Concordia Neighborhood Association | Portland, Oregon

  • Home
  • Get Involved
    • Upcoming Events
    • Events Calendar
    • CNA Meetings
    • Land Use & Transportation Committee (LUTC)
    • Media Team
    • Concordia Commons
    • Concordia News Submissions
    • Our Association
      • Bylaws
      • Directors & Staff
      • 2024 Budget
      • Donate
  • Concordia News
    • Advertise
    • Concordia News Issues
    • Write for Concordia News
  • Community Room
    • Community Room Rental
    • Community Partners Guidelines
    • Community Room Calendar
  • Resources
    • Services & Agencies
    • Schools
  • Contact

Category Archives: Concordia News

Together we face CU closing

Posted on April 1, 2020 by Gordon Riggs Posted in Concordia News, CU Sale

By Astrid Furstner, CNA Chair

Resilience is defined as having the ability to recover readily from illness, depression, adversity or the like. In Concordia, the place we call home, resilience is being able to recover from the news that left us reeling – the closure of Concordia University.

At our March general meeting, we had asked Julie Dodge, doctor of ministry, to speak to us about resilience – something that she deals with and helps others to deal with on a daily basis. The university associate professor was invited as a speaker for our March event prior to the university’s announcement about closing.

The strength and courage she showed in still coming to our meeting was amazing. As a matter of fact, there were several other staff/faculty members in attendance that night – not as representatives of the school, but as members of the community, neighbors and as people whose lives have also been changed.

The school is closing. The students will no longer be on campus. The faculty and staff are losing their jobs. This is what we have to contend with as a community.

There will soon be a void. There is uncertainty. How will we, as a community, come together and fill that void?

Let us begin with our children. Karmin Williams, Ed.D., Faubion School principal, attended. She alleviated some fears by reporting the Faubion building is owned by Portland Public Schools (PPS) – not the university.

Faubion is not closing. She also said the university was providing 40% of funding along with volunteers and teaching students, in addition to a full-time employee who coordinated community activities. So Faubion will face a shortfall, both in finances and assistance.

What can we, as a community, do to help? Volunteer. Any neighbor who wishes to volunteer must go through a PPS background check and application process. Learn more at PPS.net. How much time do you have?

The university provided our community with the use of its library. That’s closing. But, did you know that we have six other public libraries that we can also use – for free?

They are: Kenton Library on north Denver Avenue, North Portland Library on north Killingsworth Street, St. Johns Library on north Charleston Avenue, Albina Library on northeast 15th Avenue and the Hollywood Library on northeast Tillamook Street.

We also have several free little libraries in our community. Leave a book – take a book.

The closing of the university does have an impact on our community, but it does not have to destroy us. Change is here, how do we face it?

Personally, I say we face it together.

Why not work together to continue to make Concordia our home – a place where our children can live out their lives and create memories? A place where we care for our neighbors. A place where we thrive as a community.

Astrid Furstner is a mother, a wife, an immigrant, a local artist and an artisan. She lives with her luthier husband, Brent, and her artist-in-the-making daughter, Luciana. Together, they call Concordia their home.

This garden grows self-esteem and more

Posted on March 26, 2020 by Web Manager Posted in Concordia News, Gardening

By Marsha Sandman | CNA Media Team

Amoreena Guerrero (left), Youth Grow manager at Growing Gardens, and “Garden Lady” Betsy Lattig find joy in the Faubion School garden, and in teaching students about gardening and more. Photo by Marsha Sandman

Walking through the Faubion K-8 School playground at 2930 N.E. Dekum St., a covered asphalt area is scattered with a riot of colorful flowers and the words “Plants Rule.”

On this winter day the flowers are drawn in chalk. But soon planting should start in the Faubion garden, which has 20 raised beds.

This is evidence that Betsy Lattig, known as “The Garden Lady” at Faubion is having a positive impact on the students. Betsy comes from Growing Gardens, a local nonprofit organization with garden programs in 10 schools throughout Portland.

The organization’s website sums it up, “Youth Grow provides hands-on education in school gardens to help all children feel accepted and empowered to make healthy choices, become stewards of the environment, share their culture and increase community resiliency.”

The program integrates science, biology, sociology, healthy eating, cooking and other core subjects with outdoor education. As a year-round educator, Betsy starts the gardening journey with classroom visits.

She facilitates intercultural and inter-generational community building through events and workshops, and in the garden as students plant and nurture their crops.

Students often eat straight from the garden, and families are invited to harvest during the summer.

“I can’t tell you how excited I am to deliver hands-on garden lessons in the Faubion community,” Betsy said. “I’ll be taking students outside during the school day, as well as during a Schools Uniting Neighborhoods programming, to delve into garden education.

“We’ll be growing food, eating fruits and veggies, doing creative projects, and growing a program based on the needs and visions of the Faubion community.”

Volunteers are a vital part of Growing Gardens, because they also mentor and donate plant starts to in-need Faubion families for three years to grow home gardens and develop healthy eating habits.

In addition, the harvested produce is donated to the school cafeteria, school-based food pantries and families.

The students also attend cooking classes, taste test their own recipes, and the more popular recipes are shared with other Portland school lunchrooms.

Growing Gardens is funded by donations, grants and fundraising dinners hosted by local chefs. During the first two weeks of April, Faubion plans to host a plant sale.

Orders are taken in the school office and at CharityAuction.bid/FaubionPlantSale. Plant delivery is scheduled May 8, just in time for Mother’s Day.

Growing a garden not only cultivates plants. It also grows self-esteem, healthy bodies, and environmental awareness, according to Betsy. So she advises getting your hands dirty.

After living east, south, north and west, Marsha Sandman is home at last. And she wants to hear your story. Contact her at MarshaJSandman@ gmail.com.

Our 42nd changes faces, not the mission

Posted on March 25, 2020 by Web Manager Posted in Concordia News

By Dan Werle | CNA Media Team

Eduardo “Edy” Martinez hit the street running in January, taking the helm of Our 42nd Avenue. With the departure of Michael DeMarco from the organization, and Edy’s arrival, the eight-year-old prosperity initiative district also melded its efforts with Native American Youth and Family Center.

Our 42nd Avenue is a local organization whose stated mission is to “cultivate economic opportunity to achieve a prosperous, diverse 42nd Avenue community.”

It’s been fulfilling that role since it gained nonprofit status eight years ago as one of seven Neighborhood Prosperity Initiative districts in Portland, and one of two in Cully. In 2016, The Portland Mercury featured it in a story headlined “NE 42nd Is Portland’s New Restaurant Row.”

The district is bordered by Lombard and Shaver streets, and 33rd and 55th avenues.

In January, Our 42nd Avenue’s longtime executive director, Michael DeMarco, stepped down from his position to create Genuity Economic Development, a consulting firm housed on 42nd Avenue.

Although Michael retains an advisory role with Our 42nd Avenue, Eduardo “Edy” Martinez officially took over as the group’s district manager Jan. 7.

Edy grew up in northern California with six sisters and a brother. He enjoyed volunteering and working at the local summer camp. He earned a degree in recreation and administration from California State University, Chico before moving to Portland.

He has spent 16 years working to improve communities, most recently as a Schools Uniting Neighborhoods school manager, where he assisted organizing nutrition, medical, dental and educational programs for nearby students and their families.

Edy speaks with a calm, measured, confidence, and he exudes leadership and optimism. He is enthusiastic about Our 42nd Avenue’s priorities.

“We are focused on creating generational wealth, looking at barriers differently and figuring out how to knock them down.” Additionally, he is excited about the opportunities he has for learning about and serving the community.

Edy’s arrival is not the only significant change the new year ushered in for Our 42nd Avenue. The Native American Youth and Family Center (NAYA) is now Our 42nd Avenue’s umbrella organization.

The two groups had been discussing a merger for several months prior to the decision. Both share similar visions, and perform similar work. The size, strength and organizational structure of NAYA provided Our 42nd Avenue an opportunity to sharpen its focus, and more efficiently use its available resources.

With Michael’s departure, and Edy’s arrival, both organizations believed it was an optimal time to make the change.

Edy looks forward to building relationships within the 42nd Avenue community and continuing the steady progress Our 42nd Avenue has made.

He’s officed at 4213 N.E. 42nd Ave., and you can reach him via email at Edy@42ave.org. It’s best to advise him before dropping in. “If I’m doing my job right, I won’t be in the office very much.”

Dan Werle lives in Concordia with his wife, Anna, and their dogs.

Park ranger is local mystery author’s heroine

Posted on March 24, 2020 by Web Manager Posted in Concordia News

By Kathy Crabtree | CNA Media Team

Kathleen Cocannon’s novel, “Deadly Bluff” takes place in multiple national parks. A conservationist, the author pays tribute to President Teddy Roosevelt for founding the network of national parks. Photo by Lloyd Kimeldorf

A mystery set in a fictional national park filled with native folklore, vivid scenery and political intrigue is a perfect read for a rainy day in the Northwest.

In “Deadly Bluff,” local author Kathleen Cocannon’s heroine park ranger, Dana Madison, leads a mismatched team attempting to decipher clues of connected deaths at multiple national park sites.

Even more baffling is the fact the deaths have spanned multiple years. In a recent interview, Kathleen explained the addition of several separate chapters of historical significance by including Teddy Roosevelt’s influence on her story.

“President Roosevelt is considered the founder of the national park system. As a conservationist myself, I wanted to honor his creation and acknowledge his preservation of the sacred lands of the Northwest tribes.”

While the actions of the team lead the reader closer to solving the mystery, it is the descriptive scenes that capture the imagination. In every chapter there is evidence of Kathleen’s appreciation for the beauty of mountain trails.

As Dana hikes the footpaths, it is as if the reader is beside her, sharing her thoughts. Kathleen admits to having run a few miles of trails in her youth and continues to walk them whenever given the chance.

The book’s premise that heroine Dana was a Denver detective before becoming a national park ranger is something that Kathleen admits was not part of her wheelhouse of knowledge.

Having never been a policewoman, or a ranger, she credits a desire to emulate the strengths she admires in herself and other women. Although Dana is decisive, she is vulnerable – having endured previous struggles leading her to question her budding relationship with Dodge, one of the park carpenters.

That attraction complicates separating the good guys from the villains. Readers will commiserate with her as they, too, will question whom to trust as the story progresses.

Kathleen meets with a group of writers every couple weeks to critique and review each other’s work. She credits their support and includes them in the book’s acknowledgements.

Several years ago she had an agent marketing a previous novel and, although close to a contract, it didn’t materialize.

She self-published this book and credits the Northwest Independent Writers Association with decreasing the learning curve related to that effort.

Will there be more adventures of Dana’s team, including the attractive Dodge? She nodded. “I’m sure there will be.”

“The Deadly Bluff” is available at Amazon.com.

Kathy Crabtree lives near Fernhill Park and enjoys the constant flow of dogs happily on their way to romp off leash. In real life she is a nursing professor. In her dreams she is the creator of a series of mystery adventures of a retired female lawyer/judge of a certain age – to be named at a latter date. Contact her at KCrabtree4320@att.net.

LUTC Update – Censuses report Concordia’s changing face

Posted on March 18, 2020 by Web Manager Posted in Concordia News, Land Use & Transportation

By Garlynn Woodsong | CNA Board Member, SW1, CNA LUTC Chair

This year is a decennial census year in which a count is conducted of every person living in the United States, including the collection of short-form information about each. Once the census forms are collected, they then must be tabulated, analyzed, tabulated and published, a process that takes another couple of years.

Check out the changes between 2000 and 2010 census data for our neighborhood profile, published by the Population Research Center at Portland State University.

In the year 2000, our population was 9,564 people; in 2010, it was 9,550 people, a loss of 14 people. The average household size decreased from 2.44 to 2.36, the average family size from 2.98 to 2.82, and the number of vacant housing units increased from 143 to 166, likely related to the great recession.

With 23 additional vacant homes in the neighborhood, a loss of 14 people seems surprisingly low. The total number of homes in Concordia increased by 89 from 3,921 in 2000 to 4,001 in 2010.

Similarly, from 2000 to 2010, the total number of households in the neighborhood went up, from 3,760 to 3,835. And yet, the number of families went down, from 2,231 to 2,052, even as the number of nonfamily households increased from 1,538 to 1,783 and the total group quarters population increased from 354 to 502.

So Concordia saw an increase in homes, which balanced out shrinking household sizes and an increase in vacancies. It also likely saw an increase in the student population at Concordia University, contributing to the rise in group quarters population.

It was, however, a neighborhood that was becoming less diverse. In 2000, Concordia was 63.3% white, 31.9% black, 2.5% American Indian, 4.5% Asian, and 5.2% Hispanic. By 2010, it had lost 1,271 black people, along with smaller losses of every other race except white people, of whom there was an increase of 1,265, and hispanic people, the population of whom increased by 132.

By 2010, Concordia was 76.7% white, 18.7% black, and 6.6% Hispanic, with less than a 0.3% change in the population of any other race.

From 2000 to 2010, the population of children ages 5 to 14 years (ages that might attend Vernon School, for instance) declined by 464, a very significant ratio of the total population of that school of 522. Over the same time period, Concordia saw an increase of 563 people ages 25 to 44, and 369 people aged 55 to 69, bringing the median neighborhood age up from 33.7 to 35.4.

Concordia’s 854 acres saw the absolute population density of 11.2 persons per acre, or 7,166 persons per square mile, remain unchanged from 2000 to 2010. Overall, it’s a stable, mature neighborhood, where incremental change generally occurs slowly, except for the rapid loss of black people from 2000 to 2010, and a likely associated loss of school-age children.

I’ll be very curious to see what kinds of changes the results of the 2020 census reveal to us about our neighborhood. Won’t you?

Please fill out your census form this year, and then we’ll wait for the results and the answers they bring to these questions!

Garlynn Woodsong lives on 29th Avenue, serves on the CNA board and is an avid bicyclist. He also is a dad who is passionate about the city his son will inherit. He is the planning + development partner with Cascadia Partners LLC, a local urban planning firm. Contact him at LandUse@ConcordiaPDX.org.

Alberta Street is all abuzz with gallery move

Posted on March 17, 2020 by Web Manager Posted in Concordia News, Local Businesses

By Carrie Wenninger | CNA Media Team

Pepe Moscoso says moving his Blind Insect gallery here from southeast Portland is like coming home. Alberta Street was where he first displayed his artwork 12 years ago. Photo by Carrie Wenninger

For Pepe Moscoso, owner, curator and visual artist at Blind Insect, the recent move is a bit like coming home to an old friend. The multicultural art gallery opened at 2841 N.E. Alberta St.

When his southeast Division Street landlord decided to sell the building that housed the gallery, it offered Alberta Street a chance to work its synchronistic magic. Enter the proprietors of La Bonita, friends of Pepe, who suggested the vacant storefront adjoining their taqueria.

The vibrantly colored mural splashed across the building and the sunny southern exposure made it an easy decision.

So did Pepe’s longtime connection to Concordia’s art scene, which began 12 years prior through Allan Oliver, founder of the now-shuttered Onda Arte Latina gallery.

Featuring fine artists from Latin America and holding art openings on Last Thursdays, Onda was the first gallery to open its doors to Pepe’s work. And, when Blind Insect held its grand opening here last July, Allan was there to welcome him back.

Visitors are drawn into the small – but rich-with-curious-eye-and-soulgrabbing-art – space, the very opposite of a traditionally sparse and white-walled gallery. That space is split 50-50 between gallery and gift shop offerings with prices starting at just a few dollars. This is a place to taste affordable art and then develop your palate.

“Art helps us connect to our emotions. In the end, it’s a conversation that happens here,” Pepe said. He makes sure to photograph happy customers with their purchases. Those photos are featured on BlindInsect.com, partly to show the artist where his or her work has gone.

“An artist’s work is their baby,” he said. “It’s nice to know who now has your baby.”

He believes the name Blind Insect strikes a chord, and it has proven to be a strong marketing element. It recalls arriving in a new country and feeling blind to the culture, food and language.

It also touches on the alien-like nature of insects, as well as a childhood taunt, “mosca” – Spanish for “fly” – based on his surname, Moscoso.

The gallery accepts work from people of color, emerging artists and professional artists, which is to say: everyone. Online sales are in the works, as is a joint program with Pacific Northwest College of Art to offer student internships.

His message for neighbors? “Stop by, please keep supporting multicultural artists and, if you are an artist, we want to see your work.”

Carrie Wenninger lives on 29th Avenue in Concordia. She is a freelance writer, a mom, a world traveler and a small business marketing consultant. Contact her at WurdGurl@gmail.com.

Practice offers mix of treatment alternatives

Posted on March 11, 2020 by Web Manager Posted in Concordia News
A garden is due in the back yard of YesYes Healing Garden next summer. For now, John Kozel and Katherine Sullivan direct patients up these stairs to the bathroom to enjoy greenery planted in the claw foot tub. Photo by Nancy Varekamp

By Nancy Varekamp | CNews Editor

John Kozel believes the opioid epidemic is stemming in Oregon. He’s encouraged by the increase of medical providers willing to prescribe pain management protocols with less emphasis on addictive drugs.

Effective alternatives include acupuncture, Chinese herbal medicine, massage, craniosacral techniques, myofascial release, trigger point therapy, cupping and gua sha.

Those are provided by YesYes Healing Garden (YYHG), a business he co-founded last year at 1626 N.E. Alberta St.

John earned a master’s degree from the College of Oriental Medicine, is a licensed acupuncturist, offers Chinese herbal consultations and manages the acupuncture and wellness practice.

Two licensed massage therapists also ply their skills, and one of them offers interpreting for Spanish-speaking patients.

John and co-founder Katherine Sullivan are making YYHG into an inclusive and accessible wellness practice.

“We reach out to the underserved, those who often have not been treated respectfully by other medical communities,” Katherine said.

The two-story building is on a rise above the Alberta Street sidewalk. A ramp is planned for this summer for easier physical accessibility.

Convenience is assured by walk-in hours for massage. And financial accessibility is the hallmark of Saturday and Sunday drop-in community acupuncture sessions.

Treatment is made more affordable for many because YYHG accepts health insurance. “Many policies cover acupuncture, and people just don’t realize it,” Katherine pointed out.

For John, the discovery of the benefits of healing arts came during his college days as a pre-med student in Vermont. There, he lived and worked for three years within an intentional community where he received intensive training in mindfulness and Taoist qi gong.

“I began to think there was a different way,” explained John, who moved to Portland in 2013 for his studies.

He isn’t surprised when out-oftowners visiting the Alberta Arts District drop in. “Some have their luggage and are on their way to the airport,” he reported. “Then they go home and seek this out.”

Katherine’s move to Portland from Virginia six years ago was for the culture and progressiveness.

“It was four years ago I learned respect for alternative healing practices,” Katherine said. The poet, editor and book publisher sustained an injury to her back that caused pain and reduced mobility in one arm. Neither were helped by physical therapy, but quickly responded to acupuncture.

She selected the name of the new practice. It carries the moniker of YesYes Books, her publishing company, which promotes poetry, literature and art for healing.

“Both projects are all about affirmation.”

Nancy Varekamp is semiretired from her career in journalism, public relations and – her favorite work engagement – writing and editing targeted newsletters.

Chair’s Corner – Together we make this home

Posted on March 10, 2020 by Web Manager Posted in Concordia News

By Astrid Furstner | CNA Chair

A few updates on our current developments from our board meeting in February include:

  • Potential development of the old Adams/Whittaker site
  • Confirmation of our application to the Portland Parks & Recreation (PP&R) for this summer’s Concerts in the Park series
  • The February deadline for people to apply for lowincome housing
  • A report from the Land Use & Transportation Committee regarding the update provided by the Portland Bureau of Transportation on the status of the Lombard and Columbia Corridor plan

It appears that our little neighborhood has many events and issues coming up. Lack of a quorum slowed us down in February, but won’t stop us going forward.

To continue to be here and serve you, we need your help. Don’t worry, I won’t put you to work (yet), but I would like to see more of our neighbors take an active interest in what goes on in our neighborhood.

CNA needs you to help by actively participating in the future of our neighborhood. There are a few fun and exciting events in the works. The CNA Annual Spring Egg Hunt is Saturday, April 11.

When our family moved to Concordia, it was one of the first events we attended. Our daughter loved it – we loved it! It was so much fun to see so many of our friends and neighbors out enjoying the event.

This annual event is organized by volunteers, and we need your help Friday, April 10, to stuff hundreds (thousands) of eggs and early the next morning to hide them. This year we are also asking for prize donations and candy donations. The children will find some eggs that are eggstra special – they contain tickets redeemable for prizes! Children take the special eggs to the booth to trade them in for prizes.

CNA usually purchases all of these prizes – and we will again – but, if any of you have an unopened kid-friendly gift that you would like to donate as a prize, please contact SoniaGF419@gmail.com.

Other awesome events we are working on are the Concerts in the Park. We submitted our application to PP&R and hope to be selected so we can put together three Friday night concerts at Fernhill Park in July.

We hope to line up bands/musicians for the blues, Latin, and bluegrass genres.

Historically, this has been a wonderful series for our community. If we are awarded the opportunity to host it again this year, we will need volunteers. Do you have ideas for bands? Pass them on to me at Chair@ConcordiaPDX.org!

CNA’s goal is to enhance the livability of our neighborhood and maintain an open line of communications and liaison among the neighborhood, government agencies and other neighborhoods.

Help us meet those goals by: participating in meetings and events, sharing your ideas, and engaging and investing in Concordia and its residents.

If you become aware of events or issues that pertain to our Concordia neighborhood, I encourage you to reach out and send me an email letting me know what the issue or question is and anything else you would like to share. Together we all make a difference. Together we all make Concordia our home.

Astrid Furstner is a mother, a wife, an immigrant, a local artist and an artisan. She lives with her luthier husband, Brent, and her artist-in-the-making daughter, Luciana. Together, they call Concordia their home.

Hope keeps a local activist going

Posted on March 3, 2020 by Web Manager Posted in Concordia News

By Michael French | CNews Special Writer

Karen Wells practices “each one teach one” to help broaden perspectives, one person at a time. It’s part of her relentless efforts to achieve social justice and social change. Photo by Michael French

Activist and Alameda resident Karen Wells carries a business card with the job title “change agent.” It’s a phrase that sums up her approach and five decades of social justice work aimed toward a long-term goal.

“What keeps me going is hope,” she said. “Hope that the walls of isolation will be dismantled. Hope that the pitfalls of white supremacy will be eliminated. Hope that the differences between people will be respected instead of disparaged.”

Exposure to TV coverage of civil rights movements, coupled with surviving and navigating incidents of racism while growing up in San Diego, awakened Karen to the importance for social change.

Throughout the years, episodes of racism and white supremacy erupted in her life – sometimes overt, sometimes subtle – which continue even today in Portland. By her late teens, Karen became an activist.

After moving to Oregon in the mid1970s and through the 1990s, Karen was involved in local women’s culture and the progressive political scene, was a performance artist and poet, and served on boards of gardening-focused nonprofits Groundwork Portland and Our Garden.

Karen said within these organizations, she was often the only black woman. She was often subjected to the covert pressure to fulfill the unwanted and awkward role of representing the entire black community of Portland.

As part of her journey, she embraced different approaches to social justice work over the years.

Emotionally exhausted, she changed tactics. “I decided ‘each one teach one’ was the best way to go.” “Each one teach one” is an African-American proverb that originated during slavery. When few enslaved people were literate, those who could read felt a duty to teach others. Karen’s approach to each one teach one is aimed at broadening perspectives, one person at a time.

Today Karen continues to work to improve the lives of oppressed or marginalized groups and writes for Concordia News on public art, education and other topics.

She still practices each one teach one, and in recent years she has volunteered with Health Care for All Oregon and Nasty Women Get Shit Done.

Karen is active on the planning committee for Portland Womxn’s March 2020, which sprang from the 2017 women’s marches following the inauguration of President Donald Trump.

She encourages others to join in. Details are at WomxnsMarchPDX.com. You can also find/follow the effort on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook with the same handle.

For potential allies who want to support Karen and others pursuing social justice and social change work, she asks for a change in mindset. “Believe us. See us. Respect us,” she said. “The number one thing you can do is step up.”

Michael French is grateful to live on 28th Avenue in Concordia, a place where neighbors talk to each other and he can get most places on foot, by bike or transit. Contact him at MFrench96@gmail.com.

CNA VOICES – We’ve set goals for 2020

Posted on February 22, 2020 by Web Manager Posted in Concordia News

By Astrid Furstner | CNA Chair

Greetings Concordia Neighbors! I am honored to have been elected as the 2020 chair for our Concordia Neighborhood Association (CNA). Many of us begin a new year with resolutions or goals that we wish to accomplish. CNA is no different.

At our January board meeting we held a meaningful discussion of various items we would like to see continue and others we wish to begin. With the help of the board members, our committees and our neighbors, I am sure that we can make that happen.

Let me begin by thanking our former chair, Chris Lopez, for his leadership and dedication over the past few years. Chris has faithfully fulfilled his service through his leadership and guidance. CNA successfully put together a few wonderful events last year, such as the spring egg hunt at Fernhill Park, the neighborhood clean up, the neighborhood-wide yard sale, the holiday event at Cerimon House, concerts in the park, and various mixers at local businesses.

In this new year, we hope to continue to provide you with the annual spring egg hunt, the every-other-month mixers, the concerts in the park through our association with Portland Parks & Recreation. And we are also committed to ensuring we have speakers at our general meetings who can help address various community concerns.

We are working on potentially hosting a barbecue event in the summer to provide an opportunity for our neighbors to come together, have fun, meet each other and generally create more community bonds.

We also hope to be more involved with our community businesses and nonprofit organizations. In doing so, our association is hoping to launch the community partner designation. The details are still in the works but, in essence, we hope to foster relationships with organizations that work in partnership with CNA to provide services such as education, advocacy at low or no cost, and that foster an equitable and inclusive relationship with those who reside or work in and/or near Concordia.

We are hoping to have an announcement soon, so that all can provide input.

As you can see, we have set a few goals for ourselves. I would really love to have more participation from our neighbors and hear more voices.

If there is a particular event that you have enjoyed every year, we could use your help! Come to one of our meetings and let us hear from you. What makes our neighborhood great? What ideas do you have?

Concordia is already an awesome place to live, but is there something more we can do to continue to foster relationships with our community? Feel free to email me your ideas at Chair@ConcordiaPDX.org.

Astrid Furstner is a mother, a wife, an immigrant, a local artist and an artisan. She lives with her luthier husband, Brent, and her artist-in-the-making daughter, Luciana. Together, they call Concordia their home.

« Previous Page
Next Page »

To connect Concordia residents and businesses – inform, educate and report on activities, issues and opportunities of the neighborhood.

Concordia Neighborhood Association will abstain from publishing anything that could be construed as libel.

Upcoming Events

CNA Meetings

Click here to learn about upcoming CNA meetings and how to attend.

CNA’s Facebook Group

Join us for neighborhood discussion, event updates, meeting minutes and more on our Facebook Group.

Categories

  • Archive
  • Arts & Culture
  • CNA
  • Concordia News
  • CU Sale
  • Events
  • Family
  • Gardening
  • Health and Wellness
  • History
  • Land Use & Transportation
  • Local Businesses
  • News from the NET
  • Opinion
  • Schools
  • Trees
  • Uncategorized
  • Volunteer Opportunities
CyberChimps ©2025