Early history The site of New Columbia was originally built as Columbia Villa in 1942 by Home Forward, then called the Housing Authority of Portland (HAP). The Villa was built to house the influx of shipyard workers who came to the area as ship production expanded in response to
World War II. The low-density project spread 400 low-rise apartment units over 82 acres with a suburban-style street layout. It would be one of two HAP worker housing projects that would survive after the war as low-income public housing, when the units were converted to low-income housing for veterans at the end of the war. The project maintained a positive public image through the 1960s, being praised for its beauty in a 1962 issue of
The Oregonian. However, by 1976, the same newspaper described the area as "an institutional compound".
Rise of crime and city response The shift in the 1970s has been attributed to changes in public housing regulations, persistent poverty, and the spread of heroin addiction. A Portland Police gang detective reported that in 1987, a resident alerted him to the presence of members of the Californian 357 Crips in the Tamarack Apartments of Columbia Villa, who were later joined by members of other Californian Crips chapters, and began distributing crack cocaine in the area. The arrival of the drug coincided with further decline in living conditions, as was the case in many public housing neighborhoods across the country. The Villa was then the site of the city's first known drive-by shooting in 1988, when local
Crips leader Joseph Ray Winston was murdered at a park on North Woolsey Avenue. Three bystanders were also injured in the shooting. The eponymous
Columbia Villa Crips are still recognized by
Multnomah County as an active Crips chapter. In response to rising crime in the neighborhood, the City of Portland, in cooperation with
Multnomah County and the State of Oregon, initiated a Community Service Intervention Program focused on reducing crime and the fear of crime, and improving the quality of life in Columbia Villa. The CSIP worked to improve communication between social service agencies and changed police approaches to focus on
community policing practices. This effort was also assisted by a coalition of resident activists who tasked themselves with rebuilding community infrastructure. The HAP cited substandard housing and infrastructure, as well as the street layout's inherently isolating effect on the neighborhood, as factors in the necessity for a complete rebuild. However, in comments about the plan, Portland City Commissioner
Erik Sten told the Willamette Week, "there are human problems that no architect or urban planner in the world can design away". In all, the cost of relocation services totaled approximately $4.25 million, with 74 percent of residents opting to receive section 8 vouchers, 23 percent moving to other public housing options, and 3 percent choosing to forego further housing assistance. The new construction replaced 462 units with 850 units, 200 of which were single-family houses that were sold at market prices. The remaining units were government subsidized low-income apartments. The project also added McCoy Park, a community center, a life-long learning center, an elementary school, and several retail spaces. Some residents have complained that important notices, including those that affect residency eligibility, are often distributed in English only, in spite of the high number of non-English speaking refugee families in the community. In contrast, the
Portland Police Bureau released statistics that showed a much lower crime rate within New Columbia compared to the greater Portsmouth neighborhood, indicating that the development's reputation as the center of criminal activity was no longer accurate. However, the Villa was not free from the threat of violence. In 2007, the HAP and local gang experts declared that a turf war was developing between gangs in New Columbia. The new complex experienced its first shooting murder in 2010, when a 17-year-old boy was shot in the back by another teenager. In May 2011, an 18-year-old teenager was shot and killed during the night alongside McCoy Park. On June 30, 2014, New Columbia experienced its first drive-by murder since 1994. Portland Police established the New Columbia Policing Team in 2012 in an effort to improve community perceptions of police through face-to-face interactions with residents, including during follow-up investigations. The team places a focus on connecting residents to social services and arbitrating issues between neighbors and family members. A resident Home Forward employee who reported serving as an unofficial liaison between residents and police stated that the team's work had resulted in more residents reporting incidents directly to the police, rather than anonymously through her. ==Community programs==