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About Street roots. (Portland, OR) 1998-current | View Entire Issue (April 21, 2017)
Vendors Page 6 VENDOR PROFILE Loretta H. o C E N T R A L C IT Y COFFEE DUnUmtlL JDagaai. Sourcing & roasting craft coffee to benefit programs at Central City Concern. C IN STORES New Seasons Market, Whole Foods, Food Front Cooperative Grocery, Green Zebra, Chuck's Produce and Will Leather Goods. AT YOUR OFFICE Interested in serving Central City Coffee at your office? Get in touch with us and we can help you make that happen. 503.226.7387 ON OUR WEBSITE Buy Central City Coffee online and have it shipped directly to you or a friend. AT KASBAH MOROCCAN CAFE Get your espresso favorites at Old Town's newest spot (201 NW Davis Street), featuring Central City Coffee! Follow our Facebook page for updates and specials. centralcitycoffee.org facebook.com/CentralCityCoffee coffee@ccconcern.org Answers to Page 15 Puzzles 1 1 1 1 s s S 0 1 a N 3 a v H N 3 IAI 1 V a 3 0 1 s 1 IAI 0 d O 0 3 d J Ì 9 1 V 0 s n V 3 n d i a o V ES IIU n 3 V d AA. 9 N o i a E E 3 A d d E 3 AA 1 3 V a N O l 3 d n d V o V -L V S 3 0 N V d V 3 3 o À 3 1 H 1 d 1 9 3 3 1 1 1 d s 13 3 3 3 a 3 0 d S 0 d 3 a 0 1 N 3 IAI a N V a S 1 a 3 i 3 S 3 0 3 H 9 d d 1 d V A V N V IAI 0 3 u AA 0 N 1 through bankruptcy, Loretta and Andy found a job co-managing a business in Vancouver, Wash. But the 96-hour workweeks became too stressful, and they went back to Redding. They were taken in by friends and Loretta’s sister but left both BY LEONORA KO places, not wanting to overstay their S T A F F W R IT E R welcome. “We decided that we would travel to ompassion is a basic value for Loretta figure out where we would go, but neither H. And now that Loretta is facing of us thought it would be nine months,” struggles herself, some of that compassion is returning to her through Loretta said. “I say we were homeless. My husband says we were ‘on the road.’” friends, her sister and Street Roots. They traveled up and down the Interstate “We’ve had people live with us for months when they were in a difficult 5 corridor from Mexico to Canada. Most situation,” Loretta said. “That was a value nights were spent at rest stops, and they growing up and in our family.” slept in their Toyota van, which also carried Loretta and her husband, Andy, lived a their remaining possessions. comfortable life in Los Angeles for 25 years. “It was very obvious to look in the van “We are both from middle-class families,” and know that there was more Loretta said. “My husband is an aerospace going on than just engineer, retired. I have my degree in . driving,” Loretta said nursing. I was a registered nurse, but I with a laugh. “It’s haven’t done that in decades. been a good van. I call “But then 10 years ago, my husband her Esperanza - it got cancer. We did a lot of alternative means ‘hope.’” medicine, which was not covered by Loretta and Andy insurance. So we put thousands of practice both dollars in alternative medicine, Christian and Jewish and he’s alive.” They moved to Redding, Calif., to be near a treatment center. Medical bills were put on credit cards. The credit N V d ft AA O 3 3 d V N 0 d V 3 AA 3 d 3 H d cards were paid out of got to know each other as a couple, after kids. Our lives have been difficult, but I feel like a stronger person.” Loretta says her next step is figuring out what positive impact she can have for her new community. their 401(k) retirement plans. “We lost a lot of money,” she said. After going S s t7 9 6 £ 2 1- t7 9 8 2 9 6 8 6 2 L £ 9 t7 9 L 2 9 9 6 2 I. £ 8 2 V 2 2 8 6 9 L £ 8 9 t7 2 6 2 9 I. 9 £ 2 6 9 Ÿ 8 L 2 6 £ 2 t7 I- £ 9 2 8 t7 9 9 6 9 £ 2 8 t7 9 rituals. While on the road, they made a special effort to observe Shabbat on Friday evenings, the beginning of Judaism’s day of rest. “It’s a way of keeping faith that things will get better,” Loretta said. “That we’re not ‘under’ our circumstances, no matter what. The way I see it, I’m a spiritual being, I have a soul, and I live in a body. And it is well on the inside - no matter what’s going on on the outside.” Loretta’s first brush with Street Roots was meeting vendor Marlon Crump. “I had just a five-minute conversation with him,” Loretta said. “He talked about Street Roots as a possible job. He told me a little bit about his life. But I just remember his compassion. “He was the face of Portland’s compassion to me.” Since then, Loretta and Andy have found a caretaking job that comes with an apartment to live in. And recently, Loretta began selling Street Roots and has been mentored by Marlon and another vendor, Saoirse. Selling papers is “very, very humbling,” Loretta said. “Some people look down at you with their eyes and body language. And it’s OK. It really is OK because it doesn’t define me. Then there are other people who are so kind. And those are the ones I choose to remember.” Loretta also chooses to look at the positive aspects of her life. She said: “We’ve been married 32 years, and I would say that on the road, we really S h e e p tO d S t 2 2 £ 8 Street Roots • April 21-27, 2017 L 2 503 28 b y E liz a b e th C o n s id in e