June 5, 2019 Page 5 Capitol Funeral for Senator Winters C ontinued froM f ront 2003. She was vice chairwoman of the influential Appropriation Committee and was the first Afri- can American person to hold the post of Republican Caucus leader in 2017. Winters had struggled in recent years with ailing health, having suffered a heart attack that put her out for the entire 2016 legislative session and announced in 2017 that she was undergoing lung can- cer treatment. Before becoming a politician, she founded a small chain of successful barbecue restaurants, called Jackie’s Ribs, located in the Salem and Portland areas in the 1980s and 90s. Having grown up in Portland, Winters told Portland Observer reporter Beverly Corbell in De- cember 2017 that it was emotional opening a restaurant “right smack in downtown Portland,” where years prior black-owned business- es were not wanted and where there were other restaurants that she and other African Americans were barred from entering. Born in Kansas, Winters moved to the Portland area as a small child where she survived the 1948 Vanport Flood where the only pos- sessions she had left were her dog, Tippy, and her doll. Her family then found a home in the Albina neighborhood of north and northeast Portland. Describing the neighborhood’s African American participation in commerce and community gather- ings at the time as “a lot of small businesses with over 100 social clubs.” She said before the flood, Vanport was a vibrant, self-sufficient, and in- tegrated town, “A total community and we had our own schools, had our own shopping centers.” Winters previously worked for Republicans Gov. Tom Mc- Call and later Gov. Victor Atiyeh, where she warmed to the political party that she remembered back then as the ones who got things done. Among many of the causes she backed was criminal justice re- form and civil rights. On April 18 she cast her final vote in the Leg- islature when she championed a significant criminal justice reform bill to pass in the Senate, which now awaits the governor’s signa- ture, and would roll back manda- tory minimum sentences for teen- agers charged with violent crimes. House Speaker Tina Kotek lauded her achievements when she gave a statement on Winters’ death last Wednesday. “Senator Jackie Winters was a trail blazer, a truly inspiring figure in the history of Oregon politics. Senator Winters believed, to her photo Courtesy v anport M osaiC A historic photo shows Sen. Jackie Winters (right) as a child with her dog, Tippy, and her doll, the only possessions she had after surviving the 1948 Vanport Flood. A small business owner in both Portland and Salem and the only African-American Republican to be elected to the legislature Winters died May 29 at the age of 82. core, in justice and fairness. I am saddened by her passing but am deeply grateful that she lived to see the passage of youth justice reform last week.” Winter’s family requests dona- tions be made in lieu of flowers to one of the senator’s favorite cause including Oregon Capitol Fund, Liberty House, and Oregon Food Bank, which she is credited with helping form in the 1970s. The Of- fice of Senator Jackie Winters can receive cards and remembrances for her family at 900 Court Street NE, S-301, Salem, OR 97301. Providing Insurance and Financial Services Home Office, Bloomington, Illinois 61710 Ernest J. Hill, Jr. Agent 311 NE Killingsworth St, Portland, OR 97211 503 286 1103 Fax 503 286 1146 ernie.hill.h5mb@statefarm.com 24 Hour Good Neighbor Service R State Farm R Subscribe ! 503-288-0033 Fill Out & Send To: Attn: Subscriptions, PO Box 3137, Portland OR 97208 $45.00 for 3 months • $80.00 for 6 mo. • $125.00 for 1 year (please include check with this subscription form) Name: Telephone: Address: or email subscriptions@portlandobserver.com Harris Photography 503-730-1156 Sweet 16 to 100th Event Coverage, Prints on site and Video antonioharris.com 2019 SCHOLARSHIP APPLICATION PACKETS Are available to: High School Grads, College Students And Adults Cont. Educ. PACKETS CAN BE REQUESTED AT Patriciaanntrice@gmail.com Or by phone ~ 503 283-6312 For more information contact Elizabeth F. Richard or Patricia A. Trice at 503 284-0535 THE APPLICATION DEADLINE IS MIDNIGHT, JUNE 15, 2019 The Della Mae Johnson Scholarship Foundation 2216 NE Killingsworth Portland, OR 97211