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Author Archives: Web Manager

She makes positive changes

Posted on February 6, 2018 by Web Manager Posted in Concordia News

By Rachel Richards | CNA Media Team

Mary Tompkins has lived in Concordia for 27 of the 30 years she has served in the criminal justice system. As a crime prevention officer, she responds to citizen concerns about crime. Photo by Rachel Richards

Mary Tompkins has lived in Concordia for 27 years. She has worked within the criminal justice system for 30 years, and has been in her current role of crime prevention coordinator for inner northeast Portland with the city’s Office of Neighborhood Involvement for the past 12.

Her position involves collaborating with many agencies to respond to citizen concerns about crime and their fears about crime.

Providing public safety community trainings, coordinating Neighborhood Watch and organizing National Night Out events are all a part of what Portland’s nine crime prevention coordinators do.

Responding to concerns from residents is a large part of the job, and Mary said the three biggest issues she hears about are the same citywide: car prowls, property crimes and homelessness. The concerns increase as Portland’s population grows.

Mary and her husband raised their now 21-year-old son here and she loves the neighborhood’s diversity, great parks and proximity to the airport.

She likes seeing young families move into the neighborhood to attend the new state-of-the-art K-8 program developed by Concordia and Portland Public Schools at Faubion.

“Concordia is unique, and I like seeing residents brought together frequently through the neighborhood association, and having the Kennedy School host events for the community, including Race Talks,” she pointed out.

Mary discussed the idea of crime prevention through environmental design – something she is able to work on with local homes, businesses, churches, schools, and for parks and public spaces. In 2016 she was part of a team that received an award for helping transform Holladay Park in the Lloyd District into a safe place via instituting activities to engage youth and families.

What can residents do to help in crime prevention? The Neighborhood Watch program is a great way to get involved in the community, she explained.

Call Mary at 503-823-4764 to get help with organizing, and to receive training for Neighborhood Watch. That includes information on how to report both criminal and noncriminal issues and how to look out for your neighbors.

Mary enjoys making positive changes in local neighborhoods, using creative ideas and knowledge of systems along with an understanding of what it means to be live in northeast Portland.

She helps define what it means to be not just a resident, but a community member.

Rachel is a 16-year Concordia resident who loves her community. She has a background in counseling/education and uses her passion for helping others in her work as a real estate broker. Contact Rachel or learn more about her at RachelRichardsRealtor.com.

Ecology, sustainability merge in local park

Posted on December 28, 2017 by Web Manager Posted in Concordia News

By Karen Wells | CNA Media Team

Boulders being placed in Alberta Park
Boulders are being scattered throughout the in-progress Alberta Park nature trail. They’re intended for climbing or relaxing. Photo by Eric Hoyer

Portland Parks and Recreation (PP&R) selected Alberta Park to be the first in a series of 10 parks to receive facelifts via the inclusion of nature trails. Three ma i n goals will direct the project located adjacent to Alberta Park’s playground area:

  • Reduce water, fertilizer, herbicide use and labor costs
  • Create diverse park landscapes and habitat
  • Build collaboration between PP&R, neighborhood associations and community members

Eric Rosewall is program coordinator and point person for PP&R’s Ecologically Sustainable Landscapes Program. He is originally from the Midwest and former executive director of Depave, a Portland nonprofit that promotes the transformation of over-paved places.

Alberta Park’s nature trail boundaries will be a combination of split rail fencing and nurse logs. Those are dead trees that have been cut down to provide micro habitat for small animals, birds and beneficial pollinating insects.

The trail will be ADA accessible, five feet wide and covered with finely crushed basalt.

Common Oregon natives such as sword fern (Polystichum munitum), vine maple (Acer circinatum), salal (Gaultheria shallon), Oregon grape (Mahonia aquifolium), Indian plum (Oemleria cerasiformis) and red-flowering currant (Ribes sanguineum) will be seasonal show stoppers along the trail.

Boulders will be scattered throughout for climbing or relaxing. The nature trail will use about 4,800 square yards of park space.

Eric has already seen progress on the project. Six dead trees have been cut and put in place, along with several boulders. Plantings begin this month.

He is actively reaching out to Vernon School; Concordia, Vernon and Woodlawn neighborhood associations; and Native American Youth and Family Center to build upon established partner relationships for volunteers. He expects the path will be in place by the end of the month, with it fully in use by spring.

Stay tuned: a nature trail will bloom in Alberta Park.

Karen is a retired early childhood community educator, health and safety trainer. Reach her at 619.244.7892.

Painting intersection builds local bond

Posted on December 28, 2017 by Web Manager Posted in Concordia News

By Joel Dippold | CNA Media Team

Neighbors repaint Jarret Grove at 28th and NE Jarrett Street.
Neighbors of all ages in August repainted the two-year-old Jarrett Grove in the intersection at 28th Avenue and Jarrett Street. Photo by Joe Culhane

Walk out the front door of McMenamins Kennedy School and, in a few blocks, you’ll come to the intersection of 28th Avenue and Jarrett Street. All around you are the tall firs and Tudor bungalows so common here.

But you probably won’t notice them. You’ll be staring at the ground, at a circular mandala with pine trunks pointing to the four corners of the globe. The painting is known to neighbors as Jarrett Grove.

This Flower of Life design – 19 overlapping circles bounded by a larger circle – has captivated humanity for centuries. The earliest examples are found in an Egyptian temple and Leonardo da Vinci’s notebook. Ten smaller circles form a “Tree of Life,” from the Jewish mystic tradition of the Kabbalah.

But most passersby don’t know anything about this symbolism, any more than they know what this round plaza means to the families who live in its orbit.

“We have a stronger bond because of this,” said Joe Culhane, who helped with the installation two years ago and the repainting in August. “This is a way to get together, and to work, and to produce an awesome result.”

The work component was considerable. “It was a long day, getting all that paint down,” said Katie Allen. The work was done by a volunteer army of four dozen neighbors, Village Building Convergence volunteers, and people who were out walking their dogs and just jumped in.

Katie led the fundraising effort that resulted in $1,000 to rent barricades and buy many, many gallons of special traffic paint. She and other neighbors got donations from a dozen local businesses for a silent auction at Wilder Bar Café, and kids set up a stand and charged for nail painting and temporary tattoos.

“The best part of it was later that night,” Katie said, after the paint had dried and the sun had gone down. “There were about 20 of us, all ages, and we just had the best dance party ever.”

Editor’s note: Joel had more to tell about this community building effort and a time-lapse photograph of the effort. For the rest of the story, visit ConcordiaPDX.org/jarrett-grove.

OFB coordinator is passionate about food

Posted on December 20, 2017 by Web Manager Posted in Concordia News

By Tamara Anne Fowler | CNA Media Team

Volunteers at the Oregon Food Bank enjoy what they do. So does Concordian Allison Bansen, who works full time to coordinate the e orts of those volunteers. Photo by Chris Baker

When her brother took his wedding vows in the Willamette Valley in July, Allison Bansen took the opportunity to move back from Washington, D.C., to her beloved Oregon. Two weeks later, she started work at the Oregon Food Bank (OFB).

“It was the perfect transition time,” she said.

Allison is one of five volunteer coordinators working full time on the OFB team. Coordinating volunteers isn’t new to her. She’d been at it for five years in Washington before moving to Concordia.

“I live right off Alberta. It’s less than a two-mile, six-minute commute.”

Her passion is food and food access, which makes sense as Allison’s favorite part of her job is the food repack. Produce arrives at the warehouse in 48-by-48- inch bins. Volunteers then repack the food down into family-sized portions.

The items that are repacked mirror the season. “Right now we are repacking potatoes, pears, apples, turnips and radishes,” she reported on a recent Thursday. “Tonight we are doing cauliflower.”

The focus is on providing fresh food. Allison sees engaging the community – in addition to raising hunger awareness – as the most important part of the job.

“I like to share and develop relationships focusing on what we do here and making a difference.”

Of course, she loves coordinating all the volunteers. “Our volunteer registration is strictly online. After you sign up for a shift, you’ll receive a confirmation of the date and time you’ve signed up for and you’re all set.

“Our main volunteer opportunities are in our food repack shifts that run Monday through Saturday,” she added. “We also have a garden – it just wrapped up for the season – and administrative work that people can volunteer in as well.”

Volunteer opportunities at the Portland and Beaverton locations also include leading nutrition education classes, maintaining learning gardens and lending a hand at events.

Most volunteer opportunities are two to three hours in length and do not require a regular commitment.

“We are currently holding Our Season of Giving campaign,” Allison added. “That helps us raise money to enable us to get more food throughout year.”

To donate, you can mail a check, drop off cash or a check, or donate online at OregonFoodBank.org, the same website where you can register for a volunteer shift.

OFB’s goal is $20,000 and the Season of Giving goes through the first week of January. Within the first day, on Nov. 1, OFB had already raised $2,000.

Tamara is Edit Kitten, a writer with 20-plus years of experience offering a softer, gentler approach to editing and coaching. Her personal editors – Armani, Max Factor and Spicey’D – are also her cats. Visit her at EditKitten.com or contact her at Tamara@editkitten.com.

Editor’s note: A partner of the Oregon Food Bank, Northeast Emergency Food Program – with its food pantry and clothes closet – was chosen this year to benefit from the CNA Holiday Party. See Pages 1 and 3 for details about how you can help.

Couple opens taproom for love of beer

Posted on December 19, 2017 by Web Manager Posted in Concordia News, Local Businesses

By Joel Dippold | CNA Media Team

Alex Kurnellas, half of the husband-wife team that owns Imperial Bottle Shop and Taproom, said it’s rewarding to become part of this community. Photo by Joel Dippold

Concordia residents just got another great reason to go out and drink beer, with the recent opening of Imperial Bottle Shop and Taproom at 2006 N.E. Alberta St.

Imperial features a well-curated selection of bottles and 22 high-quality beers on tap – and two wines, three ciders and even a sake – complemented by an inviting brick-and-wood interior.

The husband-wife team of Alex Kurnellas and Shawn Stackpoole were living in Concordia, right behind Thai Noon, when they decided to open their first business. But in spite of – or because of – the smell of Thai cooking wafting through their windows and the fact that Alex’s father and grandfather had owned restaurants, Alex and Shawn wanted to work in the world of beer.

“We opened because we loved beer,” Shawn said. “We didn’t say, ‘Hey, beer is a growing thing, let’s cash in.'”

But they couldn’t find the right retail space in northeast and ended up opening their first shop on southeast Division Street, just as development there was exploding. All those upscale housing developments were good for business but, with the opening of the Alberta taproom, Shawn reported, “It’s nice to be back in the neighborhood.

“One of the rewarding experiences of opening a bar was becoming part of the community,” she said on a recent afternoon and, as if on cue, a customer stopped by the table for a discussion of where to go for the best chicken wings.

Shawn and Alex hope to cement their ties to the northeast community by hosting fundraisers for local school and community groups. Their event at the Division location raised money to buy uniforms for the Cleveland High School marching band.

The tap list also reflects their interest in community, with its emphasis on local: about 75 percent of the beers are local, and there are no imports or beers from the megabreweries. Their ever-evolving tap list is online at ImperialBottleShop. com/alberta.

“It’s pretty amazing what beers can be,” Alex explained. “You look at wine and it’s basically red or white. But with beer, you have a range that’s like the difference between a Chihuahua and a St. Bernard.”

There’s no kitchen, but outside food is actively encouraged. “Thankfully, if you want grab and go, you’ve got so much here,” Shawn said.

And if you like to drink beer, there’s so much to like about Imperial Bottle Shop and Taproom.

Joel is a freelance writer and editor who has lived in Concordia since 2000.

Group works to purchase/restore Alberta Shul

Posted on December 13, 2017 by Web Manager Posted in Concordia News

Ask the historian

By Doug Decker | Historian

The question:
What can you tell me about the building at 20th Avenue and Going Street that used to house the Tifereth Israel
Synagogue? – Alessandra Novak

The historian reports:

I’m so glad you’ve asked: it’s a fascinating and rich story. This long, narrow white clapboardsided building was built in 1907 and purchased in 1914 by Congregation Tifereth Israel, a Jewish community with roots in Russia and the Ukraine.

Originally the center of Jewish life for a small handful of families on Portland’s eastside – many of whom lived within walking distance – the congregation expanded over the years to include up to 100 families.

Known during those early years as the Alberta Shul – a Yiddish word meaning a place of study and prayer – the building drew the eastside Jewish community together. By the early 1950s, Tifereth Israel had outgrown the building, so the congregation purchased and moved into the former Redeemer Lutheran Church at 15th Avenue and Wygant Street.

From 1952 until the early 1980s, the building was home to several African American congregations, including the Mt. Sinai Community Church.

In 1980, when it was sold to its current owner, the building was rented out for various purposes including religious gatherings and then eventually as storage space. In 2010 it became home to Xhurch, its current occupants, as a gathering and workspace for resident artists and musicians.

When the property was placed on the market in 2016, members of Portland’s Jewish community began to organize an effort to purchase and restore the building. The group’s proposal was in competition with developers interested in tearing down the building. But the current owner was intrigued with the restoration project and has since entered into a contract with the coalition for purchase.

Today, the Alberta Shul Coalition is raising funds and support to transform the building back to its earlier role as a place for meeting, learning, community and prayer for the eastside Portland Jewish community.

Eleyna Fugman is one of the founders of the growing coalition. Her vision is for a special, simple gathering place for local Jewish residents to connect through a variety of community-driven programming, as well as a space that northeast neighbors could rent and use for meetings, classes and events.

“The fact that we could work, play and practice in a building that our ancestors built and made into a Jewish home is very important,” Eleyna said. “There are many young Jews who are looking for a place to be Jewish, who are yearning for Jewish community in some format.”

The coalition’s vision is that Alberta Shul can be a cultural venue for Jewish art, music, learning and gathering, as well as a place for traditional and alternative religious services and prayer.

The coalition raised about $40,000 during the summer and early autumn, and is hoping to raise $136,000 by March 2018 to complete the purchase. Further fundraising of another $250,000 is planned the following year to enable the restoration.

To learn more, visit the Alberta Shul Coalition Facebook page.

Editor’s note: If you have a question for the neighborhood historian, send it to NewsEditor@ConcordiaPDX.org, and we’ll ask Doug Decker to do some digging. Check out Doug’s blog for more on local history at AlamedaHistory.org.

Concordians learn about disaster resiliency

Posted on December 12, 2017 by Web Manager Posted in Concordia News
Concordia-Vernon-Woodlawn Neighborhood Emergency Team members began their volunteer work with 30 hours of training, but continue their training and practice drills to help local residents survive disasters. Photo by Chris Baker

By Nancy Varekamp | CNews Editor

Portland is overdue for an earthquake of devastating magnitude, thanks to the proximity to a fault and delicate soil that may damage building footings.

That’s what 35 Concordians learned last month at the neighborhood association annual membership meeting. They heard from Amy Gard, leader of the Concordia-Vernon-Woodlawn Neighborhood Emergency Team (NET), and from Justin Ross, Multnomah County Office of Emergency Management community capacity specialist.

Both stressed that planning for disasters – resiliency – makes recovery easier. The county focuses on four resiliency factors:

  • Situational awareness: Take stock of where you are at all times. Know that a doorway is no longer the preferred safe zone in an earthquake; instead, drop under the cover of furniture.
  • Plans: “Plans don’t cost any money and are one of the most important resiliency factors,” the county specialist pointed out. Know how to reach and reunite with your loved ones.
  • Access to supplies: It may take two weeks for outside help arrive, so plan for it. “You don’t need to hoard,” he advised. You can grow vegetables instead of lawn, share supplies with neighbors, stock water purification kits, and more. Medications may be the most difficult to store since insurance companies balk at stocking up.
  • Community connections: Be aware that 90 percent of all rescues are performed by neighbors. “Talk to your neighbors who aren’t here tonight,” he advised. “Those are the people who are going to be responding to the disaster immediately.”

Amy focused on that community connections factor. The local NET has 20 to 30 active members currently. Each completed 30 hours of training and they continue to train and drill on fire suppression; search and rescue; triage; and emergency medical treatment. (See details in the August CNews at ConcordiaPDX.org/NET.)

Since the NET encompasses 2.4 square miles and 17,000 residents, its volunteers will be spread thin during a disaster. So Amy advises neighbors to be prepared to help each other.

It requires just 2 to 3 hours of training to volunteer for basic earthquake emergency communication nodes (BEECNs), she added. Those volunteers will be stationed at the Killingsworth fire station, Alberta Park and Rigler Elementary School after disasters – to gather information and help the injured.

“It’s low time commitment, but provides an opportunity for involvement in the neighborhood emergency plan,” she said.

Since the NET must purchase its own supplies and equipment, donations are always welcome, Amy said. One easy way to donate is by registering for the Fred Meyer Community Rewards program.

Conservation grants deadline is Dec. 15

Posted on December 6, 2017 by Web Manager Posted in Concordia News
The Cully Young Farmers Project is one very local example of a Partners in Conservation grant. It received three grants of $10,00 each to help develop the garden education program. Photo courtesy of East Multnomah Soil and Water Conservation District

Does your organization want to launch a local conservation project next year but needs start-up funds? Apply for a Partners in Conservation (PIC) grant by Dec. 15.

The East Multnomah Soil and Water Conservation District (EMSWCD) program provides funding to support conservation projects and conservation education that show a clear public benefit in any of these areas:

  • Habitat restoration or watershed health
  • Soil erosion prevention/control
  • Soil health
  • Water quality
  • Water conservation
  • Environmental education

Starting in 2011, EMSWCD provided three years of PIC funding for the nearby Cully Neighborhood Farm, supporting the Cully Young Farmers Project that provides gardening education for neighborhood youth. The urban garden sits on land owned by Trinity Lutheran Church and its school.

Today, the church leases the land to the urban farm in exchange for donations to the church food pantry, science and gardening lessons for its pre-K through 8th grade students, plus the opportunity to engage students in learning about healthy, local food sources.

“The project we funded fit our criteria for serving and engaging disadvantaged populations and diverse communities, as well as providing garden education opportunities for local youth.,” said PIC grants manager Suzanne Easton. “The three years of funding at $10,000 per year helped develop the garden education program, and these funds were matched by hefty donations of time and labor in creating the program.”

With the assistance of Concordia University and University of Portland students, the project developed and implemented weekly garden education curriculum for 103 students, many whom qualified for free or reduced lunches.

CNews youth writer Raven Pearce offered a first-person report on the garden in December 2016. (See her story at ConcordiaPDX.org/gardening-is-more). The types of organizations eligible to apply for grants include:

  • Nonprofit 501(c)(3) organizations
  • Nonprofit entities without 501(c)(3) status that retain qualified fiscal agents
  • Educational institutions
  • Government agencies
  • Native American tribes

Funding for grants ranges between $5,000 to $60,000 for single-year projects, or up to $100,000 per year for multi-year projects. Grants less than $10,000 require no matching funds and, for grants more than $10,000, EMSWCD requires applicants to secure dollar-fordollar matches.

For details about eligibility, types and amounts of grants and how to apply, visit EMSWCD.org/pic, call 503.935.5370 or email Suzanne@emswcd.org.

NEFP: It isn’t just about food

Posted on December 5, 2017 by Web Manager Posted in Concordia News

By Rachel Richards | CNA Media Team

NEFP is more than its name implies. Volunteers like Elizabeth keep the organization’s clothing closet in order. Donations of clothing, bedding, kitchen items – and yes, food – are always needed. Photo by Chris Baker

The Northeast Emergency Food Program (NEFP) provides not just food to those in need. It also has a clothing closet which provides free clothing to men, women and children, and it distributes nearly 50,000 items of clothing annually.

Other donations – bedding, kitchen items and toys – are also distributed quickly to those in need. There’s no space for furniture donations.

NEFP is recognized as one of the first Model Healthy Pantries in the state, and empowers those in need, through a shopping-style experience, to choose what they need, from both the clothing closet and the food pantry.

Serving 800 families per month, NEFP can provide four items of clothing per person per visit and 25 to 30 pounds of food up to three times in a six-month period.

There are no residential restrictions, and visitors to the pantry can provide proof of household members who aren’t present to obtain items the others need.

According to Travis Niemann, program manager, a fear currently exists across Portland that – because of the requirement to enter names into Oregon Food Bank’s Link to Feed database – undocumented immigrants are not accessing needed services.

“Our goal is to feed you, not to report you” he said. “Most of the families we serve have someone who is working,” he added. “They have resources, just not enough.”

NEFP program assistant Cecilia Estraviz said donated children’s costumes were set aside until Halloween season, to the delight of children.

Currently in the clothing closet sorting room, a few bins of toys are awaiting the holiday season, but a noticeable lack of men’s clothing exists. NEFP is currently in need of men’s job interview clothes and men’s work wear, as well as all types of winter clothing, rain gear and socks.

NEFP serves working families, seniors, people with disabilities, immigrants and refugees, people experiencing homelessness and you, if you need it.

Located at Luther Memorial Lutheran Church, 4800 N.E. 72nd Ave., NEFP is part of the Ecumenical Ministries of Oregon and a partner agency of the Oregon Food Bank. It’s open 1 to 4 p.m. Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays. Donations are also accepted during these hours and NEFP is always open to new volunteers.

Donations will be accepted at the Concordia Neighborhood Association Holiday Party. Needs include rice, soup, proteins, personal hygiene items, pet food, winter clothing and work clothing.

Monetary donations are also welcome, and NEFP is participating in the Willamette Week’s 2017 Give!Guide. To donate, visit GiveGuide.org/#neemergencyfoodprogram.

Rachel is a 16-year Concordia resident who loves her community. She has a background in counseling/education and uses her passion for helping others in her work as a real estate broker. Contact Rachel or learn more about her at RachelRichardsRealtor.com.

J’s Food Mart to become Mud Bay pet store

Posted on November 6, 2017 by Web Manager Posted in Concordia News

By Ben Earle | Secretary, CNA LUTC

The Land Use & Transportation Committee last month welcomed some news on the Concordia development front.

Henry Point Development and Edge Development last month announced they are partnering to acquire and transform the languishing J’s Food Mart property at Killingsworth Street and 33rd Avenue into a 4,850-square-foot Mud Bay pet store.

Designed by Michael Flowers Architects and WDY Engineers, principle project lead Travis Henry said the goal for the development is to breathe life into this long under-utilized site.

They will expand the existing 2,700-square-foot convenience shop into a modern, attractive, one-story store.

It will be Mud Bay’s 44th store in Oregon and Washington, its 10th in the Portland area, and it will be the company’s first to introduce a new self-serve pet washing service.

According to its website, Seattle-based Mud Bay is the Pacific Northwest’s premier independent pet retail chain, with natural, solution-based and competitively-priced foods and supplies for dogs and cats.

Started as a family business in 1988, Mud Bay has garnered praise across the years, including Pet Business magazine’s 2015 Retailer of the Year.

Mud Bay also is known for providing a supportive and engaging work environment, and recently extended company ownership to its 400 employees.

In addition to the appealing new building profile, site improvements include:

  • Reworked frontage with space for eight cars and a new parking area for bicycles
  • Pedestrian- and wheelchair-friendly connection from Killingsworth to the store’s entrance
  • Tasteful landscaping

Construction is anticipated to start by year’s end, with opening targeted for next spring. “Mud Bay Concordia will be a high-quality retail development located in the heart of one of Portland’s most popular residential neighborhoods,” reported developer Henry.

“We are excited to be developing a project compatible with the scale and needs of the surrounding area by bringing a strong local retailer to a new audience of pet owners.”

He is a Portland native, who returned to Oregon in 2008 after college and post-graduate studies to work in environmentally-friendly agriculture and watershed restoration. He then transitioned into urban planning, and more recently into commercial and retail development.

He said his firm is committed to community-oriented projects that respect and enhance the unique character of Portland’s distinctive neighborhoods.

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