On this day, November 22, 1992, A Washington Post story 1st revealed claims by several women that Sen. Bob Packwood, liberal Oregon Republican, had accosted them with unwanted touching and kisses.
Oregon liquor consumers are choosing higher-priced liquor options
Over the course of the past two years, the
Oregon Liquor and Cannabis Commission, under the direction of Marvin Revoal, has provided $620.7 million dollars to cities, counties and public health programs. This funding provides communities and statewide public health and safety programs with vital resources that benefit Oregonians daily and is a key benefit of Oregon's control state model for liquor.
At its regularly scheduled meeting on July 20th, Commissioners received the perspective of Rick Garza, Former Executive Director of the Washington State Liquor and Cannabis Board in a presentation on Washington State. Garza spoke to how in Washington – which formerly operated as a liquor control state prior to 2012 – consumers felt the effects of privatization in terms of higher prices and reduced selection for smaller brands. Garza additionally fielded Commissioners questions on compliance efforts, delivery and operations in the state.
According to the OLCC, Oregon liquor consumers are "buying up" and choosing higher-priced liquor options. This resulted in 2.4 percent increase in revenue over the prior year. This was an increase in profitability for the agency, but notably without an increase in consumer consumption. Information on the agency's budget can be found on the OLCC website.
The city of Portland's
Cannabis Policy Oversight Team, an advisory group within city's Bureau of Development Services, provided the Board of Commissioners with a review of their annual report from 2022. The report focused upon issues facing Portland's cannabis industry as well as a summary of its Cannabis Emergency Relief Fund. Commissioners asked that the city work with the OLCC and industry partners to find consensus on improvements that could benefit the industry overall.
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With the legislative session complete, the Commissioners initiated rulemaking to respond to several bills that passed during the 2023 legislative session. The legislative changes include developing more robust requirements for alcohol delivery to consumers and technical changes to both the marijuana and alcohol programs. Staff will hold advisory committee meetings and public comment periods to allow industry and the public to weigh in on the proposed changes. Commissioners also finalized a relaxation on artificially derived cannabinoids to allow the industry more time to come into line with the requirements.
--Staff ReportsPost Date: 2023-07-23 06:02:30 | Last Update: 2023-07-22 13:55:14 |
The university has a unique geothermal heating and hot water system
Oregon Institute of Technology (Oregon Tech)
have now announced that they have successfully secured $18,160,000 in state bond funding to complete a full renovation of the university’s unique geothermal heating and hot water system at its Klamath Falls campus. This crucial funding will renovate the existing geothermal system that supplies the entire campus. Oregon Tech says that despite routine maintenance, the 60-year-old system was at risk of a full system failure.
In 1964, Oregon Tech relocated to its current location to tap into this valuable resource, which has made the university a leading institution in renewable energy.
“We take pride in our Klamath Falls campus that relies solely on renewable energy for heating, which saves the university over $1.4 million in annual energy costs,†Oregon Tech President Dr. Nagi Naganathan said. “We are grateful for the legislature's bipartisan support and investment in helping Oregon Tech be proactive in renovating our system, as it allows us to continue conserving resources and provides an exceptional teaching and research tool for our faculty and students.â€
Oregon Tech says that the renovation project addresses urgent repairs, identified by a professional engineering firm in June 2022, needed to avoid imminent system failure and maintain life safety standards on campus.
Oregon Tech states that the consequences of a system failure would be catastrophic, causing no heat or hot water on campus, flooding in buildings, and power disruptions. The school insists that maintaining the system and addressing the deficiencies is substantially cheaper than replacing the system using electricity or gas.
“Future generations of students and faculty can look forward to a safe and sustainable learning environment at Oregon Tech for the next 75 years,†added President Naganathan.
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Oregon Tech stated that they deeply appreciate the dedication and tireless efforts of both Representative Emily McIntire (R-Eagle Point) and Representative E. Werner Reschke (R-Klamath Falls), who were crucial in securing the funding.
“As a member of the House Committee on Higher Education and the Joint Ways & Means Subcommittee on Education, I’m proud to have the state’s only polytechnic university in my district,†said Representative McIntire. “This funding will not only keep the heat on for students, it will further research and learning. My biggest thanks to all the stakeholders who worked so hard to get this funding request across the finish line. It is our partnership that makes these happen.â€
“Investing in critical community projects is the right way for the government to return Oregonians’ hard-earned tax dollars. I am pleased to join Representative McIntire in announcing this historic funding for the Oregon Institute of Technology,†said Representative Reschke.
--Ben FisherPost Date: 2023-07-22 14:41:39 | Last Update: 2023-07-22 15:06:15 |
Most voters become registered through this process
Secretary of State Lavonne Griffin-Valade has announced that
minor revisions have been made to the Oregon Motor Voter manual -- for the most part to account for the new software.
The amendment to
OAR 165-005-0170 adopts current revisions to the Oregon Motor Voter Registration Manual. Revisions include changing how information is presented, clarifying the Secretary of State Elections Division information processing, and technical fixes necessary to conform to the new ORVIS (formerly Oregon Votes) centralized voter registration system.
The
Motor Voter Manual is a key part of Oregon's elections process because most voters become registered and have their information updated through this process.
--Staff ReportsPost Date: 2023-07-22 11:12:32 | Last Update: 2023-07-22 11:29:53 |
Serve in your local county government
Clackamas County Commissioners
are seeking interested residents to serve on county Advisory Boards and Commissions (ABCs). These ABCs offer residents the opportunity to become very involved in specific activities and the goals of Clackamas County.
Individuals interested in this opportunity can
apply online or via a paper form that can be obtained from the Public & Government Affairs Department by calling 503-655-8751.
Milwaukie Center Community Advisory Board
The board has three (3) openings, which carry a three-year term. The board is the primary policy advisor regarding the activities and operations of the Milwaukie Community Center.
The Milwaukie Community Center is a North Clackamas Parks and Recreation District (NCPRD) facility. The community center provides programs that address the needs of senior citizens, people with disabilities, and others within NCPRD boundaries.
The board meets on the second Friday of each month at the Milwaukie Community Center. Board members must either live or work within the NCPRD boundaries.
Application deadline is Aug. 2, 2023. For more information, please contact the Milwaukie Community Center
via email or by calling 503-794-8013.
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Enhanced Law Enforcement District Advisory Board
The Board of County Commissioners and Sheriff Angela Brandenburg are seeking seven (7) residents to serve for three-year terms on the Enhanced Law Enforcement Service District Citizen Advisory Board.
The eleven-member advisory board represents the various geographic and demographic interests of the service district. The board assists the Sheriff with identifying public expectations for the district, recommending service priorities, and supporting the Sheriff’s Office outreach functions. The committee meets every 2 months.
The Enhanced Law Enforcement District was approved by Clackamas County voters in November 1994 to increase the level of sheriff’s patrols and meet the increased demand of urban Clackamas County. The district serves the residents in unincorporated Clackamas County within the Urban Growth Boundary (as it existed in 1995), as well as the city of Johnson City.
Interested individuals must live within the unincorporated areas of Clackamas County and within the Enhanced Law Enforcement District. To find out if you live within the District, please call Sarah Comstock
via email or at 503-785-5020. This application deadline is Sept. 13, 2023.
--Ben FisherPost Date: 2023-07-21 16:35:35 | Last Update: 2023-07-21 16:48:34 |
“Their solutions disrespect libertyâ€
The
Sheriff's Office of Sherman County, Oregon has now put out a statement following the recent court ruling on Oregon's controversial gun control Measure 114. Sheriff Brad Lohrey expressed his concern over the absurdity of the recently proposed law.
His statement reads as follows:
Citizens of Sherman County and other supporters,
I would like to thank you all for the support you gave me and my office on resisting Measure 114.
Measure 114 is an attack on one of our most beloved civil liberties, the right to keep and bear arms.
It is
an attack on our ability to defend ourselves and our communities. Sherman County had the wisdom to
vote an overwhelming 89% NO on this measure. However, a slight majority in the State of Oregon didn't
feel the same way and they voted to take away the rights of the minority and surrender their own.
Disgraceful.
As you likely know, I and others took the fight to Federal Court because this measure is clearly
unconstitutional and it should not become law. After my team and I battled in Federal Court, U.S. District
Judge Karin Immergut ruled against us on July 14th.
Judge Immergut ruled that the ban on the sale or manufacture of large-capacity magazines and the
requirement for a permit to purchase a gun are both constitutional. The existing case law from the U.S.
Supreme Court and both the State and Federal Constitutions are plainly worded and any reasonable
reading of these documents would show how the Judge is clearly wrong.
Here is the thing, there a are a lot of people out there that don't care what these documents say. They have
an agenda and they are not comfortable with citizens exercising firearm rights. They want barriers to
these rights. I'm sure they think they are protecting children and making their communities safer, but they
are completely wrong and their solutions tend to also make it harder, or not even possible, for law-abiding
citizens to defend themselves. Their solutions disrespect liberty.
While the measure is not in effect yet due to another lawsuit, I wouldn't be surprised if the pattern of
rights violations continues. Unless there are some serious changes to how the measure is written, there
is no way a permit can or will be issued. Even if I wanted to comply with the measure, the logistics and
process make it impossible. You won't be able to buy a in gun in Oregon (at least legally) and you will have
to worry about how many bullets you carry in your magazines (if you worry about unconstitutional laws).
I want to thank the following law enforcement leaders that cared enough to fight Measure 114 that they
actually joined the lawsuit: Sheriff Cody Bowen, Sheriff Terry Rowen, Sheriff Brian Pixley, and Sheriff Brian
Wolfe (retired). These gentlemen are true patriots that support the communities they serve.
A huge shout out to Kevin Starrett with Oregon Firearms Federation, who lead the charge. Attorneys
Leonard W. Williamson and Stephen Joncus, and all the other attorneys on the team, did a great job. This
fight is not over and there will be an appeal. Rest assured, we will not surrender our freedoms.
Sheriff Brad Lohrey
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Attorney James L. Buchal has filed notice to appeal the recent ruling in U.S. District Court in Portland on behalf of the gun rights groups.
The Sherman County Sheriff is responsible for maintaining the peace within the county and is directly accountable to the people.
Sherman County lies between the deep canyons of the John Day River on the east and the Deschutes River on the west in north central Oregon.
--Staff ReportsPost Date: 2023-07-19 19:09:17 | Last Update: 2023-07-19 19:34:34 |
Oregon State researchers say they are developing new technology
Researchers in the Oregon State University College of Engineering
now say they are developing technology to convert wastewater into a product that would simultaneously irrigate and fertilize crops.
The three-year project led by Xue Jin, assistant professor of environmental engineering, will be supported by $750,000 in funding from the U.S. Department of Agriculture and will involve partnerships with farmers, wastewater treatment plants and USDA scientists.
“Agricultural activity accounts for 70% of all available freshwater,†Jin said. “Worldwide, demand for food production continues to grow along with the population. As droughts become more frequent and severe, there is a critical need for effective treatment technologies that provide safe reclaimed water for agricultural irrigation.â€
The project also aims to reduce reliance on chemical fertilizers, which are produced by mining and manufacturing processes that consume limited natural resources and create significant environmental impacts. Further impacts occur after fertilizers are applied to fields.
“Fertilizer runoff is a major source of pollution for surface water,†Jin said. “This results in algal blooms that contaminate drinking water sources and produce further harmful ecological effects downstream.â€
The researchers are developing a two-stage, hybrid membrane filtration technology to treat the murky liquid discharge from anaerobic digesters, a type of bioreactor used in water treatment plants and on some larger farms. The digesters rely on bacteria to break down organic matter in the absence of oxygen.
In the first stage, an electrically charged membrane attracts ions such as ammonium, phosphorus and potassium and concentrates them into a fertilizer-rich brine. In the second stage, a forward-osmosis membrane removes contaminants such as bacteria, and the bacteria-free water is then recombined with the brine to produce a nutrient-enhanced solution that can be applied to crops.
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“In laboratory-scale testing, we were able to recover 80% of the water,†said Quang Ngoc Tran, a graduate student who has been a key participant in the research. “When the technology is scaled up with optimal operating conditions, that number could go even higher. The output is basically pure water, with a little bit of dissolved salts that are the plant nutrients.â€
Tala Navab-Daneshmand, an associate professor of environmental engineering at Oregon State, and David Bryla, a research horticulturist with the USDA Agricultural Research Service in Corvallis, will conduct greenhouse studies to evaluate both the effectiveness of the treated water in plant growth and the biosafety of the resulting crops.
OSU says the team will also perform economic feasibility studies. Jin says the technology could potentially be deployed directly on farms that operate their own anaerobic digesters, or even on high-tech vertical farms situated adjacent to municipal treatment plants. Vertical farming refers to growing crops in stacked layers rather than just using the ground.
“We are examining multiple prospective use-case scenarios,†Jin said. “The fiscal impacts of this technology will prove to be a key consideration in whether it becomes widely adopted. The goal is to make agriculture more sustainable not just environmentally but economically as well. If we can develop an affordable system that will effectively reduce the costs of crop production, that could be very attractive to farmers.â€
--Keith HautalaPost Date: 2023-07-18 19:12:50 | Last Update: 2023-07-18 21:43:12 |
Oregon Senate Republicans: Consequences of Oregon Democrats’ soft-on-crime agenda
Willamette Week has broken news that Jesse Lee Calhoun, one of over 1,000 criminals former Governor Kate Brown let out of prison early, is a suspect in the killing of at least four women found dead this year around the Portland metro area.
Senate Republican Leader Tim Knopp (R-Bend) released the following statement:
“Even after leaving public office as America’s most unpopular governor, Kate Brown’s legacy continues to have dire consequences for Oregonians. If Jesse Lee Calhoun is found guilty of these murders, Kate Brown will have signed the death warrants of four innocent women in the name of ‘second chances’.
“Oregon Democrats have a pathetic record of putting criminals over victims and patting themselves on the back for it. We have not forgotten that the Democrat majority stayed totally silent while Governor Brown issued a record number of commutations and pardons for drug dealers, murderers, rapists, and other violent offenders like Calhoun. This is disgraceful.
“On behalf of all Oregonians, we demand that Democrat leaders govern to protect–not jeopardize–the lives of Oregonians by holding criminals accountable and allowing law enforcement to keep us safe. Our hearts go out to the victims’ families, and we pray for healing in the years to come. The perpetrator must be fully held accountable.â€
Governor Brown, whose words have come back to haunt,
had this to say about clemency:
“If you are confident that you can keep people safe, you’ve given victims the opportunity to have their voices heard, and made sure their concerns are addressed, and individuals have gone through an extensive amount of rehabilitation and shown accountability, what is the point of continuing to incarcerate someone, other than retribution?â€
The Oregon Senate Caucus asks, rhetorically, "Are you still as confident as you were then, Governor?"
--Staff ReportsPost Date: 2023-07-18 16:09:52 | Last Update: 2023-07-18 16:23:29 |
They say it will provide long term savings
After several months, the City of Eugene
has completed its purchase of the former Eugene Water & Electric Board (EWEB) headquarters site at the downtown Eugene riverfront to be transformed into
Eugene’s new City Hall. City Manager Sarah Medary and EWEB General Manager Frank Lawson signed closing documents and officially handed over the site keys on Tuesday.
“This is an exciting day and step for Eugene!†said City Manager Sarah Medary. “After more than a decade without a City Hall, it feels very good to say that we’ve finalized this purchase in a location that builds on our great history and relationship with EWEB, connects our downtown to the Willamette River and uses City funds responsibly.â€
“We’re glad that the City of Eugene is buying EWEB’s former riverfront headquarters site to maintain this location as a space for the community,†said EWEB General Manager Frank Lawson. “EWEB and the City have always had a positive and productive relationship, and we’re grateful to staff in both organizations for all the work they’ve done to make this sale happen. In short, selling the site to the City aligned with EWEB’s core values and serves our customers well.â€
The new City Hall site is located at 500 E. 4th Ave. in Eugene. The city says it will establish a place for civic and community engagement, a public space on the river, increase ease of access to City services and provide long term savings to the community.
Several offices from within the Central Services Department, including the City Manager’s Office, will relocate to the new site first. An exact timeline and list of offices has not yet been finalized.
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City Hall offices are expected to open to the community in early 2024. As part of the sale, EWEB will be able to maintain about 1,000 square feet of shared public-facing space where customers can make an appointment to conduct EWEB business.
The Eugene City Council voted 7-1 approving proposed terms and details for the City of Eugene to purchase the former headquarters site of the Eugene Water and Electric Board (EWEB) at its January 30 Special Meeting.
The City of Eugene says that the purchase will provide space for an accessible City Hall while retaining public ownership of a valuable public building space along the river for better access and service to the community.
The terms of the deal include the 4.4-acre property, which includes two buildings and parking lots, for $12 million.
The Mayor of Eugene is
Lucy Vinis.
--Bruce ArmstrongPost Date: 2023-07-16 14:06:34 | Last Update: 2023-07-16 14:19:45 |
New agency created for early learning and child care
The State of Oregon
has announced that they have now created a brand new state agency to oversee programs and services related to early learning and care throughout Oregon. The Department of Early Learning is now operational and they have provided
the link for their new website.
“This is an historic step to ensure Oregon’s families and child care professionals get the resources, services, and programs they need to thrive,†said Alyssa Chatterjee, DELC Director. â€It positions our state as a leader in the early learning space. We know accessing child care is still a challenge for families, and our child care workers are facing multiple stressors. The launch of DELC is a milestone for our state, recognizing the importance of early learning and child care for Oregonians
The Oregon Legislature passed
House Bill 3073 in 2021, heralding the transition towards the launch of DELC.
DELC says that the agency brings together the Early Learning Division (ELD) and Employment Related Day Care (ERDC) program. ELD was a division of the Oregon Department of Education (ODE), and Employment Related Day Care (ERDC) was a program of the Oregon Department of Human Services (ODHS).
“The best way to support whole communities is to serve the needs of children and families. Bringing ERDC into DELC allows us to center the needs of children and families first and foremost. DELC is in the opportune position to work with families and providers, and design systems built for and with them†said Chatterjee.
Certain ERDC changes also take effect as of July 1. Families can now receive cash assistance from Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) and get help paying for child care from ERDC at the same time.
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The State says that the current TANF child care program will end because ERDC will provide those families more flexible child care assistance.
The State also says there will be fewer reasons for child care assistance to end mid-certification. They say most cases will now stay open a minimum of 12 months. Cases will no longer close if a family is not connected to a child care provider.
ERDC benefits will now supposedly continue if a caretaker loses their job or stops attending school.
Early Learning Division (ELD) staff will transition from ODE to DELC and the ERDC program and staff (including the Direct Pay Unit) will transition from ODHS to DELC.
“DELC Is honored to support Oregon families and child care professionals through this unified agency. We thank our partners, supporters, child care professionals, and families for being part of the work to make Oregon’s early learning and care system as strong as possible. We are committed to continue working together to best meet the needs of children, families, and child care professionals across the state,†said Chatterjee.
--Ben FisherPost Date: 2023-07-15 19:15:07 | Last Update: 2023-07-15 19:39:46 |
The decision will almost certainly be appealed to the 9th Circuit
Late on a Friday afternoon, on a hot summer day, Judge Karin Immergut of the Oregon District of US Circuit Court handed down a long-anticipated
decision on Ballot Measure 114 -- which bans "large capacity magazines" and requires citizens to acquire a permit to acquire a firearm. The decision will almost certainly be appealed to the 9th Circuit.
During the trial several witnesses pointed out that the ban is actually on virtually all ammunition magazines because most can easily be converted to hold more than 10 rounds no matter how many they held when they came from the factory. Adam Johnson, a firearm’s dealer and defensive tactics instructor, pointed out that these modification can be done with nothing more than a screwdriver or pointed object. Immergut ruled that it was not her court’s responsibility to address that saying "Whether a ten-round magazine with the baseplate removed would violate BM 114 is not for this Court to decide. This Court need not parse every potential hypothetical scenario to find what is generally prohibited under BM 114."
As many predicted, it upheld the legality of Measure 114. The Measure passed in the November 2022 with 975,862 yes votes and 950,891 no votes, a margin of 50.65% to 49.35% -- hardly a landslide in anyone's book.
According to some, Judge Immergut, a Trump appointee, shows a lack of first-hand knowledge of firearms. Ballot Measure 114 defines a Large Capacity Magazine as "Magazines over 10 rounds or readily modifiable to exceed 10 rounds." A study done by the
Policing Institute revealed that in 1,180 officer involved shootings, police fired an average of 7.59 rounds and often exceeded 10 rounds. Though the ban doesn't apply to law enforcement, it shows that firing multiple rounds is not uncommon, even for trained law enforcement.
Immergut also appears to have completely ignored the Supreme Court’s direction in the landmark case
NYSRPA vs Bruen, where they rejected the “two-part†analysis of gun laws, essentially saying that if a law violates the Second Amendment, it is unconstitutional period and the state’s “public safety interest†cannot be considered.
In her decision Immergut wrote "Defendants’ public safety interest in regulating LCMs is a legitimate legislative purpose. As discussed above, Defendants set forth evidence showing that LCMs are frequently used in the commission of mass shootings and that the use of LCMs in mass shootings increases the lethality of these events.â€
Immergut also dismissed the plaintiff’s concerns that because of the way BM 114 was crafted, it is actually impossible to comply with. She wrote in a footnote: " Plaintiffs essentially argue that when BM 114 is implemented, it will operate in such a way that individuals will be unable to receive a permit, due to lack of funding, bureaucratic disorganization, and the refusal of the FBI to process background checks. As this Court has previously held, this evidence goes to Plaintiffs’ unripe as-applied challenge, not their facial challenge. Speculation about how BM 114 might be implemented in the future—including whether the FBI’s refusal to process background checks will in practice prohibit a permitting agent from issuing a permit—is irrelevant to a facial challenge, which looks only at the language of the statute.â€
Immergut’s ruling would require that completely new lawsuits would have to be initiated after people attempt to get "permit to purchase" permits and are denied because, as Sherman County Sheriff Brad Lohrey pointed out in his testimony, it is impossible for him issue permits under the measure’s requirements.
Judge Immergut doesn't see a problem with the restriction.
The Supreme Court has held that Second Amendment protects an individual right to self defense inside and outside of the home. Large Capacity Magazines are not commonly used for self-defense, and are therefore not protected by the Second Amendment. Even if LCMs are protected by the Second Amendment, BM 114’s restrictions are consistent with this Nation’s history and tradition of regulating uniquely dangerous features of weapons and firearms to protect public safety. This Court accordingly enters judgment in favor of Defendants and Intervenor-Defendant on
Plaintiffs’ Second Amendment challenge to BM 114’s LCM restrictions.
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Oregon Firearms Federation Director Kevin Starrett was critical of the decision, saying, "What we have read defies belief. While not entirely unexpected, Immergut’s ruling is simple nonsense and sure to be overturned at the 9th circuit. When faced with the clear and undeniable issues about all magazines being banned and the permit system being completely unworkable, she essentially said 'not my problem.'"
--Staff ReportsPost Date: 2023-07-15 11:07:46 | Last Update: 2023-07-16 12:41:07 |
The objection period will be open until August 28
The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Forest Service
has now announced the availability of the draft decision notice, environmental assessment, and comprehensive plan to start the objection period for the Pacific Northwest National Scenic Trail Comprehensive Plan.
The comprehensive plan is a key document that will guide the development of the nonmotorized trail throughout its entire length, from the Continental Divide to the Pacific Ocean.
The Forest Service gathered public input on key content in the plan and environmental analysis during a scoping comment period from September 29 to November 14, 2022, and a draft comprehensive plan and environmental assessment public comment period from March 17 to April 17, 2023. The documents have been updated to address comments received during these comment periods.
The Pacific Northwest National Scenic Trail is a 1,200-mile hiking trail that starts in
Glacier National Park in Montana, crosses through northern Idaho, and finishes in
Olympic National Park in Washington.
Currently, about a third of the trail is on roads, and some portions in remote areas require bushwhacking with no trail.
It was designated by Congress as part of the
National Trails System in 2009.
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The Forest Service says that while the comprehensive plan would only be binding on the Forest Service and other federal land management agencies, the plan aims to provide a guide for local, state, federal, and tribal land managers to develop the trail and preserve its natural beauty. They hope to complete the plan by late 2023.
During the objection period, the Forest Service says they will accept objections from those who submitted specific written comments regarding the proposed project during the scoping comment period or the draft comprehensive plan and environmental assessment public comment period.
The Forest Service says that this input will be used to help shape the future of the Pacific Northwest National Scenic Trail.
The objection period will be open from July 14 to August 28, 2023.
Those interested can find more information on the
Pacific Northwest National Scenic Trail Comprehensive Plan website.
--Ben FisherPost Date: 2023-07-14 14:14:12 | Last Update: 2023-07-14 17:24:07 |
Parts of the bill have already been found to be unconstitutional
Aovernor Tina Kotek has signed
HB 2005 into law. The new law tries to prohibit so-called "ghost guns" that have parts that don't bear a serial number. Legal sources think that this includes currently held firearms, which makes an unknown number of Oregon citizens instant felons.
The use of "ghost guns" in crimes has been the subject of much discussion and peddling of questionable statistics. According the the
Washington Times they are rarely used in crimes. "In Chicago, for example, only 139 out of the 11,258 firearms seized last year -- roughly 1.2% -- were ghost guns. That number, however, represents a 93% increase from the 72 ghost guns seized in 2019. Philadelphia police in 2019 seized 95 ghost guns, accounting for 2.2% of the 4,264 guns they confiscated. In 2018, Philadelphia police confiscated 13 ghost guns."
According to sources, federal officials don't make a distinction between personally manufactured firearms -- which don't have a serial number and never needed them -- and commercially manufactured firearms which have had the serial number removed. "Ghost guns" would only be a subset of these statistics.
Senator James Manning lauded the bill, saying, “After years of work, my colleagues and I also took action on ghost guns with
HB 2005. Ghost guns are unserialized and undetectable, making them the gun of choice for gun traffickers, violent criminals, and people legally prohibited from buying firearms.â€
Oregon Firearms Federation Director Kevin Starrett raised expectations for House Republicans, who have pledged $25,000 to fight this legislation in court. "Now is the time for the House Republicans to put their money where their mouths were. This is totally on them and we fully expect them to keep their word. They have made a pledge, they helped the bill pass by showing up when they could have walked out. The ball is in their court."
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Representative Tracy Cramer (R-Woodburn) pointed out that "
HB 2005 restricts the rights of law-abiding citizens to defend themselves in public spaces. Those who are most vulnerable to being harmed by violent crime are the ones who need this right the most. Those are my constituents. Yet,
HB 2005 unconstitutionally restricts when and where they can protect themselves with a firearm."
--Staff ReportsPost Date: 2023-07-14 09:42:23 | Last Update: 2023-07-15 21:03:18 |
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