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On this day, November 21, 1992, Oregon Senator Bob Packwood, issued an apology but refused to discuss allegations that he'd made unwelcome sexual advances toward 10 women over the years.




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Christmas Tree Bill Reveals Deals Made
Allocates funds for important projects

One of the bills that comes up every long session, along with the budget bills, is one commonly known as the "Christmas tree" bill because it allocates funds for important projects in each senators' district. This year, SB 5506 went from a one and half page bill to 124 pages, 8 sections to 320 sections, from $606,781,901 to approximately $32 billion that is controlled by the legislature. After subtracting agency budgets, the Christmas tree fund is about $1 billion.

Senators that walked out and didn’t support the compromise are seeing their districts fall short of needed funding. Senator Daniel Bonham (R-The Dalles) had needed funding for the Hood River Bridge and City of Estacada projects cut. He says, “I was shocked to see the $6 million allocated for the Bridge of the Gods in Cascade Locks disappeared and was replaced for a $5 million footpath in Bend.”

The week of the negotiations, the Malheur Enterprise ran an article, State relief turns up short, leaving rail project still needing millions to finish. The article blames state legislators for not providing as much help as expected to rescue the Treasure Valley Reload Center project. It states, “The project has been over budget for months and already has had two previous bailouts from the state and one from Malheur County itself… What’s clear is that no onions will ship out of Nyssa this season as pieces of the warehouse building sit on the ground and two rail spurs needed to move train cars are yet to be completed.”

“The new money quandary emerged as Shawna Peterson, executive director of the development company, reported that state legislators would award another $5 million for the Nyssa project. Malheur County had sought $8.5 million in a request backed by state Sen. Lynn Findley and state Rep. Mark Owens.” This still leaves the project $5.6 million short to finish the project.

One onion grower is saying the whole project was mismanaged, from using a rail spur without checking with Union Pacific Railroad then cancelling, building on wetland without a study to see how deep it is because the property was owned by a board member and purchased over market value, cancelled scales and road work, contractors not being paid, and mismanagement of funds with no paper trail or purchase orders for $32 million and now they need $10.6 million more.

How much did this one project have to do with the compromise to end the walkout? We know from the Malheur Enterprise that Representative Greg Smith is under investigation for his company’s involvement and lack of records. Representative Mark Owens and Senator Lynn Findley requested funding to cover up all the mistakes. All three of these legislators were present to provide quorum.

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Senator Lynn P. Findley participated in negotiations with Senate Minority Leader Tim Knopp that satisfied them along with Senator Dick Anderson to make quorum. Senator Findley’s district has at least $35.1 million lights on their Christmas tree, rural Oregon surely needs it. A complete list of SB 5506 allocations can be searched for whether your favorite project made the list.


--Donna Bleiler

Post Date: 2023-06-23 12:51:02Last Update: 2023-06-25 22:54:04



Constitutional Carry Signature Gathering Begins
27 states are already constitutional carry states

The Oregon Secretary of State’s Office has now provided Constitutional Carry for Oregon (CCFO) with the official signature sheet templates for Initiative Petition 2024-021.

IP-21 amends the Oregon Constitution with the addition of one simple sentence: “… includes the right to carry, without a permit, a concealed firearm.”

The official ballot title reads: “Amends Constitution: Creates right to carry a concealed firearm without a permit; voids existing concealed carry restrictions.”

IP-21 in no way places firearms into the hands of felons or those otherwise unable to legally possess a firearm. Such individuals do not typically apply for concealed carry permits to begin with.

At present, 27 U.S. states are already constitutional carry states.

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CCFO states that numerous studies have shown that within five years of becoming a constitutional carry state, violent crimes in those states drop and the number of victims in mass shootings decreases.

The process of gathering the 160,551 signatures for the initiative to appear on the November 2024 general election ballot will begin on June 23rd, 2023.

CCFO has until July 5, 2024, to submit the required signatures.

CCFO is a grassroots volunteer effort. The three chief petitioners are: Joel Pawloski, a retired Army Lt. Colonel in Marion County; Kerry McQuisten, the former mayor of Baker City in Baker County; and Jean Sampson, former city council member of Clatskanie in Columbia County.

Those interested can find more information on the CCFO website.


--Ben Fisher

Post Date: 2023-06-22 17:46:14Last Update: 2023-06-22 17:59:51



Bynum Announces for Congress
The Oregon House Democrat will take on Chavez-DeRemer

State Representative Janelle Bynum has announced that she is running for Congress in the newly-drawn 5th Congressional District. If successful in the primary, she will likely face incumbent Freshman Lori Chavez-DeRemer. Representative Bynum has defeated Chavez-DeRemer twice by very small margins in state house races in 2016 and 2018.

Representative Bynum touts her record as an incumbent State Representative. In an email to supporters, she says, "I am proud to have earned a reputation as a tireless champion for real progress. In the state legislature, I’ve fought to safeguard reproductive freedom and our civil rights, create affordable housing, lower the cost of healthcare and prescription drugs, and create pathways to success for the next generation so everyone has a fair shot."

At the same time, Representative Bynum places blame for local problems on national leaders, saying, "Here in Happy Valley, where my husband and I chose to make a home and raise our children, too many families are struggling. The skyrocketing costs of education, healthcare, and housing are making it impossible for anyone to get ahead, and our elected officials in D.C. are too distracted with partisan bickering to deal with the problem.

Since being redrawn in 2021, Oregon's 5th Congressional District has had it's share of drama. Insiders say that the district was drawn at the direction of former public employee union lobbyist and now Oregon 6th District Congressional Representative Andrea Salinas for the purpose of weakening incumbent Democrat Kurt Schrader. Experts say that Schrader failed to be radical enough for the far-left unions. Schrader lost in the primary to Jamie McLeod-Skinner, who in turn lost to Chavez-DeRemer.


--Staff Reports

Post Date: 2023-06-22 11:02:15Last Update: 2023-06-22 11:44:27



Kotek Appoints New TriMet Director
Kellogg will serve as the director for District 3

The TriMet Board of Directors has announced Robert Kellogg as its newest member. Kellogg was nominated by Oregon Governor Tina Kotek. The Oregon Senate approved Kellogg’s appointment on June 16, 2023, to take effect immediately.

Kellogg will serve as the director for TriMet District 3, which covers parts of Southwest Portland, Beaverton, and southern Washington County.

Kellogg has run a general law practice for 17 years. TriMet says that with the experience on Tualatin City Council, as well as two transportation steering committees, Kellogg brings years of experience in transportation planning to the TriMet Board of Directors.

“The number one priority is safety,” Kellogg said. “TriMet riders should feel safe when getting on board. Delivering on this will help in ridership recovery. TriMet can get people to where they want to go, but we need to work on increasing efficiency, collaborating with our regional partners to speed up buses and get people to where they’re going quicker.”

During his time on Tualatin’s City Council, Kellogg focused on local transportation issues and spearheaded a voter-approved $20 million bond measure, which looked at reducing bottlenecks and improving traffic and pedestrian safety.

Kellogg began his public service career with an appointment to the Washington County Future Transportation Study, which examined opportunities for the county’s transportation systems fifty years into the future.

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Recently, he served on the controversial Southwest Corridor Light Rail Project Steering Committee, which looked at adding MAX service to the Tualatin Park & Ride at Bridgeport Village.

Kellogg grew up in southeast Missouri, receiving his Bachelor’s Degree from Truman State University. He then moved to the East Coast. Kellogg worked in New York City during the bankruptcies of Global Crossing, WorldCom and Enron.

Kellogg and his family of four live in Tualatin.

Kellogg joins Board Secretary and Treasurer Ozzie Gonzalez and directors Keith Edwards, Tyler Frisbee, Thomas Kim, Dr. LaVerne Lewis and Kathy Wai on the Board. TriMet’s Board consists of seven Directors who are appointed by the governor. They set policy for the agency as well as appoint the general manager, implement legislation pertaining to transit operations and review and approve certain contracts.

Board members are volunteers and can serve up to two, four-year terms; however, they serve at the pleasure of the governor and can continue to serve until a successor is appointed.


--Ben Fisher

Post Date: 2023-06-21 18:46:43Last Update: 2023-06-21 19:06:03



EV Infrastructure May Get A Boost
Charging stations increase to 153,927

Oregon Senate President and key sponsor, Rob Wagner (D-Lake Oswego), proudly announced passage by the House of SB 582, which requires greater safety and training standards for electric vehicle (EV) charging installations. Over the course of the next five years, the Oregon Department of Transportation (ODOT) is projecting to invest $100 million from both federal and state sources to increase EV charging infrastructure with two-thirds of the funding coming from the 2021 Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act.

"This bill positions Oregon to take advantage of federal investments in EV charging infrastructure," said Senate President Rob Wagner (D-Lake Oswego), co-chief sponsor of the bill. "By setting high standards for safety and training we will ensure state dollars are used effectively to create high quality infrastructure for Oregonians."

Oregon is anticipated to require 153,927 public electric vehicle charging ports by 2035, a more than 4,500% increase from the number of ports in 2020. That’s 1.6 for every square mile in Oregon, and a lot more if you reduce it for water and wilderness. There are currently 480 DC fast charging stations in Oregon. These high-power chargers can fill an EV to near capacity in about 20 minutes. Can you imagine your gas fill-up line taking 20 minutes each?

While devoid of carbon monoxide or other stinky pollutants, high-tech electric cars are instead emitting a gasless pollutant: Electromagnetic Field radiation, or EMF radiation. EMF radiation is a low form of energy released by any piece of technology with a plug or a battery that uses an electric current to function. Science has proven that extended exposure to these emissions cause adverse health effects, thus a highly padded cover when dental x-rays are taken.

Even low levels of frequent exposure can cause biological effects in humans and the environment. Long doses include cell damage, DNA fragmentation, fertility problems, miscarriage, cancer, and neurological effects that can lead to health disorders and behavioral issues. Some symptoms of radiation poisoning are loss of smell, loss of taste, hair loss, nausea, brain fog, etc.

Electric cars are not built to shield passengers from EMF. A big battery is being used close to passengers, with electronic circuitry running around the edge of the cabin. This increases the amounts of radiation exposure. When charging, the EMF radiation emitted from the charger is greater than ICNIRP standards of radiation levels. Even fuel vehicles have over 50 electronic control units that emit EMF radiation, including Bluetooth connections, push-button starts, car alarms, and dashboard controls.

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This whole idea of pushing electric vehicles is to decrease carbon emissions to zero by 2030, which is simply unattainable and they know it. Approximately 40% of global CO2 emissions are emitted from electricity generation by the combustion of fossil fuels to generate heat needed to power steam turbines. The demand that we stop using fossil fuels replacing it with renewable electricity options, is their agenda’s pathway to condemn humanity to poverty and control.

Oregon is reported to be a top seller of EV in the U.S. and China is reported to be leading globally in sales of their electric vehicle - NETA cars. However, a field was discovered with over 10 thousand EV cars, all 2021 models having less than 3,100 miles on them, and fully registered to count in their sales numbers. China accumulates these cars in a Ponzi investment scheme.

SB 582 passed the House and is being sent to the Senate floor for a vote without a hearing in the Senate.


--Donna Bleiler

Post Date: 2023-06-21 12:08:07Last Update: 2023-06-23 09:30:07



Diesel Shop Ordered to Pay Fine
Owner to serve six months in federal prison

A Northwest Oregon diesel repair shop and it's owner have pleaded guilty in federal court to knowingly and intentionally tampering with monitoring devices on more than 200 vehicles after removing their emissions controls in violation of the Clean Air Act.

Pure Addiction Diesel Performance, LLC, located in Hillsboro, Oregon, pleaded guilty to tampering with pollution monitoring devices and was ordered to pay a fine of $148,733 to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).

The company was also sentenced to three years’ probation.

Pure Addiction’s owner and operator, Travis Turner, 38, a resident of Forest Grove, Oregon, pleaded guilty to being an accessory to the tampering of monitoring devices and was sentenced to six months in federal prison.

“By disabling the emissions control systems of hundreds of diesel vehicles, Pure Addiction and its owner, Travis Turner, favored their own financial interests above the health and safety of our community, said Ethan Knight, Chief of the Economic Crimes Unit for the U.S. Attorney’s Office. “We will continue working closely with our partners at the EPA to ensure all businesses and business owners play by the rules.”

“The defendants installed emissions defeat equipment on hundreds of diesel trucks, resulting in substantial increases in pollution from each individual vehicle,” said Scot Adair, Special Agent in Charge of EPA’s Criminal Investigation Division (CID) in Oregon. “EPA CID will continue to focus on stopping the usage of illegal defeat devices that contribute to serious health problems and put our communities at risk.”

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According to court documents, beginning in at least 2018 and continuing through 2020, Pure Addiction tampered with and disabled the emissions control systems of approximately 245 diesel vehicles for paying customers in violation of the Clean Air Act.

Pure Addiction charged its customers approximately $2,000 each for the emissions modification and collected more $400,000 in total for the unlawful services over an approximately two-year period.

As owner of Pure Addiction, Turner took action to assist the company in evading detection by federal environmental authorities by issuing, maintaining, and subsequently providing to investigators sales invoices that included inaccurate or incomplete information about the company’s illegal vehicle modifications. 46 of the service invoices Turner provided to investigators reflected “parts only” transactions when, in fact, those transactions included additional service work that violated the Clean Air Act.

On June 1, 2023, Pure Addiction was charged with one count of Clean Air Act tampering. In the same information, Turner was charged with one count of being an accessory after the fact to Clean Air Act tampering.

This case was investigated by EPA CID. It was prosecuted by Ryan W. Bounds, Assistant U.S. Attorneys for the District of Oregon, and Karla Gebel Perrin, Special Assistant U.S. Attorney for the District of Oregon.


--Ben Fisher

Post Date: 2023-06-20 21:08:28Last Update: 2023-06-20 21:53:48



Senator Hayden Files Bill to Support News Reporting in Oregon
Hayden says a Media Tax Credit measure is necessary for more government accountability and transparency

Senator Cedric Hayden (R-Fall Creek) has introduced SB 1104, the Oregon Media Tax Credit bill, a proposal to provide Oregonians a dollar-for-dollar tax credit akin to the Oregon Political Tax Credit, when they pay to subscribe to any news outlet that covers Oregon news happenings.

The Oregon Political Tax Credit is a $50 per person, $100 per tax filing couple tax credit that most Oregonians see back on their tax return when they contribute to a political action committee for political candidates, or a policy issue committee that supports property tax or ballot issue measures. Hayden believes a parallel Media Tax Credit is necessary to encourage Oregonians to subscribe to media outlets and help defray the cost of news published behind paywalls.

“The media plays an important role in maintaining the republican form of representative government we enjoy in that it’s the role of the free press to hold government to account for its actions,” stated Hayden. “Now more than ever, we need journalism to thrive, and we need a fair, democratic way to give people encouragement to support local journalism in the same way politicians have carved out a way to receive tax-free political contributions. Having one type of tax credit that supports political speech while not fairly using tax dollars to support the free speech of the press which holds us accountable is no longer acceptable.”

Critics of his proposal note that the established media in Oregon tilts leftward and supports Democrats and the practical effect of this measure will be to prop up liberal reporting that hurts Republicans and helps Democrats.

Though late in the session, Hayden hopes the Media Tax Credit bill will be the start of an important conversation about how to support Oregonians’ ability to access news coverage that impacts Oregon.

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The measure allows for $50 per person or $100 per tax filing couple, with no household income limits, to receive the tax credit when they file their tax return if they paid for media subscription services which meet the following criteria: “This tax credit is about supporting the work of journalists who daily are working with thin staff to report important news that should matter to all Oregonians, yet because of the media models of paywalls and hard costs to report and distribute the news, like thousands of dollars spent in public records fights with the government, we see journalism reporting buckling under financial pressures,” Hayden stated.

“It’s critical that we ensure two things: that people can have an independent say in where they spend their media dollars (hence a broad tax credit with choice for the subscriber just like the choice they have in spending their Political Tax Credit) and that media outlets doing this important work are financially supported and can compete for those tax credit dollars by continuing to invest in journalistic talent and fighting the fight to get the truth about what’s happening in state and local government to the people.”

Hayden pointed to the recent spate of news stories by a small group of political reporters working to cover important topics but expressed frustration that there aren’t enough reporters to cover the thousands of bills in the legislative session that impact Oregonians. “The main story of this legislative session was about the recent walk out, but there were not enough reporters to really dive into the heart of the bills at issue, like HB 2395, the opioid omnibus bill that before being amended, would have set medical privacy down to age zero with no civil liability for harming a child. Those details matter.”

He further noted stories like the DMV data breach and the La Mota scandal as a reason to have a mechanism to support journalism. “We should call this the Sophie Peel Act,” he joked, referencing the dogged reporting by Willamette Week that shined a massive spotlight in the allegations of corruption by the former Oregon Secretary of State. “In all seriousness though, that’s the level of reporting we need all day every day in Oregon. The Media Tax Credit bill is a way to give people incentive to keep the Fourth Estate alive and well in Oregon.”

SB 1104 will have its first reading this week before the end of the legislature’s Sine Die. Senator Hayden anticipates bringing this measure back in a subsequent session.


--Staff Reports

Post Date: 2023-06-20 12:12:45Last Update: 2023-06-20 12:55:19



Wolf Committee to Hold First Meeting
Deschutes County wants to minimize livestock losses

Deschutes County's newly established Wolf Depredation Compensation and Financial Assistance Committee will hold its first meeting on Monday, June 26, from 6 to 8 p.m. at the Deschutes Services Building in downtown Bend, Oregon.

The committee will focus on preventing and reducing conflict related to the presence of wolves by making recommendations to the Deschutes County Board of Commissioners on grant applications to the State’s Wolf Depredation Compensation and Financial Assistance Grant Program.

This grant program complements and supports Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife’s Wolf Conservation and Management Plan by working to proactively minimize wolf-livestock conflict and assist livestock producers experiencing wolf-related livestock losses.

Through this grant program, the state provides pass-through grants to counties to establish and implement county wolf depredation compensation and financial assistance programs.

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The grant funds can be awarded for compensation to residents whose livestock or working dogs are injured or killed by wolves. They can also be used to provide assistance to residents who implement preventative or nonlethal wolf deterrence efforts.

The Deschutes Board of County Commissioners has appointed five members to the committee, including:

Owners or managers of livestock: Supporters of Wolf Conservation and Coexistence with Wolves: County Commissioner: For more information, you can email Jen Patterson, the Strategic Initiatives Manager, or visit the Wolf Depredation Compensation and Financial Assistance Committee website.


--Ben Fisher

Post Date: 2023-06-19 16:20:31Last Update: 2023-06-19 19:32:17



Oregon Proposes Funding For 9-8-8 Suicide Hotline
Proposed 9-8-8 tax highest in nation

The Oregon budget was used as an excuse to end the Senate walkout, but it is a baseless excuse since the legislature technically had until September 2023 to get the state budget passed. The budget is bloated with new expenditures that will potentially boomerang when Oregon’s revenues catch up with the economy.

One of those new expenditure bills is HB 2757, which provides funding for a coordinated crisis services system including improving and maintaining the 9-8-8 suicide prevention and behavioral health crisis hotline.

Who wouldn’t support a suicide and health crisis hotline? But there is something troubling about how the sponsors, Representatives Tawna Sanchez (D-N Portland) and Rob Nosse (D-Portland) are using the bill to overcharge 13 times what is actually needed. The proposed funding is $0.50/line/month for the biennium = $68,520,000 where what is needed is $5,000,000, which is $0.0346/line/month. It’s the highest charge of any state, and 44 states have no phone tax for 9-8-8 services.

Oregon Business and Industry points to the unstructured and open-ended system for the large amount of revenues raised. “We understand that if this bill were to pass, Oregon’s 9-8-8 crisis intervention tax would be the highest in the nation. As such, legislators should clearly understand the need for this level of taxation, or conversely, if a successful 9-8-8 program could be administrated at a more economic funding level.”

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The Oregon Telecommunications Association states their providers adopted the Federal Communications Commission 9-8-8 National Suicide Prevention Hotline and are already in compliance. They question the value and cost of adding an actual response to callers. Currently, 97.11% are resolved by the call counselor. Records show that EMS is contacted 2.56% of the time and a Mobile Crisis Team is contacted 0.33% with calls answered within 15 seconds.

Voters should ask about prior funding: The reason for the bloated funding may be in the Oregon Alliance to Prevent Suicide testimony. “We have a sense of urgency about passage of HB2757 because it is an essential element of our work to save lives and reduce Oregon’s high suicide rate. The national 988 line emerged out of the suicide prevention movement, and has appropriately grown to provide support and stabilization for people in a behavioral health crisis.”

The Oregon Health Authority is to establish an advisory committee to provide primary oversight and direction on operation of statewide coordinated crisis system. The OHA oversight seems to cost $63 million plus federal available funds. Cities establishing a program providing mobile crisis intervention service, must include their own funding in their plan. Since the $0.50 is identified as a “tax,” it takes a three-fifths majority vote to pass.


--Donna Bleiler

Post Date: 2023-06-18 20:19:17Last Update: 2023-06-18 21:31:21



EAB Quarantine Reinstated in Washington County
“North America’s most destructive forest pest”

The Oregon Department of Agriculture (ODA) has reinstated and amended an emerald ash borer (EAB) quarantine in Washington County, prohibiting the movement of tree materials from all ash and white fringe tree plant parts outside the county. The newly adopted temporary quarantine excludes olive trees and is set to expire on November 11, 2023. As data becomes available, ODA will evaluate the need for future quarantines.

This most recent quarantine was amended and replaced the expired quarantine first adopted in June 2022, when ODA first discovered the invasive and destructive EAB in Forest Grove within Washington County.

Due to the continued spread risk, ODA has amended and adopted a new temporary EAB quarantine per Oregon Administrative Rule (OAR 603-052-1070), limiting the movement of ash and white fringe tree materials from Washington County.

The quarantine restricts the movement of several tree materials, including but not limited to logs, green lumber, nursery stock, scion wood, bud wood, chips larger than 1 inch by 1 inch, mulch, stumps, roots, branches, and firewood of hardwood species.

The purpose of the quarantine is to slow the spread of the invasive and destructive EAB.

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Researchers consider the half-inch green, shiny beetle North America’s most destructive forest pest, killing hundreds of millions of ash trees nationwide.

So far, the state has only detected EAB within the city limits of Forest Grove.

EAB is native to Asia. Its larvae burrow into the bark of ash trees, causing canopy dieback and, ultimately, tree death. The beetle is often challenging to detect, especially in newly-infested trees.

Signs of infestation include thinning and yellowing leaves, bark splitting, D-shaped holes in the tree bark, and basal shoots.

ODA is establishing several processing and disposal resources to limit the movement of ash and white fringe tree materials within the quarantine area.

To receive more information on EAB with an up-to-date list of resources, or to report a sighting of EAB, please visit the Oregon Invasive Species Council website.


--Ben Fisher

Post Date: 2023-06-18 18:33:22Last Update: 2023-06-18 18:49:35



Hillsboro Struggles with Land Availability
This process is being driven by Oregon

On July 12, Hillsboro’s Planning Commission will hold a Public Hearing on the 2023 Housing Needs Analysis. Community members are encouraged to attend and provide testimony on this technical analysis. Hillsboro is a growing community with more than 109,000 residents of all ages, incomes, and abilities. The City’s population has increased significantly over the past 20 years, and with it, the need for a variety of housing to meet our community’s diverse needs.

Now the City -- under the leadership of Mayor Steve Callaway -- is looking towards the future and forecasting the community’s housing needs over the next 20 years. These are some of the questions answered by the 2023 Housing Needs Analysis, which aims to help Hillsboro meet the housing needs of its residents.

This process is being driven by Oregon's land use laws which were codified in 1973 in SB 100. At the time, many thought that these regulations were revolutionary and would become a template for the rest of the nation. In hindsight, many experts have concluded that they have exacerbated the housing crisis in Oregon.

According to the city's website, over the past year, the City listened and engaged with a wide-cross section of Hillsboro’s community members to inform the Housing Needs Analysis. The City partnered with community-based organizations to engage Historically Marginalized Communities through focus groups in both English and Spanish speaking receiving valuable insight into housing needs. In addition, a Community Advisory Committee -- made up of a diverse range of community members, housing professionals, and local nonprofits -- was formed to assess whether there is an adequate supply and variety of housing for Hillsboro community members at all income levels.

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Completed in June 2023, the 2023 Housing Needs Analysis looked at the amount of buildable land available for housing and forecasts the need for additional housing units over the next 20 years.

The analysis concluded that by the year 2043: The work in this area will follow the adoption of the Housing Needs Analysis and could include looking at different policy areas such as:
--Staff Reports

Post Date: 2023-06-18 15:04:31Last Update: 2023-06-18 15:36:44



Senator Kim Thatcher Tells Her Side
I cannot in good conscience return this session

On June 15, some Republican Senators made the decision to provide a quorum to the Democrats through negotiations a lot of us disagreed with. To most of us Senate Republicans, it felt like a surrender to the Democrats, especially concerning a few of the most tyrannical bills being negotiated which, ultimately were amended and made less bad. Also, it was good that some terrible bills died per the agreement.

I am expressing my concerns and disappointment that the Democrats were given so much latitude and the Republicans were given so little as outlined in the negotiations. The Democrats only needed one more Republican to attend Floor Session to meet the quorum requirement, and thus, it happened. It was an agonizing decision for all of us— to support returning or not.

Unfortunately, negotiations did not address the outright and ongoing corruption by the Democrats, nor did they adequately address the tyrannical bills. Negotiations did not address the ongoing Constitutional concerns nor the breaking of rules by the Democrats. Until these concerns are adequately addressed, I cannot in good conscience return this session to such blatant misbehavior being implemented by the Democrats to basically let them continue down this road. This needs to stop. Now.

Unfortunately, the improved, but still despotic bills I have been telling you about, moved through the legislative process at lightning speed on June 15 and will now become law. Make no mistake about it, they are still after our children. The Democrats still want total power over every position of government and every role of families in this state. They want every law-abiding citizen disarmed. That’s a definition of tyranny. But there is more to come.

I will continue to work with my constituents, but I cannot support an autocratic Democrat agenda we had a chance to stop. Unfortunately, even as Democrats were handed a gold platter to continue their scheme on the unaware public, they continue to feed Oregonians half truths and bald-faced lies to make their propaganda more believable. The media continues to aid them in this endeavor. I ask myself, why can’t they just tell the truth? Putting a spin on what happened is one thing, but having one’s own set of “facts” is another.

Keep in mind: the Democrat corruption, their money-laundered campaign donations, and their stacks of cash yielded us their majority. Only 1500 votes separated their majority from one of shared power. We would not be in this position, but for their corrupt flow of dirty money.

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This session is not going to be the end of the very caustic long-term agenda of the Democrats. Oh, no. They have much more in mind. They have been taking steps every Session to ultimately reach their goals, all while selling their masked agenda to the unaware public through mainstream media – a convenient arm of the Democrat Party. Now, it is up to the public to search for the truth, the whole truth, on their own. Do not be deceived. Ask questions and then search for real answers. If you’re used to relying on mainstream media, reach out to alternative sources, too, they’re numerous. Their agenda is being pushed at full-speed.

Pay closer attention to the words being said and what is being printed in the way of “information.” Watch for their “buzz” words. Nothing is as it used to be. Definitions have changed and nothing in reality is what they want you to think it is. We’re now in a world of good vs. evil where we’re being told that good is evil and evil is good. Please don’t buy into that.

Thank you for your support and for your kind consideration of what I have shared with you. Have a great Father’s Day!


--Kim Thatcher

Post Date: 2023-06-17 16:01:08Last Update: 2023-06-17 16:09:48



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