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About Street roots. (Portland, OR) 1998-current | View Entire Issue (March 18, 2016)
Street Roots • March 18-24, 2016 New s Page 5 P H O T O B Y P H O T O B Y M A R C IE R IV E R A Jim Serrill walks with a team o f Portland Timbers fans for the Blessing o f the Log on Feb. 18. They selected the log that will be cut during home games every time the Timbers score. T IM B E R JIM , f r o m p a g e 4 In the years since, Serrill has given back unequivocally. Using his status with the Timbers to leverage donations, he’s helped raise tens of thousands of dollars for Portland-area charities. “Jim has a big effect He is so generous and so loving and so positive,” said Cody Goldberg. Goldberg met Serrill six years ago when he was trying to raise money to build a playground where kids with disabilities, like his daughter, Harper, could play. Serrill caught wind of the effort and contacted Goldberg to see he could help. CUP BOUND AND CROWNED’ how “It’s really hard This recently released book by Prost to put it in the Amerika is a tribute to the Portland right words,” Timber s 2015 winning season. Available Goldberg said. at Powell's City of Books for $29.95, the “He was a bull in a china shop forward was written by Timber Jim Serrill 24/7 in support of and contains photos by Sireet Roots our endeavor.” photographer Diego Diaz. Serrill sold scarves with proceeds going to Harper’s Playground at every Timbers 'match, and with the help he solicited from the Timbers Army, $86,000 was raised. Today, the all-abilities playground in North Portland’s Arbor Lodge Park is a popular destination for kids with disabilities. Goldberg and his wife have two more inclusive playgrounds planned for other Portland quadrants, and Serrill is still championing their cause at fundraising events. He also created the Timbers Army CPR program, which hosts free CPR training for anyone who wants to learn, Serrill said he’d often share the story of h is d a u g h te ^ ^ a c c i^ ^ ^ . The Red Sweater Project operates a school in Mungere, Tanzania. B uilding the soil will be Jim Serrill’s focus when he travels to Africa to help with the school’s garden, pictured above. students. him as any Timbers fan. “He -will be out there working many hours “Here’s people coming in to get a first-aid b y h im s e lf u n t il p e o p l e c o m e u p w a n t i n g t o card, and here’s this guy falling apart,” he know what’s going on,” McClure said. “Then said. “But I don’t mind being exposed.” he teaches them.” His friend; Montgomery, is a paramedic Children living in the apartment buildings who expanded and now runs the program; nearby often take gardening lessons, from Serrill asked him to help with it in 2012, Serrill during the Summer. and since then, more than 400 people have This past growing season, Serrill participated. delivered 3,400 pounds of produce from the “He says it and he lives it,” Montgomery garden to Tualatin School House Food said of Serrill’s “spread the love” mantra. Pantry, providing food for more than 700 “Next to my father, he’s probably inspired hungry families each month, me more than any other male role model in he said. my life - in a very short time.” "T im b e r lim has had a “Timb er Jim has had a Serrill’s raised money for cancer research hnge im pact In onr com* huge impact in our too. In 2012, he sold wristbands, hosted m unity," said the pantry's community,” said the Timber Jim’s Cancer Killer Auction and program coordinator, pantry’s program solicited donations through the Timbers Tracy Smith. "N ot only is coordinator, Tracy Smith. Army to raise money for the Leukemia & “Not only is he extremely he extremely generons; he Lymphoma Society. generous; he also has a huge also has a huge heari to It’s a cause close to his heart because he’s had his own battle with prostate cancer heart to train, coach and tra in , coach and Inspire inspire others. You never see since his diagnosis four years ago. others. him alone. He always has He underwent seven weeks of radiation TRACT S M IT H / T U A i A T IN S C H O O L H O U S E F O O D someone tagging along he’s treatment, and ultimately, it forced him into P A N T R Y C O O R D IN A T O R invited to join his life early, retirement. journey of helping others.” “It took all my strength. It fried Even in late February, everything,” he said. Eventually he had robotic-assisted surgery at Oregon Health & signs of life poked through at the Hilltop Community Garden, with collard greens and Science University. . rosemary in full swing. Now, he said, the only thing missing is “Most of the work in gardening is his strength, but you wouldn’t know it by preparing the soil, then you put the seed in, the long hours he spends working in the and God does the rest,” Serrill said. community garden. Soil will be his focus when he visits The garden, located at the Tualatin United Methodist Church, was Serrill’s idea. Tanzania this spring. Ashley Holmer, of Lake Oswego, asked Church member Larry McClure said Serrill him to make the trip. She needed his help. “drove by our church, saw the open space She’s the founder and director of the Red and walked into the church office and asked Sweater Project, a nonprofit that operates a why they hadn’t put a garden there,” school in the Tanzanian village of Mungere. Serrill, a lifelong Methodist, joined the In rural Tanzania, the average family income church’s congregation and got the ball is about $200 per year, but the average rolling. secondary school costs $500 per year, McClure never heard of Timber Jim. m bw°13 before meeting’him but.’speaksaJs ’fondly o f1 fes list ,blo S e e T liv iS fe ti i i < iff ?fiw nsnnfir - :■ w 9® js qs