A3 THE DAILY ASTORIAN • MONDAY, JANUARY 28, 2019 End of shutdown leaves contract workers hanging By JAY REEVES Associated Press BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Federal employees are turning on offi ce lights and computers and reopening national parks and museums for the fi rst time in weeks, but others employed by government contractors face still more uncertainty over when they’ll resume work or whether they’ll ever be paid for time lost to the stalemate over President Don- ald Trump’s border wall. For the hundreds of thou- sands of people who work for private companies that sup- port government, the future will be decided in part by how quickly federal agen- cies get running after the record 35-day shutdown, the fi ne print of contracts and the kindness of strangers. Michelle Oler of St. Louis resorted to online fundrais- ing to pay bills while side- lined from her contracting job processing rural development claims for the Agriculture Department, and she’s still unsure when she’ll resume work or receive money to compensate for missed paychecks. “The estimate of what I’ve lost fi nancially due to the shut- down is upwards of $3,500. The anxiety, sleeplessness and depression make it feel like much more,” Oler said Sun- day in an interview by email. Her GoFundMe page has brought in only $50 so far. Kevin Doyle, a father of three, estimated he’s out around $5,000 from his con- tracting job as an encryp- tion specialist at Laughlin Air Force Base on the Tex- as-Mexico border. He said he didn’t sleep and lost weight during the shutdown as both the stress and the bills piled up. Doyle said he will return to work today, but he starts a new job Friday with another company that he hopes will be more stable if talks fail over Trump’s demand for money for a wall and another shut- down begins next month. “We were scraping pen- nies and nickels together one day to get the baby a Happy Meal,” said Doyle, 40. “It’s just that bad.” The partial government shutdown ended when Trump backed off his demand that Congress commit $5.7 bil- lion for a U.S.-Mexico border wall before federal agencies could resume work. All or parts of multiple federal agen- cies were affected, with some employees furloughed and others forced to work with- out pay. The 800,000 federal work- ers who were affected will receive back pay, but con- tractors don’t have the same guarantee. Jack Lyons, who was fur- loughed from his contract job providing technical support at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in north Ala- bama, didn’t miss a paycheck during the shutdown. “I was one of the lucky ones,” he said. Colin Murphey/The Daily Astorian Gabriella Perez, left, attends a rally for her grandfather, Ruben Vera Perez, who was detained by immigration agents in Astoria in December. Vigil held for man detained by ICE Dozens gathered on Friday night By BRENNA VISSER The Daily Astorian About 50 people with teddy bears, candles and American fl ags gathered at the Astoria Riverwalk on Friday in a vigil for Ruben Vera Perez, an Astoria man detained by immigration agents in December. The vigil was orga- nized by local activists and clergy to help raise money to support Perez’s family while he’s detained. On Dec. 14, Ruben Perez appeared in Circuit Court downtown to han- dle a probation matter. Last year, Perez had been arrested and charged with drunken driving. Ruben Perez was detained by immigration agents while his wife, Maria Perez, was driving him to the jail to check in with a pre trial release offi cer. “I don’t wish this feel- ing on anybody,” Maria Perez said at the vigil with her daughter and grand- daughter by her side. A GoFundMe page is being circulated by Indi- visible North Coast Ore- gon and a tamale fund- raiser is being held by t he Lower Columbia Hispanic Council to help the fam- ily pay bills while he’s detained. The teddy bears peo- ple brought to the vigil will be sent to U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden in a call to bring attention to detention pol- icies in the United States. “There has to be a better way,” said Kit Ketcham, a pastor at Pacifi c Unitarian Universalist. “We call for mercy, peace and hope.” Trump doubts negotiators will strike budget deal he’d accept By DEB RIECHMANN Associated Press WASHINGTON — Pres- ident Donald Trump said the odds congressional nego- tiators will craft a deal to end his border wall standoff with Congress are “less than 50-50.” As hundreds of thousands of furloughed federal work- ers prepared to return to work, Trump told The Wall Street Journal that he doesn’t think the negotiators will strike a deal that he’d accept. He pledged to build a wall anyway using his executive powers to declare a national emergency if necessary. “I personally think it’s less than 50-50, but you have a lot of very good peo- ple on that board,” Trump said in an interview Sunday with the newspaper. The president was refer- ring to a bipartisan com- mittee of House and Senate lawmakers that will consider border spending as part of the legislative process. The president’s standoff with Democrats on Capitol Hill is far from over and the clock is ticking. The spend- ing bill Trump signed on Friday to temporarily end the partial government shut- down funds the shuttered agencies only until Feb. 15. It’s unclear if the Dem- ocrats will budge. Trump seemed girded for battle over the weekend, sending out a series of online mes- sages that foreshadowed the upcoming fi ght with law- makers. “BUILD A WALL & CRIME WILL FALL!” he tweeted. Is Trump prepared to shut down the government again in three weeks? “Yeah, I think he actu- ally is,” acting White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney said. “He doesn’t want to shut the government down, let’s make that very clear. He doesn’t want to declare a national emergency.” But Mulvaney said that at “the end of the day, the president’s commitment is to defend the nation and he will do it with or without Congress.” The linchpin in the stand- off is Trump’s demand for $5.7 billion for his prized wall at the U.S.-Mexico border, a project Demo- crats consider an ineffective, wasteful monument to a ridiculous Trump campaign WANTED promise. Asked if he’d willing to accept less than $5.7 bil- lion to build a barrier on the southern border, Trump replied: “I doubt it.” He added: “I have to do it right.” He also said he’d be wary of any proposed deal that exchanged funds for a wall for broad immigration reform. And when asked if he would agree to citizen- ship for immigrants who were illegally brought into the U.S. as children, he again replied, “I doubt it.” Divorce need not be expensive. We help you get the paperwork right and provide mediation to help you divide your assets. Christy Shoop Brian G. 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