April 19, 2017 The Page 3 INSIDE Week in Review O PINION This page Sponsored by: page 2 pages 6-7 A TriMet photo shows transit police at the Rose Quarter. TriMet Budget Battle Advocates oppose new transit precinct by Z achary s enn t he p ortland o bserver Advocates for low-income, transit-dependent communities are challenging TriMet’s budget priorities, arguing that an added emphasis on policing comes at the expense of efforts to make public transportation more affordable to riders. OPAL Environmental Justice Oregon and Bus Riders Unite oppose the transit agency plans to spend $11 million for the con- struction of a new transit police facility in northeast Portland and an additional $1.6 million to sup- port transit police and security op- erations. “Bus riders need more accessi- ble, affordable transportation, not more racist policing on our bus- es!” OPAL declared in a commu- nity alert last week. “Given the current political cli- mate, it’s a bad time to be putting more vulnerable populations un- der a microscope,” Shawn Fleek, pages 8-10 Arts & ENTERTAINMENT M ETRO C LASSIFIEDS C ALENDAR page 11 pages 14 page 15 the community engagement coor- dinator at OPAL, told the Portland Observer. A recent study by the Port- land State University Criminal Justice Police Research Institute found that racial disparities in fare enforcement were a fact at TriMet. While no explicit racial bias practice was found, black riders, for example, were more likely to receive harsher penal- ties for fare evasion, such as ex- clusions, which bans riders from the TriMet system for up to 90 days. Currently, TriMet transit police are made up of officers from 15 lo- cal law enforcement agencies. The officers are supplemented by a team of civilian fare enforcement supervisors. The budget increase for the fiscal year starting July 1 would cover the cost of moving one of TriMet’s four transit precincts, from inside a parking structure at Old Town to a larger parking facil- ity that’s being planned for a new convention hotel serving the Rose Quarter and Oregon Convention Center. TriMet says that over the long run, the move will save them mon- ey, as the agency will be purchas- ing the space instead of renting it. Included are plans for two to three holding cells, and a space that officers can use to interrogate detainees. Roberta Aldstadt, TriMet’s me- dia relations and communications manager, says previous attempts to call the new facility a jail are misconstrued. Aldstadt says the current Old Town precinct already has two detention rooms. In addition, she says, additional space for the east- side location will mark no sub- stantial shift in transit police pro- cedures or policies. The current location poses op- erational challenges and the added emphasis on policing is meant to help both riders and operators feel safe, she says. “Anybody that’s riding the sys- tem will tell you that it’s beneficial to have police nearby when an in- cident occurs,” Aldstadt explains. “There are some issues with the facility itself, such as water intru- sion… Also, the parking is ex- tremely limited.” Fleek argues that increasing c ontinued on p age 5 Community Forum on Gun Violence A free community forum ad- dressing gun violence as a public health issue will be held Saturday, April 22 at the Highland Christian Center at 7600 N.E. Glisan St. Sponsored by Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland State University and the OHSU- PSU School of Public Health, the session will begin at 10 a.m. and run until 3 p.m. It will offer families and individuals directly impacted by violence, as well as community members interested in making a difference, a safe venue to collaborate on ideas to reduce gun violence and address the so- cial and society conditions that contribute to it. For more information or to reg- ister, visit ohsu.edu/standtogether.