Running out of time – last chance to support us through the Give!Guide

Please consider supporting our work through the GiveGuide, which ends at midnight! We are nearly to our goal and we need your help in reaching it! 

Thank you all for making 2020 a monumental year for social change. We’ve witnessed community support and engagement on a level not witnessed in generations. Bold youth organizing has influenced the social landscape of our nation.

You all did this!

Portland was on the map for uplifting the movement for Black Lives and we know this is a direct result of an ongoing commitment to education and the intentional centering of Black voices.

Continue to say #BlackLivesMatter, continue to show up and most importantly, please continue to Do The Work!

This is only the beginning.

A message to all of our Reclaim MLK volunteers – if you have signed up to volunteer with us during the march, we have your shirts ready for distribution! Please sign up here if you haven’t already, bring your masks and a friend and family member – we can’t wait to see you.

Please read on for our end of year recap/statement! We are so grateful for all of your support over the years and especially through what has been an unparalleled year for all of us. Thank you for showing up in solidarity, whether it was on the ground or from afar. This work can’t happen without all of you. 


See you in 2021.

End of Year Recap:

On the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr’s birthday, January 15th, 2019, we opened our own location at 18 NE Killingsworth, Center for Advocacy and Community Involvement. Housed within the former Albina Arts Center in Portland’s historic Albina neighborhood, we looked at this occupation as reclaiming space in a now heavily gentrified area. We are grateful to have hosted a community expungement clinic as well as our liberated archives workshops before the coronavirus pandemic turned our programming virtual in February. Over the three month course of isolation, we were able to connect families with essential items such as PPE, groceries, hygiene items and more. With resources becoming increasingly scarce as uncertainty with the coronavirus lockdown continued, we were thankful to be in a position to provide aid and services to those without access. 


On May 25th, the wrongful murder of George Floyd at the hands of police went viral – protests became organized around the world within 24 hours. As Black America sprung into action stirred by the collective trauma caused by George Floyd’s killing, an emphasis on sharing information and resources needed to happen. Our weekly online rallies were implemented in order to build mutual aid nationwide. Our way of making this accessible was through our Mutual Aid for Black Lives Matter spreadsheet, a stockpile of family-run fundraisers, community bail funds, street medic support, legal representation, phone scripts and more.

We are thankful to our team of community health professionals and researchers Arya Morman, Dr. Anita Randolph, ZaDora Williams and Donovan Smith. The collaborative research they produced for DSP served as proof of the detrimental effects caused by riot control agents on our physical, mental and environmental health. It also supported the educational and awareness of activists, court systems and health administrators in building frameworks for social equity. This scientific evidence is what propelled our lawsuit against the city of Portland forward – this hearing is a historical win as it marks the first time protestors have testified in court against police while providing in-depth accounts of the assault. This was not a pro-bono lawsuit – this happened due to the direct backing of our donors and community members, which is an extreme victory in itself! We could not do our advocacy without each and every one of you; through this network of support we have been able to continue serving the communities that need it through this tumultuous year together.

It is now our bittersweet announcement that we will no longer have a home at the DCBC nor the space next door which we opened on Dr. King’s Birthday earlier this year. When we initially moved in, we had high hopes of acquiring and rehabilating the building to provide resources for our Black community as it’s intended use, but were not granted that opportunity. With so many communities currently being displaced or facing displacement, we are simply grateful to have occupied the space for as long as we did. The educational outreach and civic engagement we cultivated at the former Albina Arts Center will serve as a cornerstone in the last ten years of Don’t Shoot Portland’s journey. We will continue to search for our permanent home in the city of Roses.

Free meals, holiday wellness & two more weeks in the Give!Guide

Thank you so much to PDX Black Excellence for showing our organization support through their recent fundraiser! It is an honor to be recognized for our programming.

As the biggest giving season of the year comes to an end, we only have two weeks left on the Give!Guide platform and need all of the backing we can get. Your contribution helps make the work we do happen and going into 2021, we are going to be needed by our communities more than ever. You can also make your donation monthly!

Mural artwork showing tribute to the life of 13 year old Nicholas Heyward Jr, whose life was lost to police brutality. Painting is located outside of Mother’s Bistro in Downtown Portland by @xochilt.art

On Dec 25th we will be continuing our Black Friday’s feed-in service by delivering free meals to families across Oregon and Washington. Please send an email to contact@dontshootpdx.org if you are in need of meals every Friday through the end of January.

All we need is a drop off location and your dietary restrictions. We are so thankful to Mother’s Bistro owner Lisa Schroeder and our dedicated team of volunteers for making this crucial outreach possible, especially those of you who are choosing to join us on Christmas day!

The end of the year can be difficult to process as we reflect on the past twelve months that have passed, especially during this unprecedented time. Please read on for holiday wellness tips from Safer Space for BLM.

Holiday Wellness Tips:
Extra support for navigating this holiday season. 

  • Holidays look different this year. Give yourself permission to get creative with traditions and try something new. 
  • Knowing you are part of a larger journey, honor and learn more about your ancestors, community, history and story. 
  • It’s common to feel overwhelmed right now. Respect your limits with boundaries and restorative rest. 
  • Rather than shutting down, make room for your feelings and process with others who are safe for you. 
  • Own your unique experience of joy, connection, disappointment, grief and gratitude.
Youth leading the Juneteenth March this summer, photo taken by Mika Martinez

Please join us on January 18th for our Reclaim MLK March! We are in need of volunteers and youth leaders; reach out here and sign up to be a part in 2021.

Liberated Archives Are BACK + Reclaim MLK

On December 11, 2020, Don’t Shoot Portland founder Teressa Raiford will be presenting as part of an online discussion, “Art of Collective Care & Responsibility: Handling Images of Black Suffering & Death” with Black Liberation Center and Museum of Contemporary Art Cleveland.
 

Streaming from December 3rd to December 13th, this free 5-part virtual teach-in highlights our collective power to oppose exploitation and anti-Black racism in the visual arts fields. The event will be education-focused and open for communal reflection for those who experience anti-Black violence. In addition to featuring a keynote lecture and two roundtable panels, this interactive gathering includes guided meditation, music, and an educational resource guide.
 

 Register for Teressa’s presentation on December 11, 2020 here. 

Other presenters include Ms. Samaria Rice, founder of the Tamir Rice Foundation, D. Christina Sharpe, Alexandra Bell, William C. Anderson, Dr. Kirsten P. Buick, Sheila Pree Bright, Dr. Kelli Morgan, Dr. Izetta Mobley, Teressa Raiford, Amanda D. King, Case Bargé, Fay Victor, Dr. Aimee Meredith Cox, Key Jo Lee, and La Tanya S. Autry.

Installation of ‘Liberated Archives’ during Hank Willis Thomas’ All Things Being Equal Exhibition with the Portland Art Museum December 2019. Pictured are Ella Ray, past employee of PAM and Teressa Raiford, founder of Don’t Shoot Portland. Photo by Tai Carpenter.

Our Liberated Archives programming is back!
 

Teressa Raiford has been invited to host a webinar as part of the Society of California Archivists event for January 21, 2021. Please save the date and register here.
 

Our Liberated Archives for Black Lives programming centers education and documentation for preservation, art and history. Through our partnership with the City of Portland Archives, Don’t Shoot Portland has been able to gain access to informational archives and relate them to our current systems – these educational assets are vital to sustaining social change. Participants of this webinar will learn how to connect with communities to build dialogue regarding the importance of local preservation of Black Civil Rights. The intended audience for this webinar would be archivists, historians, librarians, artists, activists, community educators and organizers.

As we move through December we are turning our attention towards the coming years’ Reclaim MLK march. This is one of our biggest annual events and we are grateful to re-connect with our cities’ youth as they lead this March on Dr. King Day. Please make sure you are signed up for volunteering with us as well as signing your youth up for Childrens Art and Social Justice Council.
 

We will be sending out emails in the coming weeks and will be counting on your support and participation!

COURT FINDS CITY OF PORTLAND IN CONTEMPT OVER POLICE VIOLENCE AGAINST PROTESTERS

December 1, 2020

Media contact: Juan Chavez, Oregon Justice Resource Center at 626-253-9028 or jchavez@ojrc.info.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

PORTLAND, Ore. – A federal judge has found the City of Portland in contempt over the use of so-called “less lethal” munitions against protesters. Judge Marco Hernandez has found that the City violated a temporary restraining order made in June as part of a lawsuit brought by Don’t Shoot PDX and others over Portland Police’s response to protests in the city after the killing of George Floyd. Remedies for the violation have not yet been determined.

“After being quarantined during a global crisis, I felt the violence being used at this time was even more terroristic because of the pandemic and I wanted to set a standard for our organization that Black activists can show up in the courts and we can win,” said Teressa Raiford, Founder, Don’t Shoot PDX. “This lawsuit happened to protect the rights and safety of protestors. One of the first things that occurred to me was that Portland Police Bureau/the City of Portland had committed these levels of violence before and we didn’t want them to get away with it this time. We were finally in the position with the power to take action without waiting for someone else to speak up for us. Presenting our experiences along with information helped us create a space for Black voices to speak up against injustice. We’ve witnessed our entire community show up and that is why we did it. We’ve created a mandate that shows Black voices matter and that we will show up in court to hold these systems accountable. PPB’s violence against Black people is a reminder that we’re not done holding them accountable. This is the beginning.”

Don’t Shoot PDX and individual plaintiffs Nicholas Roberts and Michelle Belden are represented by Albies & Stark, Levi Merrithew Horst, and the Oregon Justice Resource Center. SITU Research, a visual investigations practice, provided a visual reconstruction of the protest utilizing citizen video.

“This judgement demonstrates that, even when ordered by a judge to follow the Constitution, Portland Police could not comply on the night that was reviewed,” said Juan Chavez, Civil Rights Project Director, OJRC. “There have been many more nights since then, and we are confident that when we try these facts in front of a jury we will find these violations on almost any night we look at.”

Judge Hernandez did not agree that every instance raised by the plaintiffs was evidence of a violation of the restraining order. Of particular concern was PPB officers unloading barrages of plastic bullets (FN303s) against protesters. The officer who shot people in two of three instances, Brent Taylor, claimed that he thought through every trigger pull of this gun. Rapid “pop, pop, pops” can be heard on video coming from Taylor’s gun. It is clear that he could not have formed a lawful reason to fire his gun at protesters, and the judge found his actions in contempt.

“While we don’t yet know what sanctions the court will order against the City and Portland Police, we do not have confidence in their ability to change their ways, based on the evidence of their behavior over time,” said Chavez. “We need a lasting remedy that removes the City’s ability to violate the constitution by using less-lethal munitions to silence dissent.”