Page 4 February 10, 2021 Black Voices Grow Power in Salem C onTinued from f ronT health, three on civil rights and two labor bills. When Frederick was first elect- ed to the state House in 2009, he was the only African American out of 60 representatives, and the late Jackie Winters was the only African American senator. But today, the Legislature’s Black, Indigenous and People of Col- or caucus, or BIPOC, includes a dozen lawmakers, including Na- tive Americans, Latinos, African Americans and Vietnamese. One of its newest members, Kayse Jama of southeast Portland, ap- pointed last month to fill a vacant seat, is a native of Somalia and the first Muslim member of the Senate. “Now that we have 11 other members of the Oregon Legis- lature who are people of color, we clearly made our views and desires known to the rest of the legislature. Twelve members is more than ever before,” Freder- ick said. The Portland lawmaker antici- pates joining Jama and two other Black lawmakers, Sens. Janelle Bynum, representing southeast Portland and Happy Valley and Jim Manning of Eugene and Junc- tion City, on putting bills forward that deal specifically with racial issues, some that have been im- portant issues for a long time. “Some bills I’ve been working on for 11 years,” Frederick said. “Bills on excessive use of force, bills related to African American history in school curriculums, bills that deal with use of force and discipline issues as well as training and recruitment.” Frederick said he’s also work- ing on “more subtle” bills that have to do with over-testing in schools, bringing more teach- ers and counselors of color into schools, and reducing class sizes. Frederick also supports repa- rations for descendants of slaves and last month proposed a state bill to pay people who could prove a heritage in slavery, a $123,000 annuity, annually paid for the life of the applicant. Some press reports, even national ones, got the proposal wrong by con- flating annuity with annual, he said. Under an annuity, recipi- ents would receive a portion of the total each year, not the entire sum each year. For example, a $100,000 annuity for a 65-year- old would pay out about $500 per month in lifetime income. “The real key is that we are going to start talking about rep- arations,” he said. “Not just in an academic setting or around the dinner table, but to look at how to craft reparations.” On the national level, Freder- ick says he supports U.S. Rep. Barbara Lee’s reparations bill in Congress. He wants to hear more on how Congress could approve reparations and how a financial system might be created to deal with that, “That’s where the an- nuity comes in.” As a member of the state trans- portation committee, Frederick is also keeping a close eye on the I-5 Rose Quarter Improvement Project, which has been contro- versial in the past. The project seeks to undo some of the harm to the Black communities that were obliterated by the construc- tion of the Interstate freeway in the 1960s that cut through neigh- borhoods displacing many Black residents and local businesses. The area was also decimated by the construction of the Oregon Convention Center and the ex- pansion of Legacy Emmanuel Hospital. “The proposal is just to change exit ramps, but not increasing lanes,” Frederick said. “The Al- bina Vision group calls for the freeway to be covered so we can put housing on top.” Those dis- cussions are ongoing, he said, and goes back to a bill approved by voters in 2017 to increase taxes on gasoline and gasoline engines with the condition that congestion problems in the Rose Quarter section be addressed. Frederick said he feels a little cynical about some of the recent interest in the project. “Some folks decided because they discovered environmental impacts on the African American community, to use that as lever- age to stop the project from tak- ing place,” he said. “Those folks could have stepped forward 10 years ago and did not. Now they are stepping forward as though they are saving the Black com- munity, but in most cases they are not Black folks, but a group of white folks saying, ‘I really care about you.’ It’s a cynical ap- proach that I reject and I am in- sulted by. In some cases they are truly sincere; others I’m not sure about.” Another example of detach- ment from Black concerns was when a group was pushing the use of electric scooters to the Legislature. “The guy giving the pitch looked straight at me, and said how this would help the low-in- come community,” Frederick said. “I said I didn’t think that was true. They think they are trying to help, but they’re being patronizing.” In other transportation issues, Frederick said he would like to see a high-speed rail between Portland and Vancouver and be- yond. “If we had a high-speed rail a lot of people would be using that instead of driving along I-5,” he said. “We could also do Portland to Eugene, and I would like to see it go all the way to the Cal- ifornia border.” TriMet Honors Rosa Parks C onTinued from P age 2 and led to a U. S. Supreme Court decision that bus segregation was unconstitutional. Just over a year after Parks’ act of defiance, city officials were ordered to de- segregate Montgomery’s buses and Rosa Parks sealed her place in U.S. history. TriMet Board of Directors member Keith Edwards, who is a lifelong advocate for civil rights, an electrician and union leader, and member of Portland’s Afri- can American community, pro- posed the special no fares day of recognition for Parks. In January, the TriMet Board passed a resolution which de- clared her birthday as a day to acknowledge her role in the civ- il rights movement. It changed TriMet code to allow for fares to not be collected on Feb. 4 this year and years to come. “When people wonder why fares are not being collected on this day, we’ll be able to tell them that Rosa Parks is being honored,” said Director Ed- wards. “This is her birthday, and she’s the mother of the civil rights movement. She moved the country by use of a bus in a great social effort to bring about equi- ty and equality.” In unison with the civil rights movement, Rosa Parks’ cou- rageous demonstration greatly Keith Edwards contributed to the passing of the Civil Rights Act, a landmark federal law adopted in 1964. The law bans discrimination on the basis of race, skin color or na- tional origin. TriMet has been a longtime advocate for respecting civil rights and promoting the val- ue of the diverse community it serves. Leaders of the agency point to its adoption of policies to ensure that equity guides de- cisions around fares and service, evaluating all proposed changes to avoid unnecessary negative impacts on people of color and low-income populations.