OUR 115th Year April 29, 2022 SEASIDESIGNAL.COM $1.00 City passes overnight camping ordinance City could clear camp at 10th and Necanicum By R.J. MARX Seaside Signal Joshua Heineman Tillamook Rock Lighthouse is situated 1.2 miles from the Prom. FIVE VIEWS OF SEASIDE HISTORY ON THE PROM New interpretative signs along famed walkway By R.J. MARX Seaside Signal F ive new interpretative signs along the Prom off er a glimpse into Seaside’s history. City engineer L.C. Rogers designed and J.H. Tillman con- structed what would become 8,000 feet of seawall stretching 1.5 miles and built at a cost of $150,000. The Promenade, fondly called the Prom, was dedicated in a well-attended cer- emony on Aug. 7, 1921. It is the only concrete boardwalk along the ocean- front in the Pacifi c Northwest. Since that time it has been the des- tination for countless visitors. In 2021, the city celebrated its 100th anniversary with fanfare and a day of festivities. The sign project is the culmina- tion of a grant proposal the Seaside Visitors Bureau submitted to and was awarded by Travel Oregon in 2021 in connection with Prom Centennial eff orts, according to Joshua Heine- man, director of tourism marketing for the Seaside Visitors Bureau. The city received $14,000 for design, construction and fabrication of the interpretive signs. The total cost for this project end-to-end was about $15,500, with the balance cov- ered by the city advertising budget. “The subject matter for each sign simply came from the themes and questions that would occupy my mind while walking the Prom during the pandemic,” Heineman said, part- nering with the Seaside Museum & A new ordinance designed to get homeless campers off the street and establish an overnight parking program was approved by the City Council on Monday night. The City Council voted 5 to 2 to enact rules designed to close a homeless RV camp on 10th Avenue and Necanicum Drive and present alternatives for over- night shelter. Tom and Roxanne Veazey, who live near 10th and Necanicum, see this as the fi rst step toward clearing the camp. “It’s a start,” MORE Roxanne Veazey INSIDE said. “In the long Necanicum run, what they did RVs, campers in putting all those receive people in the Neca- notice • A3 nicum lot didn’t do any service to those people. They’re not going to walk over into the bathroom to use the restroom, they’re going to use the bushes. Then they’re going to take whatever comes out of their sewage and they’re going to put it in the trash.” The ordinance is intended to protect the safety of residents and regulate the use of public and private property by estab- lishing time, place and manner guidelines for homeless camping. It puts in place a permit program for temporary overnight camping on both residential and non- residential properties. Vehicles, includ- ing vans or motor homes, would need to be registered in compliance with vehicle insurance responsibilities. Without locations for people to go, “then basically the public streets are fair game,” Police Chief Dave Ham said. “The fact is that if we don’t have loca- tions to identify for somebody to go with See Signs, Page A6 See Ordinance, Page A3 Gearhart adopts parks master plan School district renews focus on Broadway Field By R.J. MARX Seaside Signal By KATHERINE LACAZE Seaside Signal A multiyear process came with approval of a new parks master plan for Gearhart. The City Council unani- mously adopted Ordinance 932 in a fi rst reading at a special meeting last Tues- day. The new rules amend the city’s comprehensive plan, zoning and sub- division ordinances to implement the plan. The parks master plan solidifi es Gearhart’s commitment to open space, recreation and outdoor activities now and into the future, Mayor Paulina Cockrum said. This is the fi rst parks plan for Gearhart. “The comprehensive plan calls for a parks master plan and the City Council has sought to create that plan for about 10 years,” she said. The parks plan, designed to look two decades into the future, was developed after the state awarded the city $15,000 grant funds for the project, part of the 2019 local government grant program from the Oregon Parks and Recreation Department. The plan became a priority after the city enacted short-term rental regula- tions and a new safety complex, Cock- rum said. See Parks, Page A6 After a survey and geological testing, the Seaside School Dis- trict Board is moving away from Wahanna Field as the potential location for a new softball com- plex and instead focusing on Broadway Field. “Wahanna Field doesn’t pro- vide a good development loca- tion for this facility,” consultant Brian Hardebeck, of Day CPM Services, told the school board during a meeting last week. The new or upgraded facil- ity must meet requirements out- lined in a resolution with the U.S. Department of Education’s Offi ce for Civil Rights to provide more equity between girls and boys sports facilities. The school district has until June 2023 to complete the project. In February, the school board voted to focus on Wahanna as the top candidate for the new facility, while not ruling out three other viable options. This sparked fur- ther investigation into the site, which included a regular survey, geologic testing and a wetlands delineation study. “We were a little disappointed in the results we received, pri- marily from the geologic test- ing,” Hardebeck said. “Findings there were not conducive to rec- ommendation of further devel- opment on that property.” The soil doesn’t have enough lateral resistivity to handle foun- dation loading for construction, with a rock layer that wouldn’t The school district is directing its attention to softball upgrades at Broadway Field. R.J. Marx See Field, Page A3 Pot revenue could help some off set fi rehouse bond tax hike By R.J. MARX Seaside Signal A Gearhart city councilor has suggested using money from the city’s cannabis taxes to help low-and-moderate income residents absorb higher property taxes if a $14.5 million bond measure for a new fi re- house is approved in the May election. “In my conversations with people out in the community canvassing and at the fi re station, open houses and mayor’s coff ees, quite a few people asked me about what are you guys doing for the people who can’t aff ord a tax increase?” City Coun- cilor Brent Warren said at a special meet- ing of the City Council last week. “This program is designed to those people who will really struggle with a tax increase. I can guarantee you there are low-and-mod- erate income people living in Gearhart.” With a second cannabis shop recently opened on U.S. Highway 101, city staff expects tax revenue to increase. The city could set aside $30,000 of the tax revenue for a program that could help residents earning up to 80% of area median income through a subsidy. “If we run out of funds, we can either be allocated additional funds or terminate the program,” Warren said. “This program is designed for those people who will really struggle with a tax increase.” City councilors were reluctant to take on the tax break before the May 17 vote on the bond measure. See Tax break, Page A6