Friday, October 22, 2021 | Seaside Signal | SeasideSignal.com • A3 Homeless: The urgency is growing with the change of seasons Continued from Page A1 or discouraged at how big the problem is. “Then it evolves into business as usual,” Moff ett said. “And everybody’s busy, so that’s an easy place to go.” “We can talk this to death,” City Councilor Tita Montero said. “It’s so over- whelming that it can just bat- ter us down. We’ve done a lot of good work here. We are ready, we want to jump, but we can’t jump because we either don’t know which way to jump or we don’t have the resources to do that.” Seaside’s push to address homelessness grew amid reports of people living in cars, the streets and in the woods. Oregon state House Bill 2006 requires local govern- ments to approve applica- tions for emergency shelter, regardless of any land use laws. House Bill 3115 aims to protect unsheltered Orego- nians from fi nes or arrest for sleeping or camping on pub- lic property when there are no other options. Seaside has until mid-2023 to comply. The topic was among the top identifi ed issues at a City Council goal-setting meet- R.J. Marx Mayor Jay Barber and Ariel Nelson of the League of Oregon Cities at a Seaside homeless forum at the convention center. R.J. Marx Homeless often sleep overnight or store belongings in the city parking lot next to the Seaside Civic and Convention Center. ing in January. A warm- ing center, shelters and a homeless liaison for Clat- sop County were identifi ed as major needs for Seaside. The county hired two home- less liaisons in the spring, but options for the homeless off Seaside’s streets haven’t materialized. For Public Works Direc- tor McDowell, the problem transcends income levels. “We have a huge prob- lem in Seaside, and hous- ing, period,” McDowell said. “Our workforce can’t fi nd housing. It’s not aff ord- able. Businesses are strug- gling with shortened hours, which decreases revenue. We’re a city 3 miles long, 1 mile wide at best. And we have no housing here that’s aff ordable for anyone. We don’t have available land to build the housing because most of the land that is left is a wetland or fl oodway.” The urgency is grow- ing with the change of sea- sons, Mayor Jay Barber said. “One of the high pri- orities is a warming center/ navigation center centrally located somewhere here in Seaside,” he said. Montero urged collabora- tion with other governmen- tal entities, especially in sit- ing locations to address the need. “While the city may not have property for tran- sitional or permanent hous- ing, land may be available elsewhere in the county,” she said. “We have to have a local mentality but we also need a county mentality.” A City Council work- shop will take place Nov. 8 prior to the regular council meeting, at which time councilors could adopt a set of initiatives. Barber hopes to focus on “low-hanging fruit.” “My hope would be that the group focuses on three or four initiatives so that we begin to see some tangible work being done,” he said. “We’ve talked in general about some of these, like a warming center. We’ve talked about the tiny house developments, we’ve talked about fi nding a campus or RV park — to really begin to focus on tangible solution projects that we can begin to work on.” School: No projects expected on the property before December 2023 Continued from Page A1 R.J. Marx Former Gearhart Elementary School, after exterior, landscape work and repaving. Prior to the August Plan- ning Commission meeting, Scofi Gearhart LLC with- drew its conditional use per- mit application after own- ers disputed comments presented in a staff report prior to this month’s Plan- ning Commission meet- ing, including the need for a property zone change to add the proposed caretaker apartments in the building, now known as the Gearhart Recreation Center. The original school build- ing was constructed in 1948 and added on to in 1968. The Moreys purchased the 8.5-acre property in 2020. The school is zoned public/semi-public, with outright uses as govern- ment facility, public meeting space or school. If owners elect to include housing in their fi nal plan, they envision it being sin- gle-story, one- and two-bed- room long-term rental cot- tages that will be designed to be in keeping with the char- acter of Gearhart. Water test sites will be monitored from Novem- ber through April. Feedback from the DEQ could come possibly as early as the end of June, Morey said. “Until we have that feedback from the DEQ. We really can’t do anything else in terms of any planning on what we can do on the site. At last week’s City Council meeting, Gearhart City Councilor Brent War- ren said the school looks “a whole lot better now than it did when he bought it. It’s a huge improvement for the community.” Morey doesn’t expect any projects on the prop- erty before December 2023. “That would be my time,” he said. “You’ve to get the background before you do anything.” If not for you, for them. Get vaxxed. colpachealth.org/vax 80% of COVID-19 infections occur in unvaccinated people. Which means, if you’re not vaccinated, you’re helping the pandemic continue. Fortunately, the vaccines are safe, free and highly effective at keeping you from catching and spreading COVID. Please protect yourself, the people you love and our community. Get vaxxed today.