During the Monday, November 19 lunch hour, John Branam, the
33-year-old development director for Portland Public Schools,
officially launched his city council campaign. Though Branam has been
campaigning for weeksโwith former Mercury managing editor
and mayoral candidate Phil Busse as his managerโand has collected
nearly $8,000 in seed money donations, and approximately 300 of the
1,000 $5 contributions he needs to qualify for public financing, he
took time on Monday to publicly lay out his education-focused agenda at
Portland State University.
Outside of school fundraising circlesโand beyond North
Portland, where Branam headed up the Arbor Lodge Neighborhood
Association from 2004 to 2005 and renovated and rented out nearly a
dozen houses (which he has since sold)โBranam isn’t very well
known. Even community activist and former state representative Jo Ann
Bowman hadn’t heard of Branam as of a few months ago. But on Monday
afternoon, she was introducing him.
“I know he’s the kind of leader we need on the city council,” says
Bowman. “He’s one that’s not afraid to speak his mind, he’s not afraid
to work in collaboration with people, he’s not afraid to tell people
they’re wrong when they’re wrong. He’s an opportunity to bring people
together across race, across class, across sexual orientation.
“He is a man that has a vision for how fabulous the city of Portland
could possibly be,” Bowman added.
Given Branam’s career at Portland Public Schools, it’s no surprise
that education is one of the main pillars of his future Portland
vision. Taking the microphone from Bowman, he outlined his goals.
“Simply put, my vision as Portland’s next city commissioner is for
Portland to become as well known for having a robust, rigorous,
well-articulated, pre-K to post-graduate education vision,” Branam told
supporters.
Branam says he wants a seat on the council to “significantly raise
the profile of public education in Portland” by convening all of the
stakeholders, from the school districts to university leadership to
community groups.
Beyond education, Branam’s campaign largely sticks to the basics:
He’s for “vibrant neighborhoods, healthy businesses, robust
infrastructure, flourishing arts and culture, and Portland’s being more
internationally minded.”
Later that evening, Branam held a meet-and-greet session at the Art
& Sole shoe shop on N Interstate and Rosa Parks Way. There,
neighbors quizzed him on the intersection of housing and schools, the
high fees associated with new development, the Interstate rename
debacle, and the challenges of running a small business in Portland.
Branam’s responsesโon small businesses, he plans to visit 15 that
“say doing business in Portland is a stinking nightmare” and 15 that
say it’s wonderfulโseemed to sway the crowd. After an hour, every
one of the dozen in attendance took a public financing contribution
form, and a few wrote checks on the spot.
