WINNER OF THE 2020 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 12, 2022 HermistonHerald.com EasternOregonMarketplace.com Warming station off ers respite Guests, volunteers at Hermiston Warming Station address homelessness By ERICK PETERSON Hermiston Herald When Sierra Gilman was home- less, she did not know of the Herm- iston Warming Station, but she said she wished she had. She worked her fi rst day as a volunteer at the station on Satur- day, Jan. 8. In this capacity, she checked in people as they sought refuge from the elements. She and others at the warming station spoke of life on the streets and their grat- itude for this service. Starting at 7:30 p.m., people who would otherwise be sleeping on the streets in the cold checked into the Hermiston Warming Sta- tion, 1075 S. Highway 395. The station opens every year as the weather becomes cold. Come City Hall project on track morning, the guests of the station leave to resume their homelessness. Gilman, 27, of Hermiston, said she learned of this volunteer opportunity last year. Her friends at her church — she is a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints — told her of the warming station. Now sober and free of drugs, she said she fi nally felt able to help out at the building. Her training included a 30 to 40 minute session to learn the rules. Among other things, guests must turn over their possessions and store belongings in a plastic tote. They also must maintain a clean environment and a respectful tone with others. In trade for following the rules, guests have access to cots, where they sleep throughout the night. Also, they are provided with food and hygiene supplies. In addition, they can use washing machines and a shower. Volunteers stand ready to meet the needs of guests. Gilman remembered back to her three to four years living without a home. She was addicted to drugs, she said, and she lived under the stars. She would camp on a space off Theater Lane in Hermiston. Hiding away, among trees, she was able to get rest. It was a trying time, though she accepts responsibility for her trou- bles. She said she was making bad decisions, which included her drug use. Despite trying several times to correct her problems, she said she lacked the strength to turn her life around. It was not until her sister died, she said, that she fi nally experi- enced an epiphany, and she had a “God moment.” Suddenly, she realized the pain she was causing other people, including her par- ents, she said. “It was the gift of desperation,” she said. See Warming, Page A7 Ben Lonergan/Hermiston Herald Brodie Messenger, a board member and volunteer at the Hermiston Warming Station, washes clothes for a guest at the shelter Saturday, Jan. 8, 2022, in Hermiston. Taking the PLUNGE The $9 million facility may be ready to open by the end of 2022, Hermiston offi cials say By ERICK PETERSON Hermiston Herald Hermiston Assistant City Man- ager Mark Morgan fi elds a lot of questions every day. Nowadays, he is receiving many inquiries into his city’s ongoing city hall and public safety center project at 180 N.E. Second St. Morgan stood across the street from the project Wednes- day, Jan. 5, in the rain, to discuss progress on the facility. Construction is on track, he said, for opening city hall at the end of 2022. Recently, roofi ng went up on the building. These days, work- ers are wiring and plumbing the structure. Much of their work is not visible from the outside as they recently started installing walls. “From here on out, it’s going to seem to be moving very slowly,” Morgan said, as workers fi ll out the building’s “guts.” The weather is not causing delays. Workers are protected inside the newly roofed and walled structure. And there are not mate- rial concerns, which was a worry last year; Morgan said materials have been acquired as needed. See City Hall, Page A7 Ben Lonergan/Hermiston Herald Angie Cooke, left, leads a pack of polar plungers out of the water Saturday, Jan. 8, 2022, at the Umatilla Marina Swim Beach during the Coats for Kids Polar Bear Plunge in Umatilla. The event collected more than 60 coats for the program, according to organizers. If your family is in need of a winter coat, contact Rita Campos at 541-969-3338 or rcampos@umchs.org. Transgender woman sues state for discrimination Former Echo resident serving prison time for killing girlfriend By PHIL WRIGHT Hermiston Herald A former Echo man serving time for killing his girlfriend in 2014 is suing the state of Oregon for failing to provide protection in prison after he transitioned to female. Zera Lola Zombie, 37, is a transgender woman serving time for manslaughter for the blud- geoning death of Samantha Brown. Zombie was Daniel Lee Smith at the time of the killing. She changed her name in July 2020 along with changing her gender to female, according to state court records. She fi led the lawsuit Sept. 10, 2021, in the U.S. INSIDE District Court of Oregon. Zombie in the 18-page com- plaint alleged she “suff ered ongo- ing harassment and verbal, men- tal, and psychological abuse by both prisoners and (Oregon Department of Corrections) staff as a result of her sex, gender and gender identity” while she was in custody at Oregon State Correc- tional Institution and then Oregon State Penitentiary. The lawsuit also alleges other inmates phys- ically and sexually assaulted her and staff did not protect her from the attacks. The lawsuit names the state as the lead defendant, plus numer- ous correctional offi cers and other staff and Josh Highberger, super- intendent of Oregon State Cor- rectional Institution, and Brandon Kelly, superintendent of Oregon State Penitentiary. The harassment and assaults A3  Morrow Superintendent Dirk Dirksen retires began in November 2019, accord- ing to the pleading, when a male offi cer at Oregon State Correc- tional Institution strip-searched Zombie in front of a male inmate. The abuse escalated from there, and on Christmas Day 2019 staff denied she could have toilet paper for bathroom hygiene. The lawsuit claims she uses her socks to clean herself and had to dispose of them in a biohazard bag. Sometime after that the Depart- ment of Corrections transferred Zombie to the state pen. There, she claims, another inmate, Allen Howard, physically assaulted her on Oct. 9, 2020, and staff ignored the assault. Zombie also claims OSP staff housed her from March 2020 until June 2021 with Mikal Shabazz. Court records show he is serving at least 40 years for convictions in 1997 in Multnomah County for A6  MLK to be celebrated Jan 17 a slew of crimes, including rob- bery, assault, sodomy and fi rst-de- gree rape. Zombie claims Shabazz physically and sexually assaulted her, sometimes on a daily basis. She reported the assaults to prison staff at least twice, according to the lawsuit, and they did nothing to protect her. Other inmates also assaulted and harassed Zombie, the pleading states, and she now suff ers “psy- chological trauma, anxiety and mental anguish as a result of the physical, mental and sexual abuse she has experienced” while in the custody of the Oregon Department of Corrections. Zombie did not specify how much she is suing the state for. Rather, she wants a jury trial and compensation for physical pain and suff ering, emotional distress, economic losses and an award for punitive damages, plus court A8  Schools keep with COVID-19 precautions costs and attorney fees and “other and further relief as the court may deem just and equitable.” Oregon Department of Correc- tions online inmate information shows she is serving her sentence at Snake River Correctional Insti- tution, Ontario. But in the lawsuit she claimed she was an at Coff ee Creek Correctional Facility, the only prison in Oregon that houses female inmates. Attorneys John Burgess and Katharine Edwards with the Port- land fi rm Law Offi ces of Daniel Snyder represent Zombie and fi led the lawsuit on her behalf. Judge Ann L. Aiken is presiding over the case and set Tuesday, Jan. 11, as the day to complete discovery and Feb. 10 for other fi lings, including a Joint Alternate Dispute Resolu- tion Report. The state as of Jan. 4 has yet to fi le a response to the lawsuit. A9  Hermiston bodybuilder prepares for fall contest