Today City Council did not vote in support of my amendment to reallocate $18 million from PPB to invest in our communities. My full statement below (Thread) can also be found here: portland.gov/hardesty/news/…
When yet another Black man was killed by police and mass protests took place throughout the country, including here in Portland, hundreds and thousands of people took to the streets to seek redress from their government and demand change. 1/18
They demanded we rethink what community safety looks like, who shows up, and how. We’ve been pushed to answer, what does community safety look like if you’re poor? If you’re not white? If you have no/limited resources? Those are the questions I’ve been compelled to answer. 2/18
What we have right now does not work. You cannot look me in the eye and tell me that a Bureau responding violently to protesters every night works for us. Or that over 50% of all the bureaus arrestees are houseless individuals works for us. 3/18
Or that a Bureau shown to stop black drivers twice as much as white drivers works for us. Or a Bureau that has accumulated over $6,000,000 in overtime works for us. 4/18
People are asking us to reinvest in communities - not to study, not to create new training programs, not to make more tables. We’ve had a lot of studies, tables, and committees, yet the outcomes in our police bureau have yet to change. 5/18
Over and over again, our communities have given us a clear mandate to rethink community safety. In June we started this journey by reallocating $15 million from the Police Bureau and redirecting those funds towards community investments. 6/18
We came into this budget with the same goal of investing in our communities and reducing police by providing mutual aid because if Portlanders can’t depend on Portland to keep them safe and supported, who can they count on? 7/18
I’m disappointed we did not do that this time, but I am taking this as an opportunity for us as Council to work harder and more collaboratively to meet the community’s mandate because justice cannot wait. Each of us were elected to act today. Not tomorrow. Not next week. 8/18
I hope that as we continue having these conversations, we operate from a place of courage and strength to do the right thing for the people we’ve left behind. 9/18
I understand that there is fear or concern over the amendment, but what I am asking those who felt uncomfortable or fearful of my amendments – whether they were too big or too fast for you, is to consider that for many Portlanders, that comfort never existed. 10/18
We can’t be coming from a place of fear. Our role as elected leaders is to move past the fear and stretch ourselves to take the action that is demanded and sorely needed by our communities. 11/18
Chief Lovell called these potential cuts to the Bureau “devastating”, but I say police violence is devastating. Losing a loved one at the hands of police is devastating. Getting pulled over for looking a certain way and then fearing for your life is devastating. 12/18
Getting arrested for simply not having a place to sleep is devastating. Portlanders have been dealing with devastation for far too long at the hands of police.
BIPOC communities have been at the forefront of these demands for reinvestments. 13/18
We can’t keep talking about how we as a city are committed to centering BIPOC voices but never actually act on things they call for. Listening without action is not progress, it is lip service. 14/18
I want to appreciate everyone who called, emailed, provided testimony, and took to the streets to make your demands for change resoundingly clear. 15/18
I also want to appreciate community partners including @UniteOregon, @paalf_advocacy , and @PDX_PeoplePower for their tireless advocacy in making sure our BIPOC communities are heard here in Council. 16/18
Lastly, I want to thank @ChloeEudalyPDX for supporting this amendment. She, like I, have listened to the demands of the community, and we responded together. 17/18
I look forward to continuing what we started in June.
People have spoken loud and clear and they’re watching. History is watching. /End
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Today I voted to support 4/5 proposals brought forward by Mayor Wheeler & Commissioner Ryan in an attempt to address our housing & houselessness crises. I also passed 2 amendments proposed by my office, and supported 2 amendments from Commissioner Rubio.
I am disappointed some of my amendments did not pass, such as speeding up the timeline of creating serviced outdoor camping areas 3x faster than the final proposal, which instead is a set of aspirational, unfunded resolutions that may begin implementation in 2-3 years.
The first resolution was my favorite because it included ideas I have been advocating for - including land banking and finding ways to make use of vacant and under-utilized private property.
We cannot solve the houslessness crisis without also solving the housing crisis.
Last week the Oregonian Editorial board sent each Council office a series of important questions in advance of an opinion piece they published on Sunday about Portland's response to gun violence and community safety. portland.gov/hardesty/news/…
This is an incredibly important conversation & these questions have complex answers. For the sake of transparency and so Portlanders know how I'm thinking about these issues, I wanted to share the entirety of my answers, which can be read below. portland.gov/hardesty/news/…
I don’t believe PPB has a staffing crisis; I believe they have a recruitment crisis. PPB currently has over 100 vacancies.
My office and PBOT are aware that the “thin blue line” flag is being displayed by a City contractor doing work for PBOT. Full statement below.
The thin blue line imagery is viewed by many in our community as a symbol of white supremacy that has been prominently displayed by those that oppose the Black Lives Matter racial justice movement and we understand this is causing distress in the community.
You can count me as one of the many Portlanders that finds this imagery deeply offensive.
It’s Tony Stevenson killed by a chokehold in 1985, where PPB officers responded by creating and selling t-shirts that read “Smoke “Em, Don’t Choke Em”.
It’s the 2003 killing of 21 year old Kendra James during a traffic stop.
It’s the 2010 killing of Aaron Campbell during a welfare check.
It’s the 40 fatal incidents at the hands of Portland Police that have occurred since Kenda James lost her life.
And now most recently it’s the killing of a teenager, Quanice Hayes.
Despite some of the spin out there, I am not anti-police. I am not a cop-hater. I have said over and over again police have a role in our society, but we need a different kind of policing that doesn’t view Portlanders as their enemy.
[Statement Thread] Let me begin by reading a piece of a letter that was written by Donna Hayes, Grandmother of Quanice Hayes, as shared on the Pacific Northwest Family Circle website.
The Pacific Northwest Family Circle is an all-volunteer community group that supports Oregon and Washington Families whose loved ones were killed or injured by police officers.
I want to be very clear, there is an accusation circulating that threatens to damage my reputation as a City Council member and as the Transportation Commissioner. I take these allegations very seriously and am here to tell you they are false allegations.
I have not driven my car in the last 24 hours. In fact, my car is inoperable because of an unlatched door and has been sitting in the same parking spot for about 6 months. As many know, I use Lyft when I’m going somewhere I can’t walk to.
You can ask my neighbors and they will tell you that my car hasn’t moved. I’ve become an avid pedestrian since the COVID-19 pandemic began. I also have not been contacted by the Portland Police Bureau regarding any such incident.