MHRC turns down polk b shotguns PORTLAND 1 Voi. 5 No. OBSERI/ER P o rtland, Oregon Thursday. Septem ber 18, 1975 lOr per ropy Grants students learn career opportunities Nearly one hundred minority stu dents will participate in Grant High School's Minority Career Education Program thia year. In its second year, the program emphasized career exploration and preparation for job experience. Students who request placement in the program first take the Kudor lest, whirh shows their five areas of highest interest. Students can then go to the computer and learn all about the suggested careers the training necessary, schools in Oregon that provide training, and the type of work the career involves. I he next stop is to check career manuels to learn about the careers, interviews persons in that career, observe people at work, and eventu ally try a job placement in that field. Students are encouraged to try a number of careers during their two years in the program. Alfonso Small, Jr., Program Coor­ dinator. emphasized that this is not a remedial, nor a vocational training program Students represent the entire spectrum of social class and academic potential, we have poor students, good students and excellent students." The students attend their regular high school classes and are assigned to one class period of career training. This class period ran include various individual projects exploring careers; math, English or typing skills; or counselling. Students are placed in jobs, to whirh they go after school or might be excused from one class period, when they are ready for the experience. “Our students are not isolated from the general school population They attend all their regular academic classes." “Through rareer explanation, the students relate what they learn in school to the world of work. Many find, after selecting a rareer they think they would like to follow, that they need certain academic courses." An example is a student who worked for a plumber during the summer and decided he wanted to he a plumber “Checking the career manuals, he learned he should be taking more math in order to be accepted as an apprentice." Mrs. Edith Harrison. Education Coordinator, explained that students are not directed into vocational and control of crime in Portland." Reverend Austin Harper Richard son, pastor of Centenary Wilbur Methodist Church in Southeast Port land, who spoke against the use of shotguns: “...what happens to the public image and role definition if the proposal to issue shotguns to Port land's Police is accepted? “From my reading I understand that a basic premia in the under standing of the police role is that the most important responsibility of the police is the preservation of human life. What this tells us is that the police responsibility for the mainte nance of social order is a conditional responsibility. The police exist to protect individual rights as well as to insure social justice. The police task is to work with the citizenry in developing communities that are livable places. "The question in my mind is whether issuing shotguns to Port land's Police enhances the image of the police as being preservors of human life. Does this proposed action further a climate of trust and lower the threshold of fear in our community?" Ellis Casson, President of the Portland Branch, N A ACP, said the N A A C P is opposed to the use of shotguns. "We have enough problem with the use of handguns and no way will we (the N A A C P ) sit back and let 'them' start using shotguns on 'us' at will." Alan Mason, speaking for the use of shotguns, said the question has unfortunately become a racial issue and Blacks think they will be the victims, but since Northeast Portland is an area of high crime rate, "fight fire with fire." Dale Smith defended the use of shotguns on the attributes of the gun itself, saying that although it is more devastating at short range, the danger of bullet at long range is not as great. Its use would eliminate the possibility of stray bullets going through walls or travelling long distances and striking an innocent bystander. George Kontanis, Socialist Workers Party candidate for the Mayor of Portland, spoke of the causes of crime and violence. "The real violence here is the violence of poverty and racism, of a Black unemployemtn rate twice that of whites, of discrimination on housing, of Black children locked into substandard schools. The real issue here is not the shotguns but the racist attitude of Portland’s police department towards the Black com munity." The M CHR sub-committee on Police Community Relations had previously voted to oppose the shotgun proposal. William Jackson, its chairman, said the decision was based both on lack of convincing evidence that shotguns would be a deterrent and the expressed fear and apprehension on the part of a large segment of the population. Police minority recruiters predict success 1975 Grant High School graduate and a participant in the ration Program, works at a lathe. training. "W e study professional as well as skilled jobs, and students are encouraged to go to college if this is what they want." Three of the students in last year's program were assisted to get scholarships. The program helps those who do go on to college select high school courses that are prerequisites they will need. The Minority Career Education Program was established at Grant by the Oregon Department of Education as a pilot project. Most students, and especially minorities, have no idea of the basic skills required or even how to apply for a job. This, together with the fart that employers say they cannot find "qualified" minorities, influenced the formation of this program. Job placements are with business and industry or non profit agencies. Students are counselled and their progress watched carefully, with the cooperation of the employer to see that they develop good work habits and attitudes. Placements vary from short term non paid jobs which in­ volve mostly observing, to longer term paid employment. (Please see photos on p. 4) Program aids parent competence by Bruce H u bert When reminirsing, how many parents have M id, "I was wrong," or “I just wish I had known better," in reference to the way that they have raised their children. The chances are that many have. Parent Child Services, located at 424 N.E. 22nd Avenue in Portland, is attempting to decrease the likelihood of such remenbrances. The center, which is funded by the Office of Child Development, was established as a pilot program in 19AM, like most of the social welfare programs enacted in the 60's it is geared to aid low income families. Eligibility guidelines dictate that low income families with children under three are given priority. However, ten percent of the service's 100 children are allowed to come from families above the PCS income regulations, when it is judged that the program can be of significant aid to them and their parents. One of only two in the Northwest, and thirty three in the nation, PCS The Metropolitan Human Relations Commission overruled the recom mendation of its staff and voted to oppose the placement of shotguns in police patrol cars. Currently shotguns are mounted only in Sargeants cars and are available for specific needs. The Police Bureau had requested that they be carried in all patrol cars as a deterrent to crime and to violence against police officers. The incidents of armed robbery is increasing. The police reasoning is that the suspects are better armed than the police and that if facing shotguns they would be leas apt to fire at police or civilians. The main eutcry against the use of shotguns has been from the Black community, where five young men have been shot by police in recent months, with four being killed. The preponderance of testimony given at the hearing held by the MHRC Wednesday was opposed to the use of shotguns. (harlottee Williams, speaking for the Black Justice Committee said "the Portland Police Department has not demonstrated the maturity, respect for public property, and care of human life and limb to permit public trust of its ability to manage this proposal usage of shotguns in the best interest of the public's safety, especially that of minority communi ties. .. The proposed shotgun action is designed to scare and intimidate citizens; fear is not the tactic supported by BJC for the prevention offers a variety of services and programs whirh, in the words of its director Mr. Augustine Roland, "are designed to teach parents to understand the different stages of growth and development of their children." PCS Services has two groups comprised of fifty children who. along with their parents, attend the agency twice a week. PCS raters to the needs of both parents and their children, offering adult and child programs. The agency's adult program is designed to teach “parenting" skills. Said Roland, “Many parents don't know what to expect from their children causing them 'to become upset." A frequent problem is in regards to the notorious "Terrible Two's." According to Roland "Many parents make the mistake of at tempting to beat it out of them." In order to combat such occurences the agency offers an Adult Group, a program designed to allow parents to understand their roles. Parents work with the PCS staff ¡earning to aid in the growth and development of their children. According to the PCS Director there are an alarmingly high number of parents who are ignorant of the nutritional and health needs of their children. The centers health and nutritional education classes are designed to alleviate this situation. Upon arriving at the center, where they are provided with nutritious meals, the centers staff of child development experts work with the children teaching them to learn how to learn, while at the same time providing them with an enjoyable atmosphere. Individual attention is also provided to children with conceptual and coordination problems. "Parents often don't understand what their responsibilities as parents are." said Roland. Thanks to Parent Child Services there will be a few less unhappy parents and children in Portland. I believe there are as many competant, qualified Black individuals as their are in the general popula­ tion." Officer Tony Newman. M inority Recruiter for the Portland Police Bureau said. With that in mind, he and Officer Joe Murillo have set out to recruit enough minority police to bring their number to approximately nine percent of the Police Bureau. During their first year on the job, they have added six minority officers to the force. This puts them nearly on schedule for the eighty four to be recruited in five years, and brings the Bureau total to twenty nine. The Police Bureau's minority re ­ cruiting efforts in the past have been a failure, leading many Blacks to believe the Bureau is not committed to minority hiring Newman says this is not so, that the Bureau is now looking for minorities and that any minority person who passes the qualifications and can compete suc­ cessfully with other candidates will •be hired. The competition for avail­ able positions is stiff, with about eight percent of the candidates being hired, but Newman points out that the six minorities who were hired outscored other candidates. There are no special qualifications or procedures to assist minorities to get into the system. The main thrust of the recruiting effort has been to encourage police officers to refer people who might be interested. These individuals are then contacted, the employment proced­ ures and the job explained. Those who complete the application are provided a manual to help them study for the written test. The next step is the examination, which tests general ability, reading comprehension, and ability to make judgements. Those who pass the written examination have an inter­ view with a member of the Police Bureau and two members of the Civil Service Commission. The interviewer explores the candidate's background, his interests, his understanding of police work, and his judgement. The w ritten examination makes up sixty per cent of the candidate's score and the interview accounts for forty per cent. Next comes the physical test with dragging weight, running and sit- ups. Those who pass go on to the medical examination and those who fail can try again after a period of time elapses. Following the medical is the psychological exam ination which attempts to judge m aturity and emotional control as well as ruling out psychosis and neurosis. Next comes the background check includ­ ing personal references, police and credit records and interviews with acquaintances. The candidate who passes these tests is placed on the hiring list according to his score on the written and oral examinations and when he is first on the list, he is hired. Although the qualifications to become a police officer are strict, and after the candidate is hired he serves an eighteen month probationary period, many men and women do pass and qualify for employment. Minor ities are passing the qualifications at about the same percentage as Caucasians. Newman has found an interest in the Police Department among Blacks and does not believe the old myth that Blacks cannot be recruited. A police officer in Portland for seven years, and before that a member of the m ilitary police, he understands the frustrations and the rewards of being a police officer and believes it is a good career to pursue. District Attorney names new deputies District Attorney Harl Haas an nounced the hiring of his second Black Deputy district attorney Jo seph L. Amber», along with five others, have been hired and will join his staff during the next few weeks. Ambers, thirty one. is a 1973 graduate of Cleveland State U niver­ sity College of Law and a cum laude graduate of Fisk University. Ambers has worked as a docket clerk for a Cleveland law firm and as a legal intern providing represents lion for indigent defendants in Ohio. He is currently employed in the City of Portland Purchasing Division. He will become a member of the District Court Unit. William N. Melhalf, twenty five, is a 1975 graduate of Northwestern School of Law. Melhalf has previously served as an intern in the District Attorney's office. He holds an undergraduate degree in Business and Technology from Oregon State University. Melhalf has held positions on the staff of Spokane County Legal Aid and as law clerk to a private firm in Corvallis. He will be assigned to the Support Enforcement Division. John E. Hoag, twenty-eight, is a 1974 graduate of the University of Texas School of Law. He holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in economics from Earlham College in Richmond. Indiana. Hoag served as intern on the University of Texas Criminal Justice Project with the Drug Abuse Division of the Dallas Police Department. He has also worked as an investigator and law clerk with the lægal Aid Society of Columbus. Georgia. He will be assigned to the Support Enforcement Division. Robert D. Laird, thirty-one, is a 1975 g rad u ate of N o rth w e s te rn School of Law. Laird has formerly been employed as intern in the District Attorney's Office. He holds a degree in Business Administration from Portland State University. Laird has worked as investigator for a private Portland law firm and has served as law clerk to Judge Alfred Sulmonetti. He will be assigned to the District Court Unit. Timothy Alexander, tw enty eight, is a 1971 graduate of the University of Texas School of Law. Alexander holds his undergraduate degree in political science from Vanderbilt University. He has worked in the Communications department of the Texas Departm ent of Public Safety, as director of the University of Texas Fair Housing Commission and as assistant district attorney in Harris County. Texas. His assignment will be in the District Court Unit. Steven W . Seymour, twenty nine, is a 1975 graduate of W illamette University Law- School. Seymour holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in economics from the University of Iowa. He has worked in Market Research and Accounts for the Case Manhattan Bank in Stuttgart, Ger many, as law clerk for the Legislative Counsel of the Oregon Legislature, and as law clerk for a private Portland law firm. Seymour fill work in the D istrict Court Unit. All are members of the Oregon Bar Association. The One Day Special Legislative Session: "They All Flew Over the Coo-Coo’s Nest” by W ally P rie stly . State R epresentative The outcome was never in doubt. The establishment had lost, and it seldom loaes, an important battle in the 19^6 regular legislative session last Spring. A mere shred of the public's right of privacy would be kept. The tattered remnants of a thin veil would be placed over police records beginning midnight Septem her 12th. Nol I t would not come to pass, and likely will not come to pass at the next legislative session in 1977 as is not touted. POLICE RECORDS I Arrest, conviction, court decisions, police reports are and have always been a m atter of public record. The constitution prohibits the existance of . secret police operations. Elected officials throughout the land and in Oregon are committed to uphold the state and federal constitution and swear to that oath upon taking office. Words used by legislators in laws they pass mean what the legislators intend they mean. But the cor porate police state apparatus in Ore gon threw all of this out the window during the second week in September of 1975. laiw enforcement agencies from top to bottom, from the United States Attorney's office and the FBI to back county sheriffs and the State police, most all are sympathetic first to the needs of lenders, employers, and retailers and oppose merger controls placed on their record compiling and diseminating powers. State politicians, concerned for their reelection, concerned first and fore most with ‘appearances', were stam peded Tuesday with only slight hesitation to repeal the modest protections they had earlier provided. T U E S D A Y : The Beginning The End During the regular Spring session a late amendment was made in the State Senate on the definition of criminal record' in HB 2579. This definition unknowingly changed the meaning of sections that were to follow in the bill, if interpreted literally without regard to the intentions of the legislature. I f so interpreted, an unconstitutional law had been w ritten and passed. Such a literal interpretation was the one chosen by Attorney General Lee Johnson. He had supported the establishment position in the Spring and had lost. Taking the hard unconstitutional line, the Attorney General started a domino effect of legal chaos. First with the State police; then spreading to County district attorneys, several of which had also opposed the way the bill had passed. The oaths of office to uphold the constitution and the rights of the people were passed over in favor of a literal mtehpretation of a law which made it clearly unconstitutional in the eyes of most of the legal community expressing opinions publically. For slightly different reasons, newspapers in Oregon opposed pri­ vacy protection of compiled arrest records: save research costs, let the computer do it. Governor Straub at first reasoned the courts could best decide and likely reverse the mistaken course of the Attorney General. But then he collapsed quickly as he was dealt a rapid one-two punch of a right to the head by the Attorney General's opinion and then a left to the stomach by the newspaper headlines of secret arrests and overfilling of already full jails. A special session was called four days hence. FORGOTTEN PURPOSE Just in case we have forgotten the purpose of government and how it is to serve the people's interests, let's start from the beginning concerning the question of police records compilation. Police record compilation ought to be done if it benefits the people of Oregon as individual citizens. It ought not be done if it is to their detriment and harm. However, timid civil liberty forces now no longer ask this question. They ask only the question of how and by what rules this compilation of information will be conducted. It is technically possible, it shall be done. Clearly employees, borrowers and consumers receive no benefit from the compilation of these records which contain nothing but bad , items of information about individuals. Business management interest of the corporate-police-state are made more efficient in hiring, firing, promoting, lending and keep ing track of we citizens with the compilation and ready availability of these records. While the police state marches onward, these records are demanded for the better control of you and I. W ill any one of Oregon's two million plus citizens more easily get a job, obtain a loan, get a permit, be found innocent of false charges or in any way benefit from the keeping of these records? No! The bosses will benefit from the keeping of these records. The lenders will benefit. The retailers will benefit. These negative items of information about us will spread decisions blade by bureaucrats against the United S û tes Some will say these actions will trickle down' to benefit us all. I don't believe i t