Quantcast Oregon Daily Emerald - University of Oregon news, sports & entertainment
College Media Network
  • Blogs
  • Calendar
  • Archives
  • Buy Photos
  • Advertising
  • Classifieds
  • Contact Us

|

Home > News

EPD treatment of homeless in question

Activists say police are treating homeless population unfairly

by Jason Reed | News Reporter

PUBLISHED ON 6/30/08 IN News
  • Print
  • Email
  • Page 1 of 1
Media Credit: Jason Reed

Media Credit: Jason Reed

A group of activists have been calling out the Eugene Police Department recently for what it says is grossly out-of-hand treatment of the city's homeless community.

Members of the Lane County Students for a Democratic Society say they have been receiving accounts of police oppression from homeless people and social service workers who work with the homeless on a daily basis.

SDS member Leif Brecke said Eugene police officers have been ramping up efforts to ticket homeless people and break down their campsites, which would force them out of town during the U.S. Olympic Track & Field Trials when thousands of visitors are in Eugene.

Brecke said police officers have followed workers for the group HIV Alliance, which conducts a needle exchange program, and arrested the homeless when they receive the needles.

He added that officers have been harassing homeless people at free meal sites by groups such as Food Not Bombs and forcing persons doing probationary community service to break down homeless camps.

EPD officials have vehemently denied the allegations of officers targeting homeless people and forcing them to move out of town during the Trials.

Nearly 50 demonstrators marched around Hayward Field Sunday afternoon and ended at the EMU. The marchers carried dozens of signs painted with sayings that ranged from "Keep Eugene Weird" to "Beds Not Jail Cells."

Members of the homeless community joined in the procession as the group chanted in unison: "Where do you sleep? In the streets. Whose streets? Our streets."

About 10 to 15 EPD bike patrol officers buzzed around the chanting activists, prompting one demonstrator to ask, "Why the hell aren't they out protecting people and doing their job? We're peaceful and obeying the law."

Sgt. Bill Solesbee, one of the bike patrol officers, said the escort was only to make sure the group followed the traffic laws and to ensure the safety of the Trials.

EPD spokeswoman Melinda Kletzoksaid the police department is short-staffed and added, "We have trouble even responding to regular calls. We don't sweep homeless out of the city."

"This is just something the city of Eugene would never do," Kletzok said.

One social service worker who is employed at Food for Lane County said, "It's insulting to our intelligence when police officers say this is not happening because it's clear to us in the grassroots organizations that it is going on."

The employee wished to remain anonymous for fear of being fired, but did go on to say that "citations for the homeless have intensely, intensely ramped up in the last few weeks. Some people are getting as many as 20 tickets in the last month for anything that you can possibly imagine - vagrancy, open containers, trespassing, jay walking."

Eugene Police auditor Cristina Beamud, however, said in the last month she has only received one complaint from a homeless person claiming to have been treated unfairly by EPD.

An employee of the low-cost health and human services agency White Bird Clinic, who also wished to remain anonymous for fear of being fired, said the oppression "is definitely happening, but it's just under the radar."

Eugene Police Officer Randy Ellis said the allegations are false and added, "there's nothing going on in the department, period. There are no sweeps going on, and in reality citations are drastically down."

Kletzok sent the Emerald a report comparing the number of citations that SDS members have alleged are being used to harass the homeless. The report lists "transient contact" in 2006, 2007 and to date for 2008.

The report shows a slight rise in the number of violation of park rules and criminal trespassing citations. The others, however, back Ellis' statement of citation numbers being down.

Rod Edward Bell, a homeless man who participated in the demonstration, said he has never actually been ticketed in Eugene but wanted to show his support for those who may have been.

Made Marco, an employee of Food for Lane County, said the pressure has been on in the city for a while now, but overall the "city really has a policy of being kind to folks."

jreed@dailyemerald.com
Page 1 of 1

Article Tools

Viewing Comments 1 - 8 of 11

Dave

posted 6/30/08 @ 7:58 PM PST

It's pretty terrible that some idiot student wants to "Keep Eugene Weird" - as if the homeless serve the function of animals in a zoo, freaks in a circus- a curiosity to be gawked at. (Continued…)

(1 reply)   Details   Reply to this comment

Kim Sprague

posted 6/30/08 @ 9:25 PM PST

I have witnessed Officer Ellis harass homeless people on more than two occasions, both near the UO campus, and near my home on East 11th.

Aside from these two recent incidents, in the past I witnessed a Eugene Police Officer tackle a man with back problems into a tree. (Continued…)

(2 replies)   Details   Reply to this comment

orwellduk

posted 7/01/08 @ 9:42 AM PST

I have witnessed officer Ellis going out of his way to help people of all types in our community. If his experience could help inform and enhance how the rest of the department is run I beleive EPD could function well. (Continued…)

NOT a Eugene resident

posted 7/03/08 @ 11:59 AM PST

Kudos to the police for trying to clean up your city. Do you ever wonder why those homeless people are homeless? Because they made poor choices. We are all a product of our choices. (Continued…)

reality check

posted 7/07/08 @ 2:16 PM PST

Wow, it seems that many of the responses to kim's comment are malicious, and, well, ignorant. I come from chicago, the capitol of police corruption in the U. (Continued…)

Shut the fuck up

posted 7/07/08 @ 10:10 PM PST

If you feel like the US is the worst place to live and the cops are corrupt and harassing you, I suggest you move to China and experience what real brutality is like. (Continued…)

Kim Sprague

posted 7/08/08 @ 5:28 PM PST

To the author of "shut the fuck up"-- your ignorance and attempts to bully others into silence does nothing to further your point. It also demonstrates how very little you understand about this community and the ongoing struggle to ensure that our law enforcement doesn't, for example, participate in the rape and assault of community members for a decade. (Continued…)

More Information

posted 7/08/08 @ 5:33 PM PST

Looking for information? Some articles relevant to the need for EPD and community partnerships to ensure accountability of our law enforcement:

http://www. (Continued…)

Post a Comment

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.


MULTIMEDIA
MORE MULTIMEDIA

AP NEWS VIDEO

Advertisement




Sponsored Links

Sex Toys

Advertisement