On this day, January 6, 1885, The 148 passengers aboard a train headed from The Dalles to Portland, were finally freed from snowdrifts that blocked their passage both from the east and the west. With food growing alarmingly scarce, the conductor ordered most of the able-bodied men to walk to Portland. About eighty men, many with their feet wrapped in towels, left the trains in extreme blizzard conditions to make their way to the city. No one starved and no one died, but nearby Starvation Creek got its name from the incident.
Also on this day, January 6 1994, At the U.S. Figure Skating Championships in Detroit, figure skater Nancy Kerrigan was bludgeoned on the right lower thigh with a police baton by an assailant, who was later apprehended and identified as Shane Stant, a person who was hired by Portland resident and rival figure skater Tonya Harding.
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KSLM Coffee Klatch, Jeff Kropf M.C. |
Monday, January 6, 2025 at 6:00 pm |
KSLM Coffee Klatch
Monday, January 6, 2025 at 6:00 pm
Speakers: Rep Ed Diehl with the latest Legislature news. John McDonnell our gun rights. Western Liberty training Conference Q/A with Rich Burke. Learn about the War Room held at the Ike Box during Oregon Legislative Days.
Legislative days start January 21, 2025
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Sparky's Brew Pub, 1252 23rd SE, Salem. South of Mission behind Carl's Jr.
All welcome. Come early to eat and mingle |
Learn About School Choice |
Saturday, January 25, 2025 at 12:00 pm |
Black Bear Diner, Free coffee and Bearclaws! Questions? Donna@LetThemLearnOregon.com |
Grants Pass, Black Bear Diner |
Western Liberty Network 15th Annual Conference |
Saturday, February 1, 2025 at 9:00 am |
"Take the Offensive" Leadership and Activist Training Conference.
See speakers and sessions and register at https://wlnexecdir.wixsite.com/wstlbtnet |
Holiday Inn Portland Columbia Riverfront hotel located at 909 N Hayden Island Drive, Portland, Oregon 97217. |
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Available to Ukraine Partner organizations
The Oregon Department of Human Services (ODHS) Refugee Program
is inviting community partners to apply for a portion of $4.6 million in funding that is available to provide services and support to certain individuals from Ukraine or those who entered through the Uniting for Ukraine program.
The deadline to apply is March 27, 2023, and the application
can be found online.
The U.S. Resettlement Program is operated by the U.S. Department of State through contracts with national non-profit organizations called resettlement agencies. These organizations have local affiliate offices throughout the nation.
The ODHS Refugee Program is responsible for some of the services that are outside of the initial resettlement provided by the resettlement agencies. The Refugee Program provides cash, medical, employment and acculturation services to refugees (and those eligible for refugee services) who are within 60 months of gaining their eligible immigration status.
Since February 2022, over 3,100 individuals from Ukraine have resettled in Oregon.
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The Oregon Health Authority and Oregon Department of Human Services are saying that the purpose of this request is to ask for applications from culturally and/or linguistically responsive organizations who provide services to immigrants or refugees (and those eligible for refugee services) to increase services and supports.
Funding is available to support:
- Housing and food assistance services: $2 million
- Statewide outreach, sponsor coordination and connection to existing case management services: $200,000
- Employment services assistance: $221,800
- Health and mental health services: $675,000
- Child care: $100,00
Legal services: $800,000
- Youth mentoring: $100,000
- School assistance: $515,000
- Senior services: $50,000
Organizations may express interest in supporting more than one service area. Community organizations are eligible to submit proposals for the funding.
The stated mission of the Oregon Department of Human Services is to help Oregonians in their own communities achieve wellbeing and independence through opportunities that protect, empower, respect choice and preserve dignity.
--Sabrina-Marie FisherPost Date: 2023-03-11 15:17:49 | Last Update: 2023-03-10 18:55:03 |
Removes barriers for Ukraine refugees
Oregon Senate President Pro-Tempore James Manning Jr. (D-Eugene) introduced
SB 935 to provide support to the thousands of Ukrainian war refugees now in Oregon. “Refugee from Ukraine†is defined as an individual from Ukraine who is displaced as a result of the armed conflict in Ukraine and granted refugee status for admission to the United States by United States Citizenship and Immigration Services.
His bill comes at the same time as the Oregon Department of Human Services (ODHS) Refugee Program is inviting community partners to apply for a portion of $4.6 million available to provide services and support to certain individuals from Ukraine or those who entered through the Uniting for Ukraine program. The ODHS Refugee Program provides cash, medical, employment and acculturation services to refugees.
More than 4,500 Ukrainian refugees are currently in Oregon out of 180,000 in the U.S., according to the Uniting for Ukraine program. SB 935 is based on input from the Immigrant & Refugee Community Organizations (IRCO), and will remove two substantial barriers that Ukrainian refugees face during resettlement in Oregon.
- Housing - the new legislation will ensure Ukrainian refugees who do not have an Oregon cosigner can still apply for, and receive, rental housing in Oregon.
- Transportation - waives the written and driving test for Ukrainian refugees applying for a driver’s license – as well as the accompanying fees – provided the applicant holds a valid Ukrainian driver’s license.
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“By removing these obstacles to basic needs, Oregon can ease Ukrainian refugees’ transition to life in Oregon at this unimaginably stressful time,†said Senator Manning. “It is our responsibility and humanitarian duty to not only open our state to these refugees but to do what we can to make their lives easier, ensuring access to housing, mobility, and state-issued identification.â€
Since SB 935 doesn’t provide any funding, perhaps it is a matter of operation and the ODHS Refugee Program will fill in the funding.
SB 935 was referred to the Senate Veterans, Emergency Management, Federal and World Affairs Committee for possible hearing.
--Dollie BannerPost Date: 2023-03-11 15:14:22 | Last Update: 2023-03-10 18:49:04 |
Raises minimum fines over a thousand percent with no latitude to the regulator.
What is the reason for sponsoring a bill? Most ideas are written into legislation without any idea of cost or where the money will come from to implement it. Senator Kathleen Taylor (D -Portland) has an answer to create more funding. She calls it “Workplace Safety Bill.â€
SB 592 will enforce stiffer penalties for Oregon OSHA safety violations, and aligns fines with federal OSHA standards.
Senator Taylor reported that this legislation will align Oregon OSHA policies with federal OSHA standards. Currently, Oregon’s penalties for serious violations are more than 73% below the national standard, some of the lowest fines in the nation.
It has to be about the money since SAIF reports in 2022, Oregon’s SAIF workers’ compensation program achieved the tenth lowest rate.
Disabling claims have dropped by over 50% and the fatality rate has plummeted by 70%.
“We need to do everything we can to keep people safe,†said Senator Taylor. “Our workforce is Oregon’s most valuable asset. This bill protects our people and our economy.â€
Major business sectors disagree. Oregon Farm Bureau Federation and Oregon Association of Nurseries testified, “we disagree with the premise that substantially increasing penalties will deter “bad actors†from willfully violating the law. That said, Oregon employers operate in an increasing burdensome and complicated regulatory arena, and many are struggling to navigate compliance with recently passed OR-OSHA laws. For family farms and nurseries, the proposed increase in penalties could be devastating or limit opportunities to invest in additional
safety measures. Oregon has done a lot of work over the last several years to update workplace safety regulations, and we should find out whether that will have an impact on workplace safety before passing laws to levy stiffer and more significant penalties.â€
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Oregon Business & Industries agreed, “For the many businesses that work hard to comply with Oregon’s workplace safety laws, SB 592
would require OHSA to conduct “comprehensive inspections†whenever a fatality occurred, even if the fatality were the result of an accident. Since they would be tied to negative outcomes, not negative behaviors, comprehensive inspections triggered by accidents would not foster safer workplaces. Instead, they would place a heavy burden on businesses by allowing OSHA to perform incredibly broad facility-wide inspections.â€
Association of Oregon Loggers said, “The bill would perversely pit OR-OSHA against employers, rather than employing the Oregon Way of cooperation and coordination in the pursuit of safer and better outcomes... The one-size-fits-all approach to inspections and penalties has the potential to destroy small and family-owned businesses, small enterprises that may not have the means to employ exemplary legal counsel, or absorb the high penalty exposure as would a larger business.â€
Senator Taylor says SB 592 will protect Oregon workers by enforcing stiffer penalties for workplace safety violations, especially for employers with willful or repeated violations.
SB 592 passed the Senate on nearly partisan lines, and will now move to the Oregon House of Representatives for consideration.
Senator Brian Boquist explains his descending vote. “SB 592 updates and addresses repeat offenders regarding work places. However, it raises the minimum fines over a thousand percent with no latitude to the regulator. The agencies actions during the political pandemic were less than stellar. Future legal actions will create serious liability for the agency and state. SB 592 should be amended in the House to have a reasonable and flexible minimum fine.â€
--Dollie BannerPost Date: 2023-03-10 13:24:07 | Last Update: 2023-03-09 23:46:42 |
Senate Republicans introduce bills to fix Oregon’s flawed sex crime laws
On Wednesday, Danielle Tudor and Tiffany Edens, who are victims of “Jogger Rapist†Richard Gillmore, joined Senate Republican Leader Tim Knopp (R-Bend), Deputy Leader Kim Thatcher (R-Keizer), and Senator Cedric Hayden (R-Fall Creek) for a
press conference at the State Capitol. Together, they discussed a series of bills that collectively support victims of sex crimes and promote justice.
Richard Gillmore, a serial rapist of at least 9 victims, was released from prison on December 16th, 2022 as a Level 1 sex offender by the Oregon Board of Parole and Post-Prison Supervision. Level 1 means the registrant presents the lowest risk of reoffending.
“We have three bills that we think are critically important in keeping Oregonians safe and keeping violent perpetrators in prison,†said Senator Knopp.
- Senate Bill 986 raises the statute of limitations on rape from 12 years to 20 years.
“We think this is necessary to make sure that every victim has the opportunity for justice and that we don’t create more victims by not prosecuting those who have committed violent six crimes against our citizens,†added Knopp.
- Senate Bill 1022 makes necessary fixes to Oregon’s sex-offender risk level assessment process and methodology.
“In December, Richard Gillmore was evaluated to be a low level 1 sex offender. Obviously, we know that’s not correct – it’s not a fair assessment,†said Tiffany Edens. “Just using one tool, the Static 99-R, is inadequate and it’s not protecting our community. [SB 1022] could alleviate some of the pitfalls in the system.â€
“[SB 1022] is really in direct response to what just took place here in the State of Oregon and tackles all of the obstacles that we ran into,†said Danielle Tudor. “If Richard Gillmore is a Level 1 Sex Offender, we have a serious problem.â€
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- Senate Bill 1023 clarifies the term ‘victim’ when State Police is required to release sex offender information.
“I’m hopeful that this legislation can move forward through the process and that we can bring some healing in the future,†added Senator Hayden.
“Hopefully we can get these to work through the process and I can be a part of it on the Judiciary Committee on the Senate side,†concluded Senator Thatcher.
These bills have been assigned to the
Senate Committee on Judiciary. Letters are being sent to the Committee Chair requesting that they be scheduled for public hearings. The deadline to schedule a work session is March 17th.
--Donna BleilerPost Date: 2023-03-10 11:05:48 | Last Update: 2023-03-10 16:55:13 |
The FBI is offering $25,000 rewards for information.
The FBI Portland and the FBI Seattle Field Offices are seeking the public’s help to identify the individual(s) responsible for vandalism at electrical substations in Tumwater, Washington and Oregon City, Oregon.
The FBI is offering rewards of up to $25,000 for information leading to the identification, arrest, and conviction of the suspect(s) responsible for each of these crimes.
On November 22, 2022, in the early morning hours, Puget Sound Energy discovered an incident at the
Barneslake Substation in Tumwater, Washington. Fluid was leaking on the ground after one of the radiators of transformers had been punctured multiple times and caused the substation to go offline for several hours. Three 9 mm shell casings were located. The outage resulted in loss of power to 5,200 individuals.
On November 24, 2022, shortly before 2:00 a.m., several reactors were shot at the Bonneville Power Administration
Ostrander Substation in Oregon City, Oregon. Investigators found a hole cut in the perimeter fence of the energized yard and discovered bullet holes in several reactors.
“Attacks on power grid substations have gripped our nation's attention in recent months because of the devastating threat they pose to our infrastructure. Entire communities - hospitals, schools, and local businesses - might conceivably be incapacitated for many days," said Kieran L. Ramsey, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI Portland Field Office. "The FBI continues to work diligently not only to identify and arrest those responsible for these wanton acts but also to disrupt any future criminal plots which might wreak even greater havoc to our community. Presently, we remain unclear on the motive for their actions. However, we do understand fully their catastrophic potential. Consequently, apprehension of those responsible must be a top priority for law enforcement and this is why we are now urgently requesting our citizens' help in identifying those responsible."
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“Interfering or tampering with our power grid can have deadly consequences.†said Richard A. Collodi, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI’s Seattle field office. “An attack like this is not just an inconvenience for home and business owners, think of medical facilities or vulnerable people who depend on electricity for their health. It’s our hope that by attaching a reward offer, someone who has that missing piece of information we need may be enticed to come forward.â€
Anyone with information is asked to call 1-800-CALL-FBI (1-800-225-5324), contact their local FBI office, or submit a tip online at
tips.fbi.gov. You may remain anonymous.
--Donna BleilerPost Date: 2023-03-09 14:52:32 | Last Update: 2023-03-09 15:07:58 |
Walmart is the latest in a long line of closures.
Whenever the national news mentions cities demolished by the riots, Portland is always on the list. Committee to Unleash Prosperity ran the
headline, “What Happens When the Last Business in Portland Leaves the City?â€
Portland riots were one of the worst in the nation, but businesses might have recovered if government hadn’t spired them on and nourished the destruction. Riots led to permission, to defunding police to no convictions resulting in more shoplifting, harassment, destruction of property to canceled liability insurance followed by increased taxes and closures.
Walmart is the latest in a long line of closures, which comes three months after Walmart CEO Doug McMillon warned that retail shoplifting is surging. He predicted "prices will be higher and/or stores will close" if local prosecutors don’t change their priorities.
This follows a closure of other individual stores like Schumacher Furs USA, Rains PDX, BJ’s, Stanford’s, Starbucks, Fred Meyers, Cracker Barrel, and NIKE closed one of the main stores over crime. Most were closed due to crimes experiencing shoplifting nearly daily.
Nike sought to hire off-duty Portland police but none were available due to the police shortage.
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Schumacher Furs reported daily harassment by protestors violating public decency laws as well as screaming profanities and threatening employees. They released a store
video (age restricted) showing police defending protestors. They were actually forced to close one of the oldest businesses in Portland.
Some closures, like Rains PDX, a clothing store in Portland, shut down last November after a string of break-ins made it impossible to stay open.
In 2019, in the crux of the destruction, government made their position known when James Manning Jr. (D-Eugene) was quoted by
Cascade Policy Institute, “Let’em leave. Someone else’ll come in.†“Unfortunately,†they continue, “the senator is not alone with the let-them-leave attitude. That seems to be the attitude of the supermajority in the legislature as well as the city of Portland, who have both recently passed massive business taxes….new taxes will be a good test of Senator Manning’s let-them-leave theory, as owners look to other states for a better business environment.â€
Now DEQ is accusing Intel staff of errors at the DIX facility in Hillsboro, which led to unhealthy air pollution when a device was left in standby mode. We have yet to hear Intel’s side, but DEQ may be putting a damper on the Governor’s plans to attract semiconductor manufacturing to Oregon. So far, Senator Manning has not been successful in his prediction that others will come.
--Dollie BannerPost Date: 2023-03-09 13:19:24 | Last Update: 2023-03-09 00:37:01 |
Voters are bypassed and disenfranchised.
There is an unattended effect of appointing county commissioners to fill vacant Legislative seats. The staggering of election cycles for County Commissioners can be disrupted as has happened in Curry County. They are seeing all three seats up for election at the same time as a result of ORS.204.005, which provides that candidates for county commission be included on the ballot at a primary or general election, if the term of a county commissioner expires the following January or if there is a vacancy for any cause in the office of county commissioner.
To solve this problem, David Brock Smith (R-Port Orford) has sponsored
House Bill 2244, which provides a statutory basis, through January 2, 2030, to extend the current term of the third county commissioner by two years, when all three county commissioners are not staggered and come up for election at the same time so that the terms of the three offices remain staggered.
At the close of the January 11th meeting that appointed David Brock Smith as an Oregon State Senator, Commissioner Tim Freeman explained: “This is the 4th legislative appointment in 8 years that I have been involved in, and we have also appointed a clerk, a surveyor, an assessor and a treasurer and an interim commissioner, that’s 9 elected officials appointed in a matter of 8 years. Nine elected officials that, but for one, one gentleman died and that was certainly not an intent of his own, but the others left early. They created the problem. We are here today to try to solve a problem that we did not create. I want to make sure that folks understand that.â€
At the January 11th meeting, Commissioners of Douglas, Coos and Curry counties unanimous selection by eight Commissioners led to the next two vacancies. The commissioners chose David Brock Smith for Senate District 1 to replace Dallas Heard, who resigned. That left Brock Smith’s House seat vacant. A month later Curry County Commissioner Court Boice was chosen by the same commissioners to replace Brock Smith. Court Boice’s Commissioner seat was then left vacant and Jay Trost was appointed to replace Boice.
If HB 2244 passes, Commissioner Chris Boice (Court Boice’s 2nd cousin), who is currently in Position 3 would receive the proposed two year extension. Passage of HB 2244 would result in legislation substituting and thus circumventing the voters choice for the duration of those two years.
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Earlier, in 2018, another series of vacancies ensued in Douglas, Josephine, and Jackson Counties when Senator Jeff Kruse resigned on March 15, 2018. Representative Dallas Heard was appointed to replace Senator Jeff Kruse. Douglas County Commissioner Gary Leif was appointed to fill Representative Dallas Heard’s position. Christine Goodwin replace Leif as Douglas County Commissioner. When Gary Leif died in 2021, Commissioner Christine Goodwin was appointed to replace Gary Leif as Representative. Here again, the county commissioners “solved a problem†of 1 vacant senate seat by choosing 2 politicians that were already serving terms of office. Instead of 1 position being filled, the county commissioners chose to replaced 3 positions.
Appointments are frequent in the Douglas County elected positions as well. Of the 6 current elected officials in Douglas County, 4 were originally appointed and 2 were elected by the people. Sheriff John Hanlin and Treasurer Samuel Lee III are the two originally elected.
The Douglas County Clerk and Recorder position has had the last three clerks enter the position by appointment. (1) In 2019 Dan Loomis was appointed to replaced Patricia Hitt. (2) In 2013 Patricia Hitt replaced Barbara Nielsen. (3) In 2003 Barbara Nielsen was appointed to replace Doyle Shaver Jr. Each was later elected to the position as an incumbent. The Clerk’s office is the head of elections.
Special elections and appointments have taken a dramatic rise in replacing elections “by the people†in recent years. A resignation from any elected office breaks a commitment to voters, narrows the field of candidates, and causes disadvantages to unendorsed special election candidates. Whether or not the vacancy is created by the resignation of an elected official, or by commissioners filling a position with another politician serving a term of office, an election “by the people†is bypassed and the voters are disenfranchised.
--Terry NoonkesterPost Date: 2023-03-08 16:53:03 | Last Update: 2023-03-07 18:09:31 |
Send letter to Governor and DOF
Representative Cyrus Javadi (R-Tillamook) spearheads opposition to Department of Forestry's Habitat Conservation Plan initiating a
letter signed by seven Representatives and Senators of rural and coastal communities. The letter, sent to Governor Kotek and the Department of Forestry (ODF), details opposition to the proposed Western Oregon Habitat Conservation Plan (HCP). Read the entire letter here.
"The HCP, as currently proposed, would devastate the North Coast," said Representative Javadi. "It would cost good-paying timber jobs and vital revenue that supports public safety services in Tillamook, Clatsop, and Columbia counties."
As proposed, the HCP would decrease harvest timber in North Coast forests by up to 35%. In a February 15 meeting, the Board of Forestry rejected a proposal that would have taken the plan back to the drawing board to balance the community's economic needs better.
The proposed reduction in timber harvest would gut local government budgets, with a total impact of nearly $8.5 million – the hardest hit being local school districts ($4.5 million) and Clatsop County ($3 million). That is equivalent to 12 full-time employees in local government public safety programs. According to the Oregon Forest Resources Institute, eleven (11) jobs are created for every million board feet of timber harvested. Thus, the HCP could instantly kill up to 275 family-wage jobs, putting local businesses that serve those forestry workers at risk.
"My first priority is to protect the North Coast from harmful policies from Salem and Portlandcentric policymakers," Javadi continued. "I have drafted priority legislation requiring ODF to do a full economic analysis and engage with various alternative plans before adopting one. This will ensure that the public knows how the ODF's actions impact their community."
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LC 4295, as drafted, would require the ODF to consider other HCP Alternative plans and issue a detailed analysis of how ODF regulations impact local jobs. It will be formally introduced in the coming days.
The letter states, “We urge the ODF to explain and address the shortcomings of the recently released State Forest IPs and suggest removing the HCP constraints from the IPs until an HCP is adopted by the Board of Forestry (BOF). As representatives of the impacted communities, our view is that an alternative plan that achieves the harvest levels ODF claimed their HCP would produce would more appropriately consider the economic impacts of the HCP while also addressing conservation issues that must be rectified.â€
“In conclusion, we urge you to direct ODF to improve the HCP to increase timber harvest volumes before it is too late. We believe that by working together, we can develop a plan that better serves our communities while providing adequate protection for sensitive wildlife.â€
--Donna BleilerPost Date: 2023-03-07 13:22:46 | Last Update: 2023-03-07 23:47:33 |
Estimated to help an additional 528 homeowners.
Oregonians are experiencing inflation at a rate over eight percent, gas at nearly $4 a gallon, and a dozen eggs costing more than gas, all while federal subsidies have ended.
Oregon Housing and Community Services will reopen the federal Homeowner Assistance Fund (HAF) Program on March 8, 2023. The program offers federal temporary COVID-19 emergency mortgage relief intended to support homeowners who have experienced severe financial hardships due to the pandemic. It provides funding for past-due mortgages and other housing expenses, as well as ongoing payment assistance, to a limited number of homeowners with low to moderate incomes.
HAF was paused on November 30, 2022 to allow the Oregon Housing and Community Services to process current applications and project the amount of federal HAF funds remaining. They will reopen with a focus on homeowners in active foreclosure and those traditionally underserved by mortgage markets. The agency estimates an additional 528 eligible homeowners can be accepted to distribute $29.5 million available. This program will run through 2026, or until funds are expended.
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As part of the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021, Oregon received $90 million to help eligible homeowners avoid mortgage foreclosures and displacement, and to cure delinquencies and defaults. The HAF program can help homeowners through a Past-Due Payment Relief program and an Ongoing Payment Relief program. Please note that funds are limited and cannot serve all in need.
Homeowners can learn more about eligibility requirements and, if eligible, apply online starting March 8, 2023, at
Oregon Homeowner Assistance Fund. There is also county housing counseling available, but caution is advised against unauthorized companies or people offering help.
--Dollie BannerPost Date: 2023-03-07 12:01:59 | Last Update: 2023-03-07 19:43:32 |
Is this how Globalism is brought to Rural Oregon?
Tillamook County recently made a contract with X4 Health. The deal amounts to $121,500 to make a
“coordinated homeless response†for the county. This plan is in response to
House Bill 4123, sponsored by Representative Jason Kropf (D-Bend) in 2022. The bill awarded Tillamook County (among several others) $1 million to develop a five-year strategic plan no later than November 2023 or one year after receiving the grant.
The Commissioners did not specify why they were unable to write this coordinated homeless response with the legally required county partners that they all regularly meet with in various advisory committees.
Specifically, Commissioner Skaar has repeatedly stated that this contract must create a “coordinated system of services†for the homeless and no/low barrier housing. No barrier housing is housing that does not have any stipulations to gain entrance, including drug addiction
and untreated mental illness.
This intent to implement no barrier housing in Tillamook County was later confirmed by Tillamook CARE Chair Board of Directors, Dusti Linnell, in a recent article in the local newspaper. The Headlight Hearld announced the resignation of their director, Peter Starkey, who had directly reported prior to his resignation that there would be various types of no barrier housing in Tillamook County. This would include a central shelter or other types of housing, as well as “safe parks†in other areas of the county.
Presumably, the X4 Health contract will be funded by the monies from HB 4123. It means the county is giving up one-tenth of this state funding to “end†homelessness for personnel services to write a plan with advisory committee members, Tillamook CARE, and other previously contracted community partners. This is after Tillamook County already worked on a pilot with a sister non-profit to X4 Health, Community Rockit, in late 2021-early 2022.
The Community Rockit plan developed in meetings not accounted for in the Tillamook Board of Commissioners’ meeting logs or agendas until August 2022
can be found online.
Of special interest to the tax payers of the state of Oregon should be the small
group sessions of “community leaders†that participated with Community Rockit through Zoom
meetings. Their presumptions of how private property owners (including churches, church
camps, RV camps, and “under-utilized propertiesâ€) could be used to meet their goal that “no one
in Tillamook County need live unsheltered†is demonstrated by their “Assets†list in a graphic on the Community Rockit Tillamook County website.
Commissioner Skaar has stated this list was a “brainstorm†of “possible partners.â€
So who is X4 Health and what do they do?
According to its founder/CEO, Christine
Betchel, “ X4 itself does a combination of social impact design (solving problems that matter at a
societal level) and project management.†This ambiguous description of the work of X4 Health is
nearly all that is available online, through their Facebook page, and as defined by those who have
worked with X4 Health, Community Rockit, or Christine Betchel. In fact, internet searches turn
up very little information about X4 Health, if one can find their website at all. Community
Rockit ,also managed/founded by Betchel, is more accessible to the public and it is mostly supported by Morris Singer Foundation and AOC (Association of Oregon Counties).
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X4 Health
also has global funders such as the Global Development Network and the Health Initiative, and is
especially interested in electronic patient records, COVID-19 issues (vaccines and government
protocols), and implementation of public health policies, especially regarding equity.
Why is a globally funded contractor working with Tillamook County to resolve their
homeless issue? According to Commissioner Skaar and a letter written by the Tillamook County
Commissioners on August 16, 2022 to Christine Betchel, X4 Health was invited to bid on this
contract based on their work as Community Rockit.
Community Rockit has also
referenced the work of Marlene Putman, Tillamook County Health and Human Services
Director.
Furthermore, Community Rockit has worked in two other counties assigned funding in
HB 4123: Benton and Umatilla.
Umatilla utilized Communtiy Rockit to aid in plans to address
mental health issues. Benton County seems to have started with planning their homeless
response through the work of HOPE Community Engagement in spring of 2021. These meetings
were made available to the public and can still be watched at their website.
Unfortunately, HOPE’s
work with Community Rockit does not appear to be as easily accessible.
Community Rockit’s work in Morrow, Eastern,
and Gilliam counties is unrelated to HB4123.
While time will tell whether Tillamook County, or other Oregon counties, working with
Community Rockit or X4 Health will be conducting their strategy sessions in view of the public or whether this globally funded “non-profit†is acting in good faith with the citizens of Oregon.
However, rural communities should be aware that organizations like X4 Health are looking for
opportunities to collect lucrative government contracts to facilitate talks with county leaders and
compile their input into simple graphics that may represent vast world view differences to the
county residents. Whether X4 Health will wield this influence to enforce globalist policies on
rural Oregon communities also remains to be seen.
--April BaileyPost Date: 2023-03-07 06:57:54 | Last Update: 2023-03-08 01:19:21 |
Decriminalizing has made addictions worse.
Measure 110 (2020) has become one of the most debated ballot measures by voters. Voters felt that drug prohibition had failed and instead of punishing them for small amounts, they needed help. Voters relied on the propaganda that decriminalizing possession of controlled substance would discourage drug dealers and decrease the drug cartel activity and thus reduce illegal drugs on streets. It was advertised that drugs would be cheaper and easier to get for adults suffering from pain that need medical marijuana. That establishing a drug addiction treatment and recovery program would be paid for by state prison savings and marijuana tax revenue.
The Oregon Health Authority
reported that more than 60,000 addicts have been helped from Measure 110. In the first three months the report shows that 18,000 were helped and 42,000 through grants. That included housing assistance, access to treatment and hiring assistance costing $3.1 million and created 200 new jobs. Auditors are saying, not so fast. It is too soon to tell if Measure 110 is working. There is very little structure on how the money allotted $264 million was spent, nor can data be connected to the results. House Revenue has discussed cutting funding up to $60 million.
The decriminalizing part of Measure 110 is making addiction worse. Oregon has seen a 3 fold increase in opioid overdose death in the past two years after wiping out laws against hard drugs. Oregon and Washington offer “sanctuary†to criminal aliens making our state a haven for cartels to operate their massive marijuana plantations using illegals as ‘Narco slaves’ for labor.
The Oregon Criminal Justice Commission
Report on Illegal Marijuana Market Enforcement states that since the passage of Measure 110, felony arrests of doubled in the three counties reported on: Deschutes, Jackson and Josephine. Firearms taken went from 23 to 156 and the number of illegal marijuana plants went from 13,677 to 551,004
In 2016, Oregon spent about $375 million on drug prohibition compared to 2019 when Oregon spent about $470 million on substance abuse treatment. Now Governor Kotek is aimed at giving the addicted “woke†homeless subsidies in free housing, food stamps, welfare, meals, tents, tarps…all their basic needs, plus $1,000 cash every month for two years to support their drug addiction (
SB 603). Maybe she is counting on fentanyl to wipe them out of their misery to reduce the homeless.
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Representative Lily Morgan (R-Grants Pass) with Representative E. Werner Reschke (R-Crater Lake) think the homeless are humans deserving to be saved from themselves and have sponsored
HB 3549. This bill will restore criminal penalties for possession of controlled substance offenses to levels prior to enactment of the Drug Addiction Treatment and Recovery Act of 2020 when person were previously cited for Class E violation for possession of controlled substance.
This bill would take a tiered approach to drug possession and return some accountability to our drug law after Measure 110 passed. It will focus on treatment and keep those from exploiting our system. The tiers work like this:
- The first encounter would maintain the current M110 Class E Violations.
- The second would be a felony possession, with eligibility for a conditional discharge. If they meet the conditions on their own, the charges would be dismissed.
- The third would be a felony charge, with eligibility for drug court. If they complete drug court, the charges will be dismissed.
Overall, Measure 110 did more harm than good. It needs accountability from the state and enforcement to reduce criminal behavior.
--Donna BleilerPost Date: 2023-03-06 16:19:28 | Last Update: 2023-03-05 16:26:18 |
Rep. Jami Cate speaks in support of Forests
Last Monday,
SB 795 was given a hearing in front of the
Senate Committee on Natural Resources. As you may recall from the action alert in my last week's newsletter, SB 795 would give counties an option to take back forest lands that were deeded over to the State.
Under the original agreement, those forest lands would be managed for the “greatest permanent valueâ€, but the Department of Forestry has lowered harvest levels below sustainable harvest levels, costing many of our counties (including Linn and Marion) and special districts over $1 Billion in tax revenues.
Under SB795, counties could take back ownership (and management) of their forestlands if those counties feel the agreement is not being upheld and that they could obtain more value from the lands on their own.
Senator Girod (R, Stayton) introduced this bill because he also feels that rural counties know better than the bureaucrats at the Oregon Department of Forestry how to best manage our own forest lands—to protect our water, provide habitat, defend our communities from fire, and support our tax base.
With the passage of SB 795 into law, logging could increase once again in Linn County, bringing with it countless jobs and added revenue.
I want to thank everyone who testified in front of the committee, as well of all of you that submitted written testimony on
OLIS. I would encourage you to continue following along as this extremely important bill continues to move through the legislative process. We will need all the support we can get!
Linn County Commissioners Roger Nyquist and Will Tucker's testimony can be
viewed here.
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My written testimony:
“When two parties enter into a contract, both parties have an obligation to uphold their side of the responsibilities outlined in that agreement. Yet in the case of our forestlands, it is the State of Oregon who is defaulting on its side of the agreement, leaving our rural communities deprived of the tax revenues they are owed—and the compounding effect of those loses for decades. SB 795 would be a small step towards correcting our State’s failure, and I urge your support.
When Counties deeded over hundreds of thousands of acres of forestlands to the state in the 1930’s and 1940’s, it was agreed that the state would manage those lands for the “greatest permanent valueâ€. Yet the Oregon Department of Forestry (DOF) has reduced management practices, repeatedly lowering the revenues off these lands by harvesting below sustainable levels.
To make matters worse, the DOF has ignored the input of our counties in their decision making, committing to a Habitat Conservation Plan (HCP) that will further reduce harvest levels on our forestlands—and with it, the tax revenues owed to our rural taxing districts. This was not the agreement the State made with our counties.
The State has failed to weigh the effect its management decisions have on our counties and has ignored its contractual obligations for these forestlands. Now, our counties want the option to effectively terminate that agreement and reclaim their rightful forestlands—something that is absolutely reasonable when a contact is in breach.â€
You can review the
entire testimony on OLIS.
--Rep. Jami Cate, HD 11Post Date: 2023-03-06 09:26:55 | Last Update: 2023-03-05 17:20:57 |
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