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#portlandor

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Budget Cuts, Portland Police and the Labor Movement

A discussion with Portland's union rank-and-file.

Kristian Williams, author of "Our Enemies in Blue: Police and Power in America" and forthcoming "Policing the Progressive City" about Portland, leads the discussion.

The cops are worried about Portland City Council. They've gotten used to bloated police budgets, absurd overtime payouts, and immunity for violent misconduct. But with four socialists elected to City Council, the police union is suddenly trying to brand itself as a "friend of workers" -- petitioning to join the regional council of labor unions, the Northwest Oregon Labor Council (NOLC). The labor council "speaks" for labor at City Council meetings and with elected politicians. What does this mean for Portlanders fighting for a city budget that doesn't cut their community centers, parks, and services? What does this mean for our efforts to hold Portland police accountability for misconduct?

#PortlandOr #PDX #Police #labor

Audio at:
kboo.fm/media/126840-budget-cu

I don't always agree with Sherry Wolf (or with anyone always, of course) but the comments below seem to me about right. In Portland, there were, by at least one count, 50,000 (so, proportionately a better turnout than NYC). Many were masked, and I appreciate all those protecting everyone's health in the crowd.

Important to remember also that in discussing 'nonviolent' protests, the violence generally comes from the police, so the peacefulness, some have suggested, comes from police having underestimated turnout (and thus being unprepared for encountering the crowd) or indifference to the actions of old white people likely to go home after the march.
I've heard that there are nationwide calls for further marches April 19 & May 1, but have not seen anything definite for PDX. There is, however, an upcoming meeting April 12 dedicated to building long-term alliances--not just mobilizing people to protest but organizing to gain positive changes. Portland Rising: The Power of Coalition from Jobs with Justice & others: Saturday, April 12, 2025 10:00 AM-12:00PM at P.A.T. Hall, 345 NE 8th Ave., Portland, OR 97232. Wheelchair accessible; Masks required and provided. actionnetwork.org/events/portl

Sherry Wolf posts:
5 takeaways from April 5th in NYC:
- 100,000 came out—mostly as individuals and not organized in groups, folks who don’t usually or ever protest on a day the city’s far left leadership was in DC for the massive Palestine protest there. Notably, thousands in NYC wore keffiyehs & carried signs about Gaza, it’s too intertwined with our national disaster to be scrubbed from an NYC protest
- Multigenerational, but skewed whiter and a bit older than NYC overall, indicating both the silos we’re in and that it was disproportionately citizens who don’t fear deportation but loss of careers, social security, Medicare, etc. these were downwardly mobile middle- and working-class people with something to lose
- The politically broad but hollow call to action—“Hands Off”— meant that the momentary vacuum could be filled by individuals or small groups putting forward chants and slogans for others, which is what I did on the march from the subway and later with union comrades for more than an hour outside the library raising explicitly anti-fascist, pro-trans and immigrant and unite and fight type chants and got tens of thousands to vigorously take them up while marching past; others did this along the way, too!
- Leftists need to learn what a united front means in practice—the denunciations online of the vacuousness of a “Hands Off” call are unhelpful; possibly 1 million people nationally turned out because they’re scared and want to find a way to fight—we need to put forward and fight for political positions inside these formations, not denounce them
- Mass actions raise the prospect of mass strikes; union leaders need to start organizing strike calls with Black, queer and immigrant groups—days of action, walk-ins, walkouts, rolling strikes—which can’t be summoned the same way as a call to action in a moment of extreme fear rage.

Join Portland Jobs with Justice's Portland Rising committee as we begin to apply the lessons from Minneapolis to our own city. This will be an opportunity for strategizing and exploring the power of coalition.

This free in-person event is the second in a series of workshops exploring how workers and community members can organize bold, strategic actions to fight for better wages, working conditions, and local policy changes. We’ll build on the previous session by thinking about the opportunities for building a broad coalition to win together here in Portland. Join us for an engaging conversation and help shape the future of class struggle in our city!

actionnetwork.org/events/portl
#PortlandOR #PDX #Labor #WorkerPower #CommunityOrganizing

Looking for friends and community in Portland!
Most of the ways I've found to meet people cost money (e.g. going to events at bars) and that just isn't sustainable for me bc I'm unemployed and disabled and my spouse isn't really making enough for the two of us!
So I'm looking for trans people I can hang out with in free spaces, especially during the day on weekdays when my spouse is at work
I'm interested in music, DIY fashion, sci-fi and anarchism
#portlandOR #pdx #transPDX #disabledPDX

The Portland, OR, City Council Resolution on Zenith will be heard at the next Transportation and Infrastructure Committee meeting on Monday, March 10th from 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Show up in support and WEAR RED. You can find the resolution here: portland.gov/council/documents

When: Monday, March 10th (Zenith resolution will be heard around ~10:30 a.m.)
Where: City Hall, Council Chambers, 2nd Floor (1221 SW Fourth Avenue, Portland, OR 97204)
Tune in virtually (YouTube, OpenSignal Website, or Xfinity Channel 30 and 330)
Sign up to testify verbally HERE: portland.gov/council-clerk/tes

*testifiers will only have TWO MINUTES
Submit written testimony HERE: portland.gov/auditor/council-c

*make sure to choose SUPPORT in the position section
Use this excellent letter (courtesy of 350 PDX and Breach Collective) as talking points to write your testimony: docs.google.com/document/d/1lq

Portland.govDeclare actions concerning Zenith Energy Terminal Holdings, LLC, including placing communications into the public record, demanding the Mayor to investigate violations of the Zenith franchise agreement, and urging the Auditor to conduct an investigation into the competing statements and arguments heard by Council on January 21st, 2025, by City staff, Zenith, and members of the public

It’s not the first time Kanal has clashed with the police union since taking office just two months ago. He sent ripples through the public safety bureaus and the unions that represent their workforces in Jan when he asked city officials to explore what budget cuts across the public safety bureaus would look like. (Police Bureau, Fire & Rescue, and Emergency Communications had initially been exempt from drafting budget cuts ...) wweek.com/news/city/2025/02/22 #pdx #portlandOR #PortlandPoliceBureau

Willamette WeekCouncilor Kanal’s Proposed Tweaks to Police Accountability Board Inflame Police Union