Oregon is not business friendly
The Oregon Forest & Industries Council
have released a groundbreaking report from national accounting firm Ernst & Young detailing the total tax burden on the private forest sector in Oregon.
Presented to the Government Issues Committee of the Springfield Area Chamber of Commerce this morning, the report’s primary finding concludes the Oregon forest sector pays more than one-and-a-half times more on average than other Oregon businesses.
“By looking at a variety of publicly available tax and economic data sources for fiscal year 2019, we concluded the tax burden on Oregon’s forest industry is greater than other Oregon industries, including the agriculture and manufacturing sectors, and is one-and-a-half times greater than the overall total Oregon business tax burden,†said Caroline Sallee, project lead on the report and Senior Manager with Ernst & Young LLP’s Quantitative Economics and Statistics Group.
Ernst & Young’s report is the first time a comprehensive analysis has looked at the aggregate forest industry tax burden and comes at a time when the Oregon Legislature is considering legislation that would further increase taxes on the sector.
“Our intuition told us this had to be the worst possible time to further increase taxes on businesses, and on the forest sector in particular,†said Todd Payne, Chairman of the Oregon Forest & Industries Council’s Board of Directors and Chief Executive Officer for Seneca Family of Companies. “We’ve just suffered the worst wildfire season in history – private forestland owners lost over 400,000 acres in the Labor Day fires and we are actively working to restore and replant those lands at significant costs. Many of our rural communities are suffering multiple extreme hardships as they struggle to rebuild post-fire while the global pandemic and business shutdowns are taking enormous tolls. This report unequivocally concludes our sector already pays more than its fair share in taxes and it vindicated our sense that additional tax increases are motivated more by philosophical differences about forest management than they are by any sense of tax equity.â€
The report calculated the total tax burden by aggregating all taxes paid by the sector, including property taxes, income taxes, small tract forestland taxes, corporate income and excise taxes, fire assessments and privilege taxes.
All told, in 2019 the forest sector contributed over $142 million to state tax coffers.
“Given the report’s findings, we now know that legislation under consideration in the 2021 legislative session would effectively double the total taxes currently paid by the forest sector,†said Adrian Miller, Chair of the Oregon Forest & Industries Council’s Tax Committee and Director of Public Affairs for Rayonier. “That would increase the forest sector’s effective aggregate tax rate to nearly three times more than other Oregon businesses pay. At a time when the latest state revenue forecast indicates the Legislature has nearly $800 million more to work with this session than it originally thought and has billions of dollars in reserves, doubling the tax burden on the forest sector seems unnecessary.â€
A D V E R T I S E M E N T
A D V E R T I S E M E N T
As the number one softwood lumber and plywood producer in the nation, Oregon’s forest sector is one of the state’s cornerstone industries and serves as the economic backbone for many rural counties.
Lane County, where the report was unveiled, combined with neighboring Douglas county are often considered the wood basket of the United States as the two counties together encompass over a quarter of the state’s annual timber harvest.
Over 80 percent of this timber is harvested from privately owned forestlands.
“When the Chamber was first made aware of this study, we were thrilled at the opportunity to bring the project lead in front of our Government Issues Committee,†said Vonnie Mikkelsen, President and CEO of the Springfield Area Chamber of Commerce. “In Lane County alone, the forest sector provides over 7,000 jobs that pay, on average, 130 percent of the county annual wage. Eighty-five percent of Lane county is forested, and we are home to nearly 30 primary wood products manufacturing facilities. This study is the first time we’ve seen information like this put together and underscores that the health of the forest sector has a direct bearing on our local economies.â€
Ernst & Young was commissioned by the Oregon Forest & Industries Council to complete the report at the end of 2020, after reviewing prior work done by the firm.
Oregon Business and Industry commissioned Ernst & Young in 2020 to quantify the impact of recently enacted state tax programs on the total tax burden borne by Oregon businesses.
That report concluded in the past few years, the Oregon Legislature has increased the tax burden on businesses by 41 percent.
“We never before had reason to commission an exercise like this until we saw legislation introduced that attempted to change the forest tax program in Oregon,†said Miller. “We felt to have a reasonable conversation about that we needed to first establish a baseline for what the sector currently contributes to state taxes. We selected Ernst & Young from among several leading regional and national economics firms largely because of the experience they – and Ms. Sallee, in particular – had in analyzing the impact of diverse state and local taxation programs on businesses, both in Oregon and across the United States.â€
--Bruce ArmstrongPost Date: 2022-04-13 10:54:14 | Last Update: 2022-04-13 18:30:30 |
“We don’t need grants, we need chainsawsâ€
Linn County Commissioners Roger
Nyquist, Sherrie Sprenger and Will Tucker
have now told representatives of the Willamette National Forest that they have major concerns that unless the U.S.
Forest Service makes major policy changes when it
comes to timber harvesting, forest floor fuel loads and
firefighting priorities, western Oregon will likely experience more massive fires in coming years.
Willamette National Forest Supervisors Dave Warnack
and Deputy Supervisor Duane Bishop provided the
commissioners with information about plans for fire
recovery, fire preparedness and opening public access.
Warnack said the Willamette National Forest will receive $78 million to be used for fire recovery programs
on 200,000 acres that burned in 2020 and 2021. He said
that federal funds often must be spent within a one- to
three-year time period, but this money does not come
with those strings attached.
He said key goals are public safety/access, infrastructure repair, reforestation; restoration, natural resource
surveys, and cultural resource surveys.
“We want to work closely with our partners to understand your needs,†Warnack said. “We are asking for
your help and participation. We have an open mind
about what that would look like.â€
Board Chair Nyquist said he has not been happy with
the Forest Service for a long time. He said that in the
1970s, there were 64 mills in Linn County and now
there are very few.
“Housing was affordable and now it’s not,†Nyquist
said. “People weren’t fearing forest fires and now they
have real concerns.â€
He believes increasing wildfire issues can be traced to
the late 1980s when timber sales were reduced significantly due to the Northern Spotted Owl being listing as
a threatened or endangered species. He said forests
grow about 2.7% per year and if timber sales do not
meet or exceed that, the amount of standing fuels and on
the ground increases significantly and creates a huge
fire threat that worsens every succeeding year.
Nyquist said while the federal funding is welcome,“We
don’t need grants, we need chainsaws.â€
Warnack said the new U.S. Forest Service chief came
from California and is well versed in the escalation of
massive wildfires.
“He understands the impact of wildfires on both resources and communities,†Warnack said. “He believes
in staying out front of wildfires by reducing fuels
through thinning.â€
Warnack said the plan is to identify places where major fires could be stopped before they ever occur by
hardening processes, such as timber reduction, etc. That
process is already occurring on the Sweet Home
Ranger District under the direction of Ranger Nikki
Swanson.
Commissioner Sprenger said that in 2008 and 2009,
when she was a State Representative, she viewed several timber stewardship projects and while they looked
“very pretty, like a park†they produced very few logs
for local mills.
“We need a whole lot more harvesting,†Sprenger
said.
Commissioner Tucker was especially concerned about
access to overhead aircraft — planes and helicopters.
A D V E R T I S E M E N T
A D V E R T I S E M E N T
“We have lost planes, helicopters,†Tucker said.
“What have we added?â€
Bishop said that planes tend to be more effective on
flatland fires and that air assets are distributed on a
national level and vary as fire season moves by region.
He also questioned the Forest Services policies concerning fighting fires in wilderness areas. He said fire-
fighters need to be able to use chainsaws and other
equipment to contain or put out fires before they become massive like the 400,000 acre fire that engulfed
the Santiam Canyon on Labor Day 2020.
Bishop said the Forest Service has a 98% forest fire containment rating and until recent years, the largest fire in
Oregon was less than 50,000 acres.
He said that weather patterns are changing and fire season that used to be four to six weeks long, may now
stretch out to four or five months.
“That 2% is the issue,†Commissioner Sprenger said. “I
implore your agency to change its policies to be more
aggressive in fighting fires and increasing timber harvesting and fuels reduction.â€
Commissioner Nyquist encouraged the Forest Service to
operate more like the McDonald-Dunn Forest in Benton
County.
“It is one of my favorites places on earth,†Nyquist said.
“Why can’t we do that? Balance timber production and
harvesting, reduce fire risk and provide public access?â€
Bishop said the Forest Service is governed by the North-west Forest Plan which was enacted in 1994 under then
President Bill Clinton.
--Bruce ArmstrongPost Date: 2022-04-13 09:35:04 | Last Update: 2022-04-13 16:04:22 |
Lifting people out of homelessness, expanding access to affordable housing, and maximizing service impacts
The Clackamas County Board of Commissioners, under the direction of Chair Tootie Smith, has prioritized
focusing on housing and sheltering in Clackamas County for several years, as evidenced by the overarching
Performance Clackamas strategic plan, the many programs and services that Clackamas County offers in this area, and continual actions to fund such services.
The document outlines 13 values that the county and its service providers should strive for when providing related services. These are grouped in three categories: providing lasting and effective programs and services; creating equitable housing solutions and housing access; and providing robust community engagement opportunities.
Last April, the board approved a similar values document on Proposed Transportation Funding Solutions for the Interstate System in the Portland Metropolitan Area. That document has been referenced many times in public settings since its inception, as it clearly articulates the board’s values and explicitly states their belief that tolling or congestion pricing on I-205 will have a disproportionate and detrimental effect on Clackamas residents, businesses, and visitors.
Clackamas County keenly focuses on the well-being of all our families and communities. Continual investments made in affordable housing and sheltering, and providing supportive services to those in need, are key to keeping our communities safe, healthy and prosperous.
A D V E R T I S E M E N T
A D V E R T I S E M E N T
Lifting people out of homelessness, expanding access to affordable housing, and maximizing service impacts are critical to an overarching goal of the Board of County Commissioners: to alleviate poverty and ensure the safety, health, and security of our residents. Clackamas County has identified the following values to guide housing-related programs.
--Staff ReportsPost Date: 2022-04-12 15:47:27 | Last Update: 2022-04-12 16:35:43 |
Full time and seasonal
Applications are being accepted for
multiple permanent positions supporting recreation programs on the Oregon Coast.
Positions range from entry-level jobs helping manage off-highway vehicle recreation at the Oregon Dunes and Sand Lake recreation areas to supervisory positions overseeing trails and recreation programs for the Hebo and Central Coast ranger districts.
Due to a large number of recreation positions to be filled throughout the Forest Service simultaneously, many similar positions from other locations are lumped into a small number of job announcements on USAJobs.gov.
Applicants interested in the positions listed on the
employment page are encouraged to reach out to the local point of contact listed to learn more about the position.
To apply, applicants will need to
identify the job announcement that matches the job series and grade of the target position listed on the employment page.
A D V E R T I S E M E N T
A D V E R T I S E M E N T
After Human Resources does their initial screening, applicants will be asked to select the locations and tour of duty (full time or seasonal) they would like to be considered for.
Applicants interested in the jobs on the Siuslaw National Forest, will need to note the location identified (Reedsport or Hebo, OR) and select that during the application process. A financial relocation incentive may be offered; government housing is not available.
The application window is April 6 – 19, 2022, yet may close earlier if the national target number of applications is met. Job seekers are encouraged to apply early.
--Staff ReportsPost Date: 2022-04-11 18:20:20 | Last Update: 2022-04-11 18:32:28 |
Advancing equity, diversity and inclusion
On Tuesday, April 5, the Washington County Board of Commissioners
established the Advisory Council on Racial Equity (ACRE), a new advisory Council to the Board and department directors.
The formation of the Council, as called for in the
Equity, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) resolution of February 2020, is intended to support the advancement of equity, diversity and inclusion best practices and outcomes.
In four planning meetings held in partnership with the Office of Equity, Inclusion and Community Engagement (OEICE), the ACRE Charter was co-created by diverse Washington County community leaders with supposed deep equity expertise.
These partners include representatives from the following organizations:
- Adelante Mujeres
- APANO Communities United Fund
- Asian Health & Service Center
- Bienestar
- Centro Cultural
- Coalition of Communities of Color
- Fair Housing Council of Oregon
- Hillsboro Chamber of Commerce
- Latino Network
- Muslim Educational Trust
- National Association of Minority Contractors
- Native American Rehabilitation Association
- Oregon Child Development Coalition
- Oregon Metro
- Professional Business Development Group
- SAGE Metro Portland and Friendly House Inc.
- SOAR Immigration Legal Services
- Unite Oregon
As stated
in the charter, the purpose of ACRE is threefold:
- Advance equity, diversity and inclusion outcomes by way of advising on the County’s planning, policies, legislative work, budgeting and programming.
- Empower Washington County equity leaders, especially those from communities most impacted by racial inequities, to provide advisement to the Washington County Board of Commissioners.
- Ensure that needs and priorities of communities most impacted by racial inequities are centered in County policies and operations.
Maria Caballero Rubio, Executive Director of Centro Cultural, shared her optimism for continued advancement of equity and inclusion by the County and ACRE. “Having participated in the Leading with Race research project by the Coalition of Communities of Color in 2016-2018, and conducted forums to get community input for the Equity Resolution, I am very excited that the County is moving forward. Thank you to Chair Harrington for moving this along.â€
Another community partner, Wajdi Said representing Muslim Educational Trust, emphasized the importance of the Council’s work.
A D V E R T I S E M E N T
A D V E R T I S E M E N T
It has been stated that their next steps include recruitment of members for the Advisory Council on Racial Equity and then Board approval of the membership roster in June, prior to the first ACRE meeting scheduled for July.
Members will supposedly include a mix of representatives of community-based organizations and at-large community members, representing racial equity expertise, as well as geographic and demographic diversity.
The County has launched it's recruitment for this advisory Council and encourages all who are interested to apply. Applications can be located on the
Boards and Commissions web page. For more information you can email the
Office of Equity, Inclusion and Community Engagement.
--Bruce ArmstrongPost Date: 2022-04-10 11:13:57 | Last Update: 2022-04-10 21:59:11 |
Reimagine Oregon wants to defund the police
According to their website,
Reimagine Oregon are a group of Black-led organizations, Black individual activists and protest organizers who advocate for radical political goals.
They claim on their website that in 2020 they developed a two-year plan to begin dismantling systemic racism in Oregon.
They also want to defund and vilify the police and reduce prosecution of violent criminals.
The gas-lighting about systemic racism will likely continue to be used, however,they were instrumental in influencing the destructive policies that Portland, Multnomah and some neighboring jurisdictions have implemented which have led to increases in crime.
According to their website, they have a number of elected politicians who have agreed to push their agenda items aggressively. Among those politicaians are Governor Kate Brown, Tina Kotek,
Representative Julie Fahey (D-Eugene),
Representative Karin Power (D-Portland),
Representative Akasha Lawrence Spence (D-Portland),
Representative Janelle Bynum (D-Clackamas), Senator Rob Wagner (D-Lake Oswego),
Senator Lew Frederick (D-Portland),
Senator James Manning (D-Eugene),
Senator Elizabeth Steiner-Hayward (D-Portland),
Senator Michael Dembrow (D-Portland), and Shemia Fagan, Oregon's Secretary of State.
It seems some county commissioners have also pledged support, such as Clackamas County Commissioner Paul Savas and
Commissioner Sonya Fischer.
A D V E R T I S E M E N T
A D V E R T I S E M E N T
Although apparently Savas has requested that they update their website, and so far receiving no response from them to do so.
Clackamas County Commissioners voted on March 29th 3-1 to withdraw any support. Commissioner Sonya Fischer maintained her support of the radical group by voting no.
Washington County Chair Kathryn Harrington and
Commissioner Pam Treece have pledged support as well. You can see them participating, along with Oregon Governor Kate Brown, in the
2020 Reimagine Oregon Press Conference.
"It's disconcerting that some Commissioners give little thought to lending the credibility of their titles and offices to groups who actively work against the public interest," said Mark Johnson,
who is running for Clackamas County Commissioner to replace Paul Savas. "Even a cursory look at Reimagine Oregon reveals it is closely linked to the madness of Portland's '2020 Summer of Love.' The desire to vilify and cripple law enforcement is central to their stated mission. I don't understand why retaining any affiliation with this organization was even a debate."
--Bruce ArmstrongPost Date: 2022-04-10 08:31:54 | Last Update: 2022-04-10 13:11:24 |
The world’s most prestigious track and field event for first time in the U.S.
“In 100 days, Oregon will welcome the world as we host the World Athletics Championships for the first time ever in the United States. We are excited, and we are ready," said Oregon Governor Kate Brown on the upcoming international event.
“This extraordinary event will bring thousands upon thousands of global visitors to our state, giving Oregon an incredible opportunity to showcase our amazing small businesses and hospitality industry, world famous food scene, and beautiful outdoors.
“I look forward to welcoming Team USA and the many athletes, coaches, and fans who will flock to our state for Oregon22. Here in Oregon, we have a rich history in track and field -- the sport is ingrained in our culture and hearts, making it even more special that we get to host the championships for the first time on U.S. soil this summer.
“I encourage all Oregonians to join me in celebrating this official countdown to Oregon22, and join us as we get ready to welcome the world and celebrate the talent and diversity of this remarkable sport.â€
A D V E R T I S E M E N T
A D V E R T I S E M E N T
The 18th edition of the World Athletics Championships will be held at the reimagined Hayward Field at the University of Oregon, and will be delivered in partnership with Oregon22 LLC and USA Track & Field. It is the first time the competition will take place in the United States, with 2,000 world-renowned athletes from over 200 nations expected to compete July 15-24, 2022. An estimated 200,000 spectators from across the globe are expected to visit Oregon for this
prestigious event.
--Staff ReportsPost Date: 2022-04-09 13:17:00 | Last Update: 2022-04-09 13:26:15 |
Taking a creative approach to recruiting challenges
Gresham, Oregon is in the midst of hiring for seasonal Public Utility Worker positions that support Gresham’s Operations Center.
However, with over
thirty positions to fill and given the state of the current labor market, the City has struggled to get applicants.
In an attempt to overcome these challenges, the City is
taking a creative approach to support recruiting efforts.
Members of Gresham’s Homeless Services Team will be taking copies of applications with them and helping those they encounter to apply for the open seasonal public utility worker positions.
“Gresham’s Homeless Services Team connects people experiencing homelessness with the resources they need including employment,†said Community Services Manager Jessica Harper. “Some of our staff have lived experience with homelessness and for them, getting a reliable, well-paying job was one of the main things that propelled them off the streets and into stable housing. I am excited that these seasonal Public Utility Worker positions may offer that same opportunity to someone experiencing homelessness in Gresham today.â€
A D V E R T I S E M E N T
A D V E R T I S E M E N T
The Gresham Homeless Services Team consists of three specialists who interact with approximately fifteen to twenty people every day.
The team says it is intentional about connecting people with the resources they need whether it be shelter or employment opportunities. They say they are proud of the teams for continuously finding innovative solutions that benefit the entire community.
- Pay for Public Utility Worker positions is $19.27 per hour.
- Positions begin in May and continue for up to six months.
- Public Utility Workers work in Gresham’s Operation Center supporting wastewater, water, parks, storm water, and transportation divisions.
--Bruce ArmstrongPost Date: 2022-04-08 22:12:09 | Last Update: 2022-04-08 22:32:29 |
Sisters area residents who are interested in serving on Planning Commission
Deschutes County is seeking volunteers from the Sisters area who are interested in serving on the County's Planning Commission. Applications will be accepted through Friday, April 29, at 5 p.m.
The Planning Commission reviews land use policy and zoning regulations and makes recommendations to the Deschutes County Board of Commissioners. Members are the official citizen involvement committee on land use planning for the unincorporated area of the County, providing a forum for community input.
There is one vacancy on the Planning Commission for a Sisters area member. The Sisters area member will serve a full term from July 1, 2022 through June 30, 2026.
Planning Commissioners are not paid for their time and serve for four year terms.
The Planning Commission meets at the Deschutes Services Center (1300 NW Wall Street) in Bend, on the second and fourth Thursdays of each month at 5:30 p.m. Additional meetings and locations throughout the County may be required.
Residents who are interested in serving are invited to submit a brief application and letter of interest.
To learn more and apply, see their website.
--Staff ReportsPost Date: 2022-04-08 09:45:44 | |
37 different surveillance technologies but few policies to guide their use
The City of Portland has concluded an
audit of Portland Police intelligence gathering both generally and during the 2020 protests. Chief Chuck Lovell leads the bureau.
According to the report, "A wave of Black Lives Matter protests swept through Portland in the summer and fall of 2020. Police encountered protesters exercising their right to free speech and others vandalizing property and committing arson. The dynamic conditions of the protests presented a challenge for police to enforce laws while safeguarding people’s civil rights.
The audit has two parts. The first reviewed whether police working the protests and criminal intelligence officers gathered and maintained information about protesters in a way that protected their civil rights. The second part focused on how the police used surveillance technology, both during protests and more generally. Among other things, the audit found that the Portland Police Bureau provided no guidance for officers at protests about what information they could collect and that the Criminal Intelligence Unit did not limit access to its reports and kept them past their retention schedule.
The 23 page report recounts that
"The [Portland Police] Bureau had 37 different surveillance technologies but few policies and procedures to guide their use. We found that officers used social media extensively without direction for appropriate use. Our review of video taken from the Bureau’s airplane did not record images that could be used to identify people or vehicles, a finding that may help alleviate protesters’ fears of the Air Support Unit.
Intelligence gathering and surveillance is by its nature secretive, but the Bureau should adopt policies to guide officers tasked with collecting it. The policies should set boundaries for acceptable activity and help ease the public’s fear of the Bureau’s use of intelligence-gathering and surveillance, the collection of which is to make Portland a safer and more secure place to live.
The Oregon Chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union panned the Portland Police in a
statement in which they described the report as "damning." "Such indiscriminate, warrantless surveillance chills free speech, erodes trust between community and government, and creates alarming opportunities for abuse. That is why, under Oregon law, the police are prohibited from collecting and maintaining information on anyone’s political views or activities outside of a criminal investigation. PPB’s broad and highly intrusive surveillance of protesters in 2020 is a blatant violation of this law."
--Staff ReportsPost Date: 2022-04-07 17:33:23 | Last Update: 2022-04-07 20:02:55 |
“Approaching workforce development with an equity lens really is the heart and soul of this legislationâ€
Governor Kate Brown has signed
SB 1545, known as “Future Ready Oregon,†at Intel’s campus in Hillsboro. According to a press release from the Governor's office, "Future Ready Oregon is a comprehensive $200 million investment that will give Oregonians the education, training, and resources they need to secure good-paying careers in key industries across the state. The bipartisan bill is the product of years of work from a coalition of diverse stakeholders working alongside the Governor’s Office and Oregon’s Racial Justice Council."
The legislation is directed at "priority populations" and defines a "priority population" to mean communities of color, women, low-income communities, rural and frontier communities, veterans, persons with disabilities, incarcerated and formerly incarcerated individuals, members of Oregon's nine federally recognized Indian tribes, and individuals who disproportionately experience discrimination in employment on the basis of age.
“Approaching workforce development with an equity lens really is the heart and soul of this legislation,†said Governor Brown. “That means identifying barriers to career advancement for underserved communities, providing support services to help individuals overcome those barriers, and viewing those supports -- such as child care access, or broadband -- as critical infrastructure. Future Ready Oregon will open the doors of opportunity to those who have too often been left behind, including people of color, women, veterans, rural Oregonians, and people with low incomes.â€
Marin Areolla III, President of Advanced Economic Solutions and Co-Chair of the Racial Justice Council’s Workforce Workgroup said, “The Future Ready Oregon model will address the barriers to workforce participation that have kept some Oregonians -particularly BIPOC, rural and other vulnerable workers from accessing the skills and opportunities they need to achieve their full potential and earn livable wages. It will also allow businesses, community based organizations, public agencies, and other partners to collaborate to transform and reinvent Oregon’s workforce system with an equity lens that incorporates culturally and linguistically appropriate practices, respect, trust, transparency, high quality services, effective communication, and innovation at all levels.â€
A D V E R T I S E M E N T
A D V E R T I S E M E N T
Mark Mitsui, President of Portland Community College and a member of the Racial Justice Council’s Workforce Workgroup said, “Future Ready Oregon will connect hard-working Oregonians with living wage careers through career pathways that bridge skills gaps for employers and equity gaps for marginalized communities, in high need sectors. Future Ready Oregon is about making opportunity as universal as the talent around us so that no matter where you were born, no matter what zip code you have, you have the opportunity to earn a better life through education and training.â€
Anne Mersereau, Vice President of HR, Diversity, Equity & Inclusion for Portland General Electric and the Chair of the Oregon Workforce Talent and Development Board said, “The Future Ready Oregon Bill represents an important investment in our future workforce and will create the necessary pathways needed for all Oregonians to have the education, skills and training needed to enter into emerging careers across the state. We believe the transition to the clean energy future must be equitable and inclusive.
SB 1545 will help remove barriers for under-represented communities looking to enter the workforce and provide living wage job opportunities all while building a skilled talent pool to ensure a vibrant Oregon.â€
--Staff ReportsPost Date: 2022-04-07 16:40:40 | |
Oregon discouraging carbon emissions
Last week, Washington State Governor Inslee signed a bill requiring all
vehicles sold in 2030 and after are to be electric.
California Governor
Newscom signed an executive order on September 23, 2020, requiring
new cars and passenger trucks sold by 2035 must be zero-emission
vehicles.
In 2019, Oregon Senator Lee Beyer (D-Springfield) and Representative
Jeff Reardon (D-Happy Valley) sponsored and passed
SB 1044 requiring
that nine out of 10 new car sales be electric by 2035 and half of
registered vehicles.
The goal for electric vehicles was 50,000 in 2020,
250,000 in 2025, 1.1 million in 2030 and 2.5 million by 2035 – basically
100%. Behind schedule, at the end of 2020 there were 32,000
registered zero emission vehicles.
ODOT likes to blame not reaching the
first goal on cheap gas they say causes people to hold onto their
vehicles longer.
ODOT’s
Climate Action Plan, issued in July 2021,
adopted modifications to 120,000 electric vehicles by end of 2027,
missing the 2025 legislative goal.
Most electricity is produced using coal, natural gas, or hydropower.
Cascade Policy Institute reports even with the stringent policies
mandating various levels of carbon-free electricity, those policies can’t
actually be implemented for several reasons.
The most obvious is that
the power sources are unstable and the physics of the grid requires
that electricity supply and demand be in equilibrium at all times
Getting people to purchase electric vehicles may take more trust in the
stability of the supply of electricity.
When
HB 2021 passed in 2021 that moved the target date from 2025 to 2030, it also set goals for electricity
providers to reduce emissions 80% by 2030, 90% by 2035 and 100% by
2040.
There were numerous experts that warned of the likelihood of
rolling blackouts related to supply and stability. HB 2021 even allows
for use of other sources in unstable periods, which means legislators
know the possibility exists.
Hydropower along with natural gas is Oregon’s back-up to supply
stability. Still Oregon refuses to classify hydropower as renewable even
though the U.S. Energy Information Administration considers it a
renewable source.
Oregon is ranked fourth in the nation using
renewable energy with hydropower, and sixteen without hydropower.
Biden’s solution for high gas prices is just buy an electric car. They are
trying to sell electric cars as an answer to pollution.
But there is more to
electric cars than the fuel. Where do you think the materials come from
to make the batteries and what happens to them afterwards?
A single Tesla battery weighs 1,000 pounds and requires extracting and
processing around 500,000 pounds of mineral ore materials to
manufacture. Imagine the huge trenches it will leave behind to meet
the supply demand. The life span may be significant, but the majority
are not rechargeable.
Disposing of a toxic large battery is something you never hear about.
How many restricted landfills and dumps will dot our landscapes? Once
a battery starts to degrade in landfills, they can contaminate the
topsoil, groundwater, and air.
A D V E R T I S E M E N T
A D V E R T I S E M E N T
When the chemical seeping happens, it
can risk entering the human supply chain. Conservationist and environmentalist concerned with fossil fuels need another look at the
bigger picture.
On the drawing table is a 1-million-mile car battery, which will
drastically reduce the amount of waste in a Tesla. Currently, the best
performing Tesla has a single-charge range of around 370 miles and a
lifespan of 300-500,000 miles. Even with Tesla’s recycling program, they
admit there are parts of the battery that is too costly to recycle. And
about 8% cannot be recycled. That’s 80 out of 1,000 pounds that is still
headed to the landfill.
Even if we are all given electric cars, the Treehuggers want to also
measure carbon emissions from all of the consumed energy used in the
processes to produce and construct a building.
It didn’t go unnoticed by
Representative Dan Rayfield (D-Corvallis). He sponsored and the Governor
signed
HB 4139 to establish a pilot program for greenhouse gas
reduction that assesses the greenhouse gas emission from concrete,
asphalt paving mixtures, steel products, and other products identified
by ODOT, and conduct a life cycle assessment and strategies for
reducing emissions.
Oregon Department of Transportation meetings on how to spend
infrastructure funds brought out those advocating for no more
highways. Is that where we are headed with zero-emissions?
--Donna BleilerPost Date: 2022-04-07 15:31:00 | Last Update: 2022-04-07 17:03:56 |
Read More Articles