11-01-2024  7:45 am   •   PDX and SEA Weather

Northwest News

The Seattle Seahawks face the Oakland Raiders in a nationally televised game. The Seahawks won 12-0…


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Take a peek at the design for the interior renovation of The Seattle Public Library's Madrona-Sally Goldmark Branch during an open house from 4 to 7 p.m. Nov. 14 at the branch, 1134 33rd Ave.
Justine Kim, library project manager and designers from Heliotrope Architects will explain the design. Library patrons can stop by any time during the open house to view the design and ask questions.


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Oregon State Senate Majority Leader Kate Brown raises her arms in victory as the results of the election came in.


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NEW YORK -- Ed Bradley, the award-winning television journalist who broke racial barriers at CBS News and created a distinctive, powerful body of work during his 26 years on "60 Minutes," died Nov. 9. He was 65.


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Deborah Starr Hodges, left, an employee of Self-Enhancement Inc., distributes decorative cupcakes to her grandchildren Naiheem Barrett, 3, center, and Nailah Barrett, 5. SEI sponsored a Halloween "Harvest Party" for the neighborhood that included games; inflated, bouncing pirate ships; free candy; and prizes.


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Despite a strong economy, more people go hungry

The area's strong economy is producing jobs, but many of these don't pay enough to cover basic living costs.
That's a major finding of the 2006 Hunger Factors Assessment, a biennial survey of emergency food box recipients in Oregon and Clark County, Wash.
"People are hungry because they don't make enough to cover basic living costs," said Rachel Bristol, chief executive officer, Oregon Food Bank. "The high cost of housing, health care, child care and fuel make it difficult for low-income individuals and families to have enough to pay for food."
The Oregon Food Bank Network conducts the Hunger Factors Survey every two years to assess the factors that create the need for food assistance. This year, 121 food pantries distributed the survey to emergency food box recipients during a three-week period in April.
Oregon Food Bank analyzed the data from the 3,676 completed surveys, which represent a balanced sampling of households served throughout Oregon as well as Clark County.
Nearly a third (29 percent) of the recipients said they need help because their wages are too low. This is a major change from 2002, during the economic downturn, when 19 percent of recipients named low wages as a reason for needing help feeding their families. 


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Service Center will help 20,000 Africans living in the Portland Area

More than 10,000 African refugees have realized a long-held dream: They have opened a home of their own called "Africa House." Designed to be a one-stop social service center by and for Africans, Africa House will serve as a "home away from home" for the 20,000 Africans who live in Portland and the surrounding area, half of whom are refugees. 


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County Chair-elect organizes group in response to budget cuts

Services offered by the SUN Community Schools program will be scrutinized by a task force organized by Multnomah County Chair-elect Ted Wheeler.

SUN (Schools Uniting Neighborhoods) Community Schools are a key element of the county's network of health and human services delivered to children and families and offered at 55 area schools. The county also has formed partnerships with other government agencies, local nonprofit agencies and the business community to offer programs.
The Multnomah County Board of Commissioners last spring reduced funding for SUN Community Schools and theit services. The board also called for the creation of a task force to address what services could be provided for school-aged youth and how families can receive them.


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U.S. Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., signs his new book, The Audacity of Hope: Thoughts on Reclaiming the American Dream after a presentation on Oct. 26 in  Benaroya Hall in the S. Mark Taper Foundation Auditorium. Obama called for changes in the nation's Iraq policy and improvements in health care, education and climate change but did not discuss a potential bid for U.S. president in 2008.


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Barack Obama promotes his book and himself

BELLEVUE, Wash. — Barack Obama, the Democrats' rock-star senator and potential White House contender, on Thursday brought his "Audacity of Hope'' road tour to a longtime Republican stronghold that could send a Democrat to Congress for the first time.
Obama, a boyish 45 and with only two years under his belt in the Senate, has gotten a star buildup by his party and the national media after writing a book, touring his ancestral homeland in Kenya and announcing Sunday that he's considering a presidential bid in 2008.
He was the big draw at a campaign rally for Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., who has a commanding lead in the polls for re-election next month, and Darcy Burner, a former Microsoft program manager who hopes the national anti-Republican tide can help her oust freshman Rep. Dave Reichert, R-Wash.


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