On this day, November 24, 1971, On Thanksgiving eve DB Cooper boarded Flight 305 in Portland, Or., and demanded $200,000 with the threat of a bomb. He parachuted from a Northwest Airlines 727 with the money over the Cascade Mountains near Ariel, Wash., and was never seen again. FBI agent Ralph Himmelsbach wrote the book NORJAK that described the case. A packet containing $5,880 of the ransom money was found in 1980 on the north shore of the Columbia River, just west of the Washington city of Vancouver. In 2011 evidence was presented that Lynn Doyle Cooper of Oregon, a Korean war veteran, was the hijacker. On July 13, 2016, the FBI said it is no longer investigating the case.
Bill is proposed in the legislature
The Coalition of School Administrators have decided to
double down on critical race theory (CRT) and CSE indoctrination.
This has created an uproar in a number of districts. The firing of five
superintendents over the past year has not set well with COSA or the
Oregon Department of Education (ODE).
Parents are increasingly making public records requests to get to the core of issues, and COSA
says it is an immoral violation on personal privacy, even though all
government workers are subject to public records requests.
The Senate Interim Committee on Education, Chaired by Senator Michael Dembrow (D-Portland) have sponsored
SB 1521, which has a public hearing this week. The bill limits the ability of the district school
board from terminating the superintendent if they are acting in
compliance with state and federal law and refuse to follow the board’s
policies.
A superintendent’s contract may have a mutually agreed upon
clause to terminate without cause, but it can’t include actions if
following state and federal law, and is required to give a
superintendent a 12-month notice.
The school superintendent is hired by the district school board to carry
out what the school board approves: school budgets, approved
curriculum, and policies in schools. If a superintendent is not going to
be supportive of the board and the district, then they are hindering
what the district deems important in their schools.
The board sets policy according to their district and parents’ input.
SB 1521 sets state and federal law over local school boards, including
executive orders, orders of the Superintendent of Public Instruction, declarations, directives or other state or federal authorization, policy, statement, guidance, rule or regulation.
In other words, local control and parents’ voices aren’t to be considered.
COSA and ODE are pushing this bill to override parents that are flooding
board meetings demanding to terminate the CRT and sexual identity
agendas.
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They are upset with the firing of the Newberg superintendent
for not following the board’s policy stating that only American and
Oregon State flags can fly in classrooms.
Recently, Director Colt Gill, ODE, threatened Superintendent Marc
Thielman and the Alsea School District to withhold COVID relief funds if
they didn’t withdraw their resolution on no mask mandates in their
school district.
He may have stirred the pot. There are more than a few
school boards looking to follow Alsea’s lead, and as many considering
withdrawing from COSA and their radical agenda.
--Donna BleilerPost Date: 2022-02-02 15:53:33 | Last Update: 2022-02-02 23:31:43 |
Representative Boshart Davis introduces the legislation
Oregon State Representative Shelly Boshart Davis (R-Albany) and Representative Sheri Schouten (D-Beaverton) are re-introducing legislation to expand stronger employee protections to include hospital workers.
HB 4142 expands the crime of assault in the third degree for someone who intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly causes physical injury to a person working in a hospital while performing their official duties.
This legislation introduces consequences to create a safer environment in hospitals.
Some observers have expressed that the current law is neither strong enough, nor provides justice for hospital workers if they are physically injured.
Hospital workers have been overwhelmed by staffing shortages recently, some due to the mandating of the controversial COVID vaccine.
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These added tensions can result in a physically hostile work environment as they attempt to provide care to patients under increased stress.
“Our overworked hospital workers deserve stronger protection and justice while they put themselves in harm’s way to care for patients,†said Representative Boshart Davis. “Current consequences for assaulting a hospital worker are simply too weak and do not fit the seriousness of the crime. Health care workers should not have to worry about physical danger while taking care of patients. Assaulting a hospital worker trying to save lives should be a serious offense. This is not just about protecting the health care community. This is also about guaranteeing exceptional care and attention for Oregonians in need by making our hospitals a safer place.â€
--Bruce ArmstrongPost Date: 2022-02-01 17:01:12 | Last Update: 2022-02-01 17:10:34 |
OHA mandates made permanent
Oregon Health Authority (OHA) marches forward with four permanent
rules on mandates for masking and vaccinations.
After an
overwhelming number of Oregonians voiced opposition, OHA still filed
the first rule with the Secretary of State’s office.
This first rule makes permanent what was a temporary rule for masking
indoors at K-12 schools and that school staff be fully vaccinated.
The
second rule, expected to be filed this week makes permanent
requirements that health care workers wear masks and, in most health
care settings, be fully vaccinated.
The temporary rules could not be renewed as temporary, giving an
excuse to make them permanent.
Why would OHA pursue permanent
rule after the Supreme Court blocked Biden’s vaccine mandates for
large employers causing Biden administration to withdraw its Covid
vaccination and testing requirements?
Does OHA not think our teachers
and health care workers deserve the same liberties as corporation
employees? The New York State Supreme Court said it’s an
unconstitutional overstep to mandate wearing masks.
Is OHA playing a
bluff that no one will challenge their authority?
The Covid vaccinations are still under an emergency use authorization
and have never been approved. As more and more questionable
information is released over the safety of vaccines, more people are
questioning that information. England announced they will no longer
require masks nor vaccine certifications and are scheduled to drop
booster requirements. Some speculate that this is to get the voter base back. If true, why isn’t Governor Brown concerned about her party’s
voter base? Are Oregon voters too brainwashed to connect the dots?
One parent, Katrina Cole, speaking out against discriminatory practice
between the vaccinated and unvaccinated, says, “they are requiring
teachers who do not get the booster shot to quarantine for 10 days,
while the boosted teachers only need to quarantine for 5 days. I cannot find any scientific data or studies that support this. The same is true for
unvaccinated students.â€
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The 'test to stay' policy was removed that was scheduled to start in
January. It allowed unvaccinated students who were exposed to a
confirmed or speculative case, to 'test out' of quarantine while
vaccinated students do not have to test if they are not showing
symptoms. However, the policy was cancelled with the current
outbreak and the current policy automatically quarantines
unvaccinated students who are contact trace to positive cases in the
classroom, even if they are not showing any symptoms and test
negative.
Cole says, “some of my lowest students have lost many
unnecessary days of instruction due to this policy, and I have
documentation from the district on all of this information.â€
It does seem the Oregon is testing the waters on all fronts. Are we
ready to join the truckers in Canada and say enough?
--Donna BleilerPost Date: 2022-01-30 13:56:06 | Last Update: 2022-01-30 15:48:02 |
The federal government extended the open enrollment period
The
Oregon Health Insurance Marketplace has announced that during the 2022 open enrollment period, 146,602 Oregonians enrolled in health insurance coverage, representing about 3.4% of all Oregonians.
The federal government extended the open enrollment period for 2022 health coverage from 45 to 76 days (Nov. 1, 2021, to Jan. 15, 2022). This extra window of time enabled more Oregonians to enroll in health coverage than either of the past two years (141,089 people in 2021 and 145,264 people in 2020).
In addition, the American Rescue Plan Act (2021) has made health insurance purchased through the Marketplace more affordable than ever. Individuals and families will pay less for health insurance thanks to financial help available through
OregonHealthCare.gov.
“I am elated to see more Oregonians taking advantage of the tremendous savings available on health coverage through the Oregon Health Insurance Marketplace,†says Chiqui Flowers, administrator of the Oregon Health Insurance Marketplace. “Health coverage is essential to helping Oregonians seek the care they need to stay healthy. We are encouraged to see the benefits the American Rescue Plan Act and extended open enrollment period will have on the ability for people to seek the care they need.â€
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People who missed the open enrollment deadline may still have an opportunity to get health coverage through the Marketplace if they experienced a qualifying life event such as moving, involuntarily losing health coverage, having or adopting a child, marriage, a change in citizenship, and being released from incarceration. Enrolled tribal members and Alaska natives can enroll in health coverage at any time throughout the year.
The Oregon Health Insurance Marketplace, a part of state government, helps people get health insurance when they do not have job-based coverage, and do not qualify for the Oregon Health Plan or another program. The Marketplace is the state-level partner to
HealthCare.gov.
--Staff ReportsPost Date: 2022-01-30 13:09:07 | Last Update: 2022-01-30 14:01:53 |
What authorization was used to make the change?
The State of Oregon’s independent advocate to help injured workers
navigate the workers’ compensation system is changing its name from
Ombudsman for Injured Workers to the Ombuds Office for Oregon
Workers.
The 1987 Legislature created the
Office of the Ombudsman
for Injured Workers as an independent advocate for injured workers
under
ORS 656.709.
That statute authorizes the Director of the
Department of Consumer and Business Services to terminate the
ombudsman, but there is no authorization to change the focus adding
workplace safety and health for all workers, nor does it authorize a
name change without legislation.
The statute directs the ombudsman to “act as an advocate for injured
workers by accepting, investigating, and attempting to resolve
complaints concerning matters related to workers’ compensation".
The work proved valuable and the Legislature increased the staff in 1990.
Legislation passed in 2003 clarified the supervision and control of
ombudsman services and required that quarterly reports be submitted
to the governor.
The office consists of the ombudsman and five staff
members. Since 2003, the office has helped from 7,500 to 9,000 injured workers per
year.
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It is now the Ombuds Office for Oregon Workers. It has expanded its
role to help Oregon workers with workplace safety and health issues,
and help workers protect their rights under Oregon OSHA’s laws and
rules. Are these the same rules the Governor called for with COVID and
vaccine mandates?
“We are continuing to serve injured workers in the workers’
compensation system,†said Ombuds for Oregon Workers Jennifer
Flood. “We are just expanding to include all Oregon workers.†Since they were working at capacity, will this be another agency in the news for failure to serve and looking to the legislature to bail them out with more staff?
What Oregonians should be asking is what authorization was used to
make a change against the laws they operate under.
--Donna BleilerPost Date: 2022-01-30 11:07:33 | Last Update: 2022-01-30 11:26:48 |
$135,000 fine reversed
Aaron and Melissa Klein were forced to close their Sweet Cakes bakery
in 2016 after the Bureau of Labor and Industries (BOLI) determined
they violated Oregon’s 2007 law prohibiting discrimination based on
sexual orientation by refusing to make a wedding cake.
The couple was
fined $60,000 in noneconomic damages to Laurel Bowman-Cryer and
$75,000 to Rachel Bowman-Cryer.
That assessment when against the
national trend when other states were assessing fines of $5,000-
$15,000.
The Kleins lost in the court of appeals and appealed to the Oregon
Supreme Court only to be declined. They then appealed to the U.S.
Supreme Court with hopes that a recent ruling in a similar case would
benefit them. The Supreme Court ruled that the Colorado Commission
on Civil Rights did not employ “religious neutrality†and reversed that
state’s decision against the bakery owner. Even though it had
applications, the Supreme Court sent the Klein case back to the Oregon
Court of Appeals for reconsideration.
The court of appeals was charged with applying the Supreme Court
ruling to the Klein case.
Justice Lagesen wrote in the case
Klein v BOLI,
“We reverse and remand the order’s damages award … BOLI’s handling
of the damages portion of the case does not reflect the neutrality
toward religion required by the free-exercise (of religion) clause. We
therefore set aside the damages portion of the order and remand for
further proceedings related to remedy.â€
Even though the Court of Appeal reversed the $135,000 fine, they stuck
to the charge of discrimination based on sexual orientation.
Judge
Lagesen wrote, “Neither the state constitution nor the federal
constitution precludes the enforcement of the statute against Aaron
(Klein), even though the enforcement of the statute burdens Aaron’s
practice of his faith. In so doing, we conclude that (the 2021 federal
decision) does not displace our previous conclusion that it is a
genuinely applicable and neutral law.†In so doing they do not provide
for the First Amendment as the authority over state laws.
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Counsel Stephanie Taub said, “Oregon is trying to have its cake and eat
it, too.†The court admitted that BOLI acted with hostility against the
Kleins’ religious beliefs.
It will become apparent in how BOLI handles
the penalties against the Kleins for living out their faith. Whatever BOLI
imposes, the Kleins intend to appeal to the Oregon and U.S. Supreme
Court on behalf of millions of faith-based small business owners.
--Donna BleilerPost Date: 2022-01-29 07:26:20 | Last Update: 2022-01-28 21:44:43 |
Why isn’t fresh thinking finding its way into public transit?
If you could choose only one, would you choose the right to keep and bear arms or the right to mobility? You do need a car more often than a gun. The Second Amendment that protects the Right to Bear Arms is under assault every day by groups seeking to limit the use of guns. The arguments and methods of attacking gun owners rights are an accumulation of the latest crises de jour. Opponents of the Second Amendment don’t appear to support any of the Bill of Rights or even the Constitution itself. It is all lumped into one category of contempt for America and its founding principles.
We hear that the F.B.I. estimates 2.5 million crimes are not committed each year because people are armed. The vast majority of these attempts at crime go unreported hence the word ‘estimate’ used by the F.B.I. Ignoring those statistics and focusing on emotional stories of whoa citizens are constantly encouraged to give up their freedom for perceived security in many ways. The arguments calling for limits to gun ownership are just a fraction of the attacks on freedom.
Another attack on freedom is one that seeks to limit the mobility of citizens. Unlike the attacks on gun ownership this threat is administered in a Fabian method. That means the change comes so slowly the victim doesn’t realize they have been trapped until it is to late to resist. Fabians argue that giving up free mobility is a tradeoff for other benefits. The problem is those benefits are phantom in which operatives sample false arguments. Those that find acceptance in focus groups get test cases. Those that attract sympathetic audiences are repeated, for generations if necessary, to break down resistance.
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80% of Americans live in urban locations. Public Mass transit is essential in only the most densely populated urban centers. Dependency on mass transit is the goal of those who are the equivalent of the gun control advocates seeking to limit the Second Amendment. Promotion of mass transit has required huge subsidies. Over time, most citizens unconsciously accept the necessity of subsidies. The reasoning is that we must care for those unable to move about without public transportation. How many times do you see mass transit sparsely occupied? How many times do you see high utilization? Could the goal of accommodating the less fortunate be served more efficiently?
We saw Uber and Lyft revolutionize cars for hire. Why isn’t fresh thinking finding its way into public transit? Could it be that Fabian methods don’t allow fresh thinking? Those less well-off receive food stamps. In Oregon that amounts to 21% of the population. What if they got transportation vouchers for Uber and Lyft and mass transit was displaced? Has anyone run the numbers on such an idea? How would that change the OVERALL cost of transportation that is paid for by taxpayers?
Literally hundreds of billions of taxpayer dollars has been consumed in building an electric car industry and infrastructure. Only 1% of Americans have purchased electric vehicles even though their cost is taxpayer subsidized $7500. To accelerated electric car sales we have seen America abandon its energy independence and in just one year gasoline costs rose 40%. If you can’t subsidize Americans into electric cars maybe you can punish them sufficiently at the pump to bring that change about. Ratepayers have been forced to pay for wind and solar farms and now they are paying to build car charging stations.
The thing about electricity that is different from petroleum is who controls the source. America’s gas and oil industry is still privately owned and privately directed. America’s electric utilities are privately owned but are state regulated monopolies. Government can deny electricity to those it finds out of favor. When a citizen threw a maskless backyard party in L.A. last year Governor Newsome had his electricity cut off. Newsome was just protecting the public from party goers spreading COVID. What a convenient excuse for asserting unchecked power. Good thing that homeowner had a vehicle that ran on petroleum.
--Tom HammerPost Date: 2022-01-29 06:27:34 | Last Update: 2022-01-28 21:09:07 |
Angela Plowhead is running for Oregon’s new district
Voters in the Newberg School District decided on January 18 to oppose the attempted recall of two of its board members.
Board Chair Dave Brown and Vice Chair Brian Shannon were targeted for recall by special interest groups that have grown used to getting their way far too often. Some of them even organized phone banks and neighborhood canvasses to try and sway the vote. Hollywood elites also became involved and chipped in financially to help fund the effort.
The voters recognized that outsiders with undue influence were involving themselves in a local matter primarily affecting parents and students and rejected the recall. Brown and Shannon will continue to serve in the positions that these same voters elected to put them in.
"In the weeks before the recall election, I publicly stated my support for those board members. I went to Newberg several times to physically stand alongside those who campaigned against the recall and was the only top Congressional District 6 candidate to do so," Said Dr. Angela Plowhead.
"This election is a good example of how school board races are being politicized in Oregon and nationally," Plowhead explained. "What we’ve seen in Oregon, for years, is the strong political power of the teachers union over state politics. It routinely donates millions of dollars every election cycle to candidates pledging to raise taxes to maintain the status quo of academic failure. The recipients of those donations include at least two Democratic lawmakers who have announced their candidacies for Congressional District 6, who have been more than happy to carry out the union’s wishes throughout their legislative careers."
Nationally, parents are growing increasingly concerned about what their children are being taught in these taxpayer-funded public schools. This has caused many of them to get involved and pay attention to what’s going on at their local school board meetings. Some, like Brown and Shannon, have run for school board positions, gotten elected and worked to bring accountability back to the classroom.
But the same teachers unions are now funding candidates in local school board elections, much as they’ve done so successfully at the state level in Oregon for decades. Although this is undoubtedly a conflict of interest, it is still allowed.
The same people and groups who tried to recall Brown and Shannon were hoping to make examples of them. They wanted to show that if you’re a school board member who doesn’t do what the teachers union wants, you will be forced out of office.
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"Education is always a top issue for candidates and voters every election," Dr. Plowhead continued. "But when some candidates talk about it, what they mean is that they will raise taxes to increase funding for a system that we all know is broken. That’s why I’m taking a different approach with this race. Academic excellence is critical. But what’s becoming increasingly obvious is that funding isn’t the issue—it’s the lack of accountability for the actual results, or lack thereof."
"I’m running on a platform of educational accountability, in which the voices of parents, students and community members are not drowned out or silenced by special interest groups," declared Dr. Plowhead. "What took place in Newberg was indeed a victory, but it’s just the beginning. As a candidate and as your next member of Congress, I will continue to stand with parents and school board members who most certainly should have a say in what students are being taught in schools. We must have true accountability in our education system."
--Staff ReportsPost Date: 2022-01-28 12:09:38 | Last Update: 2022-01-31 14:02:28 |
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.â€
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.â€
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 BleilerPost Date: 2022-01-28 08:03:35 | Last Update: 2022-01-28 08:26:43 |
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 BleilerPost Date: 2022-01-28 06:47:56 | Last Update: 2022-01-28 08:08:12 |
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.â€
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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.â€
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 ReportsPost Date: 2022-01-27 17:22:32 | Last Update: 2022-01-27 18:07:26 |
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.â€
--Staff ReportsPost Date: 2022-01-27 17:12:01 | Last Update: 2022-01-27 18:07:46 |
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