Category Archives: Portland

UPSET? Try Getting MADD

The Portland Public School District is like a dysfunctional family that has decided the answer to its problems is to remodel the living room. And Oregon’s Commission on Public Safety is like an investor who is contemplating moving money out of the one account that is paying dividends. These two entities are engaged in the […]

A False Choice: Teachers or Cops

It’s a sad sight when adults sulk like 4-year-olds. When the adults are members of a school board, it’s disturbing. Yet there sat Bobbie Regan this week as the Portland Public Schools Board of Directors voted unanimously to approve a budget that nobody liked. “I want us to remain UPSET so we can take this […]

Headline News From the After Life

In the 1998 Japanese film “After Life,” the recently deceased arrive at a celestial way station (it looks like a social services bureaucracy), where they are assigned caseworkers who help them find a moment in their lives that they can relive for all eternity. At one point, the caseworkers complain about how boring and predictable […]

Failing With ‘Fluffy’ Words

Portland public schools are still looking for a bridge to the 21st Century. Or some magic guidelines to show them the way. Or a white paper. Or another study on “welcoming, warm learning environments.” A lot of school districts are apparently looking for the same thing. “All you have to do is a Google search,” said […]

Memo to Privileged White Folk

February is half over. Have you genuflected enough? Have you acknowledged, with a quiver in your voice, the advantages bequeathed to you by your pale-faced father and mother? If not, a young blonde woman named Olivia did so on your behalf this week in the Council Chamber at the Templeton Campus Center at Lewis & […]

Helplessness and the Status Quo

In Portland, Ore., school officials are struggling with a disconnect between how the city sees itself (very livable and very special) and the poor performance of its public schools (almost half of high school students don’t graduate in four years). Fifth-year seniors are becoming a trend. “The stigma of a fifth year is not what […]

Preparing for Evolution

Antonio Zamora expects to wake up Monday morning in jail or on a park bench with a group of people. He could go to his mom’s place in Gresham, but what a letdown that would be after five weeks in Occupy Portland. “I have experienced real prosperity here,” the 26-year-old PCC student said, a couple […]

Dancing at the Revolution

If you’re going to do something radical, wear Brooks Brothers. You won’t just stop traffic, you’ll confound the status quo. Occupy Portland and the hundreds of other variations on New York’s Occupy Wall Street protest, need more ordinary middle-class employees. Many of them wear suits and are just as worried about America’s future. The men […]

Celebrating a Red Coffin

Too bad song, dance and prayer can’t end violence. The Celebration of Life held for 14-year-old Yashanee Vaughn turned into a three-hour, big-screen extravaganza, marked by a regular refrain: “End the violence.” Unfortunately, the only person who had any ideas for ending violence was the last speaker. By then some folks were drifting away when […]

In Portland, Life is a Cabaret

They’re here. They’re queer. They will not live in fear. But the gays who marched over the weekend in Portland should remain respectful of fear, instead of reducing it to a party chant. Rational fear can help them see things as they are, not as they want them to be. “There is nothing but good […]