The Columbia Press Celebrating our 100th year • 1922-2022 1 50 ¢ February 25, 2022 503-861-3331 Vol. 6, Issue 8 Fixing the disconnect along the Oregon Coast Trail The Columbia Press The state is working on a plan to improve con- nections along the Oregon Coast Trail. The trail stretches the entire 362 miles of Or- egon coastline, from border to border, offering hikers spectacular coastal vistas, lush forests and recreational opportunities. Most of the trail is on sandy beaches, with sec- tions of overland trail across headlands, forests, rivers, and through some of the coast’s 28 cities. Unfortunately, about 10 percent of the trail is disconnected, inconvenient, unsafe or inaccessi- ble — mainly where the route requires hiking on the shoulder of Highway 101 or where it follows county roads and local streets. In Clatsop County, disconnected areas are be- tween Gearhart and Seaside, between Ecola Beach and the city of Cannon Beach, and a small area just north of the tunnel at Arch Cape. Oregon Parks and Recreation Department is leading the effort to close the gaps in partnership with the Federal Highway Administration, As- sociation of Oregon Counties, and Oregon Solu- tions at Portland State University. The plan will identify gaps in the hiking experi- ence and determine actions and funding needed to improve and maintain the trail over time. The idea is to improve safety, access and con- venience. The parks agency hosted online open houses See ‘Trail’ on Page 6 By Cindy Yingst The Columbia Press Above: A forested section along the Oregon Coast Trail. Left: Three sections that need improve- ment are in Clatsop County. Oregon State Parks Cemetery lore grows after discovery of old marker By Cindy Yingst The Columbia Press Interest in Clatsop County’s first cemetery simply won’t die after the discovery last month of what appears to be an original artifact – the entry sign carved more than a century ago. “It has developed a life of its own,” City Commissioner Rick Newton said at Tuesday night’s commission meet- ing. Newton found the sign while walking through the abandoned site near his home with historian Bob Ell- sberg and his wife, Claudia. A portion of the marker found last month at the old cemetery site. Warrenton to sell two surplus properties There was speculation about who might have been involved in design- ing either the abandoned Clatsop County Cemetery or its 1898 replace- ment, Ocean View Cemetery, which lies directly to the south. Both parcels are within Warrenton’s city limits, but owned by the city of Astoria. While famed landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted designed Central Park in New York City – and thousands of parks and public areas throughout the country, including See ‘Cemetery’ on Page 6 Warrenton city commissioners ap- proved the sale of two pieces of land deemed “better suited to private own- ership.” The properties, a .41-acre lot on Ga- lena Street and a 5,000-square-foot commercial parcel at Warrenton Ma- rina, would be sold through the bro- ker hired by the city earlier this year, former City Commissioner Pam Ack- ley. The city received unsolicited offers on both properties, City Manager Linda Engbretson told commission- ers Tuesday night. The Galena Street property is va- cant and the city will ask $60,000. The marina property, at 848 N.E. First Court, also is vacant. It former- ly had been leased to a commercial fisherman who’d built a large metal storage building on the site. Upon his retirement in 2008, the fisherman rented it to another fishing operator in violation of the lease. The metal storage building on the property was stuffed with fishing equipment when it caught fire and burned to the ground in November 2018. Suggested market value of the mari- na property is $45,000. While the city had arranged a public hearing on the sales Tuesday night, no members of the public spoke on the plan. Both sales fall below the thresh- old established in Chapter 11 of the city’s charter, which requires a pub- lic vote on the sale of assets valued at $100,000 or more in 2014 dollars See ‘Property’ on Page 4