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Kotek Releases Portland Central City Task Force Recommendations
"The elephant in the living room has to be the fallout from the train wreck that Measure 110 has become"

Governor Tina Kotek and Co-Chair Dan McMillan, president and CEO of The Standard, released a set of 10 priority recommendations from the Portland Central City Task Force to be carried out in early 2024, as well as a long term strategic vision for economic prosperity for the region and, by extension, the entire state. Click here to view the PCCTF recommendations in detail.

“Confronting our most pressing challenges requires the hope and fortitude of an entire community,” Governor Kotek said. “Over the course of the last four months, members of the task force, the broader Portland community, and people across Oregon who know Portland’s success is a bellwether for the entire state have contributed to this effort in ways large and small, and I am incredibly grateful.

“We have a set of concrete recommendations, some the first of their kind, others that tap into Portland’s strengths in innovation, collaboration, art, and culture. The reward for a strong start is more work. I am committed to this effort and excited to see this work unfold.”

“When I look at this list from our Task Force committees, I see a set of refreshing, bold solutions that are smarter, stronger, and will be more effective than what any one person or governmental entity could achieve alone,” Dan McMillan said. “When the Governor and I convened the task force in late summer, it was under the theory that Portland’s challenges don’t solely rest on the shoulders of government, community, or business and that you need diverse, and sometimes unlikely, partnerships to get big things done. I believe we have proven our theory and we’re eager to move into implementation.”

Summary of top 10 recommendations for 2024:

A D V E R T I S E M E N T

A D V E R T I S E M E N T

A D V E R T I S E M E N T

A D V E R T I S E M E N T

"The elephant in the living room has to be the fallout from the train wreck that Measure 110 has become," said one former legislator who declined to be identified. "These people are reaping what they have sown."

Multnomah county voted for Measure 110 by a whopping 74%. The Democratic Party of Oregon -- which Governor Kotek belongs to -- issued an official statement in the 2020 Voters' Pamphlet indicating that the party supported a yes vote on Measure 110 and many critics are quick to point out that the heavily Democratic county that supported Measure 110 is now asking the government to resolve the issue.


--Staff Reports

Post Date: 2023-12-11 20:24:55Last Update: 2023-12-11 22:56:30



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