The Columbia Press Celebrating our 100th year • 1922-2022 1 50 ¢ 503-861-3331 September 30, 2022 Vol. 6, Issue 39 Students to build public recreation project Seniors, disabled By Cindy Yingst The Columbia Press Warrenton Middle School students will design and build a public outdoor activity space that includes walking trails, a bike path, and a disc golf course with interpre- tive signs that share regional history. Pacific Power announced this week that its foundation is donating $9,500 to the campus for the student learning experience as well as a STEM summer camp in which students will work with robots, drones and remotely operated underwater vehicles. It’s the fifth Pacific Power grant that WMS Principal Josh Jannusch has won for the district during the past two years. Others have gone to the high school’s STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) and CTE (career-technical edu- cation) programs, which included the pur- chase of welding equipment. “They have been really generous with us,” Jannusch said of Pacific Power Foun- Cindy Yingst/The Columbia Press dation. Air National Guardsman Marcus Helenius throws a disc for his dog, Mar- Jannusch’s idea was to let the students got, Wednesday on a Warrenton Middle School field that’s planned for a get some use of the entire 58-acre site that hiking, biking and disc golf area. includes the middle school. Eventually, the Warrenton-Hammond School District’s high school and grade school will be built there as well. “Our STEM class will be an integral part of this,” he said. “The hope is that all classes will have some impact.” Math students will get a chance to apply their classroom lessons to real-world experiences. Sci- ence students will learn about construction tech- niques. Art classes will be involved in the design. English students will choose and write information Approximate area for Jannusch for the interpretive signs. History students will trails and disc golf gather the regional history. Even students in an elective class on podcasting will get a chance to report on the project. “I’ve pretty much named every subject we have, but that’s kind of the idea,” Jannusch said. “We’re using a multidisciplinary approach to this, which is education-ese for using all the different skills – En- glish, math, art – to tie everything together and show that these sub- jects are applicable outside of school.” It answers the question for students who ask why they need to know how to conjugate a verb or solve a math equation. STEM and See ‘Grant’ on Page 5 more vulnerable in disasters The Columbia Press and news services Older adults, people with disabili- ties, and those on fixed incomes are especially vulnerable during disas- ters. “From a house fire to major earth- quakes, taking simple steps to be prepared can be the difference be- tween survival and recovery from a disaster,” said Ed Flick, director of the Oregon Department of Human Services’ Office of Resilience and Emergency Management. TV and print news are filled with stories about those who weren’t able to prepare for emergencies or evacuate. Many of the faces are old- er, disabled or poor. “We aim to change that as soon as possible,” Flick said. September is preparedness month throughout the nation. Most are being told to be “two-weeks” pre- pared. But in Clatsop County, resi- dents should be prepared to care for themselves for six weeks. Emergency responders won’t be as available during a mass casualty sit- uation, said LeAnn Ivers, co-chair of the Disability Emergency Man- agement Advisory Council. She’s also hard of hearing and experienc- ing vision loss. “We all need to prepare as if no one is coming to rescue us,” Ivers said. “We can take control by cre- ating our own plan and how we re- spond to disasters.” Ivers recommends these tips for older adults and people with dis- abilities, although many are rele- vant to everyone: • If you have access and function- See ‘Disaster’ on Page 4