The battle over the environment is largely a ground war fought over who controls which patch of the earth’s surface. In the early ’90s, conservationists scored major field advancements when they were able to set aside swaths of the Pacific Northwest as breeding grounds for the pint-sized Spotted Owl. But those advancements–and the very legal […]
City
A Few Hancocks Short
After two years of struggle, the 2002 Police Accountability campaign has officially lost their bid for a recount. Originally filed in March 2000, the Police Accountability Initiative proposed a massive overhaul to the system that handles complaints of police misconduct. After missing the ballot in the 2000 election by a few thousand signatures, PAC advocates […]
Starting Over
Last Wednesday evening, about 120 African American community members gathered in the King Neighborhood Facility to vent their simmering frustrations about police brutality. Just three weeks earlier, police had responded to a 3 a.m. call, where a 27-year-old African American man, Byron Hammick, was allegedly abusing his three-year-old son. When they arrived at the Southeast […]
Trouble Down on the Farm
In the last ten years, PCUN, an advocacy group for farm workers, began using a new strategy for out maneuvering stubborn employees. PCUN demanded that NORPAC–Oregon’s largest distributor of foods and manager of farms–provide better conditions and pay for workers. But instead of directly lobbying against the giant corporation, they organized boycotts of NORPAC’s food […]
All Together Now
Twenty years ago, when services for the homeless began to proliferate around the country, the prevailing solution was simple: Give them a bed and put a roof over their heads. But that Band-Aid failed to address the underlying reasons for homelessness. A recent study of Portland’s homeless adults found that half suffer from mental illness; […]
Homeless Paper Homeless
Best known for its monthly advocacy newspaper, Street Roots, in actuality, it’s an entire organization catering to the needs of the homeless in Portland. Their downtown offices are a bustling beehive–homeless getting warm, shaving, hanging out. But that organization and their space–a cavernous home base for about 150 homeless men and women–ironically may soon find […]
Railroading North Portland’s Poor
What has been billed as a blessing for North Portland over the past few weeks has turned out to be a curse: When city developers first conceived a plan to extend the MAX line into the anemic neighborhood, they recognized they were installing a vital artery. According to theory, by tracing Interstate Blvd, the mass […]
The Budget Cuts’ Next Victim
In 1998, Portland’s courts undertook an experiment: Instead of clogging the courtrooms and jails for months at a time, people who had been charged with minor offenses in North Portland could go to Community Court. The punishments were more like those from a strict, but benevolent high school principal: In exchange for a guilty plea, […]
Vera’s Deaf Ear
If President Hoover had his Hoovervilles during the Great Depression, then Mayor Vera Katz has Dignity Village, a constant reminder that the City’s health is not as rosy as she tries to paint it. More disturbing, say critics, is that Dignity Village symbolizes how the mayor handles the gritty issues in the city–those elements not […]
Truth and Consequences
When campaigning for president, George W. Bush vowed to take the United States out of the business of nation-building; no longer would America be concerned with troublesome countries. After a decade-long break from the East vs. West mentality that shaped the 50-year Cold War, the US toyed with different ideas about how to interact with […]
HMO for Homos
In the weeks following September 11, police officers and firefighters emerged as the new genre of American heroes. That esteem has had strange consequences: Last Wednesday, the Portland City Council voted to qualify same-sex partners of police and firefighters for pension benefits in the event that their partner is killed in the line of duty. […]
The Catch-22 Zone
In the waning days of summer two years ago, Stephanie Childress was picked up in McCall Park for carrying a small bag of pot and a handful of cash. As part of her punishment, the City of Portland ordered her not to set foot in the city’s so-called Drug-Free Zones (DFZ) for an entire year–an […]
