A2 • Friday, October 8, 2021 | Seaside Signal | SeasideSignal.com OBITUARIES Harvey ‘Wade’ Halbrook Jr. Seaside Sept. 9, 1962 — Sept. 20, 2021 Harvey “Wade” Halbrook Jr. took his last breath after a gal- lant fi ght with cancer on Sept. 20, 2021, leaving this world too early at the age of 59. Wade Halbrook was born in Seaside to Marilyn Jean Hal- brook and Harvey “Swede” Wade Halbrook Sr. (both pre- ceded in death) on Sept. 9, 1962. Wade graduated from Sea- side High School in 1980 and attended Chemeketa Community College in Salem. Wade lived in Arizona for a short time. His heart brought him back to Sea- side where his family and friends were. Wade worked at the Gear- hart Dairy Queen (eating all the profi ts), haying for Don Fall- eur, logging for F&B Logging, Gary Hansen Concrete, fi shing in Alaska for Dave Lethen and more concrete work for Arizona Suntec before opening his own business, Halbrook Concrete, in the early 1990s. He truly loved what he did, to quote Wade: “Best dollar ever spent.” Wade was an amazing fi rst baseman, he had such a pas- sion for baseball, hunting, fi sh- ing, clam digging, golfi ng and traveling, spring training in Ari- zona, hunting in Canada, fi shing in Alaska with Jamaica mixed in and then there was his dog, “Yogi,” man’s best friend. Wade loved living this life. Wade was extremely gen- erous, always helping others in need, donating his time and money through the American Legion local scholarship fund, which began in honoring his friend Danny Mac beginning as a baseball tournament and later became a golf tournament when they all got too “old” to play. Wade only wanted to talk about living and living he did. Wade loved being Santa (the laugh) and the Easter Bunny. Wade had a huge heart and an even bigger love for his fam- ily and friends, memories made were cherished. Wade knew very few strangers in his life and remained friends with all he met along his journey. Wade was very rich in the friend department. Along with the huge heart came the larger than life per- sona and the infectious laugh, you knew when Wade was in the room and you wanted to be a part of it. Wade is survived by his sis- ter, Janet Halbrook; brother, John Halbrook; aunts, Mary Kay Erickson, Ganet Moe (preceded in death); uncle, John Johnson; former spouses; Jennifer Braun and Myra Cordova; Wade’s very special friend, Joanne Olson; cousins, David (Tuf) Gould, Kevin Gould and Kim Gould, Randy (Tammy) Moe, Scott Moe, Greg Gould, Ronnie Gould, Sydney Gould, Samantha Gould, Nicole Gould, Joel Routh, Beau Routh, Ashtyn (Kyle) Elliott, Karlee and Kaitlyn Moe; nieces and nephews, Mindy Olson, Jes- sica Heslop, Jobe Johnson, Jalisa Johnson, Gunder Halbrok, Val- erie Kent and Angela Tuers; and great nieces, nephews and cous- ins, Alyssa, Zion, Elijah, Mia, Aiden, Joel Jr., Kylie, Trey, Leo, Kane and Sophie. The last 2 1/2 years Wade fought a valiant fi ght against cancer. Wade had cancer but it never had him — such strength, dignity and humor. He like his sweet momma never gave in or up. There is no doubt that Mar- ilyn was fi rst in line with open arms waiting for her Wade. He was a very proud mama’s boy. Wade was bigger than life and will be missed by his family and friends. He was loved from his fi rst breath to his last and will never be forgotten. Honor Wade by living your best life each day, share his stories and remember to laugh. Those wishing to contribute in Wade Halbrook’s honor may do so to: Seaside American Legion Scholarship Fund; P.O. Box 285 Seaside, OR., 97138. A celebration of Wade’s life will be held at 3 p.m. Oct. 9 at the Seaside American Legion. Astoria dispatch temporarily moving to Seaside By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Astorian Short on staff for nearly two years, Astoria’s emergency dis- patch center will temporarily move operations to Seaside in October. The dispatch center has been running with only a handful of dis- patchers since early 2020, a sit- uation that has required staff to shoulder a signifi cant amount of overtime each month and that Astoria Police Chief Geoff Spald- ing said is undesirable and unsus- tainable. Meanwhile, the Seaside Dispatch Center has been fully staff ed for a while for the fi rst time in more than a decade. Over the past year, Seaside dis- patchers have traveled north to help out in Astoria, but the new agreement between the two cities will place Astoria’s four dispatch- ers in the Seaside offi ce until four new hires can be fully trained. The arrangement could last as long as six months. The combined offi ce will han- dle 911 calls countywide, together covering all the fi re and police enti- ties served under separate Seaside and Astoria dispatch agreements. The arrangement means there will be more dispatchers available to fi eld calls at any given time — a major plus for emergency respond- ers, said Mitch Brown, the commu- nications manager for the Seaside Police Department. The combined dispatch could shorten the time it takes to organize mutual aid calls. Staffi ng levels The Astoria Police Department can’t point to any one reason why staffi ng levels have dipped so low. BOTH DISPATCH CENTERS ARE IN THE TSUNAMI INUNDATION ZONE. IN MORE RECENT TALKS ABOUT POSSIBLE CONSOLIDATION, DISCUSSIONS HAVE FOCUSED ON THE NEED FOR ANY CONSOLIDATED CENTER TO BE LOCATED OUTSIDE OF THE INUNDATION ZONE. Some dispatchers retired and oth- ers left unexpectedly. Four new dispatchers are in training or set to begin training soon and could be on board in the next three to six months. The dispatch center is authorized for nine full-time dis- patch positions, one operations supervisor and one communica- tions manager. It can easily take up to six months to get someone profi cient in dispatching. Then some hires ultimately discover the job is not for them once they are working the desk. It is a diffi cult job that requires a high level of multitask- ing skills, Spalding said. Then there are the peculiari- ties and challenges of dispatch- ing within small communities. A dispatcher must remain profes- sional no matter what, said Jen- nifer Schermerhorn, a Seaside dispatcher. “And you may know someone who is calling 911 on the worst day of their life,” she said. Talks of consolidation — to combine the two dispatch centers — have occurred at various times over the years with no concrete steps toward a single countywide dispatch center. Seaside has con- tinued to invest in its own equip- ment and continues to fi ne-tune radio issues to reliably reach all corners of its coverage area. The combined operations set to begin in October could act as a sort of test run for future consolidation, Brown allowed. “We’ll be able to see what works and what doesn’t work,” he said. But laying the groundwork for possible consolidation is not the point of the agreement between Seaside and Astoria, offi cials say. “This is to address a more immediate need of staffi ng short- ages,” Spalding said. “We are defi - nitely not going into this that it’s a test for some future consolidation eff ort.” “The simple answer of it is any- thing is always possible,” said Jon Rahl, Seaside’s assistant city man- ager. But, he added, echoing Spal- ding, “It’s not the conversation right now. The conversation is, ‘We have a staffi ng issue. How are we going to solve it?’” There are other issues that need to be addressed in any discus- sion about consolidation. It isn’t as straightforward as moving all operations to one of the existing centers. Both dispatch centers are in the tsunami inundation zone. In more recent talks about possible consol- idation, discussions have focused on the need for any consolidated center to be located outside of the inundation zone, Spalding said. And while the separate Astoria and Seaside dispatch centers now use the same software and hard- ware, the dispatchers wear diff er- ent hats. In Seaside, dispatchers also handle some front desk work and manage the records division, Spalding noted. The Seaside cen- ter also handles a lower volume of calls because they have fewer sub- scribers to dispatch services than Astoria. Workarounds Seaside dispatch supports Sea- side police, Seaside fi re, Cannon Beach police, Gearhart police and several rural fi re protections ser- vices on the south end of Clatsop County. Astoria dispatchers serve the Astoria and Warrenton police and fi re departments, a number of rural fi re protection services on the north end of the county and the sheriff ’s offi ce. Still, Spalding told the Asto- ria City Council at a meeting last week that the workarounds the two centers have developed to address staffi ng shortages in Astoria mean the diff erent dispatch staff s have now worked closely together. They’ve covered areas of the county they wouldn’t have before, are familiar with each other’s oper- ations and have established rela- tionships with one another. The agreement with Seaside could be extended if necessary. Though Astoria dispatchers may be in Seaside for up to six months, Spalding expects it will be closer to three. PUBLIC SAFETY LOG SEASIDE POLICE DEPT. PUBLIC SAFETY LOG Sept. 24 12:06 a.m., Turnaround restrooms: Graffi ti is reported. Public Works is advised to clean up. 7:40 a.m., 2500 block N. Roosevelt: Caller said she woke up to fi nd pizza on her counter. She reported this as suspicious. 10:11 a.m., 2400 block, U.S. Highway 101: Caller reports a foul odor coming from a motel; police drove by and said there was no smell consistent with what was described. 1:08 p.m., N. Roosevelt: Police assist a person looking for their missing ankle monitoring device. The search was unsuccessful. 10:52 p.m., 800 block Necanicum: Dog bite reported. Sept. 30 9:25 p.m., 400 block N. Prom: A distur- bance is reported. SEASIDE FIRE & RESCUE PUBLIC SAFETY LOG 5:11 p.m., 1000 block Avenue F: Caller reports her boyfriend left her. Police tell her he was just arrested 15 min- utes earlier for driving while intoxicat- ed. The couple were reunited at the police department. Sept. 24 Sept. 25 Sept. 26 2:03 p.m., 900 block 12th Avenue: Abandoned junk is reported. 8:18 p.m., 700 block OceanWay: Fire alarm. 6:27 p.m., Turnaround: A young child reported lost is found by an offi cer and reunited with its parents. 8:24 p.m., 300 block N. Prom: Fire alarm. 6:43 p.m., Quatat Park: Caller reports people on the boat docks they believe are trespassing; the business owner is contacted and says its employees and there is no need for police intervention. 6:38 p.m. 1400 block N. Wahanna: EMS call. Sept. 26 11:04 a.m., Avenue D and Lincoln: Caller reports motorhome they sus- pect of camping. Police were unable to contact the occupants who were not there. A parking pass for a local campground was on the vehicle’s windshield so police thought it was unlikely the camper would be remain- ing in the area long or any indication of unlawful lodging. 2:04 p.m., Necanicum River and 12th Avenue: A kayak found fl oating in the river was fi shed out by fi refi ghters and brought to police headquarters. Sept. 27 1:45 a.m., 400 block Second Avenue: A person who said they wouldn’t leave left after a conversation with a police offi cer. 12:07 p.m., Police headquarters: A person came in to register as a sex off ender. 11:58 p.m., 300 block S. Franklin: Call- er reports hearing screaming in the area. Patrol is unable to locate anyone in distress. Sept. 28 10:57 a.m., Quatat Park: A banjo is reported stolen. 5:45 p.m., 1500 block S. Roosevelt: Caller reports subject lying on his back in an adjacent property all day. Police make contact and the person said they will be moving on. 9:24 p.m., Quatat Park: Property crimes are reported. Sept. 29 6:40 a.m., Broadway: Caller reports male at the entrance to a building. They said the person was acting strangely and making employees nervous. Subject was contacted and advised to move along. 1:06 p.m., Carousel Mall: A subject is trespassed. 6:31 p.m., 2400 block S. Roosevelt: Fire alarm. 10:23 p.m., 500 block S. Broadway: EMS. Sept. 27 Sept. 28 7:44 a.m., 1100 block N. Roosevelt: Fire alarm. 8:00 a.m., 800 block N. Holladay: EMS call. 8:36 a.m., 3600 block Sunset Blvd., Fire investigation. 8:45 a.m., 2500 block S. Roosevelt: EMS call. Sept. 29 11:11 a.m., N. Wahanna: EMS call. Sept. 30 2:24 p.m., 300 block S. Roosevelt: EMS call. 3:41 p.m., East End of Avenue D: Fire investigation. 7:18 p.m., 1600 block Cooper: EMS call. Car in water A trooper on patrol on U.S. Highway 101 near milepost 13.5 Sept. 18 at 11:51 p.m. saw a black four-door sedan off the road in standing water. The female operator said she’d been traveling north when she applied her brakes on a curve and lost control of the wheel. The trooper thought she seemed intoxicated and performed the fi eld tests; the woman was arrest- ed on scene, charged with driving while under the infl uence of intoxi- cants. After she was medically cleared at Columbia Memorial Hospital she was transported to the Clatsop County jail where she took the breath test providing a blood alcohol content percent of .14. She was issued criminal citations for driving while intoxicated and reckless driving. No further infor- mation was available identifying her. Two-car crash A two-car crash happened Sept. 20 at 10:46 a.m. on U.S. Highway 101 at milepost 1. No one was injured. Both cars were stopped behind a fl agger at a construction site. A Ford box truck due to mechanical failure rolled downhill, rear-ending a Prius. The box truck, operated by a Seaside man, was towed by Classic Towing as it couldn’t be driven. The Prius was driven from the scene. FIRE LOG Gearhart Fire Department responded to a call received via 911 on Sept. 21 at 3:43 p.m. responding to a potential water rescue just north of the Del Ray Beach access. As crews responded fi refi ghters gathered information as to who the potential victim was, their possible location and their descrip- tion. Volunteers, alongside responding Seaside Fire and Rescue, were able to locate the individual in under 15 minutes. The individual denied medi- cal care and advised us he was not in distress, just enjoying the water. Along with Seaside Fire, the U.S. Coast Guard, and Medix Ambulance assisted in the response. Sept. 1 9:10 a.m., emergency medical service, Tressel. 3:16 p.m., unauthorized burning, First Street. Troopers responded Sept. 24 at 3:46 p.m. to a crash on U.S. Highway 101 at milepost 23 when a GMC SUV traveling northbound slowed for heavy traffi c was struck from behind by Dodge Caravan also traveling north. As a result of the impact, the GMC rolled once in the highway. The driver said they were slightly injured but refused medical attention. The Caravan was operated by a 79-year- old man from Cannon Beach. The GMC operator is an 85-year-old man from Manzanita. Sept. 2 Cell phone stolen A 24-year-old Portland woman told state police Sept. 26 at 4:00 p.m. her cell phone was stolen from her bag while she was surfi ng at Indian Beach. She was calling from Portland and said she was trying to track her phone. Information was taken for a report and options given. Eluded police PUBLIC SAFETY LOG A 24-year-old Warrenton woman whose name is known to police eluded an offi cer on patrol Sept. 28 at 2:07 p.m., on U.S. Highway 101 at milepost 17 southbound. State police say while on patrol they observed a car speeding on the highway; patrol got behind it and attempted to initiate a traffi c stop, and the driver did stop, but then activated its turn signal and sped off . Patrol did not pursue. Seaside police later located the car abandoned. A search of the area for the driver was unsuccessful. Her white Ford Edge was impounded and towed by Classic Towing. The case is open pending further information. Troopers went to the Sunset Beach area Sept. 18 at 3:40 p.m. after re- ceiving a report of a woman fl ashing naked portions of her body to passing motorists. After speaking with the re- porting party, the subject was located in her car heading back to U.S. High- way 101. She said she had been on the beach in various degrees of nudity and was dancing. She volunteered to take the fi eld sobriety test and was not intoxicated. She told police she had a concealed fi rearm in her car in her purse and she had proper paperwork to carry it from Washington. A records check was conducted and came back clear. She was informed the case of the fl ashing complaint would be referred to the district attorney’s offi ce. She is 31 and from Deer Park, Washington. The complainant is a 50-year-old woman from Lake Oswego. GEARHART FIRE DEPT. Rollover OREGON STATE POLICE Flashing several times, strike a power pole and land on all four tires. The Hamlet Fire department assisted troopers at the scene. The driver, Geoff rey Troy Poole, admitted his license was suspended and arranged for his own tow. No injuries were reported. One-car crash A 37-year-old Seaside man told police he dozed off behind the wheel Sept. 30 at 5:09 p.m. on U.S. Highway 26 at milepost 7, causing him to leave the highway where he was traveling west, drive on to the shoulder, head into a ditch, travel the ditch for approx- imately 150 feet before rolling over 9:27 a.m., emergency medical service, First Street. 4:51 p.m., unauthorized burning, Second Street, Gearhart. Sept. 3 2:58 a.m., emergency medical ser- vice,, Tressel. 8:46 a.m., emergency medical service, First Street. 6:14 p.m., authorized controlled burning, Hager. Sept. 4 1:41 a.m., emergency medical service, Gearhart Greens. 11:23 a.m., emergency medical ser- vice, Manion, Surf Pines. 6:06 p.m., emergency medical service, 2657 U.S. Highway 101. Sept. 6 5:45 a.m., emergency medical service, 88767 U.S. Highway 101. 4:03 p.m., emergency medical service, Railroad. Sept. 7 12:53 a.m., emergency medical ser- vice, Manion, Surf Pines. 6:27 a.m., emergency medical service, Salminen. 3:09 p.m., emergency medical service, Cullaby Lake, Warrenton. Sept. 8 12:00 a.m., forest, woods or wildland fi re. 12:13 p.m., good intent call, Pacifi c Way. 9:33 p.m., smoke scare, odor of smoke, Lewis, Sunset Beach. 10:33 p.m., emergency medical ser- vice, Seabreeze, Surf Pines. Sept. 9 12:12 a.m., building fi re, Fifth Avenue, Seaside.