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Portland, Oregon: Difference between revisions
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=== Homelessness ===
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=== Municipal Government ===
The [
Additionally, Portland is organized into [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neighborhoods_of_Portland,_Oregon 95 officially recognized neighborhoods]. These neighborhoods and the city government as linked via Portland's Office of Neighborhood Involvement and the (volunteer) City-funded neighborhood associations of each of the neighborhoods.
The neighborhood associations are further collected into seven geographically-grouped district coalitions (with
*Neighbors West-Northwest (NWNW)
*[http://www.swni.org/ Southwest Neighborhoods, Inc. (SWNI)]
*[http://npnscommunity.org/ North Portland Neighborhood Services (NPNS)]
*[http://necoalition.org/ Northeast Coalition of Neighborhoods (NECN)]
*[http://cnncoalition.org/ Central Northeast Neighbors, Inc. (CNN)]
*[http://www.eastportland.org/ East Portland Neighborhood Office (EPNO)]
*[http://www.seuplift.org/ Southeast Uplift Neighborhood Program (SE Uplift)]
=== Regional Government ===
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The Greater Portland area (including the City proper) is further administered as a region by [http://www.oregonmetro.gov/ Metro], the United States' only directly elected metropolitan planning organization. Metro is a chartered organization that was put in place via state-wide ballot measure in the late 1970s. Metro's structure includes a council-president elected region-wide, an auditor (also elected region-wide) and six councilors elected by district. Portland is represented by four of Metro's districts/councilors (the organization serves twenty-five municipalities in Multnomah, Washington and Clackamas Counties): Districts 1, 2, 5 and 6.
Metro's mandate covers mapping (GIS), coordinating urban development, transportation, and land use planning, managing natural resources, and solid waste management. Metro owns and operates the Portland Center for Performing Arts, the Oregon Zoo, the Oregon Convention Center, and the Portland Metropolitan Exposition Center (aka the Portland Expo Center).
Metro oversees a 50-year regional growth masterplan ([http://www.oregonmetro.gov/2040-growth-concept the 2040 Growth Concept]) for the Portland metropolitan area that as of this writing (2017) can be characterized as focused on increased density, transit-oriented development.
[http://www.portofportland.com/ The Port of Portland] represents another layer of regional government. It oversees Portland's port and terminals, marine operations in and around the City, Portland International Airport (PDX) and smaller regional airports as well as several industrial parks. The Port of Portland is managed by a nine-member commission, whose members are appointed (for four-year terms) by Oregon's Governor and approved by the State Senate.
=== County Government ===
[http://multco.us/ Multnomah County], in which Portland sits and is the county seat, manages many of Portland's services (including the Multnomah County Library system). Multnomah County is governed by a Washington and Clackamas counties also form part of the Greater Portland metropolitan area.
The County is administered by an elected commission that consists of a Chair, four Commissioners, the District Attorney, the Sheriff and an auditor. The County government includes a circuit court. Appointed officials fill its Finance, Elections, and Surveyor roles.
=== State Government ===
Much of the legislation that relates to housing, transportation, development and land use in Portland is determined at the state level, in the state legislature in Oregon's capital, Salem.
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