February 20, 2019 The Skanner Portland & Seattle Page 3 News the Vancouver, Wash.- based leader of Patriot Prayer, a group whose demonstrations have often descended into bloody clashes with an- tifascist demonstrators. The stories drew nation- al attention and criticism from the named com- missioners, prompted the mayor to call for an investigation of the texts and to ask Niiya to cease communication with Gibson. The Portland Police Bureau announced there would be an internal re- view, released additional texts and the city sched- uled a listening session, which will take place from 6 to 8 p.m. Feb. 21at the Maranatha Church, 4222 NE 12th Ave. Wheeler has stood by his call for an indepen- dent investigation into the text exchanges and his comments that the text exchanges appear to “unnecessarily encour- age” Gibson. In a statement, Wheel- er said police must re- main objective and that the texts appear to “cross several boundaries.” “They also raise ques- tions about whether war- rants are being enforced consistently and what information is being shared with individuals who may be subject to ar- rest,” he said. In one text, Niiya tells Gibson he does not see a need to arrest Gibson’s assistant, Tusitala “Tiny” Toese, who often brawls with anti-fascist protest- ers, even if he was the target of a warrant, un- less Toese committed a new crime. On Wednesday Willa- mette Week reported that the Multnomah County District Attorney’s office built a convincing case for prosecuting Toese but have so far failed to do so, in part because they’ve asked the police for more evidence and PPB has not provided it. “Just make sure he doesn’t do anything which may draw our at- tention,” Niiya texted Gibson on Dec. 9, 2017. “If he still has the war- rant in the system (I don’t run you guys so I don’t personally know) the of- ficers could arrest him. I don’t see a need to arrest “ Just make sure he doesn’t do anything which may draw our attention on the warrant unless there is a reason.” “This story, like many that have come before it, simply confirms what many in the communi- ty have already known — there are members of the Portland police force who work in collusion with right-wing extrem- ists,” wrote city commis- sioner Jo Ann Hardesty after the stories were re- leased. Eudaly joined Hardes- ty and Wheeler in call- ing for an investigation, writing, “This revela- tion has only served to confirm suspicions and deepen the divide be- tween the PPB and the community. All mem- bers of our police bureau must follow our rules and uphold our progres- sive values, not aid and abet groups and individ- uals bent on doing harm to our communities and responsible for terroriz- ing our city.” PPCOA’s pending grievance alleges that these comments vio- late a clause in its labor agreement with the city, saying if it has reason to reprimand or disclipline a commanding officer, “it shall be done in a man- ner that is least likely to embarrass the command- ing officer before other employees or the public.”  Heidi Beirich at the Southern Poverty Law Center, said the texts did seem “odd for their chat- tiness” and warrant an investigation. Read the rest of this story at TheSkanner.com Oregon Children’s Theatre Presents “The Legend of Rock, Paper, Scissors!” Oregon Children’s Theatre will present “The Legend of Rock, Paper, Scissors!”, a world premiere musical by John Maclay with music by Eric Nordin, directed by Stan Foote, based on the best-selling children’s book by Drew Daywalt, March 2 through April 14, 2 p.m. and 5 p.m. Saturdays and 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. Sundays at Winningstad Theatre, 1111 SW Broadway. For more information, visit www.octc.org or call (503) 228- 9571. The ensemble cast features Janelle Rae Davis, Alex Lankford, Alec Cameron Lugo, Rob Lauta, and Tara Velarde. Rosa Parks cont’d from pg 1 ed by the Oregon School Report Card – and according to text from school board meeting minutes, Portland Public Schools consid- ered those gains insufficient. Last May, the Portland Public Schools board voted to keep Rosa Parks on a year-round schedule for one more school year, then transition back to a year-round schedule. As Oregon Public Broadcasting reported Monday, teachers say despite repeated efforts to con- tact the school district to confirm the change and offer input, they didn’t receive direct confirmation — or any direct communication from the school district about the school’s schedule -- until this month. “During the pilot years of the year-round calendar at Rosa Parks School, some improve- ments in student achievement were shown. Unfortunately, not enough growth was shown com- pared to similar demographic schools. Also, it is inconclusive whether the gains are due to the yearround calendar, or due to the lack of comparable baseline data,” reads a resolution in the school board’s meeting minutes from the May 8, 2018 PPS board meeting. That resolution recommends that the school continue with a year-round schedule for 2018- 2019 and return to a traditional schedule the following year. Rosa Parks teachers who spoke with The Skanner said there was talk of a schedule shift in Novem- ber 2017, and that at the time the district was concerned about pay- roll, curriculum rollout and pro- fessional development. A Feb. 12 email sent from Port- land Public Schools to Rosa Parks staff notes that because other schools in the area — including George Middle School and Roos- “ gram, making year-over-year, ap- ples-to-apples test score compari- sons difficult. (PPS was not able to confirm this in time for The Skan- ner’s deadline.) Nichole Watson, who teaches fourth grade at the school, told Originally, when the district had decid- ed that we were going to pilot the year- round program, that was supposed to be offered to other cluster schools evelt High School — are on tradi- tional schedules, it was difficult for families to juggle the schedule of kids on different scheduled. “Originally, when the district had decided that we were going to pilot the year-round program, that was supposed to be offered to other cluster schools,” which would prevent precisely the fric- tion the district described, said Beyoung Yu, who teaches English as a second language at Rosa Parks. Harry Esteve, a spokesperson for Portland Public Schools, said while the year-round pilot pre- dates his hiring by PPS, he has also heard that there was talk of extending the schedule. “My understanding was that this was set up as a pilot program with the idea that there were oth- er schools that would go to it but that didn’t happen,” Esteve said. According to Yu, the school has not used the same standard- ized test every year since it has been on the year-round pilot pro- The Skanner that during her 2017 campaign, school board member Rita Moore described standard- ized tests as “fundamentally bi- ased” and “not useful” for par- ents, students or teachers – and that the emphasis on test scores was not the district’s original ar- gument for the schedule change. And while the May vote was public, Watson said, it came at the end of a meeting that had last- ed more than five hours, with no prior communication to teach- ers or parents about when the board would vote on the schedule change. “We just feel, as predominantly a community of color, these are the decisions that people in pow- er make when they don’t really work for equity,” Watson said. The school adopted the year- round pilot to help address “sum- mer slide” — the phenomenon where students lose ground over the summer months. Read more at TheSkanner.com cont’d from pg 1 bers of the public to contact homicide detective William Winters at (503) 823- 0466 if they have any information. The state medical examiner will conduct an autopsy to determine the cause and manner of Goggans’ death. Goggans’ family held a vigil for her Saturday evening in East Portland and a viewing Monday afternoon at the Terry Family Funeral Home, and has set up a GoFundMe to help with funer- al expenses (https://www.gofundme. com/in-the-loving-memory-of-jaquo- na-lakaya-goggans?utm_source=face- book&utm_medium=social&utm_cam- paign=fb_co_shareflow_m). Goggans’ death is not the first time violence has been visited on Palmer’s family. She had already been involved “ The community needs to stop being silent on stuff like this in movements to prevent violence for years when, in January 2015, her son, Jazman A. Moore was shot four times in an incident that was described as gang-related and which he survived. She formed an organization called the Go Get Your Child Community Violence Prevention Coalition to assist families affected by gang violence and help gang members turn their lives around. “The community needs to stop being silent on stuff like this,” Palmer told The Skanner. “That is the coldest thing that you can do to a person, to kill them and put them in the trunk of a car somewhere. I don’t know who killed her. She belonged to someone. She wasn’t a piece of trash. All the families are being affected by all this violence in the community and it needs to stop and we need to stand up and take a stand as a community.” PHOTO BY Goggans cont’d from pg 1 PHOTO COURTESY OF OREGON CHILDREN’S THEATER PPB Texts Jaquonna Goggans