Key to Victory Portland vote put Kitzhaber on top See page 3 Football Playoffs Jefferson opens tourney undefeated See page 3 community service Volume XXXX, Number 43 Established in 1970 Committed to Cultural Diversity www.portlandobserver.com Wednesday • November 10, 2010 Leaf Drop Brings Fees For the first time, residents will be billed by M elissa C havez T he P ortland O bserver In the summer, you love them. But, come fall, Portlanders’ feelings toward the city’s spectacular tree-lined streets turn to annoy­ ance. * Fallen leaves clog stormwater drains caus­ ing flooding, pile up blocking residential streets, and make roads slippery in the rainy season. “Whether you’re driving, riding a bicycle, or walking, street leaves create a road haz­ ard,” said Cheryl Kuck, public information officer with the Portland Bureau of Transpor­ tation. To combat this problem, the city of Port­ land has been sending out crews to remove curbside leaves from streets for the past 20 years. But this year marks the first time that residents will be charged a fee for this ser­ vice. Residents in areas with one scheduled cleaning will be charged $15; those with two, $30. Small commercial properties will pay the same rates, but commercial properties with more than 76 linear feet of street frontage will be charged $65. The city’s 28 designated leaf-districts in­ clude some of the most affluent neighbor­ hoods in Portland— Alameda, Eastmoreland, Laurelhurst— and some of the poorest pock­ ets of Boise, Humboldt and St. Johns. According to the Portland Bureau of photo by M ark W ashington /T he P ortland O bserver Leaves are plowed into piles in northeast Portland’s King Neighborhood by the city’s transportation crews before they are hauled away. For the first time, local residents in 2 8 districts will be billed for the leaf pickups which keep streets clear from hazards and blocked storm water drains. Transportation, the agency responsible for the leaf removal service, approximately 30,000 residents and property managers will receive a bill for the service on the Monday after their only or final scheduled street cleaning. Kuck said that, though the city has been offering this service for free, a proposed fee has been in the works for years. The decision to bill residents and busi­ ness was not been sudden, she said. On May 26, the Portland City Council approved the leaf removal fee. And it had been a part of the proposed budget for two years prior to its approval. “W e’ll continue to provide the service, but the difference is — because this is only provided on only 25 percent of streets — w e’re charging addresses in all o f the leaf districts where die removal service is pro­ vided,” Kuck said. News of the fee, however, has been lack­ ing. Residents in the leaf districts usually receive notice about collection times in mid- October. This happened on schedule, but the plan for residents who wanted to opt-out of the now fee-based service was not yet ready. The cost of the service— $800,000— has been paid out of the city’s percentage of the state gas tax. City officials say that this new fee to residents and businesses that receive the service is a more fair financial breakdown. “We pay for this out of our share of the state gas tax — so that’s every resident purchasing gas at the pump,” said Kuck. “W e’re now charging a fee to individuals and businesses on those streets (citywide) that get the direct service.” Beaumont/Rose City resident Rebecca Conant expressed concerns about the lack of continued on page 5 Remodels of Portland Schools Proposed » Jeff, Roosevelt make list for first upgrades Superintendent Carolé Smith presented the Portland School Board with a proposal Monday to modernize school buildings so that its students have the same equipment, technology and updated learning environ­ ments as students in newer buildings in neighboring school districts. “I am excited to present a proposal to deliver modem learning environments for all of our students, well-equipped, well-de­ signed schools with the technology and spaces to support great teaching in every neighborhood,” Smith said. Over a cycle of bond measures in the next 20 to 30 years, the school district plans to fully modernize every school building. Su­ perintendent Smith proposes to fund the first phase of the rebuilding work through a bond measure on the May 2011 election ballot. The six-year, $548 million bond measure would cost the median homeowner about $25 a month, and would pay for major one­ time safety and structural updates to school building system s and rebuilding eight schools. continued on page 20