Category Archives: Poverty

Ballad of the Green Pear

Too bad Johnny Cash never got to meet Daniel R. Luke. The Man in Black could have taught Danny boy the meaning of hard time. On Dec. 5, 2010, Luke broke into his ex-wife’s Northeast Portland home and tried to strangle her while his two young sons were there. The police arrived and arrested him. […]

Slumming in Portland

As Kenny Rogers might have put it: A hammer fell down on a 44-primer, now there’s one less problem in Southwest Portland tonight. If a recent officer-involved shooting in Portland had occurred in the city’s north end, specifically the scrappy St. John’s area, it would’ve been ripe for a rapper. But it happened in comfortable […]

Mau-Mauing Trader Joe’s

Coming soon to the corner of Martin Luther King Blvd. and Alberta Street in Northeast Portland: The MLK Felon Recovery and Residential Center. Now that’s the kind of project the Portland African-American Leadership Forum might get behind (as long as forum leaders get in on the action). Anything is better than a popular grocery-store chain […]

Who’s the Freeloader?

When Richard Nixon, Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama all dreamed of creating a more affordable health care system for Americans, they probably didn’t envision a cheerleader like Greg Schoenberg. He’s an insurance broker, and he smells opportunity. There are health plans to be sold, and Schoenberg is doing his part as a registered agent with […]

A Toast to Health Care

Happy Hour at a bar called the High Dive in Southeast Portland – what better place to apply for health insurance through Cover Oregon. That’s where I signed up for insurance after seeing an invitation on the Internet from a group called Working America. Within minutes of registering for a 5:30 p.m. slot, I received […]

Freedom is the New Prison

Fortunately for Piper Kerman, Eric Holder was not Attorney General in 2004 when she was sentenced to federal prison for a “drug-related crime.” Had she been spared prison, she would not be a media celebrity now and author of a best-selling memoir. A “drug-related crime” and 13 months in prison were good for Kerman. It […]

Downsizing High-Tech’s Future

In the 1990’s, I was so busy as a newspaper reporter in California I didn’t notice that men like my father were losing their work in the Oregon sawmills. When I came home on vacation one summer, I saw a bumper sticker on my dad’s pickup truck: “Save a logger, eat an owl.” I’d heard […]

Taxing Portland’s Art Spirit

Has there ever been a more inspirational work of art than the dollar sign? It mesmerizes everyone from the Dalai Lama to the humblest public employee. His Holiness recently blessed the city of Portland with a visit that drew at least 10,000 to Memorial Coliseum where he offered his usual advice: Scorn wealth and materialism. […]

Portland’s NIMBY Elite

When registered sex offender Thomas Henry Madison of Gresham, Ore., turned up six months ago at a neighborhood meeting protesting a sex offender clinic, he was tossed out. That protest was in the Inner Southeast Portland enclave of Sellwood/Moreland, and those neighbors succeeded in shutting down the clinic. Last week, Madison was back at a […]

Truths About the American Way

In the real world, Clark Kent would have been forced out of newspapers years ago. Too old. And in today’s world of American newspapers, even Superman couldn’t replace the lost ad revenues that has decimated news staffs. But in the latest comic book series, Superman’s writers don’t have Clark Kent stand and deliver those truths […]