Page 2 March 30, 2016 The Boy Dies in Path of Traffic Week in Review A 10 year-old boy was killed Monday when he in- advertently stepped into the pathway of a vehicle on Burnside Street and 162nd Avenue near a Max light rail station, police said. Investigators believe Jaafar Shbeb was not paying attention to the flow of traffic when he stepped into the roadway and was struck. School Site for Homeless Mayor Charlie Hales and Portland Public Schools Superintendent Carole Smith have cut a deal to place a homeless shelter in a storage building on the site of the former Washington High School in southeast Portland. The city would get free rent and in return promise the district ongoing funding for school se- curity and student bus passes. Sexual Assault Arrest A man wanted for sexually assaulting a woman who sought help to repair a flat tire on her bicycle while using the Springwater corridor near Gresham was arrested Friday. Thomas Peacock, 50, was identified as the suspect in the March 18 assault after tips re- ceived on a Gresham Police tip line, police said. Big Wins for Bernie Sanders Following multiple stops in the Northwest in recent days and a packed Moda Center crowd on Friday, Bernie Sanders did not just win all three states that voted this past weekend -- Washington, Alaska and Hawaii -- he won them by overwhelming, impressive margins. The pres- idential hopeful won every county in Washington. Trump Manager Charged Florida police have charged Donald Trump’s cam- paign manager Corey Lewandowski with simple assault in connection with an incident earlier in the month involving a reporter. A surveillance video re- leased by the police appears to show Lewandowski grabbing a reporter for Breitbart News as she tried to ask Trump a question during a March 8 campaign event. California Eyes $15 Minimum A political deal to raise California’s minimum wage to a nation-leading $15 an hour over six years could help some workers cope with the state’s crushing cost of living but also deprive other low-wage earn- ers of jobs altogether, economists said as Gov. Jer- ry Brown and other leaders touted what would be a landmark agreement. Patty Duke Dead at 69 Actress Anna “Patty Duke” Pearce, who won an Os- car for her role as Helen Keller in 1962’s “The Mira- cle Worker,” died Tuesday at age 69. The actress also played identi- cal cousins on the popular “Patty Duke Show” in the early 1960s, and also charted on Billboard’s top ten with her song “Don’t Just Stand There.” Photo by M ark W ashington /t he P ortland o bserver The Harriet Tubman school building in north Portland would reopen as a middle school in 2017 if a new proposal to balance district enrollment is approved next week. The building is currently a tempo- rary location for Faubion Elementary, a northeast Portland K-8 school which is being rebuilt. Back to Middle Schools Established 1970 USPS 959 680 4747 NE Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd., Portland, OR 97211 The Portland Observer welcomes freelance submissions. Manuscripts and photographs should be clearly labeled and will be returned if accompanied by a self addressed envelope. All created design display ads become the sole property of the newspaper and cannot be used in other publications or personal usage without the written consent of the general manager, unless the client has purchased the composition of such ad. © 2008 THE PORTLAND OBSERVER. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, REPRODUCTION IN WHOLE OR IN PART WITHOUT PERMISSION IS PROHIBITED. The Portland Observer--Oregon’s Oldest Multicultural Publication--is a member of the National Newspaper Association--Founded in 1885, and The National Advertising Representative Amalgamated Publishers, Inc, New York, NY, and The West Coast Black Publishers Association P ublisher : e ditor : Mark Washington, Sr. Michael Leighton e xecutive d irector : Rakeem Washington A dvertising M AnAger : Leonard Latin Office Manager/Classifieds: Lucinda c reAtive d irector : Baldwin Paul Neufeldt CALL 503-288-0033 FAX 503-288-0015 news@portlandobserver.com • ads@portlandobserver.com subscription@portlandobserver.com Postmaster: Send address changes to Portland Observer , PO Box 3137 , Portland, OR 97208 Enrollment balancing fatal for most K-8s Portland School Superinten- dent Carole Smith announced Monday that she has made her recommendations to the school board for balancing enrollment across schools and reconfiguring many K-8 schools into K-5s and middle schools. The school board will consid- er the proposal at a public hear- ing scheduled for Wednesday at 6 p.m. at district headquarters and then vote on the plan on Tuesday, April 5. For north and northeast Port- land, the proposal calls for Ock- ley Green once again becoming a middle school, phased in over two years. Beach, Chief Joseph, Peninsula and Woodlawn would become K-5 buildings, and stu- dents will then attend Ockley Green for middle school. By the fall of 2017, the Har- riet Tubman building in north Portland, a former middle school for girls that was closed just four years ago, would reopen as a middle school for both sexes, as would Roseway Heights in northeast Portland. Boise-Eliot/Humboldt , King, Sabin, and Irvington would con- vert to K-5s, with students at- tending Tubman. Rose City Park would open as a K-5 neighbor- hood school and students would attend Roseway Heights Middle School. Scott, Vestal, and Lee would be converted to K-5s, with students attending Roseway Heights Middle School. AC- CESS Academy would move to Humboldt School which is now vacant. Vernon K-8 will be con- verted to a K-5 and students will then attend Beaumont Middle School. By the fall of 2018, Kellogg would reopen as a middle school in southeast Portland, and Astor would be converted to a K-5 in north Portland with its students attending George Middle School. Several changes are also planned for the west side of Portland to relieving overcrowd- ing at Chapman K-5 and Lincoln High School.