A4 • Friday, December 25, 2020 | Seaside Signal | SeasideSignal.com SignalViewpoints For Rivera, dreams destroyed in an instant SEEN FROM SEASIDE R.J. MARX Gabriel Rivera, 20, was found dead in north Portland in the early morning of Dec. 2 of gunshot wounds. Rivera was the 48th homicide victim in Portland this year. His family wants to make sure he is more than just another unsolved homicide. “Even though Gabe died as a young man, he will always be a child in my eyes,” his cousin Nourah AlJaber said. Rivera lived in Seaside in his teens and attended Seaside High School where he made many friends, his grandmother, Rochelle Paputsis, said. Rivera moved to Portland in mid-Octo- ber with his fi ancee, Ashlee Ruppert, to be closer to their families. “We thought coming home would be good for him,” Paputsis said. “He was coming home to his family. We didn’t expect this at all.” Rivera worked 10-hour shifts as a fork- lift driver as well as doing deliveries for Door Dash. “He had dreams and plans, and set to work on building a good life and future,” his grandmother said. “He wanted babies. He said, ‘I don’t want just one baby, I want lots of babies.’” Rivera left the Pier Park area on foot in the early morning hours of Dec. 2 and was discovered near North Columbia Boule- vard and Bank Street, not more than a mile from his last known location. “My daughter called me a little bit ear- lier and asked if Gabe had made it,” Paput- sis said. “I said no.” The fi rst report of the homicide came at 7 a.m. on local TV news. Offi cers found a man’s body while con- Family of Gabriel Rivera Gabriel Rivera, a former Seaside resident who was a victim of an unsolved homicide on Dec. 2 in Portland. ducting a welfare check not far from Pap- utsis’ home. The family spent hours of uncertainty before confi rming Rivera’s identity at the city morgue. Rivera lived with a family friend in Sea- side as a teenager while attending school . He enrolled in December 2014 and trans- ferred in 2016. He liked to mountain bike, skateboard and had a love of animals and nature. “Seaside provided the comfort of a small and safe community,” Paputsis said. Rivera was supposed to visit his father in Mexico for the Christmas holiday, Pap- utsis said. His father was “really excited, and he (Rivera) was really excited about going there,” she said. “Then this happened, so his father requested that we send his body to Mexico where he would be bur- ied nearby.” Family members started a fundraiser on GoFundMe to help with the cost of send- ing the body to Mexico and burial costs, including embalming, transportation to the city morgue, the service and casket. Since Rivera was born in the United States, the funeral director sent a petition to the Mexican Embassy seeking repatri- ation for the burial. The family is await- ing response. As a “Plan B,” Paputsis said, a family friend donated a plot locally in case he is unable to be buried in Mexico. The funeral, which was private, was held Dec. 19. The Portland Police Bureau’s last update on the Rivera case was posted Dec. 3. “We have nothing further to release at this time,” a spokesman said. The family still seeks answers for the motive and suspect. “We just don’t know,” Paputsis said. “We have no idea. He was alone. It was dark. He was a target, that’s what I’m thinking. I’ve seen so many shootings here.” Guadalupe fur seal pup found abandoned on the beach SEASIDE AQUARIUM WENDI AGALZOFF Seaside Aquarium got at call at 9 a.m. last Saturday morning about an abandoned seal pup stranded along the shore in Cannon Beach. The pup ended up being a Gua- dalupe fur seal, a threatened spe- cies of pinniped with an estimated population of only 34,000. The seal was thin, dehydrated and a bit out of its normal range. After coordinating with National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and SR3, a rehab facility in Des Moines, Washing- ton, Seaside Aquarium staff suc- cessfully recovered and helped bring the seal to treatment. Guadalupe fur seals are a rare sight to see on the Oregon Coast. The species is native to the Pacifi c coastal waters of northern Mexico and southern California. However, young fur seals can travel long distances follow- ing warm off-shore currents and become cold-shocked by northern ocean temperatures along Oregon and Washington coastlines. Endemic to Guadalupe Island off the west coast of Mexico’s Baja Peninsula, the threatened spe- cies of Guadalupe fur seal (Arcto- cephalus townsendi) has an esti- mated population of only 34,000 individuals. Throughout the 1800s the species was hunted to near extinction for their thick layer of fi ne fur. Since the 1950s the spe- cies has been protected by United States and Mexico law and is pro- tected under the Endangered Spe- cies Act and Marine Mammal Pro- tection Act. Guadalupe fur seals are consid- ered a species of sea-lion, charac- terized by their long front fl ippers and ear fl aps. The “eared seal” is not social while at sea and typi- cally does not migrate or travel far from the breeding waters of Guadalupe Island. However, during seasonal changes, young pups follow warmer currents and can become stranded in the cold waters off the Oregon Coast. Unlike our local pinnipeds (sea lions and seals) the fur seal lacks a layer of blubber to regu- late body temperature in colder waters. Once sluggish and cold, these warm-water pinnipeds are known to become tangled in rope and debris. Thankfully the local Marine Mammal Stranding Network is actively working with Guadalupe fur seal experts to help recover wayward fur seals that are found on our coastline. Since 1995 Seaside Aquar- ium has spearheaded the South- ern Washington Northern Oregon Marine Mammal Stranding Net- work, a collaboration of experts and volunteers to respond to stranded sea mammals along the southern Washington and northern Oregon Coast. Through this pro- gram, locally stranded Guadalupe fur seals are able to be recovered and transported to a rehabilitation center in southern California. According to the Marine Mam- mal Center, release back to the wild is the ultimate goal for every animal. To be released, animals must pass fi nal examinations, proving Tiff any Boothe Once stable the Guadalupe fur seal will be transferred to a rehab facility in California and if all goes well eventually released. they are able to successfully for- age for fi sh. All animals receive a fl ipper tag; some that are released may receive satellite or radio tags so their progress can be tracked. As for the fur seal found in Can- non Beach last week, after a brief nap at the Seaside Aquarium, the seal was given fl uids and trans- ferred. Once stable, the seal will be transferred to a rehabilitation facil- ity in California, and if all goes well, eventually released. For more information about the Marine Mammal Stranding Network please call the Seaside Aquarium 503-738-6211. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Where’s the business plan? Serving on a govern- ment board is very diffi cult. The knowledge required is immense plus the time to research and analyze all sides of an issue. The role may also lead to sleepless nights trying to decide what is best for all. I asked each of you sev- eral months ago to stop and research the proposal to purchase Broadway Mid- dle School thoroughly and get the public (taxpayers) involved but it appears you are proceeding ahead with- out doing this. Where is Sunset Empire Park and Recreation Dis- trict’s business plan for the property and district, the strategic plan (being worked on now), and is this something your bosses (tax- payers) want? Maybe they do or would after they have all the facts. Over the past few months, more informa- tion has been uncovered. It seems many discussions have been held behind closed doors and we, tax- payers, would appreci- ate having the information. Ideas have been fl oated that maybe your employees hav- en’t thought of, i.e., asking the school district to split the property. Private indi- viduals, who wish to use the gyms for their private fi nancial gain, could pur- chase them. The school and SEPRD could rent the space as needed and the prop- erty would be back on the tax rolls. Also, removal by a private developer of the old school and new con- struction for commer- cial use, could be another opportunity. Please listen and talk to us. We all wish what is best for our community so let’s work together. Margene Ridout Former SEPRD board member Vacation rentals hurt our quality of life In response to a letter to the editor from members of the Seaside Vacation Rental Association. In their letter one state- ment was “More specifi - cally, we were never suc- cessful in getting data from you supporting the primary concerns you all expressed of signifi cant negative citi- zen complaints.” I do not live in Sea- side, I live in Gearhart and believe me, neighbors here do not like vacation rentals. Vacation rental own- ers may contribute fi nan- cially to the city or county, but you are not the only source of revenue. So are permanent homeowners. Permanent homeowners who live here full time are a lot more invested in their community than temporary vacation home renters and owners that live elsewhere. Vacation renters do not care, they may not ever stay here again. I person- ally have three vacation rentals directly behind my home and they are a con- stant nightmare. Every night we must endure bright outdoor fl ood lights shining at our house. Why do vacation home owners think they must install bright lights on the outside of their houses? Do they not understand that surrounding neigh- bors must put up with those bright lights that renters never bother to turn off? We are unable to sit out and enjoy our back patio in the evening because of the lights, and that is only a small part of what we endure. There is loud music, parties out on the vacation rental decks that face us and even fi reworks being shot off. These are not little sparklers but com- mercial type fi reworks. And not just on the Fourth of July, but anytime a renter happens to bring them. There is no way these vacation homeowners are present to address these problems and the renters know that so they don’t care. They are only here for their own enjoyment and it’s not their neighborhood. And I can assure the Seaside Vacation Rental Association my neigh- bors don’t like your rental houses either, but we feel like we are powerless and our only option is to sell our home and move. Sharon Robinson Gearhart Sunset Empire Park and Rec- reation District Board of Direc- tors, 5:15 p.m., 1225 Avenue A. Seaside School District, 6 p.m., www.seaside.k12.or.us/meet- ings. PUBLIC MEETINGS Contact local agencies for latest meeting information and atten- dance guidelines. MONDAY, Dec. 28 Sunset Empire Park and Recreation District, 5 p.m., CIRCULATION MANAGER Jeremy Feldman ADVERTISING SALES MANAGER Sarah Silver- Tecza PUBLISHER EDITOR Kari Borgen R.J. Marx special meeting, sunsetem- pire.com. Gearhart City Council, 6 p.m., work session, 670 Pacifi c Way. TUESDAY, Dec. 29 TUESDAY, Jan. 19 PRODUCTION MANAGER CONTRIBUTING WRITERS John D. Bruijn Skyler Archibald Darren Gooch Joshua Heineman Rain Jordan Katherine Lacaze Esther Moberg SYSTEMS MANAGER Carl Earl Seaside Signal Letter policy Subscriptions The Seaside Signal is published every other week by EO Media Group, 1555 N. Roosevelt, Seaside, OR 97138. 503-738-5561 seasidesignal.com Copyright © 2020 Seaside Signal. Nothing can be reprinted or copied without consent of the owners. The Seaside Signal welcomes letters to the editor. The deadline is noon Monday prior to publication. Letters must be 400 words or less and must be signed by the author and include a phone number for verifi cation. We also request that submissions be limited to one letter per month. Send to 1555 N. Roosevelt Drive, Seaside, OR 97138, drop them off at 1555 N. Roosevelt Drive or fax to 503-738-9285, or email rmarx@seasidesignal.com Annually: $40.50 in county • $58.00 in and out of county • e-Edition: only $30.00 POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Seaside Signal, P.O. 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