Blast of Summer Finding a place to cool off during excessive heat ‘City of Roses’ Court Pick Derailed Nomination pulled after black senator objects See Local News, page 3 See Metro, page 9 Volume XLVII • Number 29 Established in 1970 www.portlandobserver.com Wednesday • July 25, 2018 Committed to Cultural Diversity Photo by d anny P eterson /t he P ortland o bserver Beth Blumklotz (left) and Jimmy Appelhanz are on the front lines of a wage dispute with Portland Public Schools. The Local 757 representatives of the Amalgamated Transit Union say the school district’s final offer in wages for 100 special education bus drivers are not high enough to meet the high cost of living in Portland’s tight housing market. A strike is possible. b y d anny P eterson t he P ortland o bserver Portland Public School special education bus drivers may go on strike if they don’t accept the lat- est offer from Oregon’s largest school district to implement their final offer for a pay raise, end the negotiations, and finally settle on a long overdue employment con- tract. PPS announced that it will im- plement its offering of wage in- creases as part of Tuesday’s school board meeting; an amount that ne- gotiators of the contract and other drivers have been saying is unac- Strike Possible Final offer for school bus drivers falls short ceptable since it was first proposed in May. The drivers’ union will vote in two weeks whether to accept the district’s offer or go on strike. A proposed resolution released by the district Friday ahead of the school board meeting, calls for a special education bus drivers’ starting wage to increase from $16.25 per hour to $17.96 per hour starting July 25 — but that’s still $1.04 lower than what the drivers asked for. “The positive is this was not on the [school board] agenda before. The downside is, it’s still below what others are being paid,” driver and union organizer Beth Blumk- lotz told the Portland Observer. Organizers have frequently referenced a statistic from the Na- tional Low Income Housing Co- alition that a Portlander needs to make more than $23 per hour to afford a two bedroom rental. The drivers are asking for a $19 per hour starting wage, with yearly step increases. The drivers originally asked for over $21 per hour, which was parallel to what other PPS drivers, who transport things like ware- housing equipment, landscaping tools, and food items, made. Un- like those drivers, the special ed bus drivers must get trained in emergency response techniques for children. Since their previous contract C ontinued on P age 4