Poca 1 Apartheid veto I Page 10 St. Johns landfill Alberta Street Page 3 Page 2 PORTLAND OBSERVER 2: Jhr z«M Harrington under fire again over police actions Harrington noted and responded to those who regard the police as op­ pressors. "W e will always have the image of being the oppressor because we are the visible symbols of government. However, we can make certain that officers understand the people they are policing," Harrington added. Although she is a 21 -year veteran to Latvia Duke GRASSROOT NEWS, N W . — Poke Chief Penny Harrington has liad one turbulent breaking-in as her new administration met crisis after crisis in its first 90 days. This latest tragedy involving the death of a mentally impaired adult and an innocent 86-year-old woman illustrates the lack o f a police pro­ cedures to deal effectively with men­ tally ill adults who become violent. But Harrington inherited a police bureaucracy without these proced­ ures. She is and wants to be held ac­ countable for the actions or non­ actions of her predecessors " I accept a certain amount of re- sponsibility as I try to find out what’s wrong and correct it. Blaming the prior administration does not accom­ plish anything," she noted. Harrington was hired by a mayor whom the rank and file of the police bureau did not endorse. And Mayor Bud C lark’s citizenry approach to government runs counter to the lead­ ership style officers had become ac­ customed to. “ 1 have to do w hat’s right overall for the City. Officers feel that I should come down on the side that’s of the bureau, Harrington said she had not worked with a lot o f the rank and file. Has she experienced any sexism during these last few months? “ I experienced some sexism from some people. Some of them find it very difficult to work for a w om an." replied Harrington. Beyond her sex, Harrington has implemented personnel changes that created resentment among some o ffi­ cers when she transferred Vice and Intelligence to detectives. "Those o f­ ficers were unhappy because they were put back out in u nifo rm ," said Bud Clark and Panny Harrington addraaa City Hall m wtlng oest for the bureau. I understand their sentiments. But they have to under stand their needs are second to the needs of the City as a whole.” Har nngton added. She said she believes the resent­ ment to (his new administrative atti­ tude and leadership style will dissipate People question police actions (Photo: Kristina Altuchsr) with time. " In time they will see it’s good to (wve citizens come in and help us. It will create more support for them,” G R A SSR O O T N E W S , N .W . Mental Health Service delivery in Multnomah County is "schizophren­ ic” and mental health providers are “ paranoid " Tommy Graves, the mentally im ­ paired adult who snapped July 6, causing the death of an innocent 86 year-old woman and himself, was one of many mentally ill patients who fall through the holes in the current men tai health system. Graves was going through a revolv­ ing door of involuntary commitment proceedings, the state mental hospital and the community. His case high lights what the community and the patients have suffered in the state’s rush to deinstitutionalize mental G R A S S R O O T N E W S , N .W . - More than 300 Portlanders attended a Black United Front community meeting July 10th. The meeting was attended by Police Chief Penny H a r­ rington and M ayor Bud Clark to question and probe and advance recommendations to avoid police actions that result in the death of Afro-Americans in tlic Afro-Amencan community. Questions sometimes were politely combative while others were state­ ments regarding attitudes of officers who patrol Northeast Portland. The Graves/Tate deaths occurred on the heels of the Tony Stevenson tragedy. hi which an officer applied a sleeper hold resulting in his death. Graves was a mentally impaired adult who became violent. Tate was the innocent hostage Both were shot by police One participant stated, " I'm con­ cerned about recent events. M y chil­ dren no longer look at police as pro­ tectors They are regarded as the oppressor." Harrington withstood the sharp­ ness o f their questions and endured boos only once when residents re­ sponded to an answer regarding Mrs. Tate, an 86-year-old woman Ron Herndon addraaaM com­ munity mooting. (Photo: Kriatina Ahuchar) Woman asks question at community masting. (Photo: Kristina Ahuchar) Harrington indicated that after the officer shot her, thinking it was Graves and violent. Herndon also questioned the quali­ fications o f one o f Graves’ negotia­ tors. R. L. Anderson. When Harring­ ton called him a "Reverend," a choir o f chuckles arose from the audience. It has been reported that Anderson just walked upon the scene without prior knowledge o f Graves or the Tate family Other recommendations advanced by the audience were: — More cultural training for officers. — More respect o f the Black com­ munity by police — A change in police attitudes. — M ore police accountability to the community for their behavior while on duty. — Annual psychological tests on officers. — Involvement and input into the budget advisory committee o f the police bureau. — More effective implementation o f existing police procedures. — A police block home in every neighborhood — More money for mental health — Better training for officers. Harrington received a standing ovation and M ayor Bud Clark sat quietly writing down comments from participants. [wired when they become threatening retreating out the back door, he thought he heard her moan " I can't tell you what’s inside the officer's head. I can only tell you what he thought he saw And he thought he saw Graves coming out the back d oo r," responded Harnng ton to a question regarding the physi­ cal differences between an 86-year old woman and a 37-yeai-old man Other questions from the audience related to differences in police re­ sponse in the Black community. W hy did officers not move in on Graves earlier and why were back-up lights not available? Harrington said she was not in tlie position nor did she have the infor­ mation to compare police respouses. She said officers on the scene thought they could disarm and control Graves, and any type o f lighting aggravated Graves and made officers targets. Ronnie Herndon, co-chair o f the BUF, gathered recommendations from the audience The B U F said the Graves/Tate incident highlighted the need for more Black officers. The Front requested a national blue rib­ bon panel to review Portland police procedures and policies. They aLso called for the city and the police to meet and formulate procedures on how to deal with the mentally im- pie to make good decisions." she said Among the initial puxedural changes Harrington has implemented since the Graves situation is to dispatch the Special Emergency Response Team (SER T) every time the hostage nego­ tiation team is called. Also, Harnng ton will bring back Night Com manders. She plans to get an outside, p ro fessional opinion o f S E R T proce durals after the Graves incident. " I wonder why it took them (SER T) un til 5 a m. to find Graves’ body. And why they didn’t get Mrs. Tate's body o ff the porch sooner," Harrington added. Among the recommendations ad­ vanced by the community last Wed nesday at a Black United Front com munity meeting was one dealing with establishing a Black home for o ffi­ cers in each neighborhood. "T here’ will be people in the community that they know. And the message will be that Portland Police Officers arc dedi­ cated professionals trying to help people." Harrington concluded Mental Health Service delivery crazy by la m ia Duke by Lam ia Duke Harrington. But this rank and file disapproval o f her leadership is not perceived as mutiny. “ The good thing about a paramilitary organization is when you give orders they are followed I don’t like to give orders. I hope to get peo pie to want to do things my way with out being told. W e want to train peo patients. In 1962 Oregon passed community mental health care legislation and in 1973 they passed legislation that en­ couraged counties to have community mental health programs. In 1981 the legislature passed a Mental Health Service Act which targeted the chron­ ically mentally disabled population. Multnomah County participated in the Dam mash Bed Reduction (D B R ) project which reduced the population at the state hospital. W hile all this transition was occurring, the County subcontracted all programs to private non-profit agencies. There are four core service agencies who provide medication and case management, crisis service and residential case man­ agement. In Northeast Portland the agency is North/Northeast Comm un­ ity Mental Health, Inc. But it’s the city and the community who bore the brunt of the question­ able effectiveness o f private com­ munity mental health agencies. For­ mer institutionalized patients walk the street, live under bridges, eat out o f garbage cans and engage in a va­ riety o f irrational behavior in the urban area In and out, up and down Graves recently was released from Holiday P v k Hospital’s psychiatric ward, but he’s a statistic when it comes to the recidivism of mentally ill adults who go through Oregon's com­ mitment process Most commitment proceedings are initiated by police officers, as in Graves’ case, and signed by a hospital physician. The alleged mentally ill person is detained until released or taken to the hearing. Multnomah County Judge W illiam S. M clen n an has presided over com­ mitment hearings for 12 years. He conducts an average of 600 commit­ ment hearings per year. He said evidence constraints and limitations in the system prevent him from getting information to make an informed decision “ When these people come back three or four times, I cannot look at their file from past commitment hear ings Because o f the patient/physician privilege I can’t find out how the person behaved while hospitalized. I can’t get husband and wife to testify And I don't think those rules should apply in these hearings,” said M c­ Lennan. He also added that the District A t­ torney is required by law to assist him "But the D .A . refuses. I have no way of finding out what's in these cases until the hearing is conducted," McLennan said, and since the D .A refuses to help, there is no way to subpoena witnesses. “ The D A . said these kinds o f cases are not impor­ tan t," he added. Deinstitutionalization was created on the premise that mentally ill adults would continue on their medication to control their thoughts and behavior "B ut the people feel better, so they stop taking their medication. When this happens they wind up here,” Me fe n nan noted. When clients refuse or discontinue their medication, or when they mix their medication with drugs or al­ cohol, they "decompensate," or go off. InvarM relationships Michael Benjamin, Executive D i­ rector o f N o rth /N E. Community Mental Health, said they are between a rock and a hard place when it comes to servicing clients whom they are funded to serve. The County required these mental health providers to terminate clients who do not meet new eligibility re­ quirements So his agency services a more severely disabled population with limited funds and questionable follow-up. One observer, who asked not to be identified, said N /N E docs not pro­ vide leadership when it comes to serv­ icing this population. " I f they liave a good case manager, the patient gets excellent care But if not, the patient Is rarely seen or followed up. I t ’s a 40/40 proposition and the real losers are the patients." Sharon Slattery, director o f the Mental Health Association, said there Is little accountability when it comes to these private agencies Her obser­ vations were also echoed in an audit of Mental and Emotional Disabilities Residential services conducted by the county auditor. The auditor found a lack of clear management objectives, fragmented residential services and no long-term strategy. ALso, investigators from N /N E are required to make a recommenda­ tion regarding the mental state of those involved in commitment hear­ ings. But every time a patient goes back to the state hospital, the agency loses dollars. "Rather than send them back, the iwtient drops out until they become dangerous and the police have them commited. the incentive is to keep them out of the hospital and it’s their investigator who makes that decision to commit or not to com m it,” Slat­ tery added. She called residential care facilities a "lan d fill.” ’ T h e y take their money and food stamps. There are no laws on upkeep, or accountability. And there is very little monitoring done So, we have moved patients from a horrible hos pital into a horrible com m unity," Continued on Page 2, Column 6) Correction: In the July 10th headline we said ‘ ‘8.1-year-old woman murdered by police.” It should have read: ‘ ‘86-year-old woman shot by police.”