On this day, November 22, 1992, A Washington Post story 1st revealed claims by several women that Sen. Bob Packwood, liberal Oregon Republican, had accosted them with unwanted touching and kisses.
Loudon names several steps to save America
Trevor Loudon spoke to about 50 members and guests of Take Back America the evening of March 2nd in a barn near Damascus, OR. Elected officials and candidates for office attending included two for Clackamas County Commissioner positions, John for CD5, Dan for HD 40, Angela Plowhead for CD6, Jo Rae Perkins for US Senate and sitting State Senator Dennis Linthicum and his wife. ORP co-chair on election integrity Don Bowers was one of several hosts.
Trevor has been what some would call a freedom fighter for almost 30 years. Even though he hails from New Zealand, he is a household name among Oregon conservatives having crisscrossed the state dozens of times in the last decade. His focus on this particular lecture was the depth of Chinese infiltration into U.S. business and institutions. China has 5000 active agents working to influence diverse areas of American life.
John Conyers, deceased representative from Michigan was chair of the House Judiciary Committee for decades. He has been replaced by Jerry Nadler (D-New York). Both being card carrying member of Democratic Socialists of America and heavily financed by Chinese interests. Corruption in our Department of Justice and our FBI was lain bare for all to see during the Trump presidency. Trevor gave us the historical perspective to understand why. He drove home the point that once a department is corrupted it becomes impossible for a member of congress to challenge that condition without facing severe and often illegal punishment from those they challenge. The same fear guides the media in their coverage of the news and it doesn’t stop with the Department of Justice.
Loudon makes statements few dare make and some dare not trust. He calculates that 25% of both the US Senate and US House of Representative are compromised. Some, like Eric Swalwell (D-California) have been caught literally sleeping with the enemy. Swalwell had a long affair with a Chinese agent and suffered no consequences from it. He still serves on sensitive committees with access to our most classified information. Unfortunately, he is just one of over a hundred that meet that description.
Senator Feinstein (D-California) brought Communists to Stanford University 30 years ago. Biden Administration advisor and CPUSA member Judith LeBlanc successfully promoted former Representative Deb Haaland (D-New Mexico) to Interior Secretary. Her tenure has seen a rapid decrease of mining, extraction, harvesting and grazing from BLM lands that comprise 20% of the U.S. The result has been rapid inflation for consumers and shortages that threaten national defense.
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Trevor recites a little more history telling us The Council for a Livable World was started by Al Gore Sr. Armand Hammer, son of Julius, a co-founder of CPUSA in 1921 was a member while being a Russian agent. They financed and elected hundreds to high office cementing footholds for collectivists going back several decades. Trump deregulations and tax cuts gave us the best economy we’ve ever seen and showed the world this country’s unlimited potential. His sanctions and new posture toward China were in no small part contributing factors. Trevor is sure the COVID pandemic was economic retaliation by China. We saw how Fauci facilitated the devastating shutdowns and now know of Fauci ties to China. We saw Australia enforce house arrest on it’s citizens and Kiwi Loudon understands China’s economic control over his former neighbor which he describes as that small island just NW of New Zealand.
The Chinese Progressive Association controls San Francisco politics which includes Nancy Pelosi and Gavin Newsome. They influence and aid Silicon Valley tech giants. Chinese networks targeted battleground states in the last election with fraud, disenfranchisement of GOP voters, minority and felon registration. The truth about illicit activity tipping those election results is coming out at an agonizingly slow rate.
Loudon ends on an optimistic note by naming several steps to save America. They include: 1. Only let GOP voters vote in GOP primaries. Beware of Dems that register GOP to affect primaries. 2. Individual should act independently of the GOP party machine. Don’t let RINO’s control you. 3.Don’t do businesses with Democrats. Do business with local GOP members and conservatives. 4. Call out Wall St. for things like putting military pensions into financing Chinese business. 5. Advocate for the 10th amendment. Understand states are wrongly controlled by Federal grants. 6. Abolish the Department of Education, The Bureau of Land Management, etc.
He had other ideas not recorded here. Trevor has been a USA watcher long enough to predict that freedom will win. The effort will be by multitudes of small groups comprised of persons possessing free will and positive spirit. History says we can expect miracles from our best and maximum effort.
--Tom HammerPost Date: 2022-03-04 06:57:52 | Last Update: 2022-03-03 13:15:16 |
“I believe that the 6th district is absolutely winnable"
Former Congressman
Jim Bunn is entering the crowded race for Oregon’s new 6th congressional district. Bunn, is the last Republican since 1988 to win election from a Willamette Valley district. He served in Congress from 95-97 after serving in the State Senate.
Bunn sites his work in law enforcement -- he’s a retired Deputy Sheriff -- and years on the family farm as important background for the job.
According to Bunn, riots in Portland, attacks on personal freedom and inflation fueled by excessive government spending contributed to his decision to run. “I’m a pro-life, pro-2nd amendment, pro-freedom Republicanâ€.
Democrats currently hold 4 of Oregon’s 5’congressional seats. The 2020 census allowed Oregon a 6th seat, its first gain in 40 years. Many accused the Democrat controlled legislature of gerrymandering to allow them to win 5 of 6. Oregon's 6th Congressional District is Yamhill, Polk and the western part of Marion County, as well as a part of the Portland Metro Area.
Bunn is not deterred by the way the lines are drawn. “I believe that the 6th district is absolutely winnable," he said. The filing deadline is March 8th for the May 17th Primary Election.
--Staff ReportsPost Date: 2022-03-04 06:29:12 | Last Update: 2022-03-03 13:16:03 |
Appropriates $10.5 million to a Universal Representation Fund
A bill which would guarantee legal counsel to undocumented immigrants facing deportation passed the Oregon Senate on Feb. 28th on a straight party line vote of 17 to 8. This bill would appropriate $10.5 million from the general fund to a Universal Representation Fund and $4.5 million for the Oregon State Bar’s Legal Services Program. Chief sponsor of the bill is State Senator Kayse Jama (D-Portland). Other sponsors include former SEIU lobbyist Representative Andrea Salinas D-Lake Oswego a leading candidate for the newly created 6th Congressional District -- a district she helped create. Other BIPOC Caucus members are sponsors as well.
Jama’s press release states
SB 1543 will create pathways to work authorization and economic participation for immigrants and refugees, allow for families to remain unified, and utilize partnerships with three Oregon law schools to incentive legal talent to stay within the state.
SB 1543 now goes to the House of Representatives for consideration.
Senator Jama represents Senate District 24, officially described as East Portland and North Clackamas. Senator Jama’s letterhead describes his District as ‘Native land of Multnomah, Wasco, Cowlitz, Kathlamet, Clackamas, Bands of Chinook, Tualatin Kalapuya, Molalla, and many other tribes that made their homes along the Columbia and Willamette Rivers’.
Senator Jama serves as the chair of the Senate Committee On Housing and Development, and the Legislature’s Black, Indigenous and People of Color (BIPOC) Caucus. He was the first former refugee, Muslim, and Somali-American to serve in the Oregon State Senate. Before his appointment, Senator Jama was a prominent community organizer and Executive Director of Unite Oregon.
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Just who benefits from illegal immigration besides the illegal immigrants themselves? A review of those testifying in favor of this bill brings some perspective to this question. Eugene based Centro Latino Americano is one. They facilitate services to illegal immigrants. Their website lists the many sources of support for their cliental. They include: The Oregon Department of Revenue with assistance offered in Spanish at 503-378-4988, Bureau of Labor and Industries Civil Rights Division, University of Oregon Labor Research Center, U of O MECHA (Movimiento Estudiantil Chicano de Azlan), Oregon Hispanic Bar, Oregon Association of Bilingual Education Latino Administrators and Lane Community College Latino Student Union.
Public unions SEIU 503 and Oregon AFL-CIO were among those testifying in favor of
SB 1543 as was Inez Pena, recently resigned member of the Newberg School Board. Banning Critical Race Theory from the classrooms in Newberg was recently upheld when Recalls failed on two board members who were backed by parent rights advocates. They were challenged with recalls for removing politics from the classroom including C.R.T. which teaches that there are only oppressors and oppressed in society.
Newberg resident David Wall offered a rare testimony opposing
SB 1543. Mr. Wall feels any one in this country illegally should be deported without hesitation. He finds it repugnant that taxpayer dollars might be used for an end-run around the Public Records Act.
--Tom HammerPost Date: 2022-03-03 12:11:57 | Last Update: 2022-03-03 12:57:52 |
Breakfast with the Chief raised over $100k
The Salem Police Foundation held its eleventh annual Breakfast with the Chief fundraiser on Thursday, February 17, 2022, at 8:00am. This year the program was back to an in-person event, held at Salem Convention Center. During this annual event, participants get to hear a Year in Review recap to learn about what the Foundation has made possible for the community and in support of our Officers.
Withnell Motor Company was the 2022 Title Sponsor, and in conjunction with 35 other Salem businesses and non-profits the Foundation brought in over $60,000 in corporate sponsorships even before the event began. The Salem Police Foundation is grateful for its friends at Cherry City Metals, Grove Mueller & Swank, Pioneer Trust Bank, Walery’s Premium Pizza, Bark Boys Inc, Magoo’s Sports Bar, McGinty Belcher & Hamilton, Northside Electric, 911 Supply, Rich Duncan Construction Inc, Salem Health, and over 20 more local organizations. These donations made it possible for 100% of the donations to the 2022 event to go directly towards the Foundation’s fundraising purposes. Overall, the event raised over $100k.
Chief Trevor Womack discussed the efforts that have recently gone into the roll out of Salem Police Department’s 2022-2024 Strategic Plan, which focuses on Safety, Legitimacy, and Excellence. Chief Womack came to Salem from Stockton, California. He is a second-generation police officer with 30+ years of service.
Over the last decade, generous citizens have helped the SPF purchase critical safety and crime investigatory tools such as the city’s Mobile Command Center, crime cameras, K-9 officer dogs, a fingerprint fuming chamber, an all-terrain utility vehicle, and a Forensics Fingerprint Recovery System. This past year there were two notable additions provided by the Foundation: 1) Brigid the Comfort K-9 and 2) the opening of the Jerry Moore Scholarship program. The Foundation is still accepting donations toward its work at
www.SalemPoliceFoundation.org.
--Staff ReportsPost Date: 2022-03-03 11:46:26 | |
The final report would answer whether the state’s response to the virus was effective
A bill directing OHA to select a private consultant to evaluate Oregon’s public health response to the COVID-19 epidemic is moving.
SB 1554 passed the Oregon Senate 17 to 9 on a straight party-line vote Feb. 28th. Four Senators were excused from voting, three Republicans and one Democrat. Senators Elizabeth Steiner Hayward (D-Portland) and Dennis Linthicum R-Klamath Falls took views as divergent as the urban/rural divide they represent concerning
SB 1554. Senator Steiner Hayward’s views are expressed in the After Action Report she co-authored.
The After Action Report would investigate the COVID-19 response across several levels of engagement to identify areas for improvement, make recommendations, and capture key lessons learned. Critics are concerned that the report may be used to justify controls on the freedom of citizens in future declared emergencies.
SB 1554 includes a General Fund appropriation of $899,573. The final report is to be submitted no later than September 1, 2023.
Oregon has the least popular Governor in the nation for many reasons. Among those are the arbitrary closing of many businesses plus severe mask and vaccination mandates implemented by OHA under her direction in response to the COVID pandemic. A consultant selected by OHA under the Governor’s direction could interpret history in technical terms favorable to the Governor. This is an election year and Democrats fear the worst based on early polling. A report on the Kate Brown administration’s response would be too late technically to affect the November 2022 general election, but it would be a convenient way to deflect criticism of shutdowns and mandates during campaign season.
Steiner Hayward reasons we need this study to know how we could save lives in future emergencies. Her focus is on evaluating how the various agencies made use of their funds, coordination between various government departments, equity in outcomes and public-private partnership effectiveness.
Senator Dennis Linthicum (R-Klamath Falls) thinks a study could be useful but sees this bill as one seeking answers to the wrong questions. He questions the value in quantifying government’s role without qualifying the impact it had on those tens of thousands hurt by shutdowns and mandates that adversely affected businesses and schools.
The survey would require input from state and local agencies, hospitals and medical providers, businesses, schools and individuals. Concerns arise over the objectivity in reports from individuals and organizations dependent on public funding for their livelihoods.
The final report would seek to answer whether or not the state’s response to the virus was effective. OHA reports nearly 700,000 people contracted the disease, more than 27,000 were hospitalized and 6,582 died, reportedly all due to COVID-19 and not underlying conditions.
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Defenders of the OHA response point out that Oregon fared better Than Oklahoma and Kentucky, two states of similar size. Compared to those states, Oregon’s number of cases and deaths are nearly half. How Oregon compared to those states in mental health outcomes is not mentioned.
The post-pandemic era is upon us. A study of the wide variety of actions and outcomes taken by many different countries on six continents could be a useful tool in directing future responses to virus outbreaks. Sweden allowed citizens the freedom to act responsibly without controls. Australia mandated citizens stay in their homes and followed up with strict enforcement. Poor nations didn’t vaccinated because of cost and many achieved enviable results using affordable therapies banned in many developed countries including the U.S. Deaths and injuries to all age groups brought about by vaccines gets sparse attention by the legacy media. The actions of the FDA and CDC were questioned in Congressional hearings. Agency transparency remain a major concern by many in Congress.
--Tom HammerPost Date: 2022-03-02 11:45:57 | Last Update: 2022-03-02 12:03:24 |
Spending on disadvantaged individuals, families, businesses and communities
The Oregon Senate passed
SB 1579 on a vote of 17 to 9, along party lines.
This legislation directs Business Oregon to implement an Economic Equity Investment Program to award grants to qualified organizations that
provide culturally responsive services to disadvantaged individuals, families, businesses and communities.
The Joint Committee on Ways and Means appropriated $15 million General Funds for the Economic Equity Investment Fund for biennium ending June 30, 2023.
That is considerably less than the $50 million requested in the original bill. Perhaps they wanted to recoup most of the funds held in litigation?
Senator Tim Knopp (R-Bend) made the Ways and Means committee aware that the Emergency Board appropriated $60 million last year with similar goals, which resulted in several law suits, some of which are ongoing. The Legislative Council opinion suggests it is possible that part of this bill will be ruled unconstitutional, which will expose the state to more lawsuits.
The debate of constitutionality was argued with Senator Kate Lieber (D-Beaverton) defending the bill drafting to avoid lawsuits, but Senator Bill Hansen (R-Athena) also alerted the committee against potential lawsuits and the added expense to the state. Chair Representative Tawna Sanchez (D-Portland) referred to the LC opinion stating someone had to experience a loss before a suit could be brought. Representative Janelle Bynum (D-Clackamas) took the discussion on the legality as a personal attack. It was unnecessary since the committee is loaded 14-8 for her party.
A lot of the discussion was aimed at the disparity of Blacks. The US Department of Labor, average wages broken down based on $1.00
earned by a White worker, a Black person is 1.99% of the work force and earns $0.92. Oregon is the fifth highest paying Black wages next to
Idaho, Montana, Wyoming and Hawaii. Hispanic/Latino at 13.34% and Native Americans as 0.89% earns $0.67, Oregon is 42 compared to
other states. Asian-Pacific Islanders are 5.31% of the work force earning $1.10 ranked 13th compared to other states.
This bill directs Oregon Business Development Department to develop and implement an Economic Equity Investment Program to award
grants to organizations that provide culturally responsive services to support economic stability, self-sufficiency, wealth building and
economic equity among disadvantaged individuals, families, businesses and communities whose future is at risk.
At risk is two or more economic equity risk factors defined as:
- Experience of discrimination because of race or ethnicity
- English language proficiency
- Citizenship status
- Socioeconomic status
- Residence or operation in a rural location
Business Oregon's Strategic Plan for 2018-2022 notes that persistent
economic disparities exist among people of color and other
represented communities, despite growth rates higher than the state's
overall population. Household income and wages are lowest for
Oregon's African American, Native American, and Hispanic
communities. The Strategic Plan states that these groups are also
disadvantaged in their access to capital and are underrepresented in
employment within the professional and technical services sectors.
Akasha Lawrence Spence (D-Portland), Chief Sponsor of SB 1579, said,
“This measure is necessary to help communities from our rural center
to our urban core become self-sufficient, attract private investment and
become resilient in the face of economic shocks.â€
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Senator Kayse Jama (D-Portland), Co-Chief Sponsor, said, “We are in an
immense moment of social reckoning in this country. I have spent
nearly every one of 20 years in community advocacy focused on police
and criminal justice reform. I am a Co-Chief Sponsor of SB 1579 because
I know creating economic opportunities for all is fundamental to
creating a fairer future for Oregonians who have been left behind."
Organizations providing culturally responsive services pick and choose
winners and losers instead of a constitutional equality. It remains to be
seen what the courts say about fairness.
--Donna BleilerPost Date: 2022-03-02 10:28:43 | Last Update: 2022-03-02 17:39:57 |
Current law already gives parents the right to see what materials are being used
Senate Republicans have voted to advance a measure that would modernize Oregon’s curriculum transparency laws.
SB 1575 would increase access for parents looking to get involved with their student’s education.
“It’s time to bring Oregon’s value of transparency into the 21st century,†said Senator Kim Thatcher (R-Keizer), author of the bill. “Current law already gives parents the right to see what materials are being used to teach their kids. For decades, we have recognized parents’ right to know. This bill would create a streamlined process for parents to exercise that right.â€
ORS 336.465 outlines the rights of parents to examine “instructional materials to be used in any class, course, assembly or school-sponsored activity.†Despite this promise of transparency, parents often have no practical way of exercising this right. Outdated procedures often require parents to travel to district facilities or school buildings during limited hours (typically during working hours). This is a barrier for many parents.
SB 1575 would allow parents to access curriculum materials via an online website.
“The internet gives parents and students access to near unlimited information at their fingertips,†Thatcher continued. “Students use computers to complete assignments and even to participate in the classroom. Our transparency laws need to be updated.â€
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According to a recent national survey, 85% of voters agree that parents should be allowed to see all curriculum, books, and other materials in classes their children are taking. Seventy-one percent believe parents should have a ‘significant’ role in their childrens’ curriculum development process.
The motion to debate
SB 1575 failed along party lines, 9-16, with all Democrats voting no. The bill will remain dead in the Senate Education committee.
--Staff ReportsPost Date: 2022-03-02 10:28:18 | Last Update: 2022-03-02 10:36:21 |
Will likely cut hours and pay for farm workers
The Oregon House passed a union-backed agriculture overtime bill championed by Representative Andrea Salinas (D-Lake Oswego) and Representative Paul Holvey (D-Eugene) that many analysts say will result in job losses and pay cuts for farm workers.
HB 4002 was rushed through during the 35-day short session and passed the House today on party lines. The vote followed a motion from House Republicans to send the bill back to committee. This attempt narrowly failed initially 27 – 32, with bipartisan opposition to this flawed bill and support for a true Oregon solution.
House Democrats, led by the Representatives from Lake Oswego suburbs and Eugene, were emboldened by the threat of an overtime rule from the Oregon Bureau of Labor & Industries if legislation failed this session. The majority turned down every alternative proposal from Republicans, including an amendment to guarantee increased pay to farm workers for extra hours worked with a $50 million grant. The Democrats’ bill instead includes tax breaks for large, out-of-state corporate farms.
“This legislation is a loss for Oregon,†said House Republican Leader Vikki Breese-Iverson (R-Prineville). “We had an opportunity to find an Oregon solution that caters to our state’s diverse agriculture industry, protecting both farm employees and farm owners. Instead the majority’s failed leadership passed a bill that will cut employee hours and wages while expediting the automation of farm work.â€
“Legislators from both sides of the aisle have stated on the record: this proposal will result in job losses for farm workers,†added Representative Daniel Bonham (R-The Dalles). “There is no appropriate justification for taking jobs away from Oregonians trying to put food on their families’ tables.â€
“There is no doubt we will need to fix this legislation in 2023 to save farm employee jobs,†said Representative Shelly Boshart Davis (R-Albany). “First we will need more balance in the Legislature and a majority that stands up to partisan special interests. We must put people above politics.â€
--Staff ReportsPost Date: 2022-03-02 06:39:04 | Last Update: 2022-03-01 15:29:12 |
“How is it that the remedy for racial bias is more racial bias?â€
Reeling from months of
urban rioting in Portland and nationwide, walking back "
defund the police" movements in large cities, and facing backlash over Governor Brown
releasing large number of inmates back to communities, Democrats are eager to repair the self-inflicted damage they have done to their party and their brand, as crime and murder rates skyrocket.
The Oregon Senate -- led by Democrats -- has approved
SB 1510 on a vote of 16 to 11. This legislation reduces traffic stops, makes changes to law enforcement best practices and will distribute funding to culturally-specific organizations and service providers. Oregon Senate Democrats announced the passage in the Senate of
SB 1510 with a press release entitled “Senate Democrats Advance Measure to Improve Public Safety.â€
The bill passed, despite questions about the constitutionality of certain provisions. This is the second time in two days, Democrats have ignored legal advice to pass legislation that is constitutionally suspect. The bill would prohibit law enforcement from enforcing laws about properly functioning headlights and taillights on Oregon’s roads.
“
SB 1510 is a critical step forward to improve public safety and help undo systemic racism in our justice system. Black Oregonians are 2% of the overall population and 10% of the prison population. As a former corrections officer, I saw the impact of these racial disparities daily,†said Senator James Manning (D-Eugene), who co-carried
SB 1510 on the Senate floor. “The important investments in this bill will reach the programs that will help people re-enter society after leaving prison and help Oregonians who are in need of a variety of services stay out of contact with the criminal justice system in the first place.â€
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“This bill will make our community and roads more dangerous at a time when crime is on the rise,†said Senate Republican Leader Tim Knopp (R-Bend). “Soft-on-crime policies like these are what is causing Oregonians to feel unsafe in their homes, now they will feel unsafe on the roads.†One former legislator who declined to be named said, "How is it that the remedy for racial bias is more racial bias?"
“Communities need police to be able to focus on preventing and solving crimes, especially violent crimes,†said Senator Floyd Prozanski (D-Eugene), Chair of the Senate Committee on Judiciary and Ballot Measure 110 Implementation, who co-carried
SB 1510 on the Senate floor. “We should reduce traffic stops for equipment violations like broken taillights that aren’t dangerous, so police can focus on stopping real crime. We need to reestablish trust between communities and law enforcement.
SB 1510 will help create a safer Oregon by helping law enforcement focus on doing their jobs effectively.â€
SB 1510 directs the Oregon Criminal Justice Commission to establish a program to award grants to public and private entities for restorative justice programs, improves law enforcement best practices and directs Justice Reinvestment Equity Program funds to be distributed to culturally specific and response service providers.
SB 1510 now goes to the House of Representatives for consideration.
--Staff ReportsPost Date: 2022-03-02 06:17:04 | Last Update: 2022-03-01 12:01:33 |
“This body requires our members to mask while speaking,â€
Senate Republicans today moved to amend Senate rules to change the masking requirements in the Senate Chamber.
“This body is one of the only legislative bodies in the nation that requires our members to mask while speaking,†said Senate Republican Leader Tim Knopp (R-Bend). “There is no reason for it. The majority
kicked out a member last week for something that just 24 hours later the CDC says is not required. I asked them to wait, now the CDC shows exactly why they should have.â€
Senate Democrats voted down the rule change along party lines, 9-17. The Senate will remain out of step with CDC guidance until the masking requirement is struck.
The CDC announced Friday it is no longer recommending most Americans wear masks indoors. According to the CDC’s framework, Marion County is considered medium COVID-19 level, making masks optional. Oregon Governor Kate Brown
has announced that the mask mandate will be lifted beginning March 11.
--Staff ReportsPost Date: 2022-03-01 17:46:50 | Last Update: 2022-02-28 17:55:56 |
Legislators disappointed at no pay increase
The Oregon State Senate Committee on Rules passed
SB 1566 to the Joint Committee on Ways and Means for possible funding.
This bill establishes an annual
salary for members of the Legislative Assembly equal to an annual
occupational mean wage estimate for Oregon for the prior year and
adjusted once every two years.
The bill allows for annual cost of living
adjustment to the interim expense allowance, and adds up to $1,000
per month reimbursement for child care expenses for members who
have one or more children or dependents under age 13.
State legislator salaries would go from $32,839 to about $57,000, and
applies a cost-of-living adjustment to the monthly interim expense
allowance received by members. It also provides for a child care
allowance of $1000 per month for members who have children or
dependents under 13 years of age.
Three Democrat legislators announced they will not seek re-election assuming
that SB 1566 has failed. Representative Anna Williams (D-Hood River), Representative Karin
Power (D-Milwaukie), and Representative Rachel Prusak (D-West Linn/Tualatin) all
said their base salary was not enough to compensate for the amount of
work required as a state representative. The three have professional
jobs outside of their legislative duties.
The salary for legislators was set to be a servant of the people and a
part-time commitment.
It was never intended to be a career job. SB 1566 salary increases would change legislators to full-time careers.
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In 2010, voters approved legislator’s plea for a short session to adjust
budgets and deal with issues that couldn’t wait. That has not changed in the eyes of the public, but the legislature has manipulated legislation with studies and programs that report back to them adding meetings
and work until it has exceeded its boundaries.
COVID shut downs have kept the public voices silent making the
legislature more powerful than ever intended.
The state would benefit with new blood that will put the brakes on new programs and do a
complete audit of programs to determine the value of our "servants"
representing us.
--Donna BleilerPost Date: 2022-03-01 11:26:58 | Last Update: 2022-03-01 13:26:30 |
Instead guarantee insurance coverage for essential health care visits
House Republicans have negotiated a fix to
SB 1529 to ensure that Oregonians can receive insurance coverage for annual primary care and mental health care doctor visits.
SB 1529 previously included a proposal from Democrats that would have given the Oregon Health Authority’s public health director, an unelected bureaucrat, the same powers as the Governor to declare a health emergency and dictate mandates related to that emergency. Republicans successfully changed the bill to prevent OHA from gaining this inappropriate power.
“Oregonians need better access to health care, not a state agency with more power to dictate mandates,†said House Republican Leader Vikki Breese-Iverson (R-Prineville).
“The pandemic was and still is exhausting for hardworking Oregonians,†said Representative Raquel Moore-Green (R-Salem), a member of the House Committee on Health Care. “Rather than empowering OHA to declare more frequent emergencies and mandates, this bill gives Oregonians better access to affordable health care.â€
SB 1529 is scheduled for third reading and vote on the House floor today, March 1.
--Staff ReportsPost Date: 2022-03-01 10:25:43 | Last Update: 2022-03-01 11:17:04 |
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