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Illegal Growers Turn to Other Crimes in Off Season
Oregon’s problem of illegal cannabis

The December Special Session passed Senate Bill 893 and Senate Bill 5561 to provide relief for the humanitarian crisis facing migrant workers caught up in illegal cannabis operations.

It will create financial assistance to local law enforcement agencies and community-based organizations to work with a statewide plan to address the problem of illegal cannabis.

Senator Jeff Golden (D-Ashland), who co-carried the bill on the Senate floor with Senator Tim Knopp (R-Bend), said, “Illegal cannabis operations in Southern Oregon have been using our limited water supply, abusing local workers, threatening neighbors and negatively impacting businesses run by legal marijuana growers. This is urgent funding we need right now to protect our agriculture industry, a pillar of Oregon’s economy and the Rogue Valley’s quality of life.”

The hope for the bills is that illicit growers would leave the state facing increased enforcement. Although some are reporting a decrease in activity, residences are saying it’s only a pause for the winter.

Last year, the biggest bust was 1000 plants. A recent bust reaped 200,000 plants. The illegal operations are linked to national and international criminal organization.

These growers are coordinated from out of state and run by a mid-level person, mostly connected to Mexico. It isn’t just the Mexican cartels, there is growing evidence of direct ties to Russia, Albania, Guatemala, Costa Rica, France, China and the Mid-East.

The crime ring doesn’t take the winter off from illegally growing. They shift to other illegal activities. Jackson County Commissioner Rick Dyer told the Register-Guard that “the illegal marijuana situation in Jackson, as well as in neighboring Josephine County, has produced a number of negative impacts for the region.

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Some of the issues include human trafficking, narco slavery and forced labor amid deplorable living conditions. Drug traffickers intimidate and abuse workers, some of whom are parents to young children, or are minors themselves.”

This week Eugene police ended a high speed chase by puncturing the tires of their stolen vehicle to rescued a 10-year-old girl abducted from her bike. Eugene and Portland police worked together to rescue six girls in a Portland hotel room, including four from Eugene. Oregon state police are looking for a man that tried to abduct a 13-year-old girl.

Eugene police forced another vehicle through a fence and rescued a 17- year-old girl from a 40-year-old that is reported to have been arrested over 40 times. Another 17-year-old girl was rescued last week in Coos Bay in similar circumstances. Jackson County exposed a commercial prostitution and human trafficking parlor. These are just a tip of what is impacting communities.

Oregon voters legalized recreational drugs under a false pretense that the industry would force cartels out-of-state.

But, the state’s policy welcoming illegals giving them free health care and other benefits may have encouraged these illegal activities and exasperated the enforcement of illegal growers and traffickers.


--Donna Bleiler

Post Date: 2022-01-28 08:03:35Last Update: 2022-01-28 08:26:43



The Upcoming Short Legislative Session
Get ready for more government spending

The proposed schedule for the Oregon Legislative Session is to begin February 1.

It begins what is called a Short session and has a 35 day limit.

It was passed by voters to deal with issues from the Regular session that could or best not wait until the next Regular session, such as budget fixes and technical issues. Voters are now questioning what this session will look like after two special sessions called last year seemed unnecessary.

There are 256 bills introduced of which health issues are the most popular, and that wasn’t on the Governor’s list of priorities.

The timeline proposed is to have a scheduled work session in the chamber of origin no later than February 7 and to have bills out of that chamber by February 14.

The second chamber must schedule a work session by February 18 and consider those bills by February 24.

However, that is not the end-all. This timeline does not apply to the Joint Committee on Ways and Means, other joint committees except for the Joint Committee on Transportation, Senate Committee on Finance and Revenue, House Committee on Revenue, Senate Committee on Rules, House Committee on Rules, Senate Committee on Conduct and House Committee on Conduct. That involves more than one-fifth of the bills, and it only takes one to destroy our liberties.

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For instance, Election bills are exempt from the timeline. HB 4133, a bill sponsored by Democrat Representative Julie Fahey (D-Eugene) and Senator Akasha Lawrence Spence (D-Portland), allows a person with a Social Security number to register to vote with their signature, and it allows an approved third-party organization to submit registration cards electronically on behalf of individuals. No proof of residency, it’s an alternative to an Oregon driver license or permit, or a state identification card. Oregon’s biggest issue in fraudulent voting is ineligible voters.

This will legalize ineligible voters where, over time, Oregonians will have no say.

Governor Brown wants the legislature to deal with affordable housing, education, public safety, advancing the Private Forest Accord, allocating $100 million package in investments for child care services, a $200 million package to bolster the state’s workforce and $38 million to invest in small businesses, and increase funding to regional economic development organizations.

Those are some major issues to resolve in 35 days when some have been on the table for years.


--Donna Bleiler

Post Date: 2022-01-28 06:47:56Last Update: 2022-01-28 08:08:12



Travis Nelson Appointed to Oregon House of Representatives
Will be the first openly Black LGBTQ+ man to serve in the Oregon Legislature

Multnomah County commissioners have appointed Travis Nelson as Representative-designate for House District 44, replacing former House Speaker Tina Kotek, the longest-serving Speaker in Oregon history, stepped down officially last week to focus on her run for Governor.

Nelson will be the first openly Black LGBTQ+ man to serve in the Oregon Legislature. He will be sworn in on Tuesday, February 1 at 7:30 a.m. and will serve during the upcoming session. “I look forward to bringing my perspective as a Black LGBTQ+ man and healthcare worker to the Legislature,” said Representative-designate Nelson. “As a legislator, I will advocate for and approach policy through an equity lens to help bring opportunity to all. We must break down the systemic barriers in place that for too long have kept folks who look like me from these positions of power and influence.” Representative Dan Rayfield (D-Corvallis), a heterosexual, white, male has been elected as the new Speaker of the Oregon House.

Nelson currently works as a board certified nurse and is a member of the Oregon Nurses Association and founding member of the Alliance of Black Nurses of Oregon.

“Our Caucus is thrilled to welcome Representative-designate Nelson to the Legislature,” said Senator Kayse Jama (D-Portland), Co-Chair of the Oregon Legislature’s Black, Indigenous, People of Color (BIPOC) Caucus. “His experience as a champion for equity will serve our communities well as we work toward closing racial disparities in health care and protecting the rights of workers.”

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Having worked as a union representative and officer of the Democratic Party of Oregon, Nelson is passionate about tackling a range of issues, including climate change mitigation, housing and houselessness, healthcare access, and racial equity.

“We are proud to welcome Representative-designate Nelson to the Legislature,” said House Majority Leader Julie Fahey (D-West Eugene/Junction City). “One of our strengths as a Caucus is our diversity, and the experiences he brings will be critical to our shared commitment to an equitable recovery that reaches every corner of the state.”

The grandson of sharecroppers, Nelson was born to teenage parents in a small rural town in North Louisiana. Before entering grade school, his parents moved him and his sister from Louisiana to the Pacific Northwest in search of a better life and opportunity.

In 2005 Nelson moved to the Portland area and started his nursing career.


--Staff Reports

Post Date: 2022-01-27 17:22:32Last Update: 2022-01-27 18:07:26



Reschke: End Emergency, Preserve Medical Freedom
Reintroduces legislation to bring normalcy back into the lives of Oregonians

State Representative E. Werner Reschke (R-Klamath Falls) announced two bills he will reintroduce for the 2022 Legislative Session, which begins on Tuesday, February 1.

HJR 201 is a resolution, that upon passage, would immediately terminate the Governor’s state of emergency declaration that first began March 2020. The resolution does not require the Governor’s signature to take effect, giving the Legislature a more appropriate balance of power that is currently concentrated in the Governor’s Office.

Rep. Reschke’s second bill is HB 4069. This bill would make discrimination based on one’s medical history illegal by a government entity or private business.

“These two, common sense proposals will bring normalcy back to our lives and help unite Oregonians,” said Rep. Reschke. “People are frustrated by one-person, top-down, arbitrary ruling that has often been at odds with neighboring states and official health recommendations. We need to treat each other with dignity and respect, ending the practice of looking at one another with suspicion and contempt based on whatever one person says is or is not allowed. It is now 2022, not March 2020. It is time to move on and live our lives as free Oregonians and shed the fear from the past. Almost every other state in the country has done so. So should Oregon.”


--Staff Reports

Post Date: 2022-01-27 17:12:01Last Update: 2022-01-27 18:07:46



Beaverton City Council Election Filing Underway
Deadline for filing is Tuesday, March 8

Beaverton, Oregon residents interested in running for election to the Beaverton City Council can now obtain a Candidate’s Filing Handbook.

Four City Council positions elected at-large are open. The deadline in filing is Tuesday, Mar. 8 at 5 p.m.

Councilor Positions 1, 2 and 5 will be nominated at the Primary Election and elected at the General Election to serve a four-year term.

At the Primary Election, the two candidates with the most votes for each position will proceed to the General Election ballot. If one candidate receives a majority of all votes cast, then that candidate alone is nominated to the General Election Ballot. The candidate with the majority of votes at the General Election is elected.

Councilor Position 3 is a vacant position due to resignation with three years remaining on the unexpired term for this office.

Candidates must be 18 years of age by the election date, a qualified elector of the state, and have lived in city limits six months prior to the election date.

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The Candidate's Filing Handbook with requirements for petition and signatures can be obtained from the City Elections Office at Beaverton City Hall (12725 SW Millikan Way) or online.

The Primary Election is May 17, 2022 and the General Election is Nov. 8, 2022.


--Bruce Armstrong

Post Date: 2022-01-27 14:47:02Last Update: 2022-01-27 15:01:07



Restoring Balance of Power in Oregon Government
Proposal comes from Oregon Republicans

Oregon State Representative Mark Owens (R-Crane) is introducing a bill during the 2022 Legislative Session that will restore the balance of power in Oregon’s government.

“This is really about transparency and a balance of power,” said Representative Owens. “Oregonians are growing tired of Governor Brown’s never-ending emergency and a rule- making process that they don’t understand. We need to introduce sensible limits to the power of the Governor’s office in our state.”

HJR 206, introduced by Representative Owens with bicameral support, would refer to the voters the option to vote to amend the Oregon Constitution to limit the Governor’s ability to declare an emergency or exercise powers under the declaration of emergency to only those granted by the law and for 30 days. This resolution would bring better balance to Oregon’s government which currently concentrates a large amount of authority in a single office.

The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in strict government mandates and regulations, dictating how people can live their lives, all directed by the Governor’s Office through the Oregon Health Authority. Oregonians have become discontent with rules like a permanent indoor mask mandate and want more transparency in the decision-making process.

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“It’s time for accountability and fairness in how these decisions are made. One sole person should not have ultimate and unchecked authority when it comes to determining the rights and freedoms of Oregonians.”


--Bruce Armstrong

Post Date: 2022-01-27 14:23:48Last Update: 2022-01-27 14:34:44



Kate Brown Appoints Judge in Washington County
Miranda Summer appointment is effective immediately

Oregon's Governor Kate Brown has announced that she will appoint Beaverton Municipal Court Judge Miranda S. Summer to the Washington County Circuit Court.

Summer will fill the Washington County vacancy created by Judge Ramón Pagán’s recent elevation to the Oregon Court of Appeals.

Her appointment is effective immediately.

“Miranda Summer is a talented and compassionate judge, who has earned the respect of litigants and lawyers alike,” Governor Brown said. “She brings an invaluable set of professional and lived experiences to the bench, and will serve the people of Washington County well.”

Summer currently serves as a judge on the Beaverton Municipal Court, where she adjudicates criminal and traffic violation cases.

She also has served as a pro tem judge on the Washington County Circuit Court and as an administrative law judge for the Office of Administrative Hearings. Previously, Summer practiced as a family law attorney.

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She currently serves on the boards of the Washington County Bar Association and the Oregon Minority Lawyers Association, and has served as a member of the Oregon State Bar’s Diversity and Inclusion Committee.

Summer was interviewed last year by the Governor’s Office as a finalist for Governor Brown’s most recent judicial appointment on the Washington County Circuit Court.


--Bruce Armstrong

Post Date: 2022-01-27 11:26:46Last Update: 2022-01-27 11:36:39



Representative Scharf Hopes to Lower Drug Prices in Oregon
"Pharmacies are being double taxed"

Oregon State Representative Anna Scharf (R-Amity) is putting her efforts for the 2022 Legislative Session into a necessary Corporate Activity Tax exemption because of the impact it has on access and affordability of prescription drugs in Oregon.

HB 4094, which has bipartisan and bicameral support, would exempt pharmacies from paying CAT because they already shoulder the burden of higher prices when pharmaceutical companies pass the cost of CAT down to them. Pharmacies cannot adjust prices, resulting in slim cost margins that have forced pharmacies to close and hurt consumer options.

“Since the passage of HB 3427 in 2019, the CAT has seen multiple industries and business sectors requesting to be carved out due to the unintended burdens it placed on them,” said Representative Scharf. “Drug wholesalers and manufacturers are able to pass along the impact of the CAT to pharma by increasing the cost of drugs sold to the pharmacy. However, the pharmacy is unable to pass along any of the cost tax burden to the consumer. Pharmacies are being double taxed as they have to pay the taxes of the drug suppliers and again pay the CAT when they sell the drugs.

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“This is not the first time this exception for pharmacies has been requested. However, with the closure of Bi-Mart pharmacies and many other small local pharmacies on the verge, coupled with the increased demands on pharmacies brought on by COVID19, now is the time to pass HB 4094.”


--Bruce Armstrong

Post Date: 2022-01-26 17:14:47Last Update: 2022-01-26 17:24:41



One County’s Push for COVID Truth
“Most people contracting and spreading the virus are vaccinated”

Yamhill County Commissioner Mary Starrett will be spearheading a wide discussion of how Yamhill County provides information about COVID-19 to the public. A public discussion is scheduled for Thursday, January 27 at the 10:00am Board of Commissioners Meeting. Public comment won't be taken at the meeting, but public testimony will be accepted at bocinfo@co.yamhill.or.us. In emails made public, Commissioner Starrett appears to be driving significant changes.

Commissioner Starrett is leading a push for more accurate and balanced information about COVID-19 on the Yamhill County website in order to "present a more balanced approach to the prevailing COVID narrative on our County website and more specifically include VAERS data analyses, breakthrough data, PCR CT, hospitalizations and deaths ‘with’ vs ‘from’ COVID as well as prevention and early treatment protocols."

VAERS is the federally managed Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System. Established in 1990, VAERS is a national early warning system to detect possible safety problems in U.S.-licensed vaccines. VAERS is co-managed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

Some of the topics that Starrett wishes to be on a FAQ page include:

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In a memo to staff, Commissioner Starrett says that "the term, “safe and effective,” is an FDA term that can only be applied to licensed drugs and vaccines. Since none of the COVID shots given is actually licensed, they are, by definition, experimental or investigational. Besides, trials have not yet concluded for any of the vaccine makers. They’re all ongoing." She's asking that the term “safe and effective” be removed from the County website.

Starrett is also asking that the County remove a statement which says, “We strongly recommend that all Yamhill County residents get the COVID-19 vaccine as a protective measure for themselves and others. Getting vaccinated prevents severe illness, hospitalization, and death. It also reduces the spread of the virus in our community”. According to Commissioner Starrett, "This has been proven incorrect as most people contracting and spreading the virus are vaccinated."

In addition to changes in information on the website, Commissioner Starrett is making a request that Yamhill County provide informed consent before administering the shot, saying, "There is no adequate disclosure form given before the shot. It is impossible to make an informed decision about the COVID shots until the public has open access to all safety and efficacy data, including VAERS analysis and V-safe.

The Board of Commissioners meeting can be viewed at https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKfoZQSvH1V2JrpU3nFCgIA.


--Staff Reports

Post Date: 2022-01-25 15:11:39Last Update: 2022-01-26 09:35:04



Portland Police Seek Body Cams
“PPB believes the technology supports 21st Century Policing”

The Portland Police Bureau under Chief Chuck Lovell has moved forward in acquiring body cameras for its officers, asking that vendors provide sealed competitive proposals to provide this technology. This program is expected to be implemented in 2023.

In a press release, the PPB said "Having followed the evolution of body-worn camera technology for several years, PPB believes the technology supports 21st Century Policing and will enhance the community-police relationship by providing additional transparency into the daily operations of the Police Bureau."

During the 2021 Session, the Oregon Legislature asked the Oregon Criminal Justice Commission to study the use of body cams by police in SB 668. The CJC has been positive on the use of body cams but cites cost as a downside. The cameras themselves are not that expensive, but the storage, management and review of literally thousands of hours of video each month becomes costly.

Body-worn camera systems will also build community trust, which is essential to effectively serving a city of Portland's size, diversity, and complexity. Body-worn cameras will provide police officers and community members with greater accountability and a better understanding of critical events of public concern. Additionally, body-worn camera systems will facilitate fair and transparent adjudication of criminal and civil matters.

To that effect, PPB is currently seeking competitive proposals from qualified Vendors with demonstrated experience in Law Enforcement Body Worn Cameras.

According to a US Department of Justice bulletin published in 2016, almost half of all police departments had body-worn cameras .


--Staff Reports

Post Date: 2022-01-25 09:15:29Last Update: 2022-01-25 10:07:01



Huggins Withdraws from Oregon Governor Race
Is the fourth candidate to withdraw

Jim Huggins, a Lt. Colonel in the Auxilliary Air Force and movie producer, withdrew from the race to become Oregon’s next governor.

“We’ve got the right message, and we’ve got the right plan,” Huggins said, “but we don’t have the donor, volunteer, and organizational infrastructure we need to punch through a crowded primary candidate field and position ourselves to win a general election.”

Huggins is the fourth candidate to withdraw from the crowded governor’s race and the second Republican. Monte Sauer Jr withdrew as a Republican candidate, and Nico Pucci and Casey Kulla withdrew from the Democrat lineup.

Kulla withdrew to run for Commissioner of the Bureau of Labor and Industries. Huggins’ campaign was largely based on four issues including getting tough on crime, reducing homelessness, opposing the weakening of Measure 11 sentencing, and strengthening parental control over the direction of their children’s education.

He continues to believe, as his internal polling shows, that these issues can unite conservatives, non-affiliated voters, and moderate Democrats to create an opportunity to end the Democrat stranglehold on the governor’s mansion that has leg Oregon so far from what it can be.

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“There are many ways to have an impact on elections and impact on public policy apart from being elected governor that doesn’t require millions of dollars and out of state consultants,” Huggins said. “I am not going away. Oregon can and must be saved from bad leadership by advancing the principles of individual freedom and personal responsibility in government. Such principles bring out the best in all of us.”

The machine of campaigning is complex, and good candidates are lost to the process of learning the wheel. Media can bury a candidate as fast as a lack of funding.

The remaining 17 Republicans and 11 Democrats need a self-evaluation and not bog down the wheel.


--Donna Bleiler

Post Date: 2022-01-24 17:35:59Last Update: 2022-01-24 17:44:04



Linthicum: Expand Educational Opportunity
“Democrats are in the business of protecting the teachers’ unions”

Today marks the beginning of National School Choice Week. The week is dedicated to the stories of students and families who have found the best school for them. Research shows that students in states with more educational opportunities perform better on key educational attainment metrics.

According to State Senator Dennis Linthicum (R-Klamath Falls), the abysmal state of public education in Oregon is well documented. Just last week, The Department of Education revealed that graduation rates slid backward compared to the previous year. Last year, Democrats voted to abolish graduation standards that required students to demonstrate proficiency in reading, writing, and math because Oregon students do worse on reading and writing tests than students in 43 other states. Oregon was among the last 2 states in the nation to reopen schools, harming Oregon students, their mental health and their opportunity for a real education.

Yet, last week, Secretary of State Shemia Fagan unilaterally denied voters a voice on a constitutional amendment to grant educational opportunities for their children.

“Democrats have made it clear that they are in the business of protecting the teachers' unions’ monopoly on education because union bosses fund their campaigns,” said Senator Linthicum. “Their ideas of ‘reform’ are throwing more money at a failing system while lowering any traditional performance standards. They are protecting a system that allows wealthy families to have a choice, while lowincome and our most vulnerable are trapped in failing schools.”

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Oregon has some of the most restrictive education laws in the country. Despite the limited options available to students and families outside of government-run schools, Oregonians are making it clear they are desperate for alternatives. During the pandemic, Oregon saw the 4th largest increase in charter school enrollment in the nation. A recent survey shows that more than half of American families are looking for a new school. Support for educational opportunities soared during the pandemic.

In the upcoming legislative session, Senator Linthicum will reintroduce SB 657, legislation to increase the cap on virtual charter school enrollment. This bill will allow more children to choose an education that best fits their needs and will be assigned Senate Bill number 1552 during the 2022 short session.

“This bill is just the beginning of the work that needs to be done to empower parents and students,” said Linthicum. “The artificial cap on virtual charter school enrollment caps children's futures. It's outdated, and needs to change. The money that funds education in this state doesn’t belong to schools. It belongs to Oregonians. The money should follow students and fund their educational needs, not prop up the dismal state of our current system. ”


--Staff Reports

Post Date: 2022-01-24 16:43:38Last Update: 2022-01-24 18:15:29



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