SEASIDESIGNAL.COM • COMPLIMENTARY COPY OUR 109th YEAR • August 21, 2015 Seaside factors tsunami threat into boundary expansion Weighing multiple factors proves to complicate city’s planning process By Katherine Lacaze Tsunami preparedness, public transportation, af- fordable housing and en- vironmental protection are just some of the competing concerns the city of Seaside is taking into consideration during the process of expand- ing its Urban Growth Bound- ary. The Planning Commission heard a second round of pub- lic testimony Tuesday, Aug. 4, on its proposal to amend the city’s Comprehensive Plan and pull approximately 200 acres of new land, located to the south and east of Seaside near Wahanna Road known as Southeast Hills, into the Urban Growth Boundary. City of¿ cials and consul- tants favor Southeast Hills as the most suitable for de- velopment site over the next 20 years because of slope conditions, emergency vehi- cle access and infrastructure, among other factors. While a Seaside School Dis- trict 10 campus is not planned for the site, at earlier meetings commission members said a potential new school campus could be readily accessible to Southeast Hills. Of the proposed 200.8 acres of Southeast Hills, the city is proposing to designate 61.3 acres as residential low density; 54.5 acres as resi- dential medium density; 33.5 acres as residential high den- sity; 5.3 acres as resort resi- dential; 16.1 acres as industri- al; 19.5 acres as institutional; and 10.6 acres as park. See Planning, Page 7A JOHN DUDLEY/SUBMITTED PHOTO Seaside Signal Biplane activity sparks conversation Some residents say plane’s low overfl ight altitude is safety concern, intrudes on wildlife By Katherine Lacaze Seaside Signal Jim Grant’s biplane offers residents and visitors alike the chance to survey the surround- ing scenic area from a rare, bird’s-eye view in an open cock- pit. During the summer, Grant, of Portland, provides custom scenic À ights from the publicly owned Seaside Municipal Air- port, located on Seaside prop- erty surrounded by the city of Gearhart off U.S. Highway 101. Two passengers — he will take anyone age “4 to 94” — can ride the biplane at one time. “I’ve had a lot of people come who like having it here,” Grant said. “It’s a summertime activity that’s been traditional since the 1920s.” %ut Grant’s À yovers are ril- ing local residents who feel the operation is too noisy, interferes with wildlife habitat and creates a safety hazard, especially in ‘I’ve had a lot of people come who like having it here. It’s a summertime activity that’s been traditional since the 1920s.’ Jim Grant, biplane owner and pilot light of a 2008 Gearhart crash of a small plane that killed ¿ ve people. Mayor Dianne Widdop ad- dressed the topic at a Gearhart City Council meeting Aug. 5. Widdop, who sits on Seaside’s Airport Committee, said resi- dents whose neighborhoods he À ies over are concerned about safety, wildlife intrusion and especially the noise level. “I’ve heard from people on my street where he À ies over, the estuary front on Lit- tle Beach, on Nita and Ocean Avenue,” Widdop said. “The complaints have been with the noise, and it’s annoying to ev- eryone.” Wildlife, air safety are concerns Grant’s routes vary. The “Sea- side Intro” tour covers Seaside, the Cove, the mouth of the Ne- canicum River, Gearhart and the golf courses. Another, the “Seaside Plus,” climbs to a higher altitude for a more panoramic view of the Columbia River, Astoria and more. Other À ights, Grant said, go further up the coast and get cheaper by the minute. They hit landmarks such as Fort Stevens, the south shore of the Columbia River and two light- houses by Ilwaco, Wash. Some of Grant’s routes also À y over the Gearhart Ocean State Park. The Necanicum Estuary is a wildlife reserve the Audubon So- ciety of Portland has designated an important bird area. It provides habitat for western snowy plovers, bald eagles, Calidris sandpipers, semipalmated plovers, small num- bers of whimbrel and occasionally long-billed curlews. Gearhart resident John Dudley, who lives on Little Beach Drive, said À ights over the wildlife re- serve are “the major concern.” “It is frightening to think of those birds colliding with the plane,” he said. In September 2004, the Feder- al Aviation Administration issued an advisory that encouraged pilots making À ights near noise-sensitive areas to À y at altitudes higher than those permitted by regulation to re- duce aircraft noise in those areas. See Biplane, Page 6A Helping Hands drops plan to acquire Gearhart’s city leaders Hyak Building, lines up new facility rectify century-old By Katherine Lacaze Seaside Signal PAID PERMIT NO. 97 ASTORIA, OR PRSRT STD US POSTAGE A plan to use the Hyak Building for rehabilitating the homeless is no longer an option in Seaside. But representatives of Helping Hands Reentry Outreach Centers see a new prospec- tive site for its re-entry pro- gram. The Northwest Oregon Housing Authority gave Helping Hands permission to build a relief facility on a piece of its property off U.S. Highway 101 north of Ava- mere at Seaside, formerly Necanicum Village Senior Living. The property south of Sea- side off U.S. Highway 101 “seemed like a much better ¿ t than that location we were trying for,” Helping Hands Executive Director Alan Ev- ans said. Originally Helping Hands hoped to use the Hyak Build- ing, a multi-unit dwelling on the corner of Edgewood Street and Avenue S owned by the Clatsop County Hous- ing Authority. The social-ser- vice group planned to use part of the building to house men in the last phase of their re-entry program. Multiple obstacles During the past couple of years, that plan ran into mul- tiple obstacles: a lack of fund- ing, resistance from some neighbors and, most recently, See Hyak, Page 7A Phillips Candies to transfer to new owner Steve Phillips plans to help ease transition for his family’s business By Katherine Lacaze Seaside Signal Steve Phillips is enjoying sweet success — with a cherry on top. After spending years of long hours in the kitchen making sweets for the well-known Phillips Candies shop on Broadway, he sold the shop to Mark and Marci Utti. Although ownership will change, the shop will retain its name as well as many of the products patrons know and love. Discussions between Phillips and the Uttis began in spring 201. Phillips hoped to ¿ nd someone who wanted to keep Phillips Candies relatively the same, name and all. While the Uttis will purchase the business itself, TDM Enterprises — of which Mark Utti is a partner — is going to purchase the build- ing. TDM Enterprises also owns the nearby Funland Arcade and the Seaside Fultano’s Pizza on Broadway. The plan is for the trans- action to close Oct. 1. KATHERINE LACAZE/SEASIDE SIGNAL Steve Phillips, the owner and operator of Phil- lips Candies of Seaside, is preparing to retire and pass on his candy shop, which has operat- ed since 1897, to new owners in October. The goal, Phillips said, is a seamless transition for employees, suppliers and customers, with op- erations and product quality remaining stable. All in the family Phillips’s connection to the candy shop started in 1926, long before he was born, when See Phillips, Page 7A surveying error By R.J. Marx Seaside Signal GEARHART — A sur- veyor’s 10-foot error in 1906 led to a big-time snafu for the estate of Maynard and Helen Kern at their 402 Ocean Ave. property in Gearhart. Because a surveyor erred in drawing property lines almost 110 years ago, heirs to the Kern family sought to untangle the legal limbo to facilitate a potential sale of the beachfront property as re- quired by mortgage and title companies. “For our family, it’s heart- breaking because we’re forced to sell our property,” Margaret Chapman said, in her application. The Kern family came to the Planning Commission and City Council to request a street vacation to clear up the error, which designated a 30- foot setback rather than a 40- foot setback, as should have been identi¿ ed. They also sought a waiver of a compensation fee nor- mally required for vacation of the land, in this case about $86,000. “What we want to do is try to resolve the whole block,” said Dale Barrett of Otak, a consulting ¿ rm representing the estate and several neigh- bors. “I’ve talked to each of the owners, and hopefully we can do boundary -line agree- ments between all parties. The attempt to do the street vaca- tion is the ¿ rst step in that.” Premised on error “It’s all premised on a surveyor’s error,” said City Planner Carole Connell. “That had a domino effect of causing this house to be put into the right-of-way ; the next house’s fence to be put in the applicant’s property ; the next house in their neighbor’s property. It goes both sides of the street, and it goes all the way back to the birth of Gear- hart. We’re looking to remove that possible claim of owner- ship of that extra 10 feet, the questionable area.” “They want to get their house back legally on their property,” Connell said. “They believe it was a sur- veyor’s error and nothing more than that. This piece would be the beginning to correct the rest of the prop- erties on Ocean Avenue be- tween D and E and get every- body squared.” A similar street vacation occurred in 1999, when the city vacated a 10-foot por- tion of D Street east of South Ocean Avenue for one block, Connell said. See Error, Page 6A