Page 6 February 10, 2021 Vaccine Signups Outrun Supply Officials Respond to Spike in Shootings C onTinued from P age 3 cine rollout — overwhelming the hotline. Health officials have encour- aged Oregonians to text, call or email 211 or 1-866-698-6155 for information about receiving the vaccine. People can also text ORCOVID to 898211 to receive updates. On Monday, the health au- thority launched an online tool, getvaccinated.oregon.gov, where caregivers or family members of Oregon seniors can go to help their elderly family member sign up for a vaccine. Elderly people living in Clack- amas, Columbia, Marion, Mult- nomah or Washington counties are urged to use the state’s vaccine information chat bot tool, on the oregon.gov website, to schedule vaccine appointments. Along with mass vaccination sites, vaccines will also be ad- ministered to local practices and public health facilities, drive-th- ru centers, mobile sites and 133 pharmacies across the state. “In coming days, we know there will be more demand for vaccinations and for answers to questions than we may be able to provide,” Oregon Health Author- ity Director Patrick Allen said Monday. “My promise to older Oregonians is this: if you want a vaccination, you will get one. But it may not be tomorrow, this week or even two weeks from now. But you will get one.” C onTinued from P age 3 Council getting rid of the Gun Violence Reduction Team axed last year under criticism it target- ed Black men. Lovell said he be- lieves it helped prevent shootings. Wheeler said he supports creating the new 24-hour, sev- en-day-a-week Portland police team led by a sergeant with four officers and two detectives to re- spond to shootings. His remarks came more than a month after in Elevating Justice Portland C onTinued from f ronT Advertise with diversity in The Portland Observer Call 503-288-0033 email ads@portlandobserver.com Schmidt said there has been progress in civil rights, but that we still have a long way to go. He pointed to work he had with lead- ers like the late state Sen. Jackie Winters, a Black representative from Salem who built her roots in business fin Portland, to look for solutions to systemic racism. “This summer drove home for me the fierce urgency we all need to feel around this work, but there is more left to do,” he said. Schmidt, who served as a depu- ty district attorney in Multnomah County for 12 years before tak- ing on the top job and served as executive director of the Oregon Criminal Justice Commission, said Conviction Integrity Units are being used in 45 jurisdictions across the country to improve ra- cial justice outcomes. According a draft proposal for its creation here, “CIUs are well-established vehicles for re- viewing and, when necessary and appropriate, seeking to overturn convictions when there is evi- dence of actual innocence, pros- ecutor or law enforcement mis- conduct, or other considerations that undermine the integrity of the conviction.” The CIU as Schmidt proposes will add a deputy DA to work on questionable convictions, and a second one to work on expung- ing records of eligible people and look at fine and fee forgiveness where appropriate. Schmidt said the unit will also pursue legislative changes to al- low petitions to bring people back to court for re-sentencing, allowing the accused to have their sentences reviewed “when they are no longer necessary for public safety and are needlessly long or punitive.” The proposal also includes hir- ing one paralegal and bringing in law students to help with the extra work, as the draft proposal states, “to promote the concept that the work of pursuing justice for a prosecutor does not stop at sentencing, but continues on in the pursuit of maximizing legiti- macy for public safety.” Schmidt said he is also work- ing with Portland Police Chief Chuck Lovell to look at ways to make the criminal justice system more accountable. “I want to build trust and ac- countability in the system beyond a conviction and a sentence,” he said. But that doesn’t mean Schmidt is soft on crime. “No amount of property dam- age or violence is acceptable,” he said. Schmidt is also concerned with excessive juvenile incarceration, pointing to the negative impacts of mandatory sentencing laws as another impetus for the creation of the Conviction Integrity Unit. In his election acceptance speech, he referred to a clemency petition from a young man who committed armed robbery as a Lovell proposed such a team. The city recorded 55 ho- micides in 2020, the highest number in 26 years. Forty-one of those resulted from gun vio- lence. Police efforts to stem the vi- olence have also been hampered by the loss of 100 officers who have left the Portland Police Bu- reau over the past year. Most of the officer retired and have not been replaced. The department has about 900 officers. teenager, and who in the many years since has completed every rehabilitation program available to him. It pointed to someone that will have to spend the last months of his incarceration in an adult prison under current laws, which Schmidt says is just wrong. He went on to say “Multiple studies have shown that a juve- nile who enters the adult system is immediately vulnerable to violence and pro-criminal peer pressure. For this young man, the sentence not only fails to fit the crime, it may make us all less safe.” Schmidt said that before go- ing to law school, he taught high school in New Orleans for two years and observed the “school- to-prison pipeline” first-hand, which opened his eyes and ex- panded his perspective on justice issues. According to the Annie E. Ca- sey Foundation, there are 60,000 young people sent to jail by ju- venile courts, with nearly half in long-term correctional facilities. “There’s compelling evidence that locking up low-risk youth offenders doesn’t reduce further offences,” the foundation web- site states. “It wastes taxpayer dollars, and exposes young peo- ple to high levels of violence and abuse.” Because studies show that Black children and other chil- dren of color are more likely to be disciplined and expelled from school, they become fodder for the prison pipeline. According to the Equal Justice Initiative, as of 2015, African American young people comprised 44 percent of juvenile prison populations, while they are only 16 percent in the general population. “New Orleans it was very eye-opening, to see that crimi- nal justice system, and growing up, what it meant for me — a white kid in upstate New York — not getting worked up about the principal calling police on me,” Schmidt said. “It was just deten- tion.”