Laity, a community organizer also from Tillamook. The North Coast district’s state representative, Suzanne By ERICK BENGEL Weber, a Tillamook Repub- The Astorian lican, is giving up her seat to run for state Senate District Frederick “’Rick” T. Gray 16. The Senate seat’s long- Jr., the nonaffi liated state time occupant, Betsy John- House District 32 candidate son, resigned last year to cam- who hoped his run contained paign for governor, quitting the seed of an eventual third the Democratic Party and, like party, has withdrawn from the Gray, going the nonaffi liated race. route. The Cannon Beach Gray had been resident said on endorsed by Debo- Wednesday he believed rah Boone, a Demo- he could not build a crat who represented competitive campaign the House district for in time for the Novem- 14 years. ber election. His goal was to ‘Rick Gray Gray had gathered show that a political enough signatures in party that does not cater July to qualify for the to the two major parties’ ballot. extremes — the anti-de- “It’s hard to fi nd the mocracy movement on people to run a suc- the right, identity poli- cessful campaign. It’s tics on the left — could hard to get on the ballot by the bring moderates together and signature method. It’s hard to appeal to a large swath of the persuade the media that you’re electorate. credible. Everything builds on A centrist political party, everything else, and you’re Gray believes, could tackle an just running to catch up,” Gray urgent moral issue: preventing said in an email. ecological disaster and build- He would have competed ing a sustainable economy. against Republican Cyrus See Gray, Page A6 Javadi, a dentist from Tilla- Cannon Beach man qualifi ed as nonaffi liated SEASIDE CARE HOMES Virus outbreak, death, disclosed Details in state’s biweekly report By ERICK BENGEL The Astorian The Oregon Health Authority has disclosed a coronavirus out- break at one Seaside care home and a virus death at another. In Wednesday’s biweekly report tracking COVID-19 out- breaks at care homes, the health authority reported that Neawa- nna By The Sea experienced an outbreak among 10 people. The virus cases were among fi ve residents and fi ve staff , according to Shawna Weist, the facility’s executive director. All fi ve residents had been vaccinated against the virus, The Oregon Health Authority continues to publicly disclose COVID-19 outbreaks at care homes in biweekly reports. Weist said. Of the infected staff , three had been fully vaccinated, one had received the initial series, and one had a vaccine exemp- tion, she said. The outbreak was fi rst reported on Aug. 8. Weist said that the last round of tests had cleared everyone who had the virus. “We’ve kept it pretty con- tained, considering we have about 30 staff and about 60 resi- dents,” she said. She said no one was hospital- ized as a result of the outbreak. “This week, all of our tests are coming back negative,” Weist said. At Avamere at Seaside , a sec- ond death has been attributed to an outbreak of 14 people fi rst reported to the state on June 27, the health authority disclosed . A leader at Avamere’s Wilson- ville -based headquarters could not be reached to provide more information . See Outbreak, Page A6 City Commission fl ags commissioner Newton said he did not intend to off end after inappropriate comments By ETHAN MYERS The Astorian WARRENTON — City Com- missioner Rick Newton will receive a letter of education after city staff complained that he used a racial slur and joked about por- nography during a rambling dia- logue at City Hall this month . After an executive session on Tuesday night, the City Commis- sion voted to appoint Commissioner Tom Dyer to work with the city attorney to draft the letter to Newton . The City Commission did not publicly discuss the details of Newton’s behavior, but The Asto- rian obtained city staff ’s written account of the interaction. In a discussion that began on sign permits, city staff wrote, Newton “rambled into the topic of feminism and racism.” See Flagged, Page A6