11-27-2024  4:21 pm   •   PDX and SEA Weather

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NORTHWEST NEWS

Oregon Tribe Has Hunting and Fishing Rights Restored Under a Long-Sought Court Ruling

The tribe was among the dozens that lost federal recognition in the 1950s and ‘60s under a policy of assimilation known as “termination.” Congress voted to re-recognize the tribe in 1977. But to have their land restored, the tribe had to agree to a federal court order that limited their hunting, fishing and gathering rights. 

Forecasts Warn of Possible Winter Storms Across US During Thanksgiving Week

Two people died in the Pacific Northwest after a rapidly intensifying “bomb cyclone” hit the West Coast last Tuesday, bringing fierce winds that toppled trees and power lines and damaged homes and cars. Fewer than 25,000 people in the Seattle area were still without power Sunday evening.

Huge Number Of Illegal Guns In Portland Come From Licensed Dealers, New Report Shows

Local gun safety advocacy group argues for state-level licensing and regulation of firearm retailers.

'Bomb Cyclone' Kills 1 and Knocks out Power to Over Half a Million Homes Across the Northwest US

A major storm was sweeping across the northwest U.S., battering the region with strong winds and rain. The Weather Prediction Center issued excessive rainfall risks through Friday and hurricane-force wind warnings were in effect. 

NEWS BRIEFS

Vote By Mail Tracking Act Passes House with Broad Support

The bill co-led by Congressman Mfume would make it easier for Americans to track their mail-in ballots; it advanced in the U.S. House...

OMSI Opens Indoor Ice Rink for the Holiday Season

This is the first year the unique synthetic ice rink is open. ...

Thanksgiving Safety Tips

Portland Fire & Rescue extends their wish to you for a happy and safe Thanksgiving Holiday. ...

Portland Art Museum’s Rental Sales Gallery Showcases Diverse Talent

New Member Artist Show will be open to the public Dec. 6 through Jan. 18, with all works available for both rental and purchase. ...

Dolly Parton's Imagination Library of Oregon Announces New State Director and Community Engagement Coordinator

“This is an exciting milestone for Oregon,” said DELC Director Alyssa Chatterjee. “These positions will play critical roles in...

Oregon tribe has hunting and fishing rights restored under a long-sought court ruling

LINCOLN CITY, Ore. (AP) — Drumming made the floor vibrate and singing filled the conference room of the Chinook Winds Casino Resort in Lincoln City, on the Oregon coast, as hundreds in tribal regalia danced in a circle. For the last 47 years, the Confederated Tribes of Siletz...

Schools are bracing for upheaval over fear of mass deportations

Last time Donald Trump was president, rumors of immigration raids terrorized the Oregon community where Gustavo Balderas was the school superintendent. Word spread that immigration agents were going to try to enter schools. There was no truth to it, but school staff members had to...

Arkansas heads to No. 23 Missouri for matchup of SEC teams trying to improve bowl destinations

Arkansas (6-5, 3-4 SEC) at No. 23 Missouri (8-3, 4-3, No. 21 CFP), Saturday, 3:30 p.m. ET (SEC) BetMGM College Football Odds: Missouri by 3 1/2. Series record: Missouri leads 11-4. WHAT’S AT STAKE? Arkansas and Missouri know they are headed...

Arkansas heads to No. 23 Missouri intent on winning in Columbia for the first time in seven tries

Arkansas coach Sam Pittman delivers a presentation to his team every Monday about the upcoming opponent. It's a breakdown of rosters and schemes, of course, but also an opportunity for Pittman to deliver a motivating message to his team. Like the fact that the Razorbacks have never...

OPINION

A Loan Shark in Your Pocket: Cellphone Cash Advance Apps

Fast-growing app usage leaves many consumers worse off. ...

America’s Healing Can Start with Family Around the Holidays

With the holiday season approaching, it seems that our country could not be more divided. That division has been perhaps the main overarching topic of our national conversation in recent years. And it has taken root within many of our own families. ...

Donald Trump Rides Patriarchy Back to the White House

White male supremacy, which Trump ran on, continues to play an outsized role in exacerbating the divide that afflicts our nation. ...

Why Not Voting Could Deprioritize Black Communities

President Biden’s Justice40 initiative ensures that 40% of federal investment benefits flow to disadvantaged communities, addressing deep-seated inequities. ...

AFRICAN AMERICANS IN THE NEWS

Illinois court orders pretrial release for deputy charged in Sonya Massey's killing

SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) — An Illinois appellate court ruled Wednesday that a former deputy sheriff charged with the death of Sonya Massey, a 36-year-old Black woman shot in her home after she called police for help, should be released from jail pending his first-degree murder trial. ...

Democrat Derek Tran defeats GOP Rep. Michelle Steel in Southern California swing House district

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Democrat Derek Tran ousted Republican U.S. Rep. Michelle Steel in a Southern California House district Wednesday that was specifically drawn to give Asian Americans a stronger voice on Capitol Hill. Steel said in a statement that “like all journeys, this one is...

White supremacist prison gang leader accused of attacking two California prison officers

LOS ANGELES (AP) — A white supremacist prison gang leader is accused in the attempted homicide of two officers at the California State Prison in Sacramento, authorities said Tuesday. Ronald D. Yandell, a leader of the Aryan Brotherhood prison gang, allegedly attacked two officers...

ENTERTAINMENT

Book Review: 'How to Think Like Socrates' leaves readers with questions

The lessons of Socrates have never really gone out of style, but if there’s ever a perfect time to revisit the ancient philosopher, now is it. In “How to Think Like Socrates: Ancient Philosophy as a Way of Life in the Modern World,” Donald J. Robertson describes Socrates' Athens...

Music Review: The Breeders' Kim Deal soars on solo debut, a reunion with the late Steve Albini

When the Pixies set out to make their 1988 debut studio album, they enlisted Steve Albini to engineer “Surfer Rosa,” the seminal alternative record which includes the enduring hit, “Where Is My Mind?” That experience was mutually beneficial to both parties — and was the beginning of a...

Celebrity birthdays for the week of Dec. 1-7

Celebrity birthdays for the week of Dec. 1-7: Dec. 1: Actor-director Woody Allen is 89. Singer Dianne Lennon of the Lennon Sisters is 85. Bassist Casey Van Beek of The Tractors is 82. Singer-guitarist Eric Bloom of Blue Oyster Cult is 80. Drummer John Densmore of The Doors is 80....

U.S. & WORLD NEWS

US consumer price increases accelerated last month with inflation pressures resilient

WASHINGTON (AP) — Consumer price increases accelerated last month, the latest sign that inflation's steady...

Border Patrol trains more chaplains as the job and polarizing immigration debate rattle agents

DANIA BEACH, Florida (AP) — As immigration remains a hotly contested priority for the Trump administration after...

Fossilized dinosaur feces and vomit help scientists reconstruct the creatures' rise

NEW YORK (AP) — Using fossilized feces and vomit samples from Poland, scientists have reconstructed how...

Pakistan ends lockdown of its capital after Imran Khan supporters are dispersed by police

ISLAMABAD (AP) — Authorities reopened roads linking Pakistan's capital with the rest of the country, ending a...

Namibia votes and could have its first female leader. But election upsets have shaken the region

WINDHOEK, Namibia (AP) — A woman who joined Namibia's underground independence movement in the 1970s is a strong...

Trump's tariffs in his first term did little to alter the economy, but this time could be different

WASHINGTON (AP) — Donald Trump loved to use tariffs on foreign goods during his first presidency. But their...

By The Skanner News | The Skanner News


A view down 139th St. in Harlem

By Glenn Minnis, Black America Web

For the better part of three decades, Sikhulu Shange tirelessly labored within the often challenging confines of the only home he's known since arriving here in the States as a 20-something-year-old South African immigrant nearly 40 years ago, only to one day awake to be told he no longer has a place within that very community.

There was a time when Bobby Robinson - who, like Shange, once owned a small record store at the heart of Harlem's legendary 125th Street thoroughfare that even predated his rival's by more than 15 years - might have shed a tear of regret for his longtime buddy and friendly foe.

"But then I wouldn't have any tears left for me," explained Robinson, who, also like Shange, suffered through forced eviction from his storefront, home-away-from-home establishment at the hands of new conglomerate owners.

"We're all being made to do something we don't want to do, and I don't think many of us ever thought we would," said Robinson, whose Bobby's Happy House is reverently shrined as the first black-owned business in the history of Harlem, what many once considered the black capitol of the world. In one of the last interviews he gave before passing away just six months ago, Robinson reflected: "It's hard on all of us. All that's left is for each man to cry himself a river filled with sadness."

Such are the scars borne in many inner cities amid the changes now taking shape all across the country. And yet, that's what seems most in vogue in the new millennium, as metropolis from New York to Los Angeles and seemingly all points in between continue to take on virtually unrecognizable characteristics right before the eyes of all those who long breathed all the wonderment and vitality into them.

"This is what's happening in minority communities everywhere," said Nellie Hester, president of the Harlem Tenants Council, a neighborhood advocacy group committed to providing housing relief for the poor and fighting accelerated gentrification over the last two decades.

"What that says to me is this is about much more than just gentrification," added Hester. "It seems it's all but become a matter of public policy, one mandated by the big-time real estate, insurance and finance companies that now govern the economies of cities and truly pull all the strings. Among them, the consensus seems to be that black people don't have the right to live in prime sectors and on high-valued, expensive land."

And, try as they might, even the most compassionate of leaders and bureaucrats have been hard pressed to slow the implosion. In Harlem, though recent re-zoning legislation calls for 46 percent of all housing built on or around 125th Street to be set aside as affordable, noted Queens real estate attorney Adam Bailey isn't shy in voicing the one critical concern most all longtime Harlemites seem to share fear most.

"This is Harlem's last stand," said Bailey, who, though he is white, has represented several small minority business owners in the area faced with eviction proceedings, earning him a high degree of both trust and respect from even the Harlem community's most cynical residents. "I don't think you'll ever be able to recreate it. It's a place where black people once felt super proud to be."

But the issue, insists Hester, runs much deeper than that.

"Our group and the ones we work with are very realistic about what's happening here and what we can truly hope to accomplish," says Hester, who has lived in the area for nearly 50 years. "We all realize we can't save Harlem, but we do feel we can minimize the damage being done. Our movement isn't one simply based on nostalgia. It's very principled and practical in its nature and in what we're demanding to maintain."

But for some, such as Shange, even with new community blueprints in circulation calling for thousands of new condominiums, more high-rise office space and a 21-story tower near the borough's Metro North train station that will possibly house Major League Baseball's new television network as an anchor, the heart of the matter will forever be cloaked in emotion.

"When everybody was running away, I remained here with the few merchants that were willing to stick it out and kept Harlem, Harlem," said Shange, now 68 and a founding member of The Coalition to Save Harlem. "Harlem groomed me into manhood. How could I ever want to leave?"

But that's exactly the fate many other longtime residents now find themselves facing. Advocates cite a recent Vera Institute for Justice Study on family homelessness in NYC, which highlights Central Harlem (also known as "Black Harlem") as having the highest number of homeless families in all of Manhattan. Most of those developments, they not so coincidentally point out, were brought on through eviction. Just five years ago, Hester's Tenants Council noted that there were 17,413 residential eviction proceedings in "Black Harlem" and nearby Washington Heights, and less than a year later, a total of 21,991 eviction warrants had been issued in Manhattan Housing Court.

"Harlem is a hotbed for real estate development and speculation," said Bailey. "Without a doubt, long-time Harlem residents are being pushed out and there is no relief in sight."

What's more, the Coalition to Preserve Community points out that nearby Columbia University, with the support of Mayor Michael Bloomberg, plans to carry out its Harlem-centric Manhattanville Expansion Plan by snaring 17 additional acres of land, thereby doubling the present size of its neighborhood campus through the use of eminent domain laws.

With goals of building a five-story bio-chemical research center below ground firmly in place, many fear the university's plan will not only displace more homes and small businesses along 125th Street and beyond, but also wreak environmental havoc throughout the borough luminaries such as Malcolm X, Louis Armstrong, Lena Horne, Duke Ellington, Marcus Garvey and Adam Clayton Powell all once found so attractive.

Even the plan calling for the 46 percent housing set asides is skeptically viewed by many as an unquestionable instance of "smoke and mirrors."

"It's bogus, a typical kind of politics that seeks to promote a system of exchange like, 'You buy our neighborhood, but make sure our park is renovated,'" Sharifa Rhodes-Pitts of the Coalition to Save Harlem recently told the Village Voice. Others express equal outrage over a plan that will allow 24 blocks of Harlem to be re-zoned, thus paving the way for the dismantling of many four- and five-story buildings long reserved for housing small businesses that will now give way to new office towers and market-rate condominiums.

Of the 3,858 new units outlined for construction in accordance with the new bill, Rhodes-Pitts adds that the coalition is desperately seeking assurances that the 1,758 reserved for moderate housing will actually be affordable to existing neighborhood residents with median household incomes of around $22,000 and that full-time, above minimum wage jobs will be forthcoming from all the projects.

"The development should be from the bottom up, from the people up, not from the top down, from rich white developers and the city planning commission," agrees Brooklyn Councilman and one-time Black Panther member Charles Barron. "Ten to 12 years from now, they will see that the housing will not be affordable. This will be the wholesale sellout of Harlem from river to river."

As a counter, Bailey and others have drafted additional legislation that would essentially brand numerous historical structures across the district as landmarks, all but removing them from the path of the neighborhood's perpetually-swinging wrecking ball.

"The standing of New York City as a world capital of culture cannot be maintained or enhanced by disregarding the historical heritage of the city of such cultural assets," notes Bailey, who adds that such structures as The Audubon Ballroom (where Malcolm X was assassinated), the legendary Cotton Club and The Harlem Opera House have all been lost via demolition.

In cross-country Chicago, the scene and level of the contentiousness mirror what's taking place in NYC. But then, what might you expect when one awakes to essentially find the neighborhood and community that bore them has essentially evaporated overnight?

Homegrown Chicago Sun-Times columnist Mary Mitchell struggles with such a reality each and every time she ventures into her no-longer-recognizable South Side Bronzeville neighborhood. In 2001, the City Council remapped the neighborhood bounded by 31st Street and McCormick Place to 65th Street and from Cottage Grove Blvd. to the I-90/94 Expressway to encompass parts of several other communities, among them the ultra-chic, yuppie-filled Mid South Loop.

"I grew up in the 'hood, but I can't go back to the 'hood today," Mitchell noted. "I can't afford the housing there. It all boils down to a land grab on part of builders and developers fueled by their urges to make as much money as they can. This is about class as much as any racial component; the same thing is happening to white people all along the Lake Shore, especially in neighborhoods like Lake View."

Yet, perhaps nowhere have the consequences proved more revolting than for longtime Bronzeville area residents, who all once pridefully rejoiced in the knowledge their neighborhood was the first even Jean Baptist Point Dusable locally called home.

During the peak of the Great Migration between 1910 and 1920, the population of Bronzeville dramatically spiked as thousands of African-Americans fled the oppression of the south and immigrated to Chicago in search of industry jobs, soon constituting what historically became known as a "city within a city." By 1960, more than 800,000 blacks made their home in the so-called "Black Belt," whose history also boasts the presence of the first locally black-owned bank and insurance companies.

Today, all that seems far too much like ancient history to community lifer Harold Lucas, president of the Bronxeville Information Center. "You can just feel the towers going up, getting taller," he said. "It's obnoxious, but the developers are destroying historical and cultural parts of Chicago."

Perhaps just as troubling, recently the percentage of African-Americans in the neighborhood dropped by 24 percent, even as the area was experiencing increases in white, Asian and Hispanic populations. Still, Lucas and members of his Black Metropolis Heritage Area Project are determined to preserve a measure of their own history.

With the aid of 1st District Congressman Bobby Rush, the group recently petitioned to have the federal government designate the neighborhood a national heritage (defined by the U.S. Congress as an area "where natural, cultural, historic and recreational resources combine to form a cohesive, nationally-distinctive landscape arising from patterns of human activity shaped by geography.")

Adds Rush: "The Black Metropolis District has a cohesive and distinctive history that is worthy of national heritage designation. By highlighting the past, we can inspire the future."

A light, the voltage of which Rush speaks of, has recently shone on downtown Los Angeles - but for entirely different reasons. Law enforcement recently came under fire for exerting force in expediting the city's planned gentrification.

Dubiously distinguished as recently as 2006 for having the highest concentration of homelessness in the nation, authorities, under the command of the mayor and city attorney, dramatically increased their presence and activity along a 50-block trail known as Skid Row to coincide with the emergence of scores of high rise units, loft apartments and rising property values.

The shakedowns continued even after a federal appeals court termed the arrests and issuing of citations to people sleeping on the sidewalk because they have nowhere else to go as "cruel and unusual punishment."

"People on the streets are in a state of fear and apprehension," said Rick Mantley of the Los Angeles Community Action Network's Community Watch program. "The objective is to gentrify the area," adds fellow community organizer General Dogon. "They do not want you on the streets, nor do they want you walking around. It's bad for business."

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