THE FIVE Multnomah County Commissioners, not the voters of
Portland, are set to fill a vacant house seat in the Oregon legislature
on Thursday morning, October 22. They face a tough decision about who
should represent North and Northeast Portland in Salem, but we think
they should pick Lew Frederick. His decades of experience and steady
personality make him a great fit for the legislature.
Four weeks ago, Multnomah County commissioners picked State
Representative Chip Shields to replace retiring State Senator Margaret
Carter, leaving Shields’ house seat vacant [“A Matter of Opinion?”
News, Oct 1]. Last week, 73 precinct captains from the Democratic Party
whittled a field of applicants down to a shortlist of three
replacements: Frederick, Karol Collymore, and Eddie Lincoln.
Lincoln, a union organizer at Portland Community College, was
unavailable to attend an endorsement interview at the Mercury‘s
offices on Friday, October 16, but we spoke to him on the phone. A
former TriMet bus driver, Lincoln sees job creation and funding for
higher education as a priority for the district. We couldn’t agree
more, but are unsure whether Lincoln’s assertion that he submitted
himself as a candidate “for one reason and one reason onlyโto
win” is ironic or simply naรฏve. He doesn’t seem adequately
engaged.
Collymore and Frederick, on the other hand, both seem to want the
seat very badly. And both would make excellent “elected” officials,
even if they don’t actually have to woo voters this time around.
Collymore, a staffer for County Commissioner Jeff Cogen, was
endorsed by the Oregonian for this seat when she ran against
Shields for the Senate. The paper’s editorial board reasoned that
Collymore, an African American woman, could make up for the ethnic
diversity lost in the legislature by Carter’s Senate departure.
However, the paper failed to even call Frederick for the endorsement.
When asked why they gave the cold shoulder to the 13-year Portland
Public Schools veteran, they described him as a “known quantity.”
Frederick hit back, saying black men are afraid of being attacked by
the Oregonian, and we admired him for it.
Collymore is also outspoken. During our interview, she said, “We
need to start being in a position where we open up our mouths and don’t
care if we don’t get reelected.” But where Frederick’s stand against
the Oregonian‘s editorial board seems to embody courage,
Collymore seems to have more potential for political recklessness.
Here at the Mercury, we’re all for recklessnessโbut the
cash-strapped legislature isn’t the best place for super-independent
thinkers right now. Frederick, who has lived in the district since
1974, brings a more responsible demeanor to bear. A reporter for KGW
for 17 years, Frederick formed the Sexual Minority Task Force in
Portland Public Schools. He now runs a communications consultancy and
serves on numerous nonprofit boards and the State Board of Education.
He appears to be the right fit for a position that requires some
compromise.
Collymore is a bright and exciting thinker. Since moving to Portland
six years ago, she has instituted a cell-phone recycling program in
libraries, developed an urban farm that grew 8,000 pounds of food for
the district in 2009, worked to bring a new library to Kenton, and
helped start up a new farmers market in St. Johns. Frankly, we’d rather
benefit from her innovative ideas here in Portland than have her
weighing in on boring budgets in Salem. Collymore should consider
running against City Commissioner Dan Saltzman next spring. Or wait
until her boss, Jeff Cogen, makes his widely predicted move to city
council, and run for his vacant county commissioner seat.
“When a door is open, you should walk through it,” says Collymore.
And we don’t doubt that more doors are going to open up for her soon.
GOING OFF TOPIC: Five Curious Facts About the Two Leading
Candidates
Karol Collymore
โข Has her own
cooking blog (karolcooks.blogspot.com) that she
claims has a “gorgeous” recipe for Cuban pork pie.
โข Does not
own a car.
โข Is a huge Lord of the Rings fan.
โข Is the daughter of Panamanians and grew up in a
Spanish-speaking household.
โข Over the summer, came in second
at a New Seasons BBQ contest.
Lew Frederick
โข
Had a King City police officer point a gun at him while reporting for
Channel 8 news.
โข Hosts a 13-part online teaching series
called “Rediscovering Biology.”
โข Has always dreamed of
directing Fences by August Wilson and King Lear by
William Shakespeare.
โข Was formerly employed as a coffee lab
technician for Maxwell House coffee.
โข Taught, among other
subjects, ethnic cooking, comparative religion, and Tai Chi Chuan at
the Metropolitan Learning Center in the ’70s.

A HUGE Lord of the Rings fan who is not a dorky white guy? She would have my vote.