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  • Kotek’s 47-Member Task Force to Reinvigorate Downtown

    Kotek’s 47-Member Task Force to Reinvigorate Downtown

    The task force is a stacked roster of downtown law firm presidents, leaders of companies with a wide central city office footprint, nonprofit executives, Mayor Wheeler, Multnomah County Chair Jessica Vega Pederson, U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), U.S. Reps. Earl Blumenauer and Suzanne Bonamici (D-Ore.), state Reps. Janelle Bynum (D-Happy Valley) and Rob Nosse (D-Portland), Metro President Lynn Peterson and small business owners, among others.

    Willamette Week reports on first meeting of the task force.

  • Fall in Love with Portland Public Street Plazas

    Fall in Love with Portland Public Street Plazas

    Street Plaza Directory

    What is the Portland Public Street Plaza Program?

    Originally started during the Covid-19 pandemic to assist businesses and Portlanders, PBOTs Public Street Plaza program-built partnerships with community and local businesses to transform select streets into public spaces for cultural events, street fairs, pop-up markets, and more. The program uses PBOT’s Livable Streets Strategy, adopted by Portland City Council in 2017 as its policy foundation to turn streets into inclusive public spaces that foster public life. In 2022 PBOT’s Planning team started work to turn the temporary, pandemic-era program into a permanent Street Plaza program. This program continues to allow PBOT to act on its values around climate action, mobility for all, and building community by creating public spaces that all Portlander should be able to use and enjoy.

    Portland Public Street Plazas Funded by the American Rescue Plan

    This project is funded by the American Rescue Plan, a federal economic stimulus bill designed to help communities recover from the COVID-19 pandemic and economic recession. The City of Portland is receiving $208 million of local recovery funds. Investments focus on three key priorities: houselessness response and household stabilization, business and commercial district stabilization, and community health and safety.

  • Governor’s Central City Task Force – Public Survey

    Governor’s Central City Task Force – Public Survey

    Portland Central City Task Force Public Survey

    The Task Force is focused on the geographic areas of “Portland’s Central City.”

    Your survey responses may be used as part of recommendations from the Task Force, as well as other community decision-making purposes. Your participation and input is valuable as we work to develop a set of near-term, achievable strategies to revitalize the Central City. 

    The questionnaire should take less than 15 minutes to complete.

    https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSdM-ylt4YMwE5_uVTW-pbti2EUmbUgo9JGGmqkjilTRuWKeUQ/viewform

  • KOIN covers Neighborhood Associations’ forum on PDX Behavioral Health Crisis

    KOIN covers Neighborhood Associations’ forum on PDX Behavioral Health Crisis

    https://www.koin.com/news/oregon/we-are-failing-our-community-oregon-leaders-convene-for-behavioral-health-forum/amp/

    “PORTLAND, Ore. (KOIN) — Oregon’s behavioral health crisis reaches every corner of the state. Now, leaders from all levels are working together to figure out how to fix it, thanks to a push from residents and neighborhood associations seeing the impact every day.

    It’s a crisis felt across the state, especially hitting home for the McMurtry family, whose son Kenny struggled for years with psychosis and mental health issues while trying to get solid, continuous help. They thought they found their answer when approached by the Multnomah County Early Assessment and Support Alliance.

    “The program was designed and funded just to provide two years of support. How stupid to waste that investment by not having something next to offer,” Christy McMurtry, Kenny’s mom, said. “This was the first crack he fell through.”

    After more struggle, he ended up homeless the last few years and nearly two weeks ago, died of an overdose just days before his 34th birthday. It’s stories like theirs prompting a desperate push for change, as neighbors rallied city, county, state and federal leaders together, going beyond jurisdictions for a behavioral health forum on Monday.

    “This is not a single jurisdiction issue. People think the city is responsible for everything but so much of behavioral health is the county, the state, it’s the feds. We wanted to bring people from all levels of government together and we wanted them to hear each other,” David Dickson with the Downtown Neighborhood Association and organizer of the forum, said. “Every day that we walk out of our homes or our businesses, we run into people on the street. It’s a terribly disheartening thing to see so much tragedy going on in our streets.”

    When it comes to overhauling behavioral health in Oregon – ranking near the bottom in the U.S. for treatment – action is needed on many fronts, from housing to addiction services. One issue brought up by many in Monday night’s forum revolved around compassion and changing how to civilly commit people in need of help.

    “We don’t feel comfortable holding people because we cannot say they are at imminent risk of harming themselves or others. That is too high of a standard,” State Rep. Maxine Dexter, who serves Portland, said. “We are failing our community by not changing this statute.”

    While discussing, many learned that changing that particular issue would come from the state level. But as the issues trickle down, further services like treatment, housing, etc., would come from other levels, like Multnomah County.

    “We need treatment, but we don’t need treatment unless we have places for people to go after treatment. Because or else, they’re going to keep cycling into the ERs, the streets,” Multnomah Co. Commissioner Sharon Meieran said. “We need the experts in behavioral health to be driving the work, and elected leaders to put the money in and help implement and make it happen.”

    As for what she could do in her current position with the county, she went on to say, “We need a system, and we need to build that and that’s kind of a long-term thing. We need a plan at the county. There’s work on that. I started that, it got cut short during COVID, but I want to bring that back and finalize it.”

    While some changes like creating sobriety centers – beyond detox and treatment – could be done more in the short-term with locations and staffing, other solutions like actually establishing a statewide system for behavioral health will likely take lots of work and collaboration, lasting years down the road.

    KOIN 6 will continue to follow up on all efforts being made.”

  • 9/18/23 forum video – Portland’s Behavioral Health Crisis: Seeking Solutions

    9/18/23 forum video – Portland’s Behavioral Health Crisis: Seeking Solutions

    Register here to watch the forum video on-demand.
    On Monday, September 18 from 3-5 pm, the Downtown Neighborhood Association joined five other central city neighborhood associations, Neighbors West-Northwest, and the Revitalize Portland Coalition to sponsor the forum :Portland’s Behavioral Health Crisis: Seeking Solutions”.
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    The city we love is crying for help. We have neighbors living unsheltered on our streets, many
    suffering untreated from mental illness and others seeking escape from their desperate
    situation through life threatening drugs. Despite hundreds of millions of federal, state, and local
    taxes available, we seem to be making no progress in solving the problem. People continue to
    suffer and die, and Portland’s precious quality of life and economic vitality hang in the balance.
    Portlanders are searching for solutions. We see the problems on Portland streets every day, but
    answers lie far beyond the borders of the Rose City. County, metro, state and federal laws and
    budgets must be navigated if we are to arrive at solutions to our behavioral health crisis.
    This challenge cannot be solved solely by our elected leaders. It will take all of us working
    together with our leaders to bring our city back. The forum will feature a panel of six elected
    leaders representing our west side neighborhoods from all levels of government:
    ______________________________________________________________________________

    – Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler
    – Multnomah County District 1 Commissioner Sharon Meieran, representing Downtown
       and West Portland
    – Metro President Lynn Peterson
    – Oregon House Representative Homeless Committee Chair Maxine Dexter, representing
       Downtown and most of West Portland
    – Oregon Senate Majority Leader Kate Lieber, representing a substantial portion of
       Downtown and SW Portland
    – A member of Oregon’s Congressional Delegation (not yet confirmed)

    Each of these leaders defined the problem, explained their role (county, city, etc.) in
    addressing the problem, and proposed solutions in collaboration with other leaders.

    Prior to the forum, the public was invited to submit questions that focused on finding solutions to Portland’s behavioral health crisis and those questions were presented to the panelists.

    Sponsors:
    Neighbors West Northwest
    Downtown Neighborhood Association
    Pearl District Neighborhood Association
    Old Town Community Association
    Goose Hollow Neighborhood Association
    Northwest District Association
    Southwest Hills Residential League
    Revitalize Portland Coalition