JUNE 1, 2016 Portland and Seattle Volume XXXVIII No. 35 News ............................... 3, 6-8 Opinion ...................................2 Calendars ...............................4 A & E ........................................5 CHALLENGING PEOPLE TO SHAPE A BETTER FUTURE NOW 25 CENTS INSIDE: CAREERS EDITION 2016 PHOTO BY MOBILUS IN MOBILI (CC BY 2.0) VIA FLICKR TENANTS PROTEST TriMet has hired a consulting irm to investigate the cost and feasibility of charging a lower fare to low- income riders. By Christen McCurdy Of The Skanner News E arlier this year Bus Riders Unite — an advocacy group for transit-de- pendent people linked with OPAL Environmental Justice Oregon — asked TriMet to consider adopting a separate fare for low-income riders. Now the agency has hired a consult- ing irm to look into the feasibility and cost efectiveness of charging some riders less, if they meet certain income criteria. In May the Oregonian reported that TriMet has hired Four Nines Consult- See TRIMET on page 3 RushCard Holders Repaid Russell Simmons takes ‘full responsibility’ page 7 Veterinarian Jasmine Streeter Ofers Flea Tips page 6 Portland Tenants United demonstrated last week outside an awards ceremony for Multifamily NW, at an event attended by property managers, landlords and lobbyists. Tenants’ Group Protests Award Ceremony Housing activists hold satiric mock ‘award ceremony’ outside gala event By Arashi Young of The Skanner News Two worlds collided outside the Portland Art Museum last Thursday evening. On one side of a golden velvet rope were property managers, land- lords and their lobbyists. On the other side was Port- land Tenants United. The property managers dressed in formal wear to attend an exclusive, pri- vate event — the Multifam- ily NW ACE Awards. The tenants’ union staged a protest of the event and hosted its own awards cer- emony to bring attention to Portland’s worsening housing crisis. Margot Black, the orga- nizer behind the protest, told The Skanner News the demonstration was meant to bring attention to those who proit from high rents and housing instability. Multifamily NW was cho- sen because they lobby to ight bans on no-cause evictions, inclusionary zoning and other regula- tions intended to stabilize Portland housing. “This is a group who has never had the spotlight shined on them in terms of their contribution to the housing crisis — their celebration of the housing crisis,” Black said. “I think it’s time that people know who’s paying our lawmak- ers and that they know we’re watching.” Since October of 2008, the Multifamily NW Po- litical Action Committee and the Metro Multifam- ily Housing Association Political Action Commit- tee have spent more than $100,000 in political contri- butions, according to the Oregon Secretary of State OreStar report. The majority of these do- nations are to Oregon state legislators. House Speaker Tina Kotek has received a combined total of $9,500 from both PACs through four separate donations. Portland City Commis- sioners Steve Novick, Nick Fish and Dan Saltzman have all received contribu- tions from the PACs, as did mayoral candidate Jules Bailey and mayor-elect Ted Wheeler. The protest began in the park blocks in front of the Portland Art Museum. Music was provided by Da- vid Rokics, who sang out the song lyric, “Who gave you the right to be a land- lord?” as protestors gath- ered around the “Theodore Roosevelt, Rough Rider” bronze sculpture. PTU activist Austin Rose See PROTEST on page 3 Saadat Resigns as COCL/COAB Chair Letter submitted Monday morning By The Skanner News Staf K athleen Saadat announced Tuesday that, efective at the end of June, she is resigning her position as community li- aison and chair of the Community Oversight Advisory Board. The board is tasked with oversee- ing police reforms required by the Department of Justice’s settlement with the City of Portland ater a DOJ investigation found a pattern of ex- cessive force deployed by Portland police, particularly against people with mental illness. Saadat stepped into the role last summer following the resignation of retired Oregon chief justice Paul De Muniz. Like De Muniz, Saadat was the only key member of the Compliance Oicer/Community Li- aison team based in Oregon. Dennis Rosenbaum and Amy Watson, two researchers associated with the Uni- versity of Illinois at Chicago, head up See SAADAT on page 3 PHOTO BY K. KENDALL (CC BY 2.0) VIA WIKIPEDIA Agency will investigate the cost of reduced fares for low-income people PHOTO BY ARASHI YOUNG TriMet Looks Into Lower Fare Kathleen Saadat, pictured at an Occupy rally in 2011, has resigned from the body tasked with overseeing police reforms mandated by a 2012 settlement with the Department of Justice.