By Alex Baumhardt / Oregon Capital Chronicle / June 8, 2022 After a white supremacist recently killed 10 Black shoppers at a grocery store in New York, Reyna Lopez started to get texts from the leaders of Oregon social and racial justice nonprofits. “We wondered, are we vulnerable as well?” she said. The mass shooting last month at Tops market serving a predominantly Black neighborhood in Buffalo shook the country anew. Lopez is the executive director at the Woodburn-based nonprofit Pineros y Campesinos Unidos del Noroeste, also known as PCUN, a worker advocacy group and union for Latinos in Oregon....