Evacuee Re-grows Roots 50tf Four years after the disaster, Celeste Calvin earns her degree and starts a new job i C 1 tV Of ‘City of RoSeS Roses * Jefferson High Turns 100 Students, staff, alumni and friends o f Jefferson High School are celebrating 100 years o f history story, see See story, page page Ax A2 See story, page A2 ■«MJ iSurtlanh ©bseruer Established in 1970 Established in 1970 \ m \ mwi rtla d n n h d « o ;p b rv r r n r.co m m w w n w n .p o n rtla se p rve Committed to Cultural Diversity Volume XXXVIV, N um ber 21 Wednesday • May 27, 2009 Obama Picks First Hispanic Supreme Court nominee rises from the projects U.S. Appeals Court Judge Sonia Sotomayor speaks after President Barack Obama Tuesday announced her as his choice o f nomination for the Supreme Court justice, to replace retiring Justice David Souter. (AP) - President Barack O bam a chose federal appeals judge Sonia Sotom ayor to becom e the nation's first H is­ panic Suprem e Court justice on Tuesday, praising her as "an inspiring woman" w ith both the intellect and com pas­ sion to interpret the Constitution wisely. O bam a said Sotom ayor has more experience as a judge than any current m em ber o f the high court had when nom i­ nated, adding she has earned the "respect o f colleagues on the bench, the adm iration o f m any law yers who argue cases in her court and the adoration o f her clerks, w ho look to her as a mentor." S ta n d in g n e x t to O b am a at th e W h ite H o u se, Sotom ayor recalled a childhood spent in a housing project in the Bronx as well as her upper-echelon legal career: "1 strive never to forget the real world conse­ quences o f my decisions on individuals, businesses and governm ent." Barring the unexpected, Senate confirm ation seems likely, given the large Democratic majority. If approved, she w ould join Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg as the sec­ ond w om an on the current court, the third in history. She w ould succeed retiring Justice D avid Souter. S enate M ajority L eader H arry Reid, D-Nev., issued continued on page A1 Input on PCC Plans Missing College’s intentions uncertain by J ake T homas T he P ortland O bserver T he lead ersh ip o f P o rtlan d C o m ­ m unity C olleg e has sold P ortland on the value o f the institution. L ast N o v em b e r it co n v in c e d v o ters to green light a $374 m illion bond m ea­ sure to expand fac ilities needed to ac c o m m o d a te its b a llo o n in g stu ­ dent population. B ut n o t e v e ry o n e is c h e e rin g . Som e resid en ts o f the surrounding H u m b o ld t n eig h b o rh o o d are an x ­ ious that as P C C 's C ascad e C am ­ pus exp an d s it w ill ho llo w out the b u s in e s s c lu s te r a d ja c e n t to the c a m p u s on K illin g sw o rth S tre et, a n d w ill g iv e th e b o o t to hom eow ners and renters. N eig h b o rs are w o rrie d that the v o te r-a p p ro v e d b o n d m oney w ill g ive P C C a freehand to shape the n e ig h b o rh o o d as it w is h e s , an d h a s n 't d o n e e n o u g h p u b lic o u t­ reach. T here are also u nansw ered q u e s tio n s ab o u t the c o lle g e 's in ­ te n tio n s. F or years resid en ts have w atched as PC C has q u ie tly an n ex ed n earby properties, som e o f them w ere ch er­ ish e d co m m u n ity in stitu tio n s, in ­ c lu d in g tw o A fr ic a n A m e r ic a n c h u r c h e s , p e o p le s ' h o m e s , an d b u s in e s s e s . Jord an a S ardo, b ranch o rg an izer fo r the F reedom S ocialist Party, was in v o lv e d w ith th e o p p o s itio n to PCC's expansion in 2002. She recalls people w ho had ju s t fin ish ed p a y ­ ing o ff their m ortgages only to have them seized by the college. Two y ears ago, PC C acq u ired the P a r a g o n C lu b n e x t d o o r to th e S ardo's B read and R oses co m m u ­ n ity ce n te r on K illin g sw o rth S treet and left it em pty. S ardo d escrib es th e v a c a n t b u ild in g as an "e y e so re," w h ere p e o p le d u m p trash . S he says she co m p lain ed to PCC w ho haven 't responded. In th e m e a n tim e sh e w o rr ie s th a t th e p a rty h e a d q u a rte rs co u ld continued on page A8 photo by M ark W ashington /T he P ortland O bserver Portland Community College must decide how it will expand offerings on its Cascade Campus in north Portland while a neighborhood is anxious about losing more homes and businesses to college development. Mortgage Help gets Bogged Down in Bureaucracy Slow going on new consumer protections by J ake T homas T he P ortland O bserver Dodie Howard's greatest fear is that she w ill lo se h e r h o m e a fte r her husband's trucking business took a fatal hit from the recession. Since last fall Howard, w ho w orks as a buyer for Safew ay, has been ca llin g her lender, Citimortgage, in hopes that she can sit down with a representative and hopefully cut a deal. However, Howard, 65, now worries that her simple appeal will drow n in her lender's dizzying labyrinth o f red tape. W henever she calls she is trans­ ferred num erous tim es, put on hold, and is dism issed anytim e she pro ­ poses a resolution. M eanw hile she has fallen $ 17,000 behind on mortgage paym ents, and.has no idea if her bank TLWeek in The Review Screams Lead to Children A 7-year-old girl was rescued from the Willamette River after 1 a.m. Saturday after her screams were heard by a couple who took their boat out to investigate. Police believe the girl and her4-year-old brother were victims of an attempted photo by J ake T homas /T he P ortland O bserver Dodie Howard fights to keep her Portland home out of foreclosure. murder. See story, page A2 a cord hanging under the console. Tyson Daughter Dies Charity Builds Family Center T he 4-year-old daughter o f form er h e a v y w e ig h t ch a m p io n M ike Tyson died T uesday, a day after w hat police called a "tragic accident" at her Phoenix home. E xo­ dus Tyson was playing on a treadm ill when her head apparently slipped inside Catholic Charities has started co n ­ struction on a long-an­ ticipated family center, a 60,(MM) square foot, 4 story com plex in south­ east Portland to house nearly all o f its programs and services. See story, page A ll. intends to foreclose. "We can m ake payments. We're not destitute. We've ju st lost an income," said Howard. A bill aim ed at addressing the sort o f situation the Howard's are facing has been bogged down in Salem after m o rtg a g e an d b a n k in g in te r e s ts groaned that the bill would unfairly burden them and lacked specifics. S en ate B ill 6 28, sp o n so re d by S u zanne B onam ici, D -B eav erto n , would require lenders to sit down with the borrow er and a third-party m edia­ tor before a house is foreclosed on. But the bill faces powerful and well- financed mortgage and banking lob­ bies, like the Oregon Financial Ser­ vices A ssociation, w hich has doled out $32,000 over the last three years to both Dem ocratic and Republican members of the legislature and spends even more on lobbying activities each session. Last month there were 342,038 fore­ c lo su re s in O reg o n , ac co rd in g to RealtyTrac.com . And it’s expected to get w orse as O re g o n ’s u n em ploy­ ment rate has soared to the second worse in the nation. “This bill does need some work," said Bonamici at the beginning o f the bill’s first public hearing before the S en ate's C o n su m er Protection and Public Affairs Com m ittee, which she chairs. D uring public hearings financial and m ortgage interests com plained that there were unanswered questions as to how the bill would be im ple­ mented. For instance, it was unclear how titles would be insured and how it would gibe with federal programs aimed at stopping foreclosures. People representing banking and financial interests also claim ed that the bill w ould weigh down lenders with unnecessary requirem ents and co sts. “Creating more burdens and more Same-sex Ban Upheld first round Friday. The Beavers missed the postseason last year after winning back-to-back College W orld Series. The California Supreme C ourt T ues­ day upheld a voter-approved ban on same-sex marriage, but it also decided that the estim ated 18,(MX) gay couples who tied the knot before the law took effect will stay wed. continued OSU Back at NCAAs The Oregon State baseball team has earned a bid to the NCAA T ourna­ ment and will play Texas A&M in the I ♦ on page A8