Page 2 The Skanner January 25, 2017 Challenging People to Shape a Better Future Now Bernie Foster Founder/Publisher Bobbie Dore Foster Executive Editor Jerry Foster Advertising Manager Christen McCurdy News Editor Patricia Irvin Graphic Designer Melanie Sevcenko Reporter Monica J. Foster Seattle Office Coordinator Susan Fried Photographer 2016 MERIT AWARD WINNER The Skanner Newspaper, es- tablished in October 1975, is a weekly publication, published every Wednesday by IMM Publi- cations Inc. 415 N. Killingsworth St. P.O. Box 5455 Portland, OR 97228 Telephone (503) 285-5555 Fax: (503) 285-2900 info@theskanner.com www.TheSkanner.com The Skanner is a member of the National Newspaper Pub lishers Association and West Coast Black Pub lishers Association. All photos submitted become the property of The Skanner. We are not re spon sible for lost or damaged photos either solicited or unsolicited. ©2017 The Skanner. All rights re served. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission prohibited. Local News Pacific NW News World News Opinions Jobs, Bids Entertainment Community Calendar RSS feeds BE A PART OF THE CONVERSATION @TheSkannerNews Opinion FROM THE PUBLISHER: Why Can’t the Supreme Court Continue with Eight Justices? I n March 2016 former Pres- ident Obama nominated Judge Merrick Garland to the US Supreme Court. Judge Garland is well respect- ed and serves as chief judge of the Appeals Court of the Dis- trict of Columbia. Yet despite past bipartisan support this nonpartisan judge was re- fused a hearing in Congress. Republican leaders decid- “ Bernie Foster Publisher Court has been operating for nearly a year with eight mem- bers instead of nine and as far Court. It is not without precedent. In fact the Supreme Court was originally made up of six jus- tices and at different points in time has been composed of seven, 10 and nine justices. FDR wanted as many as 15 jus- tices, but Congress, which sets the number refused to agree. With its current eight mem- bers the Supreme Court has ruled that univer- sities may consider race among other factors in their ad- missions process. The court also struck down uncon- stitutional abortion restrictions in Texas and up- held a decision restricting gun ownership for perpetra- tors of domestic violence. The Supreme Court has The Supreme Court was originally made up of six justices and at different points in time has been composed of seven, 10 and nine justices ed to block Judge Garland’s appointment simply because he was nominated by former President Obama. As a result the Supreme as we can see it has worked well. Now Democrats should continue what the Republi- cans started and push to keep an eight-justice Supreme done well with eight jus- tices — and if another jus- tice should leave the court we have no doubt it will also work well with seven mem- bers. So why can’t the court continue to work with its cur- rent eight justices. Democrats are outnum- bered in both the Senate and the House for at least the next four years, so they don’t have a lot of power in this Congress. Nevertheless they can fight to keep the Supreme Court impartial by opposing any new Supreme Court ap- pointments. Sen. Mitch McConnell and his friends have demonstrat- ed that the eight-justice court will work. So let’s stick with it for the next session of Con- gress. What do you think? Don’t Be Confused About Vanport M ore than 370 people signed a petition at The Skanner Founda- tion’s annual Martin Luther King Jr Breakfast say- ing that Delta Park should be renamed Vanport after the town that was destroyed in the great Vanport Flood of 1948. The Skanner News has been at the forefront of efforts to commemorate the Vanport Flood, through the North Portland Multimedia Train- ing Center, a project of The Skanner Foundation. The Skanner has support- ed public screenings of The Wake of Vanport, produced by the North Portland Multi- media Training Center, which included interviews with flood survivors. The Skanner News also wel- comes the contributions of Vanport Mosaic, a separate community project that is producing a festival in May 2017 focused on the Vanport stories. We have had many calls confusing our work with theirs. We want to emphasize that while they started out working through The Skan- ner Foundation, they are now a completely separate orga- nization with no affiliation to The Skanner News. We wish them well. The next screening of The Skanner Foundation’s Wake of Vanport will be held March 2017. Subscribe to our break- ing news and events email to learn more at www.theskan- ner.com. To sign an online petition to change the name of Delta Park to Vanport, go to www.change.org/p/portland- parks-recreation-change-del- ta-park-s-name-to-vanport. To Be Equal: Assessing President Obama’s Impact and Legacy T hroughout our histo- ry, the National Urban League has taken seri- ously our responsibility to hold the President of the United States accountable to the needs of urban America and communities of color. During the Great Depression, Executive Secretary Eugene Kinckle Jones served on Pres- ident Franklin Delano Roo- sevelt’s “Black Cabinet.” Les- ter Granger, who headed the League during World War II, is among those credited with persuading President Harry Truman to desegregate the Armed Forces. Whitney M. Young advised presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson and was instrumen- tal in the passage of the land- mark Civil Rights Act. Urban League Presidents Vernon Jordan, John Jacob and Hugh Price continued our engage- ment with the Presidents with whom they served to further the work of civil rights and secure support for Urban League programs. The first African Ameri- can Presidency naturally has held special significance for the National Urban League. In recognition of Obama’s unique place in American history, we set out to create a comprehensive analysis of Marc H. Morial National Urban League his two terms, which we re- leased earlier this week to great national interest. Any evaluation of the “ ter off than you were four years ago?” In this instance, the question is, “Is the nation better off than it was eight years ago?” And, “Is Black America better off than it was eight years ago?” The answer to both questions is, unequiv- ocally, “Yes.” President Obama is leaving office with an approval rating even higher than Reagan’s, exceeded only by Presidents Black Americans felt both the pride of President Obama’s accom- plishments and the pain when it was clear his opponents sought to diminish a great American Obama administration must first recognize that he inher- ited the worst economy since the Great Depression, and was faced with Congressional opposition unprecedented in its intensity and sinister nature. Both his accomplish- ments and his failures must be evaluated against those conditions. In creating our scorecard, the National Urban League harkened back to the famous question Ronald Reagan asked the nation during his sole debate against President Jimmy Carter: “Are you bet- Franklin D. Roosevelt, Dwight Eisenhower and Bill Clinton. During Obama’s presiden- cy, the economy has added 15 million new jobs, and the job- less rate has dropped from 7.6 percent to 4.7 percent — and from 12.7 percent to 7.8 per- cent for African Americans. The high school graduation rate for African Americans has increased from 66.1 per- cent to 75 percent. There are 614,000 fewer long-term un- employed. Wages are up 3.4 percent. More than 16 million Americans who were unin- sured now have health care coverage, with the uninsured rate for African Americans cut by more than half. Barack Obama’s passion and steady hand made a huge dif- ference in charting a progres- sive course and positively im- pacted the lives of ordinary Americans. Black Americans felt both the pride of his ac- complishments and the pain when it was clear his oppo- nents sought to diminish a great American.. While we scored many of the administration’s achieve- ments with our highest rat- ing, “Superior,” President Obama’s tenure as a whole had shortcomings, due to some notable missed oppor- tunities and outright failures, such as the economic devel- opment of urban centers, gun violence and the foreclosure rate and bank closure rate in communities of color and low-income neighborhoods. On these and other issues, we rated the Obama adminis- tration “Fair” or “Poor.” Our evaluation springs from a consideration of his accom- plishments balanced against the conditions under which he served. The National Ur- ban League has given the Obama Administration an overall rating of “Excellent,” our second-highest rating.