05-08-2024  9:20 am   •   PDX and SEA Weather

Northwest News

Sens. Smith, Cantwell seek to improve financial literacy for seniors

WASHINGTON, D.C. – In an effort to combat the declining personal savings rate in the United States, Sens. Gordon H. Smith (R-OR) and Maria Cantwell (D-WA) joined today in introducing legislation to help older Americans better prepare for and manage their assets in retirement. The legislation, S.3053, will provide grants to Area Agencies on Aging to provide financial literacy services for older individuals.
"We are experiencing a national personal savings crisis," said Senator Smith. "Not enough Americans, including seniors, have the basic financial literacy skills needed to properly prepare for retirement and asset management. A simple investment by the federal government in financial literacy programs can help ensure a safe and secure retirement for many of our seniors."...


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Young Professionals host summit to help empower future leaders

The Seattle Urban League Young Professionals organization has again received a strong response for the upcoming 3rd Annual Leadership Development Summit aimed at empowering Seattle's future leaders.
Organizers say the event is geared towards young professionals of color who are interested in personal and professional development but may be unsure where to obtain information. The forum allows networking opportunities with like-minded and seasoned professionals. ...


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Bulletin Board

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


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In just one moment, a year's worth of work was lost for local artist F.X. Rosica.. On Friday, May 23, thieves smashed out a window on his car in broad daylight and stole nearly all the work he was scheduled to display next month at the Interstate Firehouse Cultural Center.

IFCC Creative Director Adrienne Flagg says the theft was devastating to the artist and the center. Unlike some art installations, Rosica was debuting a full year's worth of prints and paintings about the passage of time as we move around on bus, train and bicycles. In addition to the artwork – bright copper plate etchings – specialized tools, prints and sketchbooks were also stolen.


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Died on May 26

Genetta Williams was born on Oct. 26, 1961 in Portland, Oregon, to Mary Glen Ola Williams -McSwain and the late Deacon L.C. Williams.  She died on May 26, 2008. She was 46. She was a member of Philadelphia Community Missionary Baptist Church under the leadership of the late Pastor B.M. McSwain, where she attended Sunday school and sang in the choir faithfully. ...


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Sen. Gordon Smith, right, sponsored the Housing and Foreclosure Prevention Fair on May 27 at PCC-Cascade to help offer assistance and advice to homeowners and potential homeowners. The event was designed for people concerned about keeping their homes, or who are interested in buying their first home. Participants included credit counselors, homebuyer educators, experts in first-time home buying, foreclosure prevention specialists, nonprofit housing staff and mortgage professionals.


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WASHINGTON (AP) -- Barack Obama was within striking distance of the Democratic nomination heading into Puerto Rico's primary Sunday after top party officials agreed to seat Michigan and Florida delegates with half-votes, riling Hillary Rodham Clinton backers who threatened to fight to the August convention. Clinton won the Puerto Rico vote by a 2 to 1 margin, but still falls short of being able to gather enough delegates. A territory, Puerto Rico cannot vote in the fall general election.
The Rules Committee's compromise decision sought to end a bitter dispute that threatened Democrats' chances for the White House but it was a blow to Clinton, whose struggling campaign had pressed hard for a full reinstating of all 366 delegates from the two states. ...


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MEDFORD, Ore. (AP) _ A 37-year-old Medford man was arrested this week on hate crime charges.
Police believe Gary Moss was involved in a case of racial intimidation that left a cross and the letters "KKK" scorched into a west Medford home of a mixed-race couple late on Memorial Day.
The couple received another hate-filled message this week; now they say they are planning to move elsewhere in the Rogue Valley. ...


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NEW YORK (AP) -- Civil rights advocates have won access to the New York Police Department's internal, electronic database to search for any racial bias among hundreds of thousands of pedestrian street-stop cases.
The information could "give New Yorkers a better understanding of the extent to which the NYPD targets communities of color and particularly African-American males for aggressive stops, even though they're doing nothing wrong," New York Civil Liberties Union executive director Donna Lieberman said Friday. ...


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Specialization can lead to careers in community health fields

The International Center for Traditional childbearing last week kicked off a new round of training for young women planning careers in the area of pregnancy support, family education and infant mortality prevention.
In a word, each woman hopes to become a doula.
"They offer pregnancy and birth support for the mother and the husband, with pre-natal care and post-partum too," said ICTC founder and director Shafia Monroe. "They're really making that village concept and improving birth outcomes."
The Center recently won a grant from the Kellogg Foundation to provide doula training for free to local women of color – although last week women traveled from all over the West coast to participate in a 22.5-hour-long series of workshops in the field....


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The Skanner Foundation's 38th Annual MLK Breakfast