September 13, 2017 Page 3 INSIDE The Week in Review M ETRO This page Sponsored by: page 2 page 9 Portland Community College is providing classroom space for McCoy Academy, saving a future for the non-profit private high school serving underserved students in Portland since 1988. McCoy Gets a Lifeline Arts & ENTERTAINMENT O PINION C LASSIFIEDS C ALENDAR F OOD New support puts Academy back in action pages 7-11 pages 12-13 by d ana L ynn b arbar t he P ortLand o bserver The McCoy Academy is back and better than ever! The alterna- tive school for underserved and disenfranchised youth has found a second home with Portland Com- munity College’s Cascade Cam- pus in north Portland. Originally located on Northeast Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard, the academy faced financial strug- gles when they lost their lease to a building that was sold and de- molished to make way for con- dominiums. The school’s founder and executive director, Rebecca Black, strived to obtain the funds necessary to stay, but could not raise enough and the academy was forced out in June. Now the school has the fortu- nate opportunity to continue on with PCC. Part of the nonprofit Oregon Outreach, McCoy Acade- my had already built a relationship with the college over 25 years. After the loss of property, how- ever, Dr. Karin Edwards, presi- dent of the PCC Cascade Campus, helped with an initiative to create a space for McCoy within the col- lege. From there, Black worked with Rakeem Washington, who di- rects the Opening Doors Grant, a juvenile justice educational reen- try program at PCC. Washington also serves as Executive Director for the Portland Observer. Part of McCoy’s diverse stu- dent population benefits from the Opening Doors program. Togeth- er, PCC and the alternative school found a way to keep McCoy active by offering classroom space and enrollment options at the college. The students’ first day of classes was Monday. The students are now provid- ed with the chance to earn col- lege credits, as well as a chance to acclimate to a college campus, which is more than they received at the previous location. Katie Carpenter, assistant exec- utive director of Oregon Outreach, plans to implement a new pro- gram for adults to obtain a G.E.D., which can be housed at the office site now that the students are at the college campus. Black and Carpenter are thrilled that McCoy Academy, a long-time resource that has offered signifi- cant help to the community, was saved. “As hard as it was to move, the end result was amazing,” Black said. McCoy Academy was named after the late Gladys McCoy, a former Multnomah County chair- person, school board member and the first African American elected to public office in Oregon. Big Scare as Truck Speeds by Protest pages 14 page 15 page 16 A truck twice speeding through a street lined with protestors in Vancouver caused quite a scare on Sunday in an incident with echoes of Charlottesville, Va. when a white racist was accused of driving into a crowd of peaceful protestors last month, killing one woman. There was no arrest or inju- ries reported in the Vancouver incident. It happened after a rally organized by a right-wing group called Patriot Prayer drew counter protests in both Portland and Van- couver. Police said the driver involved may have been provoked to speed away from a threat. There were reports of people dressed in black covering their faces, clothing throwing rocks and water bottles at the truck. The driver was ques- tioned, detained and released. His truck was described as a black Chevy Silverado with Oregon plates, flying two large American flags, several small flags from the windows, along with a Confeder- ate flag decal. Police said seven people were arrested in Portland when some counter-protesters gathered at Waterfront Park began to throw rocks, smoke bombs and other projectiles at officers.