PROPERTY LINES REAL ESTATE GUIDE INSIDE 144TH YEAR, NO. 131 ONE DOLLAR WEEKEND EDITION // FRIDAY, DECEMBER 30, 2016 Judge Nelson steps down from the bench Long-serving arbiter lauded for service By KATIE FRANKOWICZ For The Daily Astorian The man pleaded “No contest” to the charges against him. He stood up. “Thank you, judge,” he said politely, nodding his head at Clatsop County District Court Judge Phil Nelson. “Enjoy your retirement.” As two deputies escorted the man out of Courtroom 200 Thursday afternoon, Nelson watched with a sort of bemused, half-smile on his face. He leaned back in the vast brown chair, a piece of furniture that his judicial assistant Paula Hovden estimates has comfortably supported one judge or another for the last 40 years. Then he moved on to the next case. Judge Nelson offi cially retires on Jan. 2 after 23 years on the bench, mak- ing him one of the longest running elected Clatsop County offi cials to date, almost beating the 24-year-run of Asto- ria’s former mayor Willis Van Dusen. Judge Phillip Nelson visits with guests during his re- tirement party on Thursday at Clatsop County Circuit Court in Astoria. Busy tenure During his time as judge, Nelson oversaw numerous cases and started a successful drug court program that has seen 192 graduates since 2001. In 2013, Nelson was a deciding voice in a com- plex and controversial liquefi ed natu- ral gas project. He ruled in favor of a Danny Miller The Daily Astorian See NELSON, Page 6A SO LONG, 2016 THE NORTH COAST’S TOP STORIES OF THE YEAR Hundreds gathered to remember and honor fallen officer Jason Goodding at Broadway Field on Feb . 7 in Seaside. Joshua Bessex The Daily Astorian The Daily Astorian T oday we mark the closing of the year in news. The stories and images that shaped our lives run the gamut from Sgt. Jason Good- ding’s tragic death to Oregon LNG’s demise to the struggle for affordable housing. We have new lead- ership, Walmart is breaking ground and the governor is proposing closing the Oregon Youth Authority. Danny Miller/The Daily Astorian A man battles weather conditions walking past storm damage along Laneda Avenue after a tornado touched down Oct. 14 in Manzanita. READ ABOUT ALL THESE AND MORE AND SEE THE TOP PHOTOS FROM THE YEAR IN WEEKEND BREAK, 1C-5C Midwife a nurturer by nature New arrival is former farmer and activist By ERICK BENGEL The Daily Astorian Ever since she was a little girl, Corinne Almquist wanted to be a midwife, a health care provider who assists women during childbirth. But Almquist, who moved to Astoria from Vermont in November, got sidetracked by OUR NEW NEIGHBORS HIGHLIGHTING PEOPLE WHO ARE NEW TO THE COMMUNITY farming and environmental activism, she said. After work- ing as a doula — a childbirth assistant — for a number of years, helping with home and hospital births, she decided to return to school. See ALMQUIST, Page 7A Corinne Almquist, a certified nurse midwife at Columbia Memorial Hospital, moved to Astoria in November. Erick Bengel/The Daily Astorian Danny Miller / The Daily Astorian Confederate soldiers practice forming ranks before the start of battle during the Fort Stevens annual Civil War Re-enact- ment on Sept. 3 at Fort Stevens Historic Area in Warrenton. A fi nal goodbye Roll call of some public fi gures who died in 2016 By BERNARD MCGHEE Associated Press Death claimed transcen- dent political fi gures in 2016, including Cuba’s revolution- ary leader and Thailand’s longtime king, but also took away royals of a different sort: kings of pop music, from Prince and David Bowie to George Michael. Embracing Soviet-style communism, Fidel Castro, who died in November, over- came imprisonment and exile to become leader of Cuba and defy the power of the United States at every turn during his half-century rule. Per- haps befi tting the controver- sial leader, his death elicited both tears and cheers across the Western Hemisphere. However, shock, grief and nostalgia greeted the deaths of several giants of pop music. David Bowie, who broke musical See DEATHS, Page 7A