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About Just out. (Portland, OR) 1983-2013 | View Entire Issue (April 19, 2002)
» apnl 1 9 .2 0 0 2 ' |MC aaftJ25 F red M iller by Jack T urteltaub red Miller, executive vice president for retail and distribution services of Portland General Electric, sits in his 17th-floor office with a panoramic view of downtown Port land, the W illam ette River and the Lloyd District. A n Oregon native since he was 6 months old, the married man has a vision for i society that matches the expansive view j from his desk. Miller is a strong supporter of equal rights j for sexual minorities because he thinks it is a j question of fairness. He takes issue with the j past efforts of Lon Mabon and the Oregon C it W hen he worked for the stare, he notes, izens Alliance to discriminate legally against the “N ot one of the governors ever asked me community. what party I belonged to.” Perhaps that non “That’s not the way you treat people,” he partisan spirit also contributed to his breadth says. “You don’t single out a group of people and of vision and his commitment to looking past treat them differently.” differences. M iller notes that his work experiences Miller started working for PGE in 1992 as and world travel probably have helped teach vice president for public affairs him that “as you look at a lot of and community involvement, different cultures, you realize "You don't single out drawing on his experience as an that no one is right. If some body— like M abon— thinks a group o f people administrator and a political mover and shaker. During the they’re right and everybody and treat them past 10 years he has tried to keep else is wrong, then that’s a the corporation— in spite of two problem." differently" buyouts and its current ownership Miller received his Ph.D. — Fred Miller by Enron— focused on maintain from Michigan State University, ing Oregon’s quality of life. was a teacher, then worked for In addition to giving his own money to several decades in Oregon’s state government. defeat anti-gay ballot measures, Miller has He had a distinguished career serving under translated his passion for fairness and his com four governors: as energy director for Bob mitment to helping others through his work Straub, as transportation director for Victor with Equity Foundation, a sexual minority Atiyeh and then as executive department direc organization dedicated to “building communi tor for Neil Goldschmidt and Barbara Roberts. F Fred Miller delivers a pitch for cash during the Oregonians Against Discrimination Luncheon on April 10 ties that em brace the dig nity and worth of all people.” He has set up five fu n d s — o n e for himself; one for his wife, Karla Wenzel, a Portland Pub lic Schools board mem ber; and one for each of his four ch il dren— to get everybody in his family involved. It appears to be working: His wife is trying Miller riling \\ it h Equit\ Foundation MacDonell (left) and comedian Lih Tomlin during the Investments in Dignity Awards Gala on K b . 25 G eri W ashington helped her beat a 12-year incumbent and earn a seat on the Multnomah Education Service Dis by Tom Stevenson trict board. That same year she served as deputy cam paign manager for No on 9. She says her work o Geri Washington, the rule of life against the anti-gay ballot measure proved to is quite simple: Everyone deserves her once again that the queer community is wel to have a decent standard of living, coming to all. and that includes respect for who “It has not been difficult to come in from they are. the outside” as a heterosexual, she says. “I had She follows her personal belief in her work as a wonderful experience in my work” on the a Portland Jobs with Justice organizer. And she campaign. follows it in her own daily walk through life, Working with kids is another key reason which includes showing endless support for the Washington remains active. queer community. “W hat inspires me most to stay “There are many things in our "When we stand involved with the sexual minori lives that we have to fight for,” Washington says. “One of those together, it is then, ties community is the youth,” she says, noting she has seen the strug fights should not be among our and only then, gles they face as they deal with selves that creates division. When coming out. “Youth are a priority that happens, nobody wins, but that we win for me because they are our pres when we stand together, it is then, ent and our future. I put so much and only then, that we win justice justice for all" work into this because I believe for all.” — Geri Washington that if I can help eliminate as Washington says her personal many barriers to their becoming drive stems in part from the fact adults...well, I'll be there." that she is a woman of color who comes from The bottom line, according to Washing the South. ton, is about respect. She says the sexual “It is a promise I made to myself that I minorities community has shown her nothing would never participate in, nor contribute to, but the utmost respect, and she believes it is hatred that targets an individual, group or her duty to do the same. Her advice to others community," she says. “This promise I take in the straight community who struggle in seriously, especially when it comes to my dealings with the queer crowd is the same she brothers and sisters who are part of the G L BT gives her own children. community because, again, an injury to one is “Judge not lest you be judged," she says. “It is an injury to all.” not for you to judge, but it is for you to respect Washington is one of those folks who stays and appreciate the difference that each individ busy away from work as well. She and her sup ual brings to the table of life.” JH porters ran a grassroots campaign in 2000 that PHOTOS BY T Geri Washington (above) protests Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia's Feb. 10 appearance at Lewis & Clark College; Washington consults with Kathleen Sullivan (center) and Susan Drew during a N o on 9 Campaign rally Oct. 19, 2 0 0 0 to close the “achievement gap” in schools, while his two older children, both in their 20s, directly help others, one as a Peace Corps vol unteer in the Ivory Coast and the other as a tutor for Friends of Children, a Portland non profit that mentors at-risk kids. He is clearly proud o f his family’s charitable efforts. As Equity’s largest donor, he won the inau gural John Grigsby-Jim Vegher Investments in Dignity Award during a banquet held Feb. 25 on the Nike campus. To put the con tribution in perspective, executive director Matthew Nelson says M iller’s charitable work supports an Oregon that “welcomes and affirms all people, including the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered communities.” Nelson calls M iller “the consummate phil anthropist. He challenges those around him to become involved, whether they are family, friends or colleagues at work.” j n