Mental Health Association of Portland

Oregon's independent and impartial mental health advocate

Archive for September, 2007

Clancy Imislund – AA Speaker Meetings

Posted by admin2 on 20th September 2007

LISTEN – Clancy I – “The Invisible Boat ” at Bellevue, Nebraska in 1983.
LISTEN – Clancy I – explains that Alcoholism is a Disease of Perception
LISTEN – Clancy I – “Singleness of Purpose ” at Sandlapper Roundup
LISTEN – Clancy I – Laguna Beach South Coast Speakers AA – Sept 22 2010

LEARN – about the Midnight Mission in Los Angeles.

Clancy Imislund

Clancy Imislund

Clancy Lowered the Boom, Los Angeles Times, October 31, 1989

I was in a back room of Skid Row’s Midnight Mission, listening to faith clash with reality.

On one side of a desk sat Peter Barmus, a well-intentioned young man making good on a promise to God. Peter believes he has the answer to homelessness.

Behind the desk sat Clancy Imislund, a tough, smart and pragmatic ex-drunk who has run the Mission for 15 years and has no pat answers.

They were talking about hope, salvation and the lack of both.

Even as they spoke, the morning crowd was drifting toward the Mission for a free meal, converging with dulled instincts to where the food might be.

They were street people who had survived another night, crawling out of doorways and cardboard shelters, dream-walking in a hard, yellow sunlight.

Clancy’s legions were stirring to life even as Peter pressed his faith.

Barmus is 33 and a city building inspector. Bothered that not enough is being done to help the homeless, he’s sponsoring an initiative that would require charities and churches to do more. It would also legalize the detention and forced treatment of transients with drug or alcohol problems.

It’s an idea that hasn’t got a chance in hell of going anywhere.

Even if Barmus should get the 48,000 signatures necessary to put his initiative on the ballot, it would die aborning.

Critics have already challenged two of its proposals as unconstitutional. You can’t force churches or charities to act, and you can’t detain without due process.

Clancy Imislund took on the third issue.

“Force-treat these people?” he was saying, talking about those who clustered in the doorway like animals huddled against a storm.

“You can’t treat people who don’t want to be treated, and believe me when I say the people you see here don’t want to be treated.”

There is an intensity to Imislund that fills a room. An advertising executive who hit the skids, he hasn’t had a drink in 31 years and is an almost legendary figure on the Row.

“But at least you can get them here to be diagnosed,” Peter argued, uncomfortable under Imislund’s hard stare.

Peter is slight and soft-spoken. A compassionate man, he promised God he’d help the homeless if he got through an illness, and has spent years trying.

“They’d go in the front door and out the back,” Clancy said. “It’s a noble idea. I’m just telling you it won’t work.”

Peter argued that they deserved a chance to get off the streets. Clancy said they were there by choice.

Here was the elemental clash: Peter wanting to drag the dispossessed up the mountainside, Clancy insisting they’d go down the other side.

“Let me tell you about Skid Row.” It was Clancy talking. “The people on it can’t cope with the conflict of a structured life.”

“An example: Every day I see deaths here, Peter. Drug overdoses in the alleys, stabbings in the street, hypothermia in the morning. But you know the one kind of death I never see?”

“Old age,” Peter said, expecting a cliche.

“Suicide,” Clancy said. The room was silent. “Suicides, Peter, are caused by emotional conflict. There is no emotional conflict here. The people have given up. They just get by.”

The debate was brief. Peter would have liked Clancy’s help. What he got was the benefit of Clancy’s experience.

One of the last things Imislund said to him was, “If you had something that would work, I’d go along with it.”

Then Clancy, as the old song goes, lowered the boom: “But if there were a solution that easy, someone would have found it. A lot of people have been looking a hell of a lot longer than you have.”

I admire men like Clancy Imislund who face life on its own hard, cold terms. But I also admire guys like Barmus.

Everybody makes promises to God. They make them in hospital beds, at war, in jail or walking down dark streets with footsteps behind them. But damned few of those promises are carried out.

For two years, Barmus has gathered food and clothing for the homeless on his own. He’s tapped his savings and drawn heavily on his $45,000-a-year salary to hand out doughnuts and grocery certificates, a lot of it in front of the Midnight Mission.

Only when he decided that wasn’t enough did he come up with the idea for a citywide initiative.

The confrontation with Clancy won’t stop him. He’s out looking for volunteers to gather signatures and he’s looking for moral support to crystallize his faith.

“At least,” he said to me as we parted, “I’m out here trying. I’m making people think.”

Not even Clancy would argue that.

Listen – Clancy I – 12 Step Workshop – #1
Listen – Clancy I – 12 Step Workshop – #2
Listen – Clancy I – 12 Step Workshop – #3
Listen – Clancy I – 12 Step Workshop – #4
Listen – Clancy I – 12 Step Workshop – #5

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Our letter to Mayor Tom Potter

Posted by Jason Renaud on 17th September 2007

Our letter to Mayor Tom Potter

Tom Potter
City Hall
September 17, 2007

Mayor Potter,

While we applaud your effort to consider how people with mental illness move through small portions of the criminal justice system with the Mayor’s Mental Health Task Force, direct accountability for James Chasse’s death remains unanswered.

A complete year has passed since James’ horrific killing at the hands of two Portland police officers and a Multnomah County Sheriff’s deputy, and a variety of questions and concerns persist. Unanswered, they undermine the credibility of the city.

Members of the Mental Health Association of Portland have collected and summarized some of the remaining questions and concerns from the community about what happened to James Chasse. These questions come from a wide variety of people, and not all questions represent all signers of this letter. Yet all these questions are open, inquiring, forthright and unguarded.

Your open and honest response to these questions will help regain the trust which has been hurt with the actions of individual officers, the comments of their associates, and the inability of the civil service to discipline or terminate the officers involved.

We understand there is an ongoing civil suit, but hope you consider reconciliation over defense in your response.

Question
What recommendations from the Mayor’s Task Force have been implemented and what recommendations have not been implemented? Who is responsible for overseeing the process of implementation? Who is responsible to report to the public what efforts have been successful or unsuccessful?

Question
On reflection, do you believe the police department and Rosie Sizer in particular handled the Chasse case appropriately?

Question
Should officers responsible for serious injury to an individual provide their transport, care, and/or communication with health professionals regarding their condition?

Question
Has the city fully and completely disclosed all documents and records regarding the Chasse case to the legal team heading the civil suit filed by the family?

Question
How can potential conflicts of interest be eliminated, such as having the District Attorney’s office lead the grand jury proceedings in the case of death in police custody and/or accusations of excessive use of force?

Question
No officer has been indicted for excessive force by our current district attorney. How can it truly be possible no Portland police officer has used excessive force during the last decade?

Question
How can the City of Portland maintain a contract relationship with AMR after what happened to James Chasse? After 16 ribs broken, Taser shots, shoulder broken, punctured lungs, how could they send him to jail as if he were unharmed?

Question
If the City’s ambulance service responded to the James Chasse call today, how would they act differently than they did on September 17, 2006?

Question
In your opinion, would different officers have responded differently to James Chasse? Would James be alive today if Nice, Humphrey and Burton were not involved?

Question
By what date can a person in crisis be certain a responding officer will be CIT trained?

Question
What percentage of Portland officers has completed CIT training to date?

Question
Has CIT training been offered to law enforcement outside of Portland? Which departments have been trained and what percentage of officers in those departments have been trained?

Question
What part of the CIT training imbues mercy and compassion to police officers? What part of CIT training teaches de-escalation and rapport building techniques to promote peaceful outcomes? If this is not part of CIT training, can there be another source that can incorporate these basic principles of crisis management into this curriculum?

Question
What funding has been sought for or secured to expand and sustain supportive housing capacity for special needs populations?

Question
One of the recommendations from your Task Force was for restoration and expansion of state sponsored health insurance. What exactly was done by the city to accomplish this recommendation in the 2007 legislature?

Question
What has the City done to assure the County is able to provide treatment services as a safety net for people with mental illness?

Question
Considering the released grand jury evidence do you believe the District Attorney should indict the officers who killed James Chasse?

Question
Within the CIT program are officers instructed to refrain from using force with people they simply want to question?

Question
Speaking as a seasoned experienced law professional, are officers’ claims that they believe their life was in danger a sufficient justification for lethal use of force?

Question
The degree of force used against James Chasse outweighs the reasons for questioning his behavior. Is this degree of force still acceptable within your police department?

Question
City contracted emergency medical technicians judged James Chasse uninjured and not appropriate to take to an emergency room. The City has just renegotiated this contract. Within the new contract, are contract EMTs given a new set of instructions about how to handle a case such as Chasse’s?

Question
Would justice and public trust been better served in cases such as James Chasse’s with an independent investigation and an independent prosecutor?

Question
James Chasse was mortally injured when he left jail in custody of police officers. Do the Portland police continue to serve as ambulances for the jail? Is it still police and city practice to drive wounded prisoners to distant hospitals rather than the closest emergency room?

Question
Is the use of force by Portland officers appropriate in light of the many accusations of unnecessary or excessive use of force? How do you – as Mayor – find a balance between safety for officers and safety for the public?

Question
How can we explain the death of James Chasse to our children, and that the men who are responsible for his death were not held accountable?

Question
Please explain why other citizens should be held accountable when the district attorney’s office failed to hold the men responsible for James Chasse’s death accountable?

Question
Please explain the rationale behind asking a judge to protect the Police Bureau Internal Affairs investigation report about what happened to James Chasse.

Question
Since when is looking odd a crime?

We would appreciate complete answers to these questions and concerns before the end of October. Because many of these questions and concerns begin with a lack of trust we hope you understand our need to shine a bright light on our questions – and on your answers.

Thank you, Roy Silberstein, President

Co-signers: Oregon Advocacy Center, Albina Ministerial Alliance; Mindfreedom.

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Chasse Anniversary Preparation Meeting

Posted by Jason Renaud on 10th September 2007

September 17 will mark the one-year anniversary of the death of James Chasse.

The Mental Health Association of Portland invites you to help prepare for this anniversary on September 1 from 2 – 4 PM at Midland Library, 805 S.E. 122nd Avenue.

James was attacked, beaten and killed by Portland Police officers Kyle Nice and Christopher Humphrey, and by Multnomah County Sheriff’s Deputy Brett Burton.

Over three hundred documents and news articles tell the full story of what happened to James Chasse. You can read about what happened to James Chasse at http://jameschasse.blogspot.com/

For information about Midland Library, go to http://www.multcolib.org/agcy/mid.html

Hope to see you at Midland Library on September 1 at 2 PM.

Please pass this message on to those you know will want to read it.

Questions? Email info@mentalhealthportland.org

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Unanswered Questions about What Happened to James Chasse

Posted by Jason Renaud on 1st September 2007

Do you have unanswered questions about what happened to James Chasse?

Consider joining the Mental Health Association of Portland on September 17 at 4 PM at City Hall to deliver a letter asking Mayor Tom Potter to answer the unanswered questions about what happened to James Chasse.

Your can be incorporated into our letter and we encourage you to write to Mayor Potter now, and also to the other accountable elected or appointed persons responsible for what happened to James Chasse.

Answers – and actions – bring justice and safety to the streets of Portland. Your help is needed – now.

Most documents and articles about what happened to James Chasse are archived at – http://jameschasse.blogspot.com/.

Send your questions and concerns for incorporation into our letter to info@mentalhealthportland.org or to P O Box 3641, Portland, 97208. Or write directly using the contact information below.

Thanks – and see you on September 17.

###

Tom Potter – Mayor
City Hall
1221 SW 4th Avenue
Portland, Oregon 97204
Phone: 503-823-4120
mayorpotter@ci.portland.or.us

Rosie Sizer – Chief
Portland Police Bureau
1111 S.W. 2nd Avenue
Portland, Oregon 97204
Phone: 503-823-0000
rsizer@police.ci.portland.or.us

Bernie Guisto – Sheriff
Multnomah County
501 SE Hawthorne # 350
Portland, Oregon 97214
Phone: (503) 988-4300
sheriff@co.multnomah.or.us

Michael Schrunk – District Attorney
1021 S.W. 4th Avenue, # 600
Portland, OR 97204
503-988-3162
DA@mcda.us

Letter to the Editor
The Oregonian
1320 SW Broadway
Portland, Oregon 97201
Giselle Williams, letters
Phone: 503.221.8150
Fax: 503.294.4193
letters@news.oregonian.com

Letter to the Editor
Willamette Week
2220 NW Quimby
Portland, OR 97210
Phone: 503 243-2122
mzusman@wweek.com

Letter to the Editor
Portland Mercury
605 NE 21st Ave, Suite 200
Portland, OR 97232
Phone: 503-294-0840
mdavis@portlandmercury.com

Letter to the Editor
Portland Tribune
6605 S.E. Lake Road
Portland, OR 97222
Phone: 503-226-6397
dwightjaynes@portlandtribune.com

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