A4 • Friday, April 16, 2021 | Seaside Signal | SeasideSignal.com SignalViewpoints Seaside library through the decades BETWEEN THE COVERS ESTHER MOBERG This year we are celebrating the Seaside Prom Centennial of 100 years. The appealing prome- nade cement boardwalk that bor- ders the ocean and off ers beautiful views. I’ve walked, biked, roller- bladed and ran on the prom for at least 30 years of the 100. But over the last 100 years of the prom and the Seaside Public Library, a lot has changed. Libraries in general have changed quite a bit from 1921 to 2021. The Seaside Library began eight years before the prom was built, back in 1913. The library started out in the public bathrooms (The old Dresser building where Seaside Coff ee House and Tom’s Fish and Chips now live) near the Seaside railroad stop where families got off for the weekends to visit Seaside from Portland. The train took most of the day and cost $2. Twelve diff erent librarians have managed the Seaside library over the years including myself which averages to approximately 10-15 years per librarian! Back in 1921 the librarian was paid $400 a year to run the library with most of that salary paid in the summer and $75 paid over the win- ter. Seems that it was pretty quiet in the winter in Seaside back then. Most of the money that supported the library came from the women’s club in Seaside before the library became a city and public library offi cially in 1935. The Oregon State Library still holds the origi- nal charter document. One of our library patrons remembers going into the library back when it was in the building next to the old city hall, which is now the Seaside Brewing Com- pany. All the adult books were up a very rickety staircase with a wobbly banister. She still remem- bers the librarian telling her the upstairs was for adults only. Her mom looked at her and said, go on upstairs, so she did. She viv- idly remembered the railing for the stairs were not in great shape and she was afraid she might pull it off . This was back in the 1940s or 1950s. Up through the 1950s much of what librarians did was reader’s advisory, helping library patrons fi nd books. They also sometimes helped people use phone books or fi nd an address. Library books were all cataloged using a card cat- alog with real cards. One of my favorite pictures from the library when it was on the highway, where Cleanline Surf shop now stands, shows one of the librarians in a gopher or beaver costume reading to a small group of children in the ’70s. I believe In 1913 the Seaside library opened for business as a reading room in the Dresser building. The building now houses Tom’s Fish and Chips and the Seaside Coff ee Shop. this was a summer reading pro- gram. I applaud the full commit- ment by that librarian. Unfortu- nately, the picture didn’t have a name on it so if anyone remembers this program, please let me know. The old library on Roosevelt also had an event with a cage full of baby chicks in the library for story time back in the ’80s. In the ‘60s and ’70s, Librarians did complicated searches in data- bases that only they could access. You had to know Boolean search keys and how to fi nd the right records. Around that time discus- sion about librarianship changed from “analog — just books and card catalogs — to information technicians. Librarians began to understand that training in how to best search and fi nd resources and information was where the future was. Many librarians preferred to just take care of books, magazines, and records, and that was it but they were slowly being left behind. The new librarian was the keeper of many types of information in many forms and not only new the infor- mation and resources within the library, but also outside the library on the Internet as well as commu- nity resources. The internet of the ’80s brought in way more information that needed someone to help navigate and librarians found themselves taking up that role. In the 1980s the library direc- tor didn’t drive a car, so to collect overdue library books and fi nes, the librarian would be chauff eured around town in a police car. I have a feeling a lot more people paid their library fi nes when the police showed up at their door! Programs and spaces where peo- ple met became areas the libraries began to focus. The Seaside Pub- lic Library has always had a strong focus on families and young chil- dren reading. Children’s programs today are focused on STEM, early literacy, and brain development and ways for parents to help their children grow and succeed. The library continues to off er programs for children and teens through Zoom. Due to COVID-19, our maker space is on hiatus, but we you can still request items be made on our 3-D printer. We off er many things in our “library of things” collection including a telescope, a waffl e maker, Wi-Fi hotspots, cul- tural passes, and much, much more that are all checked out using your library card. The library now off ers many resources and services. We still have books, we just added ebooks, audiobooks, DVDs, CDs, magazines, and more. Esther Moberg is executive director of the Seaside Public Library. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Answers sought over school sales The recent tempest in a teapot at Sunset Empire Parks and Recreation Dis- trict is interesting. To hear these folks talk, the old Broadway Middle School property, which SEPRD recently purchased from Seaside Administrative School District #10, is a toxic dump site of asbestos and black mold! Reading their vitriolic letters to the editor, I’m left wondering, where was their hue and cry over this issue when our children were in those buildings? Why were they silent about this threat all these years? Why is it now suddenly a big concern to them? Is the problem really that bad or is this all just hyperbole? It also raises the ques- tion, why didn’t the Sea- side School Board “gift” the middle school prop- erty to SEPRD, another taxing district serving the public, like they did the Gearhart school property? Supposedly a big part of their reasoning for sell- ing the Gearhart property to a private concern for less than a fi fth of its true base value was worries about asbestos and mold. That whole aff air fails to pass the smell test. Dis- trict taxpayers were robbed and the school board was wholly complicit in the theft. Especially when you consider the subsequent Broadway Middle School sale. If either of these sites are as dangerous as they are being made out, some- one needs to prove it. My children went to both these schools. I want answers. And, quite honestly, the members of both boards should have their feet put to the fi re to justify their actions. Bill Graffi us Seaside Vicious cycle for those in need That man from Clacka- mas County is right (letter, “Time to move transient RVs out of Seaside.”) It’s a trav- esty that people are living in broken-down RVs parked on the street. And, unlike housed peo- ple and the landlords, they’re using alcohol and drugs! Unlike housed people, these people don’t work or con- tribute anything to society. Yes, they collect returnables and help keep garbage out of the landfi ll, maybe. But they’re making a profi t on that! How dare they! They could be making, like, $50 a day hogging the returnables machine at the grocery store. That’s only 500 cans and bottles. They’re not poor — they just blow all that cash on drugs. And food! Plus they’re lazy. I don’t know how they manage to fi nd 500 cans and bot- tles every day seeing as how they’re stoned and asleep most of the time. Or they’re just looking for trouble. Or scaring the children with their schizophrenia or what- ever. Really, they should be encouraged to live in RV parks. But they’d need new RVs, because the RV parks won’t let those POS campers in. Which means they’d need a lot more than 500 cans and bottles a day. They should have jobs! Why don’t they have jobs? They should be forced to have jobs — not my job, mind you, but some other job. Maybe they could col- lect garbage or something. They should be doing some- thing productive that makes a profi t for someone else, not living off the detritus of the consumer economy. They should help some- one else make a profi t, and then they should take their stagnant wages and give that money to a bank, so the bank can make a profi t by giving them a mortgage and allowing them to live in a house for $50 a day. Then we wouldn’t have to see them and their naked frailty. I don’t want to see them because there but for the grace of God go I. We should not allow people to be homeless. People should not have to resort to living on the street and relying on the trash of others to keep them warm. We have plenty of houses, and we have plenty of mate- rials to build more houses if we need them. But as long as houses are used to make profi ts for the well-off and the wealthy, the man from Clackamas is right. We will continue to see increas- ing numbers of ugly bro- ken RVs on the street, then the tents, then the impo- tent anger, the graffi ti, the crime, the desperation, and then the burning. Perhaps we should round up all the undesirables, chain them together and drown them in the Pacifi c. Then we can dis- mantle their RVs and get them recycled. Pamela Cromwell Seaside Thank you to DMV Over the past 14 months, I have found it necessary to visit the Astoria DMV on three diff erent occasions and on each of those occasions, I found the representatives there to be professional, knowledgeable, helpful and friendly. Each time I received guidance from one of them, I found their body of knowl- edge impressive, not to men- tion accurate and appropri- ate to my situation. I was also taken by how organized they were and the manner in which they “kept the line moving!” Many thanks to those who helped me navigate my way through the paperwork I needed to complete. Marti Wajc Seaside NOTES Tiff any Boothe/Seaside Aquarium Sea otter on the south end of Manzanita beach. Live sea otter recovered off Manzanita beach A live, stranded sea otter was reported at the south end of Manzanita Beach on April 5. This is the fi rst live sea otter the Seaside Aquar- ium has ever responded to, Tiff any Boothe of the Sea- side Aquarium said. The otter was lethargic and showed signs of possi- ble neurological issues, she said. The otter was trans- ferred to the aquarium and then to a rehab center up in Washington, but failed to survive. While a necropsy is yet to be performed, it is thought that the animal was suff ering from a protozoal infection. Sea otters were once quite common off the Ore- gon Coast but as a result of intense hunting from the fur trade, they were wiped out and pronounced extinct in the early 1900s, Boothe said. Previous eff orts to reintroduce sea otters on the Oregon Coast have failed but there is a group cur- rently working on a plan to once again reintroduce sea otters to Oregon. Sea otters reside in Alaska, California and Washington state. Day of Caring at the Railroad Community Garden The Clatsop County United Way is partnering with the Sunset Empire Park and Recreation Dis- trict to renovate the Rail- road Community Garden to increase accessibil- ity for patrons, beautify the garden, and help the planet. The 2021 Day of Caring is scheduled for Saturday, April 17 from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Materi- als for the project have been donated by the Home Depot Foundation, Trails End Recovery, and War- renton Fiber. The park district serves a variety of patrons through the community gardens program, among them, veterans, seniors, youth, working families, and other members of this small, rural commu- nity. Food shortages are a major concern in Clat- sop County, with increas- ing numbers of citizens relying on programs like the Meals on Wheels Pro- gram, the South Clatsop County Food Bank, and the CCA Regional Food Bank, with additional eco- nomic impact resulting from COVID-19. Interested volunteers can sign up through the Clatsop County United Way at https://www.sig- nupgenius.com/go/5080c- 4ca8af28a1fc1-2021. Author debuts novel set in Seaside The Hoff man Center for the Arts hosts a book release and publishing workshop with local award-win- ning author, Melissa Eskue Ousley on Fri- day, June 11, at 4 p.m. on Zoom. The $25 reg- istration fee includes a copy of the author’s new- est book, “Constellations of Scars,” a novel set in Seaside. Alternatively, there is a $10 fee for just the event. Eskue Ousley will read from the book and dis- cuss her publishing jour- ney with Elle Beaumont of Midnight Tide Publish- ing, an author collective “Constellations of Scars” and independent press that seeks to give authors creative freedom while offering support and col- laborative opportunities. “Constellations of Scars” received a starred review from Kirkus Reviews, who called it, “An indelible story of loving yourself in a world of dreadful realities.” To register, visit hoff- manarts.org. PUBLIC MEETINGS Contact local agencies for lat- est meeting information and attendance guidelines. MONDAY, APRIL 19 Seaside Budget Committee, 6 p.m., 989 Broadway. TUESDAY, APRIL 20 Seaside Planning Commis- sion, work session, 6 p.m., 989 Broadway. CIRCULATION MANAGER Jeremy Feldman ADVERTISING SALES MANAGER Sarah Silver- Tecza PUBLISHER EDITOR Kari Borgen R.J. Marx Seaside School District, 6 p.m., www.seaside.k12.or.us/meetings. Gearhart Small Business Com- mittee, 6 p.m., cityofgearhart. com. PRODUCTION MANAGER CONTRIBUTING WRITERS John D. Bruijn Skyler Archibald Darren Gooch Joshua Heineman Rain Jordan Katherine Lacaze Esther Moberg SYSTEMS MANAGER Carl Earl WEDNESDAY, APRIL 21 Tourism Advisory Committee, 3 p.m., 989 Broadway. Gearhart Parks Master Plan Citizens Advisory Committee, 5:30 p.m., work session, cityof- gearhart.com. MONDAY, APRIL 26 Seaside City Council, 7 p.m., 989 Broadway, cityofseaside.us. TUESDAY, APRIL 27 Sunset Empire Park and Recreation District Board of Directors, 5:15 p.m., 1225 Avenue A. 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. 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