presentation by Lisa K. Bates, PhD, Associate Professor, Toulan School of Urban Studies and Planning, Portland State University
Tuesday, April 13, 2021
If you ask most urban planners, they’ll tell you that Portland, Oregon is about regionalism, transit-oriented development, sustainability, and hipsters ‘putting a bird on it.’ For Portland’s Black community, urban planning has been an often-mysterious process by which their neighborhoods have been repeatedly disrupted by first urban renewal and redlining, and then public investment-led gentrification. In the face of impending erasure, communities of color demanded that Portland’s plans and policies do more than just gesture towards equity goals. Due to this organizing, Portland’s latest comprehensive plan includes an anti-displacement agenda for new land-use policy. Planners are grappling with historical legacies of racism and present-day policy implementation, working with community organizations in venues of both conflict and collaboration. This talk will reflect on the challenges of implementing the planners’ aspiration that “we shall seek social justice”* and the possibilities when communities of color take the lead.
*”We shall seek social justice” is one of the aspirational principles of the American Institute of Certified Planners.