11-15-2024  3:17 pm   •   PDX and SEA Weather

Northwest News

Program helps youth make smart nutrition, health decisions

Beginning later this month, people will have an opportunity to make a difference in the health of today's youth, as well as the health of future populations.
Starting Aug. 20, for four half-days, the MIKE program will train future mentors to work with students at several Portland high schools. MIKE stands for Multicultural Integrated Kidney Education Program, but is named for Dr. Michael Hartnett, a kidney specialist and late husband of Dr. Cheryl Neal.
The training will take place from noon to 5 p.m. at Portland Opportunities Industrialization Center (POIC), 717 North Killingsworth Ct. and runs Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday.
Organizers for The MIKE program believe disease and conditions leading to chronic kidney failure start early in life, are passed from generation to generation and are growing at epidemic rates. They also believe teens are one of the most underserved and vulnerable populations in the city.
"These youth are our next generation of parents, productive citizens and compassionate care providers," said MIKE founder and president, Dr. Cheryl Neal. "Given the opportunity and support, they do want to make a real difference and are more likely to be open to messages from ....


READ MORE

Inspired by family"s legacy, photographer allows normal girls to shine

In 1954, Benjamin and Mary Rose Dean opened a hair salon in the heart of Northeast Portland. Now, 53 years later, Dean's Beauty Salon & Barber Shop is not only still in business and owned by the family, but it has received a tribute from the late couple's granddaughter, Kelly Johnson.
Johnson, a professional photographer, has been either hanging out or working for her grandparents' business since she was a child. She knows how important a hairstyle is to ....


READ MORE

After three years, Constructing Hope stays strong to reduce recidivism

Clarence Larkins and David Greenidge say they have a goal. It might be a little tough – maybe impossible — to accomplish, but they might have a fighting chance. They say they want to bankrupt the prison industry.
For three years now, members of the Irvington Covenant Community Development Corporation have been trying to attain that goal, a handful of ex-offenders at a .....

READ MORE

Bulletin Board

9. SAY HEY! Help welcome a special group of new professionals of color joining the Oregon and Southwest Washington communities. 5:30-8 p.m. Two World Trade Center - Plaza Level, 121 S.W. Salmon St.
10. MOVIE NIGHT. Come watch "Willy Wonka & The Chocolate Factory" at the transformed outdoor movie theater. Pioneer Courthouse Square. Begins at Dusk.....


READ MORE

Kids participating in the Langston Hughes Performing Arts Center's "Cinderella A Love Story With the Sounds of Motown" walk and dance in the Umoja Fest African Heritage Parade on Saturday. The play will run Aug. 21-26 at the Seattle Repertory Theatre.


READ MORE

While unemployment is low, majority of jobs don"t pay living wage

Washington's unemployment rate is hovering near a 30-year-low, and the state's average wage rose 5.3 percent last year. But a closer look at the numbers shows that most jobs created amid the economic expansion in recent years don't pay very well.
Almost 70 percent of the 240,000 jobs created in Washington between 2002 and 2006 paid less than $832 a week, or just over $43,000 a year — what Penn State's Poverty in America project calculates as a "living wage" for a family of two adults and two children here, The Seattle Times reported Sunday.
Several of the fastest-growing job categories — retail, hospitality, agriculture and social services — have been at the lower end of the wage scale.
More than 26,000 new administrative and support jobs, for example, pay an average weekly wage of $605 or $31,500 a year. General retailers added nearly 9,900 jobs that paid $460.53 a week on average, or less than ....


READ MORE

Seattle"s Cecil Cross II, 24, returns home to promote his first novel

Seattle native Cecil Cross II knows a thing or two about the life-altering first semester of college. After all, the 24-year-old first-time author just graduated in 2004 from Clark Atlanta University in Atlanta, Ga.
The young writer and journalist was in town on Aug. 4 at Barnes & Noble University Village promoting his debut novel, "First Semester," a fictional coming-of-age story about ....


READ MORE

Low, moderate income families are eligible for early education

City of Seattle preschool programs are now enrolling 4-year olds from low-to-moderate income families.
Seattle Step Ahead and the Early Childhood Education and Assistance Program still has free or reduced-cost spaces available for 638 children at 22 sites in southeast and southwest Seattle this school year.
"These preschools help get children ready for kindergarten academically, socially and physically," said Patricia McInturff, director of the Seattle Human Services Department. "The earliest years of a child's life are critical to ....


READ MORE

Portland Development Commission

Portland Development CommissionThe Urban Renewal Agency for the City of Portland, OregonPortland is…


READ MORE

Somalian immigrant  Zhara Mohammed demonstrates the art of Henna on the arm of a volunteer at the Sellwood-Moreland Library-sponsored event in Sellwood Park. Henna is a natural dye made from plant leaves that is made into a paste for which Somalian women, as well as other women around the globe, decorate their hands and feet. Designs stay on the skin for about one week. The demonstration was part of Sellwood's Sundae in the Park event.


READ MORE

Recently Published by The Skanner News

  • Default
  • Title
  • Date
  • Random

theskanner50yrs 250x300