SEASIDESIGNAL.COM • COMPLIMENTARY COPY OUR 111th YEAR • March 17, 2017 CHAMPIONS! Seaside Head Coach Bill Westerholm celebrates his team’s victory after Seaside defeated Valley Catholic 71-63 in the 4A State Cham- pionship game on Saturday, March 11, in Forest Grove. DANNY MILLER/EO MEDIA GROUP By Gary Henley EO Media Group F OREST GROVE — Small in stature, big in heart. And pretty good in quickness, defense, passing, ball-handling, speed, shooting ability, etc. Add it all up, and it equaled an unbeatable combina- tion for the Seaside High School boys basketball program, over the course of the 2016-17 season. And ultimately, it gave the Gulls’ their fi rst-ever state championship. With their 71-63 win over Valley Catholic at For- est Grove High School late Saturday night, the Gulls indeed made school history, as they returned home with the town’s fi rst state championship in boys bas- ketball. Was there ever a doubt? The Gulls were ranked No. 1 at the Class 4A level almost from Day 1 of the season. With the returning state Player of the Year and a host of quick and talented (but not very tall) athletes, the Seaside boys showed early on that they would be nearly impossible to beat. They lost just once, to Valley Catholic, Feb. 10. Af- ter that, the Gulls closed out the regular season with two must-wins. And with their colors of Red, White and Columbia Blue, they fl ew past the competition in the playoffs and the state tournament, winning fi ve in a row — including two victories over the Valiants. See Champions, Page 10A Gearhart 9-1-1: Committee says fi rehouse needs to be replaced By R.J. Marx Seaside Signal R.J. MARX/SEASIDE SIGNAL PAID PERMIT NO. 97 ASTORIA, OR PRSRT STD US POSTAGE The Gearhart Firehouse could be underwater even in a medi- um size tsunami. Members of Gearhart’s fi rehouse committee present- ed fi ndings Tuesday night and left the audience with life-and- death questions to ponder. Goals of the committee are to replace the 59-year-old fi re- house, built of unreinforced masonry and considered inad- equate by modern standards, at a cost voters will approve. Appeal decision awaits at Pearl Oceanfront Resort Height at issue in hotel variance council appeal By R.J. Marx Seaside Signal A snafu in the submission of a legal notice delayed a de- cision on the future of a new hotel on the Prom . But parties in favor and against a height variance al- lowing construction of the proposed three-story, 45- room Pearl Oceanfront Resort on 341 South Prom made their cases before city councilors during an appeals hearing Monday night. Because of an 8-foot grade difference between the east and west sides of the build- ing, a variance was needed to allow the increase to 60 feet for the roof height at the west building wing, an addition of 15 feet over the 45 feet al- lowed by city zoning. The Planning Commission granted the variance in Janu- ary, a decision appealed to the City Council by Susan and Dan Calef, owners of a du- plex at 25 Avenue A. This is their second appeal of the pro- posed structure. City coun- cilors returned the project to the Planning Commission last year after rejecting a setback variance approval. “The hardship is develop- ing this property at all, giv- en not only the 8-foot grade See Pearl, Page 6A Of nine locations studied, the committee narrowed the choices down to three: Gear- hart Park; the current site at 670 Pacifi c Way; and Trail’s End, directly across from the fi re station on the south side of Pacifi c Way. Sites north and east of the city were considered but re- jected from primary consid- eration. “We’re really dealing with the best of a series of bad sce- narios,” fi rehouse committee co-chairman Jay Speakman said. “We have no perfect answer, so we came up with what we thought as a group was a lot of bad choices. I hate to put it that way — but when you’re looking at the Big One, there’s no perfect location.” A change of plan A 2006 plan which in- cluded a fi rehouse building with a C ity H all component was defeated by voters, City Administrator Chad Sweet said. “That was a large build- ing with beautiful pictures, 17,000 square feet. Peo- ple said, ‘That’s not needed around here. That’s too big.’” This time around, com- mittee members eliminated the C ity H all component and reduced the size of the public See Firehouse, Page 9A From princess to queen Program raises scholarship funds, self-esteem By R.J. Marx Seaside Signal R.J. MARX/SEASIDE SIGNAL Miss Oregon 2016 Alexis Mather and Han- nah Garhofer. “Oh my goodness!” Hannah Garhofer said after being crowned Miss Clatsop County . “So many emotions right now! I’m thankful for this opportunity to serve Clatsop County, because it truly takes a village to raise a child. And they have raised me for the past 20 years.” Garhofer was one of three young women awarded the Miss Clatsop County Scholarship Program’s top honors Saturday night, March 11, at the Seaside Civic and Convention Cen- ter. Winners receive scholarship awards while serving as ambassadors to the community. Nicole Ramsdell, 15, of Astoria was se- lected Miss North Coast’s Outstanding Teen. She attends Astoria High School. Peyton Sims was named Miss Clatsop Coun- ty’s Outstanding Teen. Sims, 13, is an eighth- grader at Broadway Middle School in Seaside. See Princess, Page 9A