CAREERS Special Edition August 15, 2018 The INSIDE Week in Review C AREERS Page 3 This page Sponsored by: page 2 See inside page 6 Photo by d anny P eterson /t he P ortland o bserver Eddie Kirk Jones, 58, worries that without new zoning protections, the property where he and his wife have lived in the Cully Neighborhood for the past 17 years, will be redeveloped and land them on the street. R ELIGION Fighting Displacement Zoning plan to protect affordable Mobile Home Parks page 8 d anny P eterson t he P ortland o bserver A proposed re-zoning of mobile home parks in Portland is meant to protect over 3,000 low-income families from being displaced or put out on the streets due to real estate market forces that have seen properties across the city trans- formed into future lots for higher priced homes and condominiums. The city’s 56 mobile home parks are some the most afford- able residential areas left in Port- land and many of the residents of these parks cannot financially af- ford to move. Many of the mobile homes themselves are also too old to transport elsewhere. The zoning proposal before the City Council would give some protections to the parks and is a less expensive way of securing affordable housing than construct- ing new affordable units, propo- nents say. Mayor Ted Wheeler backed the proposal when it went before the Planning and Sustain- ability Commission in July and by S PORTS pages 8-10 Arts & ENTERTAINMENT was passed. A public comment period is now open ahead of the council taking up the matter next week. In the Cully Neighborhood of northeast Portland, in which 10 percent of residents live in one of the six mobile home parks located there, redevelopment of the parks into apartments or something more lucrative could displace a population that in many cases has already exhausted all other hous- ing options. Cully is one of the most di- verse neighborhoods in Oregon, according to Cameron Herrington, anti-displacement coordinator for Living Cully, a non-profit neigh- borhood group that is pushing for the rezoning effort. According to the last Census, 16 percent of Cully residents are black, Herrington said. There’s also a high immigrant and refugee population. Many of these resi- dents moved there after being dis- placed from other neighborhoods in north and northeast Portland or from their home country. “It’s sort of been a landing place but other than that also a place where people have created really strong community ties, identity, and pride,” Herrington said. Back in 2016 Herrington was the major backer of another initia- tive to save a mobile home park, Oak Leaf, also in the Cully neigh- borhood, by facilitating its pur- chase by the charity St. Vincent de Paul of Lane County. It was spared from being redeveloped and resi- dents were able to continue living there, although four other mobile home parks closed in Portland due to redevelopment that same year. At Cedar Shade Mobile Home Park, near Northeast Killing- sworth Street and 72nd Avenue and adjacent to Living Cully Pla- za, many of the residents are wor- ried that redevelopment of their land could lead to them hopeless- ly fending for themselves on the street. C ontinued on P age 6 Fabricator’s Death Goes Unsolved page 9 M ETRO O PINION C LASSIFIEDS pages 12-13 pages 11, 14 Portland police are asking help from the public in solving the ho- micide of Eugene Gora, a much beloved neighbor, legacy fabri- cator, and welder whose red shop was a landmark at the corner of Northeast Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd and Skidmore Street. A cash reward of up to $2,500 is being offered for any informa- tion about the case, for which ho- micide detectives have not deter- mined any suspects. Eugene Gora Gora’s Welding and Fabrica- tion at 4232 N.E. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd was the 85-year- old’s place of business, residence, and the location where he was dis- covered, deceased, by a friend on May 10. Medical and emergency per- sonnel, who responded at 6:30 p.m. that evening, confirmed that he was deceased upon arrival. The C ontinued on P age 5