'City of Roses’ June Key Weapon of Earth Day Future community center builds green Resistance Rap music i > defines anger in Libya See page 3 Read back issues of the Portland Observer at W W W .portlandobserver.com Volume XXXXI, Number 17 Wednesday • April 27. 2011 See page 5 Established in 1970 Committed to Cultural Diversity Power Seat at the Table Local leader to help shape ‘Portland Plan’ by L ee photo by M ark W ashington /T he P ortland O bserver Andre Baugh is in a position o f leadership as the new chair o f the Portland Planning and Sustainability Commission. Unique Garden P erlman T he P ortland O bserver Andre Baugh faces an interesting but daunting task in the effort to plan for Portland’s future. A saving grace is that he has an array of talented help behind him. Last year the city combined the Portland Plan­ ning Commission and the Sustainability Commis­ sion to form the Portland Planning and Sustainability Commission. Earlier this year, Baugh, a longtime member of the Planning Commission, became its new chair. The new board is comprised of 11 members, and it includes people with backgrounds that transcend land use planning and zoning. Among them are Parkrose School Superintendent Karen Fischer- Gray; public health officer Dr. Gary Oxman; Portland’s best-known environm entalist Mike Houck; bike and rail transit advocate Chris Smith; and Lai-Lani Ovalles and Irma Valdez of the Native American and Latino communities, respectively. It is fitting that the group’s interests are so broad because it will come in handy with theirchief assign­ ment: helping shape the Portland Plan. This docu­ ment will set policies governing public action and private development, and this in turn will set the stage for updating the zoning and other regulations of the 1980 Portland Comprehensive Plan. The Portland Plan will also venture more deeply into areas such as education, recreation and health than previous land use plans have gone. “I feel very good about being selected as the new chair,” Baugh told the Portland Observer. “I'm relatively new there, I came on in 2008, and some of continued on page 7 Communities of Color Volunteers plant seeds for urban harvest C ari H achmann T he P ortland O bserver On a recent chilly morning, seeds were planted in Portland’s first ur­ ban garden organized solely by communities of color. Since the garden’s kick-off ear­ lier this year, leaders of the Urban League of Portland and African Women’s Coalition, along with com­ munity volunteers, neighbors, and families, are transforming a plot of land for future harvests. The response comes as local lead- n- , • . photoby K yle W eismann -Y ee /U rban L eague ok P ortland Picking up shovels and wheelbarrows to create the Urban Harvest Garden on a plot o f land at North Albina Avenue and Beech Street continued on page 7 are representatives o f the Urban League o f Portland, African American Women's Coalition and other volunteers. The garden is a first- of-its-kind for the African-American community by