FEBRUARY 1, 2017 Portland and Seattle Volume XXXIX No. 18 25 CENTS News ...............................3,8,10 A & E .....................................6-7 Opinion ...................................2 Dr. Jasmine ......................8 Calendars ........................... 4-5 Bids/Classifieds ....................11 CHALLENGING PEOPLE TO SHAPE A BETTER FUTURE NOW PHOTO THE SKANNER NEWS IMMIGRATION PROTEST Dr. T. Allen Bethel, President of the Albina Ministerial Alliance, at The Skanner’s Martin Luther King Jr. Breakfast 2010. AMAC Urges City to Continue COAB L See COAB on page 3 Thousands of people filled Westlake Park and the surrounding streets to protest President Trump’s executive order which imposes a temporary, 90-day ban on people entering the U.S. from Iraq, Syria, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen.  The order stopped dozens of people who had already received visas from entering the country which prompted protests in dozens of airports including Seatac on Saturday evening and larger protests in several cities, including Portland, through the weekend. Sharon Gary-Smith Passes the MRG Torch Former MRG director reflects on the foundation’s growth during her tenure By Melanie Sevcenko Of The Skanner News AP PHOTO/CAROLYN KASTER T President Donald Trump speaks during the 58th Presidential Inauguration at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, Friday, Jan. 20, 2017. Inauguration Speech Talks of ‘Carnage’ page 10 ‘Bowing Down Is Not an Option’ page 8 he idea of a force like Sharon Gary-Smith ever slowing down seems almost com- ical. But, at 68-years-old, this mogul has recently stepped down from her role as the executive direc- tor of the McKenzie River Gathering (MRG)  Founda- tion, a 40-year-old philan- thropic organization that mobilizes resources for Oregon communities. With unprecedented vigor and integrity, Gary- Smith joined MRG in 2011 and helped steer the char- itable nonprofit into the spotlight. As the daughter of a fierce activist who once sat on MRG’s grant-making committee, Gary-Smith was raised with her moth- er’s social justice spir- it, which she took to the streets and communities of Portland. “You did the work, no matter what your station in life, whether you were African America or fe- male,” recalled Gary-Smith in an interview with The Skanner. From her earliest years, Gary-Smith remembers wanting to stand out for her talents and passions, especially among Oregon’s overwhelming White population. And so it was MRG’s support of groups such as the Black United Fund, the Coalition for Black Men and various la- bor and immigrant orga- nizations that aligned with her own interests. “That work was very challenging and different in Oregon, to stand up po- litically and say, ‘We’re in- vesting our money in this change,’” she said. Gary-Smith’s life-long drive to make change led to careers in Atlanta, Geor- gia, where she worked with a national Black Women’s Health Imperative, and as the president of the Urban League in Austin, Texas. But her unwavering aspi- ration was to challenge the changemaker persona of philanthropy. Coinciding with that urge, she devel- oped a knack discussing diversity, equity and inclu- See GARY-SMITH on page 3 ‘Constructing Identity’ Puts Black Artists on Display Portland Art Museum will work throughout the spring to engage community, local artists By Christen McCurdy Of The Skanner News W hen Trayvon Martin was killed, Monica Montgom- ery was working as a pre- school teacher in Washing- ton, D.C. Suddenly she found herself fielding kids’ questions about wheth- er it was bad to eat Skittles or wear hooded sweatshirts. “It made my community feel very unsafe,” Montgomery said. She started to create curricula around community care that impart- ed the Black Lives Matter message to children. Soon after, she said, she was fired. “I was told, ‘Your politics aren’t wel- come here. You’re too radical. You’re fired,’” Montgomery said. She started the Museum of Impact, which she describes as the world’s See ART on page 3 PHOTO BY CHRISTEN MCCURDY By Melanie Sevcenko Of The Skanner News ast Thursday, the City of Portland’s Community Oversight Advisory Board (COAB) met for the final time in its current formation. With Mayor Ted Wheeler in atten- dance, along with representatives of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), the closing meeting was a culmina- tion of years of confusion, conflict and distrust. It seems no one party was equipped to save the sinking ship, amid pleas from COAB members to keep it afloat. The COAB was formed after a 2012 investigation of the City of Portland PHOTO BY SUSAN FRIED Members of police oversight board plead to keep it afloat Monica Montgomery, founding director of the Museum of Impact, addresses a crowd of about 100 people at the community opening of “Constructing Identity,” the Portland Art Museum’s exhibit of African American art dating back more than 130 years.