February 28, 2018 The Skanner Page 3 News cont’d from pg 1 “ their love of music. After meeting in 1991, when they both worked for City Commissioner Gretchen Kafoury, the two struck up a unique friendship and would of- ten get together to sing. “When she speaks in public, what makes her speeches so impactful is that she’s direct and ev- ery word means some- In the same way that she’s spellbinding when she speaks, I’m spellbound when she sings Civil Rights Ordinance. She was also the diver- sity director at Cascade AIDS Project, and in 2012 she accepted the Lifetime Achievement from the Portland Human Rights Commission. But when she wasn’t on the frontlines of the cause, Saadat was sing- ing. “I cannot remember not singing,” she told The Skanner. “During World War II, I lived with my grand- mother who sang every day, so my brother and I sang with her.” While Saadat said her entire family had a gift for song, she never gave much thought to a career in music. “The closest to any professional training I’ve had was one year in my high school’s glee club, about a year in the children’s chorus at the AME Zion church, and with voice coach Susan Dorn while I worked with Thomas to do this album,” Saadat said. “I would guess there are about 66 years between the church and this expe- rience.” It’s no surprise that Saadat and Lauderdale’s almost 30-year long friendship grew out of thing,” said Lauderdale, who formed Pink Marti- ni in 1994 after stepping away from a profession in politics. “And that’s how she sings, which very few people do.” Eventually, Saadat ap- proached Lauderdale with the idea of record- ing a few songs to share with family and friends. That was the seedling which, six years later, would become “Love for Sale.” “Each of these songs on the album has a nar- rative and her voice is so rewarding to listen to,” Lauderdale told The Skanner. “In the same way that she’s spellbind- ing when she speaks, I’m spellbound when she sings.” The album marks the first time the activist has recorded professionally. “I never recorded any- thing because I’ve nev- er regarded myself as a singer. I’ve never seen myself as someone who had a singer’s voice,” said Saadat. “I don’t read music nor do I play an instrument, so I just con- sidered my singing as something I did mostly for me.” Broadband Read the rest of this story at TheSkanner.com Law cont’d from pg 1 (D-West Eugene and Junction City), drafted the bill after buying a house in Eugene and discover- ing the property deed said the house could only be sold to “mem- bers of the Caucasian race.” “I went back and forth with the realtor and the title company to see if it could get that language taken out,” she said. She discovered the process was “time consuming and expensive” and not very accessible to some- one who could not afford a law- yer, partly because the process requires that all owners of record be notified. “For me, part of the reason of bringing the bill is to continue the conversation in the legisla- ture and the public and continue the conversation about our histo- ry of racist discrimination. Peo- ple know about redlining, people know about discrimination by the financial system, but they may not know about this,” Fahey said. Richard Rothstein, a research associate of the Economic Policy Institute and a fellow at the Thur- good Marshall Institute of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund and of the Haas Institute at the Uni- versity of California (Berkeley), writes in the 2017 book, “The Col- or of Law: A Forgotten History of “ White home- owners formed neighborhood associations which enforced the deeds How Our Government Segregat- ed America,” that restrictive cov- enants were common in housing deeds through the mid-20th cen- tury and were part of a system of legal tools that kept neighbor- hoods segregated and prevent- ed African American families from owning homes and accru- ing wealth. White homeowners formed neighborhood associa- tions to enforce the deeds. . “Between 1935 and 1955 W.E. Boeing, the founder of Boeing Aircraft, developed suburbs north of Seattle. During this pe- riod and after World War II, the South Seattle Land Company, the Puget Sound Mill Company, and others constructed more sub- urbs. The builders all wrote ra- cially restrictive language into their deeds. The result was a city whose African American popu- lation was encircled by all-white suburbs,” Rothstein wrote. The book also notes that local governments aggressively pro- moted restrictive covenants and that the Federal Housing Admin- istration gave higher ratings to mortgage applications if there were no African Americans liv- ing in the neighborhood. The Skanner invites readers to share their stories with restric- tive covenants in Portland. Please write to news@theskanner.com or call (503) 285-5555, ext. 503. Read more at TheSkanner.com cont’d from pg 1 to form a 501(c)(4) corporation and po- litical action committee. According to the Institute for Local Self-Reliance’s Community Networks page, more than 750 American commu- nities have built publicly owned broad- band networks. “When a community is served by a municipal network, the infrastructure “ PCRI Breaks Ground Portland Community Reinvestment Initiatives, along with Albina Construction, Brett Schulz Architect and other partners broke ground Feb. 27 on the first homes for purchase by first-time homebuyers as part of its Pathway 1000 Initiative. Four new townhomes will be built in North Portland. These new homes, for sale to low- and moderate-income first-time buyers will be prioritized for families displaced from North and Northeast Portland and families at risk of displacement. Pictured here are Travis Phillips, Housing Development Director (PCRI) –Maxine Fitzpatrick Executive Director (PCRI), Dennis Harris (Owner of Albina Construction, LLC.) and Brett Schulz, Bret Schulz Architect. institute’s Community Broadband Net- works Initiative. Hanna sees the notion as a revival of a Progressive Era notion of making cer- tain utilities part of the public good. “A hundred years ago there was an effort to municipalize utilities, which is responsible for the city life we know today. There’s been a gradual chipping A hundred years ago there was an effort to municipalize utilities, which is responsible for the city life we know today is a publicly-owned asset, similar to a road or an electric utility. There are a variety of models from full retail, in which the city takes on the role of an Internet Service Provider like Comcast or AT&T, delivering services directly to residents and businesses, to Institu- tional networks in which only munici- pal facilities receive services,” said Lisa Gonzalez, a senior researcher for the away at that effort,” Hanna said. Senior likened the potential creation of a municipal utility to the creation of the Portland Water Bureau in 1885, pri- or to which there were a number of pri- vate water companies in Portland that failed to consistently provide clean wa- ter as the city grew. Last year the City of Portland re- leased a Digital Equity Action Plan that reported 15 percent of Portland households do not have Internet access at home, citing cost as a barrier. “It starts when young people have homework they can- not complete,” Phil- lip-Robbins said. That inequity perpetuates Advocates are pushing for a publicly-owned broadband network in itself when low-in- Portland. come people do not have the necessary tools to search for be helpful, they can also be complex jobs or housing. “If we want to close the and difficult to apply for, and that may be why they are so under-utilized. gap, this is a major opportunity.” “The other part of this that’s really The plan recommends making sure compelling is money stays in the com- wi-fi is available at all public buildings munity,” Phillip-Robbins said. throughout the county, and outreach to The next step is to procure $300,000 ensure private programs that provide for a feasibility study. Advocates said Internet access to low-income people, they’ve had interest from both the city such as Comcast’s Internet Essentials and the county. program and CenturyLink’s Internet Basics. Read the full story at TheSkanner.com Senior said while those programs can BY PROJECTMANHATTAN (CC BY-SA 3.0) and under-represented groups including com- munities of color, wom- en, and LGBTQ people. Saadat was appointed Oregon’s affirmative ac- tion director under Gov. Neil Goldschmidt in 1987. Later, she worked within Multnomah County’s De- partment of Community and Family Services and helped draft the Portland PHOTO COURTESY OF PCRI Saadat