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?

A Mark on Judicial Majesty

There was a time – and not that long ago – when Paul DeMuniz entered a courtroom,  people stood up. Those days are gone. Now that DeMuniz is no longer chief justice of the Oregon State Supreme Court, he doesn’t command the respect he used to. Perhaps that’s appropriate. For the past two years, he […]

Journalism’s Agony and Ecstasy

One of the most under-reported stories in 21st Century America is the daily grind of so many workplaces, courtesy of our high-tech supremacists. Monologist Mike Daisey, who likes to say he served three years at Amazon.com, wants more stories about labor. He brought one of them to Portland, a monologue called JOURNALISM. Daisey billed his […]

Taxing Portland’s Art Spirit

Has there ever been a more inspirational work of art than the dollar sign? It mesmerizes everyone from the Dalai Lama to the humblest public employee. His Holiness recently blessed the city of Portland with a visit that drew at least 10,000 to Memorial Coliseum where he offered his usual advice: Scorn wealth and materialism. […]

Portland’s NIMBY Elite

When registered sex offender Thomas Henry Madison of Gresham, Ore., turned up six months ago at a neighborhood meeting protesting a sex offender clinic, he was tossed out. That protest was in the Inner Southeast Portland enclave of Sellwood/Moreland, and those neighbors succeeded in shutting down the clinic. Last week, Madison was back at a […]

The Reincarnation of Al Neuharth

A fascinating S.O.B. entered the cosmic recycling bin a week ago. He will be coming around again soon. His kind never dies. Al Neuharth, USA Today founder, and former chairman and CEO of Gannett Co. Inc. – the largest newspaper chain in the U.S. – shoved off at the age of 89 at his home […]

America’s Marathon on Race

They were young, male and they bore a terrible trauma on their souls. Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev? The Central Park Five? In 21st Century America any disaffected male minority can lay claim to ancestral suffering to explain bad behavior. Here in Oregon, the state Senate recently passed a bill requiring that any new legislation include […]

Advocating for Abusers

No wonder women get slapped around. Consider the spectacle they created in a hearing room at the Oregon State Capitol, where a legislative committee took testimony on a proposed law to drop mandatory-minimum sentences for first-degree sexual abuse, second-degree robbery and second-degree assault. Here they came over two days of hearings, women representing groups with […]

Breaking Weak on Drugs

Whenever my younger brother is asked if he has ever smoked, his standard reply is, “I smoked a pack a day until I turned 18.” Our parents were addicted to nicotine, a habit my brother and I were forced to endure. I learned something early on from my parents’ addiction: If you never start a […]

Reinvesting in Crime

There was no Celebration of Life for 14-year-old Marysa Nichols. Some man came along and crushed out her life before she got to bloom. He left her body in a field near her high school in Red Bluff, Calif. When Marysa did not come home on Feb. 26, her parents knew she had not run […]

Benson Tech Played as a Pawn

There it was on the front page of The Epoch Times, an international newspaper distributed throughout the Oregon state Capitol Building: “Only Half of Grads Use Their Degrees.” Too bad Gov. John Kitzhaber doesn’t at least peruse the headlines of this Chinese-based weekly. “Nearly one-half of college graduates in the United States are overqualified for […]