FEBRUARY 21, 2018 Portland and Seattle Volume XL No. 21 Opinion ...................................2 Calendars ........................... 4-5 A & E .....................................6-7 Bids/Classifieds ....................11 CHALLENGING PEOPLE TO SHAPE A BETTER FUTURE NOW 25 CENTS INSIDE: BLACK HISTORY MONTH Special Edition ESPRQII (CC BY-SA 3.0) VIA WIKIPEDIA STATE OF AFRICATOWN Longer-term residents of Lake Oswego say last month’s racist incident targeting an African American student was not isolated. Racism in Lake Oswego F amilies affected by racism in the Lake Oswego School District have organized a meeting to be held on the morning of Feb. 26 to talk to students about Black History Month and address racist behavior at the school. The event comes exactly one month after an African American student was handed a note with a racial slur written on it, sparking local and na- tional media coverage, a Feb. 5 student walkout and scrutiny of racial politics of the wealthy, predominantly White suburb southwest of Portland. The district has also seen a shakeup PHOTO BY KAYLA IRBY, HUNS See LAKE OSWEGO on page 3 Former FBI Director addresses spying on Black activists in a discussion with Howard University students. Comey Visits Howard University page 9 Kam Gives ‘Black Panther’ 4 Stars page 7 MC Dr Renee MCoy, jokes with Chukundi Salisbury, with Showing Up for Youth after introducing him at the 5th annual “State of Africatown: Team African American African Diaspora” gathering held Feb. 17 at Langston Hughes Performing Arts Institute. It featured presentations on the accomplishments of the last year, as well as vision, opportunities, and challenges facing the African American and African Diaspora community in 2018 and beyond. Business Funds Start-Ups with T-Shirt Sales ‘Fund a Founder’ raises capital for Black and female-owned tech companies By Melanie Sevcenko For The Skanner News L ocal tech entrepre- neurs Marceau Michel and Kathryn Brown have recently turned a simple retail transaction into an innovative means of bankrolling start-ups. Launched last fall, Fund a Founder works by offering anybody a chance to fund small companies through the purchase of a custom T-shirt or hoodie. Shop- pers can choose between the ‘Black Founders Mat- ter’ line or the ‘Fund Fe- male Founders’ collection, designed by artists Zephan Knaus in Portland and At- lanta resident Will Henry. Through apparel sales, Michel and Brown are looking to take down the barrier to capital — one T-shirt at a time. While offering gifts or incentives to public do- nors is nothing new in the crowdfunding sphere, Mi- chel said he’s yet to hear of a tech company that’s do- ing it with t-shirts. “It’s definitely a different approach to fundraising and supporting minorities and women in tech,” Mi- chel told The Skanner. Yet the genesis of the campaign came naturally between friends. “(Kath- ryn and I) both faced the same challenges when it came raising money for our business. And we both have celebrated, award-winning businesses that no one wants to fund,” he joked. Michel’s on-demand staffing platform, Werk- horse, won him the Tech- stars Startup Weekend, Portland Pitchfest, and a grant from Prosper Port- land. It was also selected to present at last year’s AfroTech, the largest Black tech conference in the na- tion. In 2018, Michel will be taking Werkhorse to TiE Oregon, an incubator for the state’s newest tech start-ups. Likewise, Brown’s ScoutSavvy — a career finding tool for women in tech — scored her the 2017 Company of the Year: Pre-revenue Award at the Oregon Technology Awards and was a finalist for the Top Social Impact Startups for the 2017 Bend Venture Conference. But regardless of the ac- colades and the demand for their products, the two Portland entrepreneurs have run into the same try- ing circumstance time and See START-UPS on page 3 Minding the Business of the USDA Forest Service Contracting officer Stevonne Fuller manages contracting agreements and logistics By Christen McCurdy Of The Skanner News S tevonne Fuller majored in business and initially consid- ered a career in finance before a chance encounter with a re- cruiter from the USDA Forest Ser- vice changed her mind. Originally from Englewood, New Jersey, Fuller attended Florida A & M University and graduated from its five-year master of business admin- istration program, which grants stu- dents a combined bachelor’s degree and MBA after five years of study. She considered careers at financial services firms like Ernst & Young, but then attended a career fair held by the university and met a Forest Service recruiter who was also a FAMU graduate. “She explained the type of work See FOREST on page 3 PHOTO BY CHRISTEN MCCURDY By Christen McCurdy The Skanner News PHOTO BY SUSAN FRIED Families talk about their experiences in Lake Oswego Schools Stevonne Fuller is a contracting officer for the USDA Forest Service.