OUR 114th Year February 12, 2021 $1.00 SEASIDESIGNAL.COM Warming center opening in doubt Shelter was slated to open on Saturday By R.J. MARX Seaside Signal The future of a warming center in Seaside is in ques- tion after Sunset Empire Park and Recreation District board members asked to table the proposal for now. “This just came in our radar last week,” board mem- ber Celeste Bodner said. “There’s a whole coalition of people working on homeless issues for decades. We should be playing a support role, not a main role. I think it’s mis- sion creep and has the poten- tial of alienating folks.” The warming center had been prepared to open on Saturday in the Sunset Recre- ation Center, formerly Broad- way Middle School, which the park district purchased in January. Bodner said business- people in Seaside had the impression “this was a bait and switch. If this is the fi rst thing with 30 days of clos- ing on the building and this is the fi rst thing, I think we have some communication to do.” Questions of staffi ng, hours, insurance, supplies, litter and pets were among concerns raised at the board meeting on Tuesday night. “Those are the questions we need answers to before we can say, ‘Yes, we can go for- ward with this plan,’” Kath- arine Parker, the board pres- ident, said. “I understand the need, particularly this week as the temperatures are going to plummet. I just don’t know if we can get through this in three days.” Modeled after the Astoria Warming Center, the warm- ing center was planned as a partnership between Clatsop County Community Action, Seaside, Helping Hands and the park district, which would have provided two classrooms for overnight shelter in inclement weather See Warming, Page A3 Gearhart fi re chief plans to retire By R.J. MARX Seaside Signal Gearhart Fire Chief Bill Eddy will be stepping down from his role. Eddy has served as chief since 2000 and has been with the fi re department since 1981. No fi rm retire- ment date has been set. City Administrator Chad Sweet announced Eddy’s retirement at a City Council meeting last week. “I’m getting a little bit up there in age,” Eddy, who turns 67 in April, said. “It’s probably time to let some- body else take it to the next level.” The Eddy family arrived in Gearhart in the 1960s when Eddy’s father, William Lloyd Eddy, was named Gearhart police chief. The younger Eddy worked as a beverage account man- ager before joining the fi re department, serving under chiefs Bruce Maltman, Randy Curs, Preston Dever- eaux and Jim Pesonen before being named chief. “Back then, it was a lot different than it is today,” Eddy said. “As long as you were a warm body, they took you. We didn’t even run a hundred calls a year back then. I don’t even want to guess what the num- bers were. Somebody pretty much sponsored you or brought you in. They said, ‘Here’s your gear, here’s the truck and here’s how you use it.’” During his years as chief, he faced several challenges, including the 2007 storm. He responded to an air crash in Gearhart in August 2008 that killed fi ve fam- ily members and partici- pated in countless beach res- cues, fi reworks and mutual aid calls throughout Clatsop County and beyond. He traveled with crews to wildfi res in Oregon three R.J. Marx Steve Urman at work on the Ridge Path. Duncan’s Crossing finds no bridge too far By R.J. MARX Seaside Signal When he ran for Gear- hart City Council in 2014, City Councilor John Dun- can listed as one of his top goals to complete and extend the portion of the Ridge Path from Eighth Street to Gearhart Loop Road. Duncan and his vol- unteer army marched through mud, brambles and elk droppings with loppers and saws. He worked so long and with such pride that other vol- unteers pled fatigue to convince him it was time to quit for the day. He was out working on the path two days before his death in September 2015. Duncan’s widow, Sandy, sought to remem- ber her husband in a way that would have been meaningful to him. With her cooperation, Gear- hart established a fund for “Duncan’s Crossing,” a project designed to bridge wetlands and connect the path to Gearhart Loop Road. “John saw the com- pletion of the Ridge Path between Ninth and 10th streets and then north from 10th Street along the Neacoxie to Gear- hart Lane as an oppor- tunity to do a couple of things at once,” volunteer Bob Widdop said. “As an engineer it was a chance to use his skills for a pub- lic good and to organize the public to participate in a hands-on project that gave a signifi cant sense of accomplishment to all involved.” The former Native American trail runs between privately owned residential properties within the blocks between Cottage Avenue and Nea- coxie Creek, extend- ing from F Street on the south to 10th Street on the north. The fi rst 11 blocks were established See Duncan’s Crossing, Page A3 John Duncan, who died in 2015, had a vision for the Ridge Path. See Chief, Page A3 Marion Blake, ‘a force Valentine’s Day pairs of nature,’ dies at 102 kids, senior citizens By R.J. MARX Seaside Signal By KATHERINE LACAZE For Seaside Signal Marion Blake, one of Seaside’s oldest residents, died Saturday at 102 peace- fully at home. “A force of nature,” is how her daughter, Mary Blake, described her. “As she was getting older around her century mark, she was constantly asked, ‘To what do you attribute your lon- gevity?’ Good genes, red wine, dark chocolate, being with the one you love, great friends, play and have fun!” Marion was born April 29, Valentine’s Day this year will be a little more special for residents of Avamere at Seaside and local students, thanks to a partnership between the senior care community and Pacifi c Ridge Elementary School. “I get very excited about the connection between the children and the adults,” said Erin Zell- mer, who started as Ava- mere’s life enrichment director fi ve months ago. Mary Blake See Blake, Page A4 Marion Blake at home in 2018. See Valentine’s Day, Page A5 A secondgrader shares a Valentine’s Day wish. Feb. 20th & 21st Saturday: 9 am- 3 pm ◆ Sunday: 10 am- 3 pm Seaside Convention Center You Never Know What You’ll Find At A Collectors West Gun & Knife Show! 415 1st Avenue, Seaside collectorswest.com $ 8