RACC Blog

Eight company bands head to Battle on May 12

Preparations are underway for our first annual Battle of the Bands, a celebration of employee creativity and a benefit for Work for Art! The event takes place Thursday, May 12 at the Crystal Ballroom. Doors will open at 6:00 p.m. and the competition begins at 7:00.

Eight employee bands, sponsored by their companies, are currently tuning up their ten-minute sets.

Brothers Jam, featuring Jamey Hampton of BodyVox and Hampton Lumber, will open the show.  Seven other bands will perform in a variety of genres to vie for the title of “Best Company Band,” as determined by our panel of celebrity judges. The judges will also award a “Best Showmanship” prize, while everyone else gets to select an “Audience Favorite” by voting for their favorite band with cash. The competing bands include:

  • Burgerville, Dystopia
  • Kaiser Permanente, Members Only
  • KeyBank, The Red Keys
  • Portland General Electric, Larry and the Lightbulbs
  • The Standard, Smoke Before Fire
  • Tonkon Torp, The Legal Limit
  • ZGF Architects, Pencil Skirt Paula and the Straight Edge Rulers

The Portland Timbers Army band Greenhorn will also perform.

Tickets are just $10 each, available at the Crystal Ballroom Box Office or online at http://bit.ly/WFABattleOfTheBands. A limited number of VIP tickets are available for $100 each and include hosted food and beverage, table seating area, validated parking and a complimentary concert t-shirt.

All proceeds benefit Work for Art’s 10th Anniversary Campaign to raise $1 million for local arts and culture organizations. This is an all-ages event, accessible for people with disabilities. For more information visit http://workforart.org/battle-of-the-bands/.


Battle of the Bands

A benefit for Work for Art

Thursday, May 12 at 7:00 pm (doors open at 6:00)

At the Crystal Ballroom, 1332 W Burnside, Portland

General Admission $10, VIP $100

workforart.org/battle-of-the-bands/


First Thursday Night Lights

Thirteen multidisciplinary artists enrolled in the University of Oregon’s BFA Digital Arts program in Portland, Oregon who call themselves Sunny Side Up, will project their work for the April 7, 2016, First Thursday Night Lights. Their work spans several medias, including graphic design, illustration, programming, animation, interactive design, photography, drawing, installation and beyond. They say, “We are visual communicators who use our imaginations to make the world a better place, one art experience at a time. After all, life is always better served Sunny Side Up!”

The group includes Jiana Chen, Kathleen Darby, Anthony Hou, Jonny Kim, Sam Lillard, Clara Munro, Anna Pearson, Alex Prestrelski, Brandon Rains, Marion Rosas, Deandra “Sweet Dee” Stokes, Justus Vega, Kendall Wagner.

First Thursday Night Lights
April 7, 2016, Sundown to 9:00p.m.
411 NW Park Ave- North Wall, facing Glisan Street


It’s Advocacy Season!

Eloise’s Blog:

Clearly spring is here and with its glorious arrival come our annual rounds of budget advocacy. Over the past five months a highly convincing group of arts leaders and advocates from the private sector, ably led by Chris Coleman, has visited with Mayor Hales, Commissioners Fish, Novick, Fritz and Saltzman as well as the two leading contenders for our new Mayor, Jules Bailey and Ted Wheeler. These meetings focused on the vital role the arts play here and the need to fill the gap in the Arts Tax funding so that all the benefits voters supported actually come to fruition.

This same group also met with Multnomah County Chair, Deborah Kafoury, and soon RACC will be checking in with our other friends at the County during their budget process. We were thrilled last year when the Chair included in her budget (with urging from Commissioners Shiprack and Bailey)an increase to RACC to support the Right Brain Initiative and arts services to underrepresented communities.

In Washington County interest is high to coordinate arts services better going forward, to clarify funding processes and sources, and to increase the County Commissioners’ investments in arts and culture, through RACC and several key arts organizations in the county.

The main thrust in Clackamas County is to restore a $20k cut from several years ago in order to strengthen arts education and specifically the Right Brain Initiative, a favorite program of this Board of Commissioners.

And last but not least we are meeting with Metro Councilors to hopefully invigorate our relationship and mutual interest in the region whose footprint we share.

This is time consuming work, but rewarding to have meaningful discussions with the talented people who are serving in elected office.

What can you do to help? Please mark your calendars and join us for our annual State of the Arts presentation to Portland City Council! Thursday, April 21 @ 2:00 pm. We promise a lively event if you will help us pack City Council Chambers once again!  Thank you.


Coming to the Portland Building Installation Space: “Radical Positivity,” an installation by Larry Yes, April 25 – May 20.

Picked for its punch of color and upbeat message, the Installation Space selection panel said “yes” to Larry, an artist whose work focuses on love and human connection, and can be described as a meditation on color and joy. The exhibition will cover the walls from floor to ceiling with “positive words” and symbols rendered on wood planks in the artist’s signature style—a combination of hand inscribed text, graphics, and color that scans the rainbow.

The Portland Building is located at 1120 SW 5th Avenue in downtown Portland and is open 8 am to 5 pm, Monday – Friday.

For more information on the Portland Building Installation Space, including images, proposals, and statements for all projects dating back to 1994, go to http://racc.org/installationspace.


A tax you can feel good about

Now in its third year, the Arts Education and Access Fund has put an arts teacher back in every Portland elementary school and is transforming the way arts organizations serve our community. 

by Claire Willett

At right: Sitton Elementary in St. Johns didn’t have a full-time arts specialist before the arts tax. Now students receive weekly instruction from art teacher Carlos Baca.

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“I like to pay taxes. With them, I buy civilization.” –Oliver Wendell Holmes

Like fireworks on the Fourth of July, pumpkin pie on Thanksgiving and debating the merits of the Super Bowl halftime show, grumbling about our taxes in April is practically an American tradition. We know our tax dollars matter; they pay for our roads and bridges, our hospitals and firefighters, and other vital services from which we all benefit in countless invisible ways every day. Taxes are the price we pay for a civilized society, a mark of our collective obligation to each other; but it can be hard to get too excited about watching a chunk of your annual income disappear into the vast machinery of the government when you have no control over how it’s spent and no way to see what impact it will ever have.

But what if you could?

What if there was a concrete, measurable way to show you the real impact of your tax dollars? What if a little bit of money came out of your pockets and a little bit of money came out of my pockets and it joined together with a little bit of money from everybody else’s pockets and together we transformed an entire community?

If you paid your arts tax last year, that’s exactly what happened.

In 2012, 62% of Portlanders voted to pass ballot measure 26-146, the Arts Education and Access Fund (AEAF), as a way to stem the tide of a staggering decline in the quality of the city’s public school arts instruction. The city lagged embarrassingly behind national education standards; before the tax, only 18% of Portland elementary schools provided any arts instruction, compared to a national average of 83%.  So for the cost of $35 per eligible taxpayer, the City of Portland collects over $9 million which they then distribute partly to schools, and partly to RACC to support arts organizations throughout the region.

“But I don’t have a kid in public school,” you might be asking yourself, “so why should I care?”

Because arts education doesn’t just serve the handful of students who might want to be actors or cellists when they grow up; it’s crucial in stimulating creativity and academic achievement for every child. According to Americans for the Arts, students with early, regular access to arts in schools are four times more likely to be recognized for academic achievement than those who don’t. They have better attendance, lower dropout rates, higher confidence and stronger writing skills. They volunteer in their community and read for pleasure at astonishingly higher rates. They’re also better positioned for a 21st century workforce where a recent study conducted by IBM determined that the most important quality in the next generation of business leadership is “creativity.”

The arts aren’t a luxury for affluent suburban kids in well-funded schools whose parents can afford dance classes and theatre camp. They’re a vital tool to help every student learn.

In a city like Portland, whose citizens value creativity, and where the challenges facing our public schools are a source of concern to us all, it’s no surprise that a substantial majority of voters agreed to back the AEAF and do something about it.

The question, of course, is – did it work?

According to Marna Stalcup, RACC’s arts education director, the answer is yes.  And even better than expected.

The tax was created to fund one arts teacher per 500 students; the actual result has been better than promised, with a ratio of 1 to 398.  Before the arts tax, there were 31 arts teachers in elementary schools in Portland; now there are 91, of whom 80% are funded by the arts tax.  Portland Public Schools – the district with the greatest need – has seen the greatest increase, more than tripling their number of arts instructors from 15 to 64.  “Voters got what they wanted and it’s a solid success,” Stalcup says.  “It’s pretty exciting.”

With no restrictions on what artistic discipline to choose for their newly-hired teacher, the results have shown a fascinating range of different ways that schools and districts are choosing to spend that money.  David Douglas, for example, is investing in a comprehensive district-wide music education pipeline, while some schools have hired dance teachers for the very first time.  And on their own dime, Portland Public Schools has finally filled the district-level arts coordinator position which sat vacant for years. “The funding for that position came from PPS and supports the entire district—not just the newly-hired teachers,” says Stalcup. “That position isn’t funded by the AEAF, but it took the arts tax to bring it back.”

But it’s not just schools and districts who have used the AEAF as a tool to give their organizations permission to think about the work they’re already doing in a more expansive, innovative way. Grants Officer Helen Daltoso says the same has proven true with the fund’s second-largest program: support for arts organizations.

“We Are Proud to Present a Presentation About the Herero of Namibia, Formerly Known as South West Africa, From the German Sudwestafrika, Between the Years 1884-1915” playing at Artists Repertory Theatre through April 10.

Teacher salaries are allocated first, so this second pot of money will continue to grow as more people each year pay the tax, but organizations are already making changes.  Artists Repertory Theatre Managing Director Sarah Horton says increased operating funds from RACC support a range of community outreach and accessibility programs.  Pay-What-You-Can performances and the “Arts For All” program are offered for every season show, opening the doors to low-income audiences, while free student matinees impact over 1,500 students every year, including guests from the “I Have a Dream” program, New Avenues for Youth, and Outside In.  And she says RACC’s funding has also helped Artists Rep continue to develop their ArtsHub program, providing crucial performance, rehearsal and administrative space to ten Resident Companies and dozens of very small and emerging organizations at deeply reduced fees.

“The ArtsHub protects a space for art and artists in a real estate environment that’s become increasingly difficult for the arts, and gives fledgling organizations, many of whom serve underrepresented artists and audiences, a place to share their work and grow,” says Horton, and the consistent base of annual operating support they receive from RACC each year is a vital tool in helping make that outreach possible.

Daltoso says that the discoveries that came about through the access fund have sparked conversations among the RACC staff about every grant funding program they run, who’s being served by these grants, and who isn’t.  Grant applications now gather more thorough demographic data about board, staff and audience makeup, and RACC is exploring ways to help support the entire Portland arts community to step up their game about equity, diversity and access. You’re perilously close to being behind the times if you’re not tackling this stuff head-on,” she says.  “Period.”

The AEAF is also helping to get money in the hands of artists working in communities that haven’t previously been on RACC’s radar.  RACC’s new Arts Equity Grant program (formerly titled “Expanding Cultural Access”) funnels AEAF money to organizations providing services in communities that RACC hasn’t supported, opening the door to a rich, diverse ecosystem of nonprofit organizations that provide vital arts programs and services to an astoundingly broad range of often-underrepresented cultural communities.  Last year this fund supported projects ranging from a site-specific photography installation in the Lents neighborhood to summer arts workshops for gang-affected youth.  The number of applications increased significantly this year, says Daltoso, and “the breadth and depth of what we received was pretty phenomenal.”  Watch for the list of grant recipients to be announced in May.

Like throwing a rock in a pond and watching the ripples circle outward, it’s clear that the impact of the arts tax has already gone far beyond what was projected, inspiring the community to use their resources in ways they would never have thought of before this fund existed.  “It really is because of the arts tax that schools, arts organizations and funders are all thinking as deeply as we are,” Daltoso says.  “It’s too easy just to keep doing what you’ve always done, or believing that you can’t do something differently because it’s too difficult to change. If everybody’s doing what they can, if everybody’s making an effort, we could see some amazing changes happen.”

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For more stories on how the arts tax is making a difference in our community, follow the hashtag #pdxlovesart. The arts tax is due on April 18 and can be paid online at artstax.net.


New “Arts Equity” grants available

After a three-year pilot program to expand access to arts and culture in the city of Portland, RACC is launching a new Arts Equity Grant program, funded by Multnomah County and the City of Portland’s voter-approved Arts Education & Access Fund or “arts tax.”

“This new program is similar to the ‘Expanding Cultural Access’ grants that RACC has funded for the last three years, but now the online application and reporting process is similar to other RACC grants – and we have a larger budget,” explained RACC grants officer Helen Daltoso. A total of $100,000 will be awarded in May of 2016, with grants ranging from $1,000 to $7,000 each, but interested organizations need to submit a letter of interest online by February 24 at 5:00 pm.

RACC’s Arts Equity Grants are aimed at groups that are “under-represented”—for lack of a better term—and include communities of color, immigrants, refugees, underserved neighborhoods, persons with disabilities, LGBTQ communities and other under-represented people. These grants are open to nonprofit organizations in the City of Portland and Multnomah County.

There are a number of memorable projects that were funded by RACC’s Expanding Cultural Access grant program in 2015, which all serve as good examples of the mission of the new Arts Equity Grant for 2016.

The Immigrant and Refugee Community Organization (IRCO) prepared a public showing of elder artists from diverse ethnic backgrounds and cultures, many of them having encountered not only trauma and terror of dislocation from their homes, but also the intercultural and intertribal strife within their homelands and in refugee camps.

Latino Art Now conducted quarterly dialogues/pláticas entitled “Conversations with Latino Artists: Building Visions.” The topics for discussion were: The Contemporary Latino Art Experience; Culture, Mestizaje/Hybridity, and Representation; Intellectual Traditions and Artistic Contributions; Strategies to Democratize the Arts. The group also accompanied the pláticas with four video installations documenting artists and the ways in which their work highlighted the plática topics.

Micro Enterprise Services of Oregon (MESO) put on a multi-cultural market featuring 40 community artists selling their wares and talents as a special feature for its “East Meets West” fundraiser. The sensational “East Meets West” event included Night Flight Aerial Arts, Kalabharathi School of Dance, acrobatic troupe Kazum, Mathias Galley African Dance and Parkrose High School dancers.

The Miracle Theatre Group hosted LAX/IdeaAL (Latino Artists eXchange/Intercambiode Artistas Latinos) a conference for about 90 artists of all disciplines, featuring workshops on professional development, cross-discipline arts, collaborative mural working and more. Discussions and instructions were presented bilingually in English and Spanish.

The Native American Youth and Family Center sponsored a marketplace for Native American artisans. Pre-event workshops focused on artistic design, business concepts, motivation and staying in tune with one’s Native American culture. Native artist Lillian Pitt spoke about shifting her work as a hairdresser to a career in sculpture and visual arts and the plenty of challenges she’s faced in her long and distinguished career. Pitt was joined in the workshops by Louie Gong, a young Native artist who works with paint and sneakers.

VOZ Workers’ Rights Education Project held free, bimonthly art workshops for day laborers and Latino artists. The evening workshops were split between visual art techniques (such as screen-printing, welding, and masonry) and marketing skills (website building, resume writing and craft fair participation). Many of the Portland area’s day laborers are skilled craftsmen. The workshops helped them to enhance their creative skills, network with other professional and aspiring artists, and expand their potential sources of income.

Colored Pencils Art and Culture Council’s mission is to nourish psychological wellbeing and to overcome racism, sexism, and other forms of discrimination through art and cultural diversity. Its family-focused events, like the one RACC sponsored, bring together immigrant, refugee and other communities to share each other’s music, dance and food. One participant enthused, “I felt it was such a treat to be able to experience such diverse cultures from places I may never travel to in my lifetime.”

Rogue Pack will present “Bob #middleschool #tweensandteens” in two public performances this month at the Sellwood Playhouse, 901 S.E. Ninth Ave, on Friday and Saturday, January 29-30, 7:00 pm to 8:00 pm. Rogue Pack middle school students are writing stories and collaborating with theatre professionals like executive director Ann Singer and Nelda Reyes, the director of the upcoming “Contigo Pan y Cebolla” at Portland’s Milagro Theater. “Supporting their creativity gives them the confidence to be more successful at school and in life,” Singer said.  Of the metro area youth involved in Rogue Pack, 75% are kids of color and many are also LGBTQ.

As with RACC’s Expanding Cultural Access grants in the past, the new Arts Equity Grants are designed to help RACC expand its cultural reach, and to ensure more diversity among organizations that receive RACC funding.  These efforts are bolstered by the City of Portland’s Arts Education and Access Fund, which voters approved in 2012. This dedicated funding stream ensures that every K-5 public school student in the City of Portland has an art or music teacher; provides general operating support for 47 Portland-based arts organizations; and sets aside money specifically for increasing the community’s access to arts and culture.

Information about the first round of Arts Equity Grants is online at racc.culturegrants.org. Proposed projects must take place between July 1, 2016 and June 30, 2017. The deadline to submit a letter of interest online isFebruary 24 at 5:00 pm.

RACC will host free information sessions to help potential applicants understand the process and guidelines for Arts Equity Grants. Dates and locations will be announced on racc.org in early January.


Jenna Reineking’s “Temporal Ecologies,” March 21 – April 15, heads up a new season of installations at the Portland Building

PORTLAND, ORE – Artist Jenna Reineking’s upcoming installation in the lobby of the Portland Building, Temporal Ecologies, is designed to transform the architecture of the exhibition space into an activated environment; her choice of materials to accomplish this—the humble brown paper lunch bag: “I recently have become interested in creating systems using forms repeated in incremental units that can range from finite to infinite based on the constraints of the space.”

The choice to use inexpensive, readily accessible materials allows the artist to create environments that ask the viewer to revalue the mundane. Reineking’s process includes carefully manipulating or “sculpting” each bag and adhering them one by one to fit and transform the geometry of the Installation Space. She expects to use over 300 individual bags, “They will grow from the corners and utilize the walls, ceiling, and floor…and will be recycled upon completion of the exhibition.” In the process the artist hopes to transcend the “thing-ness” of these simple, overlooked manufactured goods and create a new set of biomorphic forms—design elements that are reminiscent of nature and living organisms but do not aim to directly reproduce them.

The Portland Building is located at 1120 SW 5th Avenue and is open 8 am to 5 pm, Monday – Friday. Temporal Ecologies opens March 21st and runs through April 15th.


A New Season at the Installation Space:
  Jenna Reineking’s installation kicks off a new season of exhibitions at the Portland Building. Over the course of the next year, nine artists will present installation based and experimental media installations in the small gallery space adjacent to the building’s lobby. Each four week long installation has been chosen by the program selection panel to present challenging and diverse work that encourages visitors to reexamine their expectations of what art is and can be.

New Season Schedule and Project Descriptions:

Jenna Reineking  March 21 – April 15, 2016

Temporal Ecologies – Description above

Larry Yes  April 25 – May 20, 2016

Radical Positivity – Picked for its punch of color and upbeat message, the selection panel said “yes” to Larry, an artist who’s work focuses on love and human connection and can be described as a meditation on color and joy. The installation will cover the walls of the space from floor to ceiling with positive words and symbols rendered in every color of the rainbow.

Hannah Hertrich  May 31 – June 24, 2016

Delicate Home – Many of us think of home as our foundation, an extension of self that is a base of stability, but is that perception based on reality? Hertrich’s Delicate Home explores the “fragility of self” by focusing on our notion of home. The installation stages a series of model houses constructed out of mirrors perilously set below gathering clouds of stone.

Yalena Roslaya  July 5 – August 5, 2016

Visual Sound – Roslaya will record sounds that occur within the Portland Building and translate them into sound waves sketched visually on the wall and rendered aurally via ceramic sound wave sculptures. Five of these sculptures will fill the space, each with a mp3 driver enclosed in the heart of the vessel. “The idea of visually displaying sound is inspired by my experience with hearing-motion synesthesia…I would like to share this experience with viewers through my installation and hear their response.”

Bukola Koiki  August 15 – September 9, 2016

JJC (Journey Just Come) – Koiki highlights the challenges immigrants face by spotlighting the linguistic slang and vernacular that people often need to learn and employ when navigating the spaces between and within disparate cultures. “As a Nigerian-American immigrant myself, I am particularly interested in pidgin, which is a grammatically simplified means of communication that develops between two or more groups that do not have a language in common…In Nigeria, a country of over 500 known languages, communication can be truly daunting at times.” To explore this idea of communication and miscommunication, the artist will fill the Installation Space with a profusion of brightly colored flags that showcase Pidgin English sayings extracted from the local language in Lagos, Nigeria.

Benz and Chang  September 19 – October 14, 2016

The Bridge, 1910 – Based on an archival photo of the Hawthorne Bridge under construction, Benz and Change offer a thoughtful and dynamic homage to the crews that built Portland’s oldest existing Willamette River crossing. The Bridge, a set of four, 8 foot by 6 foot, hand cut silhouettes crafted in wood, will extend from the back wall of the exhibition space to render a life-sized composite image of the historic photo.

Alex Luboff  November 14 – December 9, 2016

Pipeline Obstruction Pathway – Takes the form of large (one foot diameter), hand-build pipelines installed to purposefully obstruct and obscure entry into the exhibition space—a project that will get viewers thinking about all the energy infrastructure in our lives. Are the pipes, deftly assembled from plywood, a network of interlaced craft objects? Or are they elements of a dystopian “extractive energy landscape” we may be headed for?

Emily Myers  January 17 – February 10, 2017

Mechanical Rituals – A comment on just how industrial our food production cycle has become. Myers will install a set of computer controlled mutoscopes—mechanized flipbooks mounted on rotating cylinders—on a prominently positioned dining room table. The mutoscopes, which show scenes of the food we eat as it travels from farm to table, are animated automatically as viewers approach. “My proposal for Mechanical Rituals brings the process of industrialized agriculture, which is so far removed from society’s consciousness, into the modern dining room.”

Stephanie Simek  February 21 – March 17, 2017

Following on her work with optical illusions, holograms and science themes, Simek will create a custom built “table of holograms.” Optics hidden within her table will reflect images of common minerals upwards and cause them to appear to hover above the table surface. Simek sees her structure as a vitrine or a container for a kind of t​able of elements. ​“The choice of content is based on my previous work and interest in basic, elemental materials and their inherent potential. This often includes unusual and interesting physical properties like magnetic, electrical, and optical capabilities.  For example, I have built sculptural objects that are also simple radios, an invisibility cloak, a compass, and a levitating sculpture, all reliant on the special properties of familiar minerals.”

Location and Hours: The Portland Building is located at 1120 SW 5th Avenue and is open 8 am to 5 pm, Monday – Friday.

A preliminary mock-up of Emily Myers’ Mechanical Rituals. This installation, along with eight others, is part of the new season of exhibitions at the Portland Building.

A preliminary mock-up of Emily Myers’ Mechanical Rituals. This installation, along with eight others, is part of the new season of exhibitions at the Portland Building.

For more information on the Portland Building Installation Space, including images, proposals, and statements for all projects dating back to 1994, go to http://racc.org/installationspace.


Elected Officials

Find contact information below for all elected officials in RACC’s jurisdiction. Updated May 2021.

Skip to:

City of Portland
Clackamas County
Multnomah County
Washington County
Metro

 

City of Portland

Mayor Ted Wheeler
City of Portland
1221 SW 4th Avenue
Portland, OR 97204
MayorWheeler@PortlandOregon.gov
503.823.4120

Commissioner Mingus Mapps
City of Portland- City Hall
1221 SW 4th Avenue, Room 210
Portland, OR 97204
MappsOffice@portlandoregon.gov 
503.823.4682

Commissioner Carmen Rubio
City of Portland- City Hall
1221 SW 4th Avenue, Room 220
Portland, OR 97204
Comm.Rubio@portlandoregon.gov 
503.823.3008

Commissioner Jo Ann Hardesty
City of Portland- City Hall
1221 SW 4th Avenue, Room 230
Portland, OR 97204
JoAnn@portlandoregon.gov
503.823.4151

Commissioner Dan Ryan
City of Portland- City Hall
1221 SW 4th Avenue, Room 240
Portland, OR 97204
CommissionerRyanOffice@portlandoregon.gov
503.823.3589

 

Clackamas County

Chair Tootie Smith
Clackamas County
2051 Kaen Road
Oregon City, OR 97045
bcc@clackamas.us
503.655.8581

Commissioner Paul Savas
Clackamas County
2051 Kaen Road
Oregon City, OR 97045
bcc@clackamas.us
503.655.8581

Commissioner Martha Schrader
Clackamas County
2051 Kaen Road
Oregon City, OR 97045
bcc@clackamas.us
503.655.8581

Commissioner Sonya Fischer
Clackamas County
2051 Kaen Road
Oregon City, OR 97045
bcc@clackamas.us
503.655.8581

Commissioner Mark Shull
Clackamas County
2051 Kaen Road
Oregon City, OR 97045
bcc@clackamas.us
503.655.8581

Multnomah County

Chair Deborah Kafoury
Multnomah County
501 SE Hawthorne
Portland, OR 97214
mult.chair@multco.us
503.988.3308

Commissioner Sharon Meieran
Multnomah County
501 SE Hawthorne
Portland, OR 97214
district1@multco.us

Commissioner Susheela Jayapal
Multnomah County
501 SE Hawthorne
Portland, OR 97214
district2@multco.us

Commissioner Jessica Vega Pederson
Multnomah County
501 SE Hawthorne
Portland, OR 97214
district3@multco.us

Commissioner Lori Stegmann
Multnomah County
501 SE Hawthorne
Portland, OR 97214
district4@multco.us

 

Washington County

Chair Kathryn Harrington
Washington County, At-Large
155 North First Ave.
Hillsboro, OR 97124
cao@co.washington.or.us
503.846.8681

Commissioner Nafisa Fai
Washington County, District 1
155 North First Ave.
Hillsboro, OR 97124
District1@co.washington.or.us
503.846.8681

Commissioner Pam Treece
Washington County, District 2
155 North First Ave.
Hillsboro, OR 97124
District2@co.washington.or.us
503.846.8681

Commissioner Roy Rogers
Washington County, District 3
155 North First Ave.
Hillsboro, OR 97124
District3@co.washington.or.us
503.846.8681

Commissioner Jerry Willey
Washington County, District 4
155 North First Ave.
Hillsboro, OR 97124
District4@co.washington.or.us
503.846.8681

 

Metro

Council President Lynn Peterson
Metro, 600 NE Grand Avenue
Portland, OR 97232
lynn.peterson@oregonmetro.gov
503.797.1889

Councilor Shirley Craddick
Metro, District 1
600 NE Grand Avenue
Portland, OR 97232
shirley.craddick@oregonmetro.gov
503.797.1547

Councilor Christine Lewis
Metro, District 2
600 NE Grand Avenue
Portland, OR 97232
christine.lewis@oregonmetro.gov
503.797.1887

Councilor Gerritt Rosenthal
Metro, District 3
600 NE Grand Avenue
Portland, OR 97232
gerritt.rosenthal@oregonmetro.gov
503.797.1549

Councilor Juan Carlos González
Metro, District 4
600 NE Grand Avenue
Portland, OR 97232
juancarlos.gonzalez@oregonmetro.gov
503.797.1553

Councilor Mary Nolen
Metro, District 5
600 NE Grand Avenue
Portland, OR 97232
mary.nolen@oregonmetro.gov
503.797.1552

Councilor Bob Stacey
Metro, District 6
600 NE Grand Avenue
Portland, OR 97232
bob.stacey@oregonmetro.gov
503.797.1546