The recent protests against police brutality in the U.S. have brought tens of thousands to the streets across the countryโbut they’ve also brought out a lot of enlightening information about how cops do their jobs, what they can do better and how they respond to groups of armed counter-protesters versus unarmed protesters. A lot of scrutiny is being put on law enforcement, and what’s been revealed from all that scrutiny is not comforting.
While we gave kudos to the Bend and Redmond Police departments for proactively condemning the death of George Floyd, when activists asked the Prineville police to do the same, they declined, according to activists. (Prineville PD’s chief and captain did not respond to our request for more information on that and other reports stemming from ongoing protests in Prineville.)
The Bend Police department’s own 2019 Force Response Report shows that officers used force on Black men at a rate of 2.6%, and Black women at a rate of 1.3% in 2019, in a city with an overall Black population of .6%, according to 2019 U.S. Census informationโmeaning that force was used on Black men at a rate of more than four times higher than the overall Black population, and over two times higher on Black women than the overall Black population.
While arrests in any city inevitably include those who don’t live in that city, a use-of-force rate of more than four times the local population is cause for concern. Some departments have cited a low Black population as reason not to do even more to train officers in racial bias, or to speak out against the disproportionate targeting of Black men. This is every department’s problem, not just the ones in the big cities.
While every police and sheriff’s department can and should be examining itself internally to do more, Bendites have a particularly advantageous opportunity this very week to effect change in the police force, from the top down. Police Chief Jim Porter, appointed as chief by City Manager Eric King in 2014, announced his retirement in January. The City of Bend narrowed its applicant pool to 10 people in May, and to five last weekโbringing us to this moment, when there is so much scrutiny on policing, to some opportunities for the public to weigh in.
At this point in the selection process, all candidates are white males. Nowhere in the City of Bend’s five-page Chief of Police job description is diversity and racial equity mentioned in any context, though “a culture of collaboration, teamwork, and inclusivity” is mentioned once in describing the ideal candidate. The candidate profile was created following a series of listening sessions in February, according to the City of Bend. In addition to a number of law enforcement-related hiring sites, the job was advertised on the Partners in Diversity site.
On Thursday, City Manager King is hosting a virtual community stakeholder town hall, anย “opportunity for candidates to introduce themselves to community stakeholders and participate in a moderated question-and-answer forum,” according to an email from the City. Members of the Central Oregon Black Leaders Assembly, Allyship in Action, the Latino Community Association, Mecca Bend and other groups were invited to attend and ask questions.
According to the City, it will “post a captioned video recording of the virtual community stakeholder town hall on Friday, June 19, at www.bendoregon.gov/police-chief. That webpage will also host a candidate feedback survey. Community members are invited to view the town hall video and complete the feedback survey.” It’s also available in Spanish at www.bendoregon.gov/policia. Feedback is due by 5 pm on June 22.
Due to public pressure in the way of recent protests, we now know much more about how policing works both nationally and locallyโand it’s clear there’s much work to be done. This is Bend’s chance to ask meaningful questions, and ideally, to press the next chief to understand the intense road ahead to allow all community members to feel safe, protected, and free from disproportionate violence at the hands of police.
This article appears in Jun 17-24, 2020.









A very interesting article and thank you for attaching the actual Bend Police report with the statistics cited in the article. Some of the numbers in the report didnโt exactly foot to others but it looks like the total number of calls in 2019 where force was used was either 91 or 75 incidents. In either case, it was determined to be .07% of all calls. Good news! Thatโs down from .09% in 2018. So that might have been worth mentioning. Additionally – and I have no idea how this math was done for the report – but equally illuminating for readers would have been to list/determine an actual count for the two statistics most troublesome for the writer. โFour times the population โ at 2.6% represents exactly how many interactions? I think itโs two. How about 1.3%? Would it be one? And why no mention at all of the numbers of Hispanic interventions? Those numbers were quite a bit higher. Not a problem? Every single unjust police use of force is one too many. I will not minimize it. However, if you are implying the difference between zero, one or two statistical uses of force shows targeting of blacks, that is a very faulty premise – and โnot very comforting โ. There is a lot in the report if you are discerning, but not the conclusions you drew. I would have thought an editor might have coached you to draw that out. An old saying goes something like, โthere are lies, damn lies and statistics.โ Case in point.
Rich T
Bend
It’s an honor to see my art here. Thank you.