Monthly Archives: November 2009

Memoirs of a Street Roots Vendor: My Story

The following piece ran alongside Leah Nash’s “Look at me. I am not invisible,” a photojournalism piece in the November 13 edition of Street Roots.

I would like to start out by thanking you guys, my readers, and patrons of the paper.  Without you, my continued survival would be compromised.  I’ve written this because people have asked me when and if I would be in the paper.  At this time I have chosen to self-publish in order to add “extra value” and make the papers uniquely mine.

This time, I am publishing my story so you can get to know me.

My name is Melissa Walsh. I have been homeless off and on since moving to Portland in July. I used to have a house, but my husband’s uncontrolled seizures led to job loss, which in turn led to foreclosure.  We are currently seeking help for him at Outside In Clinic.  The doctors over there are working hard to try and help.  I am disabled with Asperger Syndrome, a high-functioning form of autism.

There are a lot of misconceptions about being a paper vendor.  The stereotype is a middle age drunken guy who is too lazy to do anything else.  I am none of the above.  I am 30, female, married, a renter, and my husband used to be a nursing aid.  The doctors don’t allow him to work now.  I have an associate’s degree, and have tried to find and keep work to no avail.

I have many interests and passions.  I am a yoga and tai chi practitioner.  I study philosophy, and I’m a semi-professional knitter and spindler.  The leaves are darkening on the trees, and there’s a change in the air.  The transition to fall has begun already.  I look outside my window as I read this, and the cloud cover is blanketing us with hues of grey.  I wonder when the seasonal rains will return again, their solemn drops nourishing the earth for the preparation of the harvest.

And all I can think of is wool.  Wonderful, luscious and warm, wool has helped many families through the cold months.  Wool is sturdy and strong and naturally water repellant.  It is also expensive and the price is out of my reach.  And yet I still dream of crafting warm sweaters for my husband and I.  My life is mostly about subsistence, but somehow, I still believe in the power of the ancient tradition of knitting to make it feel a little better.  When I knit, I feel more real, more human somehow.  I feel like I am doing something that makes a difference.  Knitting is about hope, bringing comfort and warmth in every stitch.

Even though I’m a Street Roots Vendor, I still believe in hard work and doing your best.  Knitting engenders that.  I am about quality, equity and freedom of expression.  Knitting allows for that.  Cheers to a job well done.

- Melissa M. Walsh

“Look at me. I am not invisible.”

The following photojournalism piece ran in the Nov. 13 edition of Street Roots and was displayed at the Albina Community Bank during the month of November.

“All these people pass me by and avoid my eyes.  I want to tap them on the shoulder and say, ‘Look at me, I am not invisible.’”

This was my introduction to Melissa Walsh, Street Roots vendor.  And so to tell her story I began by listening.  I listen to her cry, I listen to her argue with her caseworkers, and I listen to her talk excitedly about her next knitting project.

I then I begin to follow her: to the food bank, to urgent care, to the mental health unit to visit her husband.  Her days are not easy, and sometimes just following along is a burden that I find difficult to bear.

Now three months later I look at Melissa and the images I have created and think, “There but by the grace of God go I.”  For in this modern day Great Depression she really could be any of us.

By photographing her everyday moments, these little slices of life, my goal was to tell her story as best I could and to help give a voice to those that are sometimes not heard.  Enjoy.

- Leah Nash

Melissa Walsh is 30 years old and a Street Roots vendor. Diagnosed with Asperger’s Syndrome, a high-functioning form of autism, Melissa moved from Spokane in July with her husband Sean after they lost their home to foreclosure.

Melissa and her husband married five weeks after meeting. She thinks their relationships has survived the hard times because, “Neither of us can bring ourselves to give up on anything. That is our greatest weakness and our greatest strength. We will not quit.”

Moving to Portland because of its bike-friendly reputation, the Walsh’s brought only what they could carry on their backs. For the first few months, they lived in a one-bedroom apartment in Beaverton, but the $535 rent proved too high and they were forced to leave.

Without a car, Melissa and Sean rely on public transportation and their bicycles. Here they are transporting food from a local food bank. Continue reading

Paper day, early Friday morning

Paper arrives.

Street Roots vendor Bruce Heino helps unload the truck when papers arrived Nov. 27. Every other Friday, the vendors help unload the truck and stack the papers in the office before heading out to their sales locations. It’s always a very busy morning at the office. Continue reading

Extra! Extra!

Even in difficult times, there’s so much to give thanks for — including the newest edition of Street Roots and your friendly neighborhood vendor who is working, rain or shine, to bring you the news. Here’s what’s in the new edition, hitting the streets bright and early Friday morning:

Dylan for the holidays: An exclusive interview for street papers with Bob Dylan about his new Christmas CD. He’s putting all of his income from the CD toward three programs that feed the homeless.

Portland housing advocates consider push for housing levy: Seattle has had a housing levy since 1981, funding thousands of new housing for low-income residents. Amanda Waldroupe pursues the answer to the question: Why doesn’t Portland do the same thing?

Activists mark 10 years since the Battle in Seattle: In 1999, the world convened in Seattle for a week of demonstrations against the policies of the World Trade Organization. A decade on, and activists remember what was remarkable about the event, and the work that lies ahead.

Single-payer advocate says keep the heat on those in power: Jay Thiemeyer talks with Peter Shapiro with Jobs with Justice about his own activism to keep single-payer the goal in health care reform.

Genny Nelson, Sisters’ co-founder, retires: Nelson reflects on 30 years with the organization that brought power to the streets and changed the dialogue around homelessness.

And much more is packed inside 16 pages, all for only $1. Get yours today, along with one for the office.

Thank you!

Isdud Al Najjar with Mercy Corps: We want to live in Peace

It took two months, international negotiations, and U.S. escorts to extract Isdud Al Najjar from the barricaded city of Gaza and bring her to Portland. For weeks she was a captive of the conflict between the Israeli and Palestinian governments that has shut Gaza off from the rest of the world. But Gaza is her home, and her family is there, and she knows she will have no trouble getting back in.

The ordeal illustrates only some of the conditions Najjar works under as the program manager for economic recovery in the Gaza Strip. She spearheaded the agency’s humanitarian work in the region when Israel and Hamas, the Palestinian party that won control of Gaza, erupted into war, killing 14 Israelis and an estimated 1,300 Palestinians while creating an imprisoned region for 1.5 million more.

She arrived in Portland to be honored with Mercy Corps’ Ellsworth Culver Leadership Award for her work in a city literally cut off economically and socially by the Israeli and Palestinian conflict. In Gaza, unemployment is more than 40 percent, communities lie in rubble for want of building materials, and nearly all of the people rely on international assistance for basic needs such as food. Eighty percent of Gaza’s population lives below the poverty line.

During the fighting, Najjar led the distribution of food and blankets, and helped establish recovery and post-trauma programs for children. In the aftermath of the war, Najjar leads Mercy Corps’ programs to help rebuild the Gazan economy, including the Cash-for-Work program that employs seamstresses, cooks, and repair specialists for farming and fishing equipment to help offset the paralyzing unemployment.

We spoke with Najjar during her brief stay in Portland, a few days before she and her 4-month-old son returned to Gaza at the end of October.

Joanne Zuhl: I understand simply getting here was a major undertaking, what happened?

Isdud Al Najjar: No one can imagine it because it is so difficult. Until you experience it. Just to get outside of Gaza I need an Israeli permit. I need to cross a crossing point that connects Gaza with Israel. It’s not easy to get it. It’s only for international human aid or social workers who can get in and out, or if you have severe health problems and need help.

When I get out of Gaza, I have to also get out through Jordan. When you get out of one, you worry that you can’t get out of the next one at the right time. If I am late, the crossing will be closed and I’ll lose my permit for that date. You get only one day to get through. So when I get back, I’ll have to call the Israelis to get the permit for that day to get from Jordan to the West Bank and then from the West Bank into Gaza. Continue reading

It’s time to help SR and get some great incentives in return this week!

It was the best of times, and the worst of times…

The good news is SR has raised $12,000 since Nov. 1 The bad news is the organization needs to raise another $13,000 to stay afloat in the first quarter of 2010.

From Nov. 24 until Sunday Nov. 29 – you will get some love back for your gift to SR.

The WW Give! Guide has put together some great incentives this year and this week only, Street Roots, is now giving you the opportunity to get something back in return when you give this year.

If you give $25 dollars or more from now until the end of the week (Sun. Nov. 29) either at the Street Roots home page or through the WW Give! Guide, you will get a free 10-year anniversary Street Roots T-shirt. You can both help the organization and wear your support at the same time.

And, wait… Are you 35 or under? If so, you can help Street Roots get into the WW Give Guide Top Ten this week of donors under 35. And no, the Give! Guide and Street Roots isn’t trying to knock anyone’s age – we’re just trying to encourage younger people to give!

We need 20 of you — 35 or under — to donate $25 dollars or more this week and we’ll have a great shot at being highlighted on the Give! Guide’s Top Ten under 35! Plus, you will also receive a free Street Roots T-shirt with your donation. Amazing. You can make it happen here.

Here’s why you should support Street Roots!

In 2009, Street Roots helped more than 50 individuals access housing through the stability and income from the newspaper, while more than 300 individuals improved their quality of life.

We spearheaded a battle that secured housing assistance for 300 people in Northwest Oregon and led the efforts that saved millions of dollars for homeless services in Portland.

We connected tens of thousands of individuals and families with much needed services through the Rose City Resource booklet and web site.

We’ve gone the extra mile to report on complex issues such as affordable housing, and civil rights along with unique perspectives from people living in poverty both locally and globally.

In a nutshell, Street Roots provides immediate solutions to homelessness while working every day to make long-term impacts through public education, dialogue and independence.

Thanks everyone for the consideration. Your donation matters this year, really.

The last Republican

From the Nov. 13 edition of Street Roots

Investigative journalist Max Blumenthal looked deep into the heart of the Republican Party. What he found should make the GOP blush

Sometimes, you admire someone before you meet him. Such was the case with Max Blumenthal.

A little more than a year ago, I came across a YouTube video called “Generation Chickenhawk,” an eight-minute piece on the 2007 College Republican National Convention. In it, a whole cadre of young men and women, done up in business attire, wax philosophical about why the Iraq War is necessary (“We went there because al Qaeda is there.”) and why they hadn’t enlisted (“I can’t because of medical reasons.”), all the while, completely embarrassing themselves. It’s pretty hysterical. Until you realize how disturbing it is.

These rightwing lads and lasses were confessing their opinions to a young, almost Republican-looking man who was interviewing them on camera. Who, I wondered, was he? Turned out his name was Max Blumenthal. I decided to see what else he’d done. That search didn’t prove hard.

Basically, Blumenthal could be found just about everywhere a lefty might search out information: The Nation, NPR, Democracy Now!, The Rachel Maddow Show, The Huffington Post, salon.com, alternet.org. He provided both print and video journalism for these and other media outlets, often focusing on the impact of the conservative movement on the Republican Party. Not only was his work damning, but pretty damn witty.

Those investigative skills, that wit: They’re all on display in his first book, “Republican Gomorrah: Inside the Movement that Shattered the Party” (Nation Books, $25), an enlightening — and, at times, terrifying — narrative recounting of how the Religious Right’s emphasis on creating a theocracy based on a Christian G-O-D did a number on the G.O.P. The cast of characters is huge and their scandals legion. It reads like fiction. Too bad it’s fact.

So when Blumenthal gave a talk in Seattle recently, I knew I wanted to meet him. And the stars, they aligned: We wound up having brunch earlier that day, in Belltown. And over omelets — I had veggie sausage and Swiss, he had veggie sausage and broccoli — we took a rightwing tour of Biblical proportions, with stops in the Swiss Alps, the White House, Kiambu, Kenya and, of course, Wasilla, Alaska.

Rosette Royale: “Republican Gomorrah:” You know, Gomorrah’s a Biblical town that’s linked to Sodom and, essentially, things didn’t go so well. So why choose Gomorrah as part of the title?

Max Blumenthal: And I managed to look into Gomorrah and not turn into a pillar of salt.

It’s a reference to the Republican experiment — from the Gingrich Revolution in ’94 to the end of the Bush era — and during that time, a Gomorrah-like sea of scandals exploded into the open, ranging from the bizarre sexual escapades of rightwing, supposed family-values Republicans from Ted Haggard [the evangelical preacher caught having sex with a male escort while using meth] to Larry Craig [the former Idaho Republican senator arrested for lewd conduct in an airport bathroom] to David Vitter (the Louisiana Republican senator who frequented a high-end prostitute called the “D.C. Madam”), to lesser known figures who did even more bizarre acts, to the wanton criminality of Tom DeLay, “The Hammer,” who (was charged with money laundering and violating campaign finance laws and) was the majority leader of Congress. And these scandals, to me, while they’re entertaining, they suggest a lot of hypocrisy. I wanted to go beyond that and show how they reflected an essential sensibility of the Christian Right, and how bringing that movement into that party brought the party down.

R. R.: When did this movement begin? You mention Newt Gingrich.

M. B.: The movement had been building capacity in the 1960s, and my narrative sort of starts in the Civil Rights struggle, and Jerry Falwell was inveighing against Martin Luther King from the pulpit: He’s attacking King for being political and saying preachers shouldn’t be. Falwell was primarily concerned with his private Christian schools being integrated and King was a threat to that. The irony of attacking King as political can’t be lost —  I don’t know how long I can go with the answer. Continue reading

Join us in S.F. to demand affordable housing and civil rights!

Sisters Of The Road and Street Roots are founding members of the Western Regional Advocacy Project (WRAP).  Our mission is to build a movement that is based in the experience of people with experience with homelessness to expose the root causes of homelessness; challenge unjust housing and economic development policies; and fight the criminalization of poverty.

On January 20, 2010 the Western Regional Advocacy Project (WRAP) will be gathering at the San Francisco Federal Builidng to demand the following from the Obama  Administration:

ON HOUSING
•    Immediately restore the Federal Government’s affordable housing funding to comparable 1978 levels. (In 1978, the budget was over $83 billion – in 2009 it is a meager $38.5 billion.)
•    Restore USDA new unit construction levels in rural communities to the 31,000 annually averaged between 1976 and 1985.
•    Enact a moratorium on the demolition, conversion or destruction of ANY publicly funded units until federal law guarantees one for one replacement at existing affordability rates.
•    Ensure adequate funding for operations of public housing to prevent unit loss, high vacancy rates, and substandard living conditions.

ON CIVIL RIGHTS
•    Stop “nuisance crimes” or “quality of life crimes.” These programs criminalize and remove homeless, poor, people of color, and disabled members of our communities.
•    Call for DOJ to respond to LA community request for investigation of discriminatory police enforcement under the Safer Cities Initiative that targets homeless, poor, people of color and disabled community residents.
•    Ensure that the more than 914,000 homeless children in our public schools are able to stay at their “home school” are fully integrated with their housed peers, and are provided the support they need to learn and thrive.
•    Stop any and all questions regarding a person’s immigration status when they are requesting housing, health care, emergency shelter or services.

Read more and sign the petition!

Artwork by Claude Moller

Oregon hunger rate near doubles

Oregon joins Mississippi in having the largest rate increase in the number of food insecure in the nation.

The following is a statement by Oregon Center for Public Policy analyst Joy Margheim on food insecurity data:

Data released today showing a surge in Oregon’s hunger rate remind us of the importance of the expansion of food stamp benefits in the federal recovery package.

The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) announced today that more than one in eight Oregon households (13.1 percent) struggled to put food on the table at times during 2006-08. Oregon’s rate of food insecurity was unchanged from 2003-05 and not significantly different from the national rate for 2006-08.

But the share of Oregon households experiencing hunger, “very low food security,” increased to 6.6 percent (one in 15 Oregon households) in 2006-2008, up from 3.9 percent in 2003-05. Among the 50 states and the District of Columbia, Oregon and Mississippi had the largest percentage point increases in their rates of very low food security.

The nation as a whole saw increases in both food insecurity and hunger or very low food insecurity in 2008 compared to 2007. Because it is necessary to combine three years of data to get reliable state-level estimates, the picture at the state level is not as clear.

The USDA data on state-level food insecurity include two years of economic expansion and extend only to the end of 2008, so they do not show the full impact of the recession. More Oregonians today likely face difficulties feeding their families than the USDA figures indicate.

The hardship for Oregon families would be greater were it not for Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits, or food stamps. Time and again food stamps have demonstrated their effectiveness in curbing food insecurity. Oregon Department of Human Services data show that Oregon’s food stamp caseloads have grown by 45 percent since the recession began, with more than 340,000 Oregon families receiving SNAP benefits in October 2009.

Funding from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) has been vital in meeting that rising need. Through November 13, 2009, Oregon spent $80.9 million in ARRA funding for increased SNAP benefits and administrative costs. Oregon is expected to receive roughly $180 million more in SNAP funds by the end of 2010. These are important federal dollars boosting Oregon’s economy.

Because these federal dollars are spent quickly here in Oregon, they generate substantial economic activity: $1.73 for every dollar in additional benefits.

It’s clear that, at a time of great need, federal stimulus spending is helping many Oregonians weather the recession and providing our economy a boost.

Editorial: Region must work for housing levy

Ever wonder why so many people are experiencing homelessness in Portland, or why the panhandling debate never seems to die? It most certainly has something to do with the economy, but it also has something to do with the lack of ongoing revenue and affordable housing units available to low-income working people.

Our sister city to the north, Seattle, just overwhelmingly passed (63 percent) a housing levy for $145 million over a seven year period. Most of the levy, $104 million, will go toward producing and preserving 1,670 apartments for low-income individuals, while another $4 million will go to more than 3,000 individuals and families in need of rent assistance.

It doesn’t stop there. More than $6 million will go towards purchasing land for affordable housing, with $14 million going toward operations and maintenance for affordable rental units and another $9 million going for homebuyer’s assistance.

The levy not only provides homes for people experiencing homelessness and poverty, it also goes to create an ongoing revenue stream for jobs and construction projects in the region.

All for $17 per $100,000 of assessed property value annually. That means for most Portland homeowners, they would be contributing $34 to $68. That might be the same amount you find yourself donating to a local non-profit to help feed, cloth or house an individual. Why not put that money toward something that will house thousands of people?

Street Roots realizes there are barriers both locally and at a state level concerning the tax structures and how money will be allocated. We also realize there are many competing interests, ranging from the schools to human services and the arts. At the end of the day, all of these things – schools, human services and the arts would benefit from a revenue stream dedicated to improving the quality of life by providing a warm and safe place for individuals and families to call home.

The region has excellent leadership at a government level when it comes to helping secure funding for people experiencing homelessness and poverty. In the past year, both city and county government have been engaged at one level or another in helping maintain our fragile safety net for the area’s poor. They’ve done more with less and should be commended for their efforts.

In a time when unemployment rates, hunger and homelessness are at an all-time high both locally and throughout Oregon – we have a responsibility to help maintain the basic needs of our citizens – not just this year, but for many years to come.

The recent passing of the housing levy in Seattle gives us hope. Hope that even in hard times people can pull together and find a way to do the right thing – even if that means paying $17 to $100 a year for the areas most vulnerable citizens.

Street Roots believes the political will exists to pass a levy or a tax locally for affordable housing. We’re hoping that together as a community, we can make that happen in 2010.

Extra! Extra!

streetrootsnov1309page1If you are already a regular customer of Melissa Walsh, one of Street Roots great vendors, you’ll especially enjoy this edition of Street Roots. It features a story in pictures of Melissa and her husband Sean’s lives, including the obstacles they face and the love between them that carries them through.

And if you’ve never met Melissa or Sean, come and discover this incredible couple that are among so many finding their own path to survival in this city. It’s a compelling piece of photojournalism by Leah Nash that you won’t want to miss.

Street Roots hits the pavement first thing Friday morning, and your vendor will be ready and waiting with this and many other stories to share!

Also in this issue:

“We want to live in peace.” The words of Isdud Al Najjar, who was recently honored for her work with Mercy Corps in Palestine. Joanne Zuhl interviewed Mrs. Al Najjar during her visit to receive the humanitarian award.

The last Republican: Investigative journalist Max Blumenthal looked deep into the heart of the Republican Party. What he found should make the GOP blush. Rosette Royale reports.

Plus, columns by Sally Martin and Ruth Kovacs, an interview on the Street News Service, a biting editorial on what really needs to be done on the housing front, and much more. Thanks, as always, for your tremendous support, and for proving time and time again that Street Roots readers are the finest in town!

Money to burn: Measure 66 & 67

moneyburncrop2Almost from the moment the state Legislature voted to create $733 million in additional revenue by raising the corporate minimum tax and personal income taxes of wealthy people, drama ensued — predictable in a state known for its hatred of taxes.

A group calling itself Oregonians Against Job-Killing Taxes quickly created a campaign and raised $1.2 million to collect enough signatures to refer the taxes — now known as Measures 66 and 67 — to a special election scheduled for January in the hopes that Oregonians would vote the taxes down.

But, according to a variety of sources, there is even more money at stake —  up to an additional $1 billion — if the taxes are voted down, because of their connection to money Oregon has received from the federal stimulus package and other matching dollars.

The explanatory statement for Measure 66 published by the Secretary of State’s office in October acknowledges that Oregon stands to lose federal funds. Continue reading

Thomas Greco talks economics

thomas-grecobwMoney is the root of all evil, so the saying goes.

It’s not just a tired platitude, says Thomas Greco, who has spent the past 30 years studying that notion, reaching one conclusion. “The money problem” as he calls it, has to go.

Greco is an economist, author and consultant on alternative economic systems that wrest control from multinational corporations and return it to the common man. The titles of his books, “The End of Money” and the “Future of Civilization,” echo his mantra that it’s not just about the little guy getting more money. It’s about the future of our planet, our health and our democracy.

And it’s not just the wishful thinking of a disgruntled academic. The systems Greco supports are in operation around the world, including in the United States. They include the LETS movement — Local Exchange Trading Systems. And the Swiss WIR Bank, a credit-clearing system that has more than 70,000 members, not to mention all the national and international barter exchanges that involve hundreds of thousands of businesses trading in billions of dollars of goods and services.

Joanne Zuhl: At what point in your life did you realize that the current monetary system had to be replaced?

Thomas Greco: That goes back 30 years. I was teaching in the college of business in upstate New York, and essentially money and banking was being taught pretty much to accept the system as it is, with the Federal Reserve and the International Monetary Fund and the money creation process, but I really didn’t understand any of that.

It wasn’t until I had left my academic career behind and got involved in the peace and justice movement that I began to see information that was calling into question the dominant paradigm and the structures of banking and money that we had inherited in the past.

I was trying to get to the basic causes of the world’s problems, like starving amidst plenty, the gaps in income and wealth around the world, why some countries were very affluent while other were economic basket cases, and why we had recurrent wars. And in the process of doing my research, I quickly realized that there were a number of causes at different levels. We have the personal values added to beliefs, cultural factors that dispose us in certain direction, but those all result in some fundamental structures: political, economic and social structures, and institutions that channel those ideas and channel human energy.

J.Z.: With the recent economic crisis, is the time ripe for a new understanding of alternative monetary systems?

T.G.: It is a ripe time because we’re starting to feel the pain right here at home. Before, we were able to export the problem to other countries, Third World countries, I called them economic colonies of the Western economies — Europe, the U.S. and Japan. By dominating markets, both the market and the politics, the Banana Republics have been under the thumbs of the United States for well over a century. The U.S. military has been the enforcement arm of the imperial ambitions of American companies, not just American, these are multinational companies with no allegiance to any one country.

J.Z.: It reminds me of “Confessions of an Economic Hit Man.” The author’s name escapes me, but it was very simply laid out how the banks and the military operated in vulnerable countries.

T.G.: John Perkins … he makes it very clear how that works. But before the United States, the empire was headed by Great Britain, and other European powers. Throughout the 18th and 19th centuries, you had many countries dominating other countries as political colonies and later as economic colonies.

We’ve seen a shift from political colonialism to economic colonialism, just as on the micro level we’ve seen a shift from overt slavery to wage slavery, but it sill reflects a shift in balances of power.

J.Z.: You say that your search for social justice led you to conclude that the economic model was the root of the problem. How, then, will a different system correct environmental and social injustice?

T.G.: I quickly came to realize that the fundamental linchpin, the keystone of this structure of power is the money and banking system. Money is the medium of exchange, and whoever controls the allocation of the medium of exchange controls the economy, and whoever controls the economy controls the politics.

The key to understanding all of this is to realize what the substance of money is. It’s just credit. It’s no longer gold or silver. It’s not even any longer bank notes redeemable for gold or silver. What’s behind the money today is a debt obligation. When a bank makes a loan, they create the money in the process of making the loan.

But banks, when they make a loan, they only create the principal and not the interest, the system has a debt imperative, which is a growth imperative. That’s why economists constantly talk about growth. Because we have ever-increasing debt. And this compound-interest formula, it forces growth to accelerate over time.

We’re seeing basically an explosion of the financial system with an explosion of debt. And as debtors try to service what they owe, they have to continually expand their profits, and so we continue to tear up more of our planet, to make more stuff, and we continue to consume more stuff and that’s what’s driving the consumer economy.

Once we realize that money is only credit, then we can take control and allocate it to whomever we want.

J.Z.: How would the alternative economy work?

T.G.: You create a credit-clearing organization, associated with a group of others, who are both producers and consumers. When you sell something into the system, your account is credited and when you buy something, it’s debited.

We’re reinventing money and banking from the bottom up. The banks have been perverse in their actions, and it’s gotten worse and worse over time. We used to have community banks that used to provide credit. Most community banks have been gobbled up by large bank holding companies. And the credit is allocated to big corporations. Continue reading

Housing Bureau is moving

Picture (Device Independent Bitmap) 1

The offices are moving, in part, due to the merger of the Bureau of Housing and Community Development and aspects of the Portland Development Commission; the combined agency will now be known as the Portland Housing Bureau. The staff of the former BHCD will be located in the same building, just moving six floors down, while the Portland Development Commission housing staff will be relocating from their Old Town Chinatown headquarters.

For inquiries about the new bureau, call 503.823.2375. There may be brief interruptions in services while the bureau moves offices during the next week.

Help SR name a new column and educate ourselves about racism all in one

In this week’s Street Roots we published a Letter to the Editor, in which an avid reader, and elder from the Watoska Band of Ramanichal took offense to the liberal use of the word gypsy in Street Roots, specifically referring to the column, “The Urban Gypsy’s.”

The column has stirred many emotions over the past year, including a sobering piece about what it’s like to be a woman and become homeless.

The column is written by Julie McCurdy, a woman who is still experiencing homelessness with her dog in the Rose City. She has written a regular column with the newspaper and help break the news story about the police inviting themselves into St. Francis Dining Hall back in October.

When we showed the letter to Julie she immediately took ownership of the liberal use of the word, and said, “Absolutely, let’s change that now.” After thinking on it for a night or two, Julie has come up with the idea of asking SR readers to help name the column.

So, readers, what should Julie call her column? Julie is hoping for your suggestions and would love to introduce the next column under the name readers come up with.

And lastly, both Street Roots, Julie and Soup Can Sam, all give thanks for the letter and apologize for any misgivings.

The Letter to the Editor is below.

I have been an avid reader of your paper for quite some time and like what it stands for.  However, there are quite a few of us in the Romani community that find one thing distressing. One of your columnists calls herself “The Urban Gypsy.” Well according to The World Romani Congress established in 1971, the term Gypsy is racist. So used in improper context, saying Gypsy is similar to the N-word. If you want to know what our culture is about go to the Patrin Web site.

I do not know if your contributor has Romani heritage, but I would appreciate it if she would please stop it.  We have a very rich culture and have endured a lot of discrimination. They used to brush my teeth with hospital soap in school for speaking Romani. I know a Roma who was placed in aboarding school by the government, in a brutal forced assimilation program (similar to what the Native Americans endured).

I’m sure you can reply with some such comeback that so called ‘Urban Gypsies’ are living in the spirit of the Gypsies of old.  Well we are not so easy to understand, as we live by our own laws and understandings; and we are driven by a different force.  So respectfully I request… please do not debase our culture by calling yourselves Gypsies.

Thank You!

Casimire Watoska
Elder, Watoska Band of Ramanichal
Life member Romani against Racism
Portland

Posted by Israel Bayer