CODA reconsiders Albina drug treatment proqram Donald Fuller Donald Fuller James Robbins, director o f Com­ prehensive Options for Drug Abuse, Inc. (CO DA), a non-profit agency seeking the approval o f King Neigh­ borhood Association o f a special project to decentralize treatment of drug addicts in Portland, will meet with Ms. Anna Madden today. The The hastily hastily arranged arranged meeting meeting was was the result o f the outrage expressed by the largely Black residents o f King at the manner in which the community was presented w ith the special project. Robbins indicated that the heated exchanges resulting in a motion to disapprove the location o f the drug treatment effort in the heart o f the Black com m unity put the project opening date in doubt and he would would not not commit commit the the agency agency to to a a date. “ The timing was all wrong for an arrogant approach by some down­ town white boys,” said one resident after the meeting. “ How could they think that something like that would glide by after the boycott thing?” The purpose o f the meeting will be to r be to discuss a letter from Ms. Mad­ den as chairperson o f the King Neighborhood Association in fo rm ­ ing Robbins o f the vote and o f possible changes in the program that may make the program acceptable. This meeting w ill be open to association members, said Ms. Madden. " I frown on closed door meetings . . .’ ’ so no deals will be made. * . . ’ A great deal appears to be at stake fo r the hard-pressed agency. M in o rity clients have dropped to “ twelve to fifte e n per cent par­ ticipation . . ” according to Robbins and that means the loss o f more National Institute on Drug Abuse funds and matching state funds un­ der the Oregon M ental Health Division. The project is not a residential care PORTLAND OBSERVER . ... facility, but the community objected to the lack o f prior consultation, the dispensing o f methadone (free) and the lack o f sensitivity to the cultural and political climate developing new pride in Black residents. The stalling o f the project and control over the project once approved were serious concerns not addressed in the presen­ ta tio n at the September 17th (Please turn to page 5 col. I) Volume 9 No. 37 Thursday. September 20. 1979 10C USPS 959 680 Civil Rights erasing backlog Dewey Taylor: Happy to be alive Dewey Taylor will open at the Jazz Quary on October 5th with Sky Trio. ‘ I’ m not doing much but playing a little music, doing ^some fishing and trying to cling to life ," Taylor said Three trips a week to the kidney dialysis machine take much o f his time but Tayor still finds time for his f riends. A series o f heart attacks, kidney trouble, strokes and other ailments have not kept Dewey Taylor down but they have slowed him a bit. A man o f many trades, he was the first advertising manager for the Observer, sold for Coast Janitorial and worked for the Portland Public- Schools. Taylor began playing the harmonica ai ihe age o f eleven and his music has led him all over the world. He played with the Red Skelton Show, Count Basie, Duke Ellington, Andy Krk, Dick Stabile, and others. He travelled the world playing for USO camp shows. Although he found the rest of the world exciting, Por­ tland is his home Portland has been good to me. I raised a lovely family and enjoy my lit here." n tv v investigation Tals© alarm Mrs. G a ie v brought h r« ..o h t some Mrs. Oslv Osly Gates confusion to the Title V II advisory committee as she announced that a team from the Region X and Wash­ ington office o f the U.S. Depart­ ment o f H ealth, Education and W elfare had visited the Portland District in response to her inquiry. In August she had advised HEW that newly passed School Board policies might effect the District’s Title V II proposal. Mrs. Gates received a letter from Allen T. Apodaca, Regional Com­ missioner o f Education, stating the teams would be in Portland during the week o f September 10th “ to assess and verify the status o f recent board actions and the e ffe ct on desegregation and q u a lity o f education for children attending the Portland Public Schools.” That visit did not occur, but Pete Suazo, the D istrict’s liaison in Wash­ ington D.C. did make a routine visit on September 13th. Suazo met with district officials regarding changes in finding procedures for next year’s proposal. A cco rding to C lin t Thomas, Director o f Desegregation Program, he also offered assistance ....................... .u ___________ . . . . . . in the district needs to change the current proposal. Apodaca told the Observer that when he wrote to Mrs. Gales he had thought a team would be visiting the Portland District both to assess the results o f policy changes and to offer technical assistance. However, the decision was made not to make the anticipated review at this tim e because it was too early to determine the results o f the changes and because it was financially inappro­ priate to spend the money to bring people from Washington at the end o f the budget year. He decided to give the District time to determine the response to policy changes and to assess result­ ing problem s. H EW w ill o ffe r assistance in amending the 1979-1980 Title V II proposal if necessary. Apodaca expressed concern that since the Title V II proposal calls for programs at specific schools, with­ drawal o f Black students could mean that those schools should not receive Title V II funds. He said he would be “ very concerned" if he learned that schools with insufficient numbers o f Black students received T itle V II The Civil Rights Division o f the Oregon Labor Bureau has had a tar­ nished image for many years as the result o f its inability to investigate and dispose o f civil rights complaints within a reasonable length o f time. In the eight months since l abor Commissioner Mary Roberts took office, 1,207 cases have been closed, the backlog substantially cleared. The number o f cases in process has been reduced more than 32 per cent. New Director o f the C ivil Rights Division, Gary Gomez reports that the departm ent is using a two pronged approach, providing im ­ mediate investigation o f new com­ plaints as well as clearing up old cases. Gomez has instituted a "Fact F in d in g " procedure whereby the complainants and respondent are asked to attend a (act finding conference with a compliance officer. At this meet­ ing an agreement can be reached and, it appropriate, a predetermination set­ tlement made. Gomez explained that some cases that arc really a result o f poor communication can be settled at this stage. In others, where discri­ mination docs exist and the employee is aware that there is substantial evidence, the employer has an op­ portunity to settle prior to a lengthy investigation. hen a complaint is filed, action begins within a few days. The fact finding conference usually occurs within about two weeks and if that fails the case is assigned immediately for investigation. Gomez expects to speed the process even more by building a stronger intake process. By assign­ ing the best staff to intake he hopes not only to elim inate cases over which the Division has no jurisdic­ tion but to refine the complaints to make investigation more efficient. Ninety-nine new complaints were filed in August, bringing the year’ s total to 678. Complaints have in­ creased during the past three months which Gomez credits to word getting out the complaints are being investi­ gated in a timely manner. Many per­ sons were previously discouraged from filing complaints by the fact that it might be two years before an investigation began. Timetables will be set to insure that every complaint moves through the investigation and cancellation process. O f the 99 com plaints filed in August, 96 were in employment and three in housing. Complaints on sex discrimination in employment were 38, complaints on race and color 23. Thirteen o f the employment com­ plaints were on workers’ compen­ sation. One o f the housing complaints was on racial discrimination; two were on discrimination against persons with mental handicap. Employment complaints also lead the complaints filed during the final eight months o f the year, with 643 complaints. O f those 221 were based on sex and 136 on race. There were 21 housing complaints, 15 on race. T hirteen com plaints were filed charging discrimination in public ac­ commodation, ten o f these based on race. One com p la int o f racial d is c rim in a tio n was file d against vocational schools. O f those cases filed before 1977, 14 remain in investigation and 16 are either in co ncilia tion or pending referral fo r hearings. A Manage­ ment Review Group is going over all pre-1977 cases to determine which can be completed. By the end o f August, he expects only ten o f these cases to remain in the Department. O f the old cases, 175 are at the A t­ torney G eneral’ s o ffic e to be prepared for hearings and 23 were com plaints against the state that have been referred to private attor­ neys. Gomez, who has held his current position for four months, came to the Civil Rights Division from the State Welfare Division, where he was manager o f the o ffic e serving Clackamas and Washington Coun­ ties. He at one tim e headed the Aluma office o f the Welfare Depart­ ment and prior to that worked in private industry. ' Black Studies celebrates ten j years funding, it disproportionate num bers o f white students received assis­ tance from ihe program, in that there was d iscrim in atio n against Black students. “ The purpose o f the program is to insure quality education for Black students. One concern is for quality. I would be personally very concerned if Black students do not receive a high proportion o f the benefits." He explained that w hite students at receiving schools may be eligible for services if they are educationally disadvantaged The purpose o f Title V II, he said, is to insure that Black students sent to m ajority white schools for deseg­ regation purposes receive q ua lity education and that the education o f­ fered in receiving schools does not decline because o f the addition o f Black students. The Title V II program in Portland provides compensatory education for students in 36 receiving schools, with a ratio o f three white resident students to one Black transfer student receiving aid. The project also includes parent involvement and c u rric u lu m developm ent/teacher training components m m The n id i» n ,» » « » » .. The Black Black S Studies Department at Portland State U niversity w ill be celebrating its tenth anniversary next week. The department plans to hold a banquet on Friday, September 28th, at 7:00 p.m ., at the West­ minister Presbyterian Church, 1624 N.E. Hancock Street. The keynote speaker will be Dr. Lee P. Brown, form er Com m issioner o f Public Safety fo r the c ity o f A tla n ta , Georgia. Black Studies Department Head, Bill Little says the department was first implemented as an experimental program in 1969 at Portland State. Since that time, Little says five major areas o f emphasis are offered in the department. Some o f the areas in­ clude Black Urban A ffa irs , Black Civilization and Culture, and Black Social Development. Presently the department staff is composed o f five full time professors and 12 part time faculty members. Little says, “ Most o f our faculty members have Ph.D’s. For the most part we are all overworked and under­ payed. We do more than we ought to be doing because we are committed. We are black and feel we have a respon­ sibility to meet. 1 feel you have to put in m more don’ t want ¡n O r e if ¡ f y you oud o n *tw an. . to O be second rate. Our department is not second rate.” Little says the anniver­ sary banquet is being held to celebrate the achievement o f the department, university and Black community. "T h is banquet is something the black community should be proud o f and I feel it is a sign o f achievement. The department has reached a high level o f excellence nationally as well as internationally. Our sense o f pride and growth is a significant example o f w hat’ s happening in the com­ munity. This event is not something we plan to hold on an annual basis. I t ’s something special. “ Our department and faculty have made m ajor c o n trib u tio n s . The department is known as one o f the major catalysts in helping to create other black studies programs around the country. Both students, faculty members and administrators have worked hard to develop the program o f study. We are the only section in the northwestern part o f the country that is recognized as a department. The rest o f the existing black studies sections at regional schools and universities are only programs,” said Little. Right now it takes 51 hours to DR. BILL LITTLE receive a degree from the depart­ ment. But Professor Little says some requirements will be changed in the future to what is more desirable and needed to relate with Black studies courses. A proposal is being submit- (Please turn to page 9 column 3) Should the United Nations look into America’s prisons? by Nat H e n to ff (PN S)—There is cu rren tly no more unfashionable preoccupation than the rights o f prisoners. Insofar as the citizenry thinks o f prisons at a ll, they want more o f them—the more punitive the better. The notion that one o f the pur­ poses o f these fastnesses is rehabili­ tation is no longer held even by most liberals. E. Donald Shapiro, dean o f the New York Law School, recently spoke for a clear consensus o f the *■ populace when he proposed, for the 1980s, not only an increase in prisons but a desire that they should not be “ any better than the slum housing in which society places the poor, the u nfo rtu n a te elderly or dependent children.” In this ambience, it is rather d if­ ficu lt lt to to focus focus public public attention attention on on ficu what it is actually like to be in most prisons. Yet two recent cases o f not all that e xtra ord in ary abuse o f prisoners’ most fundamental rights may help concentrate the mind on the most invisible o f this nation’ s discards. Seven women in New York State was awarded $45,000 in damages on July 12, 1979, in a settlement that the AC LU 's National Prison Project has described as “ the First o f its kind in the co un try.” Three years before, the women had been involuntarily tran sfe rred — w ith o u t a ju d ic ia l commitment hearing—from the Bed­ ford Hills prison to Matteawan, an institution for the criminally insane. The reason was that they were " d if ­ ficu lt” to control, incessantly assert­ ing that they knew their rights and otherwise an. otherwise actina acting in in an an undn<-il<> undocile m man­ ner. A t Matteawan, the women were fo rcib ly dosed with such powerful neuroleptic drugs as Thorazine and Prolixin, along with a literally stun­ ning array o f sedatives, hypnotics, and anti-depressants. They were never told the types o f drugs they were being given; and no physical, neurological or psychiatric examinations were conducted by the s ta ff psychiatrists to determine whether the drugs were producing allergic reactions or other side effects —even though the women frequently complained o f highly disorienting side effects. (Such drugging is not uncommon in “ co ntrol units” o f American prisons dealing with “ un­ cooperative” inmates who have also never been determined to be mentally tit ill.) x In a dd itio n to the continuous drugging, the seven women were compelled to participate in a behavior modification program, one o f the more trendy control devices in many prisons around the country. This one was called STEADY (Steps Toward Eventual Acceptance o f a Disciplined You). The women were forced into STEADY, one o f their lawyers later said, because “ Prison o ffic ia ls wanted to go beyond sedating these women. They wanted to break them ." Ostensibly, the program would enable the women to "e a rn ” their way out o f segregation (they were in their cells 23 hours a day) and back into the general population at Bed­ ford Hills. They were to receive plus marks fo r "cooperative” behavior and minus grades fo r conduct un becoming an inmate. The problem was that there were never any clear, comprehensive guidelines as to how they were expected to behave, and so, as court papers point out, "they did not know from one day to the next what conduct would result in earning a reward or punishment.” Furthermore, whenever it looked as i f STEADY was not working, the women were adm inistered even larger quantities o f drugs. Finally, they were rescued from Matteawan by a federal judge who ruled that their Fourteenth Amendment rights to due process and equal protection under the laws had been violated by their transfer to a mental institution without a judicial hearing. The women then sued for damages for their time o f unabated horror at Matteawan, and the state o f New York, rather than go to trial, agreed to a settlement. Not that anyone— from the State Com m issioner o f Correctional Services on down to the staff psychiatrists on the ward—has admitted any wrongdoing. Even in those few suits that prisoners win, the defendants almost inva ria bly take the Nuremberg defense ( “ It wasn’ t my responsibility.” ) Meanwhile, in Virginia, another prisoner, Henry Tucker, after “ act­ ing out” in acute disappointment at the denial o f his parole in 1976, was injected with Prolixin, a formidable anti-psychotic drug. A t the Virginia State Penitentiary in Richmond, one gave Tucker any neurological, psychiatric or physical examination (Please turn to page 8 column I)