aaBM. g j a n e ♦ a »»-» y r -0*4 s ffc - .X • I 1 “ "*“ Page 4, Portland Observer, July 10, 1986 EDITORIAL/OPINION usy weekfor Keystone Cops W ith reckless disregard for the life o f a hos- or a relative a fraid to leave her home, the police bureau by its actions, Chief Penny Har­ rington by her defensive posture and the arro­ gance o f Bud C lark’s aide dismissed the death o f an 85-year-old woman as an example o f police restraint. The Black community is horrified, shocked and righteously indignant that a so-called metro­ politan police force did as little as it could to save an elderly woman during an incident where Tommy Graves, a mentally impaired adult, snapped. The police never bothered to ask, so they did not know, that Graves lived with Mrs. Alberta Tate for 14 years in a group home for adults. Mrs. Tate’s recently deceased daughter- in-law ran the group home. During this seige, Graves thought he was protecting Mrs. Tate. The tragic outcome is an example o f an inade­ quate police policy to deal with violent, men­ tally impaired adults. There is plenty o f blame to go around and Chief Harrington’s assertion that there is none is ignorant and insensitive. Among the questions to ask is, “ Why did the police wait until Graves escalated the situation to its tragic boiling point?” The police containment procedure failed miserably because it resulted in the death o f an innocent victim. During the seige, the police shot out all the street lights, put inexperienced cops in a situa­ tion that required special training, and shot Graves in the front door and Mrs. Tate as she was running out the back door. Mrs. Tate was a casualty o f impromptu police procedure. Families in that area were subjected to tear gas fall-out which led to a variety o f irritants. Why didn’ t the police warn residents o f possible effects? Like Keystone Cops, the Portland po­ lice deployed their tactical response unit after both the suspect and the victim were dead. You can bet your bottom dollar that had Graves or Mrs. Tate been white and in a differ­ ent neighborhood, the police would still be out there trying to negotiate a solution. But they have proven time after time again that they do not care about Black people or the Black com­ munity. It’s alright to throw dead opossum in front o f a Black-owned restaurant. I t ’s alright to incorrectly administer a sleeper (choke) hold on an off-duty security officer, and then stand around and watch him die because CPR was not administered in time. In this seige, Mrs. Tate was safer with Graves. A t least she was alive. As taxpayers we should not accept the official version or conclusion. As in the Stevenson trag­ edy, incompetence, racism and indifference will start to come out. A public informational ses­ sion on the scale o f a public inquest is in order. The officials will let M r. Cover-up — District Attorney Michael Schrunk — investigate. But that is like letting the fox guard the chicken coop. The blood of Tony Stevenson is still wet on his hands. This new City Administration is not yet six. months old and there have been three Black people dead at the hands o f the police. The thorns in the City o f Roses have pricked two in­ nocent victims: Tony Stevenson who was trying to calm a confrontation, and Mrs. Tate. How many more innocent Portlanders will have to die before a major or national evalua­ tion o f the police bureau is conducted? It does not seem that the rank and file of the police bu­ reau respects its new chief. Letters to the Editor The Observer welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typed or neatly printed and signed with the author's name and address taddresses are not published) We reserve the right to edit f o r length. M a il to: Portland Observer, P. O. Box 3137. Portland. O B 9720ft Rev. Coleman speaks in hushed and pious tones participants, including the "m edia­ tors.” Even if the mediators were professions, I hardly see how they could do a good job without a repre­ sentative sample of the parents who brought the concern. James Harrison was hurt by this year’s events, but he was not the only one hurt. A secretary and a number of excellent teachers remain unem­ ployed because they chose conscience over continued employment. In addi­ tion, children suffered with their teachers, and tears were common during the last months o f the school year. I urge any parent who plans to send a child to the school next year to ques­ tion the Rev. Coleman, the new prin­ cipal, and new staff members care­ fully. especially concerning the Clothes Closet operation in the school. The parents who have re­ moved their childred from the school did so for good reasons. have been confused by his use of that term. W hile it may be true that a majority o f the families at the school are struggling economically, poor children do not deserve a lesser stan­ dard o f safety than other children. No child is expendable, and the school should be closed if the Clothes Closet is more important than a safe and orderly learning environment for children. Short-term aid is admirable, but it does not change the dynamics which produce need in the first place. Short­ term aid, "n o questions asked," can indeed trap the needy on a treadmill going nowhere. Education, on the other hand, is long-term service. The highest and best use of education is to help those served become servers in their own right, a process which requires growth from everyone involved. The '84-'85 St. Andrews School staff aimed for this, and they will be sorely missed. The Rev. Coleman convened two "mediations" this year in which he or one o f his appointees chose all the The Clothes Closet operation in St. Andrews School during school hours is dangerous. U p to 150 persons enter the school o f about 80 children, “ no questions asked," each Thursday morning during the school year. One crazy person among 150 is not a sta­ tistical improbability. The sheer vol­ ume o f bodies in the school insures noiae and a drain on the bathroom fa­ cilities. Teachers have worried about this situation since 1975, years before the '84-'85 staff arrived. The Pastor/ School Board’s solution to a problem brought up by parents was to get rid o f an excellent and dedicated staff. This did indeed punish the parents for bringing up the subject, but it does not solve the problem. I f the new staff is professional, they will also discover that working conditions are difficult in the school on Thursday, and new parents and children will dis­ cover the same thing. The Rev. Coleman speaks in hushed and pious tones of his concern for the "p o o r.’ ’ Many o f the parents ¡PORTWND observer Last week my article on the mis­ leading statistics o f lung cancer sur­ vival was unfortunately cut o ff mid­ sentence. I was in the process o f writ­ ing that I hoped the attendees of the aforementioned conference on “ med­ ical quackery” would soon open their eyes to the vast literature that exists linking dietary habits with such con­ ditions as cancer and heart disease. I hope that the groups who sponsored this conference eventually come to the realization that prevention, alter­ native health care and the rights o f in­ dividual choice are essential to the future o f American Medicine. Maybe at this point these groups will begin to look into their own self-regulation with kthe zealousness they put into the regulation o f others. Afterall, it is "th eir” system that accounts for thousands o f deaths and tens of thou­ sands o f injuries each year aa a result of their tre a tm e n t programs How can I say such a thing as this? For one, studies kthat have looked into iatrogenisis (doctor caused ill­ ness) have placed the figure of around one-third of hospital emergency ad­ missions to be the result of doctor- caused conditions. Studies such as the recent article on lung cancer have shown areas of care where no benefit exists yet certainly much injury oc­ curs. Drug horror stories such as D .E .S ., bendictine acutane, etc., re­ veal an over-zealousness within the drug industries to patent and market their products with inadequate studies to predict their new products' safety. And as a final comment, the fact that the death rate has dropped in cities such as San Francisco and London when hospital strikes occurred em­ phasizes the dangers o f surgical and drug treatments. Modern medicine is neither all bad nor all good, but has, within its con­ fines, areas o f miracles and tragedy. This grayness is precisely why the A .M .A . and other organizations need to spend more ol tneir ettons into objective self-regulation, and less into (as the F .T .C . worded it in their cease and desist order to the A .M .A .) ha­ rassment and obstruction o f the growth o f alternative medicines. The A .M .A .’s parity with the American Rifle Assn, as the single biggest lobbyist at capital hill gives some idea to the size the A .M .A . and its children such as the Oregon Medical Assn, chosen to spend much o f their time harassing others rather than concentrating on public safety and improving the areas o f their health delivery that cause so many thousands o f deaths and injuries each year? Probably the single most important reason is money and the power/ esteem that accompanies it. W hile our economy has staggered over the last decade, the increases in health care dollars have consistently exceeded inflation and now represent 11 *1» of our countries G .N .P . Does this mean that with the increases more people are receiving health care? N o, the increases in costs represent a m ulti­ tude o f factors including higher costs for suplies and materials, but pri­ marily are due to the extremely high costs o f high tech medicine (bi-pass surgery, dialysis, cancer treatments, etc ). W hile U .S. House hearings Tuesday (July 9, 1985) featured many doctors stating that recent Reagan cuts in M edicare/Medicaid have dev­ astated the care programs for the elderly, the fact remains that close to two-thirds o f Medicare dollars are spent in the last six months o f life, and thus don't represent 'health care" but crisis medicine, much o f which serves to sustain life after the body has determiorated beyond the state o f self-sufficiency. The ability of modern medicine to sustain life through support systems has led many to make out a "living w ill," so that their life savings will not be totally usurped while sustaining a non­ functioning body for a few addition Peters received $16,281 from City of Portland M A R Y S . PEARCE Parent o f Fred Pearce. 6 $15 for one v— ' $25 for tw o years I b o . 3137 PnrtianrI OR m * Apt ■ C lTV state T 2 & X j m cn 5 =5 £2 -< < z >3 T is Portland Observer •A» M*l • > 3J * 8 ZIP NA ‘• ' • » I . -z (U SPS 96» 8801 a puM W wd evwy Tburtdav by t x » PulXnbog Company. Inc 1483 N E XA«g» worth Portland. Oraoon 97211 Poal Ottica Box 3137 Portland, TTw P o rtla n d O tn r r w r dragon 97208 Second d a ta pm taga paid at Portland. Oraoon STAN PETERS Tba P o rtla n d (M o e rre r w as aaiabbanad at 1970 < f j * P u h * * * Cw. m MEMBER Association - fo un ded IM S 288-0033 Box 3137. Portland Oraoon 97208 Alfred L Henderson. Edito Publisher A! Williams, Genera! M u next • V. . Dus agreement started in September 1981 when former Police Chief Ron Still ordered Peters relieved o f all police duties. New Police Chief Penny Harring­ ton has ordered Peters to begin earn ing his salary by working for the City again. Chief Harrington should be by Jerry Garner Sobecnpiont »15 00 per year m the Tn County area P oet m a tte r Sand addraas changea to the P o rtla n d O h w r v r r . P O N a tio n a l A d v e rtis in g R e p re s e n ta tiv e A m a lg a m a te d Pubiiehera. inc N e w York moments (days to months). W hy does our system in America focus so exclusively on drug "cures” and surgical techniques? There are a multitude o f reasons for this ap­ proach, yet the theme of money and power again appear as central rea­ sons behind this reality. As in the American Cancer Society where most o f their research returns to the vested interests o f the predominant white male, non-labor, board members who dictate A C S policy, industry (phar­ maceutical, insurance, banking) has taken an aggressive role in most o f the policy matters o f American health. There is a self-sustaining interest in the continued development o f new patents for drugs with all the ancillary industries involved. And there is very little money to support care that real­ izes the individual nature o f disease and the need to broaden our ap­ proach to attempt to prevent many of the current maladies. Surgery is an extremely expensive alternative to prevention and provides much esteem and power to the individuals who perform them. Doctors do not want to give up their role as “ miracle w orker" and certainly there is more glamor in per­ forming a “ life saving” surgery than in counseling patients on life style and diet. For these reasons, and for many others, I seriously doubt whether medical colleges will incorporate nu­ trition (less than one hour average in national M .D . programs) or other individual oriented approaches into their curriculums in the near future. For this reason alone it is important that current level o f harrassmenl of my profession (Naturopathic M edi­ cine) as well as others be allowed to grow without harrassmenl in order to fill this important void in American care. N e x t w e a k : Conclusion on the medical quackery conference and lung cancer. Recently it was revealed that Stan Peters, Portland Police Union Pres­ ident, was paid $32,563 a year of which half ($16,281) came from the City o f Portland. However, he did not perform any duties for the City. • • • • . . • * i commended for having the political courage in ordering Peters to work for his City paycheck. Citizens o f the City should be out­ raged that Peters has been conducting Union business on City time with pay. It is not surprising that former Police Chief Ron Still relieved Peters of police duties in order for him to work full time for the union. Both former Chief Still and Peters believe that the public has no business questioning the actions o f the police department. Both men opposed Ballot Mesure 51, which was approved by voters to form a 12-person Audit Committee designed to review police handling of public complaints. Peters has used his position as Union president re­ peatedly to attack Ballot Measure 51. Citizens o f Portland shouldn't be asked to pay half o f Peters' salary as a lobbyist for the Police Union, espe­ cially when the majority o f the lobby­ ing is in the defense of officers in­ volved in criminal activities or acts of racism. The $16,281 that the City was pay­ ing Peters should be used to fund the Police Internal Investigations A u d it­ ing Committee. The Committee is grossly inadequate to hear appeals for the citizens who have complaints against the Portland Police Bureau. -a xrnCS xv * m r v A ■ ■