Category Archives: Poverty

Nickel and Dimed in Portland

Liberal or conservative, Republican or Democrat, left-wing or right-wing. It’s all about the money. In Portland, Ore., voters were especially generous with money this past Election Day. They approved three tax measures, including a record-setting, half-billion dollar school bond to renovate three high schools, a K-8 school, update eight science labs and make seismic improvements. But […]

Obama’s America, Romney’s America

Suppose a distant relative showed up at your door, down on his luck and needing a place to stay. You don’t really know this person, but you feel sorry for him. And you want to set a good example for your kids. Compassion in action. So you turn over a spare room to this relative. […]

‘Won’t Back Down’ Wimps Out

Years ago when I was a newspaper reporter in San Bernardino, Calif., I covered a story at one of the city’s high schools and needed to use the girls lavatory. Inside the restroom, I found that the stall doors to all of the toilets had been removed. There was no privacy. What happened, I asked […]

Portland’s Walmart Future

It’s just as well that Walmart has been getting rid of its greeters, considering it’s the retail chain everyone loves to hate. Who needs a smile and a greeting from Walmart? Certainly not Steve Novick, the city commissioner-elect for Portland. He doesn’t take office until January, but he’s already got big plans for his city: […]

This Will Never Stop

The 17-year-old girl was in labor when she arrived at the emergency room, strapped into a wheelchair because her physical and mental disabilities made it difficult for her to sit upright. She could not speak. Hospital staff remembered her from two years earlier – when she had given birth the first time. “This is the […]

America’s Transit of Venus

What kind of civilization will America be in December 2117? Will it be reduced to a once-extravagant wonder, a country whose glory days are found in history books that nobody reads anymore? In Shirley Hazzard’s 1980 novel, “The Transit of Venus,” a prosperous New York attorney tells his wife, a young woman from Australia: “Our […]

Hold the Applause

Failure can hide in what passes for “success” stories. Like the story Multnomah County District Attorney Mike Schrunk told recently about a graduate of Drug Court. Speaking to the Portland City Club, Schrunk described how a man holding a baby, and accompanied by an attractive woman and an older couple, approached him at a Drug […]

A Day of Licentious Benevolence

I once worked for a newspaper editor who decided that on each day between Thanksgiving and Christmas we would strive for a “Santa presence” in the paper. Preferably, a picture of Santa. Or a story with a reference to Santa. This idea was probably cooked up by somebody in advertising to appeal to the business […]

The Crisis Next Door

The woman on the phone wants to kill Robert Kennedy. “He needs to be hooked up on life support until he has eaten every bit of his flesh,” she says slowly. She has given it serious thought. This woman obsesses about all of the Kennedys. “I have a theory about Karen Carpenter. She isn’t really […]

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 […]