Seaside signal. (Seaside, Or.) 1905-current, August 06, 2021, Image 1

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    OUR 114th Year
August 6, 2021 $1.00
SEASIDESIGNAL.COM
AIR SHOWS, ‘QUEEN OF SONG’ STARRED IN PROM’S DEBUT
Seaside Museum & Historical Society/Bruce Andrews Restoration
Dignitaries and citizens gather at the Turnaround in Seaside for the dedication in August 1921.
City celebrates centennial on Saturday with parade
By R.J. MARX
Seaside Signal
‘A
turning point in the civic and
cultural history of the state of
Oregon,” is how a proclama-
tion celebrating the opening
of the Seaside Prom read in 1921.
One hundred years later, the city
will again celebrate the Prom with
a parade and celebration on Satur-
day as part of a yearlong celebra-
tion of the North Coast icon’s mon-
umental birthday.
The city issued and unani-
mously endorsed a proclamation
celebrating the Prom in July. Sea-
side Public Library’s exhibit “The
‘SEASIDERS WANT THE TRAVELERS TO
COME AND IN RETURN WILL ENDEAVOR
TO ENTERTAIN ALL WHILE HERE.’
Seaside Signal, Aug. 11, 1921
Prom in Pictures,” is on display and
will head to the Seaside Museum &
Historical Society in late August.
The parade kicks off Saturday
at 10 a.m. near City Hall, the his-
toric location of Seaside’s train sta-
tion, and then proceeds west down
Broadway to the Turnaround.
The public is invited to gather on
the beach facing the Turnaround,
which will serve as a stage for
the ceremony. The Royal Rosar-
ians, Portland’s offi cial ambassa-
dors of goodwill, were present at
the 1921 dedication and will return
to Seaside to join the parade. The
group’s prime minister will plant a
rose at the corner of Broadway and
R.J. Marx
See Prom, Page A4
Plaque honoring the builders of the Prom.
Task force
formed on
homelessness
As masks return,
safety remains
top priority at
Seaside schools
By R.J. MARX
Seaside Signal
By KATHERINE LACAZE
For Seaside Signal
At a listening session in July, city coun-
cilors vowed action on homelessness.
At last week’s City Council meeting,
they took the fi rst steps, with the announce-
ment of a homelessness task force to be
led by City Councilor Steve Wright and a
homelessness think tank overseen by City
Councilor Tita Montero.
Wright anticipated meeting with the task
force once a month, “with a lot of study and
hard work involved.”
“One of the things I talked about towards
the end, is we’ve gathered the informa-
tion,” Montero said. “Now we need to start
formulating what we can do and a way to
do that is through possibly brainstorming.
“I’m calling mine a think tank, so that
we can pull together a variety of ideas and
strategies coming from things that we’ve
learned and looking at how can we do
things, what can we do and how can we
fund them.”
Wright’s Seaside Task Force for Devel-
opment of Housing Opportunities comes
with the appointment of eight members,
including property manager Erin Barker and
homeless advocates Rick Bowers and Nelle
Moff att, who created the nonprofi t Friends
a solution,” said Skyler Archibald, the park
district’s executive director. “The staff of
the district advise the board to continue pur-
suing a more balanced relationship with the
other parties in this agreement while keep-
ing the fi eld open for community use.”
With a Title IX decision from the Offi ce
for Civil Rights of the U.S. Department of
Education this month, an additional ele-
ment is thrown to the mix. The agree-
ment between the Seaside School District
Oregon will require students and staff at
K-12 schools to mask up when school starts
in September.
Amid concerns about the spread of the
delta variant, Gov. Kate Brown last week
directed the Oregon Health Authority and the
Oregon Department of Education to create a
rule to require masks to be worn indoors at
schools for the 2021-22 school year.
While the nuts and bolts surrounding trans-
portation schedules, contact tracing and other
COVID-19 precautions are still being ham-
mered out by the Seaside School District’s
leadership team, Superintendent Susan Pen-
rod said they are looking forward to having
students back full time and in-person for the
2021-22 school year.
From a full academic schedule to club
activities and athletics programs, “we’re plan-
ning to move forward,” Penrod said.
It’s the detailed operational blueprint for
the school year that is currently under review
by the leadership team, which consists of Pen-
rod, buildings administrators and a few other
district staff members, including new assistant
principal of instruction Sarah Shields.
“It’s a complex situation, and there is a lot
to take into account,” Penrod said.
In this process, the team is looking to the
Oregon Department of Education’s Ready
Schools, Safe Learners resiliency framework.
See Field, Page A3
See Schools, Page A5
See Homelessness, Page A3
Hailey Hoff man/The Astorian
The view from home plate of the softball diamond at Broadway Field.
Park district wants fresh look
at Broadway Field agreement
Field of dreams, but
who will bear cost?
By R.J. MARX
Seaside Signal
The city owns the land. The Seaside
School District uses the fi elds. The Sunset
Empire Park and Recreation District main-
tains them.
The park district’s board believes it is
time to take a look at park expenses and
forecasts and putting a new deal in place
with an intergovernmental agreement from
2012 for Broadway Field.
“While the timing of this has certainly
taken longer than ideal, it will stay on the
forefront of our minds as we work toward
MORE INSIDE
With grant funds, districts partner
for summer child care • A3