MARCH 21, 2018 25 CENTS Portland and Seattle Volume XL No. 25 News .............................. 3,8-10 A & E .....................................6-7 Opinion ...................................2 Putin ................................9 Calendars ........................... 4-5 Bids/Classifieds ....................11 CHALLENGING PEOPLE TO SHAPE A BETTER FUTURE NOW MEYER’S NEW HOME Residency Supports Artists of Color ‘Art Saved My Life’ will select three local artists to create works around community healing By Melanie Sevcenko For The Skanner News I n a new twist on the ‘artist residen- cy,’ a group of Portland creatives are launching ‘Art Saved My Life’ – a local program that supports Artists of Color who have been impacted by the city’s decades-long struggle with gentrification, forced relocation and AP PHOTO/JOSSY OLA See ART on page 3 People gather outside the general hospital where the kidnapped girls from the Government Girls Science and Technical College Dapchi who were released are being treated, in Dapchi, Nigeria, March 21. Boko Haram Returns Nigeria Girls page 10 August Wilson’s ‘Two Training Running’ Comes to Portland page 7 PHOTO COURTESY OF MEYER MEMORIAL TRUST ‘Art Saved My Life’ is an artist residency program that supports Portland-based Artists of Color to create works around healing from gentrification. This lot at 2045 N. Vancouver will be the new headquarters of Meyer Memorial Trust, one of Oregon’s largest philanthropic organizations. The foundation intends to relocate in March 2020. Meyer Memorial Trust to Relocate in 2020 Foundation announces purchase of property on North Vancouver By Christen McCurdy Of The Skanner News M eyer Memorial Trust is moving to close-in North Portland. The state’s second larg- est foundation, which manages an $800 million endowment created by grocery-chain found- er Fred Meyer, has an- nounced its purchase of a 25,000-square-foot lot at the intersection of North Tillamook and Vancou- ver. Foundation CEO Doug Stamm, who retires at the end of April, said the orga- nization will move into the new spot in March 2020. Public records say the lot sold for $4.9 million in January. Foundation CEO Doug Stamm said Meyer’s lease at its long-term office is coming to an end, and higher-ups started look- ing for a new location to house its increased staff. When Stamm started 16 years ago, the foundation employed 11 people; it now employs 43. The 25,000-square-foot site currently hosts Ser- geant’s Towing, which had owned the property since 2000. “We think it’ll be an im- provement over a tow yard,” Stamm said. “Not too many people show up at the tow yard very happy, I can tell you that.” Meyer has engaged the development firm Project^ and is in discussions with an architect. The founda- tion is also talking with community partners about what the end result should look like. Anyeley Hallová, a part- ner at Project^, said the site was chosen partly for its proximity to transit and the availability of park- ing for partners driving in from elsewhere in the state. She also said Stamm and others stressed the im- portance of developing a site that wouldn’t displace anyone from their homes. “The conversation we’ve had has been less about what is on site but with Meyer being there, how that can be a positive con- See MEYER on page 3 REPORT: One in Three Oregonians Struggle to Afford Housing Housing crisis has hit renters especially hard The Skanner News Staff O ne in three Oregon families struggle to afford housing, and renters have been hit especially hard, says a new report detailing the extent of the state’s housing crisis. Last week the Oregon Center for Public Policy found a quarter See HOUSING on page 3 Oregon households of color more likely to rent Share of racial or ethnic group renting their residence in Oregon in 2016 70% Black/African-American Hispanic/Latino 58% American Indian/Alaskan Native 58% 57% Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander 53% Other Race 52% 2+ Races 42% Asian White (Non-Hispanic) 35% All groups have a statistically significant difference compared to white (non-Hispanic) households at the 90% confidence level. Source: OCPP analysis of Census Bureau American Community Survey data. O REGON C ENTER FOR P UBLIC P OLICY | OCPP.ORG