SEASIDESIGNAL.COM • COMPLIMENTARY COPY OUR 109th YEAR • July 24, 2015 New school may come with growth boundary expansion City Council ‘very interested’ in South East Hills By Katherine Lacaze Seaside Signal At a July 7 Planning Commission meeting, city staff and the commission considered four sites for expansion of the city’s urban growth boundary by about 200 acres. Along with three other potential sites, commission members focused on the South East Hills area, south and east of Seaside near Wahanna Road. The land is considered suitable for development because of easy access, potential for diverse land use and lo- cation near about 30 acres suitable for a school site. “We’re not ready to do that today, but I certainly want to acknowledge the planning goals, guidelines for land use planning. idea of having school facilities and en- Through consultation with Otak, the abling them to grow up into that area,” city forecast the rate of growth in Sea- planner Don Hanson said. side over the next two decades and es- Hanson is a principal and director timated how much land needs to come for HLB Otak, Inc., a Seaside-based into the Urban Growth Boundary to ac- HQJLQHHULQJ DQG FRQVXOWLQJ ¿UP KLUHG commodate the city’s growth, Hanson by Weyerhaeuser, which owns much of said. the land under consideration. Otak and the city collaborated to “Our City Council is very interest- create a land-need analysis that showed ed in having that land,” City Planner the city will require 154.6 acres of resi- Kevin Cupples said. “If you wait until dential land, 10.6 acres of park land and you run out and then you’re trying to 35.6 acres of industrial and institutional scramble in order to do that, then that’s land, for a total of about 200.8 acres. not good planning.” With that “land budget” in mind, they considered where in Seaside it Managing growth could be found, in pieces or as a whole, The process to expand Seaside’s according to Cupples. boundary started about two years ago See UGB, Page 9A in order to comply with statewide SUBMITTED DRAWING/COURTESY OTAK Four study sites considered for expansion of Seaside’s Urban Growth Boundary. CITY COUNCIL Panhandling rules stir citizen ire since it was adopted in 1984. In general, it regulates the buying and selling or mer- chandise by individuals who GRQRWKDYHD¿[HGORFDWLRQ Currently the code en- By Katherine Lacaze tirely bans begging or so- Seaside Signal liciting on the streets or in any public place under a Seaside City Council different ordinance. The members tabled an amend- amendment to the itinerant ment to the itinerant merchant merchant regulation would ordinance after testimony allow that activity — as from numerous citizens, as long as the individual has well as the audible support the obtained a permit. The fees speakers received from the remain unchanged. 7KHGH¿QLWLRQRIWHPSR- audience during Monday’s UDU\ ¿[HG ORFDWLRQ ZRXOG meeting. During the public hearing, change to “any business words such as “wrong,” “bru- location, public or private” tal,” “discriminatory” and “a and the amendment also street-sweeping technique” would prohibit activities were used to describe the associated with the per- amendment, which expands mit from 10 p.m. to 8 a.m. WKH GH¿QLWLRQ RI ³LWLQHUDQW Additionally, the amend- merchant” to include anyone ment adds a new exception who “provides a service (en- to limit licensing during tertainment, etc.) or solicits KLJKWUDI¿FWLPHV The penalty for violating for any form of compensa- tion or remuneration.” Those the ordinance is $500; the people would have to pay $50 amendment would increase per day or as much as $1,000 that to to $700. Most of the nearly dozen per year for a permit. This GH¿QLWLRQ ZRXOG HQFRPSDVV speakers took issue with the panhandlers, which were the idea of requiring panhan- main source of concern for dlers and street performers, many of whom don’t make many. “Draconian policies $50 per day, to pay for a per- against the homeless are not mit. For some who spoke, the answer,” Mary Eng said the change carries implica- during the public hearing, tions about how individuals “We need humanitarian solu- and society should approach poverty and homelessness. tions.” Many aspects of the or- See Rules, Page 6A dinance have been in effect Proposed rule changes for panhandlers come under fire in Seaside KATHERINE LACAZE/SEASIDE SIGNAL Celeste Bodner (back row, third from left), the founder and executive director of FosterClub. This summer’s All-Star in- terns include: (front row, from left) Tristan Torres, Ridmi Coe, Angelica Cox, Karen Banks, Ariana Guerra, (back row, from left) Malcolm Leal, Ricky Ballesteros, Isaac Brito, Rosalina Burton, Ashyna Davis, Alexis Baska and Teal Martell. Local woman featured in national magazine for work with foster youth Founder of FosterClub shares personal story By Katherine Lacaze Seaside Signal PAID PERMIT NO. 97 ASTORIA, OR PRSRT STD US POSTAGE local woman is making far-reaching, dynamic waves from within a small, un- assuming facility on First Avenue in Seaside. Celeste Bodner is the founder and executive director of FosterClub, a national network well known in Wash- ington, D.C., and elsewhere across the country for connecting and represent- ing foster youth and reforming policies and practices related to the system. If you asked native Oregonian Bodner about her life-changing ef- forts, though, she immediately would reference the young people with whom she works, because to her, they are the game-changers — strong, ca- pable and resilient. She is the coach, guiding and cheering them on from the sidelines through her organization. Bodner recently brought more rec- ognition to her young people and Fos- terClub when she shared her story in MORE magazine’s July/August 2015 edition, guest edited by First Lady Mi- chelle Obama. Bodner was featured along with four other individuals in a section titled “Women Working Won- ders,” which highlighted their work with youth across the country. She was included in the article upon nomination from a White House staff member who remains anonymous, even to Bodner. Although being featured in a maga- ]LQHDUWLFOHLQYROYHGDQDLUSODQHÀLJKW and a photo shoot in New York City, both activities that Bodner dislikes, she was happy to promote FosterClub. From a simple website run from Bodner’s home with the help of her sister, the organization has grown to an approximately $1.6-million oper- ation with 40,000 members and na- tional name recognition. The website also includes an online training portal, used by about 8,000 foster parents. It all started about 20 years ago, when Bodner was introduced to two people who irreversibly changed her life. Bodner’s story In 1994, while living in Portland, Bodner and her husband met Terry and Gary, then ages 12 and 10, through a day laborer hired occasionally by Bodner’s husband. The boys were the sons of the employee’s girlfriend. See Bodner, Page 7A Seaside high schoolers help adorn cast of local music festival production Sewing Club members participate in costume apprenticeship By Katherine Lacaze Seaside Signal Three students from Seaside High School’s Sewing Club took part in the Astoria Music Festi- YDO¶V ¿UVW FRVWXPH DSSUHQ- ticeship program in late June. The festival, which held its 13th season this year, traditionally incorporates a Vocal and Instrumental Apprentice Program. The program’s production for 2015 was the comedic opera “The Magic Flute,” RU ³'LH =DXEHUÀ|WH´ E\ Wolfgang Amadeus Mo- zart. The production used Astoria as its setting. In general, the two-week apprentice program pro- vides advanced training to pre-professional sing- ers and instrumentalists. It also incorporates local young dancers. A new addition to this year’s program was a cos- tume apprenticeship, over- seen by Costume Manager Cynthia Harber, a local teacher at Astoria Middle School. When Managing Di- rector Carol Shepherd heard about Seaside High School’s Sewing Club, she saw an opportunity to provide another venue to instruct and develop young people through the apprentice program. Three students from the sew- ing club — Brooke Laws, Max McNeill and Chastity Cozzitorto — participated in the costume apprentice- ship, and the program ben- H¿WHGIURPWKHLUSDUWLFLSD- tion, Harber said. The program also bene- ¿WHGIURPDEXGJHWIRU costumes, which gave the team the ability to create more elaborate attire. They KDGWRFUDIWRXW¿WVDQGRWKHU costume pieces for the near- ly 20-member cast, as well as about 18 dancers from Maddox Dance Studio and the Astoria School of Ballet. See Sewing, Page 9A City considers regulating medical marijuana grow sites Operations would be subject to licensing, zoning regulations By Katherine Lacaze Seaside Signal The Seaside City Coun- cil reviewed an ordinance Monday to limit the growth of medical marijuana to the city’s three industrial zones. The council also established licensing requirements for local medical marijuana growers. The legislation, drafted by the Seaside Planning Commission, resembles the work done by the City Council earlier this year to establish rules and regula- tions for medical marijuana dispensaries. “This creates some reg- ulatory relief, which was not created by the state of Oregon,” City Planner Kev- in Cupples said. “The city would be regulating the grow sites similar to the way they regulate dispensaries. This is making sure the city is aware of what’s going on, and that we’re aware of who’s doing the activity and that the activ- ity is carried out safely.” The city’s code currently prevents licensing of busi- nesses deemed “prohibited by the laws of the United States.” Since cannabis remains a Schedule I sub- stance under federal law, the proposed amendment would grant general busi- ness licenses for medical marijuana production and processing, as long as the business otherwise com- plies with city code. Production and process- ing of medical marijuana would be restricted to the industrial areas in Seaside based on the city’s zoning ordinance. Because the ordi- nance already has provisions for producing or processing prescription drugs in the in- dustrial zone, commercial production of medical mari- juana would be addressed by those, Cupples said. See Pot, Page 6A