T he C olumbia P ress June 26, 2020 City’s community development director accepts Mt. Angel post Kevin Cronin, who served dards for fast-food restau- as Warrenton’s community rants to ensure new busi- development director, has nesses don’t cause traffic accepted a job as city problems. manager of Mount “Mount Angel of- Angel in Marion fers the best oppor- County. His last day tunity to advance my was Thursday, June career in empower- 25. ing small towns to do Cronin was hired in great things,” Cro- June 2018 to replace nin said. “I will have Cronin City Planner Skip Url- fond memories of my ing, who retired. Previous- experience in Warrenton, ly, Cronin spent two years but I’m happy to move on as Astoria’s community de- with my life to the next velopment director. chapter.” During his two years with His goal for Warrenton Warrenton, Cronin was best was to help the city move known for cracking down beyond its past and to think on blighted properties and strategically about the fu- cleaning up the city’s build- ture, he said. ing code – including add- The city has hired Mark ing categories for cottage Barnes, former city plan- homes, tiny homes and ac- ner for Cannon Beach, to cessory dwelling units. fill in until a replacement is He organized a charrette found. – a community think-tank Also, city Building Offi- session – for a proposed cial Bob Johnston has an- new development initially nounced his retirement called Spur 104 and later and the city has begun the called Chelsea Gardens. recruitment process for his He also developed stan- replacement. County makes planning appointments Planning commissioners Robert Stricklin in District 2 and Christopher Farrar in District 3, were reappointed Wednesday evening to four- years terms. Both positions were to ex- pire on June 30. In addition, Commissioner Michael Magyar, whose term expires in June 2022, sub- mitted his resignation. Lam Quang, a self-em- ployed artist living in the Lewis & Clark/Olney/Wall- ooskee unincorporated area, was appointed to fill Mag- yar’s post. Two county commission- ers, Mark Kujala and Lianne Thompson, had recommend- ed postponing the appoint- ments until after the newly elected county commission- ers take office in January. “I am deeply, deeply dis- turbed by this little trick you’re trying to pull here,” Commissioner Pamela Wev said to Kujala and Thomp- son. Thompson said she was try- ing to find a moderate middle place. “I’m trying to make peace, not war here.” “I think we have a good board right now and I think we can make a decision on this,” Chair Kathleen Sullivan said. “I understand things are going to change in January, but the board will have new 3 State’s cultural organizations suffering Many of Oregon’s cultural organizations face suspension of op- erations or perma- nent closure due to the COVID-19 impact, re- veals an Oregon Cultur- al Trust survey released this month. The survey, the most comprehensive look at Oregon’s cultural com- munity since the crisis began, includes data and comments from 330 cultural nonprofit groups. Participants proj- ect a collective loss of $40 million and aver- age losses of $121,281 through June 30. Just over half the re- A volunteer helps a young reader in a spondents have annu- Portland-based shadow project. al revenues less than severely affected by the crisis. $250,000 and operate out- They also will be the slowest side the Portland Metro area. to reopen. Half of the agencies had not The survey revealed partic- applied for the federal Payroll ular hardship for cultural or- Protection Program, likely ganizations in rural areas. because 44 percent employ Bend’s High Desert Mu- less than one full-time staff seum reports that museums member – relying mostly on like itself “will be hit hardest a volunteer workforce. Of the immediately and will have a 49 percent that did apply for PPP, only 73 percent received funds. “The PPP loan is a finan- cial band-aid for the short term, but for us to continue to provide our essential ser- vice … there will be a need for continued relief funding well into the next fiscal year and possibly beyond,” reports the Tillicum Foundation, which operates nonprofit radio sta- tions in Warrenton, Astoria, and Tillamook. “Quite frankly right now it looks grim,” reports the Or- egon Coast Council for the Arts, “when the PPP monies are gone, we may be look- ing at a staff-less OCCA for a while.” Because most cultural orga- nizations rely on large gather- ings for ticket and rental rev- enue, they rank at the top of Oregon business sectors most much longer recovery period - we saw this during the recession and the indicators point to a similar pattern now … funding to help orga- nizations like the High Desert Museum be re- silient for the next 12 to 24 months is critical.” Survey comments also reflect the concern cul- tural organizations have for the vulnerable popu- lations they serve. The Shadow Project, which provides learn- ing support for children with disabilities, reports that “during COVID-19 these children are even more vulnerable, at highest risk of falling further behind and ex- acerbated mental health disorders.” The Cultural Trust awaits Legislative consideration of its Emergency Cultural Relief Fund proposal, which would deploy up to $10 million of its $29 million permanent fund to create an emergency relief funding program for Oregon’s cultural organizations.