A4 • Friday, January 8, 2021 | Seaside Signal | SeasideSignal.com SignalViewpoints Sasquatch comes to Seaside SEEN FROM SEASIDE R.J. MARX J ason Lancaster, a former top chef at restaurants along the North Coast, is now displaying his culinary skills from inside his Sasquatch Sandwich Co. food cart parked at Hamilton Market on Avenue U. Lancaster was a chef at Maggie’s on the Prom when he met the restaurant’s co-owner, William Montero. While Lan- caster left Maggie’s several years ago, the two met up at the Seaside Golf Course this fall. Montero invited Lancaster to set up on the parking lot of the market, which he opened in 2019 with family members at the site of Ken’s Market. In December, Seaside approved a spe- cial parking lot sales event permit in response to restrictions for the coronavirus pandemic. “I had the truck and he had the prop- erty,” Lancaster said while grilling an Asian num pang sandwich — pork belly, cucumbers, pickled carrots, cilantro, spicy mayo on a club roll. “This is exactly what I wanted it to be.” Sasquatch Sandwich has a recurring set of specials including the Sasquatch Reu- ben, with pastrami, Swiss cheese, pickled cabbage, Russian dressing on marble rye; the Cubano, pork shoulder, ham, Swiss, pickle, mustard and pub roll; and the salami hero and vegetarian garden sandwich on rye or sourdough. Lancaster, a Seattle native, joined Bridgewater Bistro as a sous chef and grad- uated to chef de cuisine. At The Cove restaurant at the Peninsula Golf Course in Long Beach, Washington, he enhanced his reputation with an Iron Chef Goes Coastal award and was men- tioned in a “picks” selection by The Orego- nian contributor Gerry Frank. He established a permanent truck as part of a food pod in Astoria before buying a second truck, which he tried out this sum- mer at the Seaside Farmers Market and is now debuting for eight weeks every Friday at the Hamilton. He is joined by his partner, Amy Myers, who worked at Maggie’s as a sous chef. Myers, a Portland native, grew up in Hillsboro and the Portland area before her family relocated to Seaside. She brings 27 years of experience to the food truck, work- ing at various restaurants since she was around 10. “I went to culinary school over a decade ago,” Myers said. “I used to be the kitchen manager right here in this neighborhood at the former U Street Pub.” The most diffi cult part of operating a food truck, Lancaster said, is setting up and shutting down. “You’re putting in an hour before you even touch any food,” he said. Unlike in Astoria, where he serves from a fi xed location, moving the cart means loading and packing up. Not done properly, once out of the parking lot the inside of the truck “looks like a bomb went off,” he said. Lancaster, Myers and Montero still face a challenge to maintain a long-term spot in Seaside. In 2018, Seaside restaurant owners largely opposed a request from another food cart owner to operate in Seaside, cit- ing limited housing and the short tour- ist season, which, they said, put brick-and- mortar businesses at a disadvantage. LETTERS Column should be used to build community, not tear it down I love the city I have lived in for the last 56 years and am both happy and proud that our children were raised here, graduating from Seaside High School, participating in sports and learning to swim at our pool. One way of giving back to the com- munity is to be involved in different groups, organizations, associations or perhaps nonprofi ts or various boards or councils. I volunteer hundreds of hours per year out of the interest I share with others in the well being of this commu- nity we call home, it is a way of show- ing gratitude. Part of what a person learns in work- ing with others is the ability to come and reason together. Sometimes this means that we shall agree to disagree after our brainstorming, conversation, debate or even goal setting, but we still move for- ward in a civil manner and seek out the greater good. We all should be able to have a voice in the process and understand we’re often after the same goal even if the pic- ture in my mind is different than the one in your mind. Recently I was disparaged in what used to be a community newspaper col- umn where the person made accusations, called names, misquoted me and even assigned to myself the actions of others. I could have written a much longer retort and replied to the many mistruths and insinuations but I shall spare the readers and simply say that some peo- ple feel that others don’t have the right to be involved in the process and if one has a differing opinion then they are a bad person. This type of behavior is simply manipulative and designed to be used as a scare tactic toward the many who may wish to share an opinion. When a community column is turned into a pul- pit for bullying it is a sad day indeed and works to tear down rather than promote community. Randall L. Frank is a Seaside City Council writing as a private citizen. Taxpayers, beware of debt risk The Sunset Empire Park and Rec- reation District Board of Directors approved the purchase of the Broadway Middle School in their closed session of Dec. 28. What surprises me is how they can move forward without full disclo- sure of all the inspection reports and the remediation costs to the public. In the reports I have read there is no estimate of these costs, only that these issues are very expensive and could be into the millions. The roof needs imme- diate repair estimated at $4 million. With the purchase price, roof replacement, seismic retrofi t, lead paint abatement, asbestos abatement and mold remedia- tion, the costs could reach $10 million to $12 million. Has the board considered these addi- tional costs, repairs and maintenance and ongoing administrative costs. Have they just dismissed them? Why have these issues not been discussed in open session or at least disclosed? Are the taxpayers aware of these costs and that the district receives about $1.7 million in tax revenues per year plus miscella- neous revenues of about $1.2 million (which includes $600,000 opening fund balance) for a total of about $2.9 million per year, which is all allocated already? Where is the money going to come from to repay the loan and repairs that are needed? What programs will be cut or downsized to fund this debt? Why isn’t there transparency on this major cost that the taxpayers will ultimately have to pay? Taxpayers should be aware of how district residents’ money is being spent and how much debt the board will be entering into. Al Hernandez Seaside CIRCULATION MANAGER Jeremy Feldman ADVERTISING SALES MANAGER Sarah Silver- Tecza PUBLISHER EDITOR Kari Borgen R.J. Marx By NICOLE BALES The Astorian ELSIE — Diane Jette describes herself as an independent voter who is socially liberal and fi s- cally conservative. The 74-year-old resident of Elsie, a rural, unincorporated area in the southeastern corner of Clatsop County, said it was her fi scally conser- vative side that compelled her to vote for Presi- dent Donald Trump in 2016. “I had hoped that he would be able to stop our fi nancial bleeding,” Jette said. This year, she said she would have voted for just about anybody to replace Trump. “His personality has come through and also he’s shown himself to be a bigot, which is so, so against my beliefs,” Jette said. “You’d like to hope that the leaders you elected are actually somewhat on your side. And then, of course, I found out he was only on his own side.” Elsie was one of three precincts — along with Stanley Acres and part of Warrenton — that favored Trump in 2016 but fl ipped to for- mer Vice President Joe Biden, the Democrat, in 2020. One precinct — Walluski — switched to the Republican. Despite the coronavirus pandemic, social unrest across the nation and an economic cri- sis, the county’s vote for president did not shift substantially, suggesting voter opinion has only hardened over the past four years. The county’s precinct map for the November election illustrates the historical advantage for Democrats, as well as the political divide playing out across Oregon and the United States between city and rural neighborhoods. Biden defeated Trump 54% to 43% in the county. While Biden performed better than for- mer U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who received 47% in 2016, Trump pulled slightly more than the 41% he had four years ago. Voter turnout was about 80%, up only mar- ginally from 2016. Biden won every city precinct except for part of Warrenton. Only four rural precincts broke against Trump. “I think one of the takeaways for me when I look at this data for the presidential races, and I think about the upcoming ideological split that I CONTRIBUTING WRITERS John D. Bruijn Skyler Archibald Darren Gooch Joshua Heineman Rain Jordan Katherine Lacaze Esther Moberg Carl Earl All uses in the city’s commercial zones, “shall be conducted entirely within a com- pletely enclosed building,” Seaside’s code reads. County vote for president shows how opinions harden PRODUCTION MANAGER SYSTEMS MANAGER Photos by R.J. Marx ABOVE: Jason Lancaster and Amy Myers inside the Sasquatch Sandwich Co. food truck. TOP: Food trucks may be returning to Seaside as a result of special permits. “When I asked for the event permit, I used COVID as the basis for my request,” Montero said. “My sense is that we are really not infringing upon the sit-down din- ers, we’re really affecting the fast-food people. There’s a need. Even McDonald’s and Kentucky Fried Chicken are backed up for blocks.” A challenge looms. After their fi rst day serving, Mon- tero said, they were told that downtown restaurateurs had complained to the city’s planning department about Lancaster’s operation. Montero planned to approach the depart- ment to seek a variance for a long-term permit. If denied, he said, Montero could approach the City Council to try to change the ordinance. Lancaster said he is confi dent he will be able to continue to operate in Seaside. “If places have the right setup and you’ve got your own garbage disposal and power, I think they’re going to allow it,” he said. see on our nominally nonpartisan county com- missioner board — I’m always fascinated by how people compartmentalize local politics in a different way,” said Andy Davis, the chairman of the Clatsop County Democratic Party. “That we’ve got 55% of the county in this case voting for the Democratic nominee for pres- ident, and I’m looking at a county commissioner board that appears to me that it’ll be 3-2 in a con- servative-leaning direction. And that’s always interesting to me that there’s that split existing.” Davis, in a text message, said, “the challenge going forward is fi nding ways for those two geo- graphic groups of people to understand each other and work cooperatively, so we don’t just swing back and forth each election with the out of power group becoming more aggrieved at the one that happens to be currently in charge.” Lisa Lamping, the chairwoman of the Clat- sop County Republican Party, believes the party can grow its base in the 2022 elections. “I see a real move towards more conserva- tive things because of the extreme policies that seem to be affecting our state right now,” Lamp- ing said. “So I think you’re seeing a lot of Clat- sop citizens that are just kind of fed up. I also think #TimberUnity played a big factor in that, and I think you’re probably going to see more of that coming.” She pointed to the victory of Tillamook Mayor Suzanne Weber in the state House Dis- trict 32 race, the fi rst Republican to win the seat in nearly two decades. Weber nearly tied Deb- bie Boothe-Schmidt, the Democrat, in Clatsop County, while claiming the Tillamook County and Washington County portions of the district. “So that tells you right there that some Dem- ocrats ... came over and voted for her and some independents I’m sure did,” Lamping said. She thinks liberal state policies and the restric- tions aimed to stop the spread of the coronavirus have caused people to become disillusioned with government. “And it doesn’t just affect those issues,” Lamping said. “There’s a lot of values associated with those choices, too. And so it trickles down beyond just the political side. It trickles down into the value system side and how it’s affecting families and our quality of life and how we live. “And here on the coast, we are a different breed than the city slickers.” 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. 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