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Home · Articles · News · News · Another Brick In The Wall
December 21st, 2005 NIGEL JAQUISS | News
 

Another Brick In The Wall

The latest shot in the war on new business on Alberta is an idiotic one.

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The note and brick thrown into locally owned Bishops Barbershop on Northeast Alberta Street.
Bishops Barbershop on Northeast Alberta Street has an odd problem for a local business owned by a minority: It's been targeted by clueless protectors of the street's virginity.

On Monday, Bishops general manager Stella Farina arrived at the company's headquarters at 2132 NE Alberta St. to find shattered glass and a brick wrapped with an anti-corporate message, much of which was apparently cribbed from the Portland novelist Chuck Palahniuk's Fight Club.

"You bring nothing to our table besides bills and foreclosure notices," read the unsigned note. "We bring you broken glass and a headache for you to hide behind your shitty haircuts."

For anybody who has followed Alberta's rapid gentrification (see "Alberta Rising," WW, June 6, 2000), backlash against newcomers—especially anybody remotely connected to globalization or corporatization—is hardly unexpected.

Roslyn Hill, who has developed several properties along Alberta, says her projects have been tagged by people upset about gentrification—even though she's an area old-timer and, unlike most developers on the street, is African-American.

"Most of the people are new to the neighborhood, and they don't know anything except that costs have gone up and they don't want big corporations on the street," Hill says.

The brick-throwing at Bishops, which has about 50 employees in five shops around Portland, follows a series of minor vandalism and taggings at the building, which was completed in September.

The property's developer, Mary Walker, says she suspects whoever is behind the damage to her property is operating under mistaken beliefs about her and her tenants.

"They've tagged the building with bleach, acid, glue and paint," says Walker, a single mom who lives in North Portland. "It's a lot like what happened to Starbucks on Division."

Last year, activists unhappy that Starbucks was moving into a stretch of Southeast Division Street dominated by local businesses targeted and even firebombed the building the coffee conglomerate occupied. And attacks also mimic those directed at a proposed McDonald's on Southeast Hawthorne Boulevard in 2001.

But Walker's building is home to knitting and fabric shops owned by two local women, as well as Bishops, a Portland company owned by local entrepreneur Leo Rivera, a Filipino-American.

Farina thinks the vandal or vandals may have mistaken the local Bishops chain, which was founded in 2001, with Rudy's, another "rock and roll" hair-cutter that has expanded rapidly in trendy Portland neighborhoods.

Complicating the mystery is a series of burglaries at Bishops. In the past two weeks, somebody has broken into Bishops locations on Southeast Hawthorne Boulevard, Northwest 21st Avenue and Alberta Street, stealing safes and cash registers. Two of the break-ins occurred in the early morning of Dec. 16.

Farina says the coincidence is remarkable but thinks the burglaries and the brick-tossers are unrelated.

"It's really frustrating," she says. "If people feel that passionately, they should check the facts—which are that we're a local, minority-owned company that provides lots of jobs—before they make themselves look like idiots."

 
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12.20.2005 at 10:00 Reply
Another Brick In The WallI always find it very helpful to attack property that isn't mine. Penalize people offering constructive activity (small business) as an alternative to illegal activity by creating even more illegal activity. (sarcasm stops here, next paragraph is serious).I think it's great that a local woman in North Portland owns commercial property on Alberta, and is contributing to a productive culture. However, it shouldn't matter who owns the property. People are upset about insurance rates and other costs of living being so high in an area? I hope they aren't the ones vandalizing.I used to live very near to 20th and Division, and was a little annoyed that Starbuck's moved in. However, after the attack on that building, I made it a point to give them my business for the sole purpose of spiting those who vandalized it.I hope nobody responsible for tagging, breaking windows, burglarizing, etc complains when others do that to them.Don't like a business? Don't give them any money. Curse them. Protest them. Write scathing letters to local newspapers. However, don't escalate my personal costs (e.g. car insurance) with destructive behavior.—Aaron Smith

 

12.20.2005 at 10:00 Reply
Another Brick In The Wallis not gentrification if i get my hair cut their? right?after all they do serve pbr—hipster

 

12.20.2005 at 10:00 Reply
Another Brick In The WallWell, they are right about the shitty haircuts at least.—Dan

 

12.20.2005 at 10:00 Reply
Another Brick In The WallI think the points made in this article are very good. These are locally owned businesses that are providing jobs paying the states bills by paying federal, state, and local taxes. I would be interested in knowing what the "brick-throwers" do for a living. What types of businesses do they find to be acceptable? Where do they buy their grocers? Where do they buy their clothes? etc..I understand that some Portlanders are worried about gentrification. However, the fact that businesses are minority-owned do not make it right for them to conduct business in the Alberta neighborhood. The fact that they are locally-owned, well-run businesses, that provide jobs and pay taxes make it right for them to conduct business in the Alberta neighborhood.Pointing out that the businesses are minority-owned displays the hipocrocy of those throwing bricks, but are you saying that it would be okay to throw bricks if the business were owned by whites?—Dan Floyd, Portland

 

12.21.2005 at 10:00 Reply
Another Brick In The WallPeople who throw bricks through the windows of locally owned business need to pick their asses up and move back to whatever oppressive small town they moved here from. Simmer down, people! You're not exactly making me want to move back to my hometown!—ex-portlander

 

 
 

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