Friday, May 21, 2021 | Seaside Signal | SeasideSignal.com • A3 Business Directory PUBLIC SAFETY LOG Continued from Page A2 8:59 a.m., Broadway and Roosevelt: A subject reported selling fi rewood is unable to be located by police. 9:45 a.m., 800 block Avenue S: A person attempting to dump a couch at the recycling center is apprised that’s not ok. 10:03 a.m., 400 block S. Prom: Caller reports fi nding a purse in their backyard and believes it might be stolen. 12:45 p.m., 1100 block S. Wahanna: An eight-year-old child reported lost is reunited with a parent. 3:06 p.m., Police headquar- ters: A person came in to register as a sex off ender. May 12 7:29 a.m., 1000 block S. King: A female reported talking gib- berish is advised she’s making other people uncomfortable. She is encouraged to move along. May 13 3:43 a.m., 1200 block Beach Drive: A missing person is reported. 8:37 a.m., 800 block Avenue G: A woman reported sleeping in the doorway of a business is advised management wants her trespassed. 8:48 a.m., 2300 block S. Roosevelt: A stray white Husky dog attached to no human is reported in a motel parking lot; police transport the dog to the kennel. 12:52 p.m., Holladay and Fourth: A reported domestic disturbance in progress is intercepted by police offi cers who locate the subjects. 4:08 p.m., 12th Avenue park- ing lot: Caller reports a male subject stalking her. The man is contacted by police and advised of the complaint. He left the area. 5:48 p.m. 400 block Ocean- way: Caller reports messy transients are preventing her from holding an awards ceremony for high school kids. The transients agreed to move their stuff and move along for the time being. 6:22 p.m., Fourth and Beach: A huge hole dug in the sand is surrounded by cones so nobody falls in. Public works is advised to fi ll in the hole. SEASIDE FIRE & RESCUE PUBLIC SAFETY LOG 9:05 p.m., 33000 Rippet Lane: Emergency medical response. May 13 1:52 a.m., N. Prom: Emergency medical response. May 8 6:08 a.m., 400 block S. Roo- sevelt: Emergency medical response OREGON STATE POLICE PUBLIC SAFETY LOG May 9 Single vehicle crash 8:53 p.m., Ocean Way: Emergency medical re- sponse. State police responded to a single vehicle crash on U.S. Highway 101 at milepost 17 on May 7 at 1:09 a.m. The driver, a 36-year-old Westport man, was not in the vehicle and could not be located. Gary’s Towing removed the Toyota from the scene. 10:56 a.m., 900 block Ave- nue G: Emergency medical response. 12:44 p.m., 2500 block Mill Creek Lane: Emergency medical response. 4:50 p.m., Bell Buoy: Emer- gency medical response. May 12 9:07 a.m., 2300 block S. Roosevelt: Emergency medi- cal response. 1:46 p.m., 400 block S. Broadway: Fire investiga- tion. inc . E xcavation • u ndErground u tiitiEs r oad w ork • F ill M atErial s itE P rEParation • r ock owned and operated by M ike and C eline M C e wan 503-738-3569 2:48 p.m., 1800 block N. Wahanna: Structure fire. May 10 B oB CONSTRUCTION M c E wan c onstruction , 34154 Hwy 26, Seaside, OR P.O. Box 2845, Gearhart, OR S erving the p aCifiC n orthweSt S inCe 1956 • CC48302 Melissa Eddy REAL ESTATE BROKER melissaeddy@windermere.com Two-car crash A young Seaside couple were involved in a two-car crash May 9 at 12:04 a.m. on U.S. High- way 26 near milepost 19 that landed one car in a ditch on the westbound shoulder, rolled up on its driver’s side. A 25-year-old Dallas, Texas man was given a citation for following too closely. Hillsboro Towing towed one car from the scene. No one was injured. EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY Your real estate vision is my expertise. beachhomerealtor.com 503-440-3258 CREMATION Ocean View Funeral & Cremation Services www.OceanViewAstoria.com Lowest Cost Cremation On The Northern Oregon Coast See our website for Up-To-Date Pricing Comparisons. Also registered in the State of Washington ELECTRICAL • Repairs • Generator installation & servicing • New construction • Remodels Serving the North Oregon Coast since 1950! Serving Clatsop & Tillamook Counties 503.738.8391 CCB#3226 • New Construction • Remodels • Panel Changes & Upgrades • Add Circuits or Lighting CCB #198257 • Generators CALL US for your next electrical project! • Repairs 503-739-7145 712 S. Holladay Dr. • Seaside, OR Monday-Friday 8 am -5 pm www.jjelectricservice.com FLOORING CCB# 205283 Luxury vinyl planks and tile. Hailey Hoff man/The Astorian you walk on our reputation Flooring Installation Clatsop County hopes to improve evacuation routes to better prepare for an earthquake and tsunami. County renews focus on disaster preparedness By NICOLE BALES The Astorian With a Cascadia Sub- duction Zone earthquake and tsunami on the hori- zon, Clatsop County has taken steps to protect res- idents and tourists from catastrophe. The county has com- pleted the Tsunami Way- finding Project, which inventoried evacuation signs and identified where additional signs were needed. The county is also plan- ning to relocate its pub- lic works facility out of the tsunami inundation zone — an initiative for- merly known as the Resil- iency Project, which had included establish- ing alternative evacuation routes around vulnerable parts of U.S. Highway 101 and U.S. Highway 30. The alternative routes were put on the back burner, however, after backlash from residents in Lewis and Clark who live along a road that the county identified as an option. In 2019, the county received a transportation and growth management grant through the state to develop a tsunami evacua- tion facility improvement plan. The plan will focus on tying walking and cycling trails into evacu- ation routes and identify- ing gaps. Parametrix, a consult- ing group in Portland leading the project, pre- sented the plan and solic- ited feedback from the public during a virtual open house last week. “We’re talking about a very serious and sub- stantial event that could occur tomorrow or 200 years from now,” Ryan Farncomb, a senior plan- ner and project manager at Parametrix, said. “So it could be difficult to make the case to folks the need for improving evacuation facilities or thinking about this. And so by tying this work to recreational facil- ities — trails which peo- ple could use every single day — I think we’re really setting the county up for making improvements in the near term after this plan is done.” Gail Henrikson, the county’s community development director, said the work ties in and can build off efforts the coun- ty’s emergency manage- ment staff has completed, like the wayfinding proj- ect and the natural hazards mitigation plan. “We’re really focused on the coastal areas in unincorporated Clatsop County, but are also look- ing at the interconnections with the incorporated areas,” Henrikson said. The project is look- ing at Arch Cape, Clat- sop Plains, Fort Stevens State Park and the Miles Crossing and Jeffers Gar- den area. “What we did in this ini- tial exercise, is we looked at the existing evacuation system, existing assem- bly areas — which again are those places that peo- ple are supposed to head to during an emergency — and then also looked at a lot of environmen- tal information, including things like where are there streams, rivers and wet- lands,” Farncomb said. “And also, where are there landslides or bridges that are maybe over land of concern. “We looked at all of this information at once to be able to understand what are the risks to exist- ing evacuation routes, what are the opportunities and where are there trails already on the ground that could be used for evacuation.” Farncomb said there is substantial landslide risk in many areas along the coast, as well as liquefac- tion risk, especially north of Gearhart. “The area of greatest evacuation needs overall is that Clatsop Plains area north of Gearhart all the way to Fort Stevens State Park,” he said. “There are many neighborhoods there that lack east-west access to higher ground.” Farncomb said there are a lot of north-south oriented waterways like lakes, streams and wet- lands that make it diffi- cult to create new con- nections. Meanwhile, a wide swath of the coast is expected to be inundated during a major earthquake and there are few places to reach higher ground. Farncomb said improv- ing trails in Fort Stevens State Park is also a prior- ity because of the heavy visitor traffic during the summer. The project will also look at building a vertical structure people can climb to evade a tsunami. The county expects to hold two more public meetings in the summer and fall before presenting the completed project plan to the Board of Commis- sioners early next year. An advisory commit- tee for the project is made up of representatives from cities, fire districts, pri- vate and public landown- ers and nonprofit agen- cies, including Consejo Hispano. 3470 Hwy 101 Suite 102 • Gearhart, Oregon 503.739.7577 • carpetcornergearhart.com Randall Lee’s 0% FINANCING AVAILABLE Window Treatments, Fabric, Designer Wallpaper, Counter Tops, All Flooring and Miele Vacuums Visit Our Outlet! Randall Lee’s Seaside • 2311 N. Roosevelt Dr. • 503-738-5729 rlflooring@yahoo.com • www.RandallLeesFlooring.com Randall Lee’s Flooring Outlet • 3579 Hwy 101 Gearhart • 503-738-6756 Warehouse pricing • Open to the Public • Hundreds of instock rolls & remnants • In House Binding LANDSCAPING YARD DEBRIS DROP-OFF (no scotch broom) • Laurelwood Compost • Soil Amendments • Planting MacMix • Mulch 503-717-1454 34154 HIGHWAY 26 SEASIDE, OR Laurelwood Farm ADVERTISING YOUR AD HERE! Our Business Directory is an inexpensive CALL TODAY SARAH SILVER 503-325-3211 to discuss new and exciting ways to promote your business on the North Coast