Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Columbia press. (Astoria, Or.) 1949-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 2020)
The Columbia Press August 21, 2020 3 Business and development tidbits Oregon’s average student borrower Favorite restaurants dishing up some changes leaves school $26,328 in debt The Columbia Press Student loan debt has bal- looned to $1.67 trillion na- tionwide and Oregon stu- dents rank in the top 30 percent. The average debt per bor- rower in Oregon is $26,328, although the figure rep- resents a drop of 8 percent over last year’s figures, ac- cording to LendEDU, an on- line seller of student loans and other financial products. The company has complet- ed an in-depth analysis of hundreds of public and pri- vate schools in all 50 states for the fifth consecutive year. Oregon’s student borrow- ers rank 17th of the 50 states, with 36 percent of the class of 2019 shouldering debt upon graduation. The schools with the high- est average loan debt per borrower were the private Corban University, where the average borrower walked away $40,239 in debt. Sev- enty-five percent of the stu- dents had outstanding loans to pay. Other schools and their average debt per borrow- er: Oregon State University, $27,392; University of Ore- gon, $26,548; Eastern Ore- gon University, $25,756; and Western Oregon University, $6,815. The topic of student loan debt and the rising cost of college in the U.S. is more important now than it has ever been before, according to LendEDU. The coronavirus pandem- ic has students and par- ents weighing the true value of higher education and the financial burden of student loan debt that usually comes with earning a degree. A little spruce-up Dairy Maid Dairy Maid, the town’s fa- vorite burger joint, reopened Tuesday after a monthlong closure for maintenance. The parking lot has been repaved and some repairs have been made inside, al- though most everything else is the same, said Jodi Helmer, daughter of business owner Julia Salmi. The drive-through restau- rant at 89 N. Main Ave. also revised its hours of operation. Dairy Maid is open 10:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday and closed Sundays and Mondays. If you’re looking for a job, instead of a great burger, the restaurant is hiring. Arnie’s Café Crystal Neahring-Green and the crew at Arnie’s Café will serve their final meals Sunday in the old building near War- renton High School. The popular eatery’s new home near City Hall is nearly complete, said Rick Newton, owner of the building that housed his auto parts busi- ness before he retired. Opening of the new café could come as early as Thurs- day, Aug. 27. New middle school Photo courtesy Spruce Up Warrenton Spruce Up Warrenton members Norm Hoxsey, left, and Jim Dutcher, along with Chris Connolly, who isn’t shown, replace the handrails at Lighthouse Park at the four-way stop. The volunteers have made im- provements large and small throughout downtown in the past year. The design phase of War- renton’s new middle school is complete and it’s time for the project to fully move into the construction phase, project manager Scott Rose told the school board late last week. “There’s a lot of activity hap- pening and it’s very exciting,” he said. “In November, the steel arrives and we’ll start getting vertical.” After excavation, which is nearly complete, the pave- ment of Warrior Way, fea- tured on today’s front page, begins Oct. 16. Grade School A contract to build Warren- Cindy Yingst/The Columbia Press An excavator works on a stretch of Warrior Way at the site of Warrenton’s future middle school. The school will be off Dolphin Drive, south of Walmart. ton Grade School’s securi- ty vestibule was awarded to Mark Baldwin Construction, who was the only bidder on the project. The vestibule will be near the front office and provide a barrier between the entrance and student areas. It’s in re- sponse to violence such as oc- cured at Sandy Hook in New- town, Conn., where a gunman shot and killed 20 children and six adults after gaining easy access to campus. The vestibule construction should be complete in early September.