April 5, 2017 Page 3 INSIDE The Week in Review O PINION This page Sponsored by: page 2 pages 6-7 Portland Development Commission Project Manager Kim Moreland and Alex Colas of Colas Construc- tion oversee the construction of Alberta Commons, the future site for a Natural Grocers store and a strip of small, minority-owned businesses at Northeast Alberta and Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard. pages 8 S PORTS Lease Alberta Commons Small, minority-owned busi- nesses still have the opportunity to participate in the retail mix at Al- berta Commons, now under con- struction at the corner of Northeast Martin Luther King, Jr. Boulevard and Alberta Street. The Portland Development Commission PDC sent out word Friday that it still has leasing op- portunities for commercial retail space at Alberta Commons and M ETRO page 11 pages 8-13 Arts & ENTERTAINMENT C LASSIFIEDS C ALENDAR pages 14 page 15 priority will be given to exist- ing local businesses, particularly those owned by people of color. Alberta Commons is the second half of a long term plan for retail development geared toward the heart of Portland’s historic black community. It follows the con- struction of Vanport Square more than a decade ago, the retail com- plex immediately to the north. PDC officials say they are com- mitted to the success of Alber- ta Commons to provide needed goods and services to the neigh- borhood and create lasting, bene- ficial relationships with the com- munity. The project will contain a Natural Grocers as the anchor tenant. For more information about the lease opportunities for Alberta Commons, contact Tory Campbell at the PDC. Assembly for Black Affairs Turns 40 The official state advocacy group for Oregon’s black popula- tion turns 40 years old this week. The Oregon Assembly for Black Affairs will celebrate with a cere- mony in the Legislative Chambers at the State Capitol in Salem on Friday, April 7 at 10 a.m. Calvin O.L. Henry, the OABA president, invites friends and sup- porters of the organization to join them. The Oregon Assembly for Black Affairs was established by the Oregon Legislature in 1977 to improve conditions for blacks in Oregon. At the time, the political and economical voices for people of color were nearly non-existent in Salem. “In many ways, we were afraid to speak up for each other or do Calvin O. L. Henry business with each other,” Hen- ry said. “Our community often left young black children to fend for themselves in school settings. The percentage of blacks in the Oregon prison population was and still is greater than the percentage of blacks in the Oregon popula- tion, and businesses in Oregon’s black community had decreased.” Since its establishment, the OABA has been working to less- en these strong disconnects while encouraging more people of color to run for partisan and nonpartisan offices and to get involved with Oregon political parties. “The OABA knows that black Oregonians must become in- formed and committed voters who will use their citizenship power to improve conditions in Oregon, Henry said. “Thus, the mission of the Oregon Assembly for Black Affairs is to improve the political, educational, social, legal, and eco- nomic status of blacks in Oregon.”