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About Street roots. (Portland, OR) 1998-current | View Entire Issue (May 1, 2015)
Street Roots • May 1-7, 2015 News also talk about where people are living now, what they’re trying to build for themselves, whether it’s out in East Portland or it’s up in North Portland, or really anywhere they live, to try to talk about those places, too. A.G: Tell me more about the plan’s focus on black families in East Portland who have already been displaced. What do they need to be successful and hopefully not be displaced again? L.B: There is a whole team that is specifically working on that. They’ve had two open workshops with the public in the past couple of months, and they are coming together around some concepts that have to do with the connections of health, very broadly defined, and stability — mental health, stress, depression, anxiety, the things that happen when you are in a precarious situation with your P H O T O BY SH A N E VALLE housing and you’re stressed out — trying to really tie housing stability to this whole People attending a community workshop on March 28 participate in a group activity. broader set of concerns, like how are you going to be a great parent or family if or a program that you really need to own the Albina Plan, and how will the People’s you’re out of your mind with worry or very, your own house to participate in fully, Plan differ? very anxious or you’re moving schools. that’s not going to affect African-Americans You can’t have a stable situation so as much because our home-ownership rate L.B: I think that many people in the they’re very on this theme of replanting is much lower. That’s one way of looking at community were pretty happy about the people with “root shock.” This amazing it. content of (the Albina Plan). People psychiatrist at Columbia University, Dr. The other is culturally, socially. For participated a lot; they were very engaged Mindy Fullilove, she coined this phrase. example, there was a group that looked at in it. It was a process that was certainly in It’s when people move involuntarily, it’s response to the really bad old days of the idea of crime prevention through like pulling a plant up out of soil. You can’t urban renewal — not that the current days environmental design. It’s an interesting just put it somewhere else and think it’s of u rb an renewal are n o t bad, b u t it w as a concept. Some of it has to do with, like, going to grow. You’ve damaged the roots; plan by official institutions. The content of don’t put shrubs up against a building . you’v esK o ck ed its roofe/Aiid'sKe'Kas^ it is perfectly fine; it’s very comprehensive; b e cau se so m e o n e could hide b eh in d it. documented those impacts for individual it talks about all these issues, but then the Some of it has to do with lighting, but a lot people for families, for community at large. responsibility for it went (away). Every of it has to do with the idea of eyes on the It’s disruptive, and you can see it in so agency was kind of like, that’s not us, we street and natural surveillance by other many fields. It’s the equivalent to losing don’t have the money. people. So what does that mean if you’re months in school if you’re a kid and you It comes back to this organizing and black youth and you want to go hang out at change schools in the middle of the year. accountability piece. The plan is not really the park? If there are all these eyes on the There’s job loss and job disruption and the thing. Policies are important; programs street who are other people checking out income problems. There are so many are important. We have a lot of ideas of what you’re doing, is that a positive thing pieces that wear down people what those are going to be. The plan is because they’re engaging with you as a psychologically, and it harms their getting people to pay attention and identify community member, or is that potentially networks. So how do you connect all that the targets that can get it done. But part of very negative because they’re calling the stuff up to very clear resources and that also means it’s not only the “capital C ” cops and now you’re having a criminal- City of Portland that’s gonna do it, but who programs to say actually: This housing justice system encounter because you’re thing? That’s a health thing. This rental trying to chill out at the park? So they did a in the nonprofit sector is going to get this done, or what agency is going to change deposit assistance thing? That’s an little bit of thinking analysis around that, the way they’re working to deliver education policy. How do you build that up talking to people about how they something different for people if they’re as official ways of doing things? experience those things. really going to serve this group. Sö I think there’s more implementers; A.G: What did the background work on A.G: What is this next phase all about? there’s an accountability structure. There’s the plan involve? L.B: The phase we’re in right now is all an advocacy moment that we can put about getting people who are - I’m going L.B: Not directly part of the People’s forward. to use the term “experts,” - together in Plan but something that’s been going on circles to talk about hey, here’s all the A.G: So how do everyday people enter the for a while is the Urban League’s State of policy stuff that’s been thrown out there, conversation? Black Portland project. We’ve been which of these things sticks for you? And connecting with them and getting L.B: We’re just getting into that part. then just get also their general human information from that since last spring on We’ve spent some time doing background ideas about life and the world and what’s what are the key data pieces that you see, work. And there have been a couple of im portant So when we say experts, we what are the most persistent, severe events in East Portland. For us, that’s a don’t just mean certified smart people. disparities, where are the biggest gaps, real priority area to engage in East We’re trying to get a mix for each topic what are the worst things, what are the Portland because that’s an area that’s been area of people who are some kind of biggest priorities? Then I had a bunch of underserved and overlooked in the certified, titled person who is identified as students who looked specifically at urban conversation about black folks in Portland. a leader in some way, but also has people planning in Portland, urban plans in We focus a lot of our time physically on the who are personally impacted by the issue, Portland, a wide variety of types, to space that is Northeast Portland and then who are experts oh their own lives, people basically ask the question: Are black going, “Oh no, we can’t find the black who have experience and networks in the people here? Does this do anything for people to survey here.” Well, no kidding. community. black people? We know that the black So one of the things we’re trying to do is co m m u nity faces certain disparities and figure out what people want to do and then A.G: / imagine that the People’s Plan will certain issues that might relate to their deliver more of that. get compared to the Albina Plan of the 1990s ability to engage with a specific kind of over and over again. What went wrong with plan. So if there’s a project or a proposal Page 9 Death of a Building by Maddy Brown-Clark Dead buildings Reach for the sky And wait for the touch Of the wrecking ball To pound them into dust Flatten them by bulldozers And scoop them from the earth In wait of a parking lot For daily commuters Up for sale on ancient computers All a part of urban decay And old dead buildings Who have seen their day. The Mirror: School of Hard Knocks by Leo Rhodes Looking in the mirror I start reflecting on being a youth With eyes of wonderment And a mischievous mind Always knowing there’s a big world (beyond my realm) Jtist waiting for me to conquer My teen years Confusion, uncertainties Making bad choices Still waiting to conquer “The Big World.” Conquering the world As an adolescent I hit the ground running “Take no prisoners!” “Do or die!” was my war cry. Pushing the envelope Living on the edge Taking life’s bumps and bruises Many times my life spun out of control I would seek shelter and safety But as the years went by Shelter and safety became less and less Many years later as I look in the mirror I see a wiser elderly man With scars of victory he once boasted about And other scars that weren’t so victorious As I look in the mirror I see a wiser elderly man Whose idea of conquering the world Has changed in’many ways