Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current, July 10, 2019, Page 10, Image 10

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    Page 10
July 10, 2019
B ID /C LASSIFIED
Letter to the Editor
L egaL N otices
Metro runs the Oregon Zoo, Assistant Guest Services Manager,
Oregon
Convention
Center, full-time , Oregon Convention
Need to publish a court document
or notice? Need an affidavit of
publication quickly and efficiently?
Please fax or e-mail your notice for
a free price quote!
O PINION
Portland Expo Center and
Portland’5 Centers for the Arts
and provides services that
cross city limits and county
lines including land use and
transportation planning, parks
and nature programs, and
garbage and recycling systems.
Center, $49,481 - $71,749
annually. Deadline date: July 17,
2019
Executive Assistant, full-time ,
Oregon
Convention
Center,
$49,481 - $71,749 annually.
Deadline date: July 18, 2019
Medical Technician, part-time,
Visit oregonmetro.gov/jobs for Oregon
Convention
Center,
Fax: 503-288-0015
current openings and a link to $17.19 - $17.89 hourly. Deadline
e-mail:
our online hiring center.
date: July 15, 2019
classifieds@portlandobserver.com
Metro is an Affirmative Action /
Operating Engineer I, Show
The Portland Observer
Equal Opportunity Employer
Coverage, part-time , Portland’5
Centers for the Arts, $31.00 -
SUB BIDS/SUPPLIER QUOTES REQUESTED
$32.46 hourly. Deadline date:
July 15, 2019
Hillside Manor Renovation
2889 SE Hillside Street
Milwaukie, OR 97222
Bids Due: July 26, 2019 @ 2:00 PM
Hillside Manor is an existing 9-story concrete frame affordable
housing building with 100 units. The project will consist of a
seismic upgrade on the ground floor and new plumbing and
mechanical systems throughout the building. Electrical, low
voltage, and fire sprinkler systems will receive various levels of
upgrade. The building management offices on the 2nd floor as
well as the ground floor common areas will be re-programmed
and updated. The project will be occupied during the work, but
the bulk of the unit work will take place when the unit is vacated.
Trades Included: Aluminum Storefront, Design-Build Mechanical,
Plumbing, Electrical, Low Voltage, Fire Protection & Micro Piles ONLY
Plans are currently available at:
Walsh Construction Co., contractorplancenter.com,
iSqFt.com, mcip-pdx.org, and oame.org.
Special Notes: BOLI Commercial and Davis-Bacon Building
Prevailing Wages; Certified Payroll; 25% MWESB participation
goal – certified businesses are encouraged to bid.
WALSH CONSTRUCTION CO.
2905 SW First Ave| Portland, OR 97201
(503) 222-4375| FAX (866) 446-0681
Contact: Bennett Barnwell or Kim Smith
ORCCB # 147267/WALSHCC962LD
Walsh Construction Co. is an equal opportunity employer and
requests sub-bids from Minority, women, disadvantaged and
emerging small business enterprises.
ORCCB # 147267/WALSHCC962LD
SUB BIDS REQUESTED
PDX TCORE - Concourse B Extension
Portland, OR
Bid Package: #4 – All Work
Pre-Bid Meeting: July 10th 3:00 pm
Bids Due:
July 31st 2:00 pm
Bid Documents: www.hoffmancorp.com/subcontractors
222 SW Columbia Street, Suite 300
Portland, OR 97201
Phone (503) 221-8811
BIDS@hoffmancorp.com
Hoffman Skanska LLC is an equal opportunity employer and requests
sub-bids from all interested firms including disadvantaged, minority,
women, disabled veterans and emerging small business enterprises
OR CCB#186536
Operating Engineer II, Show
Coverage, part-time , Portland’5
Centers for the Arts, $34.04 -
$35.66 hourly. Deadline date:
July 15, 2019
Relief Facility Security Agent
– On Call, part-time , Oregon
Convention Center, $17.89 -
$23.96 hourly. Deadline date:
July 15, 2019
These opportunities are open
to First Opportunity Target
Area (FOTA) residents: This
area includes the following
zip codes located primarily in
N, NE and a small portion of
SE Portland: 97024, 97030,
97203, 97211, 97212, 97213,
97216, 97217, 97218, 97220,
97227, 97230, 97233, 97236,
and 97266, whose total annual
income was less than $47,000
for a household of up to two
individuals or less than $65,000
for a household of three or more.
Visit oregonmetro.gov/FOTA for
the complete job announcement
and a link to our online hiring
center or visit our lobby kiosk
at Metro, 600 NE Grand Ave,
Portland.
Metro is an Affirmative Action /
Equal Opportunity Employer
On Police Response to Protests
Editor’s note: The following
is an open letter to Portland
Police Chief Outlaw and Mayor
Wheeler from members of Port-
land Copwatch:
We are very concerned about
the police and city’s response to
the protests on Saturday, June
29.
One primary concern is the
statement which came from Dar-
yl Turner at the Portland Police
Association asking that you take
the “handcuffs” off of the rank-
and-file officers so they can act
with “strong and swift enforce-
ment action.” This echoes the
highly inaccurate complaints by
those who wanted the US to step
up its violent attacks in South-
east Asia saying that the Viet-
nam War was fought with “one
hand tied behind our backs.”
We appreciate that the mayor
took time to call out the PPA’s
comments as false and mislead-
ing. However, when he says
he condemns violence, it rings
hollow when essentially saying
the police get to decide how to
attack demonstrators. The state,
we’ve noted before, declares a
monopoly on violence.
Secondly there is the issue
of the unsubstantiated rumors
about quick drying cement be-
ing put into milkshakes that were
thrown. But according to one
article, adding such a substance
into a sugary drink would chem-
ically negate the use of cement.
The article also debunked the
rumor as false and exposed other
misleading tactics such as the use
of photographs taken in different
places long ago which purported
to be current and local.
The fact that an officer would
post something on social me-
dia as though this were a sub-
stantiated fact with no concrete
evidence (pun intended) is not
“responsible” as Mayoral Pub-
lic Safety Advisor Robert King
put it. The Bureau is constantly
telling people in the community
not to spread rumors and assume
wrongdoing immediately after
police shootings-- even as the
facts have been harder to come
by in the last several years.
If the PPB is going to ask for
an “innocent until proven guilty”
standard for themselves, surely
at the very least any post about
such rumors/suspicions can be
couched in terms such as “al-
legedly” or “suspected” rather
than stated as facts.
Related to this point is the
question of why the mayor’s aide
(a former captain at the PPB-- and
a former president of the PPA) is
making statements about the po-
lice action rather than the PPB
spokesperson or the chief. We
note that the chief did describe
the reality that some people think
the police go too far while others
think they don’t go far enough.
Finally, it should go without
saying that we are always con-
cerned when we see the PPB us-
ing pepper spray and (reportedly)
pepper ball guns against entire
crowds of people. While there
were some small disturbances
and clashes, several people we
know went downtown and didn’t
witness any violence. This brings
to mind whether there was, again,
an over-reaction by the police de-
spite the fact that Officer Turner
thinks his colleagues were “hand-
cuffed.”
Dan Handelman, Regina
Hannon, Peter Parks and other
members of Portland Copwatch