Legislative District 17


State Representative Position 2 


Additional Comments:

  • Joe Kear: <No additional comments>

    Paul Harris: <Did not complete questionnaire>

    Earl Bowerman: <Did not complete questionnaire>

    Justin Forsman: I am not a big fan of using law enforcement to generate armed public revenue.

  • Joe Kear: <No additional comments>

    Paul Harris: <Did not complete questionnaire>

    Earl Bowerman: <Did not complete questionnaire>

    Justin Forsman: The system protects tends to protect itself. this would curve that to a degree.

  • Joe Kear: <No additional comments>

    Paul Harris: <Did not complete questionnaire>

    Earl Bowerman: <Did not complete questionnaire>

    Justin Forsman: Too often we see law enforcement using their police powers to abuse their authority to the extent of committing crimes and operating under the “color of law” I am for holding anyone who breaks the law or violates someone’s rights accountable.

  • Joe Kear: <No additional comments>

    Paul Harris: <Did not complete questionnaire>

    Earl Bowerman: <Did not complete questionnaire>

    Justin Forsman: I would support this but feel more that an independent body or person needs to be assigned. an unbiased, non government affiliated entity. attorney generals are generally extremely biased and highly political.

  • Joe Kear: <No additional comments>

    Paul Harris: <Did not complete questionnaire>

    Earl Bowerman: <Did not complete questionnaire>

    Justin Forsman: I have been advocating for police body cams since 2015 publicly. also I believe law enforcement should have randomized urine analysis as well. I believe the potential for abuse exists where people with vast amounts of power and control is invested.

  • Joe Kear: <No additional comments>

    Paul Harris: <Did not complete questionnaire>

    Earl Bowerman: <Did not complete questionnaire>

    Justin Forsman: I consider this practice to be cruel and unusual punishment. also It causes psychological damage to a large degree on who its implemented upon.

Free Response Questions

  • I understand that law enforcement is usually after the fact but I believe the public wants law enforcement to be visible as a deterrent. I support additional staffing to allow a community policing approach. But importantly we also need to have more training in equitable law enforcement to make law enforcement personnel aware of biases and discrimination. We need law enforcement to treat every member of the community with respect and to be able to be objective. We also need more training in de-escalation.

    I also support behavioral health crisis response teams, like the successful CAHOOTS program in Eugene, OR. We don't need armed officers performing first response duty for members of the community in the middle of a drug or mental health crisis. These programs need to be available in every part of the state.

    I also believe we need caseworkers on the street to work personally and extensively over time with homeless individuals. The chronic homeless have underlying issues and most would benefit from residential treatment centers but SW Washington State is among areas of the country with the fewest dual diagnosis treatment facilities. We should be transitioning the homeless to treatment, halfway houses and permanent housing. It will probably take less money that what we currently spend on encounters with law enforcement and jail, ER and hospital stays, and shelters and camps.

    Another area of concern is keeping our communities viable and feeling like safe places. Funding for litter removal and graffiti removal, is also a priority, even though is seems minor. A community that looks like it cares, and like it is safe, is one that is conducive to maintaining safety. (The NYC subway system learned that removing graffiti nightly kept new graffiti to a minimum).

    What are the ways to measure progress? Tracking the number of cases of discrimination in policing. Tracking the number of un-housed individuals. Tracking the cases of vandalism. Tracking the number of women and minority personnel in law enforcement.

  • We have a wealthy state. We can afford to fund community programs like staffing for community policing and behavioral crisis response teams. I would advocate for funding these approaches. I would also seek funding for comprehensive approaches to the homeless crisis. We have chronically homeless individuals in every community and in rural areas, living in the woods. People living in survival mode, living moment to moment, are not able to move forward. Theft and drugs are just part of survival for many. We need to take the humanitarian measure of actually providing housing and treatment.

  • As I mentioned, tracking progress with female and minority staffing can be helpful in creating law enforcement that is better at community relations. This is not to overlook the many examples around the country of biased treatment coming from female and minority officers. But it is moving in the right direction.

    We also have to consider reforming our jails. Some law enforcement personnel move between jail duty and street duty. The inhumane conditions in our jails, and the exploitation of inmates with fees and assessed costs that become future burdens is not the way to treat people. That outlook could unfortunately be transferred to the street.


Paul Harris (Republican Party)

Paul has not completed ACLU People Power Washington’s candidate questionnaire.

Rep Paul Harris Voting Record

To learn more about these bills and why People Power Washington supported or opposed them, please check out our Voting Record explainer:

 

Earl Bowerman (Republican Party)

Earl has not completed ACLU People Power Washington’s candidate questionnaire.

Free Response Questions

  • Law enforcement should be to keep the public safe and honor the constitution, which both do not seem to be much of a priority to most law enforcement or government entirely.

    More checks and balances need to be made and more scrutiny in a proactive manner.

  • I would fight to make sure government is held to the highest standard. I would fight for less government control and oversight. I would fight to end the war on drugs, the war on the people and the middle class: I would fight for less taxes to people and small businesses. I would fight to reform the criminal justice system and bring the power back to we the People.

    Whether black, white, red, brown, yelgray, gay, straight, democrat, republican, independent or other... we all have common enemies and common interests. That is holding the government accountable and stopping them from dividing and subjugating us into countless categories to compete and fight against each other, all while our rights our stripped while we're distracted.

    It's the divid and conquer strategy and I'm completely sick of it.

  • I support police body cameras, randomized urine analysis and monthly police ride alongs and performance checks by independent sources. Clearly law enforcement has a tough job, but if drugs were legal, taxed and regulated by the government. We would see less criminals dealing, less people dying from cut toxic drugs and less law enforcement having to put their life in jeopardy to enforce ridiculous laws that only beneftt the prison industry and not the American people.

    I wrote an initiative a few years ago to legalize most drugs except methamphetamine. I believe this would provide not only revenue and resources to help those struggling from addiction, but would allow law enforcement to focus on protecting the public and would take the power away from the cartels and secret government black operations.