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Oregon Citizens Lobby War Room |
Thursday, April 3, 2025 at 8:30 am |
Meet at Ike Box for training and updates on legislation. Send testimony, watch hearings, and visit capitol to testify. Legislators and special guests. Every Thursday 8:30am to 3pm to June 26. |
Ike Box, 299 Cottage St NE, Salem (upstairs) |

Coffee Klatch, Jeff Kropf host |
Monday, April 7, 2025 at 6:00 pm |
Political news unraveled. Guest speakers, Senators and Representatives. Hear Candidates running for May Primary. Learn how to testify. Bring your friends and neighbors! All welcome. |
Bo & Vine 3969 Commercial SE, Salem |

OFF 2-Day Shooting Event |
Saturday, May 3, 2025 at 10:00 am |
Oregon Firearms Federation. All proceeds benefits OFF’s legal fund to cover ongoing fight against Measure 114 and efforts to protect your Second Amendment rights. Cost $50 per day, May 3 and 4, 10am to 7pm. Competitions. Special prices. Food & drink provided. 541-258-4440 |
Indoor Shooting Range, 580 S Main, Lebanon, OR |

Oregon Citizens Lobby War Room |
Thursday, June 26, 2025 at 8:30 am |
Meet at Ike Box for training and updates on legislation. Send testimony, watch hearings, and visit capitol to testify. Legislators and special guests. Every Thursday 8:30am to 3:00pm to June 26. |
Ike Box, 299 Cottage St NE, Salem (upstairs) |
View All Calendar Events
Should we ban colored pencils?
A man was arrested and is facing a felony assault charge after stabbing a security guard in the head with a makeshift weapon in the Portland Old Town neighborhood.
On Saturday, March 26, 2022 at 10:20a.m., Portland Central Precinct officers responded to a report of a stabbing near Northwest 5th Avenue and Northwest Couch Street.
The victim, a uniformed security guard, was reporting that he had been assaulted and was following the suspect as he walked away.
Officers caught up with the suspect at Northwest Broadway and Northwest Hoyt Street and arrested him.
The victim was transported to the hospital by ambulance with non-life-threatening injuries.
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The investigation revealed that the victim was ordering coffee when the suspect walked up behind him and without warning stabbed him in the head with a makeshift weapon made of a plastic bottle and two sharpened colored pencils.
The victim was wearing a bicycle helmet at the time and the pencils pierced part of the helmet foam before puncturing his skin. The weapon was later seized as evidence.
Samuel J. Kusaj, 51, was booked into the Multnomah County Detention Center on charges of Assault in the Second Degree and Unlawful Use of a Weapon.
--Bruce ArmstrongPost Date: 2022-03-27 12:22:30 | Last Update: 2022-03-27 12:29:25 |
Exposed employees to potential serious injury
Oregon OSHA has fined Dollar Tree Stores Inc. $32,000 for repeatedly exposing employees to potential serious injury from unsecured materials falling on them, tripping and falling in cramped aisles, and inaccessible fire extinguishers and emergency exits.
The penalty was issued as part of a citation resulting from an inspection of the Dollar Tree at 29756 SW Town Center Loop West in Wilsonville.
Under Oregon OSHA rules, penalties multiply when employers commit repeat offenses. The $32,000 fine following the inspection of the Wilsonville site reflects the fact that most of the violations identified there were repeats of violations cited previously at other Dollar Tree locations in Oregon.
The citation against the Wilsonville location stems from an inspection the division initiated in response to a complaint.
The inspection – launched in late 2021 and wrapped up in February – included interviews, on-site walk-throughs and observations, and an examination of records, including internal company audits revealing workplace hazards left unaddressed.
The inspection identified five violations, four of which involved repeat offenses, exposing employees to serious physical harm.
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“The workplace safety and health standards enforced by Oregon OSHA are there for a reason, so that employers have clear and time-tested steps to follow to keep workers out of harm’s way,†said Lou Savage, interim administrator for the division. “Failing to follow them is not an option. Repeatedly failing to follow them serves only one purpose: to deepen the risk of severe injury and suffering.â€
Altogether, Oregon OSHA cited Dollar Tree Stores Inc. for the following violations at the Wilsonville location, reflecting the application of increased penalties for repeat violations of the same rule at other stores in the state:
- Failure to stabilize and secure boxes of merchandise to prevent them from falling onto or in the path of employees, which potentially exposed employees to struck-by, trip, and fall hazards. It was the sixth repeat violation of this rule since 2018. Penalty: $7,500
- Failure to ensure an adequate width for aisles and walkways, which potentially exposed employees to trip and fall hazards. It was the fourth repeat violation of this rule since 2019. Penalty: $10,500
- Failure to ensure that stored materials, including merchandise in the stockroom and at the back of the store, did not block access to portable fire extinguishers. It was the second repeat violation of this rule since 2018. Penalty: $3,500
- Failure to ensure that merchandise, carts, and conveyor rollers in the stockroom did not block emergency exit routes, which potentially exposed employees to trip and fall hazards, and smoke inhalation or burns. It was the second repeat violation of this rule since 2020. Penalty: $10,500
- Failure to keep written records of safety committee meetings for three years, including names of attendees, meeting dates, safety and health issues discussed, recommendations for corrections, and dates by which managers agree to follow up on corrections.
--Bruce ArmstrongPost Date: 2022-03-25 19:55:44 | Last Update: 2022-03-25 20:15:33 |
Wilsonville City Councilor wants to serve Clackamas County
Ben West is
running for Clackamas County commissioner.
He is a sixth-generation Oregonian who has lived in Wilsonville since 2014.
He’s a registered nurse at Oregon Health and Science University’s cardiology clinic and has served on the Wilsonville City Council for the past 3.5 years.
From the Oregon Legislature all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court, Ben has successfully fought for civil rights and for foster families.
In his spare time, Ben regularly travels to Peru to provide medical care at children’s hospitals and to indigenous populations along the Amazon River.
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He’s running for Clackamas County Commissioner, Board Position 5 to be a strong voice for working families and to ensure a stronger future for the county and all of the its residents.
West is opposed to road tolls in Oregon, "I am firmly opposed to burdening working families by charging them to drive on roads that they’ve been using to get to their jobs."
He has also spoken out against high-density housing mandates. "I think part of the reason people live in suburbs or small towns is so they can own a single-family home with property," West explained. "I want to preserve that quality of life for our residents, instead of trying to force everybody into high-density housing."
--Staff ReportsPost Date: 2022-03-25 10:14:14 | Last Update: 2022-03-28 12:20:21 |
“Election integrity is an issue high on my priority listâ€
On March 23rd from the Tumwater Ballroom in Oregon City, President Donald Trump’s “First Lady of Election Integrity,†Kelli Ward, formally endorsed
Kerry McQuisten for governor.
“I’m proud to endorse my fellow patriot, Kerry McQuisten, for governor,†says Ward. “Kerry is a warrior for our freedoms, and I have full confidence in her ability to tackle the hard issues faced by Oregonians, including election integrity.â€
Ward, a former Arizona state senator, now serves as chair of the Arizona Republican Party.
She is a speaker, author and physician.
McQuisten, 49, was raised on a cattle ranch in Baker County.
She graduated from Willamette University in Salem, and has lived and worked around the world. She garnered national media attention as the Baker City Mayor, for authoring her city’s resolution against Governor Kate Brown’s lockdown mandates, and creating a network of elected officials in all corners of Oregon who then did the same.
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She is also a former business development and marketing executive who founded her own publishing house in Baker City in 2007.
“I’m thrilled to have Kelli’s support and encouragement,†says McQuisten. “Election integrity is an issue high on my priority list. Without fair and honest elections, we risk the loss of our Republic.â€
If elected, McQuisten would become Oregon’s first female Republican governor, and the first governor from eastern Oregon since the 1950s.
--Staff ReportsPost Date: 2022-03-24 23:40:24 | Last Update: 2022-03-24 23:54:45 |
Taking over for Jim Lewis, who recently resigned
Salem City Council voted to appoint Micki Varney to the vacant Ward 8 Council seat during a special meeting on March 21st.
Varney's career experience includes early work as a high school teacher and 30 years as a salmon biologist.
"I believe a city councilor has a responsibility to be a community educator," she wrote in her application. "Councilors keep current on most everything related to city affairs. They must process and understand the information and have the ability and commitment to explain policy decisions and city actions, and be a liaison to the citizens they represent."
Varney served as a city councilor in Dayton, Wash., for two years before moving to Oregon.
She has served on the Salem Parks and Recreation Advisory Board for 3.5 years and volunteered for the West Salem Neighborhood Association for eight years.
She is filling the Ward 8 seat vacated earlier this year by the resignation of Jim Lewis.
Varney will serve the remainder of the term, which expires at the end of 2022.
She will be sworn in at the Monday, March 28 City Council meeting. She and Chris Cummings also qualified as candidates for the seat in the May 17 primary election.
--Bruce ArmstrongPost Date: 2022-03-24 17:29:36 | Last Update: 2022-03-24 17:37:26 |
Public input sought on how to spend recovery funding
Oregon Housing and Community Services is looking for public input on what the priorities should be for spending $422 million in disaster recovery funding from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD).
The funds will come in the form of a Community Development Block Grant for disaster recovery and mitigation and will assist with the ongoing recovery from the 2020 Labor Day fires.
In order to receive the funding later this year, the agency must complete a series of federal requirements, including developing an Action Plan to lay out how the money will be spent.
The Action Plan will focus on replacing housing, particularly for low- and moderate-income families or individuals, but there are also other ways the money can be spent, such as on public infrastructure or economic revitalization.
OHCS has been meeting with local governments and community groups working on wildfire recovery to get their input on priorities for the Action Plan, but the Oregon Housing and Community Services department says they also want to hear from interested members of the public.
OHCS invites anyone who is interested to take its online survey, including a mobile-friendly version, which is available on the
OHCS website.
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“We are looking for public input, because it’s the right thing to do. It’s the ‘Oregon Way,’ and we know it will make the plan better,†said Alex Campbell, chief external affairs officer for Recovery and Resiliency at OHCS. “We are especially interested to hear from folks we know were hit the hardest and who face the greatest challenges in recovery, including our Latino/a/x neighbors, older residents, and Oregonians who have specific housing needs due to disability or other circumstance.â€
Once a draft Action Plan is written, Oregonians will have another opportunity to provide comment in May, as required by HUD.
More details on how to participate will be announced in the coming weeks.
--Bruce ArmstrongPost Date: 2022-03-23 20:09:52 | Last Update: 2022-03-23 20:28:42 |
Conservatives Rally to Support Lindsay Berchauer
TYamhill County will not get a new Commissioner -- at least for now. As of 8 am. on March 23rd with 100% of precincts reporting in the Recall election of Commissioner Lindsay Berschauer, the no vote count was 1,580 ahead. A total of 33,000 votes were cast representing 44.3% of registered voters.
The Recall attempt initiated by Progressive Yamhill, a local part of Indivisible, was
well funded. Indivisible money came in from national public unions, Soros globalists, and Hollywood. It funded several mailers and studio production videos that aired on TV in prime time.
A conservative coalition of
family farms,
Yamhill Republicans, Newberg/Dundee and McMinnville Strong put boots on the ground to work in opposition of the Recall. Groups led by Julia Howard and Beth Keyser canvassed every house on their list, a Herculean task accomplished. Matt Jordan directed volunteers who made near 6000 phone calls to neighbors.
Isaac and Rose Etherington wrote and produced home videos which aired on social media. Mailers were produced and funded by
Oregon Family Farms and others from rural communities. James Goings led an effort that covered the county with field signs. Steve Howard scheduled crews of elections observers for signature verification and ballot counting.
Legacy Oregon media -- Oregon Public Broadcasting -- jumped in with
questionable headlines like "Yamhill County chair likely survives recall amid accusations of spurring divisive politics." One local insider quipped that this kind of coverage "spurs divisive politics."
The recall election cost County taxpayers near $100,000. An earlier failed Recall attempt involving Newberg School Board members cost the County near $60,000.
The political opponents will get little rest. The next election is May 17th, less than two months from now. That election will determine the other two positions on the Board of Commissioners. Campaigns for those and other elected offices are already well underway.
--Tom HammerPost Date: 2022-03-23 09:47:25 | Last Update: 2022-03-23 17:09:46 |
ODA prepares as highly pathogenic avian influenza is confirmed
On March 2, the World Organization for Animal Health (OIE) confirmed a bald eagle found dead in British Columbia, Canada tested positive for the
highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) Eurasian strain H5N1.
The detection is the
first in North America’s Pacific Flyway, since 2015.
HPAI is a highly contagious, deadly disease in domestic poultry. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and Prevention, HPAI detections do not present an immediate public health concern.
No human cases of these avian influenza viruses have been detected in the United States.
“The best protection for birds are owners who practice effective biosecurity,†said Dr. Ryan Scholz, State Veterinarian, Oregon Department of Agriculture. “We must be vigilant and strict with our biosecurity practices especially for backyard flocks, as well as educated on when and how to report potential avian influenza deaths. Our preparation could reduce the risk of infection among poultry and prevent or limit the impact of HPAI introduction in Oregon.â€
Earlier this year, the United States Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) confirmed HPAI in wild waterfowl in the Atlantic Flyway, on the east coast.
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In addition, USDA APHIS has also confirmed HPAI infections in 16 states including both backyard and commercial flocks with new detections announced every week.
ODA is working closely with USDA APHIS, other federal partners, neighboring states, and commercial poultry producers to prevent the introduction of HPAI into Oregon’s poultry flocks.
ODA is asking for the public’s help in detecting HPAI in backyard flocks.
Tracking cases is critical. ODA asks bird owners to report unusual increases in illness or death rates in their flocks. If you find a sick or dead bird, don’t touch it, report it.
--Bruce ArmstrongPost Date: 2022-03-22 17:36:55 | Last Update: 2022-03-22 17:56:44 |
Implementing a toll on Interstate 205
Regional leaders and elected representatives from local jurisdictions worked together to ensure income from this measure will benefit local communities.
A plan by the Oregon Department of Transportation to implement a toll on Interstate 205 to pay for improvements in Clackamas County received a key procedural approval Thursday after the Joint Policy Advisory Committee on Transportation voted to amend two regional transportation plans.
JPACT's vote was to amend both the Regional Transportation Plan and the Metropolitan Transportation Improvement Program, two federally-mandated documents that needed a formal amendment for the tolling project to proceed.
The yes vote now sends the proposal to the Metro Council, which must also approve the plan for it to proceed.
Two Metro councilors serving on JPACT, Christine Lewis and Juan Carlos Gonzalez, voted against the tolling proposal. The vote came after an intense discussion among JPACT members about a number of topics, including equity, trust and how the I-205 tolling plan fits into the broader picture of plans for a regional congestion pricing program.

The Metro councilors were joined by JPACT members from Clackamas County and Portland, who also voted against the proposal and expressed concerns about traffic diversion and a lack of transparency in ODOT's decision-making process.
ODOT officials said the plan is an important step in paying for long-promised improvements to I-205 in Clackamas County, including a seismic retrofit of the Abernethy Bridge over the Willamette River in Oregon City and a congestion relief effort between that bridge and Stafford Road. However, Clackamas County leaders have been concerned about whether the tolls, which are proposed as a way to pay for the bridge improvements and widening plan, would cause drivers to divert off the freeway and onto local roads, like Highway 99E through Canby and Oregon City, or Willamette Falls Drive through West Linn.
Lewis, whose Metro Council district includes most of urban Clackamas County, lives in West Linn's Willamette neighborhood, where drivers already use Willamette Falls Drive to avoid the congestion on I-205. She said ODOT had made improvements to the plan to address diversion and equity – but not enough to earn her vote.
"Regional partnership was very strong on this, and everyone came together to improve this proposal," she said. "The overall package is better because it now includes language that forces ODOT to spend money on local streets to which traffic from I-205 is already diverting. They will also be required to invest in local communities, make sure the project is in sync with other congestion pricing efforts, and they must now commit to prioritizing safety and equity."
But, she said, she's still concerned about how the tolling proposal for I-205 will fit into efforts to create a regional congestion pricing plan.
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"It makes no sense to place undue burden on communities in Clackamas without syncing the timeline up to the regional system we are trying to build," Lewis said.
Clackamas County Commissioner Paul Savas expressed concerns over including language that opens the door to tolling on all lanes of the interstate.
"I'm inclined to think that we will put more people at risk," he said. "I don't think we will accomplish, and perhaps even worsen our climate goals, and frankly I think there are some serious economic impacts that have not been considered."

Joining the coalition against the proposal was Jo Ann Hardesty, the Portland City Commissioner responsible for that city's Bureau of Transportation. She said the past month "has been wonderful communication with ODOT," but expressed concerns about ODOT's record when it comes to listening and working closely with local communities.
"I still see a reluctance to do anything different that you've ever done," she said. "I push back on the notion that we should trust you, because there is nothing in your history that proves that we should trust ODOT to actually do the right thing when it comes to prioritizing other modes of transportation, when it comes to being a real partner in our communities. I'm not clear that ODOT has listened at all about the major concerns in Clackamas or the major concerns that folks in my community have about how much it's going to cost them to actually travel in a city where they've been pushed out to the edges."
But ODOT officials said the plan had made significant changes to address concerns about diversion mitigation and the impacts of the plan on local communities. The plan to move forward includes commitments from ODOT to elevate the role of local policymakers and stakeholders, center equity and process in outcomes, increase transit and multimodal transportation options, and provide fiscal transparency to build trust and understanding.
That was enough to get support of Milwaukie City Councilor Kathy Hyzy, who had previously been opposed to the plan.
"So much of this is stepping out on faith and deciding where to take risks," she said. "At this point I think we're just going to have to step out in faith that ODOT is going to do its best. We are relying on ODOT to do what it is saying at these tables; that is going to be critical, and we will be watching. And in future votes we will be paying close attention to see that ODOT has done not just its level best, but has pulled out all the stops to get these two things as closely aligned as is extra-humanly possible because the cities and the region do not want to be left hanging when it comes to tolling."
--Staff ReportsPost Date: 2022-03-21 09:30:42 | Last Update: 2022-03-21 09:46:11 |
The frontier for the rights of the unborn
As the repeal of Roe v. Wade heats up in the U.S. Supreme Court,
Oregon’s majority party pushed through
HB 4034 to make the Reproductive Healthcare Equity Act permanent.
Buried within HB 4034, which adds to what a pharmacy intern can do,
allowing a pharmacy to swipe person's driver license for purchasing
pseudoephedrine without a prescription to a person who is at least 18
years of age with a valid government-issued photo identification, is the
implementation of the Reproductive Health Equity Act of 2017 (RHEA).
Usually, laws that compel health insurance providers to cover particular
treatments are automatically repealed after six years. HB 4034 didn’t
need to add RHEA because it already made abortions a free medical
benefit. Not only did HB 4034 make abortion benefits permanent, but
the slap in the face came by adding an “emergency clause†preventing a
citizen’s petition from challenging the law by a vote.
HB 4034 also allotted distribution of $2,555,000 General Fund to give
Oregon Health Authority more latitude in who receives grants to push
their pro-abortion agenda, including schools.
The bill authorizes ten
school districts to receive grants for health care centers, and awards up
to four grants to school districts or education service districts for
mobile school-linked health centers.
Putting health care centers in schools is another way to separate
children from parents allowing state to provide treatments without
parents' knowledge.
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Abortion first showed up in Oregon law In 2017,
HB 3391, in a full court
press by Democrats to pass the Reproductive Health Equity Act (RHEA).
The Act expanded health coverage to access free reproductive health
services, including abortion, contraceptive options, and experimental or
investigational treatments or treatment that do not conform to
acceptable and customary standards of medical practices.
Why the urgency to make the RHEA law permanent?
If the Supreme
Court overturns Roe v. Wade, the decision goes back to individual
states.
There are 26 states likely to ban abortions. However, 15 states
are taking action to make abortion a legal right by passing laws.
Republicans put forth a motion to withdraw pro-life bills from
committees in 2021 in both Houses with
HB 2699 and
SB 586 that would
require an aborted baby born alive to be treated as a viable person.
Democrats voted down both attempts.
HB 4034 is currently awaiting the governor’s signature.
--Donna BleilerPost Date: 2022-03-20 12:41:46 | Last Update: 2022-03-20 15:56:53 |
Andrew Shearer has been appointed
After serving the Springfield community for nearly a year as Interim Chief, Springfield City Manager Nancy Newton
has appointed Andrew Shearer to serve as Springfield’s next Police Chief.
He will be officially sworn in at 10:30 a.m. Monday, March 28th.
Shearer brings more than 29 years of law enforcement experience to Springfield, most recently as Assistant Chief of Police with the City of Portland.
When selected to serve as interim, Chief Shearer issued his commitment to working alongside community members, public safety stakeholders and SPD to enhance community trust, improve transparency, and to foster a policing culture based on dignity, fairness, respect, and accountability.
“Ten months ago, I was provided an opportunity to serve the members of SPD and this community. Since then, I’ve witnessed the courage of the men and women of this agency firsthand,†Springfield Police Chief Andrew Shearer said.
He continued, “We should all appreciate their selflessness in the face of danger in order to protect the people of Springfield as well as their courageousness in self-reflection to seek continual improvement. A safe city requires trust and partnership between police and community in addition to a combined commitment to public safety for all. That commitment is strong here in Springfield. I am confident that existing partnerships will strengthen, new ones will grow, and we can achieve even greater successes in this city."
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Newton said Chief Shearer not only brought the experience and fresh perspective the City was hoping for in a new Chief, his leadership led the department to make considerable strides to improve the work of law enforcement such as increasing access to information, updating policies and procedures, improving opportunities for the community to engage with the department, providing more officer training, and working to strengthen relationships with underserved communities.
“Chief Shearer’s approach to the responsibilities of Police Chief have been exemplary,†Newton said. “We are very fortunate to have someone with his extensive experience, thoughtful guidance, and compassion serving our community. He embodies the balance we need to ensure we conduct our work based on best practices and accountability, provide proper training and support for SPD; and serve all community members with respect, fairness, and dignity. His steady guidance and exceptional leadership came at the right time, and I am very pleased he is continuing with us in service to the Springfield community.â€
--Bruce ArmstrongPost Date: 2022-03-19 18:10:51 | Last Update: 2022-03-19 19:15:44 |
Making DST permanent
Oregon passed a law in 2019 to make Daylight Saving Time (DST)
permanent if Washington and California also approved the change, and
Federal law allowed the change. Federal law does not currently allow
full-time DST.
In the last four years, 18 states have enacted legislation or passed
resolutions to provide for year-round daylight saving time, including
Washington and California.
None of that matters if Congress doesn’t act.
On Tuesday, the U.S.
Senate took a surprise unanimous vote to make DST permanent by
passing the Sunshine Protection Act of 2021.
The federal proposal
would supersede any state laws. If it passes, all of Oregon, including
Malheur County, would be permanently on daylight time. The Oregon
State law alone excludes Malheur County, the only Oregon county that
observes Mountain Time.
Daylight saving time has long been a topic of discussion in Congress on
the potential benefits and the costs of daylight saving time since it was
first adopted as a wartime measure in 1942.
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The proposal will now go
to the House, where the Energy and Commerce Committee had a
hearing to discuss possible legislation last week. The chair,
Representative Frank Pallone Jr., agreed it was time to quit changing
clocks, but was uncertain whether it should be daylight savings time or
standard time.
Perhaps the U.S. Senate made that decision for him.
--Donna BleilerPost Date: 2022-03-19 17:12:19 | Last Update: 2022-03-20 19:59:31 |
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