Author Archives: Pamela

Pamela Fitzsimmons lives in Portland, Ore., and was a reporter and editor at newspapers in California and Washington state for more than 25 years.

She grew up in Medford, Ore., a working-class town that was once populated with pear orchards and formerly home to lumber mills, fruit-packing houses and excellent public schools (among the required reading in senior year: Arthur Koestler’s “Darkness at Noon”). She worked her way through the University of Oregon as a forest fire lookout for the U.S. Forest Service, stationed on mountains in the Umpqua, Wallowa-Whitman and Willamette national forests.

In the decade of the 90’s, like hundreds of other reporters in Southern California, she wrote about gangs, drugs, deteriorating schools, urban sprawl, poverty and its offsprings: more babies, more poverty, more social problems. In her case, the focus was on San Bernardino where smog obscured the San Bernardino mountains, and there was never a hint of orange blossoms in the air.

By the time she returned to the Pacific Northwest, parts of it were starting to look like San Bernardino, minus the smog. Gangs, strip-commercial sprawl, declining schools, the meth epidemic, illegal immigration – California’s bad dreams had moved north. Didn’t anyone read the news and see this coming?

Bullied by a Trendy Crime

The identity of the shooter in the Sparks, Nev., school killings hadn’t been released before a popular excuse was quickly invoked: He had been bullied. “There has to be an end to this bullying. It is the responsibility not only of the parents but also the schools have to put a stop to this. Bullying […]

Keep ‘The Dean’ and His Size 13

For the first time since he murdered a police officer 21 years ago, Sidney Dean Porter might know what it’s like to gasp for life. He was supposed to be released from prison in June, courtesy of the Oregon Board of Parole and Post-Prison Supervision who voted unanimously earlier this year to free him. But […]

Craven conversations on race

It’s too bad Willamette Week’s cover story on the expulsion rates of black students in Portland didn’t run a week earlier, when Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas was in town. What would he have said about Kwame Briggs, whose 12-year-old son has been suspended more times than the dad can remember, and who blames his […]

Newspapers: ‘Nobody Knows Anything’

Every time you read a news story that mentions the president’s “jobs bill,” pause and consider that the journalist who wrote those words is living under the likely threat of losing his or her job. What’s it like to write about the decline in solid, middle-class jobs knowing your own might be next? It’s not […]

King and ‘the Gangstahs’

What happens to a dream deferred? Ask anyone. We’ve all had dreams deferred. Langston Hughes asked if a dream deferred festers like a sore — and then runs, or does it stink like rotten meat, or sag like a heavy load. What he led up to in his poem Harlem was that a dream deferred […]

Freedom is the New Prison

Fortunately for Piper Kerman, Eric Holder was not Attorney General in 2004 when she was sentenced to federal prison for a “drug-related crime.” Had she been spared prison, she would not be a media celebrity now and author of a best-selling memoir. A “drug-related crime” and 13 months in prison were good for Kerman. It […]

Playing Now: The ‘New Jim Crow’

The summer of Trayvon Martin is morphing into the summer of Oscar Grant. Two young black males shot and killed by two non-black males who felt threatened. (Had the shooters been black, we wouldn’t have heard about Martin or Grant. They would have been reduced to news briefs.) Grant, 21, was killed in 2009 during […]

Let Us Now Praise the Jury

George Zimmerman’s best defense may have been his fearful baby face. He was accused of trying to be a hero or a wanna-be cop. He looked like an ordinary man, scared and tired of being scared. “They always get away,” he told the 911 dispatcher, reporting what he thought might be a suspect in a […]

Downsizing High-Tech’s Future

In the 1990’s, I was so busy as a newspaper reporter in California I didn’t notice that men like my father were losing their work in the Oregon sawmills. When I came home on vacation one summer, I saw a bumper sticker on my dad’s pickup truck: “Save a logger, eat an owl.” I’d heard […]

Our Vines Have Grown Twisted

Next year at this time, we’ll probably be outraged that our medical records are all over the Internet, courtesy of the Affordable Care Act. Electronic records are supposed to save money and improve care. Inevitably, they won’t remain private. If the reaction to the recent revelations about the government accessing our cell phone and Internet […]