- The next stop for Portlandâs apartment boom? Neighborhoods east of 82nd Avenue. A new report from the cityâs Bureau of Planning and Sustainability predicts commercial districts in East Portland will see 11,600 new apartment units built in the next 20 years. The projected apartment growth would hit neighborhoods such as Parkrose, Lents and Gateway, where residents have long complained about a lack of basic city services and amenities (âThe Other Portland,â WW, Oct. 12, 2011). In the past decade, only 1,005 permits have been issued for multifamily residences in East Portland. The projected growth would double its share of the cityâs apartment construction. Many areas also lack the easily defined business districts of inner-Portland neighborhoods that have witnessed an apartment-building frenzy (âBlock Busters,â WW, Sept. 19, 2012). The report introduces new commercial zones, such as the âJade Districtâ along Southeast 82nd Avenue, and âMidwayâ along outer Southeast Division Street.
- Residents of Hayden Island long frustrated by the concentration of video lottery retailers in their areaâa dozen in a single strip mallâhave asked for an investigation into the relationship between one retailer and Elisa Dozono, chairwoman of the Oregon Lottery Commission. The Hayden Island Neighborhood Network (HINooN) has asked Secretary of State Kate Brown to order an audit into the potential âconflict of interest and appearance of improprietyâ of Dozono, whose law firm, Miller Nash, represents Dottyâs Deli, one of the biggest video lottery retailers. In 2012, the Oregon Government Ethics Commission said Dozono doesnât have a conflict because she is a ânon-equityâ partner of Miller Nashâthat is, an employee, not an owner. HINooN chairman Jeffrey Geisler, who says that distinction is âsophistry,â wants the state Audits Division (which answers to Brown) to investigate. Dozono says sheâs done nothing wrong and is âdisappointedâ with HINooNâs action.
- How many words of instructions should a third-grader have to wade through before getting to an actual test question? If itâs a Smarter Balanced practice exam, the answer is a lotâmore than 700. Portland parents and teachers have been complaining on Facebook, as first reported on wweek.com, about the overly complicated English exam. This spring, Oregon students will be tested for the first time on Common Core State Standards in English and math using Smarter Balanced assessments. So weâre wondering, parents and teachers, what examples of Common Core nuttiness have you seen? Send them to bslovic@wweek.com. Weâll publish the best of the worst.
WWeek 2015