The Columbia Press June 24, 2022 that,” Commissioner Rick Newton said at a recent city commission meeting. “We’re terrible land- lords for our … (bene- fit), but very good for building, it could write the other side. I think grants or work with it should go away. organizations to raise That’s my opinion.” money for repairs. Commissioner Mark “It makes it an easier Baldwin agreed. The Head Start building is in the southwest cor- process,” Ervin said. “That was the worst The agency owns ner of Robinson Community Park. lease in the history of three of its six Head forever,” Baldwin said. ary clause on CAT should vot- Start buildings in Columbia, The city’s attorney will draft ers approve the transfer. Tillamook and Clatsop County. a ballot measure and Warren- “We’re losing over $200 per The city of Seaside also owns ton voters will decide the issue month every month we own the Head Start building there. in November. “It’s always been a good part- nership with the city of War- renton,” Ervin said. “When we needed a building, they stepped up with us to get a grant, and this is the next log- ical step.” The building and property are worth more than $700,000, according to the county As- sessor’s Office, yet it cannot be sold and the city cannot increase the rent according to terms of the block grant. Voters would have to ap- prove the transfer because of the property’s value, according to city statutes. The county has agreed to re- lease the city from the rever- sionary clause it placed on the property when it was gifted to the city years ago, and the city intends to impose a reversion- CCC students Head Start: City will ask voters to give building to group Continued from Page 1 alent of 15 years of rent win campus clause whereby the property fixing siding and leak- revert to the county if ing windows. literacy award would If CAT owned the the city sold it or abandoned it. Nine Clatsop Community College students were named winners of the campus’ Infor- mation Literacy Award. The annual prize is awarded each spring to students who’ve submitted research projects to the college librarian, who eval- uates them using information literacy criteria. All nine illustrated a strong grasp of the evolving world of information, as well as the ability to incorporate author- itative information into their research. Students cited a range of research sources, in- cluding websites, journalists, books, magazines, scholarly journals, streaming movies, and personal interviews. The 2022 winners are: •Isabella Anthony, for her work on left-sided heart failure •Drake Fischer, who wrote about the damage sea lions cause to property and salmon •Teresa Higuera, who sub- mitted a report on historic preservation problems •Emma Johnson, for her re- search project “Stonehenge: A Novel Interpretation” •Vance Lump, for thought- ful explication of upgrading of historic wood windows •Katelyn Olsen, who exam- ined Bipolar I Disorder •Scott Stanford, for his Baldrige assessment of Costco •William Stevison, who ex- plained the Treaty of Guada- lupe Hidalgo •Shea Stokes, for his paper on Architectural Terra Cotta The award was divided equally among the nine win- ners, with two students shar- ing the nursing student award and seven students sharing the general award. Each received a $133 check from the Clatsop Community College Foundation. The college library creat- ed the Information Literacy Award to recognize student re- search skills. In 1995, the Community Ac- tion Team (CAT) approached city leaders, who agreed to sponsor the nonprofit agency in seeking a federal Communi- ty Development Block Grant, money that must be used to benefit seniors, those with low incomes, the disabled or other special groups. The group received a grant to build a Head Start facility on half an acre. Head Start is a preschool for low-income families. Today there are 40 children in the program ages 3 to 5. The city wants to give the property to CAT. “It would make a difference because, (there are problems when) maintenance needs to be done -- and we do a lot, right now we’re getting ready to paint the interior of the building,” said Joyce Ervin, CAT program director. But the nonprofit’s mission doesn’t include major reno- vations to buildings it doesn’t own. The city receives $225 per month from CAT, an amount that hasn’t increased since 1995 and never will. Just last year, the city spent the equiv- 5