Experience African Culture ‘City of Roses’ Volume XLVII • Number 31 Pan African Festival to fill Pioneer Courthouse Square See Metro, page 9 Outlaw Defends Response to Protests Chief says crowd control tactics will be reviewed See Local News, page 3 Established in 1970 www.portlandobserver.com Wednesday • August 8, 2018 Committed to Cultural Diversity Cristina Marquez points to the racism behind a ballot measure to kill Oregon’s sanctuary law. Tracking the Hate behind Measure 105 Ballot to kill sanctuary law draws a fight b everly C orbell t he p ortlanD o bserver Cristina Marquez is determined to fight back against racial profiling in our state. Marquez is Director of Advocacy& Civic Engagement for Causa Oregon, part of the broad coalition, Oregans Unit- ed Against Profiling, which is urging cit- izens to vote against Measure 105 in the November ballot that would negate the state’s 31-year old sanctuary law. “This law was passed because at the time we were seeing a lot of racial profil- ing,” Marquez said. “So lawmakers, with broad support from both Democrats and Republicans, decided to pass this law to ensure that racial profiling wasn’t some- thing that was a norm in Oregon.” Measure 105 (Initiative Proposition 22) seeks to roll back that reform and is sponsored by the Repeal Oregon Sanctu- ary Law, which is funded by Oregonians for Immigration Reform and the Feder- ation for American Reform. According to the Associated Press, both groups are classified as hate groups by the Southern Poverty Law Center, which tracks hate by photo by D anny p eterson /t he p ortlanD o bserver Board members and founders of KairosPDX, a public charter school serving children in the African American community, are disappointed with an offer of a one year lease for the former Humboldt school property at 4915 N. North Gantenbein Ave. Pictured (from left) are KairosPDX board members Tiffani Penson and Chris Nelson; school founders Zalika Gardner, Marsha Williams and Kali Thorne-Ladd; and board members Stuart Ellis and Traci Rossi. Advocating for KairosPDX One year lease brings uncertainty by D anny p eterson t he p ortlanD o bserver Even as doors opened Monday at Kai- rosPDX, a public charter school serving children in the African American commu- nity, a school that will see its first graduat- ing class of fifth graders this new school year, uncertainty for the school’s future lingers. That’s because for the second time in less than a year, the school which is tasked with closing the achievement gap for mi- nority students by using evidence-based methods of increased learning outcomes, and is led by a volunteer, minority-led board, has been offered just a one year lease by the Portland School District, own- ers of the property. KairosPDX wanted a five year lease, but the district offered only one year, plus a rent increase of over 30 percent, accord- ing to KairosPDX school board members. Portland Public Schools cited a dis- trict-wide shortage of facilities as the reason for the shorter lease, though no plans are in place specifically for the former Humboldt Elementary School, whose doors were shuttered when Kairos moved in. Tiffani Penson, who is the vice chair of KairosPDX’s board of directors, told the Portland Observer that she’s disappointed in the school district’s decision. “I understand that there is resistance to charters, but when you are failing to serve an entire demographic of children; you lose the right to have an ideological argument. You need to focus on what works and sup- port that,” she said. Black students were the lowest perform- ing ethnic demographic in Portland Public Schools this past school year, according to scores from Smarter Balance Assessment Consortium. Less than 15 percent of Port- land Public Schools black students met the C ontinueD on p age 4 C ontinueD on p age 5