A3 THE DAILY ASTORIAN • FRIDAY, MARCH 8, 2019 State lawmakers release two-year budget draft Astoria man pleads no contest to attempted murder By BRENNA VISSER The Daily Astorian A Fern Hill man accused of walking into a Westport wom- an’s house and chas- ing her with a chain- saw pleaded no contest Thursday to attempted murder . Loren Shaun Knapp, 57, was charged with attempted murder, attempted fi rst-de- gree assault, fi rst-de- gree burglary and other charges related to the incident last May. Knapp apparently drove to the Westport home in search of a man who he believed stole his rifl e, Dep- uty District Attorney Beau Peterson said. He entered the home and began chasing the woman inside with the chainsaw. He said he was going to kill her and sawed through a bedroom door. He left the house and began confronting the man outside before deciding to leave the scene, Peter- son said during a court hearing. Sheriff ’s Loren Shaun Knapp deputies arrested Knapp near the home shortly after. Knapp is sched- uled to be sentenced next week. Attempted murder is a Measure 11 crime that carries a mandatory minimum sentence of 7½ years in prison. As part of a plea deal, the rest of Knapp’s charges have been dismissed by the prosecution. Knapp has been arrested in Clatsop County more than 25 times — including for charges of burglary, criminal mischief, men- acing, assault, animal abuse and stalking. Johnson a key player in process By MARK MILLER Oregon Capital Bureau Ethics commission rejects settlement with ex-fi rst lady By GORDON R. FRIEDMAN The Oregonian said. Steiner Hayward was one of two sena- tors named to co-chair Ways and Betsy Johnson Means for this session. State Sen. Betsy Johnson, D-Scap- poose, said the three co-chairs have worked well together, and she suggested that their geographic diver- sity helped guide their bud- get proposal. All are from western Oregon, but John- son represents a mostly rural district northwest of Portland, Steiner Hayward represents an urban district on Portland’s w est side, and ‘FOR THE FIRST TIME IN MY CAREER IN THE SENATE, IT IS REFRESHING TO GET A GLIMPSE AT A BUDGET FRAMEWORK THAT IS FISCALLY RESPONSIBLE AND WILL LEAVE A HEALTHY ENDING BALANCE.’ State Sen. Herman Baertschiger Jr., R-Grants Pass The Oregon Health Plan isn’t entirely spared from cuts the way that the state schools fund is, but Steiner Hayward, who is a prac- ticing physician, said the co-chairs are proposing no cuts to patient services. “There may be some areas of savings for admin- istration, but we will not be cutting eligibility or bene- fi ts for any Oregonian who receives services or is eli- gible for services through OHP,” Steiner Hayward Rayfi eld represents part of the mid-Willamette Valley. “We all brought our own ability to project the con- cerns of all of Oregon into this budget,” Johnson said. Rayfi eld said the com- mittee’s job is to balance the cost of government ser- vices with the available resources. “This is not a perfect budget,” he said. “There will be folks who are not happy with this budget. ” The Senate Republican leader isn’t one of those folks. “For the fi rst time in my career in the Senate, it is refreshing to get a glimpse at a budget framework that is fi scally responsible and will leave a healthy ending balance,” said Sen. Herman Baertschiger Jr., R-Grants Pass, in a statement released shortly after the budget was unveiled Thursday. Johnson, Rayfi eld and Steiner Hayward said keep- ing Oregon fi nancially sta- ble is one of their main objectives. They want to avoid deeper cuts in the coming decade, especially if the state’s economy slows down. “This takes a signifi - cant step toward creating sustainable buadgets in the future,” Rayfi eld said. The Legislature is required to approve a bal- anced budget for the next biennium by the end of June. With both the gov- ernor’s budget proposal and the Ways and Means co-chairs’ plan now on the table, the state’s leaders have until the end of the legislative session to ham- mer out an agreement. The Oregon Capital Bureau is a collaboration between EO Media Group, Pamplin Media Group and Salem Reporter. WANTED Alder and Maple Saw Logs & Standing Timber Northwest Hardwoods • Longview, WA Contact: John Anderson • 360-269-2500 Barn Dance & Dinner Live Music By Thunder Road Saturday March 9 , 2019 th Elks Holiday Helpers FundRaiser Presents: t Western Ev A d ul en n A BBQ Chicken Dinner Live Western Band Games & Contests Dinner starts 6 pm Band starts 8 pm 324 Ave A • Seaside t State ethics commis- sioners on Thursday unan- imously rejected a pro- posed settlement with ex-fi rst lady Cylvia Hayes, Commissioner Dan Mason said. Hayes had agreed in January to a $44,000 fi ne for breaking ethics laws 22 times. But the settlement needed fi nal approval from the Oregon Government Ethics Commission. Hayes did not attend the commission meeting, and her absence was a fac- tor in the vote against the settlement. “All of us felt offended that she would not appear in person,” Mason said. Ethics investigators concluded Hayes abused her access to Gov. John Kitzhaber, her longtime fi ancé, to land consulting work that paid more than $200,000. Federal and state pros- ecutors declined to seek criminal charges against Hayes and Kitzhaber. But the couple’s actions sparked an infl uence ped- dling scandal that led to Kitzhaber’s resignation and Hayes’ bankruptcy. Thursday’s vote sends Hayes and the state back to the drawing board, leaving her ethics case pending as offi cials and Hayes’ law- yers renegotiate a potential settlement. If and when one is reached, said Michael Fuller, Hayes’ bankruptcy attorney, the former fi rst lady’s fi nes would likely be forgiven because she has fi led for bankruptcy. Hayes has to make a good-faith effort to pay her debts, Fuller said. Even so, what she pays of an even- tual ethics fi ne would be “pennies on the dollar,” he said. “The vast majority of the fi ne would be forgiven, if not all of it,” Fuller said. That fact didn’t set well with the ethics commissioners. “The discussion among all of us led to wonder- ing if she would even pay anything,” Mason said, “which tipped the scale on rejecting the agreement, in my opinion.” Kitzhaber settled his own ethics case last year, agreeing to a $20,000 fi ne for 10 violations. An element of Hayes’ bankruptcy proceedings involves a debt of about $125,000 owed to The Oregonian for attorney fees stemming from a court case in which the newspa- per prevailed in its attempt to access Hayes’ emails. Fuller said he and the newspaper’s attorneys have been negotiating for months and have reached a tentative settlement which will soon be presented to the court. The newspa- per’s attorney in the mat- ter, Brad Daniels, was not immediately available for comment. Willamette Week fi rst reported the negotiations. “We have a deal ham- mered out,” Fuller said, “and it’s a fair deal.” Oregon’s K-12 schools won’t feel pinched under a proposal unveiled by leg- islative budget-writers Thursday, but other gov- ernment services through- out the state are likely to see cuts. The co-chairs of the Joint Ways and Means Committee presented a $23.2 billion budget plan. That represents a 10 percent increase from the approved 2017-19 state budget, but not enough to maintain cur- rent service levels. Spending in nearly every area of the budget comes in below what state econo- mists say will be needed to keep service levels steady over the next two years. That would likely mean public employee layoffs, less grant money available to organizations and munic- ipalities that rely on state support, and other reduc- tions as Oregon’s state gov- ernment tightens its belt. In her $23.6 billion bud- get proposal released late last year, Gov. Kate Brown called for spending $8.8 billion in general and lot- tery revenues for the K-12 state school fund, the main source of money for school districts throughout Ore- gon. The legislators did likewise in their proposal. “We’re putting $668 mil- lion more into the current service level than the pre- vious biennium, which is a non trivial sum of money,” state Sen. Elizabeth Steiner Hayward, D-Beaverton, said. “We’re doing the best we can with the available resources. We recognize that it’s not ideal.” State Rep. Dan Rayfi eld, D-Corvallis vowed that lawmakers will be “work- ing this entire session to try and fi nd more money” for public education. Unlike Brown’s bud- get, the lawmakers’ pro- posal does not assume any tax increases will give bud- get-writers more money to spread around. Brown rec- ommended changing Ore- gon’s business tax code and ending payments to coun- ties under the Gain Share program, lessening the need for state budget cuts. The cost of provid- ing public services tends to increase every year due to infl ation, cost-of-living adjustments for employees, rising pension obligations and other economic factors. Couples $25 Singles $15 Joy Cruz 503.440.0675 • Maddy Speer 503.717.2807 Please Adopt a Pet! DALTON 2 year old American Bulldog Dalmation Blend Indulge in a sweet devotion. Discover the restorative power of play. See more on 8 March 1941 Happy Birthday Petfinder.com CLATSOP COUNTY ANIMAL SHELTER • 861-PETS 1315 SE 19th St. • Warrenton | Tues-Sat 12-4pm www.dogsncats.org THIS SPACE SPONSORED BY BAY BREEZE BOARDING C latsop C ounty R ental O wners A ssoc. 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