The BulleTin • Thursday, april 22, 2021 A13 AN OSCAR NOMINEE WITH OREGON ROOTS Grant County graduate earns 2nd nomination with his latest documentary, ‘Hunger Ward’ lack fundamental resources such as running water, electricity or access to health care. “In some small sense, I experienced some of that lack myself, and I wanted to make sure that whatever I devoted my career to, there’s an attempt to use my career for good to get change,” Fitzgerald said. BY RUDY DIAZ His 2018 film “Lifeboat,” also nominated for Blue Mountain Eagle ilmmaker Skye Fitzgerald carried the les- an Oscar, followed search and rescue opera- sons he learned in high school in the tiny tions off the coast of Libya. “Hunger Ward,” competing in this year’s short town of Monument all the way to war- documentary category, focuses on two torn Yemen, the setting for his latest therapeutic feeding centers in Yemen for documentary “Hunger Ward,” which children suffering from malnutrition. is in the running for an Academy He said the Oscar nomination gives the Award at Sunday’s ceremony. documentary another chance to raise It’s Fitzgerald’s second Oscar nom- awareness about the conflict. ination, and he said his time grow- “It’s important that I use my own ing up in rural Grant County taught tools as a filmmaker to try to intervene him the value of hard work and gave Fitzgerald and bring the issue to the largest au- him an appreciation of “the simple dience possible to alter this unfolding things in life” when his family moved to a house 16 miles outside of Monument that tragedy that doesn’t need to occur because of lacked running water and electricity when he this human-caused war,” Fitzgerald said. was in eighth grade. Fitzgerald said he shot the film over 30 days “The fact that we didn’t have running water in January and February last year in Yemen, or electricity made me appreciate them all the which is caught in a war between Saudi Ara- more when I went to college in La Grande at bia-backed pro-government forces and the Eastern Oregon University,” he said. rebel Houthi movement. Fitzgerald said he knew he wanted to pur- Filming in a conflict zone was challenging, sue a career where he could bring to light the especially when the Saudi coalitions reject challenges faced by others in the world who journalists and filmmakers in the country. He F Dispatch Continued from A1 The resulting pilot program would cost the county approximately $250,000 to $300,000 and would strengthen an existing program, the Mobile Crisis Assessment Team, or MCAT, by funding two mental health workers to respond to calls of suicidal subjects without involving law en- forcement. Police officers would still be dis- patched if the person is known to have a weapon or has attempted sui- cide before. Leaders of Redmond Police De- partment and Bend Police Depart- ment are supportive of the idea, Har- ris said. If approved, the program could begin in September. “Law enforcement has told us this is a great place to start, and that it would help them out tremendously if we were able to take those off their hands,” Harris said. Data from Deschutes 911 shows these responses last an average of two hours and rarely require a police pres- ence, Harris said. And just as police are ill-equipped to respond to mental health calls, mental health workers are not trained in situational awareness and other law enforcement concepts. The pilot program would involve training for mental health workers to operate police radios and know when to call for backup when they feel their safety is at risk. Fortunately, studies from successful similar programs in the U.S. show that’s a rare occurrence, Harris said. Submitted photo Skye Fitzgerald filming a search and rescue operation in the Southern Mediterranean. said his party was detained in Yemen for seven hours before being released. “You have to fight very hard and in nuanced ways to get into the conflict zone,” Fitzgerald said. “Once you’re there you have to work in careful, delicate ways to keep yourself from danger.” Seeing children die was extremely difficult, he said, but the crew wanted to portray the war authentically — even if it was hard to watch. “To me, it made the project even more im- portant because it was so challenging,” Fitz- gerald said. “Just because something is hard, it A unique Lane County program, CAHOOTS, is considered a national model in crisis response. CAHOOTS is tied in with a medical clinic, which allows 911 operators to dispatch two-person teams consisting of an EMT and a mental health worker in an ambulance. Such an arrangement is not cur- rently in the works in Deschutes County, but local leaders are looking at expanding the types of emergency calls mental health workers respond to, like disorderly conduct and tres- passing, calls that often involve a mental health component. There are four programs in the county that currently address mental health crises. • The Bend City Council-funded Crisis Response Team, a mental doesn’t mean that it’s not worthwhile.” Without electricity in Monument, Fitzgerald said he did not have a chance to learn much about cinema and media until he went to col- lege, and his family is helping others dream big through the annual Dream Scholarship awarded to a graduate of Monument High School who is pursuing higher education. Fitzgerald said success is not tied to where a person went to school or even innate talent: It’s about will and a willingness to improve. The 93rd Academy Awards ceremony is Sunday, 5-8 p.m. on ABC. health unit within the Bend Police Department. • Bend Police’s grant-funded Co-Responder program, which em- beds two Deschutes County mental health workers in the Bend Police Department. Mental health coun- selor Abby Levin responds alongside a Bend officer to calls in city limits and connects subjects with services. Har- ris said the program has been a big success, diverting an increasing num- ber of people from the justice system each year, but that only shows the need in the region. Levin is only able to respond on calls during her four 10-hour shifts per week, 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Thursday. “We could use it round-the-clock,” Harris said. The program is assured federal grant funding through October 2023. • The county’s MCAT, which re- sponds to mental health calls county- wide and in the emergency room at St. Charles Bend, though not along- side deputies in their vehicles. Re- sponse times vary though they’ve been decreasing and can be as short as 10 to 15 minutes, according to De- schutes County Mental Health. In 2020, MCAT responded on 9,500 calls, a jump of 45% from 2019. • The county also operates the Sta- bilization Center, opened in 2020, on the Bend law enforcement campus on Poe Sholes Drive. 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