SEASIDESIGNAL.COM • COMPLIMENTARY COPY OUR 110th YEAR • June 24, 2016 Zero to 60 in 2.5! SEASIDE SIGNAL/FILE PHOTO Seaside School District Superintendent Doug Dougherty and geologist Tom Horning at Sea- side Heights Elementary School in April. The Weyerhaeuser land site can be seen behind them. Weyerhaeuser gift could lead to November school vote 80 acres designated for new campus By R.J. Marx Seaside Signal The school in one of the most dangerous locations in America could fi nd a new home. Seaside High School, located in the tsunami in- undation zone, will receive an 80-acre gift from Weyerhaeuser Co . for a new school campus lo- cated in a safer area. “Weyerhaeuser is generously donating 80 acres of land to Seaside School District to re- locate its schools,” Doug Dougherty, Seaside School District superintendent, said on Friday, June 17. “We will own the property that meets the Oregon Department of Geology and Miner- als Industries’ safety recommendations prior to going out for a bond.” Dougherty said ownership of land out- side the tsunami inundation zone was a con- dition many community members request- ed before voting to fund a new school bond. A 2013 bond to move the Seaside schools out of the inundation zone failed at the polls when voters rejected a $128.8 million bond proposal. According to Dougherty, there are only four public K-12 schools in Oregon within the tsunami inundation zone. “Weyerhaeuser understands that Seaside School District has three of these four schools and that there is no other suitable land available,” Dougherty said. Rare ‘supercar’ a highlight of the show By R.J. Marx Seaside Signal W ith 0-60 in 2.5 seconds and a top speed of 200 mph, nobody just takes the Kepler Motors Mo- tion out for a spin. The “Super- car” made its Seaside Muscle and Chrome Car Show debut, featuring 550-horsepower, 3.5 liter twin-turbo engine, all-wheel drive and acceleration from 0 to 60 mph in less than 2.5 seconds. The most expensive car in the world was made entirely by hand; only 50 were produced. R.J. MARX/SEASIDE SIGNAL See Kepler, Page 10A Skeleton man at the wheel. See Schools, Page 6A Kids get an introduction to gardening in Seaside Healthy eating and a learning opportunity By Katherine Lacaze For Seaside Signal PAID prefer throughout life, but also that nutrition will help them do better in every aspect,” said Hassan, a retired nurse. “Let’s face it: nutrition is everything when children are developing. It’s physical, it’s mental, it’s emotional.” Besides, she added, “There’s such magic, taking that tiny seed that grows into a fabulous plant.” Seaside High School seniors Sam Beaudoin, Raiden Bowles and Josef Barbic built the gar- den’s plant containers for their PERMIT NO. 97 ASTORIA, OR PRSRT STD US POSTAGE Children who want to learn about nutrition and experience the thrill of growing their own produce now have a place to call their own at the recently completed Youth Garden be- hind the Sunset Pool. The Youth Garden, locat- ed on Sunset Empire Park and Recreation District property adjacent to the Sunset “Sunny Hunt” Pool Garden, was un- veiled to the public during a grand opening June 8. Master gardeners Mary Blake and Barbara Hassan helped spearhead a campaign to provide a garden for children that is being used within the district’s preschool and youth programs. “If we can get children to alter their palates, to make healthy choices early in life, that’s what they’re going to Pacifi ca Project. District staff, along with Hassan and her hus- band and fellow master garden- er Ed, helped with construction. What used to be an old park- ing area that was plagued with standing water and a real drain- age problem is now resolved with a beautiful garden, Hassan said. The project was fi nanced by the high school students’ proj- ect sponsors, as well as the rec- reation district. See Garden, Page 7A SUE CODY/FOR SEASIDE SIGNAL Young girls admire an artichoke plant that is taller than they are at the more established Sunny Hunt Garden adjacent to the youth garden. Saying farewell to Father Nick Beloved pastor returning to his African homeland By R.J. Marx Seaside Signal DANNY MILLER/EO MEDIA GROUP Father Nicholas Nilema says goodbye to church-goers follow- ing morning services in Seaside. Father Nicholas Nilema —Father Nick to all — is preparing to leave Seaside at the end of July, and his “family” here is already miss- ing him. “I will miss them here too,” Nilema said. “It’s really a family, my family. For us as mis- sionaries, everywhere we go or are sent, we make a family.” During his 18 years in Seaside as pastor of Our Lady of Victory, Nilema counted as his accomplishments the rebuilding of the church, outreach to the homeless and partnerships within the community. “It’s a loving, caring community,” Nile- ma said. “People’s needs are the same every- where. When people lose a loved one or fami- ly members, it’s the same.” Flashing his famous smile, he added: “Ex- cept there are some differences in the social aspects.” Raised in Tanzania, East Africa on the slopes of Mount Kilimanjaro, the high moun- tain in Africa, Nilema attended seminary to study accounting before his call to the min- istry. He served with a small parish near Mwanza in the Lake Victoria region, before an assignment at Saint Therese Parish in east Portland in July 1992 as a member of the As- sociated Life Community of Priests, a mis- sionary order that fi lls the need for priests. In 1997 Nilema arrived in Seaside, which, he said, was even smaller than his Tanzani- an birthplace. He devoted his attention to the community, especially the ill, the elder- ly and those will special needs. He formed a ministry at Providence Seaside Hospital and administers to families in Astoria at Colum- bia Memorial Hospital. He is a key founder of the emergency shelter with Alan Evans of See Farewell, Page 7A