Next Up at City Council 11/21/07

Submitted by Amanda Fritz on November 18, 2007 - 12:15pm.

The most controversial item is early on Wednesday's Portland City Council Agenda. That, of course, is the renaming of 4th Avenue and the proposed Code amendment to allow the Council to initiate and pass street renamings top-down, in this and future cases. The agenda item title and ordinance still calls for the renaming of Interstate, but as Anna Griffin reported in yesterday's Oregonian, that was an error which can be fixed by parliamentary procedure. It's a Second Reading, so likely no debate.

I wasn't aware of the related Code amendment until I read Amy J. Ruiz's Blogtown post and Anna's newspaper article, after writing my analysis yesterday. It allows the Council to rename any street they want to. It was an item on last week's Agenda which required "Suspension of the Rules" for the Council to consider and pass it to a vote.

Hoo boy.

I didn't post Next Up at City Council last weekend, as it was the last few days of my parents' visit and I relished every minute spent with them. And I didn't see any attention to this proposed Code amendment, in the controversy over whether to rename Interstate, 4th, or any street.

I will not miss posting Next Up at City Council.
I will not miss posting Next Up at City Council.
I will not miss posting Next Up at City Council.
I will not miss posting Next Up at City Council.
(x 100)

This new Code section will permanently change the process allowed for future street renamings. And this new process is one future Councils might actually follow, because it allows them to do whatever they want. Under it, Council can propose a street rename (prohibited in current Code). They can approve a name change with few restrictions, after sending the proposal to the Planning Commission for a token public hearing. As with other issues, the Council doesn't have to accept the Planning Commission's recommendation.

Adding a new Code section with no public process for reviewing the language (other than the hearing on Thursday when people had bigger topics to talk about, and the Code proposal had been out for less than a week) is not a good way to amend public policy standards in the Portland City Code.

The ordinance, sponsored by Commissioner Saltzman, essentially says "Council can name streets and there's nothing citizens can do to stop it even if you show up at a Planning Commission hearing and City Council hearing". Since this is a Second Reading to vote on the new Code language, I don't know if there will be an opportunity for citizens to comment on it this Wednesday. I would like Council to make a minor amendment adding a sunset date, so this is the only street renaming allowed under the new top-down process. The City Council should either honor the current Code regulations, or stop renaming streets.

OK, back to the rest of the Council's Agenda for Wednesday. It begins with Citizen Communications, which is where anyone can sign up to talk to the Council for three minutes. There are five spaces available each Wednesday morning. This week, four citizens from SW Portland will talk about the "4T Trail", and one at-large person is signed up to address a change in the Sidewalk Obstruction ordinance. The 4T Trails concept uses (MAX) Trains, Trolley, Tram and (walking) Trails. Check out that link, it looks entertaining and useful.

Other items of interest on the Regular Agenda:

* The vote on banning smoking outside City buildings

* Extending the moratorium on commercial and industrial development on Hayden Island

* 1391 Authorize a major encroachment to bSide6, LLC to install, use and maintain building improvements in the airspace over a portion of the E Burnside St right-of-way at SW corner of SE 6th Ave and E Burnside St (Previous Agenda 1314) The developer gets to add tens of thousands of dollars' worth of additional square footage in the building, in return for $1 per year. The City couldn't get more than a dollar for use of the airspace over the sidewalk, apparently.

* *1395 Authorize Intergovernmental Agreement with the State of Oregon, Department of Corrections to provide work crews to PortlandParks and Recreation through the Inmate Work Program

The emergency ordinance ("emergency" because the crews are "needed for fall park maintenance work" - apparently fall came at an unusual time this year) says that "minimum security" prisoners will be working on landscaping in Portland's parks. The ordinance says the contract price tag of $180,000 results in "substantial savings in labor costs to the City". Hmm. So instead of paying Portland-area residents who haven't committed crimes and aren't incarcerated to work in our parks, we plan to bring in prisoners from state facilities. Have inmate crews finished pulling all the ivy at Tryon Creek State Park and Forest Park? There is plenty of work needing to be done in those areas, to provide meaningful community service tasks for prisoners. If the City wants to pay for prison work crews "for a public benefit while learning work skills and habits", which is a worthy goal, it should do so to get some of those hard, additional tasks done, without taking routine fall maintenance jobs from regular and seasonal employees.

Submitted by Mary Huff on November 18, 2007 - 3:28pm.

In the mean time while City Council displays its leadership, the real work of Human rights and Justice is bringing people together. http://causaoregon.org/

I thought the quote about how Chavez's leadership style is being honored at http://leadershipforchange.org/awardees/awardee.php3?ID=122

His Leadership style

In the tradition of his heroes Chávez, Huerta, and Ferrel, Ramón Ramírez uses his position to reduce the barriers that obstruct others from realizing their own leadership potential. He seizes every opportunity, for example, to send emerging and potential leaders to meetings and conferences. And in one-on-one conversations, especially with youths, he shares his own background, experiences, and mistakes in order to demystify the leadership process. He says he views the raising of public consciousness, the forging of alliances, and collaborative leadership as necessities, not simply useful strategies.

Ramírez says he believes that people, especially those who are marginalized and oppressed, have a deep desire to reduce injustice. Most are capable of taking leadership positions, he says, but are deterred by fear of retaliation, lack of self-confidence and support, inadequate understanding of how the system works, and by the time and energy consumed by the struggle for daily survival. He uses his leadership position to reduce the barriers that obstruct others from acting on their own leadership instincts. Direct and disarming, Ramírez tries to “identify and articulate the progress manifest in every situation” because, as he explains, “that’s the raw material for sustaining hope.”

Compare this with the "leadership" of last week in Portland, suspending public process and instead of inspiring the community to a higher purpose dividing it with deep wounds.

Submitted by amyjruiz on November 18, 2007 - 4:15pm.

That, of course, is the renaming of 4th Avenue and the proposed Code amendment to allow the Council to initiate and pass street renamings top-down, in this and future cases. The agenda item title and ordinance still calls for the renaming of Interstate, but as Anna Griffin reported in yesterday's Oregonian, that was an error which can be fixed by parliamentary procedure. It's a Second Reading, so likely no debate.

Thanks to all of the procedural back and forth on Thursday, things got very confusing. I believe I unraveled it all on Friday, and here's my understanding (explained in long form on Blogtown).

The ordinance you've linked to that refers to Interstate won't be fixed to reflect 4th on Wednesday. It'll either be killed off before a vote, or the council will (presumably) vote it down. (Potter could have withdrawn it last week after the resolution coupled with it died, but he declined to do so; He really wants an up-or-down vote on Interstate.)

The ordinance for 4th Avenue—they've already passed the resolution—won't materialize for quite awhile, until after the council gets a recommendation from the planning commission on the idea of renaming 4th (as directed in the resolution they've already passed, but contingent on passing this new process).

I hope that makes sense...

-------------
Amy J. Ruiz
News Editor
Portland Mercury