'-* ■ . *r «r ■■HH ■•'••. ■’. -■•> Volumn XXII, Number 36 ‘The Eyes and Ears of the Community' <- 9 September 2, 1992 (Etje ^tlnrt l:tnh © beerter Teens Say Respect Key To Solving Inner-City Problems j T h i s summer, Portland, Oregon • was one o f three Sites across the nation for an exciting, new venture to continue Sum m erTraining and E du­ cation Program (STEP) services to third-year high school students. STEP services are offered on a collabora­ tive basis between The Private In­ dustry Council and local school dis­ tricts throughout M ultnom ah and W ashington counties. Funding is pro­ vided by the federal governm ent through the JobT raining Partnership Act. STEP offers low-income youth the opportunity to participate in sum ­ mertime classroom and work experi­ ence program s designed to give youngsters the skills they will need to meet the challenges of tom orrow ’s workplace. Traditionally, STEP has been offered to 14-and 15-years olds with clearly-defined classroom ac­ tivities during the morning and work experience in the afternoon. An ad­ vocate assigned toeach student works to effect a smooth transition between the two activities and to provide o n ­ going support during the school year. In this exciting new program made possible by an additional grant from the Northwest Film C enter’s V ideo/Film m aker-ln-Schools pro­ gram (a statewide artist residency outreach program funded by the O r­ egon Arts Commission, National En­ dowment for the Arts and M etropoli­ ta n A rts C o m m is s io n ), K risty Edmunds, artist-in-residence, worked hand-in-hand with STEP instructor Amy M itchell to integrate work ex­ perience and classroom activities in the context o f assisting students in the production of a 10-minute video. For seven weeks, seven students from several high schools located in Northeast Portland made the psycho­ logically long trek to Portland’s af­ fluent Southwest downtown area to utilize the filmmaking facilities at the Portland Art M useum ’s N orth­ west Film Center. To begin their summer-long as- signment, students (Trina Alexander, Charles Denis, Darryl English, Mario Jackmon, Nokita M erriweather, Karl NAMCO And Black Contractors Picket Emanuel And Legacy Top: Irving Robinson, Lyles roofing, Joints Picket of Baugh Construction at Emanuel Hospital Bottom: Families come out to lend support 25* Portland Assoc. Of Black Journalist present awards The Portland Association of Black Journalist (PAB J) has selected two out­ standing journalism students to receive the PABJ Scholarship for African- American Journalism Students for 1992. PABJ is an affiliate o f the National A sso c ia tio n o f B lack Jo u rn a lists (NAB J). Proceeds from theNABJ 1991 Regional Conference in Portland estab­ lished the first annual PABJ Scholar­ ship Fund. High school and college recipient award categories were designated by the chapter to provide funds for educa­ tion in the field of journalism or related careers. Q ualifications for the award were based on academic achievement, a writing sample and letters of recom­ mendation. The awards are for S500 each. This year’s high school student award went to Stacey Givens, 1992 graduate o f Parkrose Senior High School. Stacey intends to enroll at Port­ land State University in the Fall and would like to prepare for a career in magazine journalism or television news reporting. The outstanding college student award went to Glenn Harris, a student at Portland Community College. Glenn has been active on the student new spa­ per, The Bridge at PCC. Some o f his work has also appeared in The Skanner Newspaper. He would like to continue his work in the print media. “ W e’ve extended an invitation for these award winners to becom e student members o f PA BJ,” said Ken Boddie, chapter president, “ we hope to provide them with support and assistance on a practical level, too.” The students will receive a certificate of aw ard at the next PABJ chapter meeting in October. PCC Construction Trades Program Announces First Graduates Pavelic and Jeffrey Brown) were asked to decide on a them e for their video. By brainstorming a num ber of topics, the students decided to incorporate the ide­ als o f respect (for self, other youth, adults and com m unity), a need to return to values and the need for role models into their film. Thus, the birth of “Quick to Com e Up and Slow to R espect.” During the course o f the following seven weeks, students worked long hours (in many cases far and above the num ber of hours they were being paid ), as they began to take on real ow nership of the project. In the first tw o-and-a-half to three weeks, the youth worked in identify the message they wanted to convey in their film, who their audience was and what format the film should take (ic: drama vs. docum entary) to most effectively convey the message. Once the students decided upon the formal of a docum en­ tary, they then needed to identify who to interview and what scenes to film. Most poignantly, the students decided to film scenes from their own neighbor­ hoods in Northeast Portland even though in doing so the students were aware they were risking the danger of reinforcing the very stereotypes they were attem pt­ ing to dispel. Over the course of the next several weeks, the students hauled heavy and cumbersome video equipment in som e­ time 100+ degree temperatures to cap­ ture what they termed “moments of dis­ respect”: broken glass, graffiti, theft, prostitutes working the streets, young children left alone to watch babies on the porchstcps o f their homes. These arc the images these young people have grown up with. ..the reason these and other youth have been “quick to come up.” Out of the disparity, however, these young filmmakers wanted to convey a message of hope. To counter the bleak images o f the first half o f the film, the students interviewed a number of their peers as well as prominent members of the community to define for themselves what a positive role model is. In the process, these seven young people left a real and lasting impression on the many lives they touched. As Kristy Edmunds noted, these young people have empowered themselves, their mentors in STEP program and at the Northwest Film Center and they subjects they interviewed to lake re­ sponsibility for their community. As Ellen Thomas, Education Director of the N orthw est Film Center, com ­ mented at the prem iere of the film: “(these young people) will amaze you and give you great confidence in our future.” This project was funded and sup­ ported by The Private Industry Coun­ cil, Portland Public Schools, Public/ Private Ventures, the Northwest Re­ gional Education Laboratory, the Port­ land Leaders Roundtable and the Port­ land Art Museum Northwest Film Center. The Private Industry Council is a private, non-profit organization whose mission is to promote individual self- sufficiency and a skilled workforce by eliminating barriers to productive employment. “ No Jobs - No Peace,” is amongst the slogans o f Sing W elding Pickets who gathered at a construction jobsite in north Portland beginning last M on­ day. The pickets are dem anding con­ tracts and job for local area businesses and residents. The Emanuel Hospital and Health Center mob, now under construction, is located at the southwest section of the Emanuel Hospital campus. The three block area will house a six story pored concrete building and accom pa­ nying four story parking structure con­ sisting o f 425 parking stalls. Baugh Construction Company o f Beaverton, Oregon, is the general contractor on the multi-million dollar project. According to a flyer being circu­ lated by the informational protesters, “ Em anuel H ospital, a m em ber of Legacy Health Systerri, has lied about com m unity econom ic reinvestment. They continue to build and expand in northeast Portland and around the city. After years o f promising to provide jobs and contracts and to include resi­ dents, African-Americans in northeast Portland are again left out.” Baugh construction, the flyer al­ leged, “is contributing to this problem because they accepted the prime con­ tract and neglected to provide jobs and subcontracts to African-Americans liv­ ing in the heart of the construction activity. “Pickets claim that no blacks arc currently working on the project. James Posey a spokesman for The Coalition of Contractors and unem­ ployed construction workers headed by The National Association O f M i­ n o rity C o n tra c to rs O f O re g o n (NAMCO), said that the picketing ac- PCC students graduate from two nationally recognized trades programs. Many have overcome great personal obstacles and now have hopes of secur­ ing high-paying construction trades jobs and bettering their lives. From Monday Aug. 24 to Thurs­ day, Sept. 3, students are working on job sites throughout the Portland-metro area. Sites include Tualatin Valley Fire and Rescue Training Facility, City of Tigard, W ashington County Com m u­ nity Action and Scouter’s Mountain Boy Scout Camp in southeast Portland. B-Wcst (Building W orkers Enter­ ing Skilled Trades) Regional Workforce Training Center, a six-month intensive training program to help the unem ­ ployed and those working below their ability, will graduate its first class on Friday, Sept. 4 at the Rock Creek Cam ­ pus in the Pioneer Room, Building 3, 17705 NW Springville Road. The ceremony begins at 11 a.m. and the public is invited. In addition, the college’s non-traditional training program for women, B-FIT (Building Futures in Industry and Trades), will graduate its sixth class. Fifty-one students will participate in the ceremony. The program includes guest speaker Quint Rahberger, direc­ tor of Apprenticeship and Training for the Bureau of Labor and Industries; B- WEST student speakers David Ponce and Tammy McLeod; and B-FIT stu­ dent speakers C athy A ndrew an d Suzanne Scheans. B-W EST and B-FIT were both designed with these workforce changes in mind. The program s recruit and train people for jobs in construction, m e­ chanical, electrical and masonry trades. Inaddition,T he B-W EST program provides program -developm ent m ate­ rials and training to high schools and community colleges and other organi­ zations in the region. It also offers free consultation and workshops to em ploy­ ers in industry to help them prepare for the changing workforce. Karla Talley, 34, is currently en ­ rolled in the B-FIT program and will graduate on Sept. 4. The northeast Port­ land resident has long-term plans to become a journeym an plumber. An African-American, Talley was looking for a trade which would “ help me use my natural mechanical abilities and eliminate the boredom. I have a l­ ways been awed by those who could lake lumber, nails, wires and pipe and build something both useful and beau­ tiful. “I applied for the plum ber’s ap­ prenticeship program, I was interviewed and was accepted. T here’s no question, I will succeed,” said Talley. For more in fo rm a tio n , p le a se c o n ta c t D ick Burchell at 244-6111 ext. 7474. tivity is the culmination o f efforts to the Emanuel officials sensitive to the needs of the African-Americans com­ munity prior to extensive expansion activities. “ After several years o f trying to get them to realize that they need to give more than lip serv ice to the idea of community reinvestment, they intend to expand their operation while ex­ cluding local area workers and com ­ munity-based contractors from par­ ticipation.” Posey said. The project in question was made possible thru land acquisition by the hospital some twenty years ago. “Many of the families removed through this urban renewal process,” according to o n e b y s ta n d e r, “ w e ’re b la c k homeowners.” Some o f them were driven to being renters instead of home owners because the prices paid were well below market value and they were unable to afford comparable housing in other areas o f the city. Likewise, acquisition of surrounding properties also meant the demise o f black-owned businesses which once formed a cul­ tural business hub along W illiam s Avenue and Russell Street. Nathan Proby, former NAMCO President, said he had contacted hos­ pital officials as early as October of 1991, and expressed an interest in in­ suring that north and northeast com ­ munity based contracting firms receive contracts during construction phases of the expansion program. “NAMCO received bid documents, had minority business participation language w rit­ ten into an addendum , and encouraged its members to submit bids.” Some NAMCO members bid the project but were not able to negotiate contracts with Baugh who said there were no low bids received from m inorities. Both Posey and Proby have d is­ cussed the deficiencies with Em anuel and Baugh Personnel over the past few months. In an A ugust 12, 1992 letter addressed to Larry Hill D irector o f Corporation Real Estate, Posey ad­ dressed the broader issue of the devel­ oping of a strong contract procurem ent inclusion policy for com m unity disad­ vantage business and suggested that Hill set up a meeting betw een Legacy and NAMCO representatives. No re­ sponse was ever received, thus the picket. “ W hat we expect out o f this is to bring them to the bargaining table to hammer out a long term binding policy of inclusion for jobs and real co n ­ tracts,” Posey said. He pointed out that Emanuel Hospital is just the tip o f the iceberg. Many large corporations o p ­ erate in our community and tradition­ ally, reinvestment to them is to provide token efforts, providing free space to non-profit organizations, and the an­ nual donation to a local civil rights agency along with circus tickets are examples of such gestures. “We mean business and are seeking the support of all concerned citizens and organiza­ tions," Posey said. Those interested arc urged to com e to the picket line and grab a sign. “ If people are serious about economic developm ent in the black community they will come and a help us in this effort” he said. Meaningful rein vcslincnlcom es with jobs andcon- tracts and this docs not appear to be the case with Emanuel Hospital, which as a large African-American clientele.