Ex-Employees of Multnomah County Transitional Home File $2 Million Racial Discrimination Lawsuit
Three former employees at a Multnomah County-funded transitional home have filed a lawsuit against the nonprofit that runs the home, alleging racial discrimination in their complaint.
Former program manager ONeesha Cochran and fellow ex-employees Sonja Freeman and Shalontelle White-Preston are suing Bridges to Change, a nonprofit that manages many housing and addiction services programs in the Portland area. The three women worked at Diane Wade House, a home for Black women who are formerly incarcerated or experience mental illness. Diane Wade House, located in Gresham, is owned by Multnomah County but operated by Bridges to Change.
Diane Wade House is meant to provide its residents with skills theyll need to eventually live on their own, and offer a supportive environment that is racially and culturally specific to African American women. But soon after the home opened last year, the employees say they began noticing problemsincluding racial discrimination against employees and residents by Bridges to Change staff, and neglect of the residents needs. All three women who filed the lawsuit are Black.
The Mercury reported on alleged problems at the Diane Wade House in July 2019. From our previous reporting:
The problems Cochran and Freeman say they identified include Bridges to Change staff members treating house residents with disrespect, scant resources like personal hygiene products and cookware for residents, Bridges to Change failing to secure the contracted program vendors Cochran wanted to work with, clients being randomly separated from their mentors, and residents not being allowed to see their children in foster care as punishment for offenses as minor as swearing in the house.
Freeman tells the Mercury that conditions at Diane Wade House got noticeably worse after Cochran was fired. Those in leadership positions at Bridges to Change filled in for Cochran until they found a permanent replacement, and Freeman, along with several residents, said relations between Bridges to Change employees and residents were tense, and residents complaints werent being listened to. But when Freeman tried to bring up her concerns with Bridges to Change leadership, she was brushed aside, and stripped of some of her key duties. It was the distress caused by this treatment, Freeman says, that prompted her to take a leave of absence.
For me, the impact that it had on me as a Black woman was horrific, Freeman says. And I watch the women relive this terrorization over and overI just had a really hard time. So I did my best for the women, but eventually I just couldnt work like that.
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https://www.portlandmercury.com/blogtown/2020/04/24/28335994/ex-employees-of-multnomah-county-transitional-home-file-2-million-racial-discrimination-lawsuit