?:reviewBody
|
-
The whole city of Portland, Ore., is not on fire, despite President Donald Trump’s claim that the entire city is ablaze all the time. The remark came during a White House press conference, when Trump criticized Portland’s mayor for his handling of ongoing protests in the city. Later that night, Trump told Fox News , Portland's been burning for many years, for decades it's been burning. Local authorities and journalists disputed both claims. We are not on fire. We have not been on fire, said Lt. Rich Chatman, a spokesperson for Portland Fire & Rescue, adding that there has been a steady and remarkable decline in the number of fires for the last few years and certainly decades. Portland, Oregon’s largest city, drew national attention when federal agents swooped in against the wishes of local leaders to protect federal property that they said was at risk because of the protests, which have occurred every night since May. Some have included incidents of vandalism and violence, leading businesses near the affected areas to close or board up their windows. But the problems have been mainly confined to small parts of the city, including the area near the federal Hatfield Courthouse. There’s a lot of damage around the federal courthouse, Chatman said. But the fact of the matter is this is a very small area of even downtown. We are not under siege. For the average resident of Portland, they probably never lay eyes on some of these fires, Chatman added. This is a very concentrated area. The Portland Police Bureau provided PolitiFact with a map and timeline of the protests from May 29 to Aug. 31. It details where each has taken place, whether a riot was declared, whether arrests were made, and whether the protesters used projectiles, fireworks, vandalism or fires. By our count, there were 54 fires set across 95 nights of demonstrations, which have largely taken place at one of 10 discrete locations, according to the map and timeline. A Department of Homeland Security officer emerges from the Mark O. Hatfield United States Courthouse after demonstrators lit a fire on Aug. 2, 2020, in Portland, Ore. (AP) Chatman said that in five or six incidents, fires were set to buildings that had people in them. But in many cases, the fires have been set in trash cans, dumpsters or on the street. None of these fires have grown to a size that requires more than one of our fire engines, Chatman said. The individual fires don’t amount to a city on fire. Portland is not ablaze, said Charles Boyle, a spokesperson for Oregon Gov. Kate Brown, who pointed to a television news station webpage that shows live camera footage of different areas in the state, including parts of Portland. Trump has warned that Portland’s protests are an example of the type of unrest that he claims would go unchecked under former Vice President Joe Biden, his challenger in 2020 — even as the protests continue on his watch. The city, Trump has said, is under siege. But the president’s description of a city gripped by violence and engulfed in flames has been challenged by journalists working in the area. In July, for example, the editorial board for the Oregonian wrote an opinion piece titled, Not under siege, but a city in need. Two people sit in Pioneer Courthouse Square in Portland, Ore., on Aug. 27, 2020. (AP) The Oregonian’s news department reported on the disconnect between how Portland is known to its residents and how it has been portrayed by Trump and conservative media. Buzzfeed News and CNN have described the same discrepancy. RELATED: No, these aren’t photos of Portland, Ore., after the protests We asked journalists from the Oregonian and other local news outlets about Trump’s claim. They described an on-the-ground reality in which most protesters have been peaceful, while a subset of people have clashed with police, graffitied buildings and ignited fires. The fires that have ensued have been quickly extinguished and confined to a few small parts of the city. Portland is not ablaze, though we do love the Trail Blazers, said Anna Griffin, the news director at Oregon Public Broadcasting, in a reference to the city’s NBA team. Street-level activism has been a feature of Portland’s culture for years, Griffin said. We’re a small city reckoning with centuries of racism — both within our law enforcement and laws themselves — and that reckoning isn’t tidy, added Alex Zielinski, the news editor at the Portland Mercury, an alternative newspaper. But no, we’re not on fire. Our ruling Trump said of Portland: The entire city is ablaze all the time. While months of protests in Portland have seen many fires set to streets, trash cans, and buildings, those incidents have been confined to a few small sections of the city and relatively easy for the city’s fire department to extinguish. Most of the city has been unaffected. The whole city is not in flames. We rate Trump’s claim False.
(en)
|