March 22, 2017 The Skanner Page 3 News cont’d from pg 1 ties to learn and grow. Gardner thinks of her- self as a curator of the station’s television pro- gramming — researching new shows from PBS and the British Broadcasting Corporation and decid- ing what the station will move with in the coming months. That affords her the chance to get a sneak peek at upcoming pro- gramming and develop a sense of what audiences will respond to. “Television is chang- ing. We all know that. People have DVRs that didn’t exist even 10 years ago. People can watch new shows on their iP- hones,” Gardner said. “Downton Abbey,” the period drama that aired on the BBC and became a surprise hit with U.S. au- diences after PBS picked it up a year later, devel- “ think 70- or 80-year olds just want to sit in a rock- ing chair. I’ve found, es- pecially in Oregon, a lot don’t want to do that,” Gardner said. Oregon’s seniors are more active than senior’s elsewhere, and OPB’s television audience is younger: 55, compared to the national average of 65, according to Gardner. She attributes that to Oregon’s culture and the fact that Portland’s larg- est employers are en- gaged in technology and scientific research. Bass said Oregon’s au- diences are unique, but Gardner’s also unique- ly talented at engaging them. “We’ve got really wonderful audiences who tend to be abnormal- ly interested in the world around them,” Bass told The Skanner. “I think a lesser person wouldn’t At previous jobs, I’d learn ev- erything there was to learn and then I’d be bored oped a following in part due to word of mouth and social media buzz. But in order for that to happen, Gardner said, someone had to make the call to make the show available to audiences in the first place. The downside of the job: dealing with the fall- out from unpopular de- cisions. “The Lawrence Welk Show” ran from 1955 to 1971 on ABC, but its reruns were a staple on many public televi- sion stations throughout the country, including OPB — until 2010, when Mary pulled the musical variety show from the station’s schedule. The move wasn’t pop- ular with all audiences, and the station got nega- tive feedback for weeks, Gardner said. But she also said she routinely encounters people, in- cluding senior citizens — who make up the show’s putative audience — who thank her for making that call. “I think a lot of people Shooting be able to take advantage of that in the way she has.” Gardner spoke with The Skanner just days be- fore President Trump re- leased a proposed budget calling to eliminate fund- ing for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, raising questions about the survival of public broadcasting in general and OPB in particular. According to Bass, OPB receives 8 to 9 percent of its funding from CPB cof- fers, with the rest coming from member contribu- tions and private under- writing. That puts it in a better place than other local stations, which may draw as much as 30 per- cent of funding from the federal government — and many of those are in rural areas. But CPB does provide startup funds for some local programs, like OPB’s “Earth Fix,” which is now self-sus- taining, he said. Read the rest of this story at TheSkanner.com PHOTO BY SUSAN FRIED Gardner Eviction of Omari Tahir-Garrett Longtime Central District activist Omari Tahir-Garrett, joined by Seattle City Council member Kshama Sawant, gives a statement outside the Umoja PEACE Center on March 16 after the Center was cleared out and he was evicted from the property. The property in the Central District where the Umoja Peace Center is located has come to represent the continued gentrification of what was once a  predominantly black neighborhood, and Tahir-Garrett’s eviction has been the focal point of numerous protests in recent weeks. “Nothing demonstrates the unacceptable impacts of gentrification and defacto redlining taking place in Seattle like the eviction of the Umoja PEACE Center, Black Dot, and the other centers for culture and organizing in Seattle’s historically black Central District,” Sawant said. MCDC cont’d from pg 1 sent 19 to 20 percent of those in jail, and 41 percent of those with mental illness, according to one sample. Due to DRO’s status as the pro- tection and advocacy service for Oregon, its attorney Sarah Rad- cliffe gained access to the jail’s incident reports and medical re- cords, as well as conducted inter- views with staff members of the sheriff ’s office and 45 inmates. While the organization has monitored several statewide county jails, Radcliffe said MCDC raised some serious red flags during her routine visit. For example, inmates are seg- regated based on mental health severity; the more severe, the less out-of-cell time the inmate gets. This means continual solitary confinement. Numerous inter- views with inmates revealed that many spent three to 12 months without fresh air. “From a legal perspective, that’s low-hanging fruit,” said Radcliffe. “It’s clearly illegal to do that.” Furthermore, staff deputies have not received de-escalation or crisis intervention training. Instead, they fall back on correc- tional tools, which do not equip them to deal with mental illness. In a formal response to DRO’s report, Sheriff Mike Reese expressed his willingness to “strengthen support” for those in custody that suffer from mental illness. Solitary confinement, restraints and use of force While MCDC holds one-third of the county’s jailed population, it accounts for 83 percent of in- cidents involving force against a detainee. “ force, and almost twice as likely to be “voluntarily” restrained,” reads the report. DRO found that suicide watch is generally more agonizing than punitive recourse, as inmates are stripped of their personal be- longings, mattress and blankets, and are forced to dress in only a heavy smock. They are denied Once incarcerated, Black detainees appear almost twice as likely to disci- plined, twice as likely to be subjected to physical force, and almost twice as like- ly to be “voluntarily” restrained That’s likely because “solitary confinement drives adverse events,” a consultant of Sheriff Reese was quoted as saying in the report. In other words, the more one is subjected to solitary confine- ment, the more one’s behavioral health slips — prompting agita- tion, violence and confrontations with staff, which is then met with more solitary confinement, re- straints and force, and so on. For African American detain- ees it’s much worse. “Once incarcerated, Black de- tainees appear almost twice as likely to disciplined, twice as likely to be subjected to physical visits, phone calls and showers. One inmate, referred to Mr. Clifton in the report, suffers from serious psychosis and was placed on suicide watch. After his soap, book and mattress were removed, Clifton grew exceedingly upset. When he tried to run, guards used a taser on him and carried him back to the cell, where he be- gan to bang his head against the floor. A deputy straddled Clifton and forced him into a restraint chair, where he remained for over six hours. Read the full story and view PHOTOS at TheSkanner.com cont’d from pg 1 Hayes’ autopsy showed he was shot three times, twice in the torso and once in the head, and that he had cocaine, benzodiazepine and hydrocodone in his system at the time of his death. The press release says officers en- countered Hayes after responding to three separate 9-1-1 calls about inci- dents near the intersection of North- east 82nd Avenue and Tillamook: a gunpoint robbery, a car prowl and a home invasion. All callers described the suspect as a young African Ameri- can man. Police say officers encountered Hayes at a residence in the area and, after or- dering him to crawl out of an alcove between the garage and home, and that he made “repeated and deliberate mo- “ replica. The case will be subject to an internal review and will go before the Police Review Board. [The press release] does not say whether Hayes drew a replica firearm that was found next to Hayes on the scene tions with his hands to the area of his waistband and pockets,” at which point Hayes fired. It does not say whether Hayes drew a replica firearm that was found next to Hayes on the scene, but does say an Oregon state crime lab in- vestigation showed Hayes’ DNA on the Hearst was also involved in the fatal shooting of Merle Hatch in the parking lot of Adventist Hospital. The same day Hayes was killed, offi- cers fired at and wounded 56-year-old Don Perkins in southeast Portland. Per- kins, a White man in apparent mental health crisis, survived the altercation; last week a Grand Jury also found of- ficers justified in their use of force against him. Don’t Shoot Portland and Hayes’ fam- ily held a press conference Wednes- day to address the decision not to in- dict Hearst, and to seek Grand Jury transcripts and all evidence related to Hayes’ death. Hayes’ memorial service will take place at 2 p.m. Friday at Em- manuel Church of God In Christ Unit- ed, 4800 NE 30th Ave. Hayes’ family has a crowdfunding site to help pay for memorial expenses at https://www.go- fundme.com/relief-for-quanice-hayes.