August 22, 2018 Page 15 Focused on Issues C ontinueD from P age 4 be just 10 percent of what the city currently spends on their handling of homeless people using police, Hardesty said, and was inspired by similar programs that have tak- en place in other cities. “If we allowed people to self-manage themselves, we’d have a whole lot less trash, and we’d have a whole lot less com- plaints from other community members. Everybody needs a safe, affordable place to lay their head at night,” Hardesty said. Hardesty also supports rent control, tenant protections, res- ident relocation assistance, and working with realtors to create housing options at all income lev- els. In addition, she wants to nix monthly pet rental fees for hous- ing. She called the current state of Portland’s law enforcement record involving homeless people “inhu- mane,” citing a recent report that stated over half of all arrests by city police last year were of home- less people. Hardesty is calling for sweep- ing changes in Portland’s law enforcement policies in light of officer-involved fatal shootings of people with mental illnesses in recent years, including using fire- fighters as responders to those ex- periencing a mental health emer- gency. “The police are way out of their lane,” she said. “‘I don’t know about you, but when I see fire- fighters running up the step, help is on its way. And they have nev- er killed one person because they didn’t do what they told them to do.” She also criticized police’s profiling of African Americans through the guise of gang enforce- ment, as was recently revealed to have occurred in an independent police review by the dispropor- tionate number of traffic stops they performed, which resulted in few gang-members being appre- hended, Hardesty said. “I think it’s the community’s responsibility to decide how they want to be policed and it is the po- lice department’s job to be respon- sive to communities’ needs. And I look forward to working with Chief Outlaw to fundamentally change how we do policing in the city of Portland,” she added. Hardesty also derided police crowd control tactics used earlier this month during a right-wing and counter left-wing counter-demon- stration, downtown, in which flash-bang grenades were used to subdue counter-demonstrators and injured some of them. She sug- gested removing “war weapons,” from police such as the offending flash-bang grenades, which were temporarily suspended by police from their arsenal, after the recent protest. A top-to-bottom audit of the police department, pulling out of a federal law enforcement partner- ship, and providing more funding for 9-11 responders are also on her agenda. She said she also wants to re-train 9-11 responders so that they can differentiate between “a real She and the other demonstrators were barricaded from City Hall by riot police. Hardesty eventual- ly made her way inside, but said she discovered later that if just one city council member had opposed the barricade, it could have been dissolved. That’s when she knew she had to run, she said. “I went to Dan [Saltzman] and looked him in his eye and as a board member of the NARAL Pro-Choice Political Action Com- mittee and the housing non-profit Human Solutions, among several other advocate organizations. Though she did not raise the most money of all the candidates in a crowded primary, she did have the largest number of indi- vidual donors, over 1,200, who contributed “from $5 to $5,000” with the largest being from her ex- mother-in-law, Hardesty said. She scored a dramatic 20-point victory over Smith, her closest opponent. answer that doesn’t sound flip. For example, I got in trouble earlier on because I called some people idi- ots because they thought that us- ing a jail for houseless people was a good approach,” Hardesty said, referencing her disagreement with her opponent, Loretta Smith, who said she supported re-purposing the unused Wapato Jail in north Portland as a homeless shelter. In the historic election that will seat Portland’s first black fe- male city council member, I asked Hardesty her thoughts on being a by D anny P eterson /t he P ortlanD o bserver Portland City Council candidate Jo Ann Hardesty (center) meets with her volunteers and poses for a campaign photo Saturday during door-to-door canvassing in southeast Portland. The longtime Portland activist and former state legislator uses a grass-roots style as her main campaign strategy. crime in progress and houseless people who are an inconvenience in [the caller’s] neighborhood.” On the matter of preventative mental health care, Hardesty said she’d like to work with state and county agencies to increase the number of mental health providers “so that people have choices avail- able in their local community.” Hardesty said she was inspired to run for the City Council back in 2016 during a public protest over police union contract negotiations under then-Mayor Charlie Hales. said ‘Dan, you’ve been here too long and I’m going to run against you.’” Two weeks later, Saltzman re- tired, she said. Building coalitions of people to back a cause is the basis of Hard- esty’s political experience and foundation to her current cam- paign. Besides leading the Port- land NAACP, she was executive director of the nonprofit Oregon Action and currently serves on the executive committee of the Albina Ministerial Alliance, and When asked how she would toe the line between being a public official and an activist, Hardesty responded that her activism back- ground helped inform her time as a state legislator, and expects the same this time around, too. “I don’t think an activist and policymaker are mutually exclu- sive. I think you can be both.” When asked whether anything about her campaign or herself could’ve been improved, she re- sponded: “Sometimes I probably don’t take time to not provide an role model for others. “I hope somebody sees a work- ing class person could have a cam- paign that was people-focused and have people give them money and support them, not because they were rich, connected, special in any way, just someone who did the hard work of doing the things that the community needed done. And so if I’m going to be a role model, I hope that’s the role model. But I don’t want anybody to think that I think I’m perfect, ‘cause I am very flawed.”