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About Street roots. (Portland, OR) 1998-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 29, 2014)
street roots 6 Aug. 29, 2014 Making an honest dollar ♦ Humber of public skateparks in Portland: 7 BY SARAH HANSELL S T A F F W R IT E R • Estimated number of skateboarders in Portland: 27,260 • Cost of tine for skateboarders under age of 18 not wearing a helmet: $25 • Humber of participants in Portland Sunday Parkways events in 2013: 85,480 • Number of Sunday Parkways events held in 2013:4 • Years of operation of Sunday Parkways: 7 rank Quiroga’s ultimate goal is to open a Native American restaurant that features the dishes his auntie taught him to make — Indian tacos, fry bread, deer meat, buffalo and seafood. “I want to ... have a story of each tribe’s background and history with a picture of tribe members and their regalia,” he said. Frank is a member of the Alaskan Native Tlingit tribe and hopes they will help pay for culinary and business management classes, and provide start-up money to open a restaurant. » V E N D O R ,P R O F IL E • Total number of organizations, . businesses and neighborhoods Sunday Parkways worked with in 2013:488 • Humber of volunteers for 2013 Sunday Parkways: 870 - , • Total number of volunteer hours for the events: 4,655 • Total cost of 2013 Portland Sunday Parkways: $439,999 - • Humber of mti^B-Ling.doilxgiy........... service has gone since its founding in 2009:12,000 • Humber erf deliveries made by B-Line since 2009:10,000 • Carrying capacity of a B-Line delivery bike: 800 pounds • Pounds of organic produce delivered by B-Line since 2009:400,000 City of Portland; Portland Parbs and Recreation; Portland Sunday Parkways 2013 Report, City of Portland, B-Line Frank Quiroga "(It’s) more than likely if I can give them a good proposal and show them the plans, step-by-step plans, of how I’d run the restaurant,” he said. His wife and brother both support his idea. “(My brother) really supports me and thinks it’s a good idea, and when I get discouraged about thinking it might not happen, h ekeeps reminding me to just stay positive and keep working on it and it’ll eventually happen,” he said. Currently. F rank jinci his wife pf .eight years don’t have ,a place to live. They use Frank’s income from selling Street Roots to get a hotel every night they can. The couple and their five-year-old son used to live with Frank’s mother-in-law. Two months ago, however, she moved to North Dakota to be with her ailing mother. They gave her temporary custody of their son because they didn’t have a place to stay. “He asks to be with us and it’s hard for . us to explain that we’re homeless,” he said. “He does (know), but I don’t think he really understands.” M ffT B r P H O T O B Y <^OLE M E R K E L Frank lost his job as a certified flagger, partly because he could no longer use his mother-in-law’s vehicle for transportation. So he and his wife moved to Portland — and away from temptation. “For a long time I hid from (from m y' wife) that I was using drugs. She found out one day, and I really loved her, so I quit,” he said. That was17 sformonths ago, and he hasn’t " T O W e 111’ ... ................... * • “It’s not worth losing her or not being able to talk to my son,” he said. Being in Portland, however, definitely makes it easier for Frank to stay sober. “Up there I knew too many people and too many temptations,” he said. Frank lost stable housing for Hie first time at a young age. His m other died when he was 11, leaving him and his younger brother to live with his grandmother. “The money my grandma was getting for taking in me and my brother was barely enough to keep one of us in school clothes and whatnot, so I pretty much went to the streets and let my brother get the better lifestyle and better upbringing,” lie said. He stayed with friends and relatives, and checked in with his grandmother about once a month. He fell in with the wrong crowd, he said. “Honestly, the only good thing l ean say about that is I got that all out when I was real young, so by the time I hit 17, 1 8 ,1 realized that wasn’t the way to go and pretty much worked odd jobs from there.” Now he works selling Street Roots hoping to eventually work toward getting an apartm ent and fulfilling ,his goal erf opening his own restaurant “That’s one of my main reasons for selling Street Roots, to help provide for both of us,” he said. “It keeps me busy so I don’t get tempted and fall back into old ways. It actuallyfeels good to make an honest | dollar.” Frank sellá Street Roots outside World Foods in the Pearl District. CGNTRALCITY Answers to puzzles on page 15 •a -e is E V 14 E r T ' 1 A f V É T E IAI V tí IAI E 1 V O .E; J. H A Si AA V u E e V r E b 81 I r E v le D O M, k 1 V LL b TÌ 71 T r 0 V i 1 Iv 0 E tí f E 14 B B V i i d V v i b V H E i 1 V À 4 g X G 9 8 <4 5 3 1 V 1 V tí 1 |b r O Ti¡ 1 V 1 |r e . ÌA b It O X H 0 r IAI i r E T1 H_ t E r r E 1 AA i V ’ T r E E b n b 1 n V I h Ò 1 8 1 ri d b E V S c ,V B E A E C Ö b E 8| ■V r e 9 5 G G st 9 3 3 8 5 G X G 9 S 4 8 X G 3 4 X G 3 5 8 9 i 4 4 G G 8 Is ¡T ! 8 X 4 5 3 G 9 G « É c E E r E b E i 8 E concern Ending homelessness and achieving self-sufficiency - now roasting and distributing craft coffee. Available for purchase at: A Dj I H b E E D ■ 1 8 14 n J? 14 3 G X 5 8 4 9 G 8 4 3 G t G X 5 9 4 G 8 G 3 9 X 5 New Seasons Market Green Zebra Grocery Food Front Cooperative Grocery Chuck's Produce Call ùs-ìor oinca coffee accounts! CENTRAL CITY COFFEE w w centìaLcityconcern org ? la£@boQVGcm/<^ntràlCiTyòoite©,' A l W I B Ì B ì K w