Sunday, June 17, 2012

Out Spotlight

Today's Out Spotlight is not about someone coming out but the father who is proud and supportive to his daughter who is. To all those parents who are proud and supportive of their LGBT children - thank you for the example you setting for other.


Today's Out Spotlight is a former American politician and law enforcement officer in the U.S. state of Oregon. He served as Mayor of Portland from 2005 to 2009, and previously was the chief of the Portland Police Bureau. A proud father and grandfather today's Out Spotlight is Tom Potter.

Tom Potter began as a police officer in 1967 as a beat officer in southeast Portland in the Brooklyn and Sellwood neighborhoods. Although the neighborhoods are considered desirable residential locations today, at the time they were largely crime-ridden and threatened by gangs. According to Potter, early in his career a citizen in Sellwood asked him what he, as a citizen, could do to help the police. His sergeant informed him to tell the citizen to "stay inside and let the police do their jobs." The comment helped motivate Potter's early interest in making changes between the relationship of the police and the citizens.

In 1986, Potter was promoted to captain in the North Precinct. He was appointed police chief in 1990 by Mayor Bud Clark, heading up the 1,300 officers in the city's largest bureau. He served three years as chief before retiring at age 52 after 25 years of service in the police force. He served as interim director of the Oregon State Department of Safety and Standards and as the director of New Avenues for Youth, a service provider for homeless youth in Portland. He also consulted police bureaus around the country on the topics of community policing and strategic planning and was considered for the job of Top Cop in the Clinton Administration to head up their COPS Office.

In 2003, he decided to run for mayor of Portland, based partly on a desire to help reform the Portland police department. He built a platform on the issue of community policing, a police strategy that involves active engagement with neighborhoods with such tactics as getting police officers out of their patrol cars.

When Potter announced his campaign for mayor in 2003, running in a field of 22 candidates, he was not widely considered as a likely contender because Potter limited his individual campaign donations to 25 dollars per person. He believed that all residents should have equal access to their politicians. Political insiders considered this a crazy move that made him unelectable. Nevertheless, he won the primary in 2004, having raised only $65,000 in campaign funds, versus other candidates who raised hundreds of thousands of dollars.


For the runoff election, he raised the limit on his contributions to 100 dollars per individual. In the months following the 2004 primary election, Potter maintained a 2-1 lead over City Commissioner Jim Francesconi in polls with roughly 25% of the electorate still undecided through October of that year. Francesconi, who raised a city-record $1 million and outspent Potter 6-to-1 during the campaign. Potter won the general election in November 2004 over Francesconi with 60% of the vote. Potter was inaugurated on January 3, 2005, succeeding Mayor Vera Katz (who had served for three terms, but did not run for a fourth). Actions as mayor.

As mayor he continued his advocacy of community policing and expressed interest in other reforms of the Portland police department. He marched against the Iraq War on the first anniversary of American involvement in March 2004 and was dismayed at the black uniforms and the militarized appearance of the Portland police he saw. He made it part of his campaign to rid the police of such a militarized appearance.

On April 22, 2005, Potter withdrew the Portland Police Bureau from the FBI Joint Terrorism Task Force. This action came after a dispute of two years over supervision, security clearances for Potter and then-Chief of Police Derrick Foxworth.

In May 2006, Potter accused the FBI of attempting to recruit an informant within the Portland city offices, going so far as to have his City Hall offices searched for listening devices. The FBI denied the accusations, which served to underscore the tensions between that agency and Potter's office.

Potter is widely credited for emphasizing diversity, and making city hall more accessible to underrepresented communities, such as people of color, immigrants and refugees, and youth. In October 2006, Potter introduced a resolution affirming the City’s commitment to the inclusion of immigrants and refugees in civic life, and convened the city’s first-ever Immigrant and Refugee Task Force to recommend strategies to address barriers to engagement. Together with wife Karin Hansen and with the help of several hundred young Portlanders, Potter led Portland to become the first major U.S. city to produce a children’s bill of rights. Our Bill of Rights: Children and Youth was created by the children and youth of the Portland area to advise community leaders of what support and access they needed to reach their full potential. It was adopted as an advisory document by both the Portland City Council and the Multnomah County Commission.

Also during 2006, Potter initiated the development of a new Office of Human Relations, dedicated to combating social issues such as race and sexual identity discrimination, hate crimes and human rights abuses through the establishment of a Human Rights Commission and police Racial Profiling Committee. The new Office officially commenced in January 2008.

Potter's openly lesbian daughter, Katie, is a Portland police officer. Potter, as the city's Chief of Police, was the first Portland Police Chief to march in his police uniform in Portland's annual gay pride parade to show his support for Katie and has spoken out in support of marriage equality for gay and lesbian couples, including Katie and her partner, police officer Pat Moen. Katie and Pat have two daughters, MacKenzie "Kenzie" Potter-Moen and Madison "Maddy" Lynn Potter-Moen.

After months of speculation, Potter announced on September 10, 2007, that he would not run for re-election as mayor of Portland in 2008. He cited a desire to spend more time with his family. In May 2008, Sam Adams was elected as the next mayor. Potter's term ended when Adams took the oath of office on January 1, 2009.

Potter lives in the Woodstock neighborhood of southeast Portland with his wife Karin. His hobbies include archaeology, hiking, camping, and bicycling.

Happy Father's Day!

12 comments:

Anonymous said...
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destiny said...

Bomer gave some nice in interviews as part of a fashion feature on ties for a shopping site to benefit the Boys Club in which he talks about his kids, I've been meaning to post them, but Father's Day seems like a good time.

I especially love this story:

"Our oldest has a fascination with ties," Bomer says. "We'll be going to a family dinner and he'll come downstairs in a pair of shorts, a T-shirt, and a blue blazer with a tie. We let him rock that."


Stylish Dads

Another story, and an adorable picture of him with the twins (parts of this interview and the photo also ran in US).

ONTD

prairiegirl said...

Cute story on one of Matt's kids, Destiny. Sounds like that young one has an individual flair for fashion, lol.

Nice Out Spotlight, Special. That is great that Tom Potter marched in uniform in Portland's Gay Pride parade. It is so great to see out and openly supportive parents. Makes me think of Adam Lambert's parents and also of Louis and Harry's mothers. When facing any kind of struggle, we all need and want our family most of all to be there for us. What a huge difference that makes.

prairiegirl said...

I got my breakfast at Whole Foods yesterday because of where I was at dogsitting. Their veggie breakfast pizza is awesome. So while I was there, I picked up a salad for lunch and wow, is it great. Even the mushrooms look and taste different from the mushrooms at, say my local Hy Vee store. Anyway, I'm eating my salad out of a box.

Now I understand that the box is earth friendly. It is lined on the inside with this wax coating so that the box doesn't get soggy. But man, I have to dig down in there to get my forkful of salad. And no, I don't want to transfer the salad into another bowl or plate. Kind of defeats the purpose, doesn't it?

So I'm eating out of a deep brown box. lol.

Hey, guess what is playing on my Pandora station right now? Something by that Florence Nightingale & the Machine group that ol' Austy likes. Sorry Aust, think I'm going to have to hit the ol' Skip button, or actually rather, the er......ol' Thumbs Down button so that it doesn't play again on my station. LOL.

prairiegirl said...

And how come whenever something goes wrong with one of our copiers or printers, everybody has always looked at me. Why do I have to be the expert at these things? Just because I know how to change the toner? Just because I know how to slap the Address Label to Recycle the Toner on the box and send it back out on UPS? Just because I know how to call the IT desk to come have something fixed when it goes kablooey?

So I just had to go over to the copier because there was some kind of jam and well, pretty much I just stood there after pulling out a bunch of drawers, taking the toner out, that kind of thing. Voila! There ya go. See, it's not rocket science.

I'm not sure why it always takes me to do that, lol. Red light comes on and the pair of eyes immediately and frantically turn to ol' PG. **sigh**.

You got me on here for a 3-fer today because we are down 2 people today. It is trench time. My super and I are slugging it out. So I'm taking a short lunch break at my desk. What better way to spend it then at the ol' homefront.

Oh!! And guess what? I was talking to our whse super because he thought my brown box in the fridge was from Unforked but I said no, it's from Whole Foods with my salad and he said something about kale.

And I thought, "Hey! I know what he speaketh of." And so I was able to coherently carry a somewhat intelligent conversation with K about kale. I asked him how he liked it and he said it was "alright". He said it was very dense and you don't need much.

And so then I told him that I knew a very unsafe, secretive young man who lived on nothing but kale.



lol. Naw, I didn't. But I wanted to. LOLLLLLLL

Back to work! Excellent salad. Even if it is a day old.

prairiegirl said...

That should read "I knew of a very unsafe, secretive young man. Not "knew a". Heaven help me.

prairiegirl said...

One can never stress enough just how unsafe of behavior Jake actually exhibits and has been seen practicing. He's my great Exhibit A for Safety Moments.

♪ They Say It Is Your Birthday ♫ said...

Sir Paul McCartney turns 70 years old today.

Florida Tom said...

Wow so awesome that Matt is sharing his great life with his fans. Nothing to hide or be ashamed of.

Anonymous said...
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Seaweed said...

I'm just loving the arse off Matt Bomer and his boys... what sweet looking kids! How great that they are out in the open and living life as they should out and very proud.

Matt certainly gives excellent interview as well.

destiny said...

Yeah, I adore Matt, I'm really rooting for him to hopefully transition into a movie star.