Students at the Leadership and Entrepreneurship Public Charter School are agitating to keep Portland Public Schools from shutting them down.
A district subcommittee ruled that the school's finances are "not sufficiently stable to support renewal."
"This recommendation is not a reflection on the good work that is being done for the students of LEP by the school staff," said PPS Superintendent Carole Smith, in a statement March 12. "But we are concerned about LEP's financial viability and the risk the school's finances pose for LEP's students and families. . . .
What's happening for you in your city this week? Read here a day-by-day diary of community events to fill your spare time. For a full calendar please click on "Read the complete article" below . . . .
A general consensus is that it was a deadly mix of panic, rage, and frustration that caused Lovelle Mixon to snap. His shocking murderous rampage left four Oakland police officers dead and a city and police agencies in deep soul search about what went so terribly wrong. Though Mixon's killing spree is a horrible aberration, his plight as an unemployed, ex-felon isn't. There are tens of thousands like him on America's streets. . . .
If Tanya Scarborough can't find a kidney donor, she'll die – possibly before her daughter graduates from high school in two years. As she struggles to persuade friends, family and church members to get their blood tested in the search for a potential match, and suffers through kidney dialysis three times a week, her time is running out.
"African Americans have among the highest rates of kidney disease, and yet when someone passes away they refuse to donate organs . . .
Mrs. Ruth C. Neal celebrated her 100th birthday at a celebration at the Calaroga Terrace auditorium on Tuesday, Feb. 25. Mrs. Neal was born on Feb. 24, 1909 in Nashville, Tenn., where she graduated from high school and attended business college. She soon met and married Richard Neal. They moved to Laurel, Miss. and had two beautiful children, Richard Jr. and Ruth Helen. Mr. Neal owned and operated a drug store there. . . .
Currently, prisoners are counted as residents of the correctional institution in which they are imprisoned, inflating population statistics and inaccurately skewing congressional and local representation in sparsely populated areas where offenders can't vote and rarely stay after they're released, says state Rep. Chip Shields, the bill's main sponsor.
During an introductory hearing last week, the Department of Corrections said it would be difficult to track the permanent addresses of offenders . . .
Members of Grandparents Raising Grandchildren – Jamie Farlow, Carollyn Smith and Margaret Curtis — engaged in a protest this week at the Department of Human Services office on Vancouver Avenue.
Smith, the group's founder, accuses the Department of Human Services Child Welfare Department of improperly separately families and merely paying lip service to their mandate to give custody to willing relatives . . .
When the beloved House of Sound music store building was demolished on Dec. 31, 2008, decades of memories came crashing down with the wood, metal and glass. Now the sign is the only remnant of a once-vibrant North Williams Avenue scene of jazz clubs, shops, and homes. Award-winning filmmaker Vanessa Renwick has launched a show about the building, at the New American Art Union, 922 SE Ankeny St. through April 19 . . .