
Gresham Mayor Shane Bemis announces immediate resignation
Bemis cites difficulties balancing his personal life and business with public service.
Source: Gresham Outlook
Tuesday, June 16, 2020
By Christopher Keizur, PMG
In a post to Facebook, Bemis wrote about the difficulties trying to balance raising a family, supporting a business during the COVID-19 pandemic, and dealing with challenges within City Hall.
"At the current moment, facing a pandemic; a rising, powerful, and necessary social justice movement; and the City's budget woes, all while trying to keep my business afloat, is not tenable," Bemis wrote. "I must fight for my business to provide for my family."
The mayor's seat now will be open in the November election, and Bemis is pushing for entrepreneur and community leader Travis Stovall to run for the position.
"Travis has been intricately involved in the City of Gresham, serving on committees ranging from public safety, to affordable housing and community development," Bemis wrote.
Bemis wrote that he watched Portland Police Chief Jami Resh step aside last week in order to allow someone else to lead the organization. Stovall is a black man who has spoken about the difficulties he has faced in East Multnomah County.
"As a political leader, it is always tempting to see oneself as the solution to whatever problems we may face," Bemis wrote. "However, when I spend time in self-reflection and consider the entirety of the critical work our city and broader society must address, I need to be willing to say I am not the best solution to these specific problems."
Bemis thanked the community for supporting him during his public service in Gresham.
"I came to Gresham as a 15-year-old kid. My family had nothing, and I knew nobody. This community has given me everything," Bemis wrote. "I will never forget your generosity and I will always do everything in my power, in any capacity, to give everything I have to this community."
Downtown Rockwood market hall gets redesign
COURTESY RENDERING: CITY OF GRESHAM - The Downtown Rockwood market hall, middle, has been redesigned to lower construction costs. Click to enlarge.
Source: The Gresham Outlook
Tuesday, May 26, 2020
Gresham Mayor Shane Bemis voices concerns about completing long-brewing development
By Christopher Keizur
A Rockwood development project that has been brewing for more than two decades is getting a redesign to keep construction costs in line with budget constraints.
The second phase of Downtown Rockwood — originally called Rockwood Rising — was for a market hall with an international grocery marketplace, public commissary kitchen, and small business and pop-up stand opportunities.
The Gresham Redevelopment Commission heard the proposed design changes for the building that had bloated past its cost estimates during a meeting Tuesday afternoon, May 19. The new market hall looks different, and adds 3,000 square feet of restaurant/grocery/retail space; 10,000 square feet of office space; and four additional micro-restaurants.
But officials said it maintains the original intent of uplifting the diverse community of food entrepreneurs who call Rockwood home.
"The new design offers more variety of spaces," said Emily Bower, interim executive director of the Gresham Redevelopment Commission.
COURTESY RENDERING: CITY OF GRESHAM - The new market hall has more space for businesses. Click to enlarge.
The new market hall has more space for businesses.The idea behind Downtown Rockwood is to bring new construction and needed services into the heart of the neighborhood. The Catalyst Site, located between Southeast Stark Street, Southeast 185th Avenue and East Burnside Street, will be a central square with a public plaza and play structures for kids, an innovation hub with services for locals, retail stores, apartments, and the market hall.
The 5.5-acre plot of land was initially purchased by the Gresham Development Commission in 2005 with funds from the city's urban renewal district. The city spent three years, from 2014-2016, soliciting ideas and feedback from residents in the neighborhood.
The project finally broke ground last summer, marking a shift from planning to actually seeing Downtown Rockwood come to fruition. Since then the former Rockwood Community Office Building was renovated and construction of the innovation hub should be complete by July.
Bower said the market hall should be completed by Summer 2021 — a timeline Gresham Mayor Shane Bemis voiced concerns about.
"I feel like we are constantly changing the program and have had the property tied up for years with little steps being made," Bemis said during the virtual meeting. "I want to get this project done and do these things we have been talking about for the last 20-plus years. I am really concerned about hitting timelines and delivering for our community."
Bower said complications the last two years led to the redesign. Developers said the Portland area has experienced historic increases in the costs of construction. That, coupled with new federal tariffs on construction material, led to the need for a redesign. The new building has been simplified to maximize the leasable area within the building to improve finances.
"I am confident we will finish this project in the 2021-22 timeline," Bower said.
This story first appeared in The Outlook. Support community newspapers. Subscribe at http://savinglocalnews.com
Now, more than ever, wisely enjoy and invest in Gresham's parks
![]() Lee Dayfield |
Lee Dayfield says Metro-approved parks funding should not be used as an excuse by the city of Gresham to reduce parks funding. Meanwhile, stay-at-home orders ask that you only venture out for essential needs. Notably, access to public parks for exercise and fresh air while still practicing social distancing is among those allowed needs, and for good reasons. |
Source: Pamplin Media Group
Thursday, April 16, 2020
If you have been out and about in our local parks and trails this past week you might have noticed how many of your neighbors are doing the same. It is not just the improving weather.
The pandemic has put a renewed premium on proximity to parks and nature. For those of us fortunate enough to have high quality public greenspace nearby, the value is especially self-evident. But long before this pandemic, research has demonstrated what people know intuitively: access to parks and nature is no simple frill or amenity, but an essential determinant of individual and community health.
Unfortunately, Gresham's City budget has made parks a low priority in recent years. Park investments made by Gresham voters a generation ago have not kept pace. To be sure, our community has many volunteers and private donors who make some parks shine.
Friends of Nadaka and the Gresham Japanese Garden are effectively harnessing volunteers and private donations; Ricki Ruiz continues to secure grants to develop futsal courts; and North Gresham Neighborhood Association is poised to build a playground at Kirk Park funded primarily through private donations.
However significant, these isolated projects belie systemic divestment. In recent years, fewer and fewer general fund dollars have gone to parks and recreation. Gresham's almost non-existent recreation programming leaves vital services to underfunded nonprofit organization like Gresham-based Play Grow Learn, which mentors at-risk adolescents using nature-play, urban gardening and athletics in our parks. Relying on nonprofits, grants, private donations, and the generosity of volunteers is not a sustainable path to a vibrant thriving parks and recreation system that bolsters our health and prosperity.
We can do a lot better.
Today, as the fourth largest city in Oregon, Gresham has the lowest per-capita investment in local parks and recreation in the Metro region.
In a hopeful turn, the majority of Gresham voters passed Metro's regional parks and nature funding measure in November 2019. The measure will infuse some additional capital funds into Gresham's local parks system. Public officials should not use that as an excuse to backfill further cuts to parks. Now is the time to launch a parks feasibility study of new local investment options and to give the community greater voice and vote in decisions with innovative tools like participatory budgeting.
As federal stimulus funds become available, Gresham would be wise to creatively invest in the city's backlog in park stewardship and deficient parks programming while putting people to work. The Nadaka Ambassador Program, which employs Rockwood residents to steward the park and garden, is a great model.
In these difficult and uneasy times, we must not lose sight of the value of stewarding our parks and nature which, now more than ever, are helping keep us healthy and connected.
Lee Dayfield is a parks advocate. In 2009, Friends of Nadaka, with Dayfield at the helm, organized the purchase and development of Nadaka Nature Park.
2020 Portland Eastside Farmer's Markets. Garden Fresh Produce Available Year-round
S-t-r-e-t-c-h your grocery dollar!
Enjoy the freshest produce, flowers, and plant starts direct from the garden.
Healthy and fresh
Farmer’s markets are a fantastic source for fresh, seasonal, locally produced foods and artisan products. Plus, you'll find great activities and fun for the whole family. Come experience the markets. Meet the vendors. Meet local cooks. Enjoy the freshest produce and products. Make your own statement in support of local food.
Want to grow your own vegetables? Check out Portland Nursery's 12-month "Veggie Calendar" planting guide here. |
2020 Portland's Eastside Farmer's Markets
- Gresham Saturday Market (mid Apr-Sep)
- Gresham Farmers Market (May-Oct)
- Hollywood Farmers' Market (year-round)
- Lents International Farmers' Market (Jun-Nov)
- Lloyd Farmers Market (year-round)
- Montavilla Farmers Market (year-round)
- Portland Farmers Market (year-round)
- Troutdale Farmers' and Artists' Market (year-round)
- Other Area Farmers Markets
(Complete details on these area markets below)
You'll find plenty of root vegetables, braising greens and lettuces, and of course plant starts for your own vegetable garden.
Bring your reusable shopping bags and plenty of small bills, though some of the markets will trade you a credit/debit card for wooden tokens that all vendors accept, which can be easier to handle than cash. We've indicated those markets that accept EBT or other food assistant coupons.
Download the Wilkes East Neighborhood Spring 2020 Newsletter here!
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2020 Spring Newsletter"Diversity, Harmony, Community - |
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Spring 2020 NewsletterInside This Issue:
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Download your copy here. (includes active web links)
Newsletters are a regular publication of the Wilkes East Neighborhood Association. They are hand-delivered to over 1,500 residences and businesses in our area 3 times per year, timed to correspond with our regular meetings.
View archive | Policy & Ad Rates
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Volunteers Needed |
Albertina Kerr Workforce and Inclusive Housing Project Update, February 2020
Albertina Kerr Workforce and Inclusive Housing. Entry, Gresham campus. Click to enlarge.
By: Jeff Carr
CEO, Albertina Kerr
www.albertinakerr.org/
Albertina Kerr continues to move forward and make progress on its Workforce and Inclusive Housing Project to be located on the Gresham campus at 722 NE 162 Avenue. The project will include 150 units, from studios to 3 bedrooms. Since the November Wilkes East Neighborhood meeting where a presentation was made, significant progress has been made:
- Site due diligence was completed in December 2019 (Geotech, surveying, arborist report)
- A Design Review Consult was completed with the City of Gresham Community Design Review Committee in December 2019
- 100% Schematic Design was completed in early January 2020
Submittals were completed for land use review in early January 2020 - Albertina Kerr hit the $1 million private fundraising mark in December 2020 and only needs $200,000 more in private donations to hit the total goal of $1.2 million in private donations.
One significant change since the November meeting is that we have decided to pursue making the building “net zero” from an energy use standpoint, which means we will be adding enhancements to make the entire building more energy efficient and producing energy via solar panels to provide enough energy to operate the entire building year-round.
The current timeline for the project is as follows:
Goal | Date |
---|---|
Complete 100% schematic design | January-2020 - Done |
Submit for land use | January-2020 - Done |
Complete 50% design development | February-2020 |
Land use public hearing | March-2020 |
Complete 100% design development | April-2020 |
Update hard cost & proforma | May-2020 |
Land use approval | May-2020 |
Submit for building permit | May-2020 |
Guaranteed Maximum Price (GMP) | July-2020 |
Permit Issued | August-2020 |
Construction Start | August-2020 |
Construction Complete | September-2021 |
We continue to be excited about this project and what it will mean for direct care workers at Albertina Kerr and others who care for some of the most vulnerable members of our community.
Architect Images
![]() NE 162nd Ave view. Click to enlarge |
![]() NE Holladay St view. Click to enlarge |
About Albertine Kerr
For more than 100 years, Albertina Kerr has been caring for Oregon’s most vulnerable citizens. Over the decades, our services have evolved to meet the community’s needs. While these needs have changed, the values of our expert caregivers remain constant: compassion, commitment, collaboration, and advocacy.
Today, Kerr empowers people with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD), mental health challenges, and other social barriers to lead self-determined lives and reach their full potential. We provide comprehensive crisis and preventative mental health care for children and teens, as well as a full range of services for children and adults with IDD.
Learn more at www.albertinakerr.org
Nadaka Nature Park future uncertain; community members call for dedicated recreation funding
Nadaka Nature Park won't have much of a reason to celebrate the new year.
PMG PHOTO: CHRISTOPHER KEIZUR - Lee Dayfield said a parks district funding mechanism is the best option for maintaining Nadaka Nature Park, which lost its fiscal agent and programming at the end of 2019. Click to enlarge
By Christopher Keizur
Source: Gresham Outlook (Oct 18, 2019)
The beautiful green space in the heart of the Wilkes East Neighborhood will be empty after losing its fiscal agent — transforming what was once thought of as the model for future parks in Gresham into just another open area. Despite the work that has been poured into the park, residents will have less of a reason to visit than ever before.
"It almost makes me cry to walk through here and know all those kids won't be coming here to be educated," said Lee Dayfield. "This park was their backyard, playground and forest."
There is no better person to talk to about Nadaka Nature Park than Dayfield. She spearheaded the charge to transform her dream park into a reality. She overcame red tape and bureaucracy, founding Friends of Nadaka to help secure grants and other funding.
The Columbia Slough Watershed Council, a Portland-based organization, had supported the Gresham park since its inception. But with some changes to the board and executive director, the group has decided to focus on other projects.
The backing for Nadaka will end when the money runs dry, which is estimated to happen in January 2020. That means no more activities — from community cleanups to educational gatherings for local schoolchildren — that made the park so special.
"They were so strong and supportive of us for seven years," Dayfield said. "People will notice a big difference."
Click "Read more" (below) to continue reading this article.
Are you prepared for a winter storm? Groceries and emergency supplies you need in case of snow
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During extremely cold weather or winter storms, staying warm and safe can be a challenge. |
Winter storms can bring cold temperatures, strong winds, power failures, loss of communications, and icy roads.
Here's a list of groceries and emergency supplies you need in case of snow.
Items that don’t require refrigeration or heat to prepare
- Nut butters, jams and jellies
- Fresh fruits and vegetables
- Dried fruits and nuts
- Juices (particularly those that are not commonly found in the refrigerator section of the supermarket)
- Breads, muffins, bagels, tortillas
- Dry cereal or granola
- Canned milk or non-dairy milk in aseptic cartons
- Protein bars and protein shakes
- Jarred sauces such as salsa, ketchup, or mustard.
- Pickles or foods preserved in vinegar
- Hard cheeses, such as cheddar, Swiss, provolone and parmesan, processed cheeses, and Edam (just make sure the cheese is well wrapped and sealed)
Other items to add to your list if you don’t have them
- A non-electric can opener
- Charcoal or propane for the outdoor grill
- Pet food
- Kitty litter
- Paper towels, paper plates, and plastic utensils (useful if the power goes out and you can’t wash dishes)
- Toilet paper
- Water (1 gal per person per 3 days)
- Rock salt for melting ice on sidewalks and driveway
- An ice scraper for your car’s windshield
- A sturdy snow shovel
- Foam insulation covers for exterior faucets
- First-aid kit
- Flashlight, with batteries
- Extra batteries, just in case
- Favorite baking supplies for cookies and quickbread (flour, sugar, salt, eggs, butter)
- Cartons of chicken or vegetable broth for making soup (a good excuse to use up what’s already in your vegetable bin)
- Canned soup
- Comfort food (mac ‘n’ cheese, pasta, potatoes. yum)
- Favorite snacks (popcorn, chips, etc.)
- Apple cider
- Coffee and tea
- Wine and beer
- Liquor
Other storm essentials
Good to have on hand when you’re going to be cooped-up
Now that you're ready you can relax and enjoy a snow day!
Source: The Oregonian/Oregonlive.com
When A Natural Emergency Strikes Will You and Your Family Be Ready?
Experts Warn Cascadia Is Overdue For A 9.0 Earthquake
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Be informed.
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If you're like most of us - you're not ready.
If that's you, we've got some great tips and valuable resources below to help you be prepared for whenever a disaster strikes.
CONTENTS
- TICK. TOCK.
- AS SOON AS YOU FEEL THE SHAKING
- HOW WILL WE GET AROUND?
- WHAT WILL WE DRINK?
- WHERE WILL WE POO?
- WHAT WILL WE EAT?
- MAKE A PLAN
- BUILD A KIT
- MORE RESOURCES
TICK. TOCK.
Think of Oregon geology as a clock, measuring time in earthquakes. Tick: a magnitude 8 quake. (Bigger than 1989 Bay Area quake that killed 63 people.) Tock: a magnitude 9 quake. (Same as the 2011 Japan quake that killed almost 16,000 people.) On average, a major quake happens in our area every 243 years, the last one was January 26, 1700 — 316 years ago. Yes. We are overdue.
Hillsides will slide. Buildings will collapse. Roads will buckle. High-rises will sway. Bridges will crack. Some will fall. Pipes will snap. Within 20 minutes, the first of several 40-foot tsunami waves will wash away the Oregon Coast’s low-lying towns.
If our next “subduction zone” quake unleashes its full potential, it will be the worst natural disaster in U.S. history.
Download the Wilkes East Neighborhood Fall 2019 Newsletter here!
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2019 Fall Newsletter"Diversity, Harmony, Community - |
![]() |
Fall 2019 NewsletterInside This Issue:
|
Download your copy here. (includes active web links)
Newsletters are a regular publication of the Wilkes East Neighborhood Association. They are hand-delivered to over 1,500 residences and businesses in our area 3 times per year, timed to correspond with our regular meetings.
View archive | Policy & Ad Rates
Got a story or tip to share? |
Volunteers Needed |
