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| | | World Cup Boosts Latino-Owned Businesses | After the Trump administration launched an immigration enforcement operation in Portland and the Willamette Valley, local Latino-owned businesses lost customers in the face of community fears around detainment. The World Cup — with added excitement as games are played in North America — has helped shops and restaurants begin to return to their previous level of business. [Oregon Capital Chronicle] | - Best Mexican restaurants: Eater Portland released its picks for Portland’s best Mexican eats, some of which are hosting in World Cup watch parties. Even the high-end Mexican restaurant República has a TV set up for watching World Cup games over brunch, something I enjoyed over the weekend.
- Other impacts: The federal immigration crackdown — when more than 1,400 people were detained in Oregon — had another serious impact. More students missed school. One example from Hillsboro: The gap between Hispanic students’ attendance rate and the rest of the student population rose sharply from under 1 percentage point to 7 points during the fall. [OPB]
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| What Portland's Talking About |
| | Albina Neighborhood Revival Underway | The 1803 Fund, the real estate company with the mission of investing in Black Portland, has purchased two more properties in the Albina neighborhood: the former manufacturing campus of Streimer Sheet Metal Works, Inc., as well as 1.5 acres from Widmer Brothers brewing. The purchase price is not yet public. [OPB] | | | 20-Minute Average Wait for High-Priority Police Calls | The amount of time Portlanders wait for police to respond to a high-priority call has been rising since 2020, even as the number of calls has dropped. Police and some police experts say that’s about staffing levels, but a progressive group says their analysis shows response times haven’t correlated with staffing levels. [Oregonian] | | Fees for Psychedelic Licenses To Double | Oregon’s struggling psilocybin treatment businesses are set to take another hit. The state is planning to double the licensing fees it charges. The law that OK'd legal psychedelics included a requirement for licensing fees to cover the state’s costs of regulating the industry. [Oregon Capitol Chronicle] | - Details: The massive fee hike is a problem for treatment centers, manufactures, and the one lab in the state: Rose City Laboratories. A lab to test psilocybin is needed for all the other businesses to stay up and running, but its owner is already losing money by staying open. [Oregon Capitol Chronicle]
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🥖 Clackamas County’s roadside bakeries: Oregon law allows bakers who do less than $50,000 in sales to sell out of their home. That’s a rule that local entrepreneurs are making use of, the Oregonian reports. Cayli McGuire, for one, has a “bread shed” in front of her Milwaukie home, where her neighbors can buy her sourdough creations. |
| — Rachel Monahan | Thanks to Elizabeth Kauma for contributing to today’s must-read and news briefs. |
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