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News from the NET – NETs are about more than earthquakes

Posted on April 20, 2021 by Web Manager Posted in Concordia News

By Erin E. Cooper | Concordia/Vernon/Woodlawn Neighborhood Emergency Team

In Portland, neighborhood emergency teams (NETs) are most often associated with earthquake preparedness and response.

Although that is often what draws people to volunteer and train for NET – and is a focus in training – NETs are also ready to respond to all kinds of large and small emergencies. For instance, in the past year, some of the ways NET members have volunteered include:

  • Maintaining a safe perimeter around downed power lines until power company employees arrive
  • Controlling traffic and monitoring patients at COVID-19 vaccination clinics
  • Staffing warming shelters in the winter and cooling shelters in the summer
  • Collecting donations of personal protective equipment and other supplies for first responders in the early stages of COVID-19
  • Staffing evacuation shelters during Oregon’s 2020 forest fires
  • Organizing and volunteering for mutual aid groups, including organizing and distributing food donations and other supplies
  • Assisting at the Multnomah County Emergency Coordination Center with COVID-19 operations

Team members have also participated in thousands of hours of advanced training over the last year. Many of these topics are those associated with traditional disaster preparation, such as first aid and maintaining post-earthquake sanitation.

Other types of training have been made available to NETs in response to the needs of Portland’s population and the evolving role of NETs to assist in our communities. These trainings have covered topics such as diversity and equity in leadership, coping with trauma, building community resilience and building cultural competency.

There are currently over 2,000 active NET members on 87 neighborhood teams across Portland. Joining NET is a straightforward, multi-step process that starts by visiting PortlandOregon.gov/pbem/31667 to sign up.

In-person classes are suspended for the time being, but it’s possible to do the majority of the free training online. You’ll be able to complete the final – and most fun – hands-on portion of the training when it is safe to conduct in-person classes again.

Erin E. Cooper is a marine biologist living in Woodlawn. She spends a lot of time thinking about disasters and has been a NET member for many years. Contact her at OceanListener@gmail. com.

One local gnome tree leads to many more

Posted on April 19, 2021 by Web Manager Posted in Concordia News, Family

By Nancy Varekamp & Dan Werle | CNA Media Team

Three-year-old Adya Soasey and her father share a love for gnomes and the local trees the miniature, fictional creatures inhabit. Photo by Mark Soasey

What began as a weekly visit to a “gnome tree” on Ainsworth Street has become an activity that is now spreading across Concordia and Portland.

Mark Soasey and three-year-old daughter Adya always stop to admire the gnome-size door within a nook of the tree’s roots. It’s adorned with little treasures from other admirers. Their visits not only add some fun to their walks, but also became an interactive pastime that affords social distance.

“My daughter would always bring a gift of her own to leave for the resident gnome,” he reported. Never seeing the miniature, fictional creature who lives inside doesn’t seem to deter her.

Mark and Adya began providing housing to more gnomes, along with treasure exchanges for children. Together, they have decorated five trees so far, and have identified several other pre-existing sites.

“Because of my experience in woodworking, fashioning the wooden doors with metal knobs was a fun and relatively easy project to work on with my daughter,” Mark reported.

Behind those doors, they leave notes to the gnomes they are certain live in each tree and/or greetings to Adya’s fellow gnome tree explorers. They also fill resealable plastic bags with shells, rocks, handmade jewelry and more – items designed to be exchanged with new gifts from each explorer who discovers them.

The duo makes the effort to respect the surrounding nature during construction of the gnome trees. “We avoid any larger holes that could be used as regular habitat for animals and/or for seasonal food caches,” he pointed out.

“Instead, we attempt to select a recess only large enough to house our treasure bag and accommodate a custom-made door.”

But they didn’t stop with nearby Fernhill Park, Alberta Park and the parking strips of Concordia. Mark created PortlandGnomeTrees.com to share DIY door-building tips, invite others to create gnome trees and maintain a map that identifies their locations across the city.

He hopes to hear about existing displays and/or treasure trees to add to the map, as well as new locations created by community members.

“The gnome and faerie trees have long since been established throughout Portland and were the key inspiration behind the development of this project,” he explained. “Our goal is to continue to expand the content of the Portland Gnome Tree Map.

“This is about engaging one’s imagination while exploring nature, and reinforcing creative thinking, sharing and giving,” Mark said. “It’s a means of showing respect to the resident gnomes and fellow participants.”

Draft CNA LUTC Agenda: Wednesday, April 21st, 2021

Posted on April 14, 2021 by Web Manager Posted in Uncategorized
Here’s a draft agenda for next week’s LUTC meeting.
WHAT:
Concordia Land Use & Transportation Committee (LUTC)
WHEN:
Wednesday, April 21st, 2021
WHAT TIME:
7pm
WHO:
Concordia neighbors interested in improving the neighborhood through safer streets, more housing opportunities, and more local business
HOW:
It’s virtual.
Login online at this link:
https://meet.google.com/ocg-wgut-iki
Or call in by phone:
316-512-3077 PIN: 417604919#
WHY:
“Cities have the capability of providing something for everybody, only because, and only when, they are created by everybody.” -Jane Jacobs
See you there!
cheers,
~Garlynn

 

::-::-::-::-::-::-::-::-::-::
Garlynn G. Woodsong (he/him)
Vice Chair and Board Member, Position Southwest 1
Land Use & Transportation Committee Chair
Concordia Neighborhood Association

From the Board – It’s tax time, again

Posted on April 12, 2021 by Web Manager Posted in Concordia News, Volunteer Opportunities

By Peter Keller | CNA Chair

Hi neighbors. I hope everyone is enjoying the early spring weather. The occasional sun breaks and sporadic rain showers make it hard to figure out how to dress when headed outside.

Like the spring weather, life is unpredictable.

One thing that is predictable is taxes. Yes, that’s one thing we adults all have in common. Whether you don’t like paying them, preparing the forms or don’t agree with where the money goes, chances are more than likely we share a common dread about them.

Taxes are on my mind because I’m taking a break from working on mine to write this column. As a self-employed person, I manage my bookkeeping and prepare everything for my accountant.

Technology has improved the process quite a bit but it still takes time. If you’re like me, you wait until the end of the year to sort it all out. Reminds me of Travis Bickle from “Taxi Driver,” “One of these days I gotta get myself organezized.” He’s a creepy character, but it’s a memorable line and movie.

Obviously some people really enjoy working with numbers and spreadsheets and make careers of this, namely bookkeepers and accountants. I’m sure we have a few living in the neighborhood.

I know bookkeepers and accountants are busy right now, but I hope they see this column because the Concordia Neighborhood Association (CNA) also has to file tax forms. While we have a volunteer treasurer who works very hard to manage our finances, we could use a little help with our taxes and bookkeeping.

Speaking of numbers, we could also use some help with our ones and zeros. CNA had a volunteer IT person, Will Goubert, who managed our modest IT needs for several years. Will is retiring and also retiring from his volunteer IT work. We’d like to thank Will for all of his help over the years.

If you or someone you know has bookkeeping, accounting or IT skills and is interested in volunteering, we would love to hear from you. You can email me directly at Chair@ConcordiaPDX.org.

In other news, we had a great turnout at our March general meeting, where we heard from the city about some of the programs and ongoing planning to address the housing emergency.

We really appreciate the participation and I want to remind neighbors that you are encouraged and welcome to join our monthly meetings (CNA Board of Directors, Land Use & Transportation Committee, Media Team and Finance Committee). Find details about those meetings to the right on this page. Happy Spring!

Native Portlander Peter Keller has lived in Concordia since 1997. He runs a small marketing agency with partner Max, out of their home studio. He loves exploring outdoors with and without his dogs.

What is camping like?

Posted on April 6, 2021 by Web Manager Posted in Concordia News

By Tara Williams | CNA Media Team

Chris Gibbons

When Oregon native Chris Gibbons was a child, he often stayed with his grandparents who lived at 32nd Avenue and Killingsworth Street. Since last August, Chris has been living in a homeless camp at 33rd and Dekum Street.

“A couple friends of mine were staying here. They told me ‘Hey, we got a spot open down here if you need it.’ I didn’t have anywhere else to go. I was thinking to myself, ‘Wow, how ironic is this?’”

Concordians may have passed Chris’ camp and noted its whimsical touches – holiday lights and the outfits of the day displayed by Manny the mannequin. Neighbors who frequent Nextdoor.com may know Chris from his posts that offer snow shoveling and handyman services.

Some have contributed to his GoFundMe.com requests, which he started in November to raise money to clean up piles of trash left in the camp by previous residents. “It looks so much better,” Chris observed.

Challenges facing the houseless include taking care of basic needs. “When I first got here, I was trying to figure out, ‘Where does everyone use the bathroom at?’” He and his campmates take turns walking to a nearby gas station, store or restaurant, or they use the compost toilet they made.

“That’s one of our biggest challenges. A bathroom would be just awesome, and that would be a big step. I heard they put a lot of port-apotties out last summer. But a lot of them got destroyed or vandalized, and those people kind of ruined it for the rest of us.”

Chris said the camp could use a generator to provide electricity. “It gets so dark here,” he said. “There’s no outdoor lighting in this area.”

Food storage is also a problem. “We get a lot of rats here.” One of his campmates’ cat kills several per night. And Chris now has a device placed in the ground outside his tent that keeps the rats from digging under and up.

In March, Chris’s 1994 red Mustang was stolen . “You gotta watch your stuff 24/7. It’s not a good situation.”

He could also use a more durable tent, and he is very interested in tiny homes. A friend of his in another camp was offered a job building tiny homes on Powell Boulevard and received housing when the project was completed.

Tara Williams is new to Concordia and loving life on Liberty Street. She’s a writer and English professor, not always in that order. Contact her at Eudaimonia.Dr.Williams@gmail. com.

This is what led to one man’s houselessness

Posted on April 6, 2021 by Web Manager Posted in Concordia News

By Tara Williams | CNA Media Team

Whimsical touches – like the outfits of the day worn by Manny the mannequin – can make campsites more homey, according to Chris Gibbons. He and the mannequin live at 33rd Avenue and Dekum Street. Photo by Tara Williams

Chris Gibbons became unhoused last August, six months after being released from prison. An attempt to make hash oil in his apartment kitchen had ended in an explosion and three years in prison.

“I wasn’t out burning anyone or anything up. It was due to me doing something stupid, and it blew up in my face,” Chris said. “I got burned up really bad. I was nine days in Emanuel’s intensive care burn unit.”

He had been out of the hospital for a week. “The police came at 2 a.m. I was still all bandaged up and looked like a Q-tip, but they handcuffed me anyway. I was terrified.

“I didn’t know what to do. I couldn’t talk to anybody. The court declared my wife and two daughters victims because they were there. I had no contact with any of them until I was sentenced and placed into prison.”

Chris pled guilty to the arson charge, which reduced his sentence. His marriage did not survive his prison term.

Recently an organization that had denied him housing in the past notified Chris he is eligible for a grant to pay for two years of housing.

“They said the problem now is finding a place that is suitable and will accept me. Some places won’t accept me because of my arson charge. That’s my biggest barrier. That’s why I’m still here at the camp.

“I know someone who had an arson charge, and it took him four years.”

Chris acknowledged not all campers would rather be housed. Some are happy with how they’re living. “They’re content being here. I’m not trying to sound rude, but it’s like they don’t care. That kind of threw me for a loop.

“They don’t care that they might have to move spontaneously, so they just create these big giant messes. Then they leave it for people like us, and we get stereotyped because we’re stuck with it.

“It’s kind of sad, you know? I guess I’m trying to emphasize that we’re not the type that don’t care.

“A lot of people come up to us and ask, ‘Hey, do you mind if I post a tent up over here?’ At this camp, we’re really selective about who we’re going to have here,” he said. “We don’t want trouble.”

Chris shares camp space at 33rd Avenue and Dekum Street with a couple who live in another tent. “We talk a lot. We want to change. We do care. We know that this is just a step we have to take in order to move up or to improve. “Unfortunately we’re here. We’re going to try to make the best of it.”

Tara Williams is new to Concordia and loving life on Liberty Street. She’s a writer and English professor, not always in that order. Contact her at Eudaimonia.Dr.Williams@gmail.com.

City monitors for health, safety

Posted on April 5, 2021 by Web Manager Posted in Concordia News

By Nancy Varekamp | CNews Editor

Untold numbers of vehicles, tents and other shelters line 33rd Avenue between Columbia Boulevard and Marine Drive. It’s one of many
encampments patrolled, monitored and served by the Portland Homelessness and Urban Camping Impact Reduction Program. Photo by Gordon Riggs

The encampment on 33rd Avenue between Columbia Boulevard and Marine Drive is just one on the radar of the city. And there’s no easy solution for risks any of them may pose for the campers and/or their housed neighbors.

Assemblies of cars – ones burned to uselessness – are one concern, Jonathan Lewis told 30 Concordians at the March 3 neighborhood association general meeting. “Whenever they go to remove a vehicle, it only seems to make space for people to bring in another vehicle,” added the Portland Homelessness and Urban Camping Impact Reduction Program coordinator.

Health and safety are the chief concerns of his agency, which is assigned to provide services related to homelessness. “Our vision is to achieve a community where everyone has a safe and lawful place to sleep, access to basic hygiene, and public sanitation standards are maintained,” he said.

Reporting on the One Point of Contact system anything contrary to that vision is how everyone can help. “It’s designed to identify where the camps are that pose the greatest risk to public health and safety,” Jonathan said. Report-generated assessments are averaging 1,500 per week.

“Our response is based on risks posed, not volumes of complaints generated,” Jonathan reported. Flooding One Point with the same complaint doesn’t move a site to the top of the list.

Community members use One Point of Contact to report burned out cars like these two on 33rd Avenue. When the city removes one, “It only seems to make space for people to bring in another vehicle,” a city representative reported at the Concordia Neighborhood Association general meeting last month. Photo by Gordon Riggs

Depending on conditions of camps, some are removed, and others receive services that include garbage removal. “When you’re in a crisis mode, you literally cannot be concerned with garbage,” Jonathan explained. With the pandemic’s economic ravages have come a dramatic increase in campers, and their waste. Garbage removal prior to the pandemic averaged 60,000 pounds per month, but January’s was 800,000 pounds.

The unhoused aren’t alone in increasing that situation. “We have gotten reports where unhoused people are telling us housed folks are driving by and dumping their garbage.”

Other health and safety concerns related to houselessness also have no easy solutions. “Our program is just one spoke on the wheel,” Jonathan said. City, county and regional governments and organizations work together in their efforts to make Portland safe for its residents, housed and unhoused. He also pointed to individuals’ efforts to help each other during the ongoing pandemic, the February ice storm and especially to projects like the Free Fridges popping up across the city.

“I feel there’s no shortage of creative solutions within the Portland community,” he noted. “There’ s no shortage of opportunities for folks like yourself to get involved. What that looks like is for you all to decide.”

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

Urbanism: Council considers sheltering project

Posted on March 24, 2021 by Gordon Riggs Posted in CNA, Concordia News, Land Use & Transportation

Editor’s note: Read the latest updates on Shelter to Housing.

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

The city of Portland has been in a state of housing emergency since first declared on Oct. 7, 2015. (See ProsperPortland.us/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/Housing-Emergency.pdf.)

It has been extended roughly annually by successive city councils since then. In this context, Jan. 26, the Portland Planning and Sustainability Commission voted to send Shelter to Housing Continuum (S2HC) zoning code changes to council for adoption before the city’s current housing emergency declaration expires April 4.

The word “continuum” is used to emphasize the project goal of providing pathways for housing to provide legally to everybody. That includes temporary shelter for persons experiencing houselessness to longer-term transitional shelters with onsite supportive services to a wider variety of more affordable types of permanent housing.

The changes the S2HC proposal would make to code include:

  • Waive system development charges for outdoor shelters and for utility hookups for tiny homes on wheels
  • Allow day storage units and hygiene facilities to be located in the public right-of-way, such as in the parking strip
  • Eliminate the need for a conditional use permit to operate a meal program
  • Clarify the difference in the code between “housing,” which is intended for permanent occupancy, and “shelter,” which is intended to serve transitional or emergency needs
  • Allow longer-term occupancy of smaller shelters, such as tiny home villages, in certain zones
  • Allow outdoor shelters on small sites on publicly-owned land in industrial zones, except in general employment 1 & 2.
  • Exempt outdoor shelters from design review
  • Allow as many as 20 individual shelters as a conditional use on a site that previously allowed one
  • Remove the concept of a “household” – with its existing limitation on the number of people who may legally live in a dwelling unit – as a basis of regulation under the code
  • Replace the above with regulation of structure type and/or the number of bedrooms contained therein, as well as require a minimum amount of habitable floorspace per resident
  • Establish a threshold of as many as eight bedrooms in a dwelling unit for “household living” to distinguish it from “group living”
  • Provide the possibility to legalize as many as one tiny home on wheels per residential lot without having it count as a dwelling unit in density standards and regulate it as a vehicle and not a structure, but maintain the prohibition on using it as an accessory short-term rental

S2HC is an effort to change parts of the city code to facilitate a larger, multi-jurisdictional effort to provide safe, decent and affordable shelter and housing to every Portlander who needs it.

It will allow a range of shelters that have already been sited as temporary, emergency uses under the emergency ordinance to be reviewed and considered for approval through permanent code provisions and to allow them to be legalized and to remain once the emergency expires.

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.

Cut fossil fuels to save lives, allay allergies

Posted on March 16, 2021 by Web Manager Posted in Concordia News

By Garlynn Woodsong CNA Board Member, SW1 CNA LUTC Chair

Two new studies released last month drive home the point that the human species needs to be working to end the era of fossil fuels as quickly as possible, for our own sake if nothing else.

The first study found that burning fossil fuels kills nearly nine million people worldwide and 350,000 Americans annually. That’s more than twice what was previously estimated, according to the study published in the International Journal of Environmental Research by scientists from Harvard and three British universities.

‘There’s a perception in the United States that we have this under control, but that’s a mistake,” Joel Schwartz, told the Boston Globe. He is a Harvard professor and one of the study’s authors.

The second study was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. It found burning fossil fuels is making the North American spring pollen allergy season come earlier, linger longer and be all-around more miserable.

“This is a crystal clear example that climate change is here and it’s in every breath we take,” lead author Bill Anderegg told the Associated Press.

The study measured changes in pollen concentrations across North America from 1990 to 2018. It found the pollen allergy season now starts 20 days earlier, and results in 21% more pollen in the air.

The study further found this trend to be caused by global warming, which is caused by higher atmospheric carbon dioxide levels that are produced by the burning of fossil fuels.

It’s more than just an obnoxious cause of sneezing and sniffly noses. Worsened pollen allergies are a significant public health concern because they can set off or exacerbate respiratory diseases like asthma. That chronic condition already costs the U.S. medical system $80 billion annually in lost productivity and treatments.

Concordia is not immune from fossil fuel emissions with the roads, rail lines, airport and industrial facilities in and near our neighborhood.

The only silver lining for us is that we’re not as bad off as some. The worst U.S. pollen impacts, the study found, are in Texas, closely followed by the Midwest and Southeast.

Worldwide, nearly one in five deaths are from fossil fuel combustion. In much of east and southeast Asia, the rate is nearly one in three deaths.

The good news, however, is that reducing fossil fuel emissions can save lives. Emissions were cut nearly in half in China between 2012 and 2018. That saved 2.4 million lives worldwide during 2018, including 1.5 million in China.

Cutting, and eventually eliminating, fossil fuel consumption is something we can do.

Doing so will literally save our lives.

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.

Draft CNA LUTC Agenda: Wed, March 17, 2021

Posted on March 10, 2021 by Web Manager Posted in Land Use & Transportation
Here’s a draft agenda for next week’s LUTC meeting.
WHAT:
Concordia Land Use & Transportation Committee (LUTC)
WHEN:
Wednesday, March 17th, 2021
WHAT TIME:
7pm
WHO:
Concordia neighbors interested in improving the neighborhood through safer streets, more housing opportunities, and more local business
HOW:
It’s virtual.
Login online at this link:
https://meet.google.com/ocg-wgut-iki
Or call in by phone:
316-512-3077 PIN: 417604919#
WHY:
“Cities have the capability of providing something for everybody, only because, and only when, they are created by everybody.” -Jane Jacobs
See you there!
cheers,
~Garlynn

::-::-::-::-::-::-::-::-::-::
Garlynn G. Woodsong (he/him)
Vice Chair and Board Member, Position Southwest 1
Land Use & Transportation Committee Chair
Concordia Neighborhood Association
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