■... * ’» v v es* Voluxnn XXÏI. N u m b er 3 5 ‘The E yes and Ears o f th e C om m unity' lu t is i 2 6 , 1 9 9 2 250 Portland Delegation Attends National Urban League Conference Roy Jay Wins Round One Judge Denies POVA Motion For Injunction M ultnom ah C ounty C irc u it C o u rt. JudgeG arry Kahn denied the request by Portland/O regon V isito rs Association fo r a p re lim in a ry in ju n ctio n against, th e ir ow n recent annual P resident’ s A w a rd recipient, local A fric a n A m e ri­ can business entrepreneur, Roy Jay. P O V A , a n o n -p ro fit organization, p rim a rily funded w (th tax revenues, asked the co u rt to te m p o ra rily stop one o f Jay’ s business operations fro m being listed in telephone directories o r other advertising m edium s, less than 4 weeks after they awarded him fo r “ p ro vid in g valuable n e tw o rkin g opportunities and services fo r sm all business ow ners in ­ volved in the v is ito r industry and fo r serving as a p o sitive exam ple fo r young entrepreneurs” . In F rid a y ’ s fiv e hour hearing, the w e ll know n A fric a n A m erican business Urban League of Portland, President Dr. Darryl Tukufu visits with fellow Portlanders Dr. Brenda Green (right) and Urban League Guild President Faye Burch (left) at a reception hosted by NIKE during the National Urban League conference in San Diego. A delegation fro m the U rban League o f P ortland attended the 1992 N ational U rban League C onference in San D iego July 26-29. The fo u r- The theme o f the conference was “ M a k in g a D iffe re n c e in the '9 0 's : B rin g in g the F u tu re In to F o c u s ," 1 ligh- lights included a keynote address by sponds to the U rb a n C ris is ,” D r. T u k u fu also delivered a ke y­ note address a t a fo ru m on “ Y o u th : O u r C o n tin u in g L e g a cy," w h ile O r­ tions. M o re than 18,000 people a t­ tended. T h e Portland delegation was led by L e a g u e P re sid e nt D r. D a rry l T u k u fu , and included members o f the League’ s board, sta ff,a n d fo u r youth John E. Jacob, president and C E O o f the N ational Urban League, and a speech by D em ocratic presidential candidate B ill C lin to n . egonian e d ito r W illia m H illia rd m o d ­ erated a session on “ E le ctio n '9 2 : fo r tie s , P o litic s a n il P a r it y " O ther conference attractions in ­ The Urban L c a g u e o f P ortland was one o f nine a ffilia te s (o u t o f a possi ble 112) recognized fo r its response to the unrest fo llo w in g the Rodney K in g ve r­ cluded m ore than 400 e x h ib it booths o f Fortune 100 com panies and m a jo r from the League’ s N U L IT E S p ro ­ d ic t The re co g n itio n ca m e in a special gram. program on “ The U rb a n League Re­ day conference is considered the na tio n ’ s p re m ie r fo ru m on race re la ­ governm ent and social service agen­ cies, a Job O p p o rtu n ity Showcase, and the A fric a n A m erican V endors Showcase. Block Party Celebrates Heros Of Drug Free Street P olice o ffic e rs , hom eowners, p ro p ­ erty managers, residents, and local o f f i ­ cials are gathering together to celebrate their success in keeping a troubled block o f N .E. Sacramento Street drug free. A n awards cerem ony and b lo c k party c o o r­ dinated by neighbors celebrated th e ir accom plishm ents F rid a y, A ug u st 21 at 11:15 a.m. at the co m e r o f N .E . Sacra­ bers o f the c o m m u n ity w h o have as­ sisted them in m aking th e ir b lo c k a safer place to live . “ W ith o u t the support o f these in d i­ vid u a ls, we co u ld never have achieved a drug-free block. It lo o k a tremendous am ount o f team w ork to gel results, and the p o lice and lo ca l o ffic ia ls were very instrum ental in the process,” said G ary m ento Street and N .E . M a rtin L u th e r K in g , Jr. B lvd . G erald M cFadden, President/C EO o f V olunteers " j f A m e rica Oregon and John Rogers o f the M ayors O ffic e pre­ sented aw ards to p o lice o ffic e rs and local o ffic ia ls . The neighbors liv in g in the area gave the aw ards to honor m em - In d ia o f G uardian M anagement. N e ig h ­ bors fro m N.E. Sacramento Street en­ listed help from local o ffic ia ls to keep th e ir neighborhood drug-free, and have w e lco m e d V o lu n te e rs o f A m e ric a ’ s M e n ’ s R esidential C enter, an alcohol and drug treatment program to the neigh­ borhood. F o llo w in g the awards cerem ony a message from M a y o ra l Candidate Vera K atz, a perform ance by the Street C o r­ n e r S in g e rs and a c o m p lim e n ta ry barbeque lunch. V olunteers o f A m e rica is a n a tio n ­ w id e social service organization w ith branches in over 200 c o m m u n itie s. V olunteers o f A m e rica O regon, Inc. serves the c o m m u n ity through c h ild care, fa m ily preservation program s, a shelter fo r homeless women w ith c h il­ dren, a senior center, senior health clin ic, a d u lt day care program , residential a l­ co h o l and drug treatm ent fa c ilitie s , a shelter fo r homeless adolescent g irls, and a C hristm as Assistance Program . ow ner was flanked by his corporate attorneys, C u rtis K in sle y o f Lake Os­ wego and P atrick B u tle r o f Portland. A fte r hearing P O V A ’ s arguments fo r a p re lim in a ry in ju n c tio n , Judge Kahn made his ru lin g w ith o u t Jay o ra n y o f his m any business and in d iv id u a l witnesses having to give one w ord o f testim ony “ T h is is o n ly round one. N o w we are getting ready fo r the tria l w hich may probably contain an extensive counter­ cla im against the P O V A organization and selected board members, in d iv id u ­ a lly ” said Jay. Jay’ s Oregon Business N etw ork w o rkin g in association w ith Oregon C onvention and V is ito r Services N et­ w o rk has garnered m il 1 ions o f dol lars i n potential co nvention, v is ito r and to u r­ ism leads over the past several years...all w ith o u t taxpayer funding and continues to expand each month. P O V A contcnded in theircom plaint that Jay’ s operation blew a potential convention o f the A m erican H ospital A ssociation in 1994 w hich could have m ent stro n g ly supporting the action and expressing the hope that this lim e ju s ­ tice w ill be served. The statement came fro m D r. B en­ ja m in L . H ooks, the N A A C P ’ s E xecu­ tive D ire cto r/C E O , fo llo w in g the an- nounccm enton Wednesday, August 5th, w ith v io la tin g his Fourth A m endm ent protection against unreasonable arrest. amateur cameraman and w id e ly shown on television. It accuses th e ir sergeant o f d e p riv ­ ing M r. K in g o f his 14th am endm ent due process rig h ts by fa ilin g to restrain the o ffic e rs . Each o f the o ffic e rs faces a m axim um penalty o f ten years in prison and a $250,000 fin e i f c o n ­ victed. A fte r the state verdicts, 14 to 17 F B I agents were assigned fu ll tim e to that a federal grand ju ry in Los Angeles had in dicted the o ffic e rs on federal In his statement, D r. H ooks said: “ Justice was not served in S im i VaHcy last A p ril. O u r hope fo r justice now lies in the federal co u rt where the charges o f vio la tin g M r. K in g ’ s c iv il o ffic e rs in v o lv e d have been indicted rights. under c iv il rights statues. “ In the past, we have experience numerous occasions where, when lo ­ cal systems o f ju s tic e faltered, there was recourse to the federal courts. “ W e arc h opeful that in this fla ­ grant incident o f p olice abuse, that those whose fa ith in the ju d ic ia l system was shaken by the incom prehensible verdicts rendered e a rlie r, w ill fin d rea­ son to once again believe in that sys­ tem .” A t a state tria l in S im i V a lle y , Ca., the o ffic e rs were found not g u ilty on A p ril 29th by a p re d o m in a n tly w h ite ju ry o f a ll charges except one against a single o ffic e r, Law rence P ow ell. Here, the ju ry was deadlocked and P ow ell faces re tria l on O ct. 19th fo r excessive use o f force. The acquittals touched o f f violence in Los A ngeles that le ft m ore than 45 people dead and damage estim ated at $8(X) m illio n . S p e cifica lly, the federal indictm ent charges the three o ffice rs w ho beat M r. K in g du rin g an arrest in M arch, 1991, The U.S. Justice D epartm ent be­ gan a Federal c iv il rights in ve stig atio n after the beating o f M r. K in g on M arch 3, 1991, that was videotaped by an w o rk on the case. The firs t count o f the in d ictm e n t names O ffic e rs P o w e ll, Theodore J. B riseno and T im o th y W in d - w ho are seen s trik in g M r. K in g on the vid e o ­ tape. I l charges that “ w h ile acting under the c o lo r o f the law s” o f C a lifo rn ia they “ d id w illf u lly strike w ith batons, k ic k and stomp Rodney G lenn K in g ” thereby v io la tin g a 1909 federal law m aking it a crim e to deprive any person o f a C o n stitu tio n a l rig h t “ under c o lo r o f la w .” Sgt. Stacey E. K oon was charged in die second count w ith w illfu lly fa il­ ing “ to prevent this u n la w fu l assault,” thereby d e p riv in g M r. K in g o f “ the rig h t to be kept free fro m harm w h ile in o ffic ia l custody.” Since 1988, die Justice D epart­ m ent has file d at least 123 federal c iv il W hat a ctu a lly happened is that the M a rrio tt H otel fa ile d to respond to Jay’s n o tific a tio n in m id June o f the potential business because they were busy han­ d lin g the guests during P ortland T ra il­ blazer P layoffs, N B A D ra ft and T o u r­ nament O f The A m e rica ’ s event and d id n ’ t consider his contact as being a p rio rity at the tim e. A black woman, Precious James o f the A m erican H o sp i­ tal A ssociation was scheduled to testify at the F riday hearing via telephone how ever at the last m inute she was unable to do so. D uring the tria l Jay’ s attorneys presented surprising docu­ ments revealing that P O V A has lost various conventions over the past tw o years am ounting to over $10 m illio n business fo r the city. The bigger picture is the actual business names being used. People both inside and outside o f P O V A c la im that R oy was ju s t a smarter business person than the $3.8 m illio n per year organiza­ tio n and u tilize d an 800 num ber to make it easier fo r prospective cu sto m ­ ers to ca ll fro m a ll over the country. P O V A cried fo u l after fin d in g o u tla y ’ s operation was co n tin u a lly g ro w in g in success and recognition. State o f O r­ egon corporation d ivisio n records re ­ vealed that in 1988 the association changed their name from Greater P o rt­ land C onvention and V isito rs A ssocia­ tion to Portland Oregon V isito rs A sso ­ cia tio n , thereby purposely o m ittin g the w o rk “ convention” , leading people to believe that they are no longer a con­ vention organization, o nly a visito rs group. Jay said “ it was ju s t another bad business m ove by A hlers and his group o f people” , consequently prospective con venlion and meeting planners., from outside o f O regon, that ca ll d ire cto ry assistance are o n ly referred to one o f Albina Head Start N ational E a rly C h ild h o o d experts spoke at a conference M onday, A ugust 24, to teachers and adm inistrators from P ortla n d P u b lic S chools, N o rth w e st R egional E ducational L a boratory and local Head Start program s. These ex­ perts w ill share practices that have proven successful in transitioning Head Start ch ild re n and fam ilies into public schools. The presenters were: Barbara Bowm an D ire c to r o f Graduate Studies at the E rickso n Institu te , L o yo la U n ive rsity, C hicago, Illin o is ; M a u rice Sykes D irec- to r o f E arly C h ild h o o d Programs fo r the D is tric t o f C o lu m b ia P ublic Schools; L in d a L ik in s d ire cto r o f governm ent A ffa irs fo r the N ational Head Start A s ­ sociation and A n ita M cC lanahan Early C h ild h o o d E ducation C oordinator fo r NAACP Applauds Filing Of Federal Charges In Rodney King Case W ith the in d ictm e n t on federal charges o f the fo u r Lo s A ngeles p o lice o ffic e rs in vo lve d in the Rodney K in g beating, the N A A C P has issued a state­ resulted in $150,000 o f business.. “ N o t true” , says Jay. the Oregon D epartm ent o f E ducation. A lb in a Head Start hosted the “ T ra n ­ sition T o E xce lle n ce ” conference M o n ­ day, August 24, at the Red L io n Jantzen Beach. The tw o year federally funded Tran­ sitio n Project is designed to dem on­ strate and evaluate an in n o vative m odel fo r p ro vid in g a com prehensive in te ­ grated program o f education and sup­ p o rt services to children and fa m ilie s beginning in Head Start and co n tin u in g through grade 3 in the p u b lic schools. The pro je ct is designed to prom ote c h ild re n ’ s physical, social, em otional and co g n itive developm ent by p ro v id ­ ing appropriate and consistent support to them in th e ir fa m ily , school and social environm ents. Jay’ s operations e n title d “ P ortland O r­ egon C onvention and V is ito r Services Bureau” since they are the o n ly one 1 isted in Portland ’ s w h i te pages as con - vention services. “ T h e way that I lo o k at it, his listin g s, alone, has saved us a lo t o f business that we n o rm a lly m ay not have received” said one hotel o p ­ erator. Jay’ s accom plishm ents in the industry are supported by w ritte n and verbal testim onials fro m local hotels, tour operators, m eeting planners and actual conventions. M a jo r hotels such as The H ilto n , S h ilo Inns, Benson and others aggressively supported his nom i­ nation fo r the annual award. Jay says that his O regon Business N e tw o rk and a ffilia te s have distributed hundreds o f leads and referrals to b usi­ nesses, both large and sm a ll, through­ out the state over the past several years. Some o f the recipients are o r were members o f P O V A w ho had never re ­ ceived such opportunities and n o tific a ­ tions from P O V A before. Some fo rm e r P O V A business members alleges that P O V A ’ s a dm inistration competes w ith th e ir o w n members in m any service categories w h ile accepting thousands o f d o lla rs in m em bership and other fees, w h ich is a d ire ct c o n flic t o f in te r­ est. O ther sm aller businesses cla im that P O V A doesn’ t g ive their members any real o p p ortunities and o n ly lets them kn o w about w hat is considered “ le ft overs” . Jay cla im s that he was targeted by A h le rs and other board members be­ cause he refused to take a back seat on m a jo r issues regarding the associations b yla w s, election procedures, a ffirm a ­ tiv e action, m em bership business o p ­ portun ¡ties and other elemen ts o ver the past several years. A s the o rig in a l ch a ir­ man o f P O V A ’ s m em bership c o m m it­ tee Jay helped brin g the organization to continued on page 8 1992/93 School Year Enrollment for Pre K (4 year olds) is now occurring at: Beach 280-6236 Boise E liot 280-6171 Humboldt 281-8797 King 280-6456 Vernon 280-6415 Woodlawn 280-6282 Please contact your neighbor­ hood School. N ow is also the time to enroll Kindergarten through fifth grade students. U.S. Bank Unveils Low-Cost Finance Program For Oregon School Districts H u rt by budget cuts and fe w e r tra­ d itio n a l fin a n cia l sources fo r sm all but v ita l projects, Oregon school d istricts now can obtain tailor-m ade, lo w rate fin a n cin g through “ F lcxF u n d ,” an in ­ nova tive cooperative finance program developed by U.S. Bank. Endorsed by the Oregon School Boards Association, FlcxF und enables schools to bundle their fin a n cing needs in to one large po o l, thereby reducing costs, in clu d in g interest rates, to all p a rticip a tin g borrowers. U.S. B a n k’ s program grew o u t o f the need to create affo rd a b le fin a n cing fo r the maintenance o f school property and the purchase o f real and personal property. “ I t ’ s becom ing very d iffic u lt fo r schools w ith needs less than SI m illio n to secure cost-e ffe ctive fin a n c ­ in g ,” says Jim M a ro lich , vice president and manager o f p u b lic finance fo r U.S. Bank. “ F lcxF und provides o p p o rtu n i­ ties fo r things lik e new ro o f, a school bus, copy machines o r com puter e q u ip ­ m ent.” rights charges, the m a jo rity against police o ffic e s fo r b ru ta lity . The c o n v ic ­ U.S. Bank com bines the districts* fin a n cin g needs in to one o ffe rin g , and issues each d is tric t an in d ivid u a lize d tio n rale has been about 75 percent, authorities say. repaym ent plan. Based on the volum e o f a c tiv ity , U.S. B ank also negotiates there is no minimum or m axim um f i­ m ore com petitive legal and trustee fees, and passes the savings on to the school d istricts. The cooperative fin a n c in g nance amount. Flex Fund requests aver­ age less than $1 m illion. FlexFund is financed through the sale o f Certificates o f Participation (C O P). COPs are sim ilar to municipal program s im p lifie s com plicated fin a n ­ cia l transactions that often preclude m any districts from the process. “ FlcxF und is an attractive fin a n c ­ ing alternative fo r d istricts w h ich aren’ t lo o kin g fo r m u lti-m illio n -d o lla r im ­ provem ents,” says M a ro lic h . “ Instead o f each d is tric t paying fees separately, F lcxF u n d a llo w s schools to com bine th e ir requests and share financing costs. Standardized documents and paym ent dates also help keep costs d o w n .” Savings arc shared by taxpayers as w e ll. F or exam ple, a school d is tric t b o rro w in g $500,000 at 10 percent in ­ terest fo r 10 years through a fin a n cial in stitu tio n pays a total o f $81,372.700 per year. The same school d is tric t using F lcxF u n d pays 7 percent (com parably), w ith no a d d ition a l costs, fo r an annual total o f $71,188.75, saving taxpayers $ 101,839.50 over the life o f the fin a n c ­ notes or bonds, and are sold in $ 5 ,0 0 0 denominations to investors looking for tax-free income. In the last year, U .S. Bank also has entered into multiple-yearcontracts with the State o f Washington, C ity o f Se­ attle, Washington School D irectors A ssociation, Special Districts Associa­ tion o f Oregon and C alifornia School Boards Association Finance C orpora­ tion. “Wc are experiencing tremendous success with this program,” says Debra Brusic, program coordinator fo r U .S . Bank. “W e look forward to supporting additional educational needs through­ out the state." U.S. Bank o f Oregon is a subsid­ U.S. B a n k’ s F lcxF u n d program iary o f U.S. Bancorp, the largest f i n n - cial services company headquartered in the Northwest, with assets o f $ 1 9 3 billion as o f June 3 0 ,1 9 9 2 . O ther U .S may also be used to refinance e xistin g o b lig a tio n s at lo w e r rates. A lth o u g h Bancorp subsidiaries include U .S. Bank ofWashington U.S. Bank o f C alifornia. ing.