Victims in Sullivan s Gulch and Irvington neighborhoods were robbed last weekend on Mother s Day. Author: Christelle Koumoué (KGW) Updated: 6:47 PM PDT May 13, 2021
PORTLAND, Oregon Portland police investigating a string of armed robberies in the Sullivan s Gulch and Irvington neighborhoods last Sunday. Never would I have expected to be robbed at gun point any day of the week, much less on Mother s Day, said Rachel, who lives in Sullivan s Gulch.
What was supposed to be a fun afternoon took a terrifying turn. She was walking with a friend on Northeast 26th and Clackamas when she heard a car screech around the corner and stop.
Months away from the start of the new fiscal year, three local government agencies are carving out room in their 2021-2022 budget proposals for programs aimed at solving one of the Portland area’s most pressing and most visual problems: trash.
This week, representatives for the city of Portland, the Joint Office of Homeless Services and the regional government agency Metro all confirmed they’re hoping to launch, or in one case have already launched, programs that pay people to pick up trash along local streets and highways.
In all three cases, staff will zero in on hiring specific demographics: people experiencing homelessness or people recently out of the correctional system. They’re also, in all three cases, aiming to pay workers living wages with rates as high as $20 an hour.