White House Fans Gumbo of Adventure President Obama and his family cheer on Oregon State and his brother-in-law coach The great city o f New Orleans is the backdrop fo r Disney s newest princess See Sports, page A6 Roses C 4 L-% I I t— Z * Z 4 ■ ( t “7 ( A Established in I 1970 .W eek ¡n The Review Obama Sends More Troops to Afghanistan President Barack Obama is dis­ patching 30,000 more troops to A fghanistan, accelerating a risk y and e x p e n siv e w ar buildup, even as he assures the nation that U.S. forces will be­ gin coming home in July 2011. War of the Roses The 113th Civil War rivalry game between lOth-ranked Or­ egon and 16th-ranked Oregon State this Thursday night is creating a lot ofpregame hoopla. The contest will decide the Pac- 10’s representative in the Rose Bowl. See Sports, page A6. Jeff Advances at State Jefferson High School has ad­ vanced to the semifinals o f the Oregon 5 A football champion­ ship series for the second year in a row. The Democrats face Sherwood on Saturday, Dec. 5 at 3 p.m. at PGE Park. See Sports, page A6. Cop Murders Suspect Killed A m an su s­ pected o f gun­ ning down four police officers in a suburban Tacoma coffee shop was shot and killed by a lone Seattle patrolman investi­ gating a stolen car early Tues­ day. Four people were arrested for allegedly helping the sus­ pect elude authorities during a massive two-day manhunt. See story, page A3 Officer Returned to Duty C ity C o m m issio n e r Dan Saltzman has changed his deci­ sion to suspend a controver­ sial police officer who shot a 12-year-old girl last month with a beanbag gun. Saltzman had in itia lly p u t C h risto p h e r Humphreys on paid leave pend­ ing an investigation. See story, page A3. TriMet Fires Operator TriMet fired a MAX operator last week for creating a potential danger to the public when he did not respond to four calls on the train’semergency intercom from Aaron Bailey, the father who had been separated from his son last month when the train’s doors closed behind him. Serena Williams Fined was B fined a record day for a ti­ rade against a line judge at last summer’s U.S. Open. She could be sus­ pended from that tournament if she has another "major Lincoln Coach Guilty Lincoln High School coach David Adelman was found guilty o f drunken and reckless driving Monday. A judge re­ jected a claim that the arrest was unlawful and motivated by a parent who sought retribu­ tion over Adelman ’ a coaching. years « •S com m unity service . . z _ z . —* z-z M 1 l zz — zj -- La — aa — * aa — z— z— . www.portlandobserver.com Committed to Cultural Diversity Volume XXXVIV. Number 47 iam s See Arts & Entertainment, page A9 Wednesday • December 2, 2009 Water Bureau Looks for Cause After E.coli found in reservoir The Portland W ater Bureau con­ tinued to drain its W ashington Park Reservoir No. 3 Tuesday, a process that w ill take until at least until W ednesday, a fte r E -coli bacteria was found in the system over the Thanksgiving holiday weekend. A boil water notice was lifted on Sun­ day to Westside residents and the city declared Monday that all taps to the entire city system were safe to drink. The contam inated reservoir was taken off-line. It will be tested, investi­ gated for contamination and cleaned before it is put back on line. O fficials said they hope to test the E-coli sample to help determine if the bacteria generated from animal or human waste. T he co n tam in ated w ater put The Portland Water Bureau's Reservoir No. 3 at Washington Portland’s open air reservoirs in a con­ troversial light. The U.S. Environmental Protection agency expects the city to stop using open-air reservoirs because of safety concerns, including the Washington Park and Mt. Tabor reservoirs by year 2015. Residents also complained about the city not getting information out to the public in a timely manner. Equity Push in High Schools Overhaul Superintendent discusses the obstacles by J ake T homas T he P ortland O bserver When Portland Public Schools finishes a proposed overhaul o f its high schools. Superintendent Carole Smith expects a more eq­ uitable educational opportunity for each child in the district. The ambitious plan is barrel­ ing along, and seeks to address the high drop out rate, the achievement gap, and the un­ even distribution o f course of­ ferings. Smith sat down with the Port­ land O bserver to discuss the obstacles she faces. The proposal could put two to three schools on the chop­ ping block, which is a prickly is­ sue as schools are cherished as­ sets to the neighborhoods o f many Portlanders who are un­ easy with the idea o f closing any o f them. “Let me tell you: Do I know that it’s tricky? I so know it’s tricky,” said Smith. In April, Smith settled on one o f three options proposed for the redesign that put emphasis on neighborhood schools, with some options for students to at­ tend specialized schools that are geared toward students with specific goals or learning needs. Portland Public Schools Superintendent Carole Smith visits Currently, PPS has an open Grant High. transfer policy that allows stu­ Because schools are allocated dents to attend schools not in money based on their enrollment, their neighborhood. As a conse­ smaller schools find themselves quence, there are widely differ­ starved for cash and unable to ent enrollment numbers in the offer the same course offerings high school system ranging from at every school. about 500 students at Jefferson “We just sort o f have a hodge­ High School to about 1,500 at podge o f who gets access to access to academic opportuni­ ties as any other. Smith sees a future where high school students would have the opportunity to attend a compre­ hensive community high school that serves 1,200 to 1,350 stu­ dents from their adjacent neigh­ borhoods or a specialized school. She is unapologetic about the possibility o f school closures. Because of the cash-per-student formula that funds schools, PPS can only staff and fund so many schools that offer the same ac­ cess to quality courses, she said. “It’s weighing nostalgia over what do we want for the future o f our kids,” said Smith, who pointed out that taxpayers would have to pony up more money if they want to maintain the same number o f schools and allow them to offer the same quality curriculum. “We don’t get it all unless we’re willing to pay for it all” She stressed that no decisions have been made about what schools are on the chopping with families at Astor School. block. Community conversa­ tions are on-going. "The reason I'm not talking what,” said Smith. For instance, some schools, about any individual campus yet like Lincoln High School, have a is because I don’t want anyone full offering o f college prep to feel like, ‘okay, w e’re safe.’ courses w hile others, like Once anyone feels like they’re Jefferson, have just recently in­ off the table, and everyone else stituted such courses. She hopes is at risk, then it totally stops that by the end o f the redesign continued on page .45 each student will have the same Community Media Tackles Disparities Sharing tools to bridge digital divide by J akf . T homas T he P ortland O bserv er In the minds o f many, cable access television is an outlet for quirky and amateurish program­ ming, lacking many o f the fil­ ters associated with more com­ mercial media outlets. But P ortland C om m unity Media wants you to know that's it gone beyond that. Over the last half decade, the local non-profit organization has been working to make sure that no one is left behind in the digital age. According to a report from the Pew Internet and American Life Project, African Americans and Hispanics are less likely to use digital technologies like the Internet than their white coun­ terparts, which could put them at a distinct disadvantage. Sylvia M cD aniel, PC M ’s chief executive officer, explained that this disparity poses a seri­ ous impediment to disadvan­ taged communities as society photo by J ake T homas /T he P ortland O bsf . rv er Portland Community Media executives Ray Larson and Sylvia McDaniel show off the television equipment housed at its non-profit cable access facility, located at 2766 N.E. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. becomes increasingly reliant on technology. Only communities who have access and under­ standing o f how to use digital tools will prosper, while others arc left behind, she said. "W hen it com es to jo b s, who's going to get the jobs?" said McDaniel. "The digital di­ vide affects those underserved populations much more than they do anyone else" McDaniel notes that PCM has a strong youth focus, so that kids who might not have computers at home have oppor­ tunities to learn media basics, and perhaps take them home to their parents. O f the four cable channels PCM operates, one specifically highlights shows produced by kids aged 10-1X While working on the show s, the youth are exposed to software and tech­ nology that could help them continued on page .42