AUGUST 17, 2016 Portland and Seattle Volume XXXVIII No. 46 25 CENTS News ...............................3,9,10 A & E .....................................6-7 Opinion ...................................2 Marc Lamont Hill .............7 Calendars ........................... 4-5 Bids/Classiieds ....................11 CHALLENGING PEOPLE TO SHAPE A BETTER FUTURE NOW BAN THE BUNKER Mayor Hales speaks about Terminal 1 at the Portland City Council meeting on August 10, 2016. Controversial Terminal 1 space expected to cost $100 million By Arashi Young Of The Skanner News P ortland City Council members voted to approve a temporary lease for a massive homeless shel- ter in NW Portland. The split 3-2 council vote came ater three hours of contentious testimony from neighbors, developers, community organizers and the houseless. The vote allows private developer Homer Williams to begin planning for a $100 million homeless complex at Ter- minal 1. Williams has six months to cre- ate a plan for the Oregon Trail to Hope project, which is modeled ater San An- AP PHOTO/PAUL HOLSTON See TERMINAL 1 on page 3 Ashley D. Bell was one of the 18 black delegates at the Republican National Convention in Cleveland and has been hired as RNC senior strategist and national director of African American engagement. Republicans Court Black Voters page 9 Gospel Singer Kathy Taylor Ministers to the World With Her Singing page 10 PHOTO BY SUSAN FRIED City Council Approves Shelter Activists interrupted a Seattle City Council meeting Aug. 15 during the public comment period about a proposed new police precinct in North Seattle. The Seattle City Council chamber was illed to capacity with people who opposed what they call the $149 million dollar Police “Bunker.”  At one point the meeting was suspended when dozens of people tried to enter the already over crowded chamber.  Despite overwhelming opposition the City Council voted to approve a resolution to proceed with a the project following a closer look at costs and a racial equity analysis. Youth and the Law Project Helps Educate Students Comic book will educate PPS students interacting with law enforcement By Christen McCurdy Of The Skanner News W hen Portland Police oicers used a Taser on a 16-year-old Roosevelt High School stu- dent two years ago, Skye Skalbeck — who is about to embark on her senior year there — wanted to do some- thing about it. “Kids were really upset, but nobody knew what they could do about it,” Skalbeck said. Then a sophomore, Skal- beck got involved with the Youth and the Law project — a collaborative project between schools and com- munity groups intended to educate young people about their rights in inter- actions with police. The project has pro- duced two publications so far, and the third — which publishes this week — is a comic book by and for youth: a small group of stu- dents in the Immigrant and Refugee Community Orga- nization’s SummerWorks program is completing production this week ater eight weeks of research, discussion with communi- ty groups and writing and drawing. The book will be distrib- uted to incoming freshman throughout Portland Pub- lic Schools this fall. The comic features ive diferent scenarios youth may be likely to encoun- ter with law enforcement (including one scenario in- volving an interaction with a school resource oicer). The project is also devel- oping training manuals to train youth and their par- ents on their rights, and organizer JoAnn Hardesty said if funding becomes available organizers would like to hold training ses- sions throughout the year for youth and their parents to understand their rights when interacting with law enforcement. Students have re- searched laws, spoken with lawyers, talked to commu- nity groups representing diferent communities of color and participated in ride-alongs with Portland Police oicers. Hardes- ty also said the Portland Police Bureau has made a donation to help with printing expenses, though The Skanner was not able to conirm the amount of the contribution with the bureau. “One of the things that’s most wonderful about this See COMIC on page 3 PFLAG Black Chapter Splits Group will reform as an independent organization, separate from PFLAG Portland By Arashi Young Of The Skanner News T he irst PFLAG Black Chapter in the country has shut its doors and is in the process of reform- ing as an independent organiza- tion. The group has focused on serv- ing the Black LGBTQ community in the Portland area. Khalil Edwards, co-director of the former organization, said the new group will continue this work un- der a new name with full agency and autonomy — a move that required leaving the PFLAG Portland organi- zation. “We still have at the center of it, liting up Black LGBTQ families and individuals and working towards liberation of all Black peoples in this country, in this state, in this city,” Ed- See PFLAG on page 3 According to Khalil Edwards, co-director of Portland Black PFLAG, the organization has shut its doors and is in the process of reforming as an independent organization.