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Home / Leadership / Foundation / Who We Are
At the Clatsop Community College Foundation, we believe our entire community benefits when every student has access to the tools and resources they need to help them succeed in school and in life.
Our mission is to inspire and engage the community in support of Clatsop Community College students so students can achieve their goals.
The CCC Foundation is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation. Contributions to the CCC Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent of the law.
Jamey joined Clatsop Community College Foundation board a year ago after moving to Astoria. She began her education career at Lane Community College and loved the personal feel of a smaller education community that catered to working individuals.
Jamey grew up in “small town” America and is an avid outdoorswoman. She loves running, hiking, backpacking, downhill skiing, wakeboarding and surfing, along with anything that keeps her in touch with nature. She has two beautiful Siberian Husky’s that join in her hiking, backpacking and running excursions. Moving from Portland two years ago, she is ecstatic to be back in a small community surrounded by her passion of water and nature while continuing a successful career as an Investment Advisor Representative at Raymond James Financial Services.
Jamey believes that education is the key to living your best life. Growing up in a home where she knew the taste of government cheese, powdered milk and the value of school meal programs, her passion is to help others find their path to live their best life by means of higher education. Jamey is also active in AAUW (American Association of University Women) Seaside as the President Chair, helping women of all ages to gain the necessary tools to go after their dreams.
“Serving on the Foundation Board has been a way I can pay it forward for everyone who paved my path to living my dream life. Being part of a program that helps students build a better foundation for themselves and their families is the most rewarding aspect of it all.”
“EDUCATION IS THE MOST POWERFUL WEAPON WHICH YOU CAN USE TO CHANGE THE WORLD” – Nelson Mandela
Katie is a native Oregonian, living most of her life in Portland. She and her husband moved to Astoria in July of 2018 after spending many vacations here, dreaming of making it their permanent home.
Katie has been in banking for about eleven years and loves all she gets to do. She learns something every day. Her primary job is getting to know people and how she can help them realize their dreams through achieving their financial goals. She is passionate about brining financial education to people of all ages.
Katie’s community involvement started with coaching CYO and YMCA volleyball. Later, she organized park clean-ups with Portland Parks and worked as a community volunteer organizer with Starbucks. She has had the privilege of serving on the boards of Hampton Woods Paddling Club, Belmont Area Business Association, and Le Tip of Kruse Way. She currently serves as vice president of the AWACC ambassadors and as a board member of the Liberty Theatre as well as the CCC Foundation board.
“I am excited to be able to contribute to our incredible community and help people move toward their life goals through education.
“Jennifer Crockett plays clarinet and bass clarinet as a substitute with the Oregon Symphony and Oregon Ballet. A DePaul University School of Music graduate, Jennifer was a founding member of the American Federation of Music Local 99 Portland’s “Fair Trade Music” campaign to establish living wages for Portland gig musicians. Passionate about arts advocacy, Jennifer is a grant panelist for the Oregon Arts Commission, an Oregon Independent Venue Coalition advisory member, and a League of Historic American Theatres board member.
Investing in our community by breaking down barriers to educational opportunities is important to Jennifer. Creating equitable access and passing along the tools to success makes the workforce stronger and more diverse, and economic growth follows. Keeping talented people in this area ensures that the small town she loves continues to thrive.”
Jennifer is currently the Executive Director of The Liberty Theatre of Astoria, Oregon, a vibrant performing arts center, home of Kids Make Theatre School, and backbone agency to the North Coast Performing Arts Alliance. Jennifer is also working toward the formation of an Astoria Arts District.
Jim Alegria was raised in Rhode Island but spent most of his adult life in the West and nearly all of it in Oregon and Washington. He has worked for the Bureau of Land Management, the State of New Mexico, and retired as a national program manager for the US Forest Service. For the past ten years, he has been a consultant for the US Forest Service International Program, the World Bank, and the United Nations working in Africa, the Caribbean, South America, and Southeast Asia.
His interest in volunteering began with spending two years in the Peace Corp and now he wants to give back to the community. He has been on committees for the CCC Budget, the Clatsop County Comprehensive Plan, and the Liberty Theater. Also, he volunteered at the Clatsop County Public Heathc Information and Communication Center where he responded to questions on COVID and scheduled appointment and was a president of the Oregon Chpater of American Statistical Association.
Jim has a master’s degree from the University of Washington, Seattle in forest statistics and a bachelor’s degree from the University of Massachusetts Amherst in forest management.
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A native of Saint Louis, Missouri, Captain Tumbarello graduated with high honors from the U.S. Coast Guard Academy in 1989 with a Bachelor of Science in Management/Economics. In 2005, he earned a Master of Business Administration from Averett University. Additionally, he earned a Type II Incident Commander Certification and a 500/1600 Gross Tons Master Mariner Motor vessel license.
In May 2013 after 28 years of distinguished service, Captain Tumbarello retired from the U.S. Coast Guard. His last assignment was the Deputy Commander, Sector Columbia River in Warrenton, OR. His military decorations include 3 Meritorious Service Medals, 3 Coast Guard Commendation Medals, 2 Achievement Medals, a Coast Guard Volunteerism Medal and numerous other awards.
Captain Tumbarello assumed the duties as the Director of Seamanship at Tongue Point Job Corps Center in June 2013. He is responsible for developing under-served 18 to 24 year old men/women into proficient, professional, passionate credentialed Merchant Mariners for successful careers in the Maritime Industry. Due to the overall success of the Seamanship program, Captain Tumbarello led a major expansion of the Seamanship program by doubling the number of students and staff from 60 to 120 students in 2015.
He has been married to his wife Holly for 31 years and is the proud father of two daughters, Angela (28), Chelsea (26) and a son, Tony (18).
Cliff is an Astorian native who began his college career at Clatsop Community College. He then transferred to the Oregon College of Education to become a teacher. However, he ended up working in the Hospitality industry, serving in Alaska and the Seattle area.
After retiring, he happily returned, in 2005 to his childhood home in Astoria. His post-retirement career has revolved around volunteering for various groups around town including: Astoria Regatta, Columbia River Maritime Museum, AGCC Board, and the CCC Foundation Board, where he currently serves as the Chair.
While serving these various organizations has been fun and rewarding, the Foundation has been the most meaningful. Helping students achieve their life path goals with financial support from the Foundation for academic and personal needs is a truly compelling story.
“It feels really good to give back to the college for all that it has done for me.”
“Come to the hill and take that step!” That’s what Gudelia Contreras tells women at the local fish processing plants where she once worked. She says there’s a separation between cannery workers and others in Astoria as if they live in two different worlds. What drives Contreras—a Clatsop Community College Foundation board member for three years—is trying to combine those worlds by making educational opportunities more accessible.
Contreras was born in Providencia, Mexico, a small town in the sugarcane-growing region of the state of Veracruz. She emigrated to the U.S. in 1990 with her then-husband, one child, and another on the way. She says her ex-husband did not believe in education, so she got a job in fast-food restaurant to make enough money to take English classes. She moved from California to Astoria and got her GED at the college in 2012. Meanwhile she worked at one of the canneries for seven years. Since she had advanced to manage the restaurant in California, she was offered a position in quality control at the fish processing plant. But the hours were still grueling. During the height of the fishing season, she would work seven days a week and between 12 and 18 hours a day. She would get off at 3 AM, sleep for two and a half hours, and then take the bus up to the college for classes. She got a job as an Oregon Health Plan outreach worker in 2015 at the Lower Columbia Hispanic Council. In 2016 she earned her associate’s degree.
“Education is the only treasure that you have in life that is all yours. You can have a house, but you can have a fire and lose it. You have your education for the rest of your life.”
Andrew Fick grew up in Astoria and attended classes at Clatsop Community College as a dual-enrollment student prior to graduating from Astoria High School. He continued his education at the University of Oregon, completing a Bachelor’s degree in Psychology and a Master’s degree in Couples and Family Therapy. After working as a community mental health therapist in Eugene, OR for several years, he returned to Astoria. Seeking a shift in his career path, he completed his Professional School Counseling Certificate through Portland State University and began work as a School Counselor at Astoria High School where he continues today. He has also worked as a commercial fisherman and cross country and track coach and remains an active member of the local community.
Andrew lives with his wife, Renia, and two daughters, Zoja and Sally, in Astoria with their dog, Mishka, and Jaime the cat. He is an avid runner and adventurer and enjoys the wild beauty of the Pacific Northwest and his own backyard.
He has been grateful to be a member of the Foundation Board since January 2022. He is passionate about ensuring equitable access to educational opportunities, improving the experiences and outcomes for learners of all ages and backgrounds, and creative systemic innovations for the benefit of all stakeholders.
Jon Fick was born and raised in Astoria Oregon. He attended Astoria High School and then went on to college at Western Oregon for a year. He then transferred back to Clatsop Community College to attend the Merts Marine program. After School Jon went on to become a sales specialist at Lums Auto Center in Warrenton, where he is currently a sales manager.
Outside of work Jon likes to fish, hunt, be outdoors, and spending time with his family and friends.
While being on the College Board it is a great honor to be able to give back and help provide opportunities for the kids and be able to help our community grow.
Anne Carpenter earned a Master’s Degree in Computer Science from California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo after earning her Bacherlor’s Degree in Art from the University of California, Riverside. She worked in three college libraries while attending school, then worked in the computer field for 15 years. Upon moving to Astoria, Anne worked with her husband, Sean Fitzpatrick, to manage and improve their portfolio of rental properties. She is now “mostly retired” and enjoys pursuing her creative interests. To round out Anne’s interest in educational opportunities for students, she also serves on the boards of Astoria High School Scholarships, Inc. and PEO.
Anne’s passion for education stems losing her father at a young age and the realization that one must always have a way to support oneself. Her mother went back to school to complete her teaching credential to support the family. In college, Anne became keenly aware of the importance of education of broadening one’s perspective of the world as well.
Anne is passionate about scholarships and their ability to help others achieve their goals and dreams. She is honored to be a Clatsop Community College Foundation Board member.
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Pat Lehman, a native of Toronto Canada, is a retired journalist, translator and educator who joined the foundation board in 2002. She served as board chair for two terms and is excited to have seen the board grow in a positive direction over the years.
Pat supports and donates to the Foundation because she sees the impact of her investment on students and the community.
Amy Baker, Executive Director of Clatsop Behavioral Healthcare, received her bachelor’s degree from the University of Oregon and her Master’s Degree in Social Work from Smith College School for Social Work in 1995. Her first job counseling services to clients was in a small logging community east of Eugene. She has worked to better the lives of Oregonians ever since, as the director of service organizations, and as the Children’s Mental Health Director for the state, where she developed mental health wellness and promotion policy.
When Amy moved to Astoria in 2016, her plan was to stay for six months. She fell in love with the place and four years later, she’s still here. A native of Albany, Oregon, who spent many years in Portland, she has happily returned to life in a small town.
Following in her father’s footsteps and his profound respect for the role of community colleges, she jumped at the chance to serve on the Foundation. Amy believes that community colleges are a crucial step ladder into economic independence. They can be the bridge that allows students to discover a future they had not dared to imagine. Students of all backgrounds deserve access to quality post-secondary education.
“Our commitment should always be to those who need us the most. Students with few financial resources take a leap of faith when going to college. Our job as community members is to help them fly.“
Jack Ficken is a Vice President at the Astoria branch of Lewis & Clark Bank and serves as a relationship manager and commercial loan officer. Jack is a proud graduate of Clatsop Community College and continued on to Oregon State University to complete his four-year degree.
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Gerry Swenson has a long time connection with Clatsop Community College. She worked as a Mathematics Instructor and Academic Advisor at CCC from Fall 1965 through Spring 1994. Gerry joined the CCC Foundation Board in the Fall of 1966. In 2008, she was the recipient of the first “Spirit of Clatsop” award “for her service as instructor, adviser, Foundation Board member and generous philanthropist.” The “CCC Outstanding Teacher of the Year Award” is named in her honor.
Gerry has also served as a tutor in the Adult Literacy Program. She has been for over 20 years and continues to be a SMART reader volunteer in the Astoria School district.
Gerry embodies the “Spirit of Clatsop” as the longest serving, standing Board member of the CCC Foundation.
Dave grew up in a small town in Illinois and has been moving north & west since graduating from the University of Illinois in 1969. Dave and his wife Kathleen finally landed on the north coast in 2013. In the interim he became a physician and diagnostic radiologist specializing in body imaging and ultrasound. His training took him to Denver, San Jose and San Diego before beginning practice in Everett, Washington where he was in practice for 33 years.
Since moving here Dave served 2 years on the CCC Board of Education and has volunteered at the Maritime Museum, Lower Columbia Hospice, and North Coast Land Conservancy. He has been on the CCC Foundation Board for several years and currently is President of ENCORE & vice-president of Friends of Warrenton Community Library. In his spare time he enjoys reading, book collecting, and walking the local beaches and trails with Kathleen and the wonder poodle Zoe. Five grandkids in Chicago and Germany keeps them traveling.
“I was extremely fortunate to have parents who valued education and gave their boys every opportunity to obtain the best education possible. It is my honor and desire to help others, especially those with limited means and opportunities, to do the same. I fully support the college’s efforts in diversity, equity and inclusion.”
Community members are invited to volunteer as a member of CCC Foundation Committees and help us advance our mission. Below is an outline of committee commitments and responsibilities. Please contact the Foundation Office if you are interested in joining one of the committees (503-338-2306 or ahunt@clatsopcc.edu).
We look forward to working together with you to ensure that cost is not a barrier for CCC students who are working to complete certificate and degree programs.
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For more information on how you can help a student reach their goals, contact the Foundation Office, 503-338-2306, 1651 Lexington Ave., Astoria, OR 97103 or email Angee Hunt at ahunt@clatsopcc.edu.