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.
“I look forward to the work ahead to help ensure these investments yield visible, measurable resultsâ€
Oregon Governor Tina Kotek and Oregon Housing and Community Services have announced that funding contracts for the Homelessness State of Emergency have been signed and funding will start being distributed to the regional multi-agency coordination groups.
On February 24, the Governor launched emergency response infrastructure, made up of seven regional MAC groups across the state tasked with effectively distributing emergency funds.
The legislature passed the Affordable Housing and Emergency Homelessness Response Package on March 21. On April 10, the Governor announced the emergency funding allocation across the seven MACs tied to specific outcomes.
“The housing crisis demands urgent action on an unprecedented timeline. I am grateful to the providers, local and county leaders who quickly assembled to form the MACs, the legislature for passing the package early with bipartisan support and broad stakeholder input, and to communities across Oregon embracing this call to action,†Governor Kotek said. “I look forward to the work ahead to help ensure these investments yield visible, measurable results across our state by the end of the year.â€
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Six of the seven regional MACs have finalized contracts to receive emergency funding to execute the Governor’s emergency order, which specifies the dollars will be used to prevent nearly 9,000 people from becoming homeless, rehouse more than 1,200 households, and create over 600 new shelter beds in emergency areas by end of the year. Due to a local policy that requires the Clackamas County commission to approve the contract before it is signed, Clackamas County’s contract is expected to be executed next week.
“If forced to do so, we will move forward on our ownâ€
In light of recently published admissions in the Willamette Week who laid out major ethics violations against Secretary of State Shemia Fagan, House and Senate Republican Leaders are calling for her resignation.
“She must resign,†said Senate Republican Leader Tim Knopp and House Republican Leader Vikki Breese-Iverson in a joint statement. “This appears to be an ethics violation and if it isn’t then Oregon’s ethics laws are broken. An elected official cannot take funds for personal use from someone they regulate.â€
The Secretary of State oversees audits for the State of Oregon. In no way could the top elected official ethically work a ‘side gig’ for a company engaged in the industry in which the Secretary is responsible for auditing and regulating.
“We have been continually calling for oversight into the OLCC and this industry. And yet, another turn of government misuse is apparent today. Democracy will die in darkness if we don’t hold elected officials accountable,†said House Republican Leader Breese-Iverson.
The House and Senate Republican Caucus’ along with the Senate Independent Caucus will be holding their first Oversight and Accountability Committee meeting this Thursday, May 4th.
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The Oversight and Accountability Committee was first requested over a week ago in a letter to the Presiding Officers of both the Senate and House Chambers. Sadly, these requests have gone unanswered.
“We have tried to work with our colleagues across the aisle to defend democracy in Oregon and hold our agencies and officials accountable. Democrats have remained silent, if forced to do so, we will move forward on our own,†said Senate Republican Leader Knopp.
Oregon House Republican Leader Vikki Breese-Iverson (R-Prineville) and
Senate Republican Leader Tim Knopp (R-Bend) penned an op-ed in The Oregonian on
House Bill 2002 B, which according to many observers, seems to allow the State to knowingly and forcefully strip away parental rights.
The op-ed reads as follows:
"Field trip permission slips. Tattoos and piercings. Contact lenses. These are just some of
the examples in which parents are required to provide consent for their children in the
state of Oregon."
"However, a bill in the Oregon Legislature would knowingly and forcefully strip away
parental rights. House Bill 2002 B expands the use of taxpayer dollars for irreversible
sex-changing treatments and procedures – including sterilization for those as young as
15 – without parental consent. Private insurers under this measure must cover these
procedures, allowing minors to undergo treatment on their parents’ insurance without
their knowing. Yes, you are reading that correctly."
"In addition, this legislation will allow a minor at any age to have an abortion without
parental knowledge or consent. A doctor may not disclose this information to a child’s
parent unless the child provides explicit written permission – stripping away a parent’s
right to know."
"Make no mistake, Oregon law already permits a minor at age 15 to have an abortion
without parental consent up until the moment of birth. Our fear with removing the age
limit for parental consent is that it leaves children on their own to deal with the
consequences of what might have been a crime, or at the very least a significant event
deserving of parental guidance. Lawmakers may very well be aiding and abetting
pedophiles and sex-traffickers who can pressure kids into telling doctors that a
boyfriend got them pregnant to avoid criminal repercussions."
"In less than an hour of debate in a recent Joint Ways and Means committee meeting and
with minimal time for questions, Democratic leadership forced a vote on this bill
knowing there would be no further opportunity for public comment than the one
hearing held in March."
"During the committee meeting, the Ways and Means Democratic co-chairs audibly
gasped when Legislative Counsel confirmed that 10-year-olds would be able to get
abortions without parental knowledge – despite co-chair Senator Elizabeth Steiner Hayward (D-Portland) boasting they were
“intimately involved with the development of this bill.â€"
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"Republicans had a multitude of questions that were left unanswered. We asked about
the estimated fiscal impact on the health care insurance premiums for Oregonians. The
answer? We will have to pass it to find out."
"However, as budget committee staff confirmed, we do know that House Bill 2002 B
vastly expands the types of irreversible sex-changing treatments and procedures funded
by Oregon taxpayers. These services will be offered through the Healthier
Oregon program, which provides health coverage to low-income individuals who would
qualify for Medicaid except for immigration status and who “live in Oregon.†According
to the Oregon Health Authority, there’s no time requirement to establish residency.
"We believe it should be standard practice to know how much something costs before
approving it. Nothing about this bill or the approach taken by Democratic leadership is
fiscally responsible. This is a long and complicated bill. It needs more input, not less."
"Don’t be fooled, this is not an abortion or equality issue – this is a parental rights issue."
"This is the state of Oregon effectively telling you that the government understands the
needs of your child better than you do. This is an extreme attack on the sacred
relationship between a parent and a child."
"House Bill 2002 B is scheduled for a vote on the House floor on Monday, May 1. Please
call your state representative and state senator and make your voice heard.
Parents – the time to take a stand is now."
Tim Knopp (R-Bend) is the state senator for District 27. Vikki Breese-Iverson (R-Prineville) is the state representative for District 59.
Editor’s note: This is the fifth of a multi-part series on the impact of your vote for School Board Candidates, an OAA Voter Education Project
The Parents’ Rights in Education (PRE) is opposed to the teaching and promotion of Gender Identity beginning in kindergarten. Unfortunately, the Nashville, Tennessee school shooting this week is an outgrowth of the activism now present in most public schools across the country.
The Tennessee shooter, a confused young adult female, was in counseling. According to Nashville’s chief of police, John Drake, investigators believed the shooting stemmed from “some resentment†the suspect harbored “for having to go to that school†as a younger person. We want to know what advice she was getting.
School counselors and psychologists today, encourage parents to begin social transitioning in kindergarten. Parents are bombarded with the message their children should be encouraged to explore their “real identity.†I recently received a call from a concerned father whose five-year-old son was seen by the Philomath, Oregon grade school psychologist, who recommended Dad consider “social transitioning.†Although Dad and son discussed biological reality, his son was influenced by female siblings to wear long hair and feminine clothing. Dad needed to be reminded he is the father and has the right to mentor his son. What if he had not contacted PRE?
What seemed like an effort to protect individuals struggling with “gender dysphoria,†has rapidly developed into a highly volatile political issue, and minor children are the target. Parents’ rights to direct the education of their minor children, and manage their healthcare decisions, have been stolen and sacrificed on the altar of Gender Identity Rights. These are pseudo “rights†fabricated out of a false premise. Humans cannot medically change their sex.
The average voter is unaware of the purposeful solicitation and recruitment of minors by public school staff and volunteers to change their sex. Students are inundated with messages about their “gender identity†rights daily. National Education Association member teachers wear badges encouraging students to seek them out for one-on-one counseling about sexuality and gender identity. In addition, LGBTQIA++ activist teachers adorn their classrooms with Gay Pride, Transgender, and Black Lives Matter political flags and posters.
Gender Sexuality Alliance (GSA) Clubs, a project of the Gay Lesbian Straight Education Network, are now in K-12 schools. GSA Network is a political organization using local public school districts as distribution centers for their trans political agenda to “leverage the collective power of thousands of trans and queer young people in the United States who connect with us through our network. â€Parents are not informed of their child’s membership in these clubs. Abigail Shrier, author of Irreversible Damage, confirms the influence of these clubs in decisions students are making to explore gender transition.
PRE featured a parent speaker whose daughter was influenced to change her sex at age 14 because of her GSA Club’s friend’s decision to do the same. As independent journalists Colin Wright and Christina Buttons have documented, many teachers who serve as adult ‘advisors’ to these clubs are intentionally concealing the sexual and political nature of their activities from parents, deliberately misleading families with vague language about ‘acceptance, tolerance, diversity, and identity.’†If parents do not support their child’s “transition†at school, they will likely be reported to Child Protective Services.
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The GSA Network has re-defined freedom, motivating “vulnerable trans and queer youth to advocate for racial and gender justice.†According to their new mission launched in March, Devising Freedom’s national strategy “will intentionally work to combat the harmful effects of anti-trans legislation and executive orders that have emerged in at least 22 states across the country, and continue to target young people in their schools, their homes, and their communities.†Their plan to “cultivate a strong, youth-led movement†and “cultivate a practice of visionary leadership,†should raise concern from anyone understanding the real meaning of freedom.
Families are shocked to learn they no longer have the right to be present when their children are counseled at school. The Oregon Department of Education recently announced the publication of a new and expanded document celebrating gender expansive students. Oregon, by passing HB 2002, plans to set up gender affirming clinics providing mental and physical treatments, including surgeries, throughout the state, serving anyone (even out of state visitors) questioning their biological sex, all on demand at taxpayer expense, and without parent consent.
School Administrators say the role of a school is “to guarantee each and every student (person) a feeling of acceptance, recognition, respect, affirmation, friendship, joy belonging, and safety.†Most students do not feel that way, and if possible, are leaving public schools because of the biased and discriminatory education policies obsessed with sexuality. Trans recruitment and indoctrination in K-12 schools stops here.
Oregon Abigail Adams Voter Education Project lists the candidates and those responding to the survey on their website.
Portland Police Bureau’s East Precinct partnered with the Multnomah County Sheriff’s Office for a successful night of stopping stolen vehicles and arresting car thieves.
PPB's East Precinct says that they continue to run these operations using a data driven and evidence-based approach to conduct fewer stops while increasing their rate of stolen vehicle recoveries.
On Friday, April 21, 2023, East Precinct and MCSO conducted the latest Stolen Vehicle Operation (SVO), focusing on the eastern area of East Precinct, and in the Fairview/Troutdale area.
In total, 19 individuals were arrested and 13 actively driven stolen vehicles were recovered. The following is a summary of the SVO results:
13 - Stolen Vehicles Recovered
19 – Arrests
1 - Illegally Possessed Firearms Seized
15 - Warrants Serviced
9 - Vehicles Eluded
6 - Suspects Eluded on Foot
13 - Vehicles Towed
8 - Citations Issued
27 - Drivers contacted with no valid driving privilege
21 - Vehicles contacted with no valid vehicle insurance
1 in every 4 stops resulted in a Stolen Vehicle
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1 in every 3 stops resulted in a Custody
1 in every 3 stops resulted in a Warrant Serviced
1 in every 5 stops resulted in a Vehicle Eluding
1 in every 8 stops resulted in a Subject Eluding on Foot
1 in every 4 stops resulted in a Vehicle Towed
1 in every 6 stops resulted in a Citation Issued
“These ongoing missions are successful due to the commitment shown by the East Precinct personnel and command to really focus enforcement efforts on stolen vehicles and the nexus they have with gun violence,†said Chief Chuck Lovell. “I want to thank the Multnomah County Sheriff’s Office for their partnership and assistance with this mission.â€
“Working together to reduce community violence allows us to build safer communities. I want to thank the Portland Police Bureau for including us in this focused effort in east Multnomah County,†added Sheriff Nicole Morrisey O’Donnell.
ODHS delivers community two large emergency containers
To help Tillamook County prepare for a Cascadia earthquake event,
the Oregon Department of Human Services (ODHS), Office of Resilience and
Emergency Management delivered two large portable cargo containers filled with
emergency relief supplies and equipment to the Tillamook Municipal Airport.
These containers, called Conex boxes, were delivered in April and are part of an
emergency preparedness partnership between ODHS, Tillamook County, Tillamook
Municipal Airport and Near Space Corporation.
“Coastal communities like Tillamook are prioritized to house these Conex boxes
because data shows they are likely to be cut off from the rest of the state during the
Cascadia earthquake,†said Ed Flick Director of the ODHS Office of
Resilience and Emergency Preparedness. “ODHS has primary responsibility for
mass care and shelter following disasters, so helping local communities access
critical supplies that can quickly be used to serve their local community is important
to us.â€
A section of the Tillamook Municipal Airport is designated as an evacuation
assembly point for Tillamook County. The Conex boxes are stocked with food,
water, tents and medical supplies to support 100 people at the evacuation assembly
point for two weeks in the event of an emergency. Conex boxes are tan or rust
colored containers that are 20-feet long and 8-feet wide.
Evacuation assembly points are short-term locations for people to gather while
emergency responders work to access the impacted area. They are not intended to
be long-term shelters but are places people can register, receive nourishment and
short-term shelter, get essential medical care and be scheduled for transport out of
the area when needed.
The Conex boxes and the emergency supplies in them are being provided to
Tillamook County at no cost.
There will also be a series of training sessions to ensure emergency preparedness
officials in Tillamook County are familiar with how to use and deploy the provided
supplies during an emergency.
“Tillamook County is grateful to ODHS for supporting our community’s emergency
preparedness efforts in this way,†said Randy Thorpe Tillamook County
emergency management director. “Having these critical and lifesaving emergency
supplies immediately available at an evacuation assembly point will help our
community respond to and recover from a mass disaster like a Cascadia
earthquake event.
Michele Bradley, general manager at Port of Tillamook Bay where the
airport is located, is involved with emergency management planning in Tillamook
County and collaborated with Thorpe to identify the best location for the Conex
boxes and supplies to be stored. They determined that a location close to Near
Space Corporation at the airport would be best.
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“I’ve been a part of work groups on resilience after a disaster,†said Bradley. “I
wanted us to be part of the solution. The airport is a good location, and it makes
sense to work with the state on this. We could easily serve the seven cities and
unincorporated areas in Tillamook County from this location.â€
Near Space Corporation tests and flies unmanned aerial vehicles such as drones
for the Federal Aviation Administration. Kevin Tucker, president of Near Space
Corporation also has experience in emergency preparedness planning.
“With our unmanned aerial vehicle testing and operations we are very much
involved with emergency management and disaster preparedness,†said Tucker.
“We want to make sure we are doing everything we can for preparedness. We want
to help all we can. It’s pretty much just being a good citizen.â€
Anyone who wants to learn more about how to prepare for emergencies can find
resources online.
ODHS holds three distinct roles through its Office of Resilience and Emergency
Management. In one role, OREM staff work every day with ODHS programs, offices and
affiliated agencies. The second role is as the lead agency for cooling, warming and cleaner air
centers to protect the public from life-threatening weather and related events. The
third role is as the primary agency for mass care and social services recovery, as
outlined in Oregon’s comprehensive emergency operations and recovery plans. In
this role, ODHS supports the evacuation, sheltering, feeding, emergency assistance, family reunification, distribution of emergency supplies and human
services needs of people impacted by disasters.
Clackamas County’s official response to the Oregon Department of Transportation (ODOT) I-205 Tolling Project Environmental Assessment (EA) describes a wide variety of concerns with both the methodology and conclusions drawn in the EA. The county submitted its 36 pages of comments to ODOT on April 20.
The county’s primary concern is that the project does not plan for how to alleviate (or mitigate) the impact of all the traffic that will shift from I-205 onto county and city roads to avoid the tolls. That jump in local traffic, which the EA acknowledges could be from 30% to 100%, will dramatically decrease safety and increase congestion on many already crowded local roads.
The EA refers to mitigation measures, but they are minimal and inadequate. For example:
The only mitigation proposed for the Stafford Road/Rosemont Road intersection is to install a rectangular rapid flashing beacon to improve pedestrian crossing, but the entire intersection is projected to be failing by 2027. No measures at all are proposed to mitigate the increased traffic volume.
Tripling the average daily traffic volume on rural roads such as Borland Road will create conditions that reduce safety and double the likelihood of crashes. Even so, there are no mitigation measures proposed to address this impact.
Tolling I-205 is expected to add more than 3,000 vehicles a day to the rural Arndt Road –the equivalent of 10 years’ worth of traffic growth without tolling. Again, there are no mitigation measures proposed to address this dramatic increase.
And even the inadequate mitigation measures that are proposed are unlikely to be in place when tolling is scheduled to begin in late 2024 because there is not enough time to put them in place.
Other county concerns include:
Higher levels of stress for people walking and rolling along local roadways due to increased traffic;
Decreased access to local businesses in congested, unsafe conditions;
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No decrease in greenhouse gas emissions, contrary to what is stated in the project, because there are no area alternatives to driving (like transit) and people will be driving longer routes on local roads to avoid paying the toll;
Severe impacts especially to low-income residents and other communities of concern who will either have to somehow pay the toll or travel on more congested, less safe local routes;
Significant aspects of the environmental review only covered areas within 100 feet of I-205, which means there was no analysis of impacts to important nearby places such as the historic Arch Bridge in Oregon City;
There has been no analysis of the cumulative impact of I-205 tolling along with the Regional Mobility Pricing Project (RMPP), ODOT’s next tolling project to toll all lanes on I-5 and I-205 in the Portland metropolitan area.
The EA is the federal environmental review process that ODOT is required to complete before the agency can implement its plans to toll the I-205 Abernethy and Tualatin River bridges in Clackamas County beginning in late 2024. A successful EA results in a Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI) from the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA).
In consideration of the many deficiencies and negative impacts of the project reflected or omitted from the EA, Clackamas County is requesting that:
FHWA not issue a Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI) for this project; and
FHWA direct ODOT to develop an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) for this project, combined with the RMPP, to analyze the impacts of both tolling projects and provide meaningful opportunities for public engagement.
Along with the 36 pages of comments the county submitted to the state, more information on Clackamas County efforts to respond to the proposed tolling plan is available on the county web page on ODOT's proposed tolling.
Lawsuit objects to plan for very broad timber sales
The Siuslaw project area west of Eugene is subject of a lawsuit brought by environmentalists against the U.S. Bureau of Land Management. The bureau made a motion to dismiss, but a U.S. magistrate judge recommended denial of the bureau’s motion moving the case forward. If the U.S. District Judge Michael McShane signs off, this court decision will set a new precedent that will allow people who live near areas or are affected to bring actions before any trees are cut down.
The Courthouse News reported that Oregon environmentalists inched toward a win against the U.S. Bureau of Land Management on Friday. According to the suit brought by Cascadia Wildlands and Oregon Wild in 2022, the bureau’s planned “landscape†project in its Siuslaw project area violates the National Environmental Policy Act because the agency failed to prepare an environmental impact statement and consider the project’s overall impacts to the bureau-administered forestland. In doing so, the groups claim the bureau excluded dozens of previously identified environmental issues from its project analysis “on the grounds that they did not relate to the Siuslaw project’s narrowly defined purpose of timber production.â€
By issuing an environmental assessment and finding of no significant impact, the bureau approved decades of logging projects on 13,225 acres across 10 separate watersheds and old-growth forest habitats. This inevitable logging, the environmentalist say, will harm several fish and wildlife species protected under the Endangered Species Act, including northern spotted owls, marbled murrelets and Coho and Chinook salmon.
According to Cascadia’s complaint, “another logging project slated near the Siuslaw project — the N126 project — will also overlap with the landscape plan and have significant cumulative effects on fish and wildlife, erosion and water quality, invasive species infestations and wildlife habitat.â€
Government attorney Alexis Romero argued the lawsuit came at an “unusually early stage and without any imminent kind of sales,†thereby lacking the injury necessary for standing. The bureau’s motion to dismiss also highlighted how the landscaping plan does not automatically authorize timber harvests or other ground-disturbing activities that could harm Cascadia’s interests.
The Courthouse News reported that Judge Kasubhai disagreed with the bureau, finding the agency identified and mapped out specific logging tracts within its landscaping plan, making logging inevitable.
The judge rejected the bureau’s argument against plaintiffs’ interests, stating that the groups have demonstrated that some members have regularly enjoyed recreation activities in distinct geographic areas planned for logging.
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The Courthouse News said, Cascadia Wildlands’ legal director and attorney Nick Cady said he expected Kasubhai’s recommendation and that the bureau’s resistance to their claims is unusual given that Cascadia’s members recreate and live nearby the project area.
According to Cady, the bureau’s new strategy to plan very broad timber sales without pinpointing its exact planned parcels for logging is what prompted the lawsuit, particularly in how the agency is putting the “cart before the horse†by proactively claiming that its logging project wouldn’t affect the environment because they promise to follow the law.
In its announcement of the lawsuit, Cascadia said the bureau is required under federal law to consider the negative impacts of its proposed logging on the region’s communities against the benefits of timber volume generation logging. The organization further noted that many residents strongly oppose the logging project, believing it will contribute to drinking water contamination, increased fire hazards, loss of recreation, soil erosion, more road construction and the destruction of wildlife habitat.
On the reverse side of that argument is that forest thinning slows wildfires, which would increases carbon emissions, reduce air quality, and threatens loss of homes. And now there are reports of wildfire survivors with mental health issues.
If environmentalists win their case and coupled with the proposed Western Oregon Habitat Conservation Plan (HCP), which is now projected to decrease timber harvest by 50%, the impact on funding for local governments could be astronomical.
Editor’s note: This is the fourth in a multi-part series on the impact of your vote for School Board Candidates, an OAA Voter Education Project
Candidate Jeff Myers’ is speaking out about how school boards are led into questionable and perhaps unlawful practices. School district have been steadily declining for years, and not just academics. One of the most important roles of a school board is to approve the core curriculum taught throughout the district. This doesn't mean the board members will review every book, every lesson, or every classroom activity. However, they do have the responsibility and authority to ensure the school district adheres to the standards, rules, and laws of our state. School boards have repeatedly failed to perform this vital function.
Jeff Myers, Beaverton school board candidate, researched Oregon law (ORS 337.120) and Oregon Administrative Rule (581-022-2350) when the school board voted to adopt the recommendations put forward by the school district administrators for their Elementary Social Science curriculum (grades K-5). He verified his findings with district staff, including Heather Cordie (Deputy Superintendent – Teaching & Learning), Kayla Bell (Administrator for Elementary Curriculum), and Aujalee Moore at the Oregon Department of Education.
Many school boards have made changes to the rules regarding public comments since the beginning of the pandemic in an attempt to muzzle parents. Testimony is being limited to two minutes per person. During Myers' two minutes, he outlined the violations of Oregon law and Oregon Administrative Rule that the district and school board committed to when they adopted their new Social Science curriculum for grades K-5. The curriculum didn’t exist yet, but the district had a plan to use an outside consultant to build it. The board had no authority within the law to vote to adopt a curriculum that didn’t exist, let alone one that hadn’t been reviewed by parents and the public.
Beaverton’s experience isn’t an isolated case when it comes to taking shortcuts that cuts out parents and the public. In Beaverton’s case, the school district began their work on a new curriculum in 2020, but when they presented their very lengthy report to the school board on May 23, 2022, it was lacking most of the components of a curriculum for grades K-5. Presented was an optional 2021 Social Science standards and a created student-friendly learning targets with a draft book list by grade level.
The intent was to have an outside consultant, Dr. Katy Swalwell, author of Social Studies for a Better World: An Anti-Oppressive Approach for Elementary Educators, which expresses her desire to transform children to take on a particular viewpoint for a “better worldâ€. She is outspoken about her disgust for things like the constitution, Christianity, the Founding Fathers, White people, capitalism, the police, and her book is part of the recommended professional development readings for teachers.
Myers said, "that’s all they had done when they presented their final report and recommendations to the school board. And on the June 21, 2022 meeting the school board voted unanimously to approve and adopt the “curriculum†that didn’t really exist."
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Myers reports, “The school board received no units, lessons, activities, assessments, scope or sequence, student-facing material, or teacher guides… they had nothing but learning targets and draft book lists. Worse yet, parents and citizens were not given the opportunity to review the curriculum required by law. Beaverton School District may try to argue that they had parents and community members as part of their project team and that the team did get the chance to vote to finalize their work. Even if that is adequate parent involvement, what were they basing their votes on when the elementary curriculum didn’t yet exist?â€
“According to the Oregon law and rule, the school district should have created the curriculum first, then solicited parents and citizens for feedback, and then taken the final step to request board approval. The district completely failed to follow the laws & rules governing this process as did the school board.â€
“The unit content rolled out to kindergarten classrooms so far, is not at all developmentally appropriate for that age/grade. That’s not just coming from me,†Myers said, “but from teachers inside and outside of the district who have reviewed the material. For some reason, they have incorporated lessons for the health standards into this Social Science unit. I am specifically referring to lessons/activities regarding “consent†and “gender identity,†which are not in the Social Science standards, let alone for 5-year-olds! This is especially troubling since the district is required by law to notify parents ahead of teaching the health curriculum so they can review the curriculum and opt their children out if they so choose.â€
School districts are using the pandemic as an excuse to never implement the 2018 standards and instead wait just long enough for these optional 2021 standards to arrive. And even with all the warnings provided by ODE on using these standards and the complete lack of support provided for them, ODE still created curriculum options, which is encouraging school districts to use them.
In the Beaverton's case, Myers wants to stop the use of all the new Social Science units and materials in grades K-5 and return to last year’s content to allow a small project team to select and recommend to the school board a Social Science curriculum from the State Board of Education’s approved list for the 2018 standards.
School boards must be attentive to violating laws when adding diversity and identity lessons into unrelated subjects - they may be violating additional laws and rules and potentially opening the door to lawsuits.
Oregon Abigail Adams Voter Education Project lists the candidates and those responding to the survey on their website.
Once the increase takes effect, the TDT rate for a single-family detached home, for example, will be $10,599 – an increase of $601 more than the 2022-23 rate of $9,998.
Washington County says that the TDT is based on the average estimated traffic generated by new development of that type and is paid by developers to fund transportation projects including road improvements, sidewalks, bike lanes and transit upgrades such as bus shelters.
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Washington County says that the TDT rates are adjusted annually based on a five-year rolling average of road construction, labor and right-of-way costs.
The rate increase was approved April 18 by the Board of Commissioners. County code calls for the Board to act on TDT adjustments annually before May 1.
Two highway stops last week yielded 31 pounds of powder and 100,000 fentanyl pills. Fentanyl is fueling a surging public health crisis in Oregon. Illicit fentanyl, a synthetic opioid, is 50 to 100 times more potent than heroin, cheaper and easier to manufacture and more addictive. It also carries a greater risk of overdose, especially for young people with no experience using opioids.
Last year, Oregon overdose deaths increased 41%, compared to a 16% increase nationwide, according to the National Center for Health Statistics. This coincides with a surge of illicit fentanyl in Oregon. Oregon peer recovery specialists report they are now responding to 40 to 50 nonfatal overdose reports per month. Opioid overdoses can be reversed with naloxone rescue kits, which the Save Lives Oregon Clearinghouse coalition provides free. Several bills were introduced to make available naloxone kits to schools and emergency personnel and limit their liability, but the Democrat leadership didn’t find it worthy of hearings.
On April 23, 2023, an Oregon State Police(OSP) Trooper out of the Salem Area Command stopped a vehicle for a traffic violation. While on the stop, the Trooper observed signs of criminal activity and subsequently asked for consent to search the vehicle. The driver denied consent but admitted to importing marijuana from California. The OSP K-9 Titan (pictured above) was deployed and alerted them to a large duffel bag in the trunk. An additional search of the vehicle revealed a large amount of various controlled substances.
51 lbs. of suspected methamphetamine
31 lbs. of suspected powder fentanyl
9 lbs. of suspected cocaine
2 lbs. of suspected heroin
Both occupants of the vehicle were detained, interviewed, and charged with federal drug charges and lodged at the Multnomah County Jail.
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Two days prior, on April 21, 2023, a Trooper from the La Grande Area Command stopped a vehicle traveling westbound on Interstate 84 near La Grande, Oregon. While on the stop, the Trooper observed signs of criminal activity. A search of the vehicle was conducted which led to the seizure of approximately 100,000 Fentanyl pills, 3 Kilograms of Heroin and 1 Kilogram of Fentanyl Powder.
Both cases are being investigated jointly by the Oregon State Police and the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA). They are being prosecuted by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Oregon.
Editor’s note: This is the third of a multi-part series on the impact of your vote for School Board Candidates, an OAA Voter Education Project
Who really makes decisions? The Oregon Department of Education (ODE) provides directives and developed ORIS (Oregon Integrated System) as a framework for the Continuous Improvement Process, which integrates equity in every area of the process. A process where school boards are pressured to adopt what ODE recommends. The ORIS centralizes many decisions that rightfully should be made from the ground up, but are actually made top down. Furthermore, decisions made at the school board level are farmed out to the district administration or unelected committees.
What most voters don’t realize is the roll of the school district with the school board. ORS 332.075 allows the school board to authorize the school district office to enter into contracts with board approval. The process deteriorates when the school board, and parents, become the last in line to hear about such contracts that have been negotiated and only aware of them when they are taken to the board for their stamp of approval. By that time deals have been made, the public’s only recourse is a mass display of protest. This type of feedback from parents made the news in Beaverton when the district tried pushing a contract and parents were locked out of the school board meeting. As a result, the National Association of School Boards proposed making parents that demonstrate domestic terrorists.
Parents are increasingly making public records requests to get to the bottom of issues. The Coalition of Oregon School Administrators (COSA) say it is an immoral violation on their personal privacy, even though all government workers are subject to public records requests.
The school superintendent is hired by the district school board to carry out what the school board approves: school budgets, approved curriculum, and policies in schools. If a superintendent is not going to be supportive of the board and the district, then they are hindering what the school board, with parents’ input, deems important in their schools.
The issue of superintendent hiring and firing is now critically important. In Newberg, Albany, and other school districts, school boards dismissed superintendents who did not comport with community values, undermined school board policies and continually placed progressive ideology above academic instruction. This was an essential last-ditch mechanism for school boards to dismiss non-responsive superintendents and preserve academic and community values.
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However, upset with the firing of the Newberg superintendent for not following the board’s policy that only American and Oregon State flags can fly in classrooms, legislative progressives rushed to pass SB 1521 in 2022. The bill made it impossible to fire a superintendent for cause without 12 month notice – despite what the hiring contract may say. The law now limits the ability of the district school board from terminating the superintendent if they are acting in compliance with state and federal law and refuse to follow a board’s policy. It sets state and federal laws or guidelines, including executive orders, orders of the Superintendent of Public Instruction, declarations, directives or other state or federal authorization, policy, statement, guidance, rule or regulation over local school boards. In other words, local control and parents’ voices are not considered.
COSA and ODE pushed SB 1521 to override parents that are flooding board meetings demanding the termination of instruction on gender identity and sexual options, shared bathrooms/showers, and receive abortion drugs without parent consent. Currently, HB 2002 is working its way through the legislature that allows students of any age to start transitioning without parents’ knowledge.
Many suggest this is what tyranny looks like using students as experiments, thwarting the voice of parents, and neutering school boards to keep progressive superintendents and the Department of Education ideological agendas moving forward using public schools as the vehicle.
Oregon Abigail Adams Voter Education Project lists the candidates and those responding to the survey on their website.