OUR 113th Year October 16, 2020 SEASIDESIGNAL.COM $1.00 Agreement calls for $2.25M middle school purchase By R.J. MARX Seaside Signal Sunset Empire Park and Recreation District board members got a look at the district’s newest purchase, Broadway Middle School. Visiting in shifts with executive director Sky- ler Archibald, they toured the middle school, looking everywhere and opening every door, both to inven- tory what’s already there and note items that may require remediation. Park district board mem- bers approved a resolution to seek fi nancing for up to $2.5 million in a special meeting last Thursday. With a purchase price of $2.25 million, 3 acres are zoned residential and 2.4 acres are zoned for com- mercial use of the 5.4-acre middle school property. The 73,000-square-foot build- ing includes the school with two gyms, cafeteria and kitchen. The school is vacant after the school dis- trict moved the campus to a new location on Spruce Drive outside the tsunami inundation zone. In seeking tax-exempt debt fi nancing, the park district is represented by a member of the Special Dis- tricts Association of Ore- gon, Archibald said, using fi nancing options the dis- trict has used in the past to expand the Sunset Pool and acquire park district property. The park district has 45 days to conduct due dil- igence, at which point the earnest money would become nonrefundable. With a building inspec- tion underway and expected to be complete this week, “that will give us plenty of time to assess whether we need to order more reports or look into the boiler or HVAC,” Archibald said at a Tuesday board of directors work session. “I don’t think we saw anything today that was crazy or alarming, but there were a few puddles that had accumulated inside in a couple of spots,” Archibald said. These included mois- ture near a classroom, the weight room and a gym area, he said. The school, built in 1949, received upgrades in 1979 and a new gym in 1994. Norris & Stevens See School, Page A3 Aerial view, Broadway Middle School. Sunset Empire Park and Recreation District is located at top right-center. CANDIDATE FORUM Gearhart wrestles with confl icting goals By R.J. MARX Seaside Signal Katherine Lacaze Dan Jesse and Jack Zimmerman, candidates for Gearhart’s Position 4. GEARHART SEASIDE Firehouse, school are hot issues Candidates focus on housing, pandemic By KATHERINE LACAZE For Seaside Signal The site of a new fi re sta- tion, the performance of City Administrator Chad Sweet, and the old Gearhart Elementary School property were the main topics of dis- cussion among candidates seeking seats on the Gear- hart City Council in the Nov. 3 election . “We’re trying to put for- ward some of the big-picture questions and hoping to ask questions of candidates that require them to carefully refl ect on the issues,” said R.J. Marx, editor of the Sea- side Signal and moderator of the forum that was held in Seaside last Thursday in col- laboration with the Ameri- can Association of Univer- sity Women. Candidates discussed the City Council’s recent deci- sion to forgo giving Sweet a salary increase, but rather proposing a performance review in the spring. Paulina Cockrum, who is running unopposed for Gear- hart mayor, said Sweet’s employment agreement requires an annual review to be completed before the city budgeting process. Gearhart missed the review this year. “We want to get back on track with what that contract says to have another review in six months,” Cockrum said. Dan Jesse, the incum- bent for Position 4, said the decision wasn’t based on the city administrator’s perfor- mance. “I wouldn’t read into the review process and the fact that (Sweet) didn’t get a raise. Frankly, I don’t think we had a discussion whatso- ever about his pay.” See Gearhart, Page A5 By KATHERINE LACAZE For Seaside Signal Housing, response to the coronavirus pandemic and an open carry rally in Sep- tember dominated the dis- cussion of those running for the Ward 4 seat on the Sea- side City Council during a candidate forum last Thursday. Candidates David Posal- ski, Adam Wood and Kathy Kleczek discussed ways to balance the housing needs of local residents with those of vacation rental owners. Posalski said as a mem- ber of the Planning Com- mission, he and commis- sioners established a code enforcement offi cer whose job is to monitor and ver- ify the regulations and restrictions. At fi rst, the decision got “a lot of pushback from vacation rental dwelling owners because it added to their fees for business licenses,” he said. Over time, however, they showed appreciation for the ability “to know when their management companies are actually doing the job they’re sup- posed to be doing,” Pos- alski said. “It ended up becoming a win-win.” This type of mea- sure, along with caps on the percentage of vacation rental dwellings, can help improve the livability of the community, Posalski said. Kleczek responded that blaming vacation rentals for the city’s housing crisis is “a falsifi cation.” “It’s not to the point where we have empty and vacant rooms during the summer,” Kleczek said. The problem is skyrock- eting property values, she See Seaside, Page A5 Calls from businesses and residents to abandon commercial zoning amend- ments came at a Gearhart Planning Commission pub- lic hearing last Thursday . They say restrictive zon- ing is “strangling” existing businesses, particularly at a time when they are limited by coronavirus restrictions. As the commission con- sidered updates to the code before sending it to the City Council for action, hearing participants said the changes were vague, overly restric- tive, poorly timed and pre- sented without adequate public input. “When the entire coun- try and world are in the midst of a pandemic and an ever-changing business landscape,” wrote Ocean Avenue resident Jamie Gay- lord wrote in a letter to plan- ners, “why do you feel it is necessary to impose restric- tions on them before we even know what the reality will be for them in the near future?” Business owner Joy Sigler asked the city to aban- don the downtown commer- cial zone altogether and begin a new one. “The language and direc- tion of the changes do not favor the promotion and support of entrepreneurs who would risk investing in this small community,” Sigler said. Patricia Roberts was among the almost two dozen to write letters to the com- mission or speak at the meet- ing. “Are any of you small business owners?” Rob- erts asked planning com- missioners. “Do any of you have a small business in the See Downtown, Page A3 Gearhart buildable lands lower than study indicated By R.J. MARX Seaside Signal Gearhart’s buildable land inventory is signifi cantly less than Clatsop County’s 2018 housing study indicated, a new study reports. Gearhart offi cials went back to the authors, Matt Hastie and Andrew Parish, of Angelo Planning Group, to refi ne the city’s buildable lands inventory and found the building capacity had shrunk by more than 45%, from a projected 701 units in the 2018 report to the poten- tial for 381 new lots on 100 buildable acres in the revised study. If that capacity is reached, Gearhart could face the need to expand its urban growth boundary. “This is really a basis for our housing element and urban growth boundary loca- tion in the event that we ever need to expand,” City Plan- ner Carole Connell said at last See Lands, Page A3 Seaside child care options stretched thin By KATHERINE LACAZE For Seaside Signal Adequate child care has long been an issue in Clat- sop County, but the coronavi- rus pandemic and temporary closure of schools to in-per- son classes has put additional strain on the area’s limited options. In the Seaside area, a few organizations are striving to fi ll the gap. “We’re in it for the long haul,” said Shelly Owen, youth program manager at Sunset Empire Park and Rec- reation District, which has been operating emergency child care for students in kin- dergarten-through-fi fth grade since the start of the school year. “We’ll be doing this until things change.” The park district is provid- ing full, fi ve-day-per-week care for nine kindergartners, 10 fi rst- and second graders, and 10 third-through-fi fth graders — along with their usual Learning Ladder pre- school program. The kinder- gartners meet at the park dis- trict’s youth center, while the two classes of older elemen- tary students take place at the former Broadway Middle School. Planning scenarios The park district isn’t sim- ply offering child care ser- vices but also providing sup- port for the Seaside School District’s Comprehensive Distance Learning program. “It’s a whole new ball- game,” Owen said, adding it was “a big step” for the park district. “When you are sup- porting a totally new style of learning for children, and you’re learning it yourself, it makes it really challenging.” According to Owen, there is enough demand for child care from local families to open a third classroom, and the district has the space because of their access to the middle school building. However, the staff of 14 — including Owen, who trav- els among the classrooms to oversee operations and fi ll in Sunset Empire Park and Recreation District See Child care, Page A5 Jase Litehiser, playing with slime at the Learning Ladder preschool program. 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