After years of delay, Portland Public Schools pursues property for its Center for Black Student Excellence

By Natalie Pate (OPB)
Sept. 10, 2025 1:20 a.m. Updated: Sept. 10, 2025 12:27 p.m.

The property under consideration is in the middle of the Albina district.

The One North property, located at the corner of North. Vancouver Avenue and North Fremont in Portland, Sept. 9, 2025. Portland Public Schools has named One North as a prospective site for its Center for Black Student Excellence.

The One North property, located at the corner of North. Vancouver Avenue and North Fremont in Portland, Sept. 9, 2025. Portland Public Schools has named One North as a prospective site for its Center for Black Student Excellence.

Rob Manning / OPB

Portland Public Schools has named a prospective site for its Center for Black Student Excellence.

THANKS TO OUR SPONSOR:

District leaders plan to enter into a purchase and sale agreement, or PSA, to buy the One North property, located at the corner of N. Vancouver Ave. and N. Fremont, as approved by a unanimous vote of the school board Tuesday night. The Oregonian/Oregonlive first reported on the district’s plans to pursue the building, located in the Albina neighborhood, the historic heart of Portland’s Black community.

The proposed purchase price is $16 million and would be paid out of PPS’s 2020 bond money. Capital construction dollars that make up school bonds have to be used for buildings and other approved infrastructure. In other words, the bond money can’t be used for daily operations, such as staff salaries.

The PSA is a crucial step toward creating a center to advance Black student opportunities in Portland. And it’s a long time coming.

Portland Public Schools is Oregon’s largest school district, with an enrollment of about 43,500 students. About 8% of district students identify as Black or African American, a rate substantially higher than the statewide demographic.

PPS has persistent achievement gaps between white students and students of color. White students in 2024 graduated at an 89% rate, according to state data, while the graduation rate for Black students the same year was 76%.

In November 2020, PPS asked voters to support a $1.2 billion bond to fund continued work modernizing the district’s high schools. In addition to construction money for schools, investments in technology and other upgrades, the bond set aside $60 million to create a new facility called the Center for Black Student Excellence. The bond passed with the approval of 75% of participating Portland voters.

But nearly five years later, the center has yet to come to fruition.

A coalition of more than 35 education and community organizations issued a formal letter to the Portland school board in May, calling for immediate action.

The coalition backing the letter included groups such as Albina Vision Trust, the Black Business Association of Oregon and the Portland branch of the NAACP.

Together, they acknowledged some of the setbacks the district has faced in establishing the center, including responding to the COVID-19 pandemic. However, the letter also called out slow progress to advance many of the projects that specifically serve the district’s Black students, such as relocating Harriet Tubman Middle School and rebuilding Jefferson High School.

The coalition outlined deadlines and actions to address what they described as “a pattern of institutional neglect and broken promises to Portland’s Black students, families, and community.”

One of the letter’s demands was to identify a site for the center by June 30, with the transaction completed by Dec. 1.

THANKS TO OUR SPONSOR:

Tuesday night’s public hearing and vote on the sale agreement will help guide the district’s next steps with One North.

“The community knows it is needed,” Michelle DePass, vice-chair of the school board, told OPB before the meeting. “And while all the details have not been worked out, there is a strategic plan, a vision, and a hope that the center can meet the needs of this community.”

Partners agreed.

“We’re excited that after several years spent collecting community input and weighing the pros and cons of potential sites, the district is finally moving forward on a site for the CBSE,” said Aryn Frazier, the executive director of a separate nonprofit called the Center for Black Excellence, which supports the student-focused center PPS is pursuing.

“This is long overdue,” Frazier added, “and demonstrates a much-needed commitment to student excellence, collaboration, and innovation — all of which are necessary to make this a district in which race is not predictive of academic, social, or postsecondary outcomes.”

Next steps

With the PSA passing this week, the district will conduct due diligence on the property over the next 90 days.

This is when officials will look at such things as added structural costs or possible modifications that might be needed on the mixed-use office space before students can move in. The two-building site wasn’t originally meant to be a school; the architects of the 2015 build described it as an innovative commercial development.

“We want to make sure … there’s no hidden barriers or unforeseen issues that may require us to pull out of the contract,” Board Chair Eddie Wang said. “We don’t want to claim a win before a win happens.”

Assuming the district doesn’t find any major problems with the site, the board plans to vote on whether to approve the purchase of the One North property in early December.

According to board documents, the seller requires the transaction to close by Dec. 29.

Wang described this property as a win-win-win. It’s new, meaning the district doesn’t have to delay the center further with more construction. The total cost of $16 million is substantially lower than the $60 million planned for the center in the bond. And, it will serve the students.

“We want to make sure that our Black community gets the best possible, right?” Wang said.

Wang added that this is an especially unique project, one done in partnership with many local organizations, including many from Portland’s Black community, something he described as “a novel approach.”

“It’s one of the first times we allow our Black community to have the say in how to run things,” he said, “and give them the power and the leadership to fulfill this vision.”

Wang acknowledged there may be some growing pains to get the project off the ground, and it may require some patience. Various questions were brought up in the lengthy board conversation Tuesday night. But none stood in the way of moving forward with next steps.

“We’re all here,” he said, “wanting to get this off the ground and making sure it’s successful.”

THANKS TO OUR SPONSOR:

THANKS TO OUR SPONSOR: