Clallam County Watchdog

How Close Clallam County Came to Testing Illegal Drugs for Users

56 min · 14. juni 2026
episode How Close Clallam County Came to Testing Illegal Drugs for Users cover

Description

In this Sundays With Seegers, County Commissioner candidate Jake Seegers examines public records showing Clallam County nearly launched a program that would have tested illegal drugs and returned them to participants for use. Despite warnings of significant legal and financial liability, commissioners unanimously approved the effort. The program was ultimately stopped after a county risk manager intervened. The records raise a fundamental question: when does harm reduction become government-facilitated drug use? Harm Reduction Almost Broke Clallam County When Health Officer Allison Berry was appointed in 2018, Clallam County’s harm reduction program was relatively simple: participants exchanged used syringes for clean needles on a one-for-one basis [https://www.peninsuladailynews.com/2016/01/15/clallam-needle-exchange-clients-increase-but-number-of-syringes-lent-out-falls/#google_vignette]. The stated goal was straightforward: reduce the spread of HIV, hepatitis, and other bloodborne diseases among people who were already injecting drugs. Over the next eight years, however, Health Officer Berry and the Clallam County commissioners steadily expanded harm reduction far beyond its original scope. What began as a syringe exchange evolved into a comprehensive Harm Reduction Health Center that distributes supplies for virtually every method of drug consumption. Today, participants receive syringes, smoking supplies, foil, naloxone, boofing kits, and other drug-use supplies. “How-to” literature not only explains alternative methods of consumption, but details how to achieve the most effective high. The transformation of a simple disease-prevention strategy into a distribution center for drug-use supplies and resources did not happen by accident. It was the result of a deliberate and sustained effort to expand harm reduction at nearly every opportunity. Health Officer Berry and the commissioners frequently justified each expansion as a necessary response to the worsening overdose crisis. Yet at every stage, the same question received little discussion: At what point does reducing the harms of drug use become facilitating drug use itself? For the Health Officer and the sitting commissioners, there appears to be no limit to their commitment to expanding harm reduction. That commitment reached a new level in 2023 when Clallam County joined the University of Washington’s ADAI (Additction, Drugs, and Alcohol Institute) Drug Checking Project. Commissioners Randy Johnson, Mark Ozias, and Mike French unanimously approved the grant-funded program that could have exposed county taxpayers to millions of dollars in liability. Take a Ride in My Drug-Testing Machine In late 2022, Health Officer Berry began advocating for a grant-funded portable drug-testing machine, also known as a mass spectrometer. During a December commissioner work session [https://clallamcowa.portal.civicclerk.com/event/910/media], she stated that the purpose was to better inform response efforts. Berry’s statements, along with her emails, indicated that the county prosecutor, Sheriff’s Office, Port Angeles Police Department, and others had signed off on the program. The problem with these claims was twofold. First, the Sheriff’s Office, Port Angeles Police Department, and Coroner’s Office would not have access to the machine. The spectrometer was intended exclusively for the Harm Reduction Health Center. If the primary goal was data collection, why exclude the very agencies that routinely encounter illegal drugs through investigations, arrests, and overdose deaths? Second, an email from then-County Administrator Rich Sill indicates that the Sheriff had raised concerns that returning drugs to participants after testing could be unlawful under Washington law. An individual who delivers an illegal substance to someone who later dies from using it may be charged with controlled substances homicide under RCW 69.50.415. While ESSB 5536 [https://lawfilesext.leg.wa.gov/biennium/2023-24/Htm/Bill%20Reports/House/5536-S2.E%20HBR%20APP%2023.htm?utm] would later take effect in August 2023, providing protections for public-health employees involved in distributing harm-reduction supplies and testing illegal substances, it did not explicitly provide protections for returning drugs to participants after testing. The drug-checking program was scheduled to begin before those protections took effect. It also would have launched during the worst overdose period in Clallam County’s history. According to the Coroner’s Office, trailing-twelve-month (TTM) overdose deaths peaked between April 2023 and March 2024, with 51 deaths during that period. That equates to nearly one overdose death every week. What were the chances that one of those individuals would have used the drug-checking program? If a participant received a contaminant-free result and later died, could county employees face legal exposure under RCW 69.50.415? The potential legal and financial liability was significant. Yet liability concerns appeared to carry little weight. In fact, nearly a year before ESSB 5536 took effect, the county had already begun distributing drug-use supplies beyond syringes as part of its ongoing expansion of harm reduction. The Process When the drug-checking program was presented to commissioners during a January 30, 2023 work session [https://clallamcowa.portal.civicclerk.com/event/1726/media], Commissioner Johnson asked the obvious question: “That’s great, but where are they [illegal drugs] coming from, the Sheriff’s office?” Karissa McLane, then Public Health Nurse Supervisor for Clallam County Health and Human Services (HHS), explained that participants in the county’s harm reduction program would bring their own drugs in for testing. A month earlier, during a December 12, 2022 work session [https://clallamcowa.portal.civicclerk.com/event/910/media], then-Commissioner Bill Peach asked: “If it turns out that it is illegal drugs, can they get arrested?” McLane responded: “That’s a good question. Yes. People can bring their drugs in to get tested. We’ve consulted with our prosecuting attorney’s office and discussed with our sheriff’s office and have determined that people will not be arrested for bringing drugs in to get tested from us.” The proposed process was straightforward: * An individual acquires illegal drugs — possibly from any of several open-air drug markets in Port Angeles, like Safeway or the Veterans Bell. * They bring those drugs to the Harm Reduction Health Center. * A county health employee tests them using the mass spectrometer. * The results are shared with the participant. * The drugs are returned to the participant for use. The problem is that sophisticated testing by a trusted county health professional can create a false sense of safety when contaminants are not detected. Liability disclosures attempted to address this by explaining that a test result “doesn’t always mean a drug is safe to use.” But common sense would suggest a simpler message: “Drugs are never safe to use.”“Fentanyl will kill you. Don’t use it.” Yet participants were unlikely to hear such unequivocal language. “Harm Reduction Messaging” guidelines attached to emails obtained through a public records request cautioned: “When discussing harm reduction, it is important to choose your language carefully to ensure that you are not coming across as paternal, shaming or denigrating.” When a participant hands illegal drugs to a trusted county health professional, receives a contaminant-free result, and leaves with those drugs—along with a pipe, syringe, or boofing kit—the message received is clear: Go ahead and use it. It’s been checked. Blinders But what would have happened if a county health employee deemed a drug contaminant-free and the participant later died from an overdose? The answer could have been millions of dollars in liability, litigation costs, settlements, and judgments ultimately borne by taxpayers. The potential exposure extended beyond Clallam County. During a January 2023 commissioner work session, Karissa McLane explained that the drug-testing machine would eventually be integrated into harm reduction’s planned mobile van. In partnership with Jefferson County, the mobile unit would provide drug testing and distribute supplies throughout both counties. After the presentation, Commissioner Ozias asked: “Commissioners, any other questions?” The audience could have heard a pin drop. On February 7, 2023 [https://clallamcowa.portal.civicclerk.com/event/1706/media], Commissioner Johnson moved to approve the program; Commissioner French seconded, and the board unanimously approved it without further discussion. Following the vote, Commissioner Ozias enthusiastically remarked: “[This] is really exciting! It’s really exciting to see the University [of Washington] being engaged so broadly and directly in communities like our county. I really appreciate that. So, thanks to our public health team for facilitating this.” Just a Matter of Time Despite the liability risks, Health Officer Berry and HHS appeared to downplay the importance of having a qualified technician operate the drug-testing machine. While discussing the grant, Berry wrote: “I am less interested in hiring our own tech.” Lisa Al-Hakim, then-Prevention Specialist/SSP Coordinator for Clallam County Public Health, proposed an alternative. The Hepatitis Education Project [https://www.hep.org/our-story] (HEP), a Seattle nonprofit and fellow ADAI Drug Checking Grant recipient, had hired an “OD Prevention Coordinator” instead of a dedicated technician. The decision appears to have been driven by cost and long-term harm reduction sustainability. Al-Hakim wrote: “So it looks like HEP hired a OD prevention specialist and rolled their drug-checking tech work into that, which isn’t a bad idea thinking along the lines of sustainability for the harm reduction health program.” Clallam County followed HEP’s lead. The problem is that the Drug Checking Network grant specifically required a Drug Technician. And, Clallam County’s scope of work committed to hiring one. Instead, the OD Prevention Coordinator position emphasized lived experience and social-service work rather than technical qualifications. But technical expertise was critical to interpreting the spectrometer's results. Before a training session led by Yarelix Estrada of the New York City Department of Health, internal emails acknowledged that interpreting the machine’s spectra readings required experience. The training materials warned: “We do not trust machines. Do not take the first match and assume it to be true. The art of drug-checking is in the technician’s ability to think critically about the sample and OPUS is only a tool.” Drug checking was not simply a matter of pushing a button. It required the judgment and critical analysis of a trained technician. Instead of prioritizing technical expertise, the county specifically encouraged individuals with personal histories of substance use to apply. Additionally, the position description stated that candidates “must be comfortable handling drug samples and potentially being exposed to substances.” Encouraging individuals in recovery to apply for a position that requires handling the very drugs they were attempting to avoid does not seem like harm reduction. The drug-testing machine would have become part of the county’s mobile harm reduction van, with complex analyses potentially conducted not by a Drug Technician, as discussed in the grant, but by an outreach coordinator—possibly someone in recovery—who would handle a constant flow of illegal drugs. That employee would have been responsible for interpreting results, giving drugs to participants, and communicating whether or not contaminants had been detected. It is difficult to imagine a scenario carrying greater potential for error—or greater liability for Clallam County taxpayers. A Voice in the Desert While county officials pressed forward with expanding harm reduction despite significant liability concerns, one employee stepped forward to protect the county from itself. When Tom Reyes, Deputy Director of Human Resources and Risk Management, learned of the drug-checking program, he immediately recognized the risks and voiced his concerns: “I believe it is only a matter of time before a lawsuit is filed on someone, or some agency, providing testing. I hope Clallam County is not that first!” Also of concern, most of the other participants in the ADAI drug-checking program were NGO’s, not government departments. In the same email, Reyes noted: “An internet search indicates they are a 501(c) (3), not a County entity. Clearly, they would not have the same level of risk exposure.” A former detective with the Clallam County Sheriff’s Office, Reyes acted quickly despite apparent internal pressure to dismiss the liability concerns. He contacted Derek Bryan of the Washington Counties Risk Pool, the insurer that provides coverage for Clallam County. Less than a week later, a response from Ken Kollmann effectively stopped the program in its tracks. The county dodged a bullet—one that its Health Officer and commissioners had been willing to put the county in front of. Common Sense Prevails The drug-checking machine was never the real story. The story is how far county leadership was willing to go in its effort to expand harm reduction. Public records show that pursuit of the ADAI Drug Checking Grant was part of a broader, coordinated effort to grow harm reduction services in Clallam County. The Harm Reduction Health Center had already taken possession of the machine and was actively promoting the program months before final approval was granted. When the program encountered resistance, Health Officer Berry attempted to salvage it by appealing to the pity of Tom Reyes: “Our staff are already incredibly overstretched and watching this position go unfilled and the money sit wasted has been deeply demoralizing to them. We cannot afford to lose any more staff to burnout this year.” But Reyes understood what others seemed unwilling to acknowledge. As Deputy Director of Human Resources and Risk Management and a former Sheriff’s Office detective, he recognized the extraordinary liability being created by a county-operated drug-checking program. While commissioners and public health officials focused on expanding harm reduction, Reyes focused on legality, liability, and common sense. He elevated his concerns to the Washington Counties Risk Pool, and within days, the program was effectively dead. Although Clallam County had already acquired the machine, it was ultimately returned to the University of Washington. The county dodged a potentially catastrophic mistake because one employee was willing to ask the questions that elected officials and public health leadership would not. Yet losing the drug-checking program did not slow the expansion of harm reduction. In 2018, the county’s syringe exchange had no dedicated employees and a modest budget of just over $60,000. Various employees, including Dr. Berry (Unthank), pitched in to run the program, totaling 0.51 full-time equivalent (FTE) employees for the entire year. By 2025, the Harm Reduction Health Center employed four full-time staff and operated on a budget of $531,010 per year—roughly equivalent to the cost of four Sheriff’s deputies. At a time when residents are demanding greater public safety, that’s a significant allocation of resources toward a program that seems to expand harm. Monthly participant encounters increased nearly fivefold, from 212 in 2023 to 975 in 2025. Meanwhile, overdose deaths in Clallam County have more than tripled since 2018—far outpacing increases nationally, statewide, and in other states that resisted the aggressive expansion of harm reduction policies. The pattern is difficult to ignore. When legal concerns emerged, county leadership pressed forward.When liability concerns emerged, county leadership pressed forward.When common-sense objections emerged, county leadership pressed forward. The drug-checking machine was simply the most extreme example. In the end, Clallam County was protected not by its commissioners, not by its Health Officer, and not by the advocates determined to expand harm reduction at every opportunity. It was protected by a lone voice willing to challenge the prevailing narrative and insist on accountability. Clallam County needs more leaders willing to do the same. Because when government becomes so committed to an ideology that it is willing to expose taxpayers to extraordinary risk in pursuit of it, common sense is no longer optional—it is essential. “However beautiful the strategy, you should occasionally look at the results.” — Winston Churchill What can you do? The future direction of harm reduction in Clallam County will ultimately be determined by elected officials and public health leaders—but they need to hear from the people they serve. If you have thoughts about the county’s approach to harm reduction, drug testing, overdose prevention, or the use of taxpayer resources, consider sharing them with the Board of County Commissioners and Health Officer Dr. Allison Berry. All three commissioners can be reached through the Clerk of the Board at loni.gores@clallamcountywa.gov. Dr. Berry can be reached directly at allison.berry@clallamcountywa.gov. You can also make your voice heard during public comment at the next Clallam County Board of Health meeting [https://clallamcowa.portal.civicclerk.com/event/293/files/agenda/6198] on Tuesday, June 16, at 1:30 p.m. in the Commissioners Boardroom at the Clallam County Courthouse in Port Angeles. Public comment is available both in person and via Zoom. Whether you support the county’s current approach, oppose it, or believe changes are needed, local government works best when citizens participate. Make your voice part of the conversation. Today’s Tidbit: First Commissioner Debate Set for Tomorrow Clallam County voters will get their first chance to see incumbent Commissioner Mike French and challenger Jake Seegers face off tomorrow night in a candidate forum hosted by the Clallam County Democrats. The debate begins at 6:00 p.m. Monday, June 15, at Democratic Headquarters, 124 W. First Street in Port Angeles, with a Zoom option available for those unable to attend in person. The format includes opening statements, audience questions, Zoom questions, rebuttals, and closing remarks. Organizers say anyone may ask questions, though comments will be limited to 30 seconds, and audience members are expected to remain respectful. Whether you’re supporting French, Seegers, or are still undecided, this is the first direct, live comparison of the candidates’ positions before the August primary. Candidate forums will be recorded and posted online for those unable to watch live. For more details, including virtual attendance instructions, click here [https://www.clallamdems.org/calendar.html] and select the event on Monday, June 15. PDC Complaint Update The Jake Seegers campaign is currently working with the Washington State Public Disclosure Commission regarding a complaint filed by Paul Pickett. As part of that process, PDC staff have advised that certain Clallam County Watchdog articles and podcast segments discussing Jake Seegers may require campaign sponsor identification (“Sponsored by Jake Seegers for Commissioner, 131 E. First St, Port Angeles, WA, 98362”). The campaign has raised concerns regarding the proposed disclosure language because no campaign funds have been paid to Clallam County Watchdog, and no compensation has been exchanged for the publication of these articles or podcast segments. In addition, Clallam County Watchdog frequently includes independent commentary and analysis that may not be reviewed, approved, or endorsed by Jake Seegers or his campaign. Podcast episodes and articles containing commentary reflect the views of Clallam County Watchdog and are not reviewed by the campaign prior to publication. The campaign and PDC staff continue to discuss these issues and work toward compliance with Washington’s campaign finance laws. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.ccwatchdog.com [https://www.ccwatchdog.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

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episode "Rock Solid" Science? artwork

"Rock Solid" Science?

When Clallam County Health Officer Dr. Allison Berry declared the science behind harm reduction "rock solid," she left little room for debate. But from Oregon's failed Measure 110 experiment to concerns raised by recovery advocates, public records, and even local data discrepancies, the evidence tells a more complicated story. If the science is truly settled, why are questions increasingly treated as attacks? At last week’s Board of Health meeting, Clallam County Health Officer Dr. Allison Berry offered an unequivocal defense of the county’s harm reduction programs. “The evidence on its efficacy is rock solid all across the country in urban areas and rural areas,” Berry told the Board. “It’s not new, it’s not strange. What we’re doing here is not atypical. It’s standard harm reduction practices.” She went even further. “Well, the data is very, very clear that it is the other way around. Harm reduction reduces people’s use of drugs. It makes them use less. It makes them less likely to die, less likely to get infectious diseases, and it makes them more likely to enter treatment.” Those are strong statements. They leave little room for the possibility that the evidence is mixed, incomplete, or still being debated. The problem is that the broader debate surrounding harm reduction is anything but settled. What Does Harm Reduction Mean? Harm reduction encompasses a wide range of programs intended to reduce the negative consequences of substance abuse. Supporters argue these programs keep people alive long enough to enter recovery and reduce the spread of infectious diseases. Critics argue some programs have drifted beyond reducing harm and instead normalize or prolong active addiction. The disagreement is not whether addiction is harmful. The disagreement is over which policies are most effective in helping people escape it. The Debate Berry Says Doesn’t Exist Berry’s comments suggest the evidence overwhelmingly supports current harm reduction practices. Yet significant questions continue to be raised by researchers, recovery advocates, elected officials, and communities across North America. Oregon’s Measure 110 experiment was promoted as a groundbreaking public health approach to addiction. Instead, overdose deaths continued to rise, and public dissatisfaction became so widespread that lawmakers ultimately reversed major portions of the policy. San Francisco has spent years investing heavily in harm reduction programs while simultaneously struggling with public drug use, overdoses, and growing concerns from residents and business owners. Even Vancouver, often held up as the model for harm reduction, faces criticism from recovery advocates who argue that treatment and recovery have become secondary to maintenance strategies. The point is not that harm reduction never works. The point is that serious debate exists. A policy surrounded by ongoing debate is difficult to describe as “rock solid.” Questions From Recovery Advocates During recent Board of Health meetings, long-term recovery advocate David Rogers has repeatedly challenged county officials [https://www.ccwatchdog.com/p/dr-berrys-response-challenges-recovery?utm_source=publication-search] to place greater emphasis on treatment, accountability, and pathways out of addiction. Rogers is hardly alone. Many families affected by addiction support treatment-first approaches and question whether the county’s current balance between harm reduction and recovery is producing the best outcomes. Reasonable people can disagree on those questions. What is more difficult to understand is why those questions are so often characterized as attacks. When Public Officials Get It Wrong One of the recurring themes in recent Board of Health discussions has been misinformation. Berry has frequently warned the public about misinformation regarding public health issues. Yet critics argue public officials themselves have made claims that deserve scrutiny. Jake Seegers highlighted several examples during public comment. In 2021, local COVID restrictions were justified in part by claims that vaccination significantly prevented transmission. At the same time, national public health agencies were acknowledging that vaccinated individuals could still contract and spread the virus. “High viral loads suggest an increased risk of transmission and raised concern that, unlike with other variants, vaccinated people infected with Delta can transmit the virus.” — Statement from the CDC [https://archive.cdc.gov/www_cdc_gov/media/releases/2021/s0730-mmwr-covid-19.html?utm_source=chatgpt.com], July 2021 From 2 Deaths to 10 In January 2019, the Peninsula Daily News reported that overdose deaths in Clallam County had fallen dramatically—from 10 deaths in 2017 to just 2 in 2018. Health Officer Allison Berry cited the figures as evidence that expanded access to naloxone was working, pointing to an Opioid Surveillance Dashboard maintained by public health officials. The numbers appeared to tell a compelling story. If accurate, they suggested overdose deaths had declined by 80 percent in a single year. However, only three months later, the same dashboard was updated. Instead of 2 overdose deaths in 2018, the revised total was 10—the same number reported for 2017. What had been presented as a dramatic decline disappeared entirely. The numbers may have changed because the original data was preliminary. But the larger issue remains. The public heard about the dramatic drop from 10 deaths to 2. Few people heard that the number was later revised back to 10. As Berry once again points to overdose statistics as evidence that harm reduction is working, some residents are asking a simple question: how much confidence should the public place in numbers that have changed so significantly before? The Importance of Verification Questions have been raised about county syringe accounting methods, including how distributed syringes are counted compared to collected syringes. Dr. Berry has stated that an empty Gatorade bottle can hold 40 collected syringes. Jake Seegers decided to test that claim for himself. It raises questions about the claim that the County is collecting more needles than it distributes. Most recently, questions have emerged regarding differences between overdose statistics presented in county reports and figures reported by the Coroner’s Office. Whether these criticisms are ultimately correct is less important than the broader principle: scientific claims should remain open to examination. Ignoring Warnings Critics also point to examples where warnings were raised to the County but dismissed. Dr. Berry’s proposed drug-checking program [https://www.ccwatchdog.com/p/how-close-clallam-county-came-to?utm_source=publication-search] was halted after concerns were raised by risk managers and the county’s insurance pool. Public records later revealed the extent of those concerns. Credit for uncovering those records belongs largely to Jake Seegers. Similarly, officials have frequently stated there were no significant issues associated with public pool shower vouchers, despite police reports documenting [https://www.ccwatchdog.com/p/pool-board-says-there-were-no-incidents?utm_source=publication-search] numerous incidents at the facility over the years. Again, the issue is not whether every criticism is correct. The issue is whether questions are being taken seriously. Questions Are Not Attacks Recently, the Clallam County Democrats circulated a newsletter containing the following statement: “Tozzer and Seegers are personally intimidating and threatening and harassing her regularly, along with their little brigade. Evidence is available on recordings of BOH and Commissioner meetings.” No examples were provided. That accusation gets to the heart of the issue. If the science is truly as “rock solid” as Berry claims, then it should withstand scrutiny. Questions about overdose trends, treatment outcomes, syringe counts, public safety incidents, and competing evidence should not be viewed as personal attacks. Science advances through challenge, debate, testing, and verification. The issue isn’t whether harm reduction works at all. The issue is whether public officials who claim certainty are willing to engage with evidence that suggests the story may be more complicated than they admit. "Science is the belief in the ignorance of experts." — Richard Feynman Today’s Tidbit: Another Trust Land Application Filed The Jamestown Corporation has submitted another application to place property into federal trust status, according to a notice received by the Clallam County Commissioners on June 9. The application, filed with the Bureau of Indian Affairs, seeks to transfer approximately 8.63 acres into trust for use as residential sites. If approved, the property would be removed from the local tax rolls and transferred into federal trust ownership. The BIA’s notice specifically requests information from local governments regarding the amount of property taxes currently collected on the parcel, any special assessments, governmental services provided to the property, and whether the proposed use is consistent with local zoning. The application is part of a continuing series of trust land acquisitions by the Tribe. County officials have 30 days from receipt of the notice to provide comments to the Bureau of Indian Affairs regarding the potential impacts of removing the property from the local tax rolls. Why it matters: Every individual trust land application may appear small on its own, but each approved transfer permanently removes property from local taxation while local governments continue to provide many regional services funded by remaining taxpayers. If you would like Clallam County to respond to the federal government's request for comment, let your county commissioners know. All three commissioners can be reached by emailing the Clerk of the Board at loni.gores@clallamcountywa.gov. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.ccwatchdog.com [https://www.ccwatchdog.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

Yesterday1 h 5 min
episode Building a Better Safety Net—or a Better Magnet? artwork

Building a Better Safety Net—or a Better Magnet?

Commissioner Mike French says homelessness services aren’t attracting people to Clallam County. But when a convicted sex offender with arrests in Illinois and Bremerton ends up living steps away from a Port Angeles shelter and receiving services funded by local taxpayers, residents are asking a simple question: if people aren’t coming here because of the services, why do so many seem to arrive where the services are? As the debate over shower vouchers at the William Shore Pool intensifies, Jake Seegers is emerging as the candidate offering what many voters see as a common-sense alternative. French Says Services Aren’t Drawing People Here At April’s Commissioner Forum [https://www.ccwatchdog.com/p/from-hoboken-to-clallam-how-did-we?utm_source=chatgpt.com], Commissioner Mike French was asked directly whether Clallam County’s extensive homelessness and harm-reduction services might be attracting people from outside the area. His answer was essentially, “no.” French acknowledged he doesn’t have definitive data but suggested that Clallam County’s remoteness may play a role. “Generally no,” French replied. He went on to speculate that people with warrants elsewhere may be drawn to remote communities because they are less connected to the places they are trying to leave behind. French also warned against what he sees as an effort to blame outsiders for local problems. “The focus right now is on finger-pointing,” he said. Yet there remains an unanswered question. If remoteness is the primary factor, why are so many individuals concentrated in the exact locations where the county’s services are concentrated? A Different View from Commissioner Johnson Commissioner Randy Johnson has previously pointed to a visit he made to Serenity House, where he said only four of roughly 114 residents [https://www.ccwatchdog.com/p/from-hoboken-to-clallam-how-did-we?utm_source=chatgpt.com] were from outside the area. But Johnson recently shared another story that complicates the picture. During last week’s Public Safety Town Hall hosted by the Calico Cat Social Club, Johnson described a conversation with a resident of Oxford House, a recovery-based housing program that requires accountability and adherence to rules. The man told Johnson: “I was in jail in Seattle. Then I came here, and I was in jail again.” Johnson used the story to illustrate the success of Oxford House in helping people rebuild their lives. But it also served as a reminder that at least some individuals are arriving in Clallam County from elsewhere. Meet Robert Jason Gould Last week, 52-year-old Robert Jason Gould was booked into the Clallam County Jail on a warrant-related matter. Public records show Gould is classified as a Level 2 sex offender following a 1998 conviction for attempted rape. In Washington, a Level 2 designation generally means law enforcement believes the individual presents a moderate risk of reoffending and community notification is authorized. His registered address is in the 2200 block of West 16th Street in Port Angeles, just a short distance from Serenity House. Records also show Gould was arrested earlier this month in Bremerton on allegations involving unlawful possession of a controlled substance and failure to appear. Prior records indicate arrests in Macon County, Illinois, including a federal hold and a criminal contempt matter. Whether Gould came to Clallam County because of available services, because of personal circumstances, or for some other reason isn’t known. But his case highlights the larger policy question facing local leaders: When people with extensive criminal histories arrive here from elsewhere, what obligations do taxpayers assume, and what policies may be encouraging that migration? The Shower Voucher Debate That question has become increasingly relevant as local officials debate the County’s shower voucher program. Under the program, vouchers distributed through the Harm Reduction Health Center can be redeemed for shower access at the William Shore Memorial Pool. Commissioner Randy Johnson defended the program at last week’s town hall, noting that it averages roughly one voucher per day. He argued the recipients are often vulnerable individuals, including women living in vehicles and families facing hardship. Commissioner Mike French also defended the program during last week’s debate against Jake Seegers. French argued that the pool is an existing public resource that can provide hygiene services at little additional cost and noted that the program operated for roughly 18 months without significant incident. But Seegers challenged that reasoning. Seegers argued that the absence of past incidents does not eliminate future risk. “Eighteen months of no incidents is not an argument to pursue something that is just an obvious common-sense public safety concern.” Seegers emphasized that individuals receiving vouchers where drug paraphernalia is distributed are often connected to addiction and argued that public swimming facilities serving children are not the appropriate venue for those programs. Unlike French, who framed the issue as a matter of service delivery, Seegers framed it as a matter of public safety and transparency. Watch the exchange here: The program operated for 18 months largely out of public view. Even Commissioner Mike French has said he was unaware of it until recently. That admission raised eyebrows because French sits on the William Shore Pool Board, where the vouchers are redeemed, while also serving as a county commissioner overseeing the department that distributes them. Despite those overlapping roles, he was unaware of the program. A Clear Contrast for Voters The debate over homelessness, harm reduction, public safety, and accountability is shaping up to be one of the defining issues in this year’s county commissioner race. Commissioner Mike French argues that services are a compassionate response to existing problems and rejects the idea that they are attracting people to Clallam County. Jake Seegers, on the other hand, argues that compassion without accountability can create new problems while failing to solve old ones. Cases like Robert Jason Gould’s sit squarely at the center of that debate. Here is a man whose record stretches from Illinois to Washington, who carries a Level 2 sex offender designation, and who has recent arrests involving controlled substances. Whatever brought Gould to Port Angeles, he now lives where many taxpayer-funded services are concentrated. If he is struggling with substance abuse, the Harm Reduction Health Center exists to provide supplies and services to encourage his addiction. It is also the same place where shower vouchers are distributed for use at a public pool frequented by local families and children. That is why this debate is about much more than a shower voucher. It is about the kind of system Clallam County is building and who ultimately benefits from it. Supporters see a network of services that offers dignity, compassion, and help to people in need. Critics see a growing system that too often manages dysfunction rather than demanding recovery, accountability, and change. As voters weigh those competing visions, the question may come down to something much simpler: Is Clallam County building systems that help people recover and become productive members of society, or systems that make it easier for people to remain dependent while attracting more of the same challenges from outside the community? “One of the great mistakes is to judge policies and programs by their intentions rather than their results.” — Milton Friedman What You Can Do The William Shore Memorial Pool Board will meet this Tuesday, June 23, at 3:00 p.m. to review the shower voucher policy. The pool board members are County Commissioners Mike French and Randy Johnson, Port Angeles City Council members Mark Hodgson and LaTrisha Suggs, and community representative Greg Shield. The public is welcome to attend and provide comment. For information about attending online or in-person, click here [https://www.sacpa.org/board-meetings]. Contact the Board: * Mike French — Mike.French@clallamcountywa.gov * Randy Johnson — Randy.Johnson@clallamcountywa.gov * Mark Hodgson — mhodgson@cityofpa.us * LaTrisha Suggs — losuggs@cityofpa.us * Greg Shield — gshield6@icloud.com Residents who support ending the voucher program may also sign the petition calling on the board to reject shower voucher and hygiene-center programs at the aquatic center. Today’s Tidbit: Town Hall Audio This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.ccwatchdog.com [https://www.ccwatchdog.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

22. juni 202643 min
episode Thrown Away, Found: Anniemarie Hogenboom's Journey from Trafficking to Hope artwork

Thrown Away, Found: Anniemarie Hogenboom's Journey from Trafficking to Hope

For this week’s Sundays with Seegers podcast, County Commissioner candidate Jake Seegers sits down with Sequim resident Anniemarie Hogenboom for one of the most powerful and personal conversations he has ever recorded. Anniemarie’s story begins in places most people can scarcely imagine. As a teenager, she was trafficked, became addicted to heroin, and found herself living on the streets of San Francisco. Looking back on that period of her life, she recalls, “I was trafficked at a time when it was definitely not something anybody talked about.” What follows is a remarkable story of survival, recovery, and redemption. Listeners will hear Anniemarie describe the moment she reached rock bottom, withdrawing from heroin alone in a doorway in San Francisco after deciding she no longer wanted to live the life addiction had trapped her in. “I ran out of drugs. I didn’t want to turn tricks. And so I went off of heroin cold turkey.” The conversation explores not only her recovery, but how a pair of compassionate mentors helped her rebuild her life through accountability, work, and expectations rather than enabling destructive behavior. “They saved me,” she says simply. From there, Anniemarie went on to build a successful career as a teacher and administrator, raise a family, and eventually become an advocate for women recovering from trafficking, abuse, addiction, and other forms of trauma. Today she leads the New Resiliency Group in Sequim, helping women navigate many of the same struggles she once faced herself. The discussion also tackles some of Clallam County’s most controversial issues, including homelessness, addiction, human trafficking, incarceration, recovery programs, and what genuine compassion looks like. Whether listeners agree with all of Anniemarie’s conclusions or not, her perspective comes from lived experience rather than theory. Perhaps the most moving part of the interview is her insistence that people struggling with addiction are not hopeless cases. Having once been written off herself, she sees value and potential where others see only problems. “Each human being who’s living on the street is a precious life,” she says. That belief is rooted in her own experience. As she reflects on the life she has today—a family, a home, and a purpose—she remembers where she came from: “I was absolutely thrown away.” This is more than a discussion about public policy. It’s a story about resilience, second chances, and the difference between helping people survive and helping them truly recover. If you’ve followed the community’s ongoing debates about homelessness, addiction, harm reduction, or recovery, this is an interview worth hearing in full. Listeners who are moved by Anniemarie's story can learn more in her memoir, Thrown Away Found, which tells the remarkable story of how a trafficked and addicted teenager became an educator, mother, advocate, and mentor to other women seeking recovery. The book expands on many of the experiences discussed in this interview and offers a powerful testament to resilience, redemption, and second chances. "I was grateful that I wasn't done the disservice of being allowed to stay high." — Anniemarie Looking for Support? New Resiliency Group Has Found a New Home During the interview, Anniemarie discusses the challenges her support group recently faced while meeting near Seal Street Park. Since recording the podcast, the group has secured a new location and continues its mission of helping women heal from life’s hardest challenges. The New Resiliency Group is a free, Christ-centered women’s support group focused on recovery, healing, accountability, and hope. The group welcomes women dealing with anxiety, grief, illness, depression, addiction, codependency, family dysfunction, abuse, abandonment, and other life struggles. Meetings are held every Saturday from 10:45 a.m. to noon at OBRIA, 660 N. 7th Avenue in Sequim. The program uses scripture-based recovery principles and emphasizes mutual support, personal growth, and practical healing. As Anniemarie explains in the interview, her goal is simple: to help women discover that their past does not have to define their future. For more information, visit www.newresiliency.com or call Annie at (707) 495-3698. Editor’s Note: CC Watchdog editor Jeff Tozzer also serves as campaign manager for Jake Seegers during his run for Clallam County Commissioner, District 3. Learn more at www.JakeSeegers.com [http://www.jakeseegers.com/]. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.ccwatchdog.com [https://www.ccwatchdog.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

21. juni 20261 h 23 min
episode Severing the Gordian Knot - Part III artwork

Severing the Gordian Knot - Part III

In this guest column, Clallam County Auditor candidate Virginia Shogren recounts a legal battle stemming from allegations of noncitizen voter registrations and her subsequent disciplinary hearing. She argues that election integrity questions deserve greater scrutiny and outlines her vision for restoring public trust through voter ID, hand-counted ballots, and increased transparency. A Gordian knot is a metaphor for an extremely complicated problem that seems impossible to solve. The phrase comes from an ancient legend in which a king named Gordius tied an intricate knot that no one could untangle. A prophecy said whoever untied it would rule Asia. When Alexander the Great encountered the knot, he didn’t try to untie it—instead, he cut through it with his sword. As we approach the America 250 Celebration, you would think that we might know by now what a “free and equal” election is, as decreed by our state constitution. Yet in March of 2025, I had a front-row view of our government’s utter uncertainty as to what that phrase even means. The occasion was my disciplinary hearing before the Washington State Bar Association. In 2021, a Pierce County nonprofit filed a writ of mandamus seeking to compel the executive branch (including the Governor) to comply with the Constitution as it relates to qualified voters. The case exposed an alleged Department of Licensing pattern and practice to register noncitizens to vote, as publicly revealed by a retired DOL employee. Instead of examining the evidence and taking action to enforce the state constitution, our Supreme Court did the opposite: it pre-emptively dismissed the action and sanctioned both my client and me for bringing a so-called ‘frivolous’ action. The Attorney General’s office (led by then-Attorney General Bob Ferguson) took to the media to declare that I had attacked our democracy and had abused the legal system: Within days of the national media campaign, AG Ferguson’s office filed a grievance against me with the Washington State Bar Association in order to have me investigated and disciplined. At my hearing, I questioned Ferguson’s Deputy Solicitor General Karl Smith and the ‘grievant’, Solicitor General Noah Purcell, while under oath in a downtown Seattle courtroom. The Deputy Solicitor General testified that he was uncertain as to whether noncitizens should be allowed to vote in our elections. He could not say whether noncitizens are qualified voters. He punted, saying that the issue is “all academic right now in terms of how the constitution is interpreted.” The Solicitor General testified that the most important reason behind his grievance was the “subject matter” of my representation. He testified that exposure of the alleged noncitizen voter registrations meant that I had questioned the legitimacy of the 2020 General Election (and that, therefore, I should properly be disciplined). Our own government attorneys don’t seem to understand that the Constitution prohibits noncitizens from voting in our elections. Instead — along with our Supreme Court — they seem more intent on the intimidation of the legal profession in order to suppress election integrity matters. The good news is that the people do not need government attorneys to tell them what their own constitution says. The people hold the political power of this state. Based on potential federal legislation in the form of the SAVE Act or similar enactments (see [https://www.ccwatchdog.com/p/severing-the-gordian-knot] Part I of this series [https://www.ccwatchdog.com/p/severing-the-gordian-knot]), and state law (which in no way prohibits in-person voting), here is what a free and equal election in Clallam County could soon look like: * Multiple voting locations (polling places) across Clallam County will be announced, as shown in the voter’s pamphlet and online. * Each polling place will be manned with volunteers, 50/50 left-leaning/right-leaning. * Election Day will be a single day of in-person voting (8 a.m. to 8 p.m.) with Voter ID. * Votes on cast ballots will be hand-counted at the polling places. * Absentee voting will be limited to the SAVE Act (Military, Illness, Disability, or Travel). The procedure for in-person voting could look like this: * Check in with a photo ID and sign the polling list. * Enter a defined voting area. * Pick any ballot from a stack available for your precinct. This provides for randomness and privacy, as each ballot will be assigned a unique number. * Go to a desk with a privacy shield and mark your votes and write-ins with a pen. * Remove the perforated tab from the top of the ballot (as is currently done). Keep the tab as it will contain your unique ballot number. Only you will know that number; you can check the records posted after the election to confirm that your ballot was tabulated. * Deposit the ballot in a clear plexiglass ballot box. * Exit the voting area. The County will maintain volunteers and a camera aimed only at the ballots and ballot box at all times, with the feed streamed live and recorded. At 8:00 p.m., polls close. The camera will be moved to tables where volunteers will remove the cast ballots from the clear box and place them into batches of 50 for counting. Tabulation will be done in teams of left/right readers, with vote tallies recorded on paper and all proceedings livestreamed and recorded. The general public will be invited to attend in person to listen and watch. The final results at each location will be phoned in to the County Election Center (with confirming images texted). The county-wide totals will be posted online once available from all polling places. Unused and cast ballots will be sealed separately in containers and transported (with right/left witnesses) to the Election Center for retention in the event of recounts or lawsuits. And there you have it! Free and equal elections are not theoretical or “academic”. On the contrary, they are a simple reality that is fast approaching: a single day of paper, pens, and Americans working together to achieve the will of the people. “The ballot is stronger than the bullet.” — Abraham Lincoln Virginia ShogrenCandidate for Clallam County Auditor961 W. Oak Court, Sequim, WA 98382www.VirginiaShogrenAuditor.com [https://virginiashogrenauditor.com] Credit for in-person voting methodology: 2016 Washington Democratic Presidential Caucus; California in-person elections; Voting Procedure Analysis of Terpsehore P. Maras Virginia Shogren is running for Clallam County Auditor to restore trust in our elections and ensure our tax dollars are spent wisely. Virginia believes in simple, honest government that works for the people—not special interests. She seeks accountability, lower costs, and real oversight of our elections and our money. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.ccwatchdog.com [https://www.ccwatchdog.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

18. juni 202657 min
episode Faithfully and Impartially? artwork

Faithfully and Impartially?

When residents of Three Crabs ask for help with flooding, when citizens request answers about public safety, or when constituents seek meetings with county officials, they often report silence. Yet public records show Commissioner Mark Ozias regularly making time for private meetings, research discussions, and information-sharing with a network of environmental activists working on timber and trust land issues. The records raise a larger question: are Clallam County commissioners serving all residents equally, or have certain activist and special-interest groups become the county’s preferred stakeholders? Who Gets a Seat at the Table? The oath of office taken by elected officials is simple. They swear to faithfully and impartially serve the public. “I, Mark Ozias, do solemnly swear or affirm, that I am a citizen of the United States and the State of Washington, and that I am legally qualified to assume the office of Clallam County Commissioner District 1, that I will support the constitution and the laws of the United States and the State of Washington, and the charter and ordinances of Clallam County, and that I will faithfully and impartially discharge the duties of this office to the best of my ability.” – Commissioner Mark Ozias, December 29th, 2015 But in Clallam County, many residents are beginning to wonder whether some voices carry more weight than others. A pair of recent Washington State Standard articles published in the Peninsula Daily News highlighted the growing influence of environmental activist networks working to reshape the future of state-managed forests on the Olympic Peninsula. One article detailed [https://washingtonstatestandard.com/briefs/fundraising-effort-saves-patch-of-state-managed-forest-in-western-wa-from-logging/] how the Elwha Legacy Forests Coalition raised $32,000 in just four days to halt logging around the Sadie Creek Campground. Another reported on litigation [https://washingtonstatestandard.com/2026/06/05/environmental-groups-sue-to-stop-400-acres-of-logging-in-was-elwha-watershed/] seeking to stop nearly 400 acres of logging in the Elwha Watershed. Among the most visible advocates quoted in the coverage is WendyRae Johnson, a member of the Elwha Legacy Forests Coalition and the recently reelected Chair of the Clallam Conservation District. There is nothing improper about advocacy. Citizens have every right to organize, lobby government, and pursue policy goals they believe benefit the community. The question is whether everyone enjoys the same access. The Activist Network Public records obtained by Clallam County Watchdog show Johnson communicating directly with Commissioner Mark Ozias regarding trust land issues, timber revenues, and meetings concerning what emails describe as their “findings on a unitary trust.” The records also show the involvement of Ed Chadd, a local political organizer and activist who has helped organize Indivisible demonstrations attended by Commissioner Mark Ozias. Chadd was included in discussions alongside Johnson and Mary Jean Ryan regarding timber revenue data and trust land issues. On March 9, Ozias obtained county financial information regarding timber revenues and forwarded it directly to Johnson, Ryan, and Chadd after locating data they had discussed. He described the information as containing “exactly the data we were discussing.” A month later, Johnson requested a follow-up meeting with Ozias regarding the group’s research. Ozias worked around scheduling conflicts, proposed multiple dates, and ultimately arranged a dedicated Zoom meeting involving Johnson, Ryan, and Chadd. The meeting wasn’t squeezed into a crowded public comment period. It wasn’t limited to a three-minute statement before the board. It wasn’t a request submitted through a county website. It was a private hour-long Zoom meeting scheduled directly with a county commissioner. The meeting appeared on Ozias’ calendar for April 22, 2026. A Concierge Service? Again, none of this is illegal. Commissioners routinely meet with constituents. They should. What stands out is the level of assistance being provided. The emails show Ozias gathering county data on behalf of the group, forwarding outside reports related to trust lands, coordinating schedules, and maintaining an ongoing dialogue about issues they were actively researching. For activists seeking information about timber revenues and trust land management, the county commissioner appears highly responsive. Many other residents would likely welcome similar treatment. Meanwhile, Other Residents Wait Residents in Three Crabs have spent years raising concerns [https://www.ccwatchdog.com/p/flooded-out?utm_source=publication-search] about flooding following restoration projects and dike removal in the area. Some report recurring seasonal flooding, property impacts, and difficulty getting meaningful responses from decision makers. Citizens concerned about public safety, homelessness, drug use, and county policies frequently report unanswered emails and unreturned requests for comment. Commissioner Ozias has also declined invitations to several community forums and public discussions where residents hoped to ask questions directly. The contrast is difficult to ignore. One group receives direct access, research support, scheduling accommodations, and ongoing conversations with elected officials. Others struggle simply to get a response. The Bigger Question The issue isn’t WendyRae Johnson.The issue isn’t Ed Chadd.The issue isn’t environmental advocacy. The issue is whether access to elected officials is being distributed fairly. Every resident of Clallam County pays for county government. Every resident helps fund the salaries, staff, and resources that support elected officials. Every resident deserves to know that their concerns will receive the same attention regardless of whether they belong to a well-connected activist network, a political organization, a tribe, a nonprofit, a business association, or simply happen to be an individual citizen. Commissioners are not elected to represent the people who already agree with them. They are elected to represent everyone. When public records repeatedly show special access for organized interests while ordinary residents struggle to be heard, it raises an uncomfortable question: Is county government serving the public equally—or has access itself become a privilege reserved for those who already have a seat at the table? Editor’s Note: Public records reviewed for this article show communications between Commissioner Mark Ozias, Clallam Conservation District Chair WendyRae Johnson, Mary Jean Ryan, and Ed Chadd concerning trust land issues, timber revenues, and related meetings. The records do not establish that Commissioner Ozias coordinated litigation or advocacy efforts, only that he provided information and participated in discussions regarding those issues. “For friends, everything; for enemies, the law.” — Attributed to several political figures Today’s Tidbit: School Board to Consider Censure of Director Nancy Hamilton The Port Angeles School District Board of Directors is scheduled to consider a resolution [https://go.boarddocs.com/wa/pasd/Board.nsf/files/DV4243004C22/$file/Resolution%202526-18%20Censure_Nancy_Hamilton.pdf] on June 18 that would formally censure board member Nancy Hamilton. The item appears on the board’s agenda as “Approval of Resolution 2526-18 – Censure of Board Director, Nancy Hamilton,” with administration recommending approval. A censure is a formal statement of disapproval by a governing body. It does not remove an elected official from office, but it serves as an official reprimand and can limit certain board privileges. According to the proposed resolution, the board alleges Hamilton violated board policies and standards of conduct through a pattern of actions that the resolution says undermined board governance and district operations. Hamilton was elected to the board in November 2025 and was sworn into office in December. In recent months, she has frequently asked questions about district finances, staffing reductions, and decision-making processes. She cast the lone vote against a recent reduction-in-force resolution, stating she did not have enough information about how staffing priorities had been determined. The meeting is scheduled for Thursday, June 18 at 5pm, and is expected to draw significant public interest. Whether residents support the censure or oppose it, this may be an important opportunity to hear the board’s rationale, Hamilton’s response, and public comment on the matter. As always, readers are encouraged to review the resolution themselves and attend the meeting if they wish to see the discussion firsthand. Commissioner Randy Johnson Agrees to Participate in This Week’s Town Hall This Weekend This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.ccwatchdog.com [https://www.ccwatchdog.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

17. juni 202647 min