Backpack fundraising at Written on the Body massage, in December!

During December, Written on the Body Massage and Acupuncture Studio will donate ten percent of massage and gift certificate sales to the King Backpack Program, to provide weekend lunches to schoolchildren at King Elementary School who are in need.

Please check out their menu of massages: it’s extensive, covering all sorts of needs.

written

503-473-8515
wonthebody@gmail.com

5005 NE 13th Avenue
Portland, OR 97211

Celebrate at Two Plum Park with us, this Sunday!

no2The Bench installation in Two Plum Park is complete!

I’d like to thank each and every one of you who made this bench possible!  After such a long journey, it suddenly feels simple again; a place to sit, relax and enjoy Two Plum Park.

Portland weather in November tends to be rainy, but this deserves a celebration!

Sunday November 24th from 2-4 pm we will toast the bench installation with hot cider in the park!  (There will be a canopy to gather under, in case of rain.)

Stop by, have a seat and discover Two Plum Park!

–Emily Wilson

PAALF intergenerational forum on gentrification and resiliency, Nov. 20th.

424697_413387082050307_2092664253_nPlease join the Portland African American Leadership Forum for the next intergenerational forum in our quarterly series.

Topic: Bringing together generations to explore community strength and resiliency within the cycle of displacement and gentrification

Date: Wednesday, November 20
Time: 6:00-9:00 PM
Location: Oregon Association of Minority Entrepreneurs (OAME)
4134 N. Vancouver Avenue, Portland, OR 97217
(Parking available. Bus and Bike friendly)

TO RSVP, please click here.

Questions? Please contact Rachel Gilmer at Rachel@aalfnw.org or ph. 503.249.1721 Ext. 230.

PAALF hosts quarterly intergenerational forums with the objective to:

  • Build individual relationships across generations
  • Provide opportunity for self reflection
  • Deepen the understandings of each generation’s perceptions of themselves and towards others
  • Strengthen relationships within and across gender and generation
  • Inform the PAALF action agenda

Community protest against PDC decision on Vanport lot, Sunday, Nov 17th.

Community members disappointed in this week’s PDC decision on the Vanport lot (MLK/Alberta) sent us this announcement:

A coalition of concerned citizens will gather this Sunday to protest a decision made by the Portland Development Commission (PDC) that will further exacerbate gentrification in the neighborhoods of North and Northeast Portland.

Date: Sunday, November 17, from 11 am to 1 pm

Location: Northwest corner of MLK and Alberta

The PDC has voted to give away $2.4 million in taxpayer dollars to a billionaire family for the development of the national grocery chain on Northeast Martin Luther King Boulevard and Alberta. In this age of service reductions, school closures, layoffs and budget cuts, the PDC hopes this subsidy for billionaires – which includes the co-owner of LA Lakers who is pursuing acquisition of his 3rd professional sports team – will trickle down to benefit the “under-served community.”

This development will occur in one of the fastest gentrifying zip codes in the nation (where rental vacancy times have recently dropped to a stunning eight days). Over the past decades, the PDC has contributed to the rapid displacement of traditionally African American and low-income residents living in North and Northeast Portland. This abuse of taxpayers dollars will continue to fuel a massive amount of new private investments – micro-apartments, skyrocketing rents, real estate speculation, that will continue to transform this community into an unlivable red-line for low-income residents.

There are obvious concerns about whether the PDC should subsidize Majestic Realty Company when there are 4 grocery stores that offer commercial and organic choices within a mile and a half of the site. There are true food deserts in our city, mostly in East Portland, that continue to be overlooked for equitable public resources.

In addition, this deal constructed by the Portland Development Commission was far from transparent. The recommendation for a grocery store project was developed by a committee over a decade ago. No public forum has been provided to re-evaluate this recommendation in over 5 years. The general public was not informed of the ‘mystery grocery store’ until days before the PDC Board brought their secret agreement to a vote.

Despite a long history of unfulfilled promises for remedies, the city bureaucracy has failed to see this property as an opportunity to bring together neighbors and community members affected by gentrification about what our vision is, for our public land.

We must try harder to hold the PDC to higher standards – more accountability, more transparency, and stronger focus on equity.