A6 THE ASTORIAN • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 2021 Windows: ‘Program provides a good opportunity’ Economy: Infl ation Continued from Page A1 eating into some gains He got in touch with McGrath and Lucien Swerd- loff , the coordinator and one of the founders of the col- lege program, who were thrilled to move forward . “We wouldn’t really have known about this without Ed,” McGrath said. “ … We want to get that build- ing back to its original shape because it has good bones to it, it has just been neglected for a lot of years. We want to get that back up to good shape so that it looks really good, and gives a good face to Ed.” During two weekend workshops with one more to go, the students have removed several windows to work on them. After dust- ing off the 40 years of saw- dust, Swerdloff said, the students began restoring sashes, cleaning up and oil- ing the jambs, replacing bro- ken glass and repairing rot- ten wood, among several other tasks. Many of the windows, Swerdloff said, have not been operable for a long time. McGrath estimates there are around 48 windows on the building, and since the students will only get around to restoring six of them, Swerdloff thought it would be a good idea for some of the Port’s employees to sit in on the workshop. “The idea was to train our students, but also to train some of their employees so they can take the project Continued from Page A1 Clatsop Community College The historic preservation program at Clatsop Community College has helped prepare students to enter the industry. over and continue working on the windows afterwards,” Swerdloff said. McGrath, along with another Port employee, attended the workshop last weekend. He believes the complete restoration of all the windows will take sev- eral years. “It’s a really labor-inten- sive process to bring these wood windows back to orig- inal glory,” McGrath said. On top of being advan- tageous for the community, Overbay and Swerdloff view the college program as bene- fi tting the next generation of workers. “The program provides a good opportunity for stu- dents and gives them a lot of chances to go on for fur- ther education or look for jobs,” Swerdloff said. “We are really community-fo- cused. O bviously, we are a community college, but really that is part of our mis- sion — to be out in the com- munity, engage people and help the community and just be involved with build- ing owners, people and local contractors.” Among those who have completed the program and moved on into the indus- try is Chris Gustafson, the owner of Vintage Window Restoration in Albany. Gustafson, who Swerdl- off considers one of the main window restoration experts in the state, is the instruc- tor of the workshops and the wood restoration course . He remains grateful for a program that redirected his career during the Great Recession in 2008. “In the sense of taking what I learned and actu- ally practicing it as a busi- ness and being dedicated to it, and then taking what I’ve learned and sharing it with others,” Gustafson said. “ … I don’t see it as a job, but as community service. “To be born and raised in that town, go through the program and start a career in it then come back and teach — it’s just fantastic.” Sture: ‘I’m not going to fall anymore’ Continued from Page A1 A psychologist who evaluated Sture before this week’s hearing diagnosed him with antisocial person- ality traits and a host of sub- stance use disorders involv- ing alcohol, stimulants, cannabis and heroin. John Bailey, the parole board member who led the hearing, read from the psy- chologist’s report, which concluded that Sture’s risk of violent behavior was low, but that the risk goes up if he starts drinking or using drugs. Sture told the other board members present — Greta Lowry and James Taylor — that he has been clean for almost two years. This time frame, Bailey pointed out, isn’t that long; the board often interviews inmates with many more years of sobriety behind them. Given how often Sture has relapsed while incar- cerated, Bailey said he has to decide how likely Sture is to relapse once he is back in the community. “I want to be transparent with you and tell you that I’m concerned about that,” he told Sture. “I’m not going down that road anymore,” Sture responded. “I am not going to hurt anybody the way I hurt Sgt. Shepherd. I can’t do that. I won’t do that.” Taylor pointed out that drugs are easier to obtain outside of prison than they are inside — and marijuana is now legal in Oregon. “What do you think it will take to keep you sober?” Taylor asked Sture. “Conviction,” Sture replied. “Conviction and work. I’m not going to fall anymore.” Sture said he planned to fi nd a job, take advantage of mental health programs and join Marion Coun- ty’s Narcotics Anonymous community. His close relatives attended the hearing. His sis- ter, Cindy Wiggins, said that her family will help Sture if the board grants him parole. “If any of us thought that Mike would be danger- ous to be released into soci- ety, we would most certainly not be making this statement today,” Wiggins said. The religious studies group that Sture has been involved with in prison also said they would support him. “We live in a society that believes in the rule of law, the importance of the rule of law, and for that reason, we incarcerate people who make serious errors,” said Douglas Parker, a volun- teer with the religious stud- ies group. “But we also look at the rehabilitation and the reentry, the reclama- tion of these lives that (is) possible.” ‘Incomprehensible’ Sandra Bierschied, Shep- herd’s daughter, was 14 when her dad was mur- dered. She said she “heard the shots in the distance that took his life.” “I had reoccurring night- mares that (Sture) is outside my house with a gun shoot- ing at my family,” she said. “And these nightmares are part of who I am now.” When she wakes up, she at least has “the security of knowing that this man is in prison and this helps me move forward every day. “The thought of this man being paroled is incomprehensible.” Brown said that Sture should remain locked up because of “the enormity of the crime.” “This was not a drunk-driving crash or something like that,” Brown said. “This was monumental.” Brown said Sture allegedly told one of his friends who was inter- viewed about the original crime that “it would be easy to kill someone on a motor- cycle.” Brown maintains that Shepherd’s murder was “arguably a ‘thrill kill.’” And that’s very concerning because that could reoccur. “He was executed, Jim Shepherd was, in cold blood,” Brown continued. “We only have Mr. Sture to tell us whether he ever suff ered much after he was shot the fi rst time until he was executed by two shots to the head.” Calling Sture a “poten- tial time bomb waiting to go off with his drug and alco- hol issues,” Brown asked the board to push back his parole for at least two more years, “to give him time to build a better track record.” Sarah Shepherd, Shep- herd’s grandniece, is a dep- uty district attorney in Clat- sop County. She wasn’t yet born when her uncle died. But she became a prosecu- tor, she said, “defi nitely in part because of what hap- pened to my family, and the generational trauma that our family has gone through because of what happened to my uncle. “Everything about this process is why I became a prosecutor, because I don’t want other families to suf- fer as mine has suff ered,” she said. She noted that, after more than four decades in prison, Sture was still at step No. 4 of the 12-step Narcotics Anonymous and isn’t active in the program at the moment. “From the work that I’ve done in drug treatment programs, Mr. Sture is not someone we would even consider for graduation,” let alone “released from prison,” she said. If the parole board releases Sture, she said, it will put him in the same position he was in in 1980. “He knows that when he relapses and when he fails, when he commits a new crime, he’ll be facing coming back to prison. And he now knows more about prison than he did when he was 24. He knows how ter- rible it is. “So what’ll happen to the next person who catches ‘I HAD REOCCURRING NIGHTMARES THAT (STURE) IS OUTSIDE MY HOUSE WITH A GUN SHOOTING AT MY FAMILY. AND THESE NIGHTMARES ARE PART OF WHO I AM NOW.’ Sandra Bierschied | daughter of Sgt. James D. Shepherd him?” she continued. “If it’s his P O (parole offi cer) walking up to his residence and he has drugs there, if it’s a police offi cer doing a traffi c stop when he’s cho- sen to abscond, what’s going to happen? I know what’s going to happen.” McMullen said tax col- lections so far are exceed- ing the close-of-session forecasts set when lawmak- ers put together the 2021- 23 state budget in June. Under Oregon’s kicker law, amounts that exceed the forecast by 2% or more go back to taxpayers, or in the case of businesses, into the school fund. Taxpayers will see cred- its amounting to a record $1.9 billion when they fi le 2021 tax returns in 2022. The $847 million in excess corporate income taxes was added to the two-year $9.3 billion school fund. McMullen and senior economist Josh Leh- ner spoke as the Oregon Employment Department released the state’s October unemployment rate, which dipped to 4.4% from 4.7% in September. Oregon’s economy continued to add jobs, but the agency also reported that growth has slowed since summer. Oregon is still 70,000 jobs below its pre-pan- demic peak — the state’s unemployment rate shot up from a record-low 3.5% in March 2020 to an adjusted 13.2% the following month after businesses closed or curtailed operations — and the Employment Depart- ment said 30,000 of those still-unrecovered jobs were in restaurants, bars and hotels, known as the leisure and hospitality sector. But many workers moved into higher-paying jobs in other sectors, such as trans- portation and warehousing — and employers are pay- ing higher wages. “As a result, we are seeing income tax collections refl ecting it,” McMullen said. Infl ation is eating into some of those gains, though Lehner said workers earn- ing less than $20 per hour are still seeing real growth in wages, but those earning more are feeling the pinch. “We are in this sup- ply-constrained economy where there are infl ationary pressures much higher than we have seen in 30 years,” he said. While some infl ation- ary pressures are short term, such as the produc- tion of goods that has not yet caught up with con- sumer demand, Lehner said Oregon still faces long-term issues such as the lack of lower-cost housing. Hous- ing sales prices and rents have continued to go up. McMullen and Leh- ner did reinforce Employ- ment Department reports that Oregon’s rural coun- ties, not its big cities, have led the recovery from the pandemic. During 2020, median income growth in the 18 counties east of the Cascades was around 15% — double the U.S. median of 7.6% — while it was lowest in Benton County and Washington County, which have the state’s high- est per-capita incomes. Lehner said all Orego- nians benefi ted from federal transfer payments such as stimulus checks, enhanced unemployment benefi ts and an expanded child tax credit. The fi rst two have ended, and President Joe Biden’s Build Back Better plan proposes to extend the third for another year. “A lot of these coun- ties started with a low-in- come base. When you add these transfer payments … it led to large percentage increases,” Lehner said. “But our tradition- ally highest-income, low- est-unemployment coun- ties lagged behind the U.S. median because it is a much smaller share in high-in- come areas.” The Oregon Capital Bureau is a collaboration between EO Media Group and Pamplin Media Group. READY... SET... WINTER TERM REGISTRATION EVENT Join us for a one-stop experience to get you ready for Winter Term. CCC staff will set you up for success and you will leave enrolled and ready for classes in January. • Register for Classes THURSDAY, DEC 2 3–6 PM PATRIOT HALL AT CCC IN ASTORIA • Join us for food & prizes • Complete your Admissions Process • Explore Financial Aid Options • Learn about College Resources • No appointment needed • Masks required inside campus buildings www.clatsopcc .edu Clatsop Community College is an affirmative action, equal opportunity institution. ADA accessible. For the complete Non-Discrimination and Accomodations statements, please visit www.clatsopcc.edu/ada. Clatsop Community College es una institución de igualdad de oportunidades y de discriminación positiva. Para las declaraciones completas de No-discriminacion y de Ayuda a las personas discapacitadas, por favor visite www.clatsopcc.edu/ada.