http://www.portlandobserver.com Ebola Alert QR code for Portland Observer Online Volume XLIV ‘City of Roses’ ‘Dear White People’ In Oregon, flu considered more o f a risk Long awaited movie on being a black face in a white place See Local News, page 3 See Metro, page 11 vyww.portlandobserver.com Wednesday • October 22, 2014 a - Established in 1970 Committed to Cultural Diversity photo by community service C olin S taub /P ortland O bserver contributor Port/and State Universitystudent group representatives and a PSU professor are leading the opposition to a proposal to deputize campus police. Pictured (from left) are o f the Black s 'tu d e m U n io n '^ for Nonvlolence’ Tom Hastmgs o f PSU's conflict resolution program; Leona Kindermann o f the PSU Student Union; and Deyalo Bennette 9 , PSU Considers Armed Police Force Students and activists raise concerns as decision nears C olin S taub P ortland O bserver contributor by Portland State University could soon see the addition of armed police officers patrolling its campus. A deputized police force for Portland’s major university is a proposal that’s drawing fierce opposition from some PSU’s student groups, professors and civil rights activists, especially in the wake of the shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., as well as the history of numerous local Portland police shootings. PSU’s board of trustees, a citizen board which is in its first full year of governing the university, will soon vote on the plans. Last fall a task force assigned to study and make recom­ mendations on Campus police came to the conclusion that PSU needs fully-sworn police officers on campus. This could come about in two ways, said the task force: Either contract with an outside agency that can provide police officers, or transition PSU’s existing public safety office into a campus police department. The university initially reached out to the Oregon State Police, Portland Police and Oregon H ealth Science University’s new deputized police force. All three declined to contract out with PSU, so the university began to inves­ tigate deputizing its own public safety officers. A campus police force would have a number of effects. It would double the number of officers on campus to about 30 or roughly one officer per 1,000 students. It would cost the university roughly $ 1.5 million. If approved, the proposal would expand officers’ jurisdic­ tion, which is complicated on a large urban campus like PSU. The area encompassing the campus is made up of a combi­ nation of university-owned, public, and private property. Currently officers have jurisdiction limited to PSU property. “If there’s a fight outside the Cheerful Tortoise [a bar one block off PSU property], campus officers can’t intervene,” said Scott Gallagher, director of communications at PSU. “It’s kind of hard to say, ‘Hey, can we move this fight across the street so our officers can handle it?” ’ The move would expand officers’ authority, giving them the ability to apply for search warrants, hold people for mental health reasons, and cite people for violations. It would also arm campus police officers with firearms, which is one of the more controversial points of the issue. The task force cited a potential active shooter situation as a reason for arming campus police. The current public safety office “has no capacity to respond to and disrupt an active shooter and must rely on the response of the Portland Police Bureau,” said the task force. While campus officers generally have a response time of around two minutes, it can take Portland Police up to 20 minutes to respond, depending on prioritization, Gallagher said. A strong opponent to an armed police force on campus is Tom Hastings, a professor in PSU’s Conflict Resolution continued on page 20