Capturing Strength, Vulnerability Film by black producers gets online premier See Opinionated Judge, page 7 Relics Coming Down Grant murals seen as promoting racist culture See story, page 2 Established in 1970 PO QR code Volume XLVIV • Number 26 ‘City of Roses’ www.portlandobserver.com Wednesday • December 9, 2020 Committed to Cultural Diversity Photo Courtesy of M ultnoMah C ounty A health care worker tests for COVID-19 at an outdoor site in east Portland. COVID-19 Danger Rises to Extreme Any activity outside home now deemed a risk Multnomah County is complying with Gov. Kate Brown’s latest or- ders on preventing the spread of the coronovirus. The Portland area moved into the governor’s new extreme risk catego- ry last Thursday. It means even more restrictions to stop the disease from multiplying, aligning it with the risks for the rest of the Portland Met- ro area and a large number of other counties in Oregon. While the new measures are part of a risk-reduction framework, any activity outside your home carries risk of spread of COVID-19, offi- cials said. And while news of sev- eral vaccine trials signals hope, it will take well into 2021 or beyond until the risk is reduced enough to return to pre-COVID-19 behaviors, according to public health experts. “We are still facing potential spread that can overwhelm our health care in the next few weeks, ’ said Dr. Jennifer Vines of the Mult- nomah County Health Department, “We can all do our part by limit- ing how much we mix with people outside our households, regardless of formal restrictions.” Health authorities say every- one should avoid the “three Cs:” Crowded spaces where you are around many people; close contact settings where people take off their masks and have close conversa- tions; and confined space, which means any enclosed area with poor ventilation. Instead, people are urged to protect one another by wearing a mask indoors and out whenever they are with anyone outside their household; wash hands frequent- ly; maintain six feet distance and open windows and doors often to improve air flow. Multnomah County has a unique role in the state as it is home to most of the state’s hospital beds, and the only specialized trau- ma and burn centers in the state. What happens in the rest of the state impacts our local communi- ty as people come from across the state to seek this specialized care, officials said. C ontinued on P age 4 Photo Courtesy M iCro e nterPrise s erviCes of o regon (Meso) Collaborating artists Latoya Lovely and her son “J” celebrate the near completion of a new mural celebrating diversity on the side of the Micro Enterprise Services of Oregon building (MESO) at Northeast Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard and Shaver Street. Black Innovators Celebrated New mural pays tribute to diverse business community Portland’s Black community and support for artists of color are celebrated with the creation of a new public mural to replace anoth- er mural that celebrated diversity small loans and business help born on the side of the Micro Enter- out of the Black United Fund. prise Services of Oregon building C ontinued on P age 4 (MESO), a nonprofit provider of