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Concordia Art Works – Pablo Brings Mexican Art to Alberta Street

Posted on September 27, 2020 by Web Manager Posted in Arts & Culture, Concordia News

By Maquette Reeverts | Alberta Art Works

Pablo Gonzalez
Pablo Gonzalez moved to Portland to pursue his art. In 19 years, he’s left his mark – and continues to – on many walls on Alberta Street. Photo by Maquette Reeverts

Born in Zongolica – meaning crafty hair – in Veracruz, Mexico, Pablo Gonzalez came to Portland in 2001 to pursue his art. He loved the beautiful trees and worked at Al Forno’s Pizza, where he did his first murals on Alberta Street.

Influenced by the Mexican tradition of murals, he carried a portfolio of his work to show store owners in his search of walls to paint. He now has quite a body of work on Alberta.

La Sirenita hosts his mermaid, her scales made of CDs reflecting the afternoon sun. On the alley wall, he collaborated with Consuela del Moral to paint Fertiledad del la Tierra – Fertile Earth – depicting various Mexican symbols, animals and designs.

On the once-vacant building on 23rd Avenue and Alberta, Pablo and friends painted a whale, elephant and large roses atop a stenciled background on the façade.

On Dar Salam’s front patio, find his trompe l’oeil. It’s an art technique that uses realistic imagery and perspective to create the optical illusion you are sitting on a Middle Eastern village street as you dine.

His latest mural at southeast 136th Avenue and Powell Street honors Black Lives Matter. Larger-than-life portraits of George Floyd and Quincey Hanes contrast a local incident with the more nationally known tragedy.

He received some negative feedback – being a Mexican artist – and pushback from the building owner, but he knew the importance of the message and continued his work.

Now Pablo’s portfolio is full of examples of interior and exterior murals, food carts and works on canvas. Visit PablosMurals.com to see his body of work.

Pablo invites fellow artists to an outdoor show in his yard for Last Thursdays. Find his sign on 19th Avenue and Alberta directing you to his house behind the Alberta Street Gallery. Listen for the DJ playing on the front porch.

“Times are tough,” Pablo said. “But I just keep going forward with positivity.”

CNA respects the views and beliefs of all Concordians, and their cultures and faiths. The views expressed by this writer do not necessarily reflect the views of CNA.

Michel Reeverts, aka Maquette , holds a master of arts degree in art education, serves Alberta Art Works as director and Alberta Street Gallery as a board member. She is also a practicing artist. Contact her at Maquette@AlbertaArtWorks.org.

Chair’s Corner – No end to distancing in sight; creativity beckons

Posted on September 26, 2020 by Web Manager Posted in Concordia News

By Astrid Furstner | CNA Chair

This time of year reminds me of the Shel Silverstein poem “Here comes summer.” The summer, indeed, has gone by quickly. It’s September and we’re all adjusting to a new normal. Many of us are handling working from home, adjusted hours and life schedules and – for those of us with children – learning to home-school our children.

Some have adjusted to this new routine, while others are still struggling. Throughout all of this, we should remember to care for our mental well-being as well, of course, as our physical.

Take time to breathe, enjoy a cup of coffee/tea, give yourself a moment, check on your neighbor, text a friend, hug your children or enroll in a virtual exercise program – anything to keep going. We tried a family 30-minute virtual yoga class and it was awesome!

When will this end? We honestly don’t know.

What I do know, is that we are trying to do our best. The Concordia Neighborhood Association continues to meet remotely by video conference.

In August, we held our first learning webinar – thanks to the Street Trust for providing the opportunity to learn and, of course, our speaker, attorney Chris Thomas. He provided us with an hour of learning regarding rules of the road for bicyclists. We had 18 in attendance, and you’ll find notes on that session at ConcordiaPDX.org/BikeLaws.

We hope to have more learning opportunities via online webinars. If you have topics, suggestions – or are interested in sharing your knowledge about something you are passionate about or are experienced in – let me know. Email me at Chair@ConcordiaPDX.org.

Last month the Office of Community & Civic Life posted its findings about how people react to Neighborhood Watch signs at MailChi.mp/bb89424745c3/the-power-of-signs-10619982.

In turn, that page links to PortlandOregon.gov/civic/62587 for information on the Neighbors Together program. It’s a new virtual community conversation that provides resources, tips and creative ideas on how to support one another reaching out to neighbors – especially those isolated and without digital access. Group training in Neighbors Together is offered via that site.

I would be interested to know what you think of it. Again, please email me.

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.

More units will serve more family sizes

Posted on September 19, 2020 by Web Manager Posted in Concordia News

By Michael French | CNA Media Team

Dekum Court
Nine-year-old year old Kylie Williams has lived at Dekum Court for as long as she can remember. Her apartment and the other 39 are planned for demolition, after replacements are built on the five-acre site. Then 160 additional units are scheduled for construction. Photo by Michael French

As one answer to a shortage of affordable housing in Portland, redevelopment of a public housing community in Concordia will provide more homes to income-qualified families by 2024.

Dekum Court, located at Saratoga Street near Columbia Boulevard, is being reimagined with community input.

To accommodate more families on the five-acre parcel that now includes just 40 units, the new structures will offer an additional 160 units—ultimately housing about 585 individuals in apartments ranging from studios to four- bedroom units.

Built in 1972, the original structures are plagued by moisture and suspected mold, and they contain damaged asbestos-containing materials. Applications for homes at Dekum Court exceed available units, and the two- and three bedroom units don’t accommodate singles and larger families.

Home Forward, the agency that oversees public housing in Multnomah County, owns and operates Dekum Court and is managing the $66.5 million redevelopment.

The majority of current Dekum Court residents identify as Latinx or Black/African American. Informed by Portland’s history of gentrification and displacement, Home Forward is managing the redevelopment with sensitivity to impacts on current residents and the neighborhood.

“We want to think about how we can make sure people who have been living in north and northeast Portland for a long time – and who may be at risk because of the market forces at work – can stay and keep their connections to their schools, their places of worship, their friends and families,” said Jonathan Trutt, Home Forward development director.

For the added units, Home Forward will reach out to culturally-specific organizations such as NAYA, Hacienda, SelfEnhancement Inc. and Urban League to get the word out. To qualify, applicants must meet requirements based on family size and household income.

A community advisory committee includes opportunities for residents and community members to provide input into issues related to support services, design and construction. John McSherry represents the Concordia Neighborhood Association on that committee.

To minimize disruption to families currently living at the complex, they will move into their new homes before the rest of the complex is redeveloped.

Phase 1 to replace at least 40 units to house current Dekum Court residents will start next summer, for completion by autumn 2022.

Phase 2 includes the demolition of the previous buildings and new construction of 160 new apartments by spring 2024.

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.

Horrifying crash highlights road diet need

Posted on September 13, 2020 by Web Manager Posted in Concordia News, Land Use & Transportation

By Garlynn Woodsong | CNA Board Member, SW1 Land Use & Transportation Committee Chair

In early August, a mother and her son, a student at Vernon Elementary School, were traveling on North Portland Highway (Hwy 30) when she lost control of her vehicle, it crossed the center line and impacted with an unoccupied truck and fifth-wheel on the opposite shoulder.

The car burst into flames, and both vehicle occupants died in the resulting fire. Police report the vehicle was traveling at a high rate of speed before impact.

A year ago, this space reported on the Columbia/Lombard project that Portland Bureau of Transportation (PBOT) had embarked upon to study conditions along those roadways, and recommend safety improvements.

Since that time, absolutely no safety improvements have been made to Lombard Street, meaning nothing prevents future tragedies such as this one from occurring again, and again and again.

It’s an unsafe highway, and the Oregon Department of Transportation (ODOT) does not appear to feel any motivation in the slightest to fix it to make it safer for travelers and nearby residents.

On the contrary, ODOT appears to feel its only required role is to justify why continuing the status quo is the only outcome they’re interested in.

The time has thus come to remove North Portland Highway from ODOT’s jurisdiction, and to transfer responsibility for the roadway to PBOT. This will free the roadway from needing to meet ODOT standards, and allow for alternative design solutions to be implemented.

Concordia Neighborhood Association suggests the facility be put onto a “road diet.” The roadway cross-section would have a continuous sidewalk, street trees and a two-directional cycle track on the south side next to the neighborhood.

Then add another row of trees, on-street parking, a single eastbound traffic lane, a median with trees and turn pockets at intersections, and a single westbound traffic lane with a shoulder/ break-down lane.

The trees would limit the ability of traffic to cross the center line, reducing the severity of crashes. With only one lane in each direction, the temptation to speed to pass other vehicles would be eliminated and, with lower speeds, would also come fewer crashes and deaths.

A protected cycle track and new sidewalk would allow bicycles and pedestrians to travel east and west along the corridor safely and comfortably. The trees would provide shade to reduce the urban heat island effect, where large expanses of asphalt cause excessive heat on hot summer days. They would also help to capture pollution, trapping it on their exposed leaf and branch surfaces until it can be washed away in the next rain.

It’s past time to stop making excuses for why bad designs have to remain. It’s time to start building the safer future that we need to manifest to stop the senseless deaths on this blood-stained piece of local infrastructure.

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.

NAYA plans virtual gala, perhaps powwow

Posted on September 12, 2020 by Web Manager Posted in Concordia News

By Steve Elder | CNA Media Team

NAYA pow wow
The Native American Youth and Family Center’s September powwow is canceled. Dances like this one from a previous year may become available in virtual cultural nights. Meantime, the 17th Annual Gala & Auction is still scheduled – but online. Photo courtesy of NAYA

What would have been the 11th Neerchokikoo Powwow has become another casualty of the pandemic.

However, stay tuned for evolving news from the Native American Youth and Family Center (NAYA). According to the nonprofit’s NAYA eNews, staff members are making plans for virtual cultural nights and other programming to keep the community connected to culture and each other. Find details as they become available at NAYApdx.org/events.

Canceling the September in-person event didn’t come easily. Since 2010, the powwow has been a celebration of Native American history and culture through food, music and dance. Men and women of all ages sing and dance throughout the day in their own styles.

The Neerchokikoo Powwow has always been free to the public. In addition to dance exhibitions, native artists offer beautiful prints, jewelry and other items for sale.

It is named for the Chinook village that previously occupied the home of NAYA.

One event NAYA doesn’t plan to cancel is the 17th Annual Gala & Auction. Scheduled for Nov. 13, it’s still on the NAYA calendar – but it is going virtual.

Plans call for Native American art, special performances and inspiring stories. To participate as an artist or sponsor – or to join the event online – keep an eye on https://Gala.NAYApdx.org.

Portland is the home to the ninth largest urban Native American population in the United States, representing members of 380 different tribes.

NAYA works to enrich the lives of native youth and families through education, community involvement and culturally-specific programming It has provided educational services, cultural arts programming and direct support to reduce poverty to the Portland metropolitan area’s native population for over 30 years.

The family center serves self-identified Native American youths and their families throughout the Portland metropolitan area.

NAYA’s powwow isn’t the only one canceled due to the pandemic. The Gathering of Nations, the country’s largest powwow, typically draws some 75,000 Native Americans and non-native people to Albuquerque, New Mexico, to watch 3,000 participants who represent over 750 tribes from the United States and Canada.

The term powwow is traditional, according to “Your Guide to Understanding and Enjoying Powwows.” Author Murton McCluskey wrote, “Some reports say that the word powwow has the origin from the Pawnee word, pa-wa, meaning ‘to eat.’”

“Other sources say the word is of Algonquin origin and was originally pronounced ‘pauau,’ which indicates a gathering of people for the purpose of celebration of an important event. In any case it is a special time to gather and celebrate, meet old friends and create new friendships.”

Steve Elder, East2@ ConcordiaPDX.org, is an inactive lawyer, a developer, activist and old grouch

Testimony welcome for tree code changes

Posted on September 6, 2020 by Web Manager Posted in Concordia News

By Sharon Kelly | CNA Media Team

Bruce Nelson
Bruce Nelson hopes neighbors will weigh in on amendments to the tree code to save older, larger trees throughout Concordia and Portland. Photo by Sharon Kelly

Portland City Council will consider amendments to the five-year-old tree code, Title 11 Trees, in September and October to save more trees in Concordia and throughout Portland.

Bruce Nelson hopes neighbors will help influence the city council to approve the amendments. He’s a Cully resident, retired horticulture professor, Portland Urban Forestry Commission member and a founding member of Trees for Life Oregon (TFLO).

“We’re losing too many trees because it’s too easy to take them down,” he pointed out. “We’ll gradually lose older large trees, a lot of those to development.

“It happens one lot at a time,” he added. “But give it 40 years, and many will have to go to a park to sit under the shade of a tree. It’s not that people are opposed to trees, they just don’t make trees a priority.”

Jim Gerbach, Concordia resident, neighborhood tree steward and also a founding member of TFLO explained, “Concordia has a lot of smaller affordable homes and has already been targeted for in-fill development and the construction of duplexes.”

According to Jim, with the August approval of the Residential Infill Project, infill will accelerate with four to six homes on a lot.

“It’s important that Concordians know about the protections for trees in their neighborhood and speak up, or they may find that trees they’re used to seeing will not be there.”

In an effort to strengthen the existing tree code and address inequities, city staff proposes the requirement that trees on private property with a diameter of 20 inches or larger be preserved, or developers pay mitigation fees for removal. Currently, the preservation threshold measurement is 36 inches.

City council will also vote on removing exemptions from some properties zoned commercial and industrial.

Concordia Neighborhood Association (CNA), TFLO, Audubon Society and many other tree advocates call for support, even stronger code and incentives for creative design to protect trees. “We encourage the city to remove minimum lot size exemptions…ensuring our neighborhood’s tree profile remains consistent throughout,” reported a letter to the city from CNA signed by chair Astrid Furstner.

Key dates to testify in support of the amendments are:

  • Sep. 8: Planning and Sustainability Commission and Urban Forestry Commission joint public hearing
  • Sept. 17: Urban Forestry Commission meeting and vote
  • Sept 22: Planning and Sustainability Commission meeting and vote
  • Oct. 29: Portland City Council public hearing – written testimony also accepted prior to the in-person hearing For details about those dates and testifying, visit TreesforLifeOregon.org and TreesForLifeOregon.org/how-totestify.

Editor’s note: Sharon has more to tell about the tree code, tree advocates’ enthusiasm for changes, the impact on trees at affordable housing sites and online references for more information. For “the rest of the story,” visit ConcordiaPDX.org/2020TreeCode.

Sharon Kelly uses her outreach and coordination skills to support trees, farmers, small businesses, and engage people to create more healthy, equitable, sustainable communities. She’s best known locally as market manager for Cully and Woodlawn farmers markets and as web manager for Trees for Life Oregon. Contact her at NaturalFarmerPDX@gmail.com.

Memorials share faces, tell stories

Posted on September 5, 2020 by Web Manager Posted in Concordia News

By Nancy Varekamp | CNews Editor

Neighbor Rob van Nood offers the names and faces – plus internet stories – of Black people who died at the hands of police or vigilante citizens. By CNews press time, he had created and installed 24 memorials on poles bordering Fernhill Park. Photos by Lloyd Kimeldorf and Gordon Riggs

“Say Their Names,” isn’t just a mantra for one neighbor, nor is it enough.

“I wanted to know more about these people who are in the headlines,” explained Rob van Nood.

“I started doing more research and started realizing, for me, the power of actually knowing a person’s story is a much more emotional connection.”

Between late June and mid-August, he had created and installed 24 memorials on poles bordering Fernhill Park near his Cully home. Each one shows the face and the name of a Black person who died at the hands of police or vigilante citizens.

Additionally, the memorials display quick response (QR) codes to sites that tell the victims’ stories and electronic votive candles on a timer that lights them for five hours beginning at 8 p.m.

“It gives us an emotional connection to the humanity of each person. I’m still going,” Rob said. “I’ll keep making them with the time and energy I have.”

Once installed, Rob checks on each memorial and provides maintenance as needed twice a week. “This gives me an opportunity to remember to say each name several times a week, and think about their personal stories.

“I’ve always been interested in the idea of public art, basically unauthorized public art,” he explained. He’s an educator, and art is his lifelong passion.

“I wanted to do this for my neighborhood as a gesture of remembrance that might stay in people’s minds beyond the headlines,” he added.

His website explains his rationale: “Who we choose to memorialize in public spaces says a lot about who we are as a people. At a time when the memorialization of historical figures is being questioned across the country, it is every person’s right to consider who should be represented in our neighborhoods and cities.

“This work is a reminder and a call that it is time that this country raise up the images and stories of people who have lived under the oppression of systematic racism for over 500 years.”

Rob added, “As a white man, I’m struggling with whether I am the right person to be choosing the names.” The first dozen victims he memorialized came from a list of names and websites distributed in May by his school’s inclusion and outreach director.

The next 14 came from headlines and three from the mid-20th century. Rob’s social media invites more recommendations.

In fact, that social media has gone viral since neighbors and other visitors to Fernhill Park share them from bit.ly/FHMemorial, @FernhillMemorial and #FernhillMemorial.

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

Concordia Art Work – Bad tags Part 2: how can you avoid them?

Posted on August 28, 2020 by Web Manager Posted in Arts & Culture, Concordia News

By Maquette Reeverts | Alberta Art Works

This mural by Carla Bartow on a wall of the Black United Fund of Oregon illustrates the history of the area. In 2015, it was the first outdoor mural for the artist and is despoiled by taggers. Photo by Maquette Reeverts

So what can you do to help curb tagging? Plant thorny trees or bushes, remove ways to climb, light the area well, install a “living” mural or pay an artist to create a mural.

Portland’s Graffiti Task Force endorses murals as one of the best strategies available to reduce unwanted tagging. Murals demand attention and are far more respected than a glaring blank space.

They can educate, unify, beautify and create an experience that gets spread far and wide via social media. Murals can also be protected using an anti-graffiti coating making any future graffiti clean ups easier.

Interested in a mural? Use the $1,000 you might otherwise pay in fines, and pay an artist. A local one earns brownie points.

Alberta Art Works can help put you in contact with an artist and facilitate the somewhat complex mural permitting process. Or look into the Regional Art and Culture Council’s (RACC’s) Public Art Mural Program, which can provide matching funds up to $5,000 – or $2,500 if the artist is a college art student.

Under this program, RACC will own the completed artwork and have the artists waive their Visual Artist Rights Act (VARA) benefits. Those protect the artist’s image as the artist intended, regardless of the ownership of the final mural. This ensures the artist’s image remains as the artist intended, and it cannot be altered and nothing added to the creation.

Murals on private property are also a solution for those fences, garage doors or concrete walls that are unsightly or targets for tagging. Murals contrast the negative mental health effects of concrete and asphalt.

Through the visual aesthetic, murals promote a sense of identity, belonging, attachment, welcoming and openness, and they strengthens our community identification.

CNA respects the views and beliefs of all Concordians, and their cultures and faiths. The views expressed by this writer do not necessarily reflect the views of CNA.

Michel Reeverts, aka Maquette , holds a master of arts degree in art education, serves Alberta Art Works as director and Alberta Street Gallery as a board member. She is also a practicing artist. Contact her at Maquette@ AlbertaArtWorks.org.

Chair’s Corner – CNA business forges on

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

By Astrid Furstner | CNA Chair

Although most of us are facing the trials and tribulations – aka adventure – of working from home and social distancing, the Concordia Neighborhood Association (CNA) Board of Directors continues to be busy.

We have received many requests for funds.

Under normal circumstances, the association fundraises through various programs or activities we put together to help those within our community. Now, however, we too are facing a shortfall. Under normal circumstances we would be able to assist and donate funds but, as it stands, we don’t have the ability to put together activities. We are not generating any income. Therefore, we must fall back on reserves to persevere.

Participants in a street mural painting project requested funding to purchase paint so that they can restore a mural on Sumner Street and Cesar Chavez Boulevard. Unfortunately, we could not fund their project this year, but perhaps those among us in the neighborhood can assist. If you have paint cans or funds you would like to donate, let me know and I’ll forward your offer along to them. My email is at the bottom of this column.

In addition, there were a few requests to assist local restaurants and businesses implement city-approved road closures. While the association cannot fund the entirety of the requests, we are able to spread it around among three plazas within the Concordia boundaries to assist with defraying some of the costs.

See Pages 6-7 for details on the innovations local restaurants and other businesses are pursuing to provide safe outdoor venues we can all enjoy.

Due to the current state we find ourselves in regarding COVID-19, the McMenamins Kennedy School Community Room is not available yet for us to use and to rent out. As soon as it is, we can begin to offer that perk once again!

The team planning redevelopment of the Portland Community College Workforce Training Center updated the CNA Land Use & Transportation Committee (LUTC) recently. They received public input from the community through our general meeting and other venues late last year. Now they’re reporting back on how that input is being used. Visit the update at PCC.edu/bond/pmwtc.

Finally, I need some assistance. We would like to put together a few educational webinars for our neighborhood. What interests you? What can we do as a neighborhood association to help keep you in the know, in the loop and interested?

I could use some ideas – so please send them my way at Chair@ConcordiaPDX.org. I look forward to receiving them.

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.

‘Tales of Portland’ begins here in Concordia

Posted on August 21, 2020 by Web Manager Posted in Concordia News

By Tamara Anne Fowler | CNA Media Team

Concordian Jeff Dodge (left) and Norman Sylvester are collaborating on a seven-part series profiling Portland’s history, beginning with the Lewis and Clark Expedition from nearly 200 years ago.

A group of the last standing Buffalo Soldiers would meet every Sunday afternoon at Magoo’s Pub on 42nd Avenue. Once Magoo’s sold in 2015, they lost their socializing venue.

Norman Sylvester understood. “We have been focusing on the impact Portland urban growth has on the African American community.”

“Tales of Old Portland,” a documentary with a projected seven episodes, presents an overview of the Portland historic journey from Lewis and Clark to the 1950s in its first episode, “Coming to Portland.” Find it at Facebook.com/oldPDX.

Norman and Concordian Jeff Dodge are creating the series. It’s been in the works for more than three years. Jeff explained, “I’d like to see this series come across with a genuine and accurate interest in where we come from and how we got into our contemporary standards.”

The next episode will focus on the ship building years in Portland, World War II, the establishment and destruction of Vanport and their overall impact on Portland history.

“The final episode is based around the history of the ‘Good In The Hood’ festival,” Jeff said. “That is actually where Norman and I met in 1995.”

If all goes well they will wrap up things by early 2021. At that time, they may expand into the other neighborhoods and those histories.

If you have tales to share with the two – especially from 1940s north and northeast Portland – they’ d like to hear from you at TrenchDigging@gmail.com.

Jeff and wife Jemila Hart have lived around the corner from Alberta Rose Theatre since 2004. They have seen a lot of change.

Between 1993 and 1995 was probably the most dangerous time in this area, as a lot of territorial gang disputes seemed to culminate around Alberta or Woodlawn.

Jeff said, “We’ll see how the interview process goes, but I’m really hoping we get to address that period of history in one of our future episodes.”

Giving his nieces a tour of Alberta last spring, he watched them take in the murals, various art galleries and eateries. It made Jeff believe this version of Alberta can survive and serve as a cornerstone of Portland culture.

“And I plan on celebrating Alberta’s and Concordia’s history as long as I live here,” he added. “I love the beautiful Concordia University campus,” Norman said. “Tears in my eye at the thought of it closing.

“The preservation of our history is a very important mission,” he added. “The reference point from our beginning helps us understand the present and prepare for the future.”

Tamara Anne Fowler 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.

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