June 8, 2016 The Skanner Page 3 News cont’d from pg 1 p o r tl a n d o re g o n . g ov/ parks/61921. To see a list of summer camps, register and apply for i- nancial aid visit https:// w w w.portlandoregon. gov/parks/61821. PP&R is ofering the Summer Free For All schedule in nine difer- ent languages this year: Arabic, Burmese, En- Through the Summer Play- grounds & Lunch program, PP&R expects to serve more than  111,000 free, healthy lunches to children in parks across the city glish, simpliied Chinese, Nepalese, Russian, Span- ish, Somalian and Viet- namese. Summer Free For All programming consists of a broad portfolio of culturally diverse music, movies, and recreation programs. Through the Summer Playgrounds & Lunch program, PP&R expects to serve more than 111,000 free, healthy lunches to children in parks across the city. (To ind a meal site in your area, visit http://www. s u m m e r f o o d o re g o n . org/.)  57% of young Port- landers qualify for free or reduced-price lunch during the school year. Portland Parks & Recre- ation supports families by ofering nutritious meals and recreation- al activities during the summer recess. The Summer Playgrounds & Lunch program is accom- panied by sports, games, crats and family activ- ities, including PP&R’s mobile rock climbing wall. Multnomah County Summer Reading Multnomah County Library’s 2016 Summer Names ilies. Efective June 15, 2016, the library will no longer charge late ines for youth materials or for cardholders younger than 18. The library will forgive existing youth late ines. Replacement fees remain in place for all unreturned materi- als. The library’s Sum- mer Reading program entices kids to read for pleasure when school is not in session, maintain- ing the skills developed during the school year and encouraging lifelong library use. Last year, approximately 110,000 babies, kids and teens participated. This year, over 85,000 students have already signed up through school. The library part- ners with seven Mult- nomah County school districts: Centennial, Corbett, David Douglas, Gresham-Barlow, Park- rose, Portland Public and Reynolds. Working with schools enables the library to reach students across the county. Read the rest of this story at TheSkanner.com Seattle Tenants’ Rights Sahro Farah listens to people speak after the Seattle City Council voted unanimously June 6 to pass an ordinance requiring that rental properties meet basic maintenance standards before rents can be increased. Farah, a mother of ive, also testiied during the council meeting, talking about her experience experiences with a landlord doubling her rent on a bug-infested apartment. She helped start the movement to get the City Council to address the issue of protecting tenants from unscrupulous rental property owners. Lead cont’d from pg 1 Parents, teachers and educa- tion advocates have been upset and worried since the discovery of lead in the drinking water at Rose City Park and Creston Ele- mentary Schools. The delay an- nouncing the test results and rev- elation that PPS had been using the wrong kind of ilter in schools has inlamed a irestorm between parents and PPS oicials. Chief Operating Oicer Tony Magliano and senior environ- mental manager Andy Fridley have been placed on paid admin- istrative leave, and the school dis- trict hired the law irm Stoll Berne to conduct an investigation. The irm will review the PPS systems and protocols relating to water testing and reporting. PPS will undertake dis- trict-wide lead testing over the summer and will work to repair ixtures using certiied ilters that meet EPA standards for re- ducing lead. Lead can enter drinking water when lead pipes or pipe ixtures corrode. According to the Envi- ronmental Protection Agency, most common lead problems oc- cur from brass or chrome pipes that have been welded with lead solder. “ 8-year-old son, Samir, who at- tends Boise-Eliot Elementary, to the lead testing clinic. She was worried about his lead exposure and frustrated at the lack of com- munication from school district. These are old buildings, and are they up to par? There are so many issues other than just the quality of education Older homes built before 1968 are more likely to have lead pipes, ixtures and solder. Only two of PPS school buildings were built in the last 30 years. More than half of them were built before 1940. Low levels of lead exposure in children can lead to behavior and learning problems, lower IQs, hy- peractivity, slowed growth and anemia. The EPA says there is no minimum safe level for lead in the water because such small amounts can afect human health. Bri Williams brought her “I feel that the situation at hand should have been handled better as far as informing us of what was going on,” Williams said. “The tests were in March, we were just inding out in May. That is over a month and a half of not knowing.” Jae Douglas, M.D., the Environ- mental Health Director at Mult- nomah County Health Depart- ment, says they will be able to test about 250 children and pregnant women that evening. Read the rest of this story at TheSkanner.com cont’d from pg 1 “Jim Crow Hill, no one even knew that existed. Somebody put it on a map.” All three landmarks are now on pri- vately owned land, and there are no signs in the area. The term “Jim Crow” refers to a sys- tem of state and local laws enforcing racial segregation in the United States, passed in the late 19th century and up- held throughout the irst half of the 20th century. While the term “Jim Crow law” ap- peared in print as early as the 1890s, it’s derived from a minstrel character cre- ated in the 1830s. Historians have recorded a few difer- ent theories about how the landmarks got their name. One is that they refer to Jim Saules, an African American sailor and business owner who lived in the area in the irst part of the 19th century. Another story — one Budnick said his father relayed to him as a child – is that there was a Native American chief in the area named Jim Crow. A third story says birds tended to congregate in the area. Budnick said the names were prob- ably assigned well before “Jim Crow” became synonymous with racial dis- “ change geographic names. “The committee’s concern is local, common use,” Maki said. The committee is also considering changing the name of a bay on Shaw Is- Nobody knows where the name came from, but it’s ofensive and should be changed, so I did my best to look up historical facts crimination. “I’d bet my life on that. It wasn’t racist, it had nothing to do with keeping Afri- can Americans out of Brookield,” he said. But that doesn’t matter, he added. “Nobody knows where the name came from, but it’s ofensive and should be changed, so I did my best to look up his- torical facts,” Budnick said. Maki also said the origins of place names — and likely intent of those who made the maps – isn’t the most import- ant consideration when deciding to land from Squaw Bay to either Sq’eme- nen Bay or Reef Neet Bay, given the his- tory of the term “squaw” being used as a derogatory slur for Native American women. Those proposals will then go to the U.S. Board on Geographic Names for approval. Last year the U.S. board approved changes that included the removal of the word “coon” from a lake and creek in Washington and the removal of the word “squaw” from three places in Or- egon. PHOTO BY JOE BUDNICK “ Reading Program begins Friday, June 17, when kids of all ages can sign up at any neighborhood library. For more in- formation, visit https:// mul t c ol i b . o r g /s u m - mer-reading. This year’s program gets underway with a big change for young readers and their fam- PHOTO BY SUSAN FRIED Summer Jim Crow Point, on the Columbia in western Washington, may soon be renamed Brookield Point, after a cannery town that lourished in the area until the 1930s.