April 19, 2017 The Skanner Page 3 News cont’d from pg 1 “ OPAL states on its web- site. “When we need to get home, to a doctor, or to the store, sometimes $2.50 is out of reach. Sometimes our fares ex- pire before we arrive at our destinations.” The organization claims that TriMet has dropped the project to pursue police expansion ‘We don’t need another tran- sit police station’ leged connections to the Immigration and Cus- toms Enforcement. The updated precinct — to be located at the parking garage of the new Hyatt Regency Port- land, adjacent to the Or- egon Convention Center — will accommodate of- ficers, staff and vehicles. Similar to the downtown division, the new pre- cinct will contain only a few holding cells. Unlike a jail, none of those cells will detain people overnight, Rober- ta Altstadt, communica- tions manager at TriMet, told The Skanner. At 9,000 square feet, the original precinct at Northwest First Avenue has struggled with grow- ing pains, a leaking ceil- ing and limited parking space. “We’ve really out- grown that location. The building is also very old,” said Altstadt, adding that the location’s lease with the City of Portland is coming to end. The new precinct will provide double the space and parking, and is ex- pected for completion in 2019. In addition to the new location, TriMet oper- ates three other divi- sions – in the south, the west, and the east. That’s enough to suf- fice operations, said BRU’s organizer Orlando Lopez. “We don’t need another transit police station.” Low-Income Fare Program OPAL and Bus Riders Unite are calling for spending on improved services, additional bus- es to increase frequency, shelter and lighting at bus stops, and BRU’s pro- posed low-income fare plan for bus riders. The program would of- fer more accessible and affordable transporta- tion, while curbing run- ins with police officers, according to its support- ers. “Fare evasion is a vic- timless crime, one that riders almost always commit out of despera- tion or unknowingness,” and racist profiling on the transit system. “Where you put your funding is where your priorities are,” Lopez told The Skanner. “TriMet is prioritizing criminaliz- ing low-income folks.” In defense, Trimet has explained that it is not abandoning a low-in- come fare program for the new police division. As bond proceeds, the $11 million can only legally be spent on tangible in- vestments, such as a pre- cinct, and cannot be fun- neled into fare programs or operations. Altstadt said the transit agency continues to meet with regional partners to devise a funding base to decrease fairs for riders with less means. “We would love to see a low-income fare,” she said. “But TriMet can’t float the bill alone.” The agency is hoping such funds will be made avail- able through the state’s upcoming transporta- tion bill. The agency is also ask- ing the legislature for jurisdiction over pro- cessing fare evasion ci- tations. Doing so would allow riders with cita- tions to pay a fine or do community service, in- stead of attending a court hearing. Furthermore, said Alt- stadt, the new police pre- cinct would not be used for fare violations. Citations Up, Ridership Down Recent numbers show that crimes reported by TriMet riders fell more than 40 percent, totaling 366 incidents. Yet dropping along with TriMet crime is its ridership, which has decreased by over 1.3 million trips in recent years. The latest stats on the 2016 fiscal year show 100,429,710 trips, down from 101,754,048 in 2015. Meanwhile, fare en- forcement actions – which are doled out by TriMet inspectors and supervisors, not transit police – have risen slight- ly. Read the full story at TheSkanner.com PCC Students Seek Gentrification Stories Portland Community College students Olivia Siulagi (left), Jovann Ray and Anna Girdner, as part of Sandy Sampson’s experimental media class, are seeking interview subjects to talk about gentrification in Portland. Their project focuses on changes in North and Northeast Portland and the experience of being Black in a predominantly White city, and the group is particularly interested in talking to longtime residents of the community. The finished project will be exhibited at Portland City Hall later this spring. Anyone interested in participating in the project should contact Siulagi at (503) 939-9207 or email oliviasiulagi@gmail.com. Unthank cont’d from pg 1 Thayer said the lecture series was the brain child of two local physicians: Dr. Nathalie Johnson, the medical director of Legacy Cancer Institute, and her hus- band, Dr. William Johnson, the President of Moda Health, both of whom are African American. “They wanted to create a lec- tureship that would help bring to light the health inequities that exist in the Portland area. They decided to name it after Dr. Nor- val Unthank to give it broader community reach, especially in the African American communi- ty,” Thayer told The Skanner. One of the goals of the lecture series is to bring the community together; another is to “move the needle” politically for communities of col- or in Oregon. Thayer said organizers are assembling an advisory com- mittee, composed of facul- ty and community members, to help plan future lectures. DeNorval Unthank, Sr. was born in Allentown, Pennsylvania in 1899, raised in Kansas City and ed- ucated at the University of Michi- Violence “ the city’s Black population grew, Dr. Unthank turned his attention to improving race relations in Portland. He cofounded the city’s chapter of the Urban League and served as president of the NAACP Portland branch, served on the state Committee for Equal Rights and the Council of Social Agen- They wanted to create a lectureship that would help bring to light the health in- equities that exist in the Portland area in Portland. When he arrived, in 1929, Oregon voters had just three years previously voted to repeal a provision in the state constitu- tion preventing non-White peo- ple from permanently settling in the state. He also arrived to a city where the Ku Klux Klan was entrenched in the city and state power structure, and his family were harassed mercilessly, relo- cating four times before settling in southeast Portland. As his career progressed and cies and helped lobby for the pas- sage of the state’s 1953 Civil Rights Bill. In 1958 he was named Doctor of the Year by the Oregon Medi- cal Society; he received a distin- guished service award from the University of Oregon in 1971; and received awards from the B’nai B’rith Lodge $65, Concordia Col- lege and the National Conference of Christians and Jews. In 1969, the city dedicated a park in North Portland to honor Dr. Unthank. He died in 1977. cont’d from pg 1 work very hard to get them – and may lash out. That doesn’t excuse violent behavior, she said. Rather, un- derstanding how trauma and compounding social factors, in- cluding poverty and racism, can lead to violence can point to a way “ gan and the University of Kansas, and attended medical school at Howard University, graduating in 1926. After performing his intern- ship and residency in Kansas City, he was hired by the Union Pacific Railroad to provide medi- cal services for minority workers Survival is driv- en by this emo- tion called fear forward. In her own practice, she said patients who’ve survived se- vere trauma can have very good outcomes when their trauma and pain are properly addressed. “Survival is driven by this emotion called fear,” Moreland said. “My talk will focus on the intersection of fear, trauma and violence and also the path to healing.” The con- ference is open to eve r yo ne , including family and community members affected by v i o l e n c e , Psychiatrist Dr. Alisha will as well as Moreland-Capuia speak at this Saturday’s leaders and health care all-day forum on gun p rov i d e rs violence as a public looking to health issue. learn more about the issue. But Moreland also said she hopes OHSU and PSU can become more of a resource for people in the community look- PHOTO COURTESY OF OHSU In response, TriMet has attempted to set straight the public con- fusion. “No, We’re Not Build- ing a Jail”, reads the tran- sit agency’s recent Face- book post. It’s an effort to dispel rumors of TriMet foregoing a plan to im- plement a low-income fare and the agency’s al- PHOTO BY BOBBIE DORE FOSTER TriMet ing to address social problems. According to the event an- nouncement page on OHSU’s website, last summer OHSU President Joe Robertson called for a series of institutional con- versations “to help us ensure that our community can bring togeth- er diverse perspectives to address violence as a public health issue  – and that OHSU can act as a conve- ner to bring together others in the communities we serve.” “Healing doesn’t happen in iso- lation. Healing happens when we come to come together as a com- munity,” Moreland said. The conference runs from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Highland Christian Center, 7600 NE Glisan Street. For more information, vis- it www.ohsu.edu/xd/about/news_ events/events/Gun-violence-pub- lic-health.cfm.