Page A3 Œ‘!l IJortlanò ffibsm ier August I, 2007 City Supports Housing Help To offset gentrification trends (A P i— The City Council has presented a plan to slow the de­ cline in school enrollment by help­ ing pt>orer families continue to live in gentrifying neighbor­ hoods. The $1.6 million package in­ cludes rental assistance, gap mortgages and grants to parent and neighborhood groups. Portland has lost 11,000 stu­ dents in the last decade as poorer families have moved to cheaper areas. The wealthy people mov­ ing closer to downtown often send their children to private schools. The trend has cost the school district tens of millions of dollars a year in state money, so keeping families in neighborhoods iscriti- cal for the health of the district, said Tripp Somerville, policy di­ rector for the Portland Schools Foundation. Commissioner Erik Sten has presented three contracts as the photo by M ark W ashington /T he P ortland ( ) bser \ er Rosa Parks Way would intersect with Cesar E. Chavez Boulevard if an ad hoc group is successful in getting Interstate Avenue re­ named in honor o f the civil rights leader who successfully raised national awareness of immigrant worker injustices. The MAX transit station (above) doesn 'tyet reflect this year’s change of Portland Boulevard to Rosa Parks Way. The Portland Chapter of the L.I.N.K.S. Interstate Name Change Proposed Strivingtoeliminate social and cultural inequities using nonvio­ lent civic-involvement principles, Chavez successfully raised na­ tional awareness o f the injus­ tices that workers endured on N o rth and n o rth e a s t the West Coast. He led an upstart labor union Portland’s tradition o f recogniz­ ing civil-rights leaders through in strikes and boycotts leading streets like M artin Luther King to the passage of the 1975 C ali­ Jr. Boulevard and Rosa Parks fornia Agricultural Labor Rela­ W ay, may soon have a C esar E. tions Act, which spawned na­ tional protections for farm ­ C havez Boulevard. Local activists have com e to­ worker rights. In Oregon, the first college in gether with the intent o f renam ­ ing In terstate A venue after the nation for recent immigrants Chavez, who organized migrant was nam ed for him, and many farm workers in Oregon during of his followers becam e leaders in city governm ents around the the 1960s and 70s. Street may honor another minority activist first specific steps in what he calls the Schools, Families. Housing Ini­ tiative. Commissioners voiced ap­ proval for the project, and the coun­ cil is expected to take action this week. "This is the money the city would spend anyway on housing, but we've linked it to school policy," Sten said. Most of the money, $950,000. will go to the Portland Schools Foundation for grants aimed at p ro m o tin g n e ig h b o rh o o d schools, so newcomers will de­ cide to send their children to them. The grants could be for anything from repairing broken windows to designing an after-school pro­ gram. The two other components are pilot p rojects. O ne p ro v id e s $450,000 in rental assistance for families w ith school-age children in schools with high student turn­ over. The other provides $200.000 for a cash reserve. W illam ette Valley. José and Kathy R om ero, the P ortland couple leading the nam e-change effort, hope that a C esar E. C havez B oulevard w ould encourage the larger com m unity to learn about the social, cultural, econom ic and enviro n m en tal co n trib u tio n s that L atin o s have m ade in O regon. So far, the Kenton Neighbor­ hood Association has voted to support the change by writing a letterto M ayorTom Potter, who recently stood up for immigrant workers after a federal raid in north Portland. With Latinos now exceeding & tLhl |J o rtla n h © bserucr 12 percent o f the O re g o n 's population, many are viewing the current lack o f public trib­ utes to American Latino lead­ ers in the Portland area as an ongoing injustice. M embers o f the R om eros’ ad-hoc organization have met with transportation officials, re­ ligious groups, businesses and agencies in an effort to ensure an i nclusive and comprehensive process. S aying that the social ben­ efits w ould far outw eigh the costs, they hope to persuade a large coalition to push for a positive C ity C ouncil vote on Oct 17. Newspaper ‘Community School Supply Drive’ Seeking the communities support in the ongoing effort to provide local children with much needed school supplies fo r the upcoming school year. Donation Drop Site: The Portland Observer Newspaper 4747MLKBlvd. M onday-Friday 9 am - 5 pm 5th Avenue Street Fair Old Tow n/Chinatow n August 2 • 5 -1 0 p.m. Nero Come join friends, family and neighbors on First Thursday for a BIG THING DOWNTOWN fun-filled neighborhood street fair to celebrate the completion of light rail construction on 5th Avenue in Old Town/Chinatown. Great food • Beer garden Kids’ activities • Entertainment Next S^Thing International Star sets Concert Date Loveness W esa o f Portland, an international star and one of A frica’s finest female artists, will perform Ii ve inconcert with her new home band called “The W hite B antuz” on Saturday, Aug. 6 at p.m. at W ashington Park in southwest Portland. W esa has established herself as one o f the most prominent I African female artists on the world stage. She is a musician, dancer, and choreographer she was the first woman artist in her native country Zim babw e to write, choreograph and produce dance theatre shows performed by mostly women. W esa has traveled the world as a cultural am bassador for Zim babw ean wom en artists, bringing to her audiences not only traditional African dancing and singing but she also does drum m ing which used to be a taboo for women in her culture to be found behind the drum. She is also spreading a m es­ sage o f peace, freedom and un­ derstanding through her works. ■ Music by MusicfestNW artists S tops at the Street Fair, First Thursday & Pioneer C ourthouse Square Learn more at portlandmall.org S 620