Page 2 ®lft Fortiani» (Dbseruer TheWeek Review egon Zoo. The 30-year-old el Ivanice Harris' Funeral Ivanice Harris, a Portland woman ephant is being treated, and cur­ rently is showing no signs who was mur- of her illness. She poses no d e re d w hile significant risk to the pub­ celebrating her lic, officials said. 29th birthday in Hawaii, was Oklahoma Tornados laid to rest on T he d eath toll from Monday after Oklahoma’s Friday tornado a memorial ser­ has risen to 14. The dead vice at L ife include five children and Change Christian Center. A sus­ nine adults. According to authori­ pect has not been named in her case, ties, this number is expected to as police continue to investigate. rise with half a dozen people, mostly children still missing. Police Fired for Beating Jasper, Texas, a town with a history All in the Family Death of racial unrest, fired two white po­ Jean Stapleton, m ost notably lice officers Monday after a known for her video captured by security role as E dith cameras caught them slam­ Bunker in the ming a black woman’s head 70’s sitcom “All into a countertop and wres­ in the Family” tling her to the ground. “The has died at the amount of force used was age of 90. The a b o m in a b le ,” said the actress passed w om an's a tto rn e y C ade away at her New Bemsen. York City home on F rid ay o f Death at the Gorge A 25-year-old Ohio man died after natural causes. jumping into Punchbowl Falls in Open-Air Reservoirs Columbia Gorge east of Portland. After a tense nine-year-battle with Three others were injured. The man the E nvironm ental Protection has been id e n tifie d as Jaso n Agency, Portland City Council Endicott; recovery efforts for his has decided to cover the city’s body began on Monday. open-air reservoirs. The reservoir on Mt. Tabor will be shut down, Ills at the Zoo Asian elephant Rama has tested while a reservoir in Washington positive for tuberculosis at the Or- Park will be capped. ........... 1 .......................... June 5, 2013 Retiring Pulliams to Address Grads Inspirational speakers lined up for PCC commencement measure in 2008, the largest educational bond measure in Oregon at the time. Another accomplishment by Pulliams included help­ ing to boost annual contributions to the PCC Founda­ tion, which has tripled scholarship awards to students. Pulliams also was instrumental in developing a partnership between PCC A total o f4,900 degrees, certificates and the City of Portland to create the Future and awards will be handed out and Connect Scholarship Program, and he cham­ more than 700 students are planning pioned efforts with Portland Public Schools to walk in front of thousands of friends, to redesign Jefferson High School to be­ family and community members at the come the Jefferson Middle College. Both 51st Portland Community College initiatives took a critical step toward helping Commencement Ceremony. the region's most needy students. Graduation proceedings are set for Reers, the graduation cerem ony’s stu­ 7 p.m., Friday, June 14, in the Memorial Michelle Reers dent speaker, is earning her transfer degree Coliseum, 1401N. Wheeler. this year after getting her associate's degree Cascade Campus President Algie in general studies and an accounting certificate Gatewood will serve as master of cer­ last year. emonies and be joined by Board Chair At age 42, Reers' story consists o f getting a Denise Frisbee, and national anthem second chance at redemption through college. singer M. Nichoel Patterson. Keynote She had tried attending a university back in speaker is retiring PCC President 1986, but lasted j ust one term and soon became Preston Pulliam s and the student pregnant with her first child. After ending a 10- speaker is Tigard's Michelle Reers. year marriage to the father of her three children, Pulliams is retiring in July after nine a meth addiction, bad friendships and poor years guiding Oregon's largest college. workplace conditions were ruling her life. As a young man, he was expected to When her sister earned an associate's de­ join his father as a foundry worker, but Preston Pulliams gree a few years ago at PCC, it gave her a great became the first in his family to attend reason, and inspiration, to get back to school. college thanks to a $600 scholarship award from his Thanks to the support she received from staff and local Rotary Club to fund two years of school. That first gift of opportunity inspired him to create faculty, she began to succeed and earned two Miller access for students who would not otherwise have Foundation scholarships through the PCC Foundation had the chance to earn a college degree. Specifically, along the way that kept her going. She will graduate with a 3.84 grade-point average and first-generation college students who need financial assistance and student support to attend PCC and is now headed to Oregon State University's Honors College to study botany. Now meth free for close to a complete their degrees. One o f the most significant achievements during decade, Reers has big plans to be a field researcher once Pulliams' tenure was the passage of a $374million bond she gets her bachelor's degree. " .................................. - ........... .............. ........................- ............................... .......... TriM et Financial Problems: S e lf-In flicte d ? TriMet has cut our passengers' service and raised fares. Each day, we hear from our passengers how these changes have made their lives more difficult. At the same time, TriMet intends to cut our family income in at least 80 different ways. Whenever the question, "Why are TriMet's workers and passengers being asked to make such deep sacrifices?" is raised, the response is always the same: "TriMet has terrible financial problems." We started investigating, looking for the cause of those "financial problems." This investigation raised a number of questions. Below are just two of them. $18.9 MILLION DISABILITY CONTRACT $10.3 MILLION IN POLICE CONTRACTS W ere seeing more and more disabled passengers being forced oft the LIFT service and onto fixed route buses. Yet, TriMet pays over $18.9 million We love our transit police officers. They are com petent and caring. But we seldom see them. This is because they must respond to non-transit calls. W hen we ask what these 56 officers do for $10 million per year, TriMet’s response is that it doesn’t audit perform ance under the contracts. If there is such a financial crisis, does it make sense that taxpayers are paying so m uch extra for police service we rarely see? a year to a Scottish multinational corporation to provide the LIFT service using TriMet-owned vehicles and buildings. That cost has grown by $6 million in the last ten years. TriMet hired two different financial experts to examine whether TriMet itself could provide the same service at a lower cost. Each time, the experts answered with a resounding “Yes!” The last expert, in 2004, stated TriMet could save nearly $3.7 million. TriMet rejected these experts opinions. If there is such a financial crisis, why are these opinions being ignored? Why is it a good idea to have a foreign corporation take millions in profits out of our local community? Nationally, subcontracting is proving to be the more expensive approach. It is being used to reduce the workload of well-paid transit managers and limit their responsibility when things go wrong. We believe the above expenditures deserve more public scrutiny, as do other financial decisions we will talk about in the months to come. An independent inquiry of TriMet's financial decisions is long overdue. Sincerely, Your Transit Workers LO O K FOR US O N FACEBOOK LEARN MORE AT LET YOUR VOICE COUNT! • I » » BBf TRANSITVOICE.ORG