JULY 26, 2017 Portland and Seattle Volume XXXIX, No. 41 PHOTO COURTESY OF TRIMET CHALLENGING PEOPLE TO SHAPE A BETTER FUTURE NOW 25 CENTS News .............................. 3,8-10 A & E .....................................6-7 Opinion ...................................2 New NAACP President ...10 Calendars ........................... 4-5 Bids/Classifieds ....................11 NEW CHIEF TriMet to Introduce SHARES Low-Income Fare NEW VISION T Portland commuters board TriMet bus. New state funds will also expand bus services See TRIMET on page 3 “African Prince,” featured in Frison’s exhibit. Local Mural Artist Exhibits page 7 Black Seniors Walk Down Memory Lane in Portland page 9 Mike Myers, Portland’s New Fire Chief, Pilots New Program for Managing Emergencies By Christen McCurdy Of The Skanner News W hen Mike Myers left the Las Vegas Fire Department 2013, where he’d served as chief since 2011, he found he was nowhere near ready for re- tirement. Myers, now 50, moved to Chicago, then to Montgomery, Florida, but found himself restless and decided to re-enter the job market. “It was just boring,” he said of re- tirement. First he moved to St. Charles, Mis- souri, outside St. Louis, and took a job in that city’s fire department. Then Portland Fire and Rescue an- Portland Fire and Rescue Chief Mike Myers has announced a pilot project he hopes will help the department better identify and address public health issues. calls the fire department responds to are urgent, but not in a category that would require a paramedic’s re- sponse — including non-emergency medical calls. Numbers released by Portland Fire & Rescue in response to a request for more detaiedl list “rescue and EMS,” which made up the largest category in fiscal year 2016-17 numbered 52,341 out of 85,866 total calls. At 61 percent)it is the largest total category, but doesn’t break the calls into emergency or non-emer- gency categories. But categories that clearly don’t qualify as emergencies made up a large share of the remaining 39 per- cent of calls. These include “good in- nounced it was searching for a new chief, and he jumped at the chance. Myers and his wife — with whom, for several years, he ran a travel blog that featured photos of the couple kissing at destinations around the world — had been eager to relocate to the Northwest. “We didn’t want to go just any- where,” Myers said. Myers is evaluating Portland’s fire department top to bottom, looking at hiring practices, training and emer- gency response. He’s also proposing a way to re- spond to non-emergency calls he says hasn’t been tried anywhere else in the United States. Myers said about 80 percent of See CHIEF on page 3 Portland NAACP Makes Bid to Host National Conference in 2020 Travel Portland estimates the conference would add $6.7 million to local economy By Christen McCurdy Of The Skanner News R epresentatives of the NAACP Portland Branch and Travel Portland made a bid Tuesday to host the organization’s national conference in 2020. Branch president Jo Ann Hardes- ty, along with representatives from Travel Portland and Metro, traveled to Baltimore this week for the 108th annual NAACP conference, where national organizers accepted bids for the 2019 and 2020 conferences. A Friday press release announc- ing the local branch’s plan to bid ac- knowledged Portland, which Census figures say is Whitest major Amer- ican city, may be a counterintuitive choice for the event. Recent confer- ence hosts include Cincinnati, Phil- adelphia, Las Vegas and Houston — See NAACP on page 3 PHOTO FROM THE SKANNER ARCHIVE riMet has announced it will be adopting a low-income fare pro- gram — a plan which has been bouncing between the transit agency and local advocates. The program, said TriMet, has been made possible through the passing of Oregon’s transportation package which, at $5.3 billion, funnels invest- ments into transit across the state. Alongside a low-income fare, TriMet will also expand bus service. “We couldn’t, as a region, move for- ward until a funding mechanism was PHOTO BY BERNIE FOSTER By Melanie Sevcenko Of The Skanner News The NAACP Portland Branch put in a bid this week to host the organization’s national convention in 2020. Portland hosted the 69th National Convention in 1978 at Memorial Coliseum. Pictured here speaking at that event is Benjamin Hooks, who served as executive director of the NAACP from 1977 to 1992.