NEWS WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW THIS WEEK HOW IT’S DONE How to Flip a Tax Break BY THE NUMBERS Police Overtime at Protests Piles Up BY KATI E S HE PHE R D ksh e p h e rd @ wwe e k.com JOE RIEDL The latest standoff between so-called “alt-right” pro- testers and their antifascist adversaries on Oct. 8 was a sleepy aff air, attended by less than 150 people. But cops are racking up overtime hours policing these fringe protesters. The Portland Police Bureau spent $1.9 million on overtime policing protests between July 2016 and June 2017. That breaks down to about 31,300 hours of personnel time—the equivalent of a 15-year career. And that doesn’t include any of the material costs BY N IG E L JAQU ISS associated with protests that can include food and water for offi cers and pepper spray, rubber bullets and other material resources used to control crowds. Assistant Chief Chris Davis says overtime pay accounts for most of the costs associated with pro- tests for the bureau. “We have to try to find out as much as we can to fi nd out what the [protesters’] plan is and try to assess the risks,” Davis says. “That’s at least as much art as it is science.” It is an expensive art. Here are the most costly protests in recent months. APRIL 29 A “patriot rally” along Southeast 82nd Avenue following a canceled community parade $28,480 CHRISTINE DONG OVERTIME COST: MAY 1 Organized labor May Day marches $175,180 WILLIAM GAGAN OVERTIME COST: n j a q u i ss @ wwe e k .co m Some lucky Portland buyers have snapped up houses sold with a tantalizing come-on: years of nearly property-tax-free living. The Multnomah County Assessor ’s Office is nearly finished calculating the property tax bills it will mail out next month. For most county residents, the news is predictable: a 3 percent tax increase, the maximum allowed by state law. But not everybody expects to pay. Under the city of Portland’s Homebuyer Oppor- tunity Limited Tax Exemption Program, 100 home- buyers each year qualify for a 10-year tax holiday on the value of the home’s structure (not the land). To qualify, they need to earn no more than Portland’s median income for a family of four. But the deal continues for the full 10 years, even if the home’s owner changes. With the rapid appreciation in Portland property values, some owners are fl ipping their subsidized homes quickly for big profits. The sweetener for buyers: They don’t have to meet any income requirements and they still get the tax break. That’s what happened, for example, with a home on North Hunt Street in the Kenton neigh- borhood. The original buyer under the program purchased it in September 2013 and sold it in 2016 for $166,000 profi t. The new buyer benefi ts from the remaining seven years of a tax break. “That’s ridiculous,” says Chuck Sheketoff, executive director of the Oregon Center for Public Policy. “It makes no sense to pass along the tax break without the income limitation.” Javier Mena, assistant director of the Portland Housing Bureau, disagrees. Mena explains that the bureau used to require subsequent buyers to also earn below median income, but enforcement proved expensive and ineffective. He says the goals of the program have also shifted over time. “Initially, we were trying to improve neighbor- hoods with the program,” Mena says. “Now, it’s about creating home-ownership opportunities. We think it’s working.” JUNE 4 OVERTIME COST: $84,673 DANIEL STINDT An alt-right “free speech” rally in the wake of a double slaying on a MAX train AUG. 6 A “Patriot Prayer” rally near the Waterfront Blues Festival that turned into a brawl $22,120 TOTAL PORTLAND POLICE OVERTIME FOR PROTESTS IN FISCAL YEAR 2017: ROSIE STRUVE OVERTIME COST: $1.9 MILLION Willamette Week OCTOBER 11, 2017 wweek.com 7