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Half the arrests in Portland last year were of homeless people. Mayor Ted Wheeler says that’s a problem

Rebecca Woolington

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Police Chief Danielle Outlaw and Mayor Ted Wheeler, who serves as police commissioner, have both said that being homeless is not a crime. But last year, one in every two arrests made by the Portland Police Bureau was of a homeless person, an analysis by The Oregonian/OregonLive has found.

Police Chief Danielle Outlaw and Mayor Ted Wheeler, who serves as police commissioner, have both said that being homeless is not a crime. But last year, one in every two arrests made by the Portland Police Bureau was of a homeless person, an analysis by The Oregonian/OregonLive has found.

Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler on Friday acknowledged it's a problem that half of the arrests that police made in Portland last year were of homeless people.

The mayor said people who are experiencing homelessness or who have mental health and addiction issues should have fewer interactions with police and more with social service providers.

He said he wants to know what's driving the statistics.

"The real question here is, 'Is there some sort of profiling or implicit bias?'" Wheeler said. "From my perspective, that's the crux of the situation. The police should be focused on policing criminal activity, and that's sort of the beginning, the middle and the end of it for me."

The remarks came during a meeting with The Oregonian/OregonLive's editorial board and were the most detailed the mayor has made since the newsroom published its findings last month.

The newsroom's analysis showed that homeless people accounted for 52 percent of arrests, while making up less than 3 percent of the population.

He spent an hour-long interview discussing a wide-range of issues related to homelessness, housing and policing. He painted a conflicting picture of how the city is responding to its homelessness crisis.

He said Portland is using the "right strategy" and the "proven strategy," to address the crisis and that cities along the West Coast "look to Portland for leadership."

But at the same time, he said homelessness in Portland has been increasing and that the criminal justice system too often plays the role of social service provider.

"The criminal justice system is not the right place -- or it shouldn't be the place of first resort to provide addiction or mental health services," Wheeler said. "It should happen elsewhere with no police and no judges and no juries and no jails."

Wheeler said he thinks most people agree with that.

"The question is how do we build the system?" he said.

Wheeler declined interview requests for the newsroom's initial story about the arrests of homeless people. During a wide-ranging interview on Monday, the mayor said he wanted to know how many of the arrests were related to calls from the public as opposed to contacts initiated by police. He also appeared to be dismissive of the findings at that time.

Asked about the disparity in arrests, Wheeler told a reporter during the Monday interview, "I could play with statistics with you all day long."

He continued, "We don't have enough information based on a newspaper article to come to a conclusion. Does it warrant further evaluation? Of course, it does. Certainly, it does."

On Friday, Wheeler called the newsroom's investigation a "very thorough and, I thought, provocative report," and he said he is taking it "very seriously."

After the newsroom's investigation, the American Civil Liberties Union of Oregon called on Wheeler and Police Chief Danielle Outlaw to investigate whether officers are profiling people who are homeless.

This week, the city's police oversight agency, the Independent Police Review, said it has launched an inquiry into how police interact with homeless people in response to the newsroom's reporting and the ACLU's complaint. Outlaw requested the investigation.

"Chief Outlaw called for that," Wheeler said Friday. "I support it."

Wheeler said often before taking enforcement action, police first try to connect people with a social service provider. "Arrest is their last choice," he said.

Asked whether the arrest numbers should influence his budget priorities, Wheeler said they should. But he said he'd be reluctant to reduce funding for services that the city is responsible for to increase funding for mental health and addiction services with the county.  

Wheeler said the city already increased funding for the police bureau's Behavioral Health Unit, which among other things pairs clinicians to work alongside police officers, and has increased training on implicit bias and de-escalation techniques. The city, he said, has added a homelessness liaison position for the police bureau to help officers develop strategies for working with people living on the streets.

Wheeler said he wants to decrease the interactions that homeless people and people who are suffering from mental health or addiction issues have with police.

"Police and firefighters are our first line of response for what is a social services catastrophe," Wheeler said. "The police should be addressing car break-ins and burglaries and things like that. And increasingly what they're doing is providing social services. The majority of police are not trained in the provision of social services."

Gordon Friedman of The Oregonian/OregonLive contributed to this report.

-- Rebecca Woolington

rwoolington@oregonian.com

503-294-4049; @rwoolington

-- Melissa Lewis

mlewis@oregonian.com

503-221-4316; @iff_or

https://www.oregonlive.com/portland/index.ssf/2018/07/portland_mayor_ted_wheeler.html#incart_most-read_