Why Portland shouldn’t be moving elementary and middle schools to widen freeways.  We’re pleased to publish a guest commentary from Adah Crandall, a high school sophomore and climate activist, who recently testified to the Portland School Board in opposition to move two schools to accommodate the Rose Quarter I-5 freeway widening project.  Crandall and others have been protesting the project weekly at Oregon Department of Transportation headquarters in Portland, and spoke out against the project’s impact on school kids:

As a former Tubman student, I know the pollution at Tubman is dangerous- no students should have to worry about if the air they’re breathing at recess will one day cause asthma or lung cancer. But the decision to move the school rather than fight the freeway expansion follows the same short- sighted line of thinking that started the climate crisis in the first place. Yes, you can move student’s away from the direct threat of pollution, but you cannot move them away from the life of climate disasters they’re inheriting as a result of your decision to support fueling this crisis without making ODOT even study the alternatives.

Crandall invoked the school district’s own anti-bullying policy, urging them not to be bullied by the Oregon Department of Transportation, and instead, to stick up not only for the interest of their students, but for the district’s professed interest in fighting climate change.