December 30, 2009 Page 5 ö'l’e IJortlanb (Obstruer Police Critic Runs for Council continued from page J opportunity to do the right thing. PO: You expressed interest in getting management o f the Police Bureau if elected. Usu­ ally this bureau has gone to the mayor. What if the mayor took it? JR : Mayor Sam Adams de­ cided last year that he was busy with other things, and found the person most willing and most reasonable to dot that task in Dan Saltzman. That has failed. I’m interested in it because o f my advocacy around the Chasse event. I'm interested in it be­ cause 1 think it's a very compli­ cated problem to solve. And it's a problem that no one on City Council knows how to solve, but 1 do. The issue isn't really the police union contract or rules or rules or laws. The question re­ ally is about post traumatic stress disorder and how do we get police officers who have a men­ tal illness helpand support to and get back to work. PO: Are you saying that the officers involved in the Chasse incident have PTSD? JR : Christopher Humphreys [an officer involved in the inci­ dent], coincident with the disci­ pline Saltzman imposed, filed a disability claim stating he had a stress-related disorder, which is labor parlance for an anxiety disorder that we would call in the psychiatric business a post-trau­ Tax Measures go to Voters More than 1.7 million Or­ egon voters' pamphlets have been delivered to post offices for delivery this week. The 92-page pamphlet con­ tains a total of 204 arguments for and against Measure 66 and Measure 67. Measure 66 raises the tax on household income o f $250,000 or more and individual income of$ 125,000. Measure 67 uses a sliding scale to raise the state's corpo­ rate minimum tax. The deadline for registering to vote in the Jan. 26 special election is Tuesday, Jan. 5. Ballots start going in the mai 1 on Friday, Jan. 8. Smart TV has Built-in PC A local entrepreneur has a new product to condense the num ber o f electronic gadgets consum ers have in their homes and put Portland on the map. Giorgio Johnson, chief ex­ ecutive officer o f Nyxio Tech­ nologies, is working on the VioSphere, which he described as a television with a built-in PC. It allows users to sim ulta­ neously surf the Internet and watch television on split screen, with capabilities for wireless connections, and a DVR drive. All o f it can be operated on a touch screen, m uch like an iPhone. “ It's one o f a kind,” said Johnson, a native o f Portland and graduate o f Benson High School. The V ioSphcre also lets people plug into Skype, a web- based application that works like a phone and is popular with people who want to talk over long distances, but not pay hefty phone fees. For many fam ilies, the tele­ vision is where they gather for theirnightly entertainment. But with the Internet, some family m em b e rs s e q u e s te r th e m ­ selves in their individual rooms. Johnson hopes that a devise that offers so many features will bring them back together. Johnson said that he has even b ig g er plans for the VioSphere. He hopes to launch an online video game network, with titles that can t be found anywhere else. Currently, he is using Port­ land as a test market. “ Portland is a family city, and it has a lot o f tech-savvy individuals,” he said. For more information, call Johnson at 503-290-9690. matic stress. This is a perma­ nent injury that has no cure. There are police officers all over the nation receiving treatment, including in the Portland Police Bureau. We need to start talking about how we can create a sup­ port structure so that they can talk about this openly. He had to hide it for months. He had to call it something that it's not. And when he was asked to come back from his first claim he ended up shooting a 12-year-old girl with a shotgun. PO: When Saltzman reversed himself on placing Humphreys on paid-leave, did he do the right thing? J R: The union's argument was that there should be an investi­ gation, that there should be a process. You can't just take an officer’s guns and badge away. Saltzman was clearly unfamiliar with the police union contract. He's clearly either incredibly poorly advised or pol itical ly pres­ sured. And both o f them are the wrong qualities to have in the person whose about to go and negotiate the contract with the police union. I expect that we're going to get taken to the clean­ ers. That's what this is about. PO: How can City Hall get people back to work? JR : I think the city can do a couple things. It can model and embrace diversity. 1 think that diversity is an economic issue as well as a cultural issue. And the city, by modeling that for the rest o f the community, brings people in and finds them positions of power and respect. I think Sam had a fascinating set of ideas in his campaign that he has since completely dropped around the creative capacity o f the city. Portland has transformed into a creative community not only of people who knit tea cozies, but people who design computer systems. W e're building an in­ tellectual capacity here, which is quite astounding and we need to look carefully at the inter­ ests and needs o f those people who come in here so that they stay. For a complete interview visit portlandobserver.com Wal-Mart Eyes Hayden Meadows Wal-Mart is going to give it another try in Portland. The mega-retailer announced plans last week to build a north Portland store near Delta Park where it could draw business from across the river in Vancouver. The 86,000-square-foot store would be among a number of big- box stores in the Hayden Mead­ ows area. Additionally, the com­ pany said it will expand its South­ east 82nd Avenue store to include groceries. Wal-Mart and Portland have held a contentious relationship. Twice in the past five years Wal- Mart has pulled back on proposed stores amid criticism from Sam Adams for its labor practices. Adams is now the city's mayor. “We are about neighbors helping neighbors improve their community." Mary Harrell at I'ricnds of Tree* 503 - j 8 j ■ 8846 www.FriendsofTrees.org F rie n d s 0 / Trees Ctrnwinq Healthy ('aaimamticA