The Southwest Portland Post. (Portland, Oregon) 2007-current, March 01, 2017, Page 2, Image 2

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    2 • The Southwest Portland Post
EDITORIAL
March 2017
Improving our Southwest pedestrian environment means budgeting funds, identifying trails
OPEN FORUM
By Glenn Bridger and Don Baack
Pedestrian connectivity is the key
to allowing residents to move about
our community.
SWTrails is in the process of
working with the city of Portland to
identify key pedestrian connections
around all of Southwest Portland.
We a r e w o r k i n g w i t h
n e i g h b o rh o o d a s s o c i a t i o n s t o
identify existing rights of way,
many heavily used, that could be
improved to be better pedestrian or
pedestrian and bicycle trails.
Unimproved existing rights of
way are promises of connections
that have never been fulfilled.
They are presently a no-man’s
land, open for public access, but in
many cases not easily traversable by
kids headed for school or residents
wanting to walk for exercise.
There have been questions of
liability for adjacent owners when
these public lands are used.
Recent state legislation has taken
aim at the liability issue when trails
are improved or maintained by a
non-profit organization such as
SWTrails.
To bring the relief intended by the
legislation regarding trail use, City
Council approval of that use must
be provided.
SWTrails is working with the
city of Portland as it begins a
project called SWIM (Southwest In
Motion), a funded effort to identify,
price out, and set general priorities
within categories of all the active
transportation projects across
Southwest Portland.
The SWTrails' effort is to identify
the hundreds of existing trail
connections, most of which are
already in use by our Southwest
residents, put them on a map and/
or a list, obtain public comment and
then get the Portland City Council
to approve the list and map.
This action will formalize more
of these trails we rely upon as an
(Continued on Page 3)
Longtime zoo resident Packy the
elephant will be missed by many
Just heard that Portland’s beloved
elephant, Packy, has died. I first saw
him when he was just a little guy. He
was on a chain and tethered outside
Lynches Market in Hillsdale.
I was with my Dad who was
getting gas at the Mobil station.
There must have been some kind
of a festival or fair and Packy was
the feature.
Our family owns a very large red
tooth brush that was given to Packy
during National Dental Health
week. It was being discarded and
was retrieved and treasured all these
years.
Some time back, we let the zoo
rea
o the a
New t oved in?
m
or just
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Packy approaches a wading pool in
the south habitat of Elephant Lands.
(Photo by Michael Durham, courtesy
of the Oregon Zoo)
know that it was in our possession
and they borrowed it for one of his
big birthdays. Packy brought a lot
of joy and also notoriety to Portland
and he will certainly be missed by
many generations of Oregonians.
Patti Waitman-Ingebretsen
Multnomah
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24
Editor & Publisher .........Don Snedecor
Reporters / Writers...... ....KC Cowan, Jack Rubinger,
................Erik Vidstrand
Copy Editor ......................Janet Goetze
Advertising Sales ...........Don Snedecor
Graphic Design ..............Leslie Baird Design
Printing ............................Oregon Lithoprint
Circulation .......................Rick Hepper
© 2017 by The Southwest Portland Post. All rights reserved. The opinions of the
artists and authors contained herein are not necessarily shared by the publisher.
Deadline for news and advertising is generally the 20th of the month prior to
publication. Please call for current deadline information. Advertising rates are available
upon request. Subscriptions are $24 per year.
The Post has a circulation of 7,000 in Multnomah Village and the surrounding
neighborhood business districts including Burlingame, Capitol Hill, Garden Home,
Glen Cullen, Hillsdale, South Portland, Raleigh Hills, West Portland and Vermont
Hills. The Post is published on or about the 1st of every month. Back issues are $2.50
each when available. All major credit cards accepted.
The Post is printed on recycled
newsprint using soy-based inks.