A crowd of mostly students behind a banner, yelling
Thousands of Portlanders marched for more urgent climate action Friday. Isabella Garcia

Thousands of Portlanders took to the streets Friday, calling on elected leaders to take more decisive action against climate change. The event, organized by the Portland Youth Climate Strike, also took aim at businesses and organizations that organizers believe are working in opposition of the cityโ€™s climate goals.

โ€œWe need adults to go beyond calling youth activists โ€˜inspiring,โ€™โ€ strike organizer Adah Crandall said in a press statement, โ€œthey must join this movement with us and do their part to protect our shared future.โ€

Over two thousand people gathered in front of City Hall Friday morning to deliver a climate pledge to Portland officials. The pledge asked city leaders to โ€œact decisivelyโ€ to combat climate change by opposing new fossil fuel investments, refusing monetary contributions from the oil, gas, and coal industries, designing climate policies that prioritize their constituentโ€™s health, and supporting environmental justice initiatives โ€œat every possible opportunity.โ€

City Commissioner Carmen Rubio, Multnomah County Commissioner Sharon Meieran, Milwaukie Mayor Mark Gamba, and state representatives Maxine Dexter and Khanh Pham, joined the protesters in front of City Hall Friday morning to sign the climate pledge. Portland City Commissioner Jo Ann Hardesty and Multnomah County Commissioner Susheela Jayapal also signed the pledge, but werenโ€™t able to attend in person.

Two people holding signed pieces of paper with their fists up in the air
State Representatives Maxine Dexter and Khanh Pham holding their climate pledges. Isabella Garcia

โ€œPeople are going to tell you that you are being idealistic and not rooted in reality, but the truth is, if theyโ€™re not taking action on the climate crisis, they are the ones who are not rooted in reality,โ€ Pham told the crowd after signing the pledge. โ€œIt is so clear that we are in a crisis situation and if we are not reacting and responding with policy changes that actually meet the crisis of this moment, they are the idealists thinking that business as usual is going to work.โ€

City Commissioner Dan Ryan posted a social media message in support of the strike, but did not immediately respond to the Mercuryโ€™s question on whether or not he plans to sign the climate pledge. Mayor Ted Wheeler’s office also did not respond to the Mercuryโ€™s question on whether he plans on signing the pledge. City Commissioner Mingus Mappsโ€™s office declined to comment.

Two people with megaphone stand in front of a crowd
Thousands of Portlanders getting ready to march. Isabella Garcia

The crowd marched from City Hall to the nearby NW Natural and Portland Business Alliance (PBA) headquartersโ€”two of the four โ€œclimate villainsโ€ event organizers identified as hindering the city from making progress on its climate goalsโ€”before marching over the Burnside Bridge towards Revolution Hall, where local environmental organizations had set up a climate festival, complete with information about local climate issues and live music.

During the march, students chanted and held signs expressing their fear for the future if dramatic action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions isnโ€™t taken soon. According to the most recent United Nations report on climate change, greenhouse gas emissions must peak by 2025 and halve by 2030 in order to avoid excessive global warming that will worsen existing climate disasters.

A person making a rock-on hand sign and holding a sign reading billionaires, kindly suck my dick
Iris Foster (left) at the climate strike Isabella Garcia

Iris Foster, a student at Lincoln High School, said that she has watched โ€œtoo many depressing documentariesโ€ to not push for greater action against climate change. Foster notes, however, that she only learned about the climate crisis and Portland-specific climate issues through her own research.

โ€œBeing able to join the movement should be more accessible,โ€ Foster said. โ€œThere should be classes in school about this.โ€

A person with short hair holding a sign reading BIPOC are disproportionately affected by climate change
Nina, a Portland Community College Student at the march. Isabella Garcia

As the march took over Martin Luther King Boulevard in Southeast Portland, Ninaโ€”a Portland Community College student who only provided the Mercury her first nameโ€”led a chant in Spanish.

โ€œยกSรญ se puede! Yes we can!โ€

To Nina, climate justice means centering Portlanders of color who are most likely to feel the impacts of climate change first.

โ€œThe movement is often led by white people even though Black, Indigenous, and other people of color have been [calling attention to the climate crisis] for years and are most impacted by it,โ€ Nina said. โ€œItโ€™s like weโ€™re overshadowed.โ€

A color coded banner with the faces of elected officials on it
The banner of elected officials who have signed the climate pledge. Isabella Garcia

As the march left City Hall, a color coded banner with dozens of elected officials’ faces on it hung in front of the building. The green sectionโ€”officials who have committed to acting quickly against climate changeโ€”included the faces of the few elected officials who signed the climate pledge. The yellow section, representing officials who had not responded to the organizersโ€™ requests to sign the pledge, was crowded with overlapping faces.

โ€œRight now, our leaders have a choice to make,โ€ Crandall said while standing in front of the banner. โ€œThey can either continue to side with the climate villains who are destroying our planet, or they can side with the young people gathered here today fighting for our futures.โ€

The climate festival at Revolution Hall is scheduled to continue until 8 pm Friday.

People with several signs supporting action against climate change including one reading youll die of old age, Ill die of climate change
Protesters gathered in front of City Hall. Isabella Garcia
Two young people smiling at each other while thy talk into megaphones
Youth organizers leading a chant. Isabella Garcia
A sign reading I want a hot date not a hot planet
“I want a hot date, not a hot planet” Isabella Garcia
A sign reading earth is the only MLIF I wouldt fuck with
“Earth is the only MILF I wouldn’t fuck with” Isabella Garcia
Students yelling along with a chant
Students at the Climate Strike Isabella Garcia

Isabella Garcia is the former News Editor for the Portland Mercury. She covered City Hall, transportation, the environment, breaking news, and more.

3 replies on “Thousands of Portlanders March For More Urgent Action Against Climate Change”

  1. The number one way to deal with climate change is to have less people living on earth. The Republicans and all of their forced birthers are about to make that impossible. People should be pissed that they want to ban abortion, get rid of contraception, and force every fertilized zygote that manages to make it to term and be given birth to as a living human being (but do nothing to care for that human being after its born). Stopping this bullshit is the number one way climate change can be affected. Adding billions of people to this already overpopulated, miserable planet is just going to bring about the end of the planet faster than ever. Stop protesting climate change and start protesting forced birtherism.

  2. the sooner the Religulous NJs

    can bring on Armageddon

    the Quicker they can get

    to Heaven — so long as

    they’re One of the Cho-

    sen Few. it’s a pretty

    Big Gamble but

    they’re willing

    to Risk it

    and US

  3. The ruling class view the rest of humanity

    as little more than consumers, wage-slaves,

    cannon fodder, motorists and malcontents.

    The #1 way to deal with climate change is

    to reduce the number of miles driven by cars,

    trucks, ships, planes and other big boy toys.

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