11-30-2024  4:45 am   •   PDX and SEA Weather

Northwest News

John Kroger pushes drug treatment, civil rights, financial reform

Oregon's new Attorney General John Kroger will be the keynote speaker at The Skanner's upcoming 23rd annual Martin Luther King Jr. Breakfast. Last week, Kroger sat down to talk with us about his plans for the state's highest law enforcement office.
Kroger, who is a former Assistant United States Attorney, helped to convict major players in the Enron case; is skeptical of some of the strategies used in the "war on drugs," where he helped to convict major traffickers who were easily replaced ...

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After visit, OLMV Director Promise King develops new ideas on race

Promise King, executive director of the Oregon League of Minority Voters, visited family in his home country of Nigeria in November and December. He was there to talk with legislators and his cousin, who is a governor.
Due to the snowy and icy conditions in Portland, Promise King was unable to catch his original flight back. The airline gave him the choice: be diverted to Dubai to wait out the weather or wait it out in Zimbabwe. King decided to revisit a country he hasn't visited in nearly 20 years....

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Newly-minted Mayor Sam Adams hosted a giant party and open house Monday night in City Hall to celebrate his inauguration as the first openly-gay mayor in the city's history. Acrobats, jugglers, and the MarchFourth Marching Band entertained thousands of guests, while free beer, wine and snacks flowed. Adams, left, is congratulated by his former senior policy director, Jesse Beason, right, now the executive director of the Portland Land Trust. Adams' new executive assistant, Cevero Gonzalez, center, looks on.

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Seattle was hard hit by the housing crisis last year, and the trouble isn't over, according to a company that monitors foreclosure data. King, Pierce and Snohomish counties saw foreclosure activity increase 62 percent, 62 percent and 71 percent, respectively. The data was gathered by Default Research, the provider of Seattle's pre-foreclosure data ...

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As the nation waits for the inauguration of Barack Obama as the first Black president, the Seattle Black Fire Fighter's Association is celebrating the year the color barrier was broken at the Seattle Fire Department.
On Jan. 17, the SPFFA will honor the 40th anniversary of the local Black Firefighters Association chapter and the 50th anniversary of Claude Harris' first day on the job.
"He showed great strength and fortitude to put up with the attitude of those times," said Reginald Ball, Northwest region director for the International Association of Black Professional Fire Fighters. "The type of resolve he showed to weather the storm was a great example of personal strength ...

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Should antiquities be viewed as the property of the states where they are found or as global heritage? Given the history of national and imperialist conflicts, are countries right to demand the return of artifacts, many of which are being displayed for everyone to see at local museums? ...

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Bulletin Board

What's happening for you in Seattle this week? Read here a day-by-day diary of free community events to fill your spare time. For a full calendar please click on "Read the complete article" below.…

 

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Bulletin Board

What's happening for you in Portland this week? Read here a day-by-day diary of free community events to fill your spare time. For a full calendar please click on "Read the complete article" below.…

 

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A motorist drives through high water at the Rainier Manor trail park in Sumner, Wash., Wednesday morning. Sumner officials recommended park residents and nearly 400 others to seek higher ground. In King County, as well as Clark County, emergency officials warned motorists not to drive through flooded roads. Interstate 5 remained closed through Chehalis, the three main highways across the Cascade Range were closed and the National Weather Service issued flood warnings for a number of major rivers in western Washington. For information on emergency preparedness procedures, check out The Skanner's Prepare, Survive a Disaster webpage (AP Photo / Ingrid Barrentine)

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Fewer people died in 2007 from traffic crashes and homicides, according to the annual King County Medical Examiner report, released last week.  The report includes statistics on causes of death, and county officials' plans on how to reduce the risk of such deaths in the future. It covers suspicious, sudden, unexpected, or violent deaths in King County for the previous year, as well as trends in homicides, traffic fatalities and drug overdose deaths ...

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