A4 • Friday, May 27, 2022 | Seaside Signal | SeasideSignal.com SignalViewpoints Riding coast to coast to address housing need SEEN FROM SEASIDE R.J. MARX R iders from around the nation gath- ered in Seaside Saturday for the kick-off of a cross-country cycling journey. The event, sponsored by the Atlanta, Georgia, based Fuller Center, aims to raise money and awareness for the Fuller Cen- ter for Housing’s aim to build and improve housing for those in need. Riders, who will stay overnight at churches, expect to arrive in Portland, Maine on July 31 — 10 weeks from their departure. Accompanied by a van, cyclists can take breaks or get transport, depending on road conditions or if they have an issue with their bike or anything like that, Becky Mitchell, the group’s photographer and social media intern said. “They’re riding almost every single mile as much as they can,” she said. “That’s the goal, ultimately, to be able to do as much as they’re able.” The riders, from around the country, gath- ered May 20 at the Our Lady of Victory Church in Seaside. Their fi rst stop was Astoria, before head- ing onto the open road on Monday for a 60-mile trek into Washington. Along their journey they will work with local builders or communities to pitch in for construction or repairs. “We call them ‘build days,’” Mitchell said. Neil Mullikin, the group leader, has made the cross-country ride before, from east to west, solo. This will be his fi rst trip eastward. “Not only are we going to have some gor- geous destinations — East Glacier, Niagara Falls,” he said. “We’re also going to see fam- ilies and have the opportunity to serve fam- ilies. It always starts off about the ride for most people, and it ends up being about the people that we meet.” R.J. Marx Bicyclists prepared for their cross-country trip, leaving from Our Lady of Victory Church in Seaside. ‘IT ALWAYS STARTS OFF ABOUT THE RIDE FOR MOST PEOPLE, AND IT ENDS UP BEING ABOUT THE PEOPLE THAT WE MEET.’ Neil Mullikin, the group leader LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Step forward While I am disappointed with the outcome of the fi re station bond mea- sure, I am encouraged by the large num- ber of residents who voted no, and yet expressed strong admiration and gratitude for our volunteer fi remen and women and acknowledged the obvious need to replace our present 60-year-old structure. I appeal to this specifi c group of residents to step forward and lead the project to achieve the replacement of our outdated facility. I agree with Teddy Roosevelt who famously said that “it is not the critic who counts, but rather the doer of deeds.” I want to acknowledge and thank those many res- idents who have devoted countless hours with the goal of meeting a critical need of our community which scores of city leaders have been promoting since 2006. The cost of delay has been enormous. Gary Gillam Gearhart Support rainforest conservation plan I’ve lived on the North Coast for 33 years. As the owner of NW Women’s Surf Camps and Retreats, I have the pleasure of teach- ing people to catch their fi rst wave along the Oregon Coast, looking from the ocean onto the beauty of our beaches and forests. As a business owner, I understand that it is the health and beauty of the forests, rivers, estuaries, ocean, and wildlife that draws people here to spend their income and time in our restaurants, retail shops, hotels and on the water. That’s why I sup- port a strong conservation plan for the Til- lamook Rainforest. The Tillamook Rainforest stretches across more than 500,000 acres of state public forest lands between the North Coast and Portland. It supports wildlife, sequesters carbon, fi lters water for 500,000 Oregonians, and provides recreation like hiking, mountain biking, summer swim- ming, mushroom gathering, hunting, and fi shing. These activities, the cool moist air, and the sense of beauty people experi- OP-ED ence beneath the forest canopy are not just unique experiences for many, but a unique economic asset. The Western Oregon State Forests Habi- tat Conservation Plan would protect habitat for 17 threatened and endangered species on the North Coast like the coho salmon, marbled murrelet, and slender salaman- der. The plan would also provide assur- ances for timber production outside dedi- cated conservation areas. This plan is fair and balanced. We have the opportunity to weigh in on a Tillamook conservation plan by June 1, and I encourage you to do so today at for- estlegacy.org. Lexie Hallahan Seaside Slow down Sorry to see the Gearhart fi rehouse bond fail. That’s not my issue, however. I live on an arterial street that 4,000 to 5,000 cars and trucks a day use. That may be an exaggeration, but not by much. I can promise you that speeding is alive and well on that street. No one is slowing down at all. To watch the driving habits of those drivers one would think that gaso- line was free. Most drivers are monkey-see, mon- key do, behind the wheel. There are a few “pace cars” who observe the posted 30 mph speed limit, but if the leader of the pack is running 45 mph, you can bet the rest will follow. There are no sidewalks here, and there is no routine police pres- ence on this street, as there are no shoul- ders where an offi cer might pull a speeder over. Doing this would create another traf- fi c hazard. The only viable solution to this qual- ity of life issue is to post radar signs every quarter mile facing north and south for the entire length of the road. Instead, the County added a lift of fresh asphalt and new striping, a facelift it could be called, rendering the “WahannaBahn” into alter- nate U.S. Highway 101. Go fi gure. Life is cheap here on the fogline. Gary Durheim Seaside PUBLIC MEETINGS Contact local agencies for latest meeting information and attendance guidelines. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1 Seaside Improvement Commission, 6 p.m., 989 Broadway. MONDAY, JUNE 6 Seaside Housing Task Force, 6 p.m., 989 Broad- way. TUESDAY, JUNE 7 Gearhart City Council, 7 p.m., www.cityofgear- hart.com. Seaside Community Center Commission, 10 a.m., Bob Chisholm Community Center, 1225 Avenue A. THURSDAY, JUNE 2 Seaside Library Board, 4:30 p.m, 1131 Broadway. Seaside Parks Advisory Committee, 6 p.m., 989 Broadway. Seaside Planning Commission, 6 p.m., 989 Broadway. CIRCULATION MANAGER Shannon Arlint ADVERTISING SALES MANAGER Sarah Silver- Tecza PUBLISHER EDITOR Kari Borgen R.J. Marx PRODUCTION MANAGER CONTRIBUTING WRITERS John D. Bruijn Skyler Archibald Joshua Heineman Katherine Lacaze Esther Moberg SYSTEMS MANAGER Carl Earl CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER Jeff TerHar Wake-up call in Gearhart unanimous approval the city manager signed a land-swap agreement with a developer GUEST COLUMN while hiding the city’s negotiations position JACK from public view. ZIMMERMAN As a result, the city gave away millions of potential profi ts to a developer, a portion of those profi ts could have been part of the land ast Tuesday Gearhart City Hall was swap and used to build the fi rehouse rather handed a stinging defeat at the polls. than our community’s tax dollars. Does After more than six years of prepara- the city think the average Gearharters is so tion for the largest municipal project our little fi nancially secure that they should be prohib- ited from sharing a portion of this transferred town has ever conceived, voters said “no.” wealth? We said “no” in spite of a highly-orga- The city decided to create its own Face- nized promotional campaign by the city, a campaign that included a generously-funded book discussion page about the fi re proj- political action committee, ample media sup- ect, and invited the community to partici- pate, a promising idea, except the councilor port, a blizzard of letters and endorsements, who runs the page decided it was his own and an online propaganda blitz. We saw all this, and still said “no” in numbers that were personal group, and deleted, censored, and blocked views or citizens he disagreed with, loud, clear, and overwhelming. while allowing these citizens, representing Was this a surprise? No, anybody who the vast majority of Gear- knows and understands hart, to be jeered at, taunted, Gearhart knew this would THOSE called “Nazis,” and told to happen. It happened because get out of town. City hall’s those leading this town LEADING THIS endorsement of this group are no longer in sync with and its content remains the Gearhart community, TOWN ARE prominent on its website. our silent majority, and its NO LONGER After rejecting the High- needs, wants, and values. lands location as too far from They no longer represent IN SYNC WITH central Gearhart, too isolated their electorate on this issue. THE GEARHART after a tsunami, too close to Let’s review. the Hertig station, and with Despite the fact that the COMMUNITY. too long response times, community soundly rejected city hall promised a series city hall’s preferred loca- of town halls, on the record, featuring panels tion for the new fi re station, Lesley Miller of experts, that would explain to everybody’s Park, proponents continued to speak out satisfaction why these reasons for rejection in favor of that location, including a cur- suddenly no longer apply. However, town rent city councilor and a member of the cit- halls never materialized, and instead we were izen fi rehouse committee. They believe that invited to drink coff ee with the mayor, and if the park were “still in play” that our prob- enjoy barbecue at fi re station open houses. lems would fi nally be solved. How wrong Here, off the record, we were lectured, they are. scolded, and patronized, with words that were Despite a survey in which the Pacifi c heavy on emotion but light on logic. Way station received over 360 votes as the We attended and spoke up at city coun- No. 1 preferred location, the only location cil meetings, to no avail. These examples in the survey that survived scrutiny, the city are just a few of many that indicate that city scrapped it and disregarded the now major- hall does not represent the majority of Gear- ity of Gearharters who prefer it, and who believe it could be easily funded with a com- harters anymore. They show a lack of trust in our judgement, our values, our intelli- bination of grants, donations and a modest gence, and our expertise. They believe that bond levy. they know better than us, and deserve to dic- Despite the fact that long ago Gearhart, tate to us what we should be willing to pay in defense of its visual beauty, prohibited the use of large political banners, our current for, what we should not be willing to risk in our lives, and what the best future is for mayor and two councilors decided that the Gearhart and its values. They know better ends justify the means, and defi ed the ordi- nance by erecting the largest political banner than the overwhelming majority of us, their Gearhart had ever seen, right at the center of electorate. We disagree, and in response to their dis- town. I think that sign alone, and the hubris regard, we handed them this defeat. Will that made it, was enough to convince most city hall wake up? No less than a profound Gearharters to vote “no.” Despite Gearhart’s tradition of respect for transformation is needed, for the sake of the its hard-working families, with city council’s future of Gearhart. L Seaside Signal Letter policy Subscriptions The Seaside Signal is published weekly by EO Media Group, 503-738-5561 seasidesignal.com Copyright © 2022 Seaside Signal. Nothing can be reprinted or copied without consent of the owners. The Seaside Signal welcomes letters to the editor. The deadline is noon Monday prior to publication. Letters must be 400 words or less and must be signed by the author and include a phone number for verifi cation. We also request that submissions be limited to one letter per month. Submit your letter online to https:// www.seasidesignal.com/site/forms/online_services/ letter_editor or email editor@seasidesignal.com. Annually: $51.00, monthly autopay is $4.25 e-Edition only: $4 a month POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Seaside Signal, P.O. 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