January 31,1990 Portland Observer • Page 3 N ew s A round T own Housing Gets First Child Care Center The first child care center for public housing residents will be opened in May, following the award of a one year demon­ stration project grant of $45,140 to the Housing Authority of Portland (HAP) and Neighborhood House. The child care center will be developed at Hillsdale Terrace, a HAP development in southwest Portland that houses 60 low income families. Par­ ents who want to use the child care center must be employed, involved in job search or training programs leading to employ­ m ent The child care center will use two community rooms at Hillsdale Terrace to serve 20 pre-school children and 15 grade City Energy Office Helps To Weatherize 5,000 Apartments Over 5,000 rental units have been weatherized as a result of Portland's Multi- Family Weatherization Assistance Program. The program, funded by the Oregon De­ partment of Energy, has just received a $230,000 grant to continue the program until June of 1991. Commissioner Mike Lindberg said that with the new grant, an additional 2,000 rental units will be weath­ erized. Under the program. Energy Office staff work closely with property owners and managers to explain weatherization incen­ tives and to prepare the application forms. “ Our program targets low-income families in multi-family housing units, which in may cases need the energy upgrading the most and can take advantage of the finan­ cial incentives offered by utilities and the State of Oregon,” said Program Manager Debbie Palermini. school children from the development. The center will operate from 7:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Neighborhood House will operate the center, which will emphasize and encour­ age the development of self-esteem and social, mental, and physical growth. Neigh­ borhood House is a community service agency that provides early childhood, family, and aging services to low income families in southwest Portland. "w e have a good partnership with Neighborhood House that will allow our low income parents to look for work and become employed,” HAP Executive Di­ rector Donald E. Clark says. “ Parents will feel better having their children cared for so close to hom e." HAP and Neighborhood House plan to involve residents with the child care center Child Care Center Forward Motion Offers Wide Variety of Services and Computer Expertise Announces Closure through a parents advisory board. Parents will have input on the development of ac­ tivities and curriculum at the center. One of the goals is to build bridges between school and home by encouraging the parents to participate in the center's classroom and help sponsor holiday events such as pot­ lucks. The child care center will be vital to the parents at Hillsdale Terrace in provid­ ing affordable child care. The grant from the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) will cover the start-up costs of the center. HAP is contributing $40,000 for the opera­ tion of the center. Additional funding will come from eligible State of Oregon Adult and Family Services subsidies. Parents will also be expected to pay based on a sliding fee scale. The PIC Elects 1990 Board Officers E. Andrew Jordan Named to Third Term as Chairman The Private Industry Council, a pri­ vate, non-profit employment and training organization, has elected officers to its board of directors. The new officers, who will serve until January 1,1991, will lead a 26-member board representing private business, education, labor, community-based organizations and the public sector. The board will oversee The Private Industry Council’s comprehensive employment and training programs for youth and adults in Washington and Multnomah Counties. E. Andrew Jordan will serve as chair­ man of the board. Mr. Jordan, an attorney, is managing shareholder of th law firm Bolliger, Hampton & Tarlow. He is an expert in land use and development, local government and employment law. He has been a board member since 1987 and will serve a third term as chairman. Mr. Jordan represents The Private Industry Council at the Portland Leaders' Roundtable. He is a former president of th Beaverton Chamber of Commerce. Bill Scott, president of Pacific Devel­ opment, Inc., is the new vice-chair. Mr. Scott participates in a number of local boards including the Association for Port­ land Progress, Emanuel Medical Center Foundation and the Portland Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce. Mr. Scott, who is also a member of the Leaders’ Roundtable, has served on the board of The Private Industry Council since 1988. Mary Zoe Petersen has been re-elected as secretary-treasurer, a position she has held since the inception of The Private Industry Council in 1987. Mrs. Petersen is co-owner of Gresham Optical and Custom Eyes. She is also an active member of the Soroptimist Club of Gresham, American Association o f University Women, the Mt. Hood Festival of Jazz Foundation and the Gresham Chamber of Commerce. The trouble with opportunity is it comes disguised as hard work. The St. Vincent de Paul Child Develop­ ment Center board of directors announced Monday morning that the center will close on February 28. Board president, Juba Baker, cited the center’s desperate financial situ­ ation faced over recent months, saying, ‘ ‘The board deeply regrets the decision, but after unsuccessfully pursuing new funding sources we felt there was no other choice. Reducing our high standards of care in order to cut our budget was not considered an acceptable option.” Since m id-1989 the center has seen declining tuition revenue, the result of falling enrollment. The center currently cares for 69 chil­ dren, between two-and-a-half to five years old. Seventeen staff are employed. The center opened 50 years ago as Blessed Martin DePorres Day Nursery at North Victoria and Broadway. Later it moved to Northeast Williams and Graham, re­ named St. Martin’s Day Nursery. In 1973 the center moved to its present location, the old Immaculate Academy at 44 Northeast Morris. Third generation students are not uncommon. NACME Recognizes Outstanding High School Students Portland resident Bosco Kante, receives a 1989 National Action Council for Minori­ ties in Engineering (NACME) High School Student Merit Award from Eastman Kodak President Kay R. Whitmore. The award recognizes African-American, Hispanic and American Indian high school students who have demonstrated academic excellence, leadership skills, and commitment to engi­ neering as a career field. Kante, who received an 411,000 schol­ arship, was among ten finalists honored at NACME’s Forum '89 in Washington, D.C. A graduate of Grant High School, Kante is now a mechanical engineering major at the University of Southern California. UV W Theautries Ben Yehudah (West) of Forward Motion, Inc. and Sam Qasam of Rent A Soft work as a team to offer a wide variety of services and computer expertise to corporations and individuals in the downtown Portland corridor at 1430 SW Park Avenue near the Portland State Cam­ pus. Both have extensive experience with computer software and hardware. T. Ben has 10 years experience in the computer industry and has worked for such companies as IBM and Xerox. He has also taught various computer subjects for community and private colleges. He has served as an advocate for juvenile African American males under the Juvenile Justice system. During the summer of 1989 he was the computer instructor for the Earn & Learn Program at Portland Community College. This was a highly successful program aimed at training youth who were or had high potentials for drug or gang involvement. The student retention rate for this summer program was an astonishing 90%! T. Bei. said “ I would like to see the Governor’s office, Portland Public Schools, and CSD utilize my expertise in organizing a year-round computer training program taylored for the specific needs of high risk African American youth.” Forward Motion trains corporate per­ sonnel as well as small business people in the use o f computer software use for IBM and compatible systems, and offers com­ puter consulting and programming. Consulting includes software and hardware sales. Sam Qasam is experienced with com­ puter hardware and offers a wide range of services to customers. Some of those services are as follows: Computer time rental, software rental, resu­ mes, word processing, desktop publishing, laser printing, spreadsheet projects, and transferring files from MAC to IBM or IBM to MAC. Sam said, “ customers should try the software before they invest $500 in purchasing such software as Lotus 123 Version 3 or other software, only to dis­ cover it was not what they expected” . “ T ” and Sam want to help individuals, small business owners, and corporate personnel be the best they can be, and they are avail­ able to assist companies in their computer decisions. Niecey's Restaurant & Lounge 5700 N.E. Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd. 249-1893 > LIVE!!! E ntertainment Thursday - Sunday SAFEWAY MONTH S afew ay’s M icrowave C ookb ook The most wonderful time-saving appliance in the kitchen is the microwave. You’ll find you can prepare light, nutritious meals quickly. 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