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Thousands March At Dozens Of Pacific Northwest Protests Across Small Towns, Urban Neighborhoods

About 85 people attended a march and protest at Northeast Sandy Boulevard and 72nd Avenue in Portland on Sunday, June 7. It was one of a number of family friendly demonstrations aligned with the Black Lives Matter movement around the Northwest over the weekend.
Courtney Sherwood/OPB
About 85 people attended a march and protest at Northeast Sandy Boulevard and 72nd Avenue in Portland on Sunday, June 7. It was one of a number of family-friendly demonstrations aligned with the Black Lives Matter movement around the Northwest over the weekend.

People turned out to demonstrate for racial justice and police accountability this weekend in places including Hermiston, Pendleton and John Day, along the Oregon coast, and in neighborhoods around Portland and its suburbs.

Late-night clashes between urban law enforcement and downtown protesters have dominated headlines in the nearly two weeks since George Floyd’s death in police custody. 

But in small towns across the Pacific Northwest, as well as neighborhoods around Portland, thousands of people have marched in dozens of peaceful – though often loud and defiant – demonstrations for racial justice and police accountability.

“It looks like a white people and a black person with a heart in between, and then I drew a policeman with a gun, and I drew, like, ‘NO’,” Rio said when asked to describe the sign. “And I wrote ‘Black Lives Matter.'”

“We’re learning a lot,” said his father, Ryan Pederson, noting that this was their third protest this week. “What are we talking about lately?”

“We’re talking about, racism isn’t fair,” Rio responded.

A similar sentiment has spurred children, teenagers and adults to chant and carry signs across the region.

Warrenton High School students organized three protests near the north Oregon coast over the past week, The Astorian reported. Photos posted by the newspaper show demonstrators in downtown Astoria wearing masks over their mouths and noses, and carrying signs memorializing Floyd’s life. The black Minnesota man died May 25 after an officer knelt on his neck for nearly 9 minutes.

Close to 400 people, from young children to elderly adults, gathered along U.S. Highway 101 in Coos Bay Saturday chanting “Black Lives Matter.” The World newspaper reported that many who drove by honked in support of a protest that was marred by one arrest – of a man who allegedly pulled a gun on the crowd and stated, “White lives matter.”

About 100 people gathered in John Day Friday to wave signs asking for an end to police brutality. The Blue Mountain Eagle reported that rumors of riots and looting circulated through town ahead of the march, drawing armed citizens to line the street. Leaders of both groups told the newspaper that they were hoping for a peaceful day, and Grant County Sheriff Glenn Palmer later said events had been quiet.

In Vancouver, Washington, Saturday about 1,500 drivers registered their cars to participate in what they dubbed a “Car Rally for Black Lives,” hosted by NAACP Vancouver and YWCA Clark County. The Columbian reportedthe peaceful vehicle parade drew community leaders, families and people who have avoided other protests – including some immune-compromised people who have avoided other events because of COVID-19 concerns.

In Portland, Cameron Scott found out last-minute about a protest a short distance from his home and walked there with his wife and two children, ages 2-and-a-half and 5.

“With two little kids, I don’t get involved in protesting very often,” he said on Sunday. “The enormity of the situation, it’s something that’s been going on for so long. These protests are making a difference.”

Copyright 2020 Oregon Public Broadcasting.

Courtney Sherwood is a JPR content partner from Oregon Public Broadcasting. Courtney is a past recipient of a Wharton Business Journalists Fellowship at the University of Pennsylvania, and is a graduate of Grinnell College.