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About Street roots. (Portland, OR) 1998-current | View Entire Issue (July 22, 2011)
t J 3 street roots July 22, 2011 DRUG IMPACT AREA: MARIJUANA Boundaries: Northern boundary is NW Lovejoy S t from M 0 5 ?lor' 9 L o v e j o y S t to «ie NW Broadway Bridge men io the Xan(k ® , ^ eWilfametta River, eastern boundary is the bank of the WiHamsite River from the NW Broadway Bridge south to where S W Market S t would m t the bank o f the Wiiteroette k w » extended e a s t Southern boundary is SW Market S t fe> i~w 5. Western boundary fe M 0 5 ? "S i**”** HOYT Portland’s “war on drugs” free zone New “D rug Impact Area” program launched in Old Town Chinatown, has county wide implications BY AMANDA WALDROUPE system and parole and probation. Individual’s are now arrested by a police People accused of possessing, dealing or officer if they are found to be in possession of a drug, dealing the drug, or using it. The using drugs are being excluded from or prohibited from physically entering Old drug impact areas are targeting two specific Town/Chinatown. For the first time in drugs: heroin and cocaine, along with Portland’s history, they are also being marijuanaf excluded from downtown Portland and the The reason why those specific drugs were chosen, Prince says, is that arrest data kept Lloyd District by the Portland Police Bureau shows that Since the program began on June 1, the highest number of arrests in the areas Portland’s new drug impact area policy has of Portland now in the drug impact area already excluded 30 people from entering come from those drugs. “It’s not arbitrary,” those areas for at least one year, and up to Prince says. three. A deputy district attorney reviews the The Portland City Council voted in April arresting officer’s report and decides if the to create what are being called the “drug case is prosecutable. If it is, the defendant impact areas.” It is the city’s latest effort to gets an attorney and decides if he wants to deal with growing drug use in Old Town. As part of the program, $250,000 of city dollars take the case to trial. If he does not, then he enters into a plea agreement with the were allocated to pay for a district attorney district attorney’s office. to prosecute drug crimes, as well as to pay The person is then put on probation. Any overtime to 20 police officers who have a person convicted of a drug crime is put on walking beat in Old Town that started June probation, meaning‘that while the person is 8. not in jail, they will continue to be under the Earlier this year, business owners, supervision of a judge or a probation officer. residents and other constituencies of Old There can be numerous conditions of a Town decried the sharp and noticeable person’s probation: that he or she attend uptick of drug use in their neighborhood, Alcohol Anonymous (AA) meetings, go to and begged the city to take action. drug treatment, and stay away from certain , “It’s a notoriously bad place for drugs,” people or places that may aggravate those says Bill Prince, the Multnomah County circumstances. The purpose of placing District Attorney prosecuting the crimes. conditions oh someone’s probation is that The hope among those groups and city he or she does not act in a way that may officials for the new impact areas is that lead to commit another crime. drug crimes lessen. “We don’t want these When Portland’s City Council passed the open air drug markets,” Prince says. “That’s ordinance creating the new drug impact the crux of what we want to stop.” areas in April, they also essentially created That was also the hope for the “Drug a new condition of probation: that a person Free Zones,” which excluded people from be disallowed from entering Old Town, parts the Old Town area until the program ended of downtown, and the Lloyd District And by in 2007. Then Mayor Tom Potter allowed making it a condition of probation, the judge Drug Free Zones to sunset because he had presiding over the hearing signs an order concerns that the program, which largely that the person not to enter those areas: excluded African Americans, was ; And whereas under the Drug Free Zone discriminatory. somfeone would have beep excluded for 90 A police officer, under the old Drug Free days, people are now excluded for between Zone, would stop someone suspected of - using, possessing or dealingdrugs. If an one year and three years. The length of exclusion depends on a officer had enough evidence to prove that couple of factors, Prince says. One is the the person indeed had drugs, individuals crime the individual is convicted of and were excluded from the area on the spot, whether it’s a misdemeanor drug offense or for 90 days. It did not go on the individual’s a felony drug offense. The judge also has criminal record, and there was little discretion in determining how long a person recourse. should be excluded. The new drug impact areas are starkly There are exceptions: if a person is going different than the old Drug Free Zone. Now into Old Town, downtown or the Lloyd the process is a multi-step process involving Center to seek social services, educational the district attorney’s office, the court STAFF WRITER Above are exclusion maps from the Portland Police Bureau fo r the new D rug Impact Area. The three new exclusion zones target two drugs: heroin a n d cocaine along with marijuana. Both heroin and m arijiana have sim iliar bounderies from N W Lovejoy to S W Market, the river to 1-405. The Lloyd District is also included fo r both marijuana and cocaine However fo r people distributing or using cocaine in S W Portland they are safe fiv m exclusions - with theboundrers ending a t S W Alder. opportunities and/or work. If a person is found in the geographic area of the drug impact area and not for one of the excepted reasons, he or she/ can be found in violation of their probation. Individuals probation can then be lengthened, and could face jailtime along with other possible consequences. An individual is also screened by th e Service Coordination Team (SCT), a controversial group of police officers and service providers who work in partnership « targeting repeat drug H i e p ro g ra m is «« w e ll offenders. th o u g h t o u t. I t based m o re X S ’than on th e d a ta . Concerns the old Drug Free service p ro vid ers an d K K . . . advocates h a d ab o n t gone -to trial,” he says, c iv il lib e rtie s an d d is c rim m n a tlo n someone is now more su rro u n d in g th e D ru g ' F ree Zones rr h ave been The program is well thought out. It is addressed, say B ill based on the data,” PrinCC, th e PriHeeaiT says that M u ltn o m a h County the concems sociai D is tric t A ttorney. service providers and advocates had about civil liberties and race discrimination surrounding the Drug Free Zones have been addressed. But neither the city, the Portland Police Bureau, nor the district attorney’s office are tracking racp, gender, or other demographic information. Prince says data is being compiled on the number of arrests made, how many people are being excluded, and how many people are going to prison versus simply being put on probation. A prison sentence may be likely if the individual is convicted of a felony, or if individuals have warrants out for their arrest. But he says there are no intentions of tracking demographic statistics. “My feeling is that we have it all available,” in the police reports, he says. Amy Ruiz, the spokesperson for Mayor Sam Adams, says the district attorney will seek exclusions for every drug case, regardless of race. And the See DRUGS, page 4