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About Street roots. (Portland, OR) 1998-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 27, 2017)
emftZoys ffooz/semt/s o f women in Portland, sexual harassment and V^auTTare uM espreadandoften unreported. Meet the people whTaretrying tochange that. BY ELIZABETH BUELOW working in the service industry in Portland told Street Roots sexual harassment and assault were rampant b u t seldom reported. ifteen women have recently come “I don’t know any woman who’s spent any forward with allegations that a time in a bar who hasn’t been harassed and powerful figure in the West Coast hasn’t felt safe,” said Jessica Rosengrant, a cocktail scene assaulted them. The women, longtime Portland bartender and survivor of some from Portland, are sounding the alarr through a blog, “The Reality of Sexual sexual assault. “People just don’t realize how-pervasive it is.” Assault in the Cocktail Community,” with Rachel Debely, a server at a busy graphic and often difficult-to-read entries downtown Portland pub, grew weary when a about their personal experiences. Their homepage states: “We want to new manager started to make lewd stimulate a dialogue about what happened suggestions, once telling her to “hike up her skirt” if .she wanted to earn more tips. She to us, why we sat in silence hurting for so asked him to stop, but he refused. When she long, how we can help others have a voice noticed him being sexually suggestive to her and how we can end sexual coworker, a minor, she decided to take assault” "There are fast no good action* One of thé accusers, statistics because It so “I knew I needed.to stop it,” Debely said. Jeanelle Owings, of sfida goes nnreported," “Sa I made a phone call to his boss.” In the Portland, told Street Roots Rosengrant said» "Si's the end, the perpetrator was dismissed from that she came forward the company. rape culture that makes because “silence keeps Sexual harassment is “much more people sick. It’s so people feel that they prevalent than most think” in the service important to speak out deserve the treatm ent and industry, Debely said. “But most girls don’t because this is happening t< don't recognize It as report it because they try to put it out of everybody.” p ro b le m a tic /' their minds,” she said, “or they don’t feel According to a 2014 comfortable reporting it to their JSSSICA ROSENG RANT, report from Restaurant PO RTLAN D BARTENDER A N D management staff for fear of not being taken C O -FO U ND ER OF N O T O K R D X Opportunities Centers seriously and losing shifts.” United, there are “endemic’ The incidence rate of sexual harassment levels of harassment in the in the service industry is difficult to pin : service industry, with at least 90 percent of women working in down for several reasons. Few complaints are formally filed with the state labor restaurants as tipped employees dealing agency. with it in some form. From 2011 to 2016, the Oregon Bureau of The Equal Employment Opportunity Labor and Industries has investigated 87 Commission cites the restaurant industry as complaints of sexual harassment in the the “single largest” source of sexual service industry in Clackamas, Washington harassment claims in the U.S. Many women CO NTR IBU TIN G W RITER ■ and Multnomah counties, making up about 18 percent of the sexual harassm ent complaints in all industries combined. Furthermore, an inquiry into the Oregon Judicial Department found that its criminal case tracking isn’t specific to an industry or location of a crime, but instead focuses on the type of case or the specific statute violated - for example, “sex offense.” The numbers aren t any easier to pinpoint on the civil side, in which court records list torts but do not narrow down which are ~ related to sexual assault and harassment. “There are just no good statistics because ft S° often goes unreported,” Rosengrant said. “It’s the rape culture that makes people feel that they deserve the treatm ent and don’t recognize it as problematic ” The statistics might not be there, but the problem is. Rosengrant detailed her experience: “I was followed home from the bar by a guy who worked with me. He tried to force himself on me. I told him to fuck off, but he grabbed me. So I pulled out my phone and was able to get him to leave me alone that way. Having someone on the other end of the line makes a difference.” Local workers’ stories to thA P « T u Dt of establishments m the Portland bar and restaurant scene, to addition to several online accounts, to get an idea of how prevalent sexual harassment See HARASSMENT, page 5