OUR 112th Year July 19, 2019 SEASIDESIGNAL.COM $1.00 Mitchell’s emissions cap vote takes heat at town hall By R.J. MARX Seaside Signal R.J. Marx Tiffi ny Mitchell addresses a town hall in the Seaside Library’s Community Room on Saturday. State Rep. Tiffi ny Mitchell came to the Seaside Library on Saturday to present a leg- islative update at her fi rst Seaside town hall. While housing, health care, education and the environment were at the top of her legis- lative agenda, it was her vote for a cap-and- trade bill that drew many of the 50 or so in the audience to hear the Astoria Democrat. House Bill 2020, which would have placed a cap on greenhouse gas emissions to help counter climate change, passed the state House but died in the Senate after a Repub- lican walkout and doubts about Democratic support. “After the election of 2018, we realized we had the opportunity to do some amaz- ing things, and I think we’ve done that,” said Mitchell, who is in her fi rst two-year term. She cited a drug take-back program for safe disposal, a $2 billion state school fund that helps career-oriented education, a plastic bag ban and limits on rent increases, among other legislative items. People in the audience said passage of HB 2020 would have cost jobs and could have led to the loss of local industry if companies Surf camp! ‘THE BIGGEST HILL’ ‘It’s like riding a skateboard down the biggest hill you’ve ever been on.’ — Surf camper Abbie By KATHERINE LACAZE For Seaside Signal O n a muggy afternoon last week, a group of young campers rested on the grainy shore at Short Sand Beach, their hair streaked with salt water after their morning surf session at one of Sunset Empire Park and Recreation District’s Learn to Surf day camps. During the break, they talked about their experience surfi ng in the cold Pacifi c Ocean water atop the gentle waves at Short Sand. “The feeling of catching your fi rst wave is amazing,” said Lindsey, a local middle school student who was back for a second time July 11 after attending the fi rst session June 27. “It’s like, ‘Oh my gosh, I did this.’” Katherine Lacaze See Surf Camp, Page A6 Campers at Sunset Empire Park and Recreation District’s Learn to Surf day camp July 11 at Short Sand Beach in Oswald West State Park. Mike Kadi moved out of the state as a result of tougher climate policies. “The closure of Wauna Mill would com- pound in the community,” Frank Stuhr, a Warrenton resident, said. “We would end up paying signifi cantly more than what the bill requires.” Georgia-Pacifi c, which employs 750 at the paper mill, did not say it would leave the state if the bill became law. But the union that represents mill workers warned about the potential for job losses and a closure. Mitchell defended her support of the bill. See Town hall, Page A6 Celebrating new trails with a party By R.J. MARX Seaside Signal In Oregon, $28 million is generated from off-road travel. “Let’s grab some of that,” Steven Blakesley, president of the North Coast Trail Alliance, said as he addressed mem- bers of the Seaside Chamber of Com- merce at the Holiday Inn Express at a June breakfast meeting. Blakesley’s visit was inspired by the coming July 20 grand opening of trails designed to end in Seaside, from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Klootchy Creek Park on U.S. Highway 26. Lodging facilities like the Holiday Inn and others stand to profi t from the busi- ness coming, which, overall, brings $400 million into the state’s economy. “Six-hundred-twenty-thousand Ore- gonians mountain bike — that’s 15% of us, and it’s growing,” Blakesley said. “Start paying attention to the bikes on the backs of the cars, you’ll see surfboards on top, bikes on the back. Nationally, 45% of bike sales are mountain bikes, he said, and the Ameri- can Mountain Biking Coalition estimates on an average mountain biking vacation, two people over three nights will spend an average of $491. Started in 2015, the North Coast Trail Alliance is a subchapter of the Port- land-based, 1,200-member Northwest Trail Alliance, which provides insurance and acts as a fi scal agent. “Usually to break ground takes fi ve to 10 years,” Blakesley said. “We’re not even a year in under 12 months and we have already three miles of rideable trails.” In late September, the North Coast Trail Alliance began clearing out future riding areas on Lewis & Clark Timberlands north of Klootchy Creek County Park, six miles of downhill, single-track trail to start, with a goal of expanding to 40 connected miles over the next few years. The cyclists’ goal will be to reach the top of Twin Peaks at an elevation of between 1,500 and 1,600 feet. Clatsop County initiated access to the trails and expanded the parking lot. Cyclists intend to celebrate their suc- cesses at the Saturday event and rib- bon-cutting at 11:30 by Mark Morgans of GreenWood Resources, with food and refreshments to follow. “It’s building a community, a whole group that meets together, works together,” Blakesley said. “It’s been phe- nomenal to be a part of that. People are See Trails, Page A6 An artist’s message in Krylon By EVE MARX Seaside Signal Josh Fry describes himself as “a nerd at heart” which is how he transitioned from his 20-year career as a chef to becoming a professional mixed media artist working in stencil and spray paint. Fry is a Seaside native who graduated from Sea- side High School in 1998. He married his high school sweetheart Kate; they have a 10-year-old son, Olly. In 2000 the couple moved to Portland and Fry worked as a cook. In 2013 the couple returned to Seaside, decid- ing that it was a better place to raise a child. One day 10 years ago Fry was meeting his brother Gil at a Portland coffee shop. “There was a good deal of artwork on the walls,” he said. “As I sipped my house drip and waited for Gil’s complicated drink, I wan- dered around looking at the art, being especially drawn to a set of Star Wars-inspired stencil art.” He asked his brother, how people can make this sort of thing “just out of their brain and onto a wall like this.” To which his brother replied, “This sucks. You could do way better.” Fry went out and bought $25 worth of Krylon spray- paint, some cutting blades and painted by moonlight on his son’s easel. “The moment I sprayed my fi rst layer on top of another and saw the effect, I knew I wanted to be really good at this.” His brother helped him build a spraypaint table, a contraption that pulls air through pegboard and shoots it outside, after he Eve Marx See Josh Fry, Page A6 Josh Fry ready for spraypaint work in his Seaside studio.