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About The skanner. (Portland, Or.) 1975-2014 | View Entire Issue (May 23, 2012)
Local News Drugs ‘DiaTribe’ ing to a formula that sends percentages to: drug treatment; the state general fund; chil- dren’s relief nurseries; the asset forfeiture oversight fund; and for cleaning up drug houses. Law enforcement agencies can keep and use a portion of the assets seized. The report shows that in Oregon last year, $400,597 was distributed according to the formula. Drug courts, for example, received $204,000, and the state’s Children’s Relief Nursery Fund received $102,000. The remainder, $620,000 went to law this information. Gresham police and the Multnomah County Sheriff’s Office shared in the pro- ceeds of joint cases. Of the funds that stayed with the police department in 2010 and 2011, none has yet been spent, says Ryan Rees, a senior Police Administrative Support Specialist in the Records Department. “The PPB intends for all of these funds to go to a drug treatment program selected by the Chief,” Rees said. Sgt. Pete Simpson said the funds, which amount to $200,000, are ear- marked for the Service Coordination Program that works with long-term offenders. Until 2000, when Measure 3 passed, police departments could seize assets even when no arrest was made, and law enforcement kept forfeited assets. “The ACLU were pretty much the only opponents of the original law,” Fidanque says. “Allowing law enforcement to confis- cate property from individuals without requiring an arrest, never mind a conviction, was an invitation to corruption.” Marijuana accounted for the largest num- ber of drug seizures, with methamphetamine, heroin and cocaine next in number. Possession charges topped the list of arrests, with delivery and manufac- ture of of drugs accounting for the most of the rest. Marijuana accounted for the largest number of drug seizures enforcement agencies across the state. The agencies must report how they spend the money, and it varies from agency to agency. Portland Police Kept $300,000 More than $300,000 ended up with Port- land Police Department, while $25,000 went to the Multnomah County Sheriff’s Office. Portland police took 33.3 percent off the top for attorney fees. That suggests that more than $100,000 went straight to the pri- vate forfeiture attorney who handles forfeiture cases for the City Attorney’s office. And it included a share of the value of two cars that PPD is now using in their investigations. Ellen Osoinach, an assistant attorney with the city did not know the total for 2011. The Skanner News has requested The Feds Play by Different Rules Federal law mandates all of the proceeds of federal forfeitures to go to law enforce- ment. “There has been some abuse,” Fidanque PHOTO COURTESY ALAN WONE continued from page 1 An historic performance event this Friday, “DiaTribe: From the Village to the Streets,” is a cultural collaboration between African and African American hip-hop, drumming, dance, krumping and spoken word artists from around the region. The event is headed up by Ghanaian master drummer Obo Addy, recording artist Mic Crenshaw, and poet Alan Wone, who will appear alongside a large cast of musicians, dancers and singers. Above, Obo Addy, at left, samples a Ghanian-style krump for fellow performers in rehearsal. The show will be recorded for a documentary project and then distributed around the country as an educational curriculum about the connections between African and African American culture. The event is Friday, May 25, starting at 7:30 p.m. at the Alberta Rose Theater, 3000 NE Alberta Street, Portland. Find more information on the Facebook fan page, DiaTribe: From The Village To The Street. says, ”but the reason there hasn’t been more is that federal agencies are focusing for the most part on organized crime, cocaine, heroin and international drug trafficking. “They aren’t interested in what the bulk of state and local government do –going after the low-level drug dealers,” Fidanque says. amendment on the floor on May 30 to get to $4.8 million. “My initial sense is that there is broad support in the building for this,” Fish said. “The mayor is to be applauded for a fourth straight year where he has funded safety net programs,” Fish said. “My job is just to close the gap.” Matheson and Fish both praised the grassroots campaign by a wide Fish spectrum of housing advocates to present a united front for funding in this budget cycle. The groups’ campaign made a visible splash on Facebook, where supporters were encouraged to take a photo of themselves holding up the same sign, which reads: “I Support the Portland Safety Net,” and then post it to Facebook. “And so what’s been great about that cam- paign is that all the different housing advocates are coming out with the same message which is — support the safety net,” Matheson said. “So you have shelter folks coming out and saying, support homeownership. You have rent assistance folks saying, support fore- closure prevention, and vice versa.” “We’ve heard from all of our partners over the last month as part of the Safety Net Coalition,” Fish said. “They’ve been enormously effective in meeting with the mayor and my colleagues, sending messages, appearing at budget forums and in council presentations. “If we get to $4.8 million, and I am confi- dent that we will do so, it will be in part a function of a very successful campaign that the advocacy community has led,” Fish said. “And this will be the fourth year that my partners have I think very successfully made the argument for investing in safety net programs.” In an effort to preserve the school’s history, The Skanner News is working to digitize hundreds of photos gath- ered up by the school staff and supporters, which will be organized into a series of slide shows, videos and interviews kept on the newspaper’s website for years to come. However one problem is that the school has no images from the decade of the 1960s. So we are calling out to school sup- porters, family and students to contact us for scanning of your images from that decade. Class photos are sought, plus any snap- shots of school activities, including teachers, classrooms and field trips. Please contact Lisa Loving at 503-285- 5555, or email lisa@theskanner.com with your historic images of Humboldt School. In case you haven’t been there in awhile, it’s located at 4915 North Gantenbein Ave., in Portland. For more information about Humboldt’s closure ceremonies call the school at 503- 916-5468. Read the rest of this story online at www.theskanner.com Budget continued from page 1 Part of a proposed $4.8 million budget for “housing safety net” programs and services overall, the cuts came in Mayor Sam Adams “Proposed Budget,” released last week. But the way the budget process works involves a level of give-and-take, Fish says, and he and his staff are waiting for a look at the mayor’s “Revised Pro- posed” Budget, due out later this week, to see the status of the short- fall. “We originally made a request for $4.8 million, which we say funds the safety net,” Fish said. “So that covers the home- ownership programs, foreclosure prevention, emergency shelters, homeless street outreach, short term rent assistance, and a number of other tools. “The strategy was to get the biggest amount of money we could get in the mayor’s budget and then close the gap,” he said. According to Fish, as each bureau was asked by Adams to suggest a range of pro- gram reductions – assuming budget cuts of 4, 6, and 8 percent – the mayor’s move to bail out Portland Public Schools with $7 million earlier this month “created a slight- ly bigger hole.” My job is just to close the gap. --City Commissioner Nick “So we have essentially three bites at the apple,” Fish said. “The goal was to get the biggest possible number in the ‘Mayor’s Proposed,’ and I believe his $4.1 million number in a tough budget year was a strong number. “Our current strategy is to find the addi- tional $700,000 and include that in the mayor’s ‘Revised Proposed,’ and if we are still not able to close the gap, I will bring an School continued from page 1 formance by the school’s signature Char- gettes all-girl dance team. Then from 6 to 8 p.m. the school is throwing a Community Carnival, offer- ing food, games, music and fun for the general public. All children must be accompanied by adults. “We want to make it a positive celebra- tion,” Poinsette said. “When you think of how many wonderful things have taken place in this building, we want to capture some part of that for our community.” Poinsette – who will herself be retiring this year after 45 years as an educator – has Class photos are sought, plus any snapshots of school activities, including teachers, classrooms and field trips been working overtime to coordinate dozens of parents and school alumni in building Humboldt School’s legacy for the many thousands of children who have passed through its doors. May 23, 2012 The Portland Skanner Page 3