T he C olumbia P ress 1 50 ¢ C latsop C ounty ’ s I ndependent W eekly n eWspaper 503-861-3331 February 23, 2018 Snow day in Clatsop County Top: Snow covers Highway 101 and the North Coast Business Park Tuesday afternoon. Above: These 2018 Ford Mustangs wear a blanket of snow at Astoria Ford. Left: Workers carry on at an Alder Avenue apartment complex renovation despite the falling snow. Vol. 2, Issue 8 Man arrested for boating under the influence and so much more The Columbia Press A day of pleasure boating ended in arrest on three charges for an Aber- deen, Washington, man. Ian Michael Wood, 40, was booked at Clatsop County Jail for providing false information to a police officer serving an arrest warrant, driving a boat while intoxicated and for failing to appear in court on a drunken driving charge. His blood-alcohol content was re- corded at 0.255 percent at the time of his arrest and 0.20 percent when he was booked later at the jail. A person is considered too drunk to legally drive or operate a boat at 0.08 percent. Warrenton police were called to the Hammond Marina about 3:30 p.m. Feb. 14 to assist the Coast Guard with a boater they deemed too intoxicated to remain on the Columbia River. The Coast Guard and the Clatsop County Sheriff’s Office both operate marine safety patrols, ensuring boaters See ‘BUII’ on Page 6 Seafood processing industry gaining jobs B y E rik k nodEr Oregon Employment Dept. An increase in the number of Oregon’s seafood processing businesses is helping reverse a nearly decade-long decline in jobs for that industry. In 2016, Oregon had 30 em- ployers and 1,141 employees turning slimy fish and armored crustaceans into succulent sea- food ready for cooking and eat- ing. Preliminary data for 2017 in- dicate the addition of two more businesses and a gain of about 50 jobs. The number of seafood pro- cessing businesses had been slowly declining since 2007, but that trend reversed in 2015. Oregon’s processing industry gained five businesses that year. Two more were gained in 2016, and another two were added in 2017. Still, the trend toward more consolidation may continue. Pacific Seafood, which is re- building its burned plant in Warrenton, has moved to op- erate a Trident Seafood plant in Newport, leaving just two main seafood processors in Newport. Consolidation also has occurred in the Oregon fishing fleet. Three ports: Astoria, Newport and Charleston, had about 80 percent of all commercial fish landings by value in Oregon in 2016. Smaller ports like Garibaldi, Depoe Bay, and Florence struggle The Columbia Press to find money for infrastructure, Workers put the finishing touches on the new Pacific dredging, and jetty maintenance Coast Seafood plant in Warrenton. Before the 2013 that can attract vessel owners and fire, it had 100 full-time and 100 seasonal employees. See ‘Seafood’ on Page 4