January 16, 2015 | Cannon Beach Gazette | cannonbeachgazette.com • 11A K-9 program ‘a great tool’ for local law enforcement He’s got a great temperament. He’s smart. He’s doing really good with the trainer so far,” Gregory said. bounds” ahead of his prede- cessor, “very hard working” when its handler moved to and “more able to concentrate Bend, said Paul Williams, on the job at hand.” chief deputy at the Clatsop “It seems like an easier ‘Leaps and bounds’ &RXQW\6KHULII¶V2I¿FH partnership for Josh,” the “They are a wonderful tool Gunner doesn’t exactly chief added. that allows us to utilize their have a tough act to follow. Gregory doesn’t foresee inherent traits to help us com- The department’s previous running into any Cash-esque plete our mission” — in this ZRXOGEH.RI¿FHU³&DVK´ GLI¿FXOWLHVZLWK*XQQHUZKR FDVH ¿QGLQJ LOOLFLW GUXJV KH never made it through the is a “totally different dog,” he said. training with the Washing- VDLG ³, IHHO UHDOO\ FRQ¿GHQW Gunner likely will work WRQ &RXQW\ 6KHULII¶V 2I¿FH with him.” with other law enforcement Though he initially showed Since Gregory is entering agencies, perhaps even in Til- much promise when the Can- Gunner’s training process lamook County, Schermer- non Beach Police Department midstream, the handler is horn said. acquired him in August, Cash learning how to read the dog’s Although Gunner’s train- turned out to be rather jumpy, body language and work off ing in Cannon Beach and afraid of heights and, when he of his tells, Schermerhorn Washington County will be detected drugs, was inclined said. ongoing, he is expected to to bark aggressively rather “We’re getting into that EHFHUWL¿HGDQGLQVHUYLFHE\ then lead Gregory straight to rhythm together,” Gregory March. Gunner, whose radio them. Cash was returned to said. call sign is 709, is considered Schultz, his original owner, in Top Dog, top dollar WKH GHSDUWPHQW¶V ³QLQWK RI¿ early October. Last year, the department cer.” He lives with Gregory “We really liked Cash,” and his family. Schermerhorn said. But raised $29,417 for the K-9 “He’s a really good dog. Gunner is already “leaps and RI¿FHU SURJUDP DQG PRQH\ K-9 from Page 1A is still trickling in, Schermer- horn said. “In fact, we’ve had peo- ple ask if they can continue to make donations,” he said. The department is trying to set up an account that al- lows people to automatical- ly donate a portion of their paychecks to the program monthly. But whereas Schultz do- nated Cash, the department paid $6,200 for Gunner, who was purchased from Top Dog Police K-9 Training and Consulting, a company in Modesto, Calif. That amount also paid for a one-year war- ranty on Gunner’s health that will include a total refund or replacement if Gunner’s con- VWLWXWLRQLVQ¶W¿WIRUWKHMRE Still in place are the com- munity donations from Dogs Allowed Cannon Beach, which has pledged to provide free dog food for the life of “Gunner” stands at attention in Cannon Beach City Hall during his fi rst graveyard shift with his han- dler, Offi cer Josh Gregory. In addi- tion to his training in narcotics detec- tion, the 2-year-old chocolate Labrador will be trained in search and rescue. ERICK BENGEL PHOTO the program, and Dr. Robert Remensnyder, a veterinarian at the Seaside Pet Clinic who will administer Gunner’s rou- tine check-ups free of charge. Gregory said he is sorry it’s taking so long to make the . RI¿FHU SURJUDP ZRUN but “everything happens for a reason,” he said. “Sometimes these things take time.” “We’re looking forward to it. It’s another great tool for local law enforcement,” Wil- liams said. The sheriff’s de- partment appreciates Cannon Beach starting the program, he added. Reason for the sea star disease outbreak is still unknown Wasting from Page 1A out millions of sea stars at several sites along the West Coast, from Alaska to South- ern California. Wasting events have hap- pened before, but “we’ve never seen the disease ar- rive at the levels that we’ve seen over the past year, year and a half,” said Melissa Miner, a research associate at the University of Califor- nia, Santa Cruz, who works with MARINe. The disease begins as lesions on a sea star’s body that degrade its tissue, shriv- HOXSLWVUD\VDQG¿QDOO\GLV solve the invertebrate into a pale goo. It usually kills the organism within a few days to a couple of weeks, though some sea stars may slough off infected rays be- fore the lesions reach their vital organs and later regen- erate them. )HUEHU ¿UVW QRWLFHG WKH disease at Haystack Rock last March. By the end of July, most of the sea stars in the rock’s intertidal zone had died. “Sea stars were falling apart,” she said. “We could see that sea stars were dying right in front of us.” However, “that’s not happening anymore,” she said. “In general, we’re not seeing category 4 anymore. We’re seeing mostly cate- gory 1 or 2.” Comebacks Right now, HRAP and MARINe are focusing on the number of new sea stars in a given sea star popula- tion and what species are thriving in the aftermath of the wasting. In recent months, six- rayed sea stars have prolif- erated at the Needles near Haystack Rock, despite that very few were recorded during HRAP’s July survey. “I’ve never seen so many six-rayed sea stars in my life,” Ferber said, adding that “none of the six-rayed that we have found had any signs of disease.” Because most of the larger sea stars that eat the smaller six-rayed species died of wasting disease, Ferber suspects that six- rayed sea stars don’t have many natural predators. “That’s just a hypothesis,” she said. When HRAP conducts its sea star survey this month, she will be interested to see PHOTO COURTESY OF HAYSTACK ROCK AWARENESS PROGRAM Th is photo of a dying sea star, taken in May at Hay- stack Rock, shows the or- ganism at roughly Stage 3 as it disintegrates into a white mush. By July, more than 90 percent of the sea stars at the rock had succumbed to the wasting disease. whether the six-rayed sea stars have continued to mul- tiply. Miner noted that at sever- al coastal sites in Whatcom County, Wash., species of ochres and evasterias seem to be making a comeback. “There are a lot of ju- veniles at nearly all of our sites, way more than we’ve ever seen before,” she said. Unknowns Last summer, marine sci- HQWLVWV PD\ KDYH LGHQWL¿HG the virus responsible for the sea stars’ dramatic die back. A disease-causing many unknowns, includ- ing the reason juvenile sea stars are less likely to con- tract and die from the wast- ing disease. Is it that larg- er sea stars carry a greater viral load of the densovirus (which naturally occurs in sea star populations)? Or is it just easier for younger VHDVWDUVWR¿JKWRIILOOQHVV" “Because scientists don’t know what causes the densovirus to kill the sea stars — and what caused this outbreak to happen — it’s kind of hard to say for sure why the smaller indi- viduals aren’t affected as SUSAN GLARUM PHOTO much,” Ferber said. Becca Cudmore, a Brooklyn-based science writer, who is And, since the virus wearing a black jacket, takes notes during HRAP’s October was already present, the sea star survey. Nadine Nordquist, center, an HRAP staff question remains: Why is interpreter, and Alix Lee, the program’s 2014 intern, gather the disease suddenly erupt- information to send to the Multi-Agency Rocky Intertidal ing on a much larger scale Network. now than at any time in the past? “We just don’t know “densovirus” associated mortality of sea stars, ac- with sea stars that is “in cording to a study published at this point,” Miner said, greater abundance in dis- in November in the journal adding that some environ- eased than in healthy sea Proceedings of the National mental factors may have exacerbated the widespread stars” is “the most promis- Academy of Sciences. ing candidate disease agent” However, that answer wasting. “There’s still a lot responsible for the mass LVQ¶W GH¿QLWLYH 7KHUH DUH to learn.” Dune grading is ‘a continuing job that’s been done before’ dispute the main facts of the re- proposal, she said. quest, agreeing that the dunes Mike Manzulli, chairman Both methods carry the sand had grown to a level that may of the Ecola Creek Watershed out to sea. In some places, at inconvenience homeowners. Council, argued that the city’s least 25 feet of sand needs to Instead, they pointed out comprehensive plan does not be excavated, said Tom Horn- that, while Breakers Point permit the dumping of sand ing, a geologist working with is required to submit semi- into the Ecola Creek Estuary the homeowners association. annual reports regarding the solely to enhancte property Without permitting de- three-year effects of each dune owners’ views. lays, the project would grading project, only two such Furthermore, many com- happen in two phases, the reports exist in the public re- munities that have recently ¿UVW WKLV 0DUFK DQG $SULO cord. experienced natural disasters the second in February and “We’ve been told in years — including the Indonesian March 2016. past, when dune grading proj- tsunami of 2004, the Japa- “This is a continuing job ects were allowed, that there nese tsunami of 2011, hurri- that’s been canes Katrina done before. ‘We love Cannon Beach. We (2005) and We’ve done Sandy (2012), don’t want anything more this in cooper- etc. — are “re- ation with the building dunes than just to have our view back city of Can- right now ... as best we can have (it)’ non Beach,” to protect the Francis said. community” Ed Stone, Breakers Point homeowner Break- when they can ers Point has afford to do so, done seven dune grading would be monitoring done he said. “I think we really need projects, removing 4,000 thereafter on a regular basis to think about this.” to 10,000 cubic yards per and reports submitted to the Some opponents said that project, since 2000. This city of Cannon Beach ... in nature ought to be allowed to latest request calls for “a order to ascertain the effects take its course. substantial increase over of the dune grading,” said Jan “I have no doubt that some what you’ve approved in Siebert-Wahrmund, a Can- of your views are gone. I think the past,” City Planner Mark non Beach resident. “Where that’s probably very true,” Barnes told the planning are these (by now numerous) resident Carol Bennett said. commission. monitoring reports?” “I also think they built some But “if you keep mak- She also asked why the condos in the ’70s on an ac- ing a bigger pile, you are planning commission was tive sand dune — what were subjecting it to more wind even considering the Break- they thinking? (Breakers Point movement,” Francis said. ers Point request “before these homeowners) bought condos “You’re going to shift more many promised and required on an active sand dune — sand onto adjacent proper- reports were turned in.” what were they thinking might ties and onto the Breakers Fraser said the city, by not happen? Were they thinking Point complex.” demanding these monitoring the view was going to stay just “We love Cannon reports, “did not hold up on the same? It’s not possible.” Beach,” said Ed Stone, a their end of the bargain.” “Those dunes are there for Breakers Point homeown- Until the city conducts a a reason. We may not under- er since the early 1980s. comprehensive study of the stand it, even if we’re — no “We don’t want anything effects of dune grading on offense — even if we’re ge- more than just to have our the beach’s ecosystem, there ologists,” resident Tommy view back as best we can should be a moratorium on Huntington said. “Nature does have (it).” any dune grading projects, this stuff for a reason, and to said resident Susan Glarum. just destroy it for our view Those opposed “That should be the minimum or something like that is irre- Most opponents did not response by the city to this sponsible.” Dunes from Page 1A Growing to serve you Providence welcomes a new cardiologist. Providence is growing to better serve north coast families and communities. Heart specialist Masud Ahmad, M.D., is joining Robert Morse, D.O., and the cardiology team on the north coast. Welcome, Dr. Ahmad! Board certified in cardiovascular disease and interventional cardiology, Masud Ahmad, Dr. Ahmad divides his time between M.D., FACC, FSCAI Providence St. Vincent Heart Clinic- Cardiologist Cardiology and Providence Medical Group-Seaside. He speaks English, Arabic, Hindi and Urdu. When not seeing patients, Dr. Ahmad enjoys traveling, biking and spending time at home in Arch Cape. Call 503-717-7556 to schedule an appointment. We accept most health insurance plans. For more information, visit www.providence.org/northcoast.