News From Sunnyside Environmental School (SES)

As I write, February is upon us and everyone is wondering—is winter here yet?! This year it has been difficult to tell. Each day we get a couple more minutes of light reminding us that soon enough there will also be warmer days to come. Yet, there is always the chance of one of those yearly Portland snow chaos winter wonderlands that thankfully only lasts a few days.

Thank you to those who joined us for the fantastic Riparian Festival. Every year I am astounded by the thought and creativity that goes into each project. The classrooms and hallways are transformed by the students’ ideas and knowledge. We have some fun events coming up at SES this month. We look forward to seeing you there!

February 4–Winter Walk and Roll to School Day

PBOT Safe Routes to School is hosting the Winter Walk and Roll to School Day on February 4th. Check the weather before you go and make sure you’ve got the right gear. As the old Swedish saying goes, “There is no bad weather, only bad clothes.” It is a day to celebrate the environment which is so important to us at SES and to remind our students of one of the many ways we can take care of our planet—like skipping the car for a day.

February 17– Last day of Read-A-Thon

Every year the entire school participates in the Read-A-Thon. This event lasts for three weeks.  Students have the opportunity to read, read, read in order to earn money for the school. There are many different reading competitions within the school that make the event a blast, and with the hard work of the PTSA the student prizes are phenomenal. Why does it matter? It encourages the love of books and all students get to immerse themselves in reading. For every line they read, they earn funds for the school. To build a buzz, the school invites local authors to speak to the students about their books. This year eight authors will visit our halls and spread the love of books. You can buy a signed copy of books from the visiting authors online. Check this link at give.mybooster.com/sunnyside-environmental-school-2 for more information. If you know a Sunnyside student be sure to ask them if they need more pledges. You can sponsor them with a flat donation or pay by the amount of minutes they have read. They can read anything including articles, graphic novels, magazines, newspapers; they can even listen to audio books.

February 17– K-5 open house 6:30 – 7:30 p.m.

Are you interested in sending your child to our beloved Sunnyside Environmental School? Join Principal Eryn Berg and others on February 17th to learn about the SES experience. As a Sunnyside parent I can tell you that the school lives up to the hype. If you are looking for an experience for your child that is outside of the humdrum of the usual public school experience, if you are looking for a school that puts community building at the forefront of everything it does, if you and your child are interested in the environment and learning more about it, this is the right place for you. Come to the open house to learn more. We hope to see you there!

Have questions about SES? Email [email protected] and maybe I’ll answer them in a future column!

January 14, 2026 SNA General Meeting

Please join us TONIGHT for our regularly scheduled general meeting. We will be discussing the future of our printed newsletter as costs rise and our neighborhood grows. Do you read the Sunnyside News? Do you read it online or in print? Would you subscribe to the Sunnyside News if it was an online-only publication? What new features would you like to see in the newsletter? We want to hear from you!

The meeting, which will be held in the upstairs conference room at Southeast Uplift (3534 SE Main St.) and online at https://us06web.zoom.us/j/85776168096?pwd=dTU3V0wycWZxTmhSVGNjNjJxdjNldz09, will start at 7 p.m. and go until approximately 8:00 p.m.

The full agenda is available at https://docs.google.com/document/d/1-rWUptnqFq4JWMxLwezzrA4VtbOAaQgg5PAVKqBjBp8/view

News from the President

Happy New Year Neighbors! I hope you had an amazing holiday season and are ready for an amazing 2026 in Sunnyside, Portland and hopefully, a better year for the country writ large.

In December, the SNA hosted a special General Meeting to discuss traffic safety issues on some of our neighborhood corridors, particularly César E. Chavez Blvd and 30th Avenue. This was prompted by the tragic accident that took the life of Richmond resident, Grey Wolfe, as she was out for her daily walk up to Mt. Tabor. We had representatives from the PBOT office of Vision Zero, which has been seeking to eliminate traffic-related deaths and serious injuries for over a decade (with mixed results), a senior PBOT traffic engineer, who is also a Sunnyside resident and parent of SES students, as well as Councilmember Morillo and representatives from Council VP Tiffany Koyama Lane’s office.

We learned about how Chavez Blvd is one of the city’s designated High Crash Corridors, which despite encompassing only 8% of Portland roads, account for 67% of traffic-related deaths. These corridors are a priority for the agency, but as we know, infrastructure change comes slowly. Work will soon begin on the southern end of the four-lane section of Chavez between Powell and Holgate, but unfortunately, work on the northern section, starting at NE Sandy Blvd is still a long way, and many budget dollars, away. But, there is some good news for advocates of safety on Chavez coming soon. PBOT is planning to use its emergency authority to lower the speed limit on Chavez from 30 to 25 and to add two radar signs that will help drivers realize how fast they may be driving through our neighborhood. This is not the panacea of putting this road on a diet by eliminating general travel lanes and improving the atrocious sidewalk situation, but hopefully it will save lives, as reductions in speed directly correlate to lower crash fatalities.

On the west end of the neighborhood, SE 30th has seen some recent “improvements” that we don’t believe are helping too much with safety at a major crossing for the Salmon St. Greenway. PBOT added “speed cushions”, which include cutouts to allow emergency vehicles to pass unimpeded, and freshly painted crosswalks. Unfortunately, the speed cushions do not seem to be having the desired effect. Drivers are easily able to use the gaps to pass through without slowing down a bit and if they do hit the bumps, the angle of the hill appears to make the bump less effective as drivers approach the intersection. Also, these changes do not protect pedestrians crossing at Main and Taylor, which are both downhill from Salmon, meaning they have very limited visibility into oncoming traffic that is cresting. Spurred by neighbors on this issue, the SNA Board agreed to sign on to a letter to PBOT seeking remediations to this project and further monitoring to ensure the changes are effective. Area neighbors are seeking help for purchasing crossing flags to aid pedestrian safety, particularly for the many school children who use this route. You can contribute at gofundme.com/f/keep-se-30th-and-salmon-safe-for-pedestrians.

Also traffic-related, the Board named a new chair for our Land Use & Transportation Committee (LUTC). Connor Lirot is a new Board member this year and lives just off of another of our corridors–Belmont. He has a passion for traffic and land use issues and has the mandate to examine a wide swath of the issues affecting the neighborhood.

Keep an eye on our Facebook page for an announcement about LUTC’s meeting schedule and upcoming agendas. You can reach out to the committee with issues at [email protected].

That’s it for now. As I write this, we are still planning our regular January General Meeting; keep those ideas and concerns coming to us at [email protected] and on our Facebook page.

Wishing you peace and joy in 2026.

SNA Newsletter Needs Your Help

As you read in previous issues, our newsletter printing costs have increased 33% overnight. This newsletter is entirely volunteer-produced–from local writers such as Erika Bolstad, Lydia Kiesling, Alex Frane, Mike Thelin, and Jordan Michelman to a volunteer copyeditor, volunteer designer and volunteer Treasurer. Sponsorship ads defray costs but don’t entirely cover them. That’s why we’re asking for your support. Speaking of ads, a HUGE thank you to the local businesses that sponsor an ad.

In the last six weeks, we have received just under $1000–about 50% of our goal. Thank you SO much to those who have given! We’re halfway there but we still have a ways to go to meet our goal. Do you like keeping up with all the neighborhood projects the SNA Board is engaged in—projects such as the 37th Street Plaza, the repainting of the City Repair Sunflower on 33rd, and the Sunnyside Shower Project? If so, please consider supporting this newsletter. Even a small donation of $10–20 a year would help us keep going. Without your donations we will have to either go to every-other-month, or possibly abandon the newsletter completely.

Donations can be made via Give Lively (tinyurl.com/395trwzw) or by check to SEUL 3534 SE Main St, Portland OR 97214, made out to The Sunnyside Neighborhood Association. Thank you in advance for considering.

Getting to Know your Neighbors

Q&A with Judi Brandel, Sunnyside resident for 60+ years

From my back window, I can see the backyard of the house Judi Brandel grew up in with her parents and older sister. She moved out of her parent’s house in the late 1960s, but returned to Sunnyside as a homeowner and mother in 1980, just a couple of blocks away from her childhood home. Brandel is a retired photography and art history teacher who learned to play the accordion from YouTube. As one of Sunnyside’s longtime residents, she’s seen a lot change in this neighborhood.

Conversation has been edited for time and clarity.

How long have you lived in the Sunnyside neighborhood?

Judi: When I was born, we lived over on Washington, between 34th and 35th, in a little house and it’s still there. There’s another one just like it up on Salmon. My uncle owned that house and the one on Washington and rented it for $60.

Then my parents found the house on Taylor; it had been empty and it was all overgrown. But, that house had really good bones. It was really well built. I remember it cost $6,500 in 1960 and so we moved in with a trailer on the car. I rode in the trailer, and we did all these trips between that house and this house, and I got my own bedroom. It was so exciting.

I moved out of my parents’ house in 1969, and we moved into this house in 1980. I was still in Portland, but I wasn’t living here. Portland, 75 years, but Sunnyside, 64 years.

What would you say was your earliest memory of living in Sunnyside?

Judi: I have memories of kindergarten. I really liked my kindergarten teacher. We had full day kindergarten, so we took naps, did the whole thing—I have a vague memory of going home for lunch. So my earliest memory of this neighborhood would have been that, ‘cause I remember going to the school and it was the same as it is now.

So you went to Sunnyside [School], and I heard your kids went to Sunnyside.

Judi: My sister and I both went to K-8 there. Then we went to Washington [High School, which is now Revolution Hall] and my daughter went there as well. Our mother was the cook at Sunnyside. She started substituting and then she got the job as head cook. When I had our daughter, I would go in there and get lunch sometimes if I was out somewhere. And then our granddaughter went there too.

What is your favorite thing about Sunnyside as a neighborhood?

Judi: It’s so centrally located. Growing up, when I lived on Washington, all summer long we’d go to the kids’ park at Laurelhurst.

Up on Belmont, the grocery store, the barber shop, the hardware store, the dime store and all the things were right there. I was always able to walk. Living in this neighborhood, for me, there’s always been such great access, to this day. I like that I can leave my house and pretty much walk anywhere I need to go.

You know where Stumptown is? There’s Stumptown, and then right next to Stumptown is the bar [Aalto Lounge]. That entire space was the Grocerteria, and that’s where we went shopping when I was a kid. Then you could walk through it, and where Tantrum is, was the butcher shop.

Tell me a little bit about how you’ve seen the neighborhood change.

Judi: When I was first living here, my mom was pretty fearful. She was a fearful person. When we first lived here, it was my first exposure to people that were weird and creepy. There were definitely strange people and strange situations.

When we moved in in 1980, there was an arsonist going around this neighborhood. Families were leaving, and Sunnyside was having trouble. People were sending their kids to different schools. I don’t know what happened. It just kind of bottomed out. And then the environmental school moved in and all of a sudden everybody wanted

to live in this neighborhood and all the families came back and now it’s amazing, I mean, all these young families and all the kids. It’s so fun watching them go to school, and the bike bus!

What could be improved in Sunnyside?

Judi: Parking, and that’s true for Portland in general.  Portland always feels like it’s a day late and a dollar short. You know, it’s like all of a sudden it goes, ‘Oh, maybe we shouldn’t have built all those big apartment buildings next to the neighborhoods where there’s no street parking.’ My mom used to get so outraged when someone would park in front of her house and I’d say, “Well, mom, it’s a public street.” But I’m the same way. Like, people, come on, can you at least park well?”

What is your favorite place in Sunnyside?

Judi: I love the library, I can’t wait for it to come back. As a kid growing up, that was one of my favorite places to go. I read every single Beverly Cleary book. I read all the Nancy Drew books. I went there and checked books out all the time. When I was big enough to go by myself, I went and did my homework there. I loved that library and I still do. I feel so lucky to have it–that it’s one of the old libraries and they’re keeping that part of it and that it’s still so close.