6A • January 8, 2016 • Seaside Signal • seasidesignal.com Downtown trash collection to get artistic New garbage receptacles to include decorated doors By Katherine Lacaze Seaside Signal These trash cans almost look too good to put trash in. Artistically decorated recep- tacles are the newest effort by the Seaside Public Works Department to make the downtown cleaner and more attractive. The project should wind up in the spring, when 43 new receptacles are installed on Broadway and those cur- rently on the street get rotated elsewhere downtown, bring- ing the total to about 250 re- ceptacles, Public Works Di- rector Dale McDowell said. McDowell is gathering ideas for how to make the garbage receptacles more visually appealing. At the weekly Seaside Downtown Development Association meeting Dec. 31, Executive Director Tita Montero shared photos of examples for the style of art that could be used. The downtown associ- ation is partnering on the project and donated $1,500 to purchase additional col- lection cans for the inside of the receptacles so the cans can be removed and washed more frequently, Montero said. KATHERINE LACAZE PHOTO/SEASIDE SIGNAL The Seaside Public Works Department provided the Seaside Downtown Development Associ- ation with a few samples of potential artwork styles to be used for the new garbage recepta- cles to be placed on Broadway in the spring. Each new receptacle will cost about $650 apiece, or closer to $800 apiece includ- ing shipping and handling, McDowell said. Adjacent ash urns, under consideration, would cost an additional $129. The downtown associa- tion has discussed the need for more garbage receptacles on several occasions during the past few years. “We all know that regular trash removal and keeping the containers as clean as possible are also major fac- tors inÀuencing the opinion that residents and visitors have about our downtown,” Montero said. McDowell said City Man- ager Mark Winstanley, who personally picks up trash downtown, also recognized the need and approved the project. Especially on busy days during the summer, the down- town trash cans tend to ¿ll ² and overÀow ² quicker than they are emptied by the Pub- lic Works Department. “We get so busy in the summertime,” McDowell said. “The crew has a hard time keeping up because there are so many people.” It has been several years since the downtown area got more trash cans. McDowell hopes, by adding more re- ceptacles, they will not ¿ll as quickly and people will be more incentived to throw away their garbage rather than littering. While researching a good model, McDowell consid- ered a few important aspects of the receptacles: they need to have side doors for remov- ing trash, to prevent injuries from city employees pulling full, heavy trash bags out vertically; the doors must lockable and have a ¿nish for Museum seeks ‘new people’ to carry on Saltmakers from Page 1A Tucker said the event’s “lack of authenticity” and inability to meet “National Park Service standards for ¿rst-person interpretation” were the main reasons the government agency termi- nated its involvement. The program is also ex- pensive, especially since it is not held on National Park Service property, Tucker said. Faced with dwindling budgets, the agency cannot afford to use human resourc- es and funds to be a partner for the event. Program fails to meet ‘standards’ In January 1806, after the Corps of Discovery settled into Fort Clatsop, a detach- ment came down to Seaside with Capt. William Clark to make salt to preserve food for the winter and the trip back to the United States. “The Saltmakers Return to Seaside” recreated the expe- rience, providing an interac- tive opportunity for people to learn about the explorers. The museum, in partnership with the Lewis and Clark National Historical Park, started the program in 2001. The presentation was held on the beach in Seaside and typically attracted about 2,000 people a year. “First-person interpreta- tion is extremely dif¿cult, and it is rarely done within the National Park Service because it takes historically accurate interpreters to do the programming,” Tucker said. Volunteer program man- ager and park ranger Sally Freeman agreed, adding the National Park Service needs interpreters who resemble the historical ¿gures and can ac- curately portray them through training and research. “It’s a huge challenge,” she said. The program Until last year, the mu- seum contracted with in- terpreters from the Paci¿c Northwest Living Histori- ans. They dressed in period costume to portray members of the expedition as they made salt from seawater for visitors over a 48-hour time period. Technically the interpreters volunteered for the park service, though, so they could fall under the agency’s liability insurance. The arrangement was “an awkward piece” that should have been identi¿ed as prob- lematic 10 years ago “and wasn’t,” Tucker said. The event was designed so visitors would feel they actu- ally were entering the Corps of Discovery’s encampment in 1806. They could even barter with time period-ap- propriate items. “We asked people to transport themselves and their minds to the camp,” Freeman said. However, it was deter- mined through discussions last year that the Paci¿c Northwest Living Historians no longer could physically “represent the Corps of Dis- covery in the ¿rst-person” in a historically accurate way and had not recruited new members to step into those roles, Tucker said. Last year, the program turned into a one-day event, and National Park Service rangers provided a third-per- son representation, with in- terpreters dressed in period costume but not trying to play speci¿c historical ¿g- ures, Freeman said. The National Park Service invited the Paci¿c Northwest Living Historians to partic- ipate in the third-person in- terpretation event, but they declined. “It seemed like it went just as well that way,” Freeman said. The agency does not plan to continue as a partner for The Saltmakers Return, even as a third-person interpretive event, Tucker said. “It’s too cost-prohibitive for a one-day program,” powered by a long life; and the external parts of the receptacles must be made of cement so they can be power-washed. The model selected, man- ufactured by Gilmore-Kram- er, has a life expectancy of about 10 years and the ¿nish should last about three years. The artwork could be painted on the doors by stu- dents or other community members or it could be vi- nyl decals, which are easy to clean and can be replaced. “No two have to be the same,” McDowell said. He still is taking input on the art aspect, but the depart- ment will not use advertise- ments. The new receptacles will be put along Broadway, “because we want the art- work there,” McDowell said, and the others will be moved to different locations down- town. “We’ll kind of rotate our stock a little bit,” he said. Once the department gauges how the public re- sponse to the new look, Mc- Dowell can decide if they will continue the trend of us- ing artwork to spruce up the downtown. “We’re just trying to step it up a little bit,” he said. He likes the samples he has re- searched so far. “For a gar- bage can, they look really doggone good.” He wants everyone on the same page before ordering the receptacles, but he plans to get them installed before spring break. Montero said the associ- ation looks forward “to the culmination of this goal.” To give input to McDow- ell, email dmcdowell@city- ofseaside.us or call (503) 738-5112. DINING on the NORTH COAST Great Restaurants in: GEARHART SEASIDE CANNON BEACH Excellence in family dining found from a family that has been serving the North Coast for the past 52 years Great Great Great Homemade Breakfast, lunch and pasta, Clam but that’s dinner steaks & Chowder, not all... menu,too! seafood! Salads! Seaside • 323 Broadway • 738-7234 (Open 7 Days) Cannon Beach • 223 S. Hemlock 436-2851 (7am-3pm Daily) Astoria • 146 W. Bond • 325-3144 SUBMITTED PHOTO/SEASIDE SIGNAL A living historian at the 2013 Saltmakers Return event. he said, adding the park also discontinued its own ¿rst-person living history program, called “Wintering Over,” held annually the weekend before Martin Lu- ther King Jr. Day. Seeking new options The national park will seek opportunities to work with the museum on cost-effective programs that highlight Seaside’s historical signi¿cance and connection to the Corps of Discovery expedition. Without going through the National Park Service, the Seaside Museum can- not provide liability insur- ance for volunteers for an event like the Saltmakers, Montero said. Additional- ly, the museum’s own vol- unteer population is aging, she said. “This program needs new people” if it’s going to continue, said Monte- ro, who also serves on the Seaside City Council. “It’s a very labor-intensive pro- gram.” Rather than letting the program struggle and “slide downhill slowly,” the mu- seum board decided “it’s much better in our mind to stop and regroup,” Montero said. To reach a decision about the event’s long-term continuation, the muse- um board is inviting com- munity organizations and residents to participate in a series of discussions re- garding the requirements, processes and possibilities for resuming the program in 2017. “We want to open the door for anybody to join with us and be part of the whole thing,” Montero said. People interested in par- ticipating can call 503-738- 7065 or visit the museum at 570 Necanicum Drive. 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