Portland, February 7th, 2016. Native American community leaders are excited about helping their children. They broke ground on the housing development phase of  their community hub called Generations. It’s a multigenerational development in SE Portland being built on land which was once home to Foster Elementary. The Native American Youth and Family Center (known as NAYA) project has been underway since 2013 and will provide stable housing and cultural support for foster youth, elders, and families. Generations was modeled on the multigenerational community, Bridge Meadows which is an intergenerational community for foster children, parents wishing to adopt, and community Elders. Local Native American leaders say the facility is vital because Portland’s Native students are perpetually under-served. They say 53% of Native students in Portland Public Schools do not obtain a diploma. At Generations, an on-site Long House community center will provide culturally specific educational, economic support, and a regional Early Learning Academy will offer early education for kids ages zero through Kindergarten.
After construction is finished, Generations will inclue 40 housing units, the Early Learning Academy and the Long House in Portland’s southeast Lents neighborhood. It’s on a 3.5 acre site which held a public elementary school. The site is near transit, shopping and public parks. The total project budget for Generations is estimated to be $22,100,000.
Keeping cultural traditions alive is important to the community. NAYA is partnering with Portland Public Schools and the City of Portland on the project. A Declaration of Cooperation was signed by Oregon Department of Human Services, Oregon Child Development Coalition, Oregon Housing and Community Services, Multnomah County, Lents Neighborhood Association, Capital Pacific Bank, Guardian Real Estate Services, Carleton Hart Architecture, LMC Construction, Legacy Health, and Social Venture Partners.
Here’s an informational video about the project.
From NAYA:Our Native American community has come together since time immemorial to identify priorities, solve problems and create positive change for our people. Portland’s Native American people, combining our diverse strengths, are united to address a long-standing inequity: one in five Native American children in Multnomah County is in child welfare custody – a rate 26 times higher than White children. Removed from our culture, our youth are more likely to age out of foster care, experience homelessness, drop out of high school, fail to obtain a diploma, and experience mental health and wellness issues. Our community, working with private and public partners, has devised an intervention – a place to provide Native American foster youth homes, families, and support to break the cycle of child welfare removal in our community.
Community members at Generations are not “clients.” They are families, neighbors and friends who are all deserving of love, respect and dignity.
Native American youth and their siblings in foster care are connected to adoptive parents in stable, affordable housing.
Community Elders become adopted grandparents and mentors who can “age in place” with a renewed sense of purpose, helping with child care and providing wisdom.
Given the opportunity to care for one another, community members come together to become a first line of intervention.
The Early Learning Academy and Long House create a center of community. A community like this can reduce poverty, improve health and wellness, and rebuild the cultural fabric of the Native community.
To the youth, parents, and Elders who live there, Generations is simply, finally, home.
The total project budget for Generations – land, construction, and soft costs – is estimated to be $22,100,000.
Almost half of the project funding has been committed at the current time.
With a recently-announced award of Low-Income Housing Tax Credits (LIHTC) from the State of Oregon Department of Housing and Community Services, funding for the housing component of the project is in place.
Funding strategies for other program elements are under active development. NAYA’s community supporters – individuals, families, and businesses – will be invited to plan their philanthropic support, as critical partners in achieving the vision this project represents.
Portland, October 8th. The Timbers’ “Stand Together Week ” is drawing more people into nonprofit work. Organized with the help of Hands On Greater Portland and supported by adidas, Alaska Airlines, Fred Meyer, JELD-WEN Windows and Doors, and KPTV, Stand Together Week includes 40 projects across the Portland metro area benefiting more than 30 nonprofit organizations focused on youth and the environment.
The projects and volunteer opportunities affiliated with Stand Together Week range from leading youth activities to outdoor/garden maintenance and construction projects. In total, Stand Together Week will bring together nearly 1,000 volunteers, including Timbers players and staff, supporters and members of the community. Volunteer opportunities are offered through Sunday, October 14th. Click here for a link to the Hands on Greater Portland sign up page!
Timber Joey volunteer with Fred Meyer at Portland YouthBuilders for Stand Together Week (L.M. Parr/Portland Timbers)
Community Cycling Center volunteers.
1,000 volunteers will be involved over the course of the week.
Timber Joey volunteers with fans at Ockley Green K-8 School for Growing Gardens as part of Stand Together Week. (Matthew Ellis for Portland Timbers)
Portland Timbers forward Kris Boyd (9) volunteers with fans at Ockley Green K-8 School for Growing Gardens as part of Stand Together Week on October 8, 2012 in Portland, Oregon. (Matthew Ellis for Portland Timbers)
Bright Dike and Timbers Joey with volunteers that helped prepare reclaimed lumber at the ReBuilding Center in North Portland during Stand Together Week . (Justin Silvey/Portland Timbers)
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