Seaside signal. (Seaside, Or.) 1905-current, July 08, 2016, Page 2A, Image 2

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    2A • July 8, 2016 • Seaside Signal • seasidesignal.com
Brushing up at the museum
R.J. MARX/SEASIDE SIGNAL
Speed on Necanicum Drive will be reduced to 25 mph.
Speed slowdown coming
to Necanicum Drive
By R.J. Marx
Seaside Signal
The Seaside City Council
slowed trafic at its last major
downtown thoroughfare, from
35 to 25 mph.
Acting on a request from
the Seaside Transportation
Advisory Commission, where
Chairman Terry Hartill rec-
ommended lowering the speed
limit along Necanicum Drive
from First to 12th avenues.
“It’s the last street at 35 in Sea-
side, and we believe it’s a little
fast for the city,” Hartill said at
the June 27 council meeting.
Goodman Park, the Seaside
Museum and the Inn at Seaside
are all along the street, he said.
There is only an east sidewalk,
forcing pedestrians to the road-
way.
“I disagree with you total-
ly,” Mayor Don Larson said
in opposing the speed-limit
reduction. He said he did not
want to “putter along, putter
along, putter along. I think it’s
much too slow.”
Other councilors, however,
endorsed the measure.
“That’s my neighborhood,
I drive it every day,” Coun-
cilor Tita Montero said. “I’m
totally in favor of it.”
“The only way this will
work is enforcement,” Jay Bar-
ber said. “It’s just a straight-
away without any limitation.”
Police Chief Dave Ham
said blind spots along the
roadway make it dificult for
drivers pulling out from side
streets. He said there are no
other streets with a 35-mph
limit in the downtown area.
R.J. MARX/SEASIDE SIGNAL
Volunteers and students at work painting the Seaside Museum and Historical Society.
Volunteers and students from the
Tongue Point Job Corps took hold of
paint brushes and got to work June 22 at
the Seaside Museum and Historical So-
ciety and neighboring Butterield Cot-
tage. The Necanicum Drive buildings
received a makeover courtesy the team
and 15 exterior gallons and ive gallons
of trim courtesy of Sherwin Williams
Co. in Gearhart, which donated all paint
and material.
The student team was led by Tongue
Point Job Corps painting instructor Tan-
dy Sturgeon.
“After a year with Tandy, they can
go out and join a union, go in as full-
trained painter making $15-20 an hour,”
Scott Carlton Dyer of Sherwin-Williams
said. “It’s an awesome opportunity for
students to learn new skills.”
The Butterield Cottage is the only
beach cottage museum in Oregon. The
Seaside Museum & Historical Society
interprets the Butterield Cottage to the
era circa 1912. The museum is open for
visitors Monday through Saturday, 10
a.m. to 3 p.m.
— R.J. Marx
Tandy
Sturgeon
of Tongue
Point Job
Corps and
Scott Carl-
ton Dyer
of Sher-
win-Wil-
liams lead
a team to
repaint the
Seaside
Museum.
SEASIDE POLICE LOG
June 19
2:04 a.m., First and Prome-
nade: A combination robbery/
kidnap incident occurred;
no further information was
available.
4:21 p.m., the Beach: A distur-
bance was reported. As it was
verbal in nature, no crime was
reported.
8:38 p.m., Broadway: Property
crimes were observed and
reported to the police.
8:44 p.m., 500 block Avenue
G: Caller reports man yelling at
and taunting tourists. Police are
unable to locate.
11:54 p.m., Stop ‘n Go: Oicers
respond to a report of a possi-
bly intoxicated individual; po-
lice make contact with the man
who is not impaired and there
are no signs of open containers
in his vehicle.
June 20
12:52 a.m., Huckleberry Drive:
Caller reports alarm blaring
from a neighborhood car. Po-
lice locate vehicle and turn of
the alarm. There were no signs
of forced entry.
1:37 a.m., 300 block S. Colum-
bia: Police respond to a report
of a car blocking the roadway
and the sidewalk. Driver tells
police he’s run out of gas; police
assist in pushing the car to an
adjacent parking spot.
2:59 p.m., S. Roosevelt: A
disturbance was reported.
No further information was
available.
3:00 p.m., 800 block 2nd
Avenue: Property crimes were
reported.
3:59 p.m., 1st and Holladay:
Police respond to a report of
a group of Hispanic men ist
ighting. Police are unable to
locate either the men or the
described vehicle.
8:24 p.m., Estuary: Caller
reports 2 boys horsing around
and knocking over public gar-
bage cans and engaging in oth-
er criminal mischief. Police are
unable to locate the juveniles.
June 21
6:25 p.m., 1800 block Spruce:
Mischievous children running
through a neighbor’s yard and
calling the neighbor names
were located by police who ad-
vise them not to trespass again
on that person’s property.
7:48 p.m., 200 block Broadway:
Caller reports a man on a roof;
police responding ind painting
supplies and a sign on the roof,
but not the person.
11:49 p.m., Broadway and
Columbia: Rowdy juveniles
reported to be throwing water
balloons at pedestrians are
warned of disorderly conduct.
June 22
1:47 p.m., N. Holladay: Police
assistance is requested by
motel management regarding
a guest who refuses to vacate
a room. Police advise manage-
ment this is a civil matter; the
guest tells police he is leaving,
but on his own time.
7:51 p.m., 12th and Wahanna:
A warrant arrest was conducted
on an individual wanted by
police. No further information
was available.
11:01 p.m. N. Prom: Caller
reports a man entering a hotel
lobby claiming he is being
followed. After interviewing the
subject, police conclude the
man is delusional and warn him
about unlawful lodging.
June 23
12:03 a.m., 300 block S.
Edgewood: Caller reports his
roommate is harassing him.
Police speak to both parties
and determine it is a civil issue.
Both parties are warned against
disorderly conduct.
9:17 a.m., 1500 block S. Roos-
evelt: Police retrieve a bullet left
in a tip jar. The bullet is slated
for destruction.
June 24
9:41 a.m., Avenue S: Caller
reports a man sleeping his
vehicle for a week; another
caller complains the same man
hollered at her about stealing
his cans. Oicers contact both
parties and determine the two
are having an argument about
who owns the cans.
9:58 p.m., S. Edgewood: Prop-
erty crimes were committed.
June 25
3:18 a.m., S. Broadway: An
assault is reported. No further
information was available.
4:34 p.m., Queen Street: Caller
reports subject harassing her
at her home. Police speak with
both parties and determine
the harassment is verbal in
nature; the complained upon
party agrees to go home for
the night.
8:16 p.m., 400 block 1st Ave-
nue: A good Samaritan turns
in a found wallet to the police;
the owner of the wallet comes
to the police station soon after
and is reunited with his wallet.
June 26
Fifty-eight traic stops result-
ing in summonses for various
vehicular transgressions were
conducted by police through-
out Seaside through the day
and into the evening.
7:14 p.m., 1000 block N. Holla-
day: An assault was committed.
No further information was
available.
9:31 p.m., N. Roosevelt: Found
keys were turned in to the
police department.
June 27
5:13 a.m., S. Holladay: A miss-
ing person was reported.
12:09 p.m., 10th Avenue: A
welfare check is conducted.
12:41 p.m., 1800 block S.
Roosevelt: A motor vehicle hit
and run accident occurred.
No further information was
available.
1:16 p.m., Seaside Police De-
partment: A person came in to
register as a sex ofender.
child. No one had any knowl-
edge of the attack. Com-
plainant said he observed the
dog on the child at an address
at the 300 block on S. Colum-
bia. No injuries were seen on
the child and the child’s father
said the dog and the child were
playing and that there was not
attack.
July 1
4:57 p.m., S. Wahanna: A miss-
ing person is reported.
7:08 p.m., Avenue E: A female
transient is reported. Police
advise woman to leave the area
which she did.
July 2
1:20 p.m. N. Prom: Caller
reports a woman in a car with
a child smoking. Police were
unable to locate.
4:04 p.m., Broadway and
Holladay: Caller reports a dog
scratched and damaged his car
during the Miss Oregon parade.
The dog’s owner and the owner
of the vehicle exchanged
information.
4:27 p.m., 4th and Beach: A
missing person was reported.
8:08 p.m., S. Franklin: Police
assist an intoxicated woman
back to her lodging.
top brands. factory-direct Prices.
free coupon book at wine & beer haus or online,
www.seasideoutlets.com
1:54 p.m., 300 block 1st
Avenue: Police and a tow truck
release a child who was acci-
dentally locked inside a vehicle.
10:32 p.m., Seaside: A person
reported missing was said to be
“anywhere in Seaside.”
June 28
2:30 p.m., 300 block Broadway:
Property crimes were commit-
ted and reported.
3:30 p.m., 900 block Broadway:
Police assisted an intoxicated
person back to their lodging.
4:28 p.m., Avenue A: Caller
reports people selling things
on the beach; police contact
subjects who say they aren’t
selling anything but that they
are working on their crafts. No
infraction was committed.
5:49 p.m., Beach and Avenue
G: A dog clever enough to have
igured out how to blow the
horn while locked inside a car
was gone before police arrived.
June 29
9:07 a.m., 1000 block S. Wah-
anna: Two subjects are report-
ed sleeping by a church door.
They are advised by police of
unlawful lodging and urged to
move on.
12:44 p.m., 1500 block S. Roo-
sevelt: Two people claiming to
own the same bicycle attracted
the attention of police who
seized the bike until one of
them could provide proof of
ownership. One of them came
back to the station with valid
proof of ownership the next
day and the bike was released
to its rightful owner.
8:38 p.m., Avenue U: Com-
plainant “thinks” someone
stole something from her store
but has no proof. Oicers are
unable to locate the possible
petty larcenist.
8:57 p.m., S. Columbia: Oicer
contacted people about a
possible dog attack on a small
book warehouse • bruce’s candy kitchen
• carter’s • christoPher & banks • claire’s
• daisy may’s sandwich shoP • dress barn &
dress barn women • eddie bauer • famous
footwear outlet • gnc • helly hansen
• kitchen collection • l’eggs hans bali
Playtex exPress • nike factory store • osh
kosh b’gosh • Pendleton • Perfect look •
rack room shoes • rue 21 • seaside shiPPing
center • the wine & beer haus • tokyo
teriyaki • tOyS “r” US• Van heusen • ZumieZ
- Open -
Monday-Saturday 10-8
Sunday 10-6
12 th Ave. & hwy. 101
SeASide, Or
503.717.1603