Why is Jill Buhler, John Austin, Phil Johnson and Dr. Tom Locke protecting slumlords over the civil and human rights of the citizens of Jefferson County?
"Barry Ellis stands in front of the Port Townsend house that he and his girlfriend rented in 2011 and that was the subject of his complaint to county and state public health boards. Ellis said chemicals in the house caused him and his girlfriend to become sick in 2011."
Source
http://www.ptleader.com/testing/pt-meth-lab-complaint-rejected/image_c4ce87b6-e5d6-5da2-ade7-23b5b26763aa.html
Folks, Don't you Think You Should have the Right to KNOW
if the home you rent was a place where Meth was cooked?
I have been a Real Estate Broker for 15 years and this is not what we are taught. Meth Labs are a VERY serious health risk. Why is Jefferson County Washington NOT protecting tenants, children and the public at large from slumlords such as Bent Meyer, the owner of this home.
Jefferson County Public Health and Dr. Thomas H. Locke MD, the powers that be, seem to think that if it is a problem that Meth houses are being rented to unsuspecting families at great health risk, well then let's change the law, the regulations.
Dr. Tom Locke, Jill Buhler, John Austin, Phil Johnson and the gang seems to be saying that We won't enforce the law and protect renters, protect the citizens of Jefferson County, so let's deregulate and make the law, the standards less so that if the home was a Meth Cook Facility, a Meth Lab then we won't have to test, clean up nor let renters know even if we are putting young children at risk with total disregard to the law, public safety and child welfare.
Dr. Tom Locke, Jill Buhler, John Austin, Phil Johnson and the gang seems to be saying that We won't enforce the law and protect renters, protect the citizens of Jefferson County, so let's deregulate and make the law, the standards less so that if the home was a Meth Cook Facility, a Meth Lab then we won't have to test, clean up nor let renters know even if we are putting young children at risk with total disregard to the law, public safety and child welfare.
Landlord Bent Meyer
So who owns the Meth Lab rental? I guess its a guy named Bent Meyer. He is said to be a pastor of a church that provides domestic violence counseling and seems to misuse it's power and connections to prey on vulnerable women in the name of God.
From what I hear, Ex- Pastor Bent Meyer, the Slumlord landlord of 31st Street house in Port Townsend Washington knew that the home was used to cook meth, as did the property managers a Townsend Bay Property Management owned by Donna Murphy Doney. And they seem to think its legal, ethical and moral to go ahead and NOT disclose nor protect the public at large.
Townsend Bay Property Management allegedly claims the property was cleaned up, but I have personally seen no proof or certificate of this being factual.
Ex- Pastor Bent Meyer Bent Meyer Speaks Out About Redemption, provides abuse counseling, and comes off as an all around do gooder.
Yet in Port Townsend Washington, Bent Meyer owns a home that he knew was a Meth lab and yet he rented it out and people got sick, VERY SICK. Children live in the home and are at great risk. Jefferson County Board of Health seems to protect him, why?
I also allege, from what I have heard and believe, Bent Meyer had an issue with the tenant that had the meth lab again and again regarding the Meth Lab and regarding unpaid rent. It is said that Bent Meyer, counselor and either pastor or ex-pastor, traded sex with the tenant in exchange for the rent. I believe that is either rape or prostitution, neither of which is moral, ethical or legal. I wonder if Townsend Bay Property Management knows this too.
"Former renter plans to pursue matter in federal court"
"By Allison Arthur" Port Townsend Leader Article
"A former Port Townsend resident who rented a 31st Street house in 2011 – and then concluded he had become sick because the place was infused with chemicals from earlier methamphetamine manufacturing – has encountered a setback in his effort for relief.
That former renter, Barry Ellis, at first sought help from the Jefferson County Board of Health, which has the power to publicly post a hazard warning on property proven to have had meth activity, and to require landlords to do a thorough cleanup.
The County Board of Health turned him down, citing a lack of clear evidence.
He then appealed that decision to the Washington State Board of Health. That board, on Nov. 12, denied his appeal, endorsing the earlier decision of the county board to place no restrictions on the property.
Coincidentally (or not, according to Ellis), Jefferson County Commissioner John Austin is both a member of the County Board of Health and the chair of the Washington State Board of Health, to which the appeal was made. Austin, however, recused himself from voting on the matter as a state board member.
In addition, Dr. Tom Locke, public health officer for Jefferson and Clallam counties, has been a state leader in drafting a law related to drug-infused housing, and argues that standards are too strict and should be reduced.
“I was expecting this,” said Ellis of the state board’s rejection of his appeal. Ellis says he is likely to appeal to a higher power, federal court. He’s not giving up, he said, because he thinks that the health of unsuspecting renters like himself is on the line.
“They can’t admit liability. I’m already talking with attorneys. You never win against the state in the state court. I have a three-year clock,” noting a three-year statute of limitations to sue the state Board of Health.
Ellis said he could draw a lesson from the state board’s ruling. “I think that what happened is this is a good ol’ boy network, and I think they covered their ass with Locke,” he said.
STARTED WITH 2011 RENTAL
The case is based on Ellis’ complaint about a house at 1507 31st St. in Port Townsend. In his written complaint to the Jefferson County Board of Health, Ellis stated that he and his girlfriend rented that house in April 2011. During the 14 months he was there, “I experienced internal bleeding, two emergency surgeries, numerous medical procedures.” He said his former girlfriend had tried to commit suicide and required medical attention right after moving in.
In his formal complaint to the county, Ellis wrote that a neighbor told Ellis that the house had been used to “cook” methamphetamine.
In April 2012, Ellis went to Marjorie Boyd of Jefferson County Public Health to inquire about possible drug use or chemical infusion at the house.
He also started submitting open public records requests to the Port Townsend Police Department (PTPD) to find out if there were any incidents at the house investigated by police.
In his testimony before the county health board in March of this year, Ellis said he had contacted the owner of the house, Bent Meyer. Meyer “refused to address the situation, but did tell me to move out immediately,” Ellis said.
When Ellis responded that he wanted permission to have the property tested for meth, “I was locked out of the residence without a court order,” he said, so that he could not have the residence tested.
Before being locked out, Ellis said, he removed some items and later had those tested for meth residue. He forwarded the results to Boyd of the county health department.
Ellis said the test results showed chemical levels “between two and 26 times the legal limit.” Boyd told him there was nothing she could do to help him, according to Ellis, a conclusion repeated by other county health department staff.
Ellis said he took the matter to the PTPD, where a case file was created. However, the PTPD apparently could not confirm prior drug activity at the house. Without that finding, the county health department again declined to take action.
Ellis did not let it drop. Instead, he said, he pursued the matter by contacting local police, the state Department of Ecology and the Jefferson County Prosecutor’s Office. Ellis’ history shows he is persistent. He said he has been involved in more than 30 lawsuits involving the Kitsap County Sheriff’s Office, and added that he’s won a number of those.
STATE INVESTIGATION
Ellis appealed to the state Board of Health, calling on that panel to overturn Jefferson County Public Health’s decision against taking action on the house.
In a Nov. 12, 2014 memo on the case prepared by state board vice chair Keith Grellner, Grellner said that Ellis’ complaint was reviewed and that three of the four witnesses Ellis cited in his written complaint were interviewed.
Neither the state board investigator nor the Leader was able to get landlord Bent Meyer to return calls.
“There was no evidence found or presented that proves that hazardous chemicals were used to manufacture illegal drugs at 1507 31st St., Port Townsend, Wa.,” Grellner wrote in a conclusion. “There was no evidence found or presented that a law enforcement agency or property owner notified Jefferson County Public Health” that the property was contaminated, he continued.
“The sample results submitted by Mr. Ellis did not provide grounds for Jefferson County Public Health to post the property or conduct further inspections under RCW 64.44 and WAC 246.205,” he added.
And finally, he said that public records requests resulted in no findings or documentation that there was ever a meth lab on the property.
LOCKE: LAWS TOO STRICT
Locke said he is pushing to relax state cleanup laws related to buildings used as drug labs, laws that he helped to write. Locke said the cleanup threshold is so low today that it impacts the supply of public housing. When traces of meth are found in housing projects, Locke said, cleanup crews are “charging tens of thousands of dollars” to do “very destructive cleanups” of homes “when there is no evidence that the amount of meth detected is dangerous.”
It is not a new subject for Locke.
“I felt especially strong about this code because I helped write it,” Locke said last week. In the late 1990s, Locke said, clandestine drug labs were a real problem. “We had several in Jefferson County and hundreds around the state,” he said.
But today, Locke said, meth labs are a much smaller problem, because the market is flooded with cheap meth made in Mexican superlabs. “There’s a very small amount of shake-and-bake,” he said of meth that is made in 2-liter soda bottles. “Meth labs have virtually disappeared, and those that do exist, exist on a very small scale.”
But those strict cleanup laws from a decade ago are still on the books, he said.
What is happening now is that any tiny amount of meth – even from smoking it – can trigger a massive cleanup that involves practically tearing the house apart.
“The point is, the cleanup standard is so low, we’ve been urging the state to raise the cleanup standard,” he said.
Locke is proposing the state raise its cleanup standards from 0.1 micrograms to 1.5 micrograms per 100 square centimeters, which is the level the state of California recommends based on a 2007 study, according to public health department minutes from April 17, 2014.
“Current cleanup protocols call for all drywall, carpeting, appliances and personal possessions to be removed,” state the minutes. “This is expensive and has limited the availability of public housing because units are closed and/or demolished rather than cleaned.”
“The law was not written to compel cleanup of residences where the only thing that has happened is the smoking of meth,” Locke said. He said tiny amounts of meth on surfaces of things, such as floors, aren’t dangerous unless you do something like prepare food on them.
Locke said that at a recent state hearing, even the Peninsula Housing Authority testified that the law, as written, is having an impact on public housing because of the high cost of cleanup. He noted that public housing is already in short supply.
PROTECTING RENTERS
Again, Ellis isn’t buying it.
“By asking to relax these standards, it sets up landlords to be able to move people into contaminated houses without legal recourse,” Ellis said in August. “It sets up renters as second-class citizens.”
“I’m going to sue them over what they have done. It’s discrimination,” he said.
Ellis said he still suffers from his days in that Port Townsend rental home, but he’s moved out to the country and is starting to feel better. He asserts that Locke and county officials are trying to protect their tax base.
“Anyone who owns property here, they give protection to. But some child goes and gets in that house and gets sick, there’s no protection,” Ellis said."
Source
http://www.ptleader.com/news/pt-meth-lab-complaint-dismissed/article_5ae257ea-7502-11e4-a6dc-0787963ae368.html
Barry Ellis State of Washington Complaint
"My name is Barry Ellis. I am here today to address a situation which was not dealt with
appropriately by Jefferson County Health Dept.
My former girlfriend and myself took occupancy of a residence owned by Bent and
Joanne Meyer located at 1507 31st Street in Port Townsend in late April of 2011.
During my fourteen months at this residence, I experienced internal bleeding, two emergency
surgeries, numerous medical procedures, an attempted suicide by my former girlfriend
and my fiancée required medical attention right after moving in with me.
In April 2012, neighbors of ours, Denise Early and Paula Martin (Guardian ad Litem
Jefferson County), told us that the owners had cleaned up remnants of a meth lab two
weeks before I moved into this home.
I then contacted Bent Meyer, the owner of the residence and he refused to address the situation but did tell me to move out immediately.
When I asked for permission to have the premises tested for meth residue, I was locked
out of the residence without a court order.
I had contacted Marjorie Boyd at the Jefferson County Health Dept. and to my surprise,
she stated there was nothing she could do except if the Port Townsend Police Dept.
notified her or the owner. I had also contacted Sgt. Green at the Port Townsend Police
Dept., and in essence was told, this was a civil matter.
Before I was locked out of this residence, I removed items from the house and had them
tested for meth residue and forwarded the results to Marjorie Boyd at the Jefferson
County Health Dept., which were between two and twenty six times the legal limit (See
exhibit A/B/C), and was again told there was nothing she could do.
I then contacted Sgt. Kaare at the Port Townsend Police Dept. and he initiated a hazmat
investigation report # 2013-00000872 (See exhibit D/E). In doing so, Sgt. Kaare spoke
with the Jefferson County Health Dept., and was told not to open a case on this matter
and in response Sgt. Kaare told them “I’m covering our ass on this one”, and opened a
case number on it. Through a public disclosure request, I asked who Sgt. Kaare spoke
with at Jefferson County Health Dept., but he could not recall (see exhibit F). I also spoke
with Ms. Armstrong at the Dept. of Ecology, and she also forwarded the lab results to
Jefferson County Health Dept. I received letters from Mr. Jarrod Keefer, Marjorie Boyd
and Christy Fiedler which I want to discuss now.
In short, the letter from Ms. Fiedler reads:
We do not have the authority to respond to this type of complaint except when it is
referred to us from a law enforcement agency or the property owner. If we are requested
by either law enforcement or a property owner to investigate a property for potential or
known contamination, then we would carry out duties as outlined in RCW 64.44 and
WAC 246-205 (See exhibit G). In short, the letter from Mr.Keefer reads:
Jefferson County Public Health Dept. received the above referenced report from the City
of Port Townsend Police Dept. on February 6, 2013. As we stated in our letter on
November 2nd, upon referral or request by law enforcement and/or the propertyowner ,
we will post and inspect the site. We have yet to receive, from law enforcement or the
property owner, a notification of potential contamination at that address due to the
manufacture of illegal drugs ( See exhibit H).
Exhibits D&E were the notifications of potential and verified contamination given to
Jefferson County Health Dept. in February 2013 by the Port Townsend Police Dept. and
by the Washington State Dept.of Ecology.
In a letter drafted by Mr. Keefer that was received through a public disclosure request
(See exhibit I), Mr. Keefer refers to me as Mr.Dundee which is corrected in an email
from David Alvarez (See exhibit J). The letter goes on to state that “the police report does
not confirm that the site is an illegal drug manufacturing lab”.
Our jurisdiction is limited
to the illegal manfacture of drugs. I am now going to read the RCW, WAC and Jefferson
County ordinance. Nowhere in these laws will you read or hear the term “illegal drug
manufacturing lab”
Source and Full Document with Exhibits Click Below
http://sboh.wa.gov/Portals/7/Doc/Meetings/2014/08-13/WSBOH-08-13-14-Tab05c.pdf
Jill Buhler |
JCPH ADMINISTRATION
Jefferson County Health Department is said to be one of the worst Health Departments in the Nation for being Proactive.
Tom Locke
Health Officer
Jefferson County
Jean Baldwin
Director
Julia Danskin
Public Health Supervisor
Veronica Shaw
Deputy Director &
Chief Operations Director
Jared Keefer
Environmental Health & Water Quality Director
Dr. Thomas H. Locke, MD
Is it a conflict of interest to be on multiple boards such as this?
Jill Buhler
Jefferson County Board of Health
Jill Buhler
Hospital Commissioner
Folks, I don't believe it is legal, and it certainly is NOT Ethical for Jill Buhler to be on both of these boards. Recusal is NOT enough. She should not be on both.
It is also said that Jill Buhler, Local Port Townsend Real Estate Agent was the agent for Jim McCarron on this deal. I say that was VERY much a Conflict of Interest, and in NO way an arm's reach transaction but is it illegal, probably not, who knows. It is certainly unethical.
"Jefferson Healthcare commissioners agreed June 20 to authorize Chief Executive Officer Mike Glenn to cinch a deal to pay Jim McCarron $7,480,000 for a two-story building the hospital has been leasing for two clinics."
"Commissioner Jill Buhler recused herself from voting on the deal because she and her husband, John, have been friends with McCarron for decades and had entered into a business partnership in a commercial building in Port Townsend with McCarron. She said that was subsequently dissolved by the building's sale. Buhler said she wanted to avoid any “hint of impropriety.”
Source
http://www.ptleader.com/news/hospital-district-votes-to-buy-mccarron-building-in-port-townsend/article_8d39ed9f-b77d-5181-a90e-ed0c89aeacc2.html
Jill Buhler was allegedly the Real Estate Agent on that deal, and as a local Broker Owner here in Port Townsend I estimate that to be about $450,000 in real estate commission. I think there is some conflicts here.
I would say there is a lot more then a HINT of impropriety. Plus how much did Jill Buhler make from the sale itself if she was in "business" or somehow part owner in some way as the article seems to imply?
I am not claiming to know the entire real estate market at that time, however, rumor has it that
Jefferson Healthcare Commissioners, of which Jill Buhler is one of them, well they voted to buy this building for what seems to be at least 2 million dollars over what the market could possibly bare.
I allege there was back alley deals per say, and that there was something shady about this HUGE price being VOTED in, but hey, that's just how I see it.
Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS), Jefferson County Public Health, the Port Townsend Police and the Hospital Commission are way to cozy on all this if you ask me. And well in the case of this TOXIC home and many other like it in Jefferson County, well we the people have to EXPOSE this issue and protect the public at large as clearly the people you are paying to protect you and your children are NOT DOING THEIR JOB.
Links to more Research on the Meth Issue and Barry Ellis Case
Complaint Details
Complaint with Police Report Exhibit
Barry Ellis telling his Story in Video
Jefferson County Public Health Meeting Minutes on this Topic
http://www.jeffersoncountypublichealth.org/pdf/BOH%20minutes%20-%20April%202014.pdf
http://www.jeffersoncountypublichealth.org/pdf/2014%20March%20Signed%20Minutes.pdf
Jefferson County Public Health Adopted Meth Lab Regulations
It is SHOCKING that Bent Meyer and his Son in Law Steve Heemstra are Pastors, and present themselves to be men of God, yet do this horrific injustice.
Ex - Pastor Bent Meyer Research Links
http://thewartburgwatch.com/2012/06/22/bent-myer-speaks-out-about-redemption-groups-at-mark-driscolls-mars-hill/
Yet Counselor Bent Meyer is a slumlord, and has a total disregard for the law, and for the civil and human rights of the tenants of his rentals.
http://northwestfamilylife.org/find-a-counselor/brent-meyer-ma-lmhca/
Bent Meyer Counselor
http://joyfulexiles.com/tag/bent-meyer/
Confessed Betrayal
http://joyfulexiles.com/2014/08/28/new-disclosures-by-former-mh-pastorelder-bent-meyer/
http://thewartburgwatch.com/2012/06/22/bent-myer-speaks-out-about-redemption-groups-at-mark-driscolls-mars-hill/
http://seattletimes.com/html/localnews/2004020898_webmarshill18m.html
http://thewartburgwatch.com/2012/01/30/fired-mars-hill-elder-breaks-his-silence/
http://northwestfamilylife.org/find-a-counselor/brent-meyer-ma-lmhca/
http://www.paradigmcounselingps.com/
Steve Heemstra Chimacum
Steve Heemstra is said to be the son in law of Bent Meyers whom showed Barry Ellis the home. Steve Heemstra seems to have known it was a Meth Lab and did not disclose.
Steve Heemstra, I believe a local Pastor of Calvary Hill in Port Townsend may face Criminal charges on this matter.
Sergeant Green |
Former Port Townsend Sergeant Ed Green
Sergeant Ed Green seems to have REFUSED to open a HazMat Investigation on this property. Even though the Port Townsend Police knew that the property had been contaminated as they had been called to the property to remove children, I believe. Sergeant Ed Green and the Port Townsend Police had information, details, testing from Barry Ellis or so it seems, and yet they did not open a HazMat investigation and did not protect tenants.
Why did Port Townsend Police Chief Conner Daily Not Step Up?
Sergeant Ed Green is now the Chief of Police of Oak Harbor.
"PORT TOWNSEND — Sgt. Ed Green, the longest-serving member of the current 15 members of the Port Townsend Police Department, has been offered the position of police chief of Oak Harbor by the town's mayor.
Green said Friday that he intends to accept it but had not yet returned the paperwork to Oak Harbor.
His hiring, filling a position formerly held by Rick Wallace, won't be final until it is confirmed by the Oak Harbor City Council on Oct. 16.
“I'm really excited about this,” Green said.
Oak Harbor Mayor Scott Dudley said Friday that he will put forward Green's name as his choice for police chief Thursday and that proposed approval of Green's confirmation and a contract recommending an annual salary of $101,292 will be items on the Oct. 16 agenda.
Source
http://www.peninsuladailynews.com/article/20121008/NEWS/310089990/port-townsend-police-sergeant-offered-oak-harbor-chief-job
Port Townsend CPS
Is Children Protective Service in Port Townsend (Office ID is 770) criminally and financially liable?
They know it's a contaminated home, they have been there to take children in a Meth situation prior to Barry Ellis moving in, from what I have heard. Yet kids live there now right? CPS should be brought up on Criminal Neglect, Right?
All these OFFICIAL agencies know the home is Deadly TOXIC yet they do not disclose, they do not open a HazMat Investigation and they ARE NOT protecting the children of Jefferson County, in my Opinion.
Meth Lab Clean Up Guidelines in other areas
http://health.mo.gov/atoz/pdf/MethLabCleanupGuidelines.pdf
http://www.deq.state.ok.us/LPDnew/methlabs/meth.htm
http://sai-dc.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/meth_lab_guidelines.pdf
http://www.methlabcleanup.com/meth%20cleanup%20laws.htm
Washington Meth Lab Clean Up Laws
http://apps.leg.wa.gov/WAC/default.aspx?cite=246.205
http://apps.leg.wa.gov/RCW/default.aspx?cite=64.06.020
Dangers of Living in a Home that was a Meth Lab
"Houses formerly used as meth labs, called meth houses, put their residents at risk of serious health consequences, says Stan Smith, a doctoral student at the University of California, Los Angeles, and director of the Drug Endangered Children Task Force, a division of the California Drug Enforcement Agency.
Upon moving into a meth house, people have experienced short-term health problems ranging from migraines and respiratory difficulties to skin irritation and burns. Long-term problems are less well known, but the results from a 2009 study in Toxological Sciences suggest that methamphetamine chemicals may cause cancer in humans.
And because children have small, developing bodies and a tendency to play on the ground and put things in their mouths, they are especially susceptible to adverse health effects from meth toxins. “When we go into a lab, if there are children, the first thing we do is take the children to the hospital and assess them for contamination,” said Smith.
The chemicals used in methamphetamine production are highly toxic and range from pseudoephenadrine — the main ingredient in meth and active ingredient in decongestants — to any one of 32 other precursor chemicals. These include acetone, the active ingredient in nail polish remover, and phosphine, a widely used insecticide.
Home-cooking meth spreads toxins to every inch of the room where the meth was cooked and beyond. Nothing escapes contamination — the carpet, walls, furniture, drapes, air ducts, even the air itself becomes toxic. “Ingesting some of these chemicals, even a tiny drop, can cause immediate death,” said Smith."
Read More Click Below
http://scienceline.org/2010/04/are-you-living-in-a-former-meth-lab/
http://www.ovc.gov/publications/bulletins/children/pg5.html
http://methlabhomes.com/about-us/my-meth-lab-home-story/
http://money.cnn.com/2013/02/12/real_estate/home-meth-lab/
http://www.methinyourhouse.com/health-effects-of-third-hand-meth.html#.VIJqcDHF-2g
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