Dawson Park Historic Story Boulders Restoration

This week, the existing steel plates and boulders will be removed temporarily from Dawson park for off-site restoration work. The installation of the updated plates and renovated boulders is expected to occur between April – May 2025 to avoid the busy summer season in the park. None of the removal or installation work will impact use of the rest of the park’s amenities. 

To learn more, see the full email notice provided by the City of Portland.

Eliot Leaf Day is THIS Friday (12/20) – Move your car outside of (residential) Eliot if you can

To make the most of Leaf Day, Move your car. Your car will be outside of the zone if it is:

  • east to NE 7th or farther
  • west to Vancouver or farther
  • North to Fremont or farther
  • South to Broadway or farther

I know that this is a pain, that many of your neighbors may not do it and that it is disappointing that our LEAF Day is so late in the year, but it is the only one day that the city is going to sweep our streets all year.

Suggestions from PBOT:

  • One day before. Rake the leaves you want picked up into the street one day before your scheduled Leaf Day pickup.
  • Tree leaves only. Use regular yard bins for twigs, branches, needles, grass clippings, and other debris.
  • Keep one foot of space between your pile and the curb for storm runoff and to make it easier for our sweepers. Also allow plenty of clearance between your pile and any vehicle left parked on the street.
  • Trim your trees to leave 11 feet of clearance. Make sure you trim any low-hanging tree limbs over the street so our equipment can get as close to the curb as possible and get the best clean. Learn more about tree pruning and permits here.
  • Move vehicles and other objects off the street. Whenever possible, allow plenty of clearance between your pile and anything left parked on the street. Leaf Day service districts are small enough that you should never have to travel more than a quarter mile to park a vehicle outside the boundaries of a Leaf Day district.
  • Help your neighbors. People are still working from home in large numbers, with vehicles parked longer. Check in with your neighbors so everyone remembers to move their vehicles on Leaf Day.

ODOT Claims it has funding to widen I-5 through Eliot, but it still has roadblocks in its path

This month, ODOT issued a press release claiming the agency intends to start construction in the summer of 2025 on the proposed Rose Quarter Freeway Expansion Project despite ODOT only possessing 40% of the needed funding for the entire project and numerous legal hurdles in their way.  The press release is designed to give this project as currently designed an air of inevitability, with ODOT issuing statements like “The I-5 Rose Quarter Improvement Project was created by the local community, City of Portland and ODOT working together to plan for changes coming in the future of inner north and northeast Portland. By building new separated bike lanes and wider sidewalks, improving the highway and creating new roadway connections, the project will create a better connected community, a more reliable I-5 and support economic growth.” (ODOT press release, 2018).

In a presentation to the Oregon Transportation Commission (OTC) this month, ODOT admitted that with their current available funding, they are limiting the scope of the project. Their ‘phase one’ would be minimal changes from the current I-5 travel patterns, but they would almost entirely to double the width of I-5. They hope additional funding arrives from the 2025 legislature to build the community components desired by the Eliot Neighborhood and others, but there is no guarantee that funding for these elements will be delivered any time soon (or ever).

Let’s be clear – thanks to the advocacy of Albina Vision Trust and other local partners to win a historic $450 million grant from the federal government, ODOT already has enough funding to build the caps over the freeway without the expansion. But ODOT is cynically spending this money upfront on their freeway expansion plans with the intent to beg for an additional influx of hundreds of millions of dollars in the upcoming 2025 legislative session, a tall order considering the legislature’s need to prioritize finding billions of new dollars of revenue to invest in basic maintenance and preservation of ODOT’s existing deteriorating roads statewide. This prioritization of investment in freeway capacity over the highway caps at a time in which the state legislature is clearly not capable of promising this additional influx of revenue jeopardizes the likelihood our neighborhood receives the positive transformative changes we were promised. We will, however, get the years of construction impacts of this project, the increased vehicle emissions, and the additional cars on our streets making the neighborhood more hostile to local residents for years to come.

In my testimony to the OTC this month, I reminded the Commission that the Eliot Neighborhood has consistently asked for a few basic things in this project:
– Change traffic patterns to help businesses thrive
– Reduce car traffic on local streets
– Improve transit
– Reconnect the urban fabric around the area
– See usable pedestrian-scale buildings in and around the project area
– Have walkable and bikeable routes to cross the highway without interacting with cars
– Reduce air pollution

Meanwhile, the funded project will:

  • Widen I-5 south of the Rose Quarter
  • Ignore all ramp reconfigurations the community asked for and keep the status quo
  • Remove the hancock overcrossing
  • Remove the clackamas overcrossing
  • Keep the overbuilt freeway cap width, leading to the need to lower the roadbed and cause major disruptions to traffic
  • Remove the most desirable building locations from the caps
  • Widen I-5 north of the rose quarter
  • Widen I-5 in both directions through the rose quarter

The Eliot Neighborhood Association has therefore continued to serve as co-plaintiffs on multiple state and federal level lawsuits to stop this project as currently designed. We, along with advocates from No More Freeways and other groups believe that ODOT didn’t fully comply with federal environmental law that demands they look at alternatives to freeway expansion in our neighborhood.

Even if ODOT hosts a ceremonial “groundbreaking” ceremony next year to commence construction, the agency still faces numerous financial and legal hurdles to completing this project, and the Eliot Neighborhood will continue to use the tools at our disposal to demand that ODOT deliver a project that in line with our communities needs and values. Any Eliot resident who wishes to get more involved with opportunities to talk to our elected officials and legislators should reach out to me at lutcchair@eliotneighborhood.org; the upcoming year represents a critical opportunity for us to organize and stand up for our neighborhood, and we’ll need all the help we can get. 

This isn’t over, but ODOT wants you to believe that it is.

EliotNeighborhood.org Posts Now go to more sites

Eliot Neighborhood Posts go to facebook, our email list, bluesky, and nextdoor. Do you have another site you would like us to cross-post to? Are there any topics you want us to cover more? As always feel free to reach out at info@eliotneighborhood.org with suggestions

  • our email list:
    you can join this by clicking on the lower left corner of our website
  • nextdoor:
  • facebook:
  • bluesky:

Eliot Land Use & Transportation Committee – 12/09/24 at 6:00pm IN PERSON

This meeting will be in person and online. The link may be modified before the meeting, please check this page.

We will be hosting PBOT’s Eliot Parking Task Force
Cascadia Garlington Health Center
3036 NE Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd

Using Microsoft Teams for the meeting: Via Teams Meeting Link https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_ZGY3ZTJmZTctZmE3NS00YWM2LWJhNWEtMGZlMTIzMTJiMzAw%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%22636d7808-73c9-41a7-97aa-8c4733642141%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%2234a5575c-33ec-43e6-a934-72ef610eeecc%22%7d
(call in: 1-888-788-0099, 817 174 478#)

December Agenda: [unusual time, 6:00pm]

Welcome & Introductions
Update on Zone V parking permit program (PBOT)
Upcoming program evaluation (PBOT)
Boise Parking Management Plan and evolution of the Zone V parking permit (PBOT)

Public comment
Updates on ongoing items:

  • Kerby project
  • Eliot News
  • Letters to City / Government officials