North Portland’s Community Newspaper - Bi-Weekly - PO Box 83068, Port. OR 97283 503-283-5086 reviewnewspaper@gmail.com WEB: www.stjohnsreview.com Missing woman tragedy spurs new sign for St. Johns Bridge O n Tuesday, September 8, an alert was sent out for a missing woman, 37-year old Lisa Jane Wright of Linnton. According to the Police Bureau message, Lisa was last seen by friends and family at 6:30 pm when she left for a walk. Later that evening some of her belong- ings were found on the St. Johns Bridge. Exactly one week later, On September 15, a Police Bureau bulletin announced that her body had been discovered on the banks of the Willamette River near the St. Johns Bridge in what appeared to have been a suicide. Tragically, the St. Johns Bridge has been the site of three suicides since May 2015, a spike compared to the four previous year’s statis- tics according to Greg Stewart of Portland Police Bureau Strategic Services. He said suicides are a serious health issue. “The Medical Examiner reports more suicides in Multnomah County than ho- micides or traffic fatalities.” Re- search has proven that as a state, Oregon stands out, with a suicide rate forty-one percent higher than the national average. The vast ma- jority of suicide victims are clini- cally de- pressed. Survi- vor Kev- in Hines offers an inside look into the mind of a vic- tim. 13 years ago Hines jumped the rail- ing of the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francis- co and fell 220 St Johns Review PO Box 83068 Port. OR 97238 #21 Oct. 16, 2015 The new St. Johns Bridge sign may look something like the one designed for the Vista Bridge. THERE IS JUST ONE MORE ISSUE LEFT TO SEND YOUR St. Johns Bridge Pictures for the 2015 Contest. (The contest ends with the Oct. 30, 2015 issue. See Page 2 for details 515-840 ft., about the same height as the St. Johns Bridge—the rough equiv- alent of jumping from a 25-story building. Only 2% survive such a fall. It took four seconds for Hines, then 19, to hit the water. He lives with a bipolar disorder, he said. His condition, in the weeks before he fell, had been worsening. He had been hearing voices commanding him to jump. Yet he said in the in- stant he fell—the instant the cold “Signs for Bridge” Continued on Page 4 By Barbara Quinn Citizen advisors request community support for effective Superfund river clean up What: Community Press Con- ference When: Monday, October 19, 2015, 11am Where: Cathedral Park turn around (end of Pittsburgh St.) C itizen volunteers working on the superfund on the lower Willamette River request resi- dents’ support for an effective clean up in an October 19 commu- P hoto of the W eek A popular and well photo- graphed view, this one was selected because of a unique opportunity the photographer caught. Geraldine Gladden said, “My husband Nathan Sandberg and I came to the park to enjoy a picnic and see the Jazz Festival. We had the wrong date. Instead, we found this piano and a cat hanging out. I could not help but get up there and use my muscle mem- ory to slightly butcher the “La Lettre a Elise” . My Husband took the picture. Minutes later, a young guy with baggy pants, blond hair looking like he got caught in a dog fight sat down at the piano. I have shivers just remembering what we heard. It was a 1st class symphony, goodness pouring out of his fingers, amazing and beau- tifully played with passion... then he took off on his skate board....Loved it!” Geraldine Gladden This issue’s Masthead was tak- en by Warren Payne and is a beautiful shot of the changing colors of fall. nity press conference. The clean up of contaminated sediments in the 11 miles of river adjacent to north and northwest Portland is a huge project in which decisions are immanent. At the press con- ference, the Portland Harbor Com- munity Advisory Group (PHCAG) will present a paper outlining a community plan for the river clean up. The paper will be turned in the same day to EPA’s National Rem- edy Review Board. The National Remedy Review Board (NRRB) is an internal EPA panel that reviews proposed Su- perfund cleanup decisions to make sure they meet cost-based criteria and to assure they are consistent with Superfund law. The Board will examine clean up methods recommended by EPA Region 10. “Superfund” Continued on Page 5