Page 4 November 27, 2013 We are Hiring Drivers for our Transportation Office! Hermiston, OR In the first year driving for Walmart, the average full time Walmart Driver will earn $76,000 per year working a 5.5 day work week. Walmart drivers earn: • Mileage Pay • Activity Pay • Hourly Pay • Regular schedule and reset hours at home, not on the road • Training Pay • Weekend Premium Pay • Quarterly Safety Bonus • Average length of haul is 300 miles Protect and provide for yourself and your family with comprehensive medical/dental plans and a company- matched 401 (k) retirement plan. Learn about our Professional Truck Driver opportunities, view the minimum job qualifications and apply online at w w w .drive4w alm art.com . Wal-Mart Stores. Inc 1$ an Equal O p p o rtu n ity Employer- By Otoice. n i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i Curly Mustards and Collards i .99$ a Bunch or $1 9 5 0 per case i i Located: at 722 N. Sumner st. i Open: Mon-Sat 9am-8pm & Sun ioam-7pm i Tel: (503) 445-4959 HAPPYTHANKSGIVING!!! Jumbo Yams 59$/lb or $20.00 per case Local Greens photo by D onovan M. S mith /T he P ortland O bserver Eli Shannon stacks fresh fruit at the Alberta Co-op on Northeast 15th Avenue and Alberta Street. Employees at the community grocer are gearing up for competition from Trader Joe's, a national grocery chain that has been picked to become an anchor tenant o f a major development a few blocks away at Alberta and Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard. Free Land Deal c o n t i n u e d f r o m fro n t is expected to sign a letter of intent at the end of December solidifying a transaction with PDC that will give them a $2.4 million break on the cost of the property with Trader Joe’s as the anchor tenant and space for 4 to 10 other businesses and 100 surface parking spaces. When the proposed transaction was made public, opposition came quickly in the form of an organized protest at the site drawing a few dozen citizens led by Steven Gilliam, a local African American resident and community activist. In a letter sent to the King Neigh­ borhood Association, Gilliam ridi­ culed the labeling of neighborhood as a food desert saying the decision to sell a prime piece of real estate at an 80 percent discount was based on a false promise and fulfills a fic­ tional need that primarily benefits the 1 percent of wealthy Americans. “The rich will continue to get richer, the desired population will continue move in to northeast Port­ land, and black residents will con­ tinue to be forced out.” Gilliam wrote. “ W h ile the m ech an ism s o f gentrification are complicated the basic idea is not. Wealthy and po­ litically powerful interests want in­ ner-city land because it makes them money. In our recent history poor black residents have been located on some o f this land. Interests have used their power and influence over our government to take the land that poor black people once held for their personal profit.” In an interview with The Portland Observer, PDC Director of Business and Social Equity John Jackley ac­ knowledges that PDC-sponsored developments have been followed by gentrification in north and north­ east Portland, but stands firm that the Trader Joe’s development will not be responsible for further dis­ placement. Jackley said the latest proposed $8 million retail development is not one of those instances. In fact, he declares that it will assist in keeping more traditional King residents in the neighborhood. “I think Steve Gilliam is exactly right in describing gentrification and displacement as the primary issue in north and northeast Portland. I don’t agree with his assessment on the project,” Jackley said. He said no single family homes on the proposed site’s Garfield Street border were displaced by Vanport Square and no-one will be displaced by the current development. “When we look at the particu­ lars of Trader Joe’s, at the demo­ graphics of the community, at how much lower prices they are than Whole Foods and New Seasons I think it continues to the community prospering in place,” he said. According to PD C’s assessment, the construction of the Trader Joe’s will also inject $1.9 million of annual payroll dollars into the community. When asked why there was not something of this or a similar magni­ tude being considered past 82nd Avenue in east Portland where many former north and northeast residents have been pushed to, and where recent numbers show the h ig h est co n ce n tra tio n o f food deserts exist, Jackley said there are such efforts and points to the agency’s Neighborhood Prosper­ ity Districts. He said PDC has tried for a num- ber of years and will continue to work to locate a grocery in the Lents and Parkrose neighborhoods of outer northeast and southeast Port­ land, including an anchor grocer like Trader Joe’s. “If people are forced out or move out of their homes it won’t be be­ cause there was an affordable grocer in the neighborhood,” Jackley said. The marketing director at locally owned and operated Alberta Co-Op says the PDC’s justification for the project feels disingenuous with newer grocery markets appearing in and within the vicinity of the neigh­ borhood since they set up their own grocery on Northeast 15th Avenue and Alberta 12 years ago. “At that time it was a very differ­ ent type of place than it is now, there’s been a lot of movement to­ wards building these types of infra­ structures and businesses moving in ,” said the c o -o p ’s T h eresa Calabrese. PDC said it was keeping the com­ munity involved throughout the process that led to Trader Joe’s, but that didn’t satisfy the co-op, which received no word on such a deal until it was finalized and came be­ fore the King Neighborhood Asso­ ciation. “It’s disappointing, because we and other organizations have been doing a lot of great work on the food justice level for a very long time,” Calabrese said. “It was just kind of a secretive deal that happened. W e’ve worked with PDC in the past, they gave us some loans when we first opened and we paid back the loans on-time, plus the interest. We were never consulted, and nobody approached us about this opportunity. I mean the land was sold for $500,000 which is something that’s within reach for a lot of people in this community,” she said.