Mary Volm is a former spokesperson for the City of Portland. She’s running to restore the city’s responsibility for basic services, instead of pet projects. And also, possibly, buy bus tickets for some of our transient kids. Read the Mercury‘s interview with Mary Volm after the jump!

MARY VOLM: PISSED WITH CITY GOVERNMENT
  • MARY VOLM: PISSED WITH CITY GOVERNMENT

So how is the campaign going?

โ€œItโ€™s going very well, and Iโ€™m having the time of my life, given the fact that Iโ€™ve been a communications director for 24 years for government, Iโ€™m in my element. Iโ€™m learning so much more outside than I did inside about peopleโ€™s concerns about government, and itโ€™s heartwarming to see how many people have strong emotional feelings about, and understanding of, city government. And thatโ€™s a strong place to be starting as a city commissionerโ€”with an engaged public. I remember when city council members would change their vote based on public testimony, and weโ€™re not an accessible government any more. The deals are made behind closed doors, amongst themselves, so the minute they get into council, the vote is sealed.โ€

โ€œLetโ€™s remember who weโ€™re serving here, and itโ€™s not that you do government by consensus, but if you donโ€™t engage the public, this is their government, and everything can happen at the local level. We can bitch all we want about the federal government and broken promises, but if you really want to hold government accountable, you have to do it at the local level.โ€

โ€œAnd thatโ€™s why I did support the recall the first time aroundโ€”when youโ€™re lied to, that creates voter apathy. And Iโ€™m just the opposite in terms of leadership. I donโ€™t like to lie to people. I like to bring people together towards a common goalโ€”itโ€™s all about that kind of communication with the people you serve.โ€

โ€œMemorial Coliseum is a good example of that not workingโ€”none of the ideas proposed in the past, they were cost prohibitive. And the spectator facilities fund is set aside for maintenance, and thereโ€™s some big ticket items, basic maintenance that needed to happen five years ago. But instead, thatโ€™s one of those pots of money that officials like to raid, and the last raid was PGE Park.โ€

So you seem to be focused on fiscal responsibility? Can you give me some examples of where the city has fallen short on this?

โ€œIt seems as if, for the most part, that elected officials like to build things so that they can be legacy projects, and Iโ€™m a little tired of building things right now, particularly in the face of a recession. Iโ€™m about maintaining what weโ€™ve got. Citizens have invested billions of dollars in their city infrastructure. To walk away from maintenance to extend the life of this infrastructure, to not do the necessary maintenance when itโ€™s needed is irresponsible on the part of city leadership.โ€

โ€œAnother good example is NW23rd. Set for rehabilitation a decade agoโ€”a million dollars to grind the asphalt off, do some limited base repair, crack seal, to keep moisture out of the base, to avoid sink holes and complete destruction of a city street. That was taken from maintenance to build the steel bridge walkway for the Eastbank Esplanade. Iโ€™m all for that new facility, but if we donโ€™t take care of what weโ€™re responsible for when itโ€™s most effective, it costs five times as much. So now weโ€™re rebuilding NW23rd at a cost of $6million. Thatโ€™s your money.โ€

โ€œIโ€™ve watched this over and over, but maybe itโ€™s because itโ€™s the public money, or basic common sense. You wouldnโ€™t put a new addition on your house if the roof was leaking. And every new project, they go ahead with these projects, and they donโ€™t put any maintenance into itโ€”600 miles of deferred maintenance on our city streets right now, and that deferred maintenance is five to six times more to rebuild. Your pothole repair increases, because potholes are just band-aids on a gushing wound. Those repairs pop off two weeks later.โ€

โ€œI know thatโ€™s a lot of detail, but this is the point. Itโ€™s just so much sexier for elected officials to be able to point to something rather than what weโ€™ve been entrusted with. The second issue on that is, when we build something, Iโ€™ll be the one on council to ask, where are the maintenance dollars on this ten years from now?โ€

Do you think thereโ€™s going to be a runoff in this election?
โ€œYes, if I donโ€™t win it outright May 18, yes. I can solidly say yes.โ€

How can you solidly say yes?
โ€œWhen you donโ€™t have any money, you canvass, you talk to people, youโ€™re out in the community. And in fact what Iโ€™m hearing so many residents say is โ€˜throw them all out.โ€™ Iโ€™ve never heard such disappointment and distrust in the city as I do now, and itโ€™s in the leadership.”

Do you mean the mayor, or Dan Saltzman?
“I mean everybody on city council. Thatโ€™s what theyโ€™re telling me. And personally, we have two new commissioners who seem to be voting along with everybody else. We have a voting block of three, much of which is a Mark Wiener block, and people are feeling like theyโ€™re not being listened to. And thatโ€™s one of the reasons why I didnโ€™t qualify for public financing, because I spent time talking to people and they feel abandoned by city government.”

What percentage of the vote do you think youโ€™ll win?
“In May I think Iโ€™m going to get 50 plus one vote. And if voter apathy keeps that from happening, then Iโ€™d look forward to a summer of campaigning, because itโ€™ll make me a better city commissioner. If Iโ€™m allowed to go against Dan Saltzman, itโ€™s pretty clear I know more about the city than he does, and I also know how to inspire people and engage them to be involved in their local government.”

What are some other issues youโ€™re campaigning on? You mentioned mental health the other day.
“Iโ€™ll lobby on a state and national level to improve funding for the mentally ill. I believe that these are people weโ€™re responsible for, period. Thatโ€™s it. They canโ€™t take care of themselves, itโ€™s not their fault. Even severe alcoholism is not their fault. They need help: Shelter, food, medication, and community support. And there are some that fall into the category of mentally ill that are productive, and weโ€™re missing a big opportunity there.”

Any other campaign issues?
“Yes, and the first one is getting Portlanders back to work. Government doesnโ€™t create jobs, but we sure create the environment. Iโ€™m the only candidate in the state with real economic development experience. I worked for the state in the late 1980s, when we were faced with a collapsed timber industry and we ran out of resource, and had communities all through the state completely out of work. At that time the state gave all its lottery dollars to economic developmentโ€”Iโ€™ve been working in every corner of the state to develop the regional strategy. Now that timberโ€™s gone.”

Did that work out?

“It did, and it really helped each county, and some got together as three or four counties, working together on a strategy.”

What do you think of Mayor Adamsโ€™ Economic Development strategy?
“Itโ€™s very weak and shortsighted. In an economic downturn we need to be as creative and diverse as we can be, and I find it to be very limiting. Business and the environment arenโ€™t at odds all the timeโ€”we have some pretty solid industrial areas in Portland that are becoming warehouses rather than production facilities. The research is available: What are the emerging businesses? And we know that green is, but every municipality is competing for green dollars. And through that research you identify which businesses are likely to expand, looking for a nice new home. Portland has everything to offer, with the exception of our SAT scores. And thatโ€™s a big thing. But we have the things that companies look for.”

So why arenโ€™t companies coming here?
“Weโ€™re not courting them. We havenโ€™t done the research to find out whoโ€™s looking, then it takes the effort to court, to say, weโ€™re interested in your business, what does it take? Now the last council, really Erik Sten, took away so much of PDCโ€™s responsibility and ability to do that. And the most important thing on every front is that if youโ€™re employed, you have better self esteem.”

Sure, but Sten was looking at homeless people and folks who couldnโ€™t necessarily work.
“Actually a lot of them can, with the right tools and society.”

PDC isnโ€™t interested in looking out for those people, though, is it?
“Well it should be. And the business community was courting this business, staying at the Nines. They were saying โ€œwe love your airport, we loved the sense of what Porltand is from the window, but the minute we stepped out onto the street, weโ€™ve never seen so many aggressive panhandlers,โ€ and that turned them off. This is simplified, but there are three types of homeless weโ€™re dealing with: The homeless who want a home and be productive. There are transients who want to stay on the street, think this is a cool place to hang out and do whatever they want because they can. And then there are the mentally ill, or severe alcoholics, those people that absolutely need our help. And itโ€™s our responsibility for the first and third categories. But the middle category Iโ€™d say get a job, get rid of the pitbull, and if youโ€™re going to a job interview, take your nosering out for a minute. But Portlandโ€™s become a magnet, and itโ€™s disturbing to me, because it is interfering with our ability to attract new business. And if you know the community by name, we can start to identify that middle group and help them, whether itโ€™s a nice suitcase, some traveling money and a bus ticket. Now I know that sounds harsh but theyโ€™re youth that ran away so that they can hang out on Hawthorne. But they are capable, and anybody including intellectually challenged people can work, and find a sense of purpose. But we have an inordinate amount of that population on Porltandโ€™s back.”

What about the work of groups like Outside In, and so on?
“And thatโ€™s what Iโ€™m talking about. You know who these people are, and I know some of them donโ€™t want to work. But give em a choice, and hereโ€™s the choice. Weโ€™ll help you become a productive member of this community, letโ€™s get you some housing, some training, help them move towards self-sufficiency.”

Or what? You said thereโ€™s a choice.
“Or where are you from? Letโ€™s help you get back there.”

What if their home is abusive?
“If theyโ€™re abused, thatโ€™s identified. And we need to get them that kind of help. But weโ€™re municipal services. We donโ€™t direct this stuffโ€”we have a role to play, but weโ€™re not the primary agency or organization in the lead, but we assist where we can.”

Any other issues?
“Maybe itโ€™s a little social engineering, but to invite people, our citizens who do not think that they are racist, who do not think that theyโ€™re responsible for marginalized communities, to learn about those communities. It seems that our paradigm is always looking for the difference between. But when it comes down to Portland, we all care about the same things. And Iโ€™d invited Portlanders to start, if they arenโ€™t already, start thinking differently about their fellow community members, and encourage them to volunteer, go to an African American church and see how welcomed they are, understand their culture a little bit better, and a greater understanding, and a greater responsibility to each other. Now let me take this a step further. 80% of Portlandโ€™s businesses are small businesses, and say Iโ€™m Cambodian, or say I have a nose ring, or purple hair, the first thing I want that employer to think is, okay, I bet we have a lot in common, rather than theyโ€™re so different from me, Iโ€™m afraid. But because of whatever, language, accent, culture, belief systems, everybody wants to hire people like themselves. So guess what happensโ€”we have these marginalized communities and they canโ€™t get into the mainstream in Portland. And people arenโ€™t even aware of thatโ€”itโ€™s cultural competency, becoming a little broader ourselves. And thatโ€™s a philosophyโ€”thereโ€™s nothing I can do to govern that.”

Any of your competitors said anything ridiculous that youโ€™ve disagreed with?
“Yes, of course. And not to cast aspersions, but I started the buy local a long time ago, because it was about keeping from people from traveling to the Big Box, but rather get to know your business community, and it really helps a whole bunch of things. But when I hear buy local from Jesse Cornett, and I look at his Orestar on a regular basis, and I see that he has three different contracts, one in Seattle thatโ€™s $3500 a month, one was for $13,000 for a poll in California, and the other one is a printer in Washington, that is, itโ€™s doubly offensive to me. Itโ€™s not only not buying local, itโ€™s using public money and taking it outside the state. And being a public servant whoโ€™s had to exist with a megaphone and a box of crayons, for most of my careerโ€”the public penny is so precious. Iโ€™ve watched the scarce resources we have diminish, and if thatโ€™s any indication of how heโ€™ll govern, then Iโ€™m very concerned. And you know as well as I do that there are plenty of printers, consultants, and pollsters in Portland, Oregon.”

Are there that many political consultants? Good ones?
“Yes. Lisa Grove, thereโ€™s a bunch.”

Who else?
“Iโ€™m sorry. I didnโ€™t get to hire a consultant, but consultants can take on two clients. Seattle doesnโ€™t have a consultant haven.”

You mentioned Mark Wiener earlier.
“Yes.”

Heโ€™s the dominant consultant here and he represents Saltzman.
“Yes he does.”

So what do you think of him?
“Iโ€™ve only met him once, but I have a concern with a consultant approaching any race with the philosophy of โ€œwin at any cost.โ€ The personal damage that I have seen Winning Mark do to other candidates running against his client is not in line with Porltandersโ€™ values.”

Can you be a little more specific about personal damage?
“Sho Dozono was a good example. That was all orchestrated first by winning Mark. Itโ€™s both the poll, and the Bush Garden incident. And whatโ€™s funny about that is after the race, they paid back the rent payments because they wanted to honor the agreement that was already in place, because right outside Bush garden is a public urinal. And the redevlopment was supposed to happen four years before the race, and it came to blows where Bush Garden said weโ€™re not going to pay unless you do it. And it was my boss who helped Sam go after his opponent, and itโ€™s unfortunate. And you just donโ€™t treat people that way. Win at any cost, and take out your opponent with honesty, experience and true disagreements between how youโ€™d approach an issue. Thatโ€™s what makes a good raceโ€”you get to hear about the issues.”

“And look what Wiener did with Bob Ballโ€”throw him under the bus. You donโ€™t think that Sam and Randy were the only ones behind that, do you? And thatโ€™s in the attorney generalโ€™s report. We need every great mind in this city, and we need to work together, not against each other. Yeah, I have differences with Dan, but I donโ€™t want to personally destroy him. Or Jesse, either. And it doesnโ€™t do any service to the voting public. We deserve more.”

Matt Davis was news editor of the Mercury from 2009 to May 2010.

20 replies on “Meet A City Candidate: Mary Volm”

  1. Lol, “let’s give the homeless a bus ticket so they go somewhere else”. That’s some good detective work, Lou.

    I’ll take bets on Mary not making 10% vote.

  2. I might put a new addition on my house if the roof were leaking. What if I wanted to convert my attic to a loft and bust out the roof anyway in order to allow for more space and light. Or what if there are efficiencies and money available for an addition or a roof but the addition can’t be funded later and the roof can. Or what if the roof will be 6X more later but the addition will be 12X more later.

    It is never that cut and dry. I can’t bring myself to support a candidate that wanted to recall a politician for lying about his sex life (barring certain exceptions such as rape and the like).

  3. Homeless people are solely responsible for homelessness, so we should definitely punish them by uprooting them completely. Gotta keep them on their toes.

    Next up: if you’re gay-bashed, you will be charged for gross acts of homosexuality and your own hospital bills.

  4. I like this too, “Actually a lot of them can, with the right tools and society.” I wonder what her vision of a “right society” is…

  5. Also I have heard from conference attendees (granted environmental conferences…maybe greenies are a little more lenient) โ€œwe love your airport, we loved the sense of what Porltand is.” But this part “the minute we stepped out onto the street, weโ€™ve never seen so many aggressive panhandlers” sounds like hyperbole. I would like to see a quote.

  6. To summarise what I have read thus far:

    “I do not care how good Mary Volm’s ideas are or how much experience she has.”

    “She is against Sam and that is good enough for me to vote for Dan Saltzman. After this election he will nod off back to sleep and not have the audacity to speak out like Mary.”

    “Some one needs to remind Mary that politics is a man’s sport and she can not have female supporters.”

    Oh wait, not voting for Mary in ‘Blogtown’ does not mean shit.

    For those what want real world exposure to your local candidates:

    Why not stop by the Multnomah County Building on April 13th at 7:00PM for the League of Women Voters’ Candidate Forum

    Graham, BlackedOut, Mopsy and C you can liveblog from there.

  7. “But this part “the minute we stepped out onto the street, weโ€™ve never seen so many aggressive panhandlers” sounds like hyperbole. I would like to see a quote.”

    I’ve heard that exact thing from a number of friends and relatives who have stayed downtown.

  8. “To summarise what I have read thus far”

    Your reading comprehension needs work, then.

    Voting contrary to your thinly-veiled suggestion is probably a good idea.

  9. Sounds like someone who only knows the homeless and mentally ill through theory. In theory a lot of things make sense but don’t pan out in real life. I’m not voting for someone who thinks fixing things is that easy.

  10. Some of you seem to think that cleaning up Portland, at least downtown, is equal to fascist ethnic-cleansing. Panhandlers and porn shops actually do give a bad impression and spoil business. I for one am happy to see that someone else in this city notices that parts are ugly, UGLY. It is clear from her statements that Volm is eager to get the eligible help that the city or county have to offer– otherwise able-bodied can get work or hit the road. I am a Progressive Democrat and have no problem with that. I do have a problem with how the city council plays games with each other and our money. This gal seems to get it–and my vote.

  11. “otherwise able-bodied can get work or hit the road”
    You really think that there is a way to keep your undesirables out of the city? How on earth would you go about doing that?

    But what am I thinking? Sex and mental illness are just UGLY we don’t need to see that horrible stuff. It shouldn’t exist in our fair city! LALALLALA!!

  12. She was in communications for 24 years? I wouldn’t expect quite so much rambling and so many non sequiturs from a professional communicator.

  13. I like this honesty. There is no one type of homeless person and until we realize there is more than one issue nothing will be solved.
    Also, basic infrastructure does need to be maintained as much as I love seeing Portland as a unique and forward thinking place. I agree with Mary.

  14. david9926 and boatgirl registered today and have only replied to this particular post with practically the same structure:
    1) Refer to an observation of a problem that Volm has made
    2) Insist others are blind to this observation
    3) Imply Volm is the only one who understands how to solve this problem

    david9926 goes the extra length of buttressing her insistence of a stalled city government and adds that being a progressive democrat is consistent with a controversially conservative policy position advocating the elimination or removal of an indigent population.

    I have Volm conceding after the first preliminary ballot results are posted.

  15. The comments I read here make me think Portland’s future is hopeless. Volm is worht dismissing because she objects to Adams’ lies and pederasty? She wants non-productive people to become productive and self-sufficient? She thinks maintaining our infrastructure is far more important than spending money Portland doesn’t have on frivilous pet projects to masterbate the egos of the three little pigs [Adams, Saltzman and Leonard]? Somehow this makes her a conservative? Just what have you all been sniffing and for how long? She’s no conservative and she’s not a foolish liberal either. But she is a liberal and I would think that would make you sit up and take notice. She’s the only one making any kind of sense. Hell, she’s talking different from everyone else because the same old bullsh*t isn’t working. You need this woman more than you can imagine but you’re so worried that Sammy-kins will be upset if he can’t build HIS bikepaths. I guess I missed the obituary for Common Sense.

  16. Joe, I think you should avoid the term ‘pederasty’, it is a term reserved for historical or scholarly work and in this context it just makes you sound like a bigot. What do you call a woman who enjoys the company of younger men? Because somehow ‘cougar’ just doesn’t seem quite as angry. I suppose you chose it because pederast sounds like pedophile, but you know better than to accuse Sam of pedophilia. Thanks to the WWeek we know at least four men Sam has dated over the years, all were adults, and all but one were age appropriate. If you do have any evidence that Sam is a pedophile I would encourage you to take it to the police.

    I don’t have any hate for Mary Volm, sure the recall has been an unnecessary distraction by my thinking, but up to each person to decide for themselves. I consider myself a liberal, and I agree with many of her policy positions. I appreciate the work she has done in her career with government to make Portland the place we have today. I don’t necessarily understand why you would support her if you are so disenchanted with the way things are going, since she has been a paid spokesperson for many of the ‘pet projects’ you find so distasteful.

    I am voting for Jesse Cornett, only the challenger with the most votes will face Saltzman in a runoff and I think Jesse has a huge advantage in that he has secured public funding. I like his policy positions as well, and feel he has some life experiences that make him particularly suited to dealing with the recent issues we have been having with the PPB. I am also concerned that some of the language Mary is using these days will play better with conservatives, if you are serious about challenging Saltzman you should remember that the typical Portland voter is a liberal who did not support the recall.

  17. “sad, sad people” is apparently living in a sad, sad fantasy world where Dan Saltzman and Mary Volm have cleared the primary.

    Oh wait! There are other options beyond Dan the Man and Mary “I belong telling stories at Sisters of the Road” Volm.

    “hey joe” has a pretty good perspective on that.

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