A4 • Friday, February 5, 2021 | Seaside Signal | SeasideSignal.com SignalViewpoints Furnish, Gearhart clam digger, raconteur and social media infl uence dies at age 70 SEEN FROM SEASIDE R.J. MARX J ames “Jim” F. Furnish, 70, who lived the last years of his life as the founder of the Gearhart Facebook pages “A Million Friends of Gearhart” and the “Pacifi c Way Group,” died Saturday morning. “This morning we have lost a father, brother, grandfather, and above all a friend,” his son, James, wrote in announc- ing his death. Furnish was born Sept. 8, 1950, in Port- land and moved to Gearhart at age 9. His mother, Elna Furnish, was a long- time columnist for the Seaside Signal, writ- ing “Let’s Talk Food” for decades. His father, William Wallace Furnish, a former World War II pilot, was a rancher and insur- ance broker. Jim Furnish was a 1968 gradu- ate of Seaside High School. He lived in Gearhart for most of his life and worked as a commercial fi sher- man, an able hand on fi sh- ing boats and a professional clam digger. He worked as drug and alcohol counselor in Seaside Jim Furnish for many years. A self-described “fi sh- monger,” he was a familiar face at Bell Buoy of Seaside, Country Traveler Online wrote in a 2015 profi le. “Behind the counter, the retired fi sherman’s energy and enthusiasm for the job belies his age. One minute he is outside tidying up the parking lot, the next minute he’s bringing someone a taste of something new at the little eating bar by the window and then he’s popped back behind the counter helping and joking with a customer he hasn’t seen for a while.” Furnish was a man of many talents and a wealth of local and other knowledge, Jay Pitman of Clatsop County Sons of Beaches said . “He was a member whom I’ll never forget, a great outdoorsman with respect to our commercial and sportsman culture of the fi shing industry. He will be greatly missed on our beach therapy sessions.” Furnish was an encyclopedia of informa- tion about the North Coast, with a knowl- edge of the characters of days gone by. As an inveterate beachcomber, he was often featured in T he Astorian for his tsu- nami debris fi nds, like the large upside down boat dock with writing on the tires in Japanese from Japan’s March 2011 tsunami or the very large U.S. Coast Guard n aviga- tion b uoy he found on a Gearhart beach. He could discuss at length Rimas Meleshyus, the wayward sailor who only knew how to drift, the long history of Terrible Tilly or “Batman” actor Adam West’s summers in Gearhart. Furnish dedicated his online social media pages to fond memories of Gearhart days gone by as well as pointed dialogues on city policy and personalities. The private group Million Friends of Gearhart, created in 2011, now has 1,500 members. “Can’t help to think about the founder of this site and how he has been the voice of truth in Gearhart,” wrote Kathleen Piner Zimmerman on the Million Friends of Gearhart page. “Love him or hate him he is a voice of reason, common sense and love for ‘keeping Gearhart, Gearhart.’” Like others in numerous tributes online, Zimmerman described Furnish as “ the best Gearhart historian I know and a true icon in the community and not afraid to stand up for what he thinks is the right thing.” The Pacifi c Way Group, started by Fur- Kathleen Piner Zimmerman Kathleen Piner Zimmerman was walking on the beach when she stumbled across Jim Furnish. He dropped off all of his clams at her house after he reached his limit. Courtesy James Furnish Jim Furnish, Emelia and James Furnish. Darien Chrysafi s Jim Furnish in 1992. Courtesy James Furnish Jim Furnish on the Columbia River. Courtesy James Furnish James Furnish, Jim Furnish and Hylah Furnish. nish in 2019, took over conversations con- sidered too political for the Million Friends of Gearhart page. It now has 241 mem- bers. The page has become a heated reposi- tory for discussions of all topics relating to Gearhart, often no holds barred. Jack Zimmerman, a co-administrator, said Furnish was very private during his last few years and determined to keep his health challenges from interfering with his Face- book efforts. He said Furnish’s social media presence was driven by his ability to critique city government, which kept him from running for offi ce. He was a good friend to all, lifelong Gearhart resident Helen Dawson-Leach said. “He loved Gearhart as all of us old-timers do. He stood up to the powers that be for the town he loved.” Furnish fought cancer for the p ast decade, according to a fundraising site orga- nized by his friend Stewart Schultz, and went through surgeries and several bouts of chemotherapy and radiation, including a botched surgery that required a lengthy and painful recovery. A year and a half ago, Furnish was diag- nosed as cancer-free and in good health, Schultz wrote. His symptoms returned in November. After two weeks in a Portland hospital, he was diagnosed with new metastatic can- cers in his liver and pelvic bone. “He would give whatever he had to help people even though he didn’t have much,” his son said. “I remember setting up his Yahoo email account in 1998, not realizing I helped cre- ate the greatest internet scourge the world would ever know. “He loved, laughed and lived a life too complex for one person to detail. I don’t know what the afterlife holds, but I know the greatest Clatsop County clam digger is now a part of the whole.” LETTER TO THE EDITOR Act now to ‘Save Our Stages’ The Save Our Stages Act was passed to provide fi nancial assistance to theaters. Unfortunately, it inadvertently excludes community theaters whose actors are volun- teers, as opposed to paid, performers. This would mean that Coaster Theatre, Tillamook Association for the Performing Arts, Peninsula Association for the Perform- ing Arts and Astor Street Opry Company would not be eligible to apply for relief. I have sent the following message to Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, bill spon- sors Senators Amy Klobuchar and Chuck Coryn as well as Rep. Suzanne Bonamici and Senators Merkley and Wyden. I would welcome anyone to join in advo- cating for assistance for these cultural venues and offer it for your use and personalization: Thank you for your efforts in bringing legislation to help all Americans in these dif- fi cult times. As a member and treasurer of the board of directors of the Coaster Theatre Playhouse located in Cannon Beach, I am writing with a concern about the Save Our Stages portion of the CARES Act 2. While it’s important that cultural venues for music and theater are preserved, the way Save Our Stages is writ- ten excludes nonprofi t community theaters which exist on limited budgets built through grants and ticket sales. The artists are volunteers who are con- tributing to their community and having the opportunity to practice their passion. Thus, the eligibility statement in Save Our Stages which requires that artists be paid rules out the ability of any nonprofi t community the- ater to apply for relief. The Coaster Theatre is one of hundreds of valuable community CIRCULATION MANAGER Jeremy Feldman ADVERTISING SALES MANAGER Sarah Silver- Tecza PUBLISHER EDITOR Kari Borgen R.J. Marx PRODUCTION MANAGER CONTRIBUTING WRITERS John D. Bruijn Skyler Archibald Darren Gooch Joshua Heineman Rain Jordan Katherine Lacaze Esther Moberg SYSTEMS MANAGER Carl Earl PUBLIC MEETINGS cultural venues whose budgets have been decimated at this time; a large portion of our sustenance, ticket sales, is obliterated due to health restrictions. Grant revenue has become even more important to preserve our future ability to provide artistic and cultural outlet to our performers and audiences, many of whom are invaluable visitors contributing to the important tourist economy of our area. As this act will be going into effect very soon, we implore you to do everything in your power to make sure that the eligibil- ity requirement that performers are paid (employees) be removed from Save Our Stages in order to protect community the- aters — and Coaster Theatre Playhouse. Thank you. Tita Montero Seaside Contact local agencies for latest meeting infor- mation and attendance guidelines. MONDAY, FEB. 8 Seaside City Council, 7 p.m., cityofseaside. us. TUESDAY, FEB. 9 Sunset Empire Park and Recreation Dis- trict, board workshop, 4 p.m., sunsetempire. com. TUESDAY, FEB. 16 Seaside School District, 6 p.m., www.sea- side.k12.or.us/meetings. Seaside Planning Commission, 6 p.m., work session, cityofseaside.us. MONDAY, FEB. 22 Seaside City Council, 7 p.m., cityofseaside. us. 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 © 2021 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: $51.00, monthly autopay is $4.25 e-Edition only: $4 a month POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Seaside Signal, P.O. Box 210, Astoria, OR 97103. Postage Paid at Seaside, OR, 97138 and at additional mailing offi ces. Copyright © 2021 by the Seaside Signal. No portion of this newspaper may be reproduced without written permission. All rights reserved.