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.
Reminding Oregonians to be informed and prepared for emergencies and disasters
September is National Preparedness Month. It is an observance each September to raise awareness about the importance of preparing for disasters and emergencies that could happen at any time. The Oregon Department of Emergency Management is urging Oregonians to take steps to be prepared.
“Disasters can happen anywhere without warning, so it’s imperative Oregonians take active steps to
prepare in advance,†said Oregon Department of Emergency Management (ODEM) Interim Director Matt
Garrett. “Sit down with your household and talk about what you’d do if you lost electricity, water, internet
and phone service for weeks – that’s how long it could take for help to reach you if transportation routes
are blocked. Being prepared helps ensure you and your loved ones can survive.â€
ODEM urges every Oregonian to practice preparedness by having an emergency plan and enough food,
water and necessary supplies for everyone in the household, including pets, to survive for at least two
weeks following any large-scale disaster. The
Ready.gov website offers a few ideas.
Be Informed
- Visit the ODEM Emergency Alert website to sign up or update your contact information to receive local emergency alerts.
- Enable Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEA) on your mobile phone.
- Understand Oregon's evacuation levels and know the evacuation routes in your area.
- Find the websites for your county emergency management, sheriff's office, or tribal police and
follow them on social media to stay up to date during quickly changing emergencies.
Have a Plan
- Develop an emergency plan that covers sheltering, evacuating, communicating and reconnecting.
- Discuss the plan with your household, loved ones, friends and neighbors.
- Practice the plan so you'll be ready when a disaster occurs.
- Establish a list of important contacts and a safe place for everyone to meet if separated during an
emergency.
- Identify multiple evacuation routes from home, work or school and plan for transportation needs.
- Plan for pets and livestock.
- Talk to your neighbors about sharing supplies and who might need extra help.
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Build a Kit
- Gather two weeks' worth of food, water and critical supplies for each person and pet, including
food, water, medication, flashlights, extra batteries, phone chargers and more. Visit the Ready.gov website or the American Red Cross website for ideas.
- Make copies of important documents you’d need to get your life back on track after a disaster; scan
or take photos of this information and store it in a password-protected online drive or on a flash
drive in a waterproof container and keep it with your emergency kit.
- Keep your supplies in an easy-to-carry backpack, bucket or bag that you can use at home or take
with you in an emergency.
- Everyone's kit will look different. There’s no one correct way to put together two weeks' worth of
supplies since everyone has different needs.
ODEM advises
older adults,
people with disabilities and caregivers to consider individual circumstances and
specific needs when planning for emergencies and create a support network of people who can help during
a disaster.
ODEM is partnering with several local, state and federal partners to message National Preparedness Month
throughout September.
--Ben FisherPost Date: 2023-09-03 15:16:43 | Last Update: 2023-09-03 16:13:39 |
“Civil libertarians are troubled by these statistics”
The Audits Division of the Oregon Secretary of State's office, under the leadership of Audit Director Kip Memmott has produced a report entitled, "
An Advisory Report on how Increased Awareness and Training Could Enhance the Effectiveness of Oregon’s Extreme Risk Protection Order Law." Ordinarily, the Audits Division focuses on audits of state agencies, but according to the report, they "chose not to follow [their] traditional audit process because there is not a single state agency responsible for administering Oregon’s ERPO law."
Oregon’s extreme risk protection order law, commonly referred to as a “red flag†law, has been in effect since 2018. According to the report, "the law is intended to reduce incidents of gun violence and suicide through a civil court order that helps prevent individuals at risk from hurting themselves or others from having access to deadly weapons. ERPOs can be requested by family or household members or by law enforcement." The order is produced through an "
ex parte" hearing in which the subject of the hearing is not present and may not even have knowledge of the hearing.
The report asks, then answers 5 questions about the law:
- What is Oregon’s ERPO law and how does it work?
- What state and local entities are involved in the process and what is their role?
- How is Oregon’s ERPO law being used and is it working as intended?
- How does Oregon’s ERPO law compare to best practices and similar laws in other states?
- What resources are available to law enforcement and the public to learn more about Oregon’s ERPO law?
In 2017, the Oregon Legislature passed
SB 719, which created the "Extreme Risk Protection Order" process. According to the report, In the first four and a half years the law was active, a total of 564 ERPOs were requested with 440, or 78%, being granted an
ex parte order issued by a judge. Washington County has the most ERPO petitions with 94. Deschutes was second with 78 and Multnomah and Clackamas completed the top 4 with 70 and 60 respectively. Though it only had 8 ERPO petitions, tiny Lake County had the highest per-capita with 99.1 petitions per 100,000 residents. Josephine County's 45 petitions came in second with 52.0 per 100,000 residents.
Critics of the law cite its lack of due process. During legislative hearings on the bill in 2017,Philip Watson of the Firearms Policy Coalition
described SB 719 as "a measure that would create a process for secretly obtaining 'extreme risk protection orders'. These orders will lead to the confiscation of firearms from unaware Oregonians who are not allowed to confront their accusers nor avail themselves of the protected right of due process."
Kevin Starrett, Executive Director of Oregon Firearms Federation, pointed out that among the justifications for an ERPO are the use of
legal marijuana, or the recent
legal purchase of a firearm. He also noted that when a person is the recipient of an ERPO they are presumed guilty and must prove their innocence at their own expense. "If a licensed mental health professional examines them and declares them mentally fit and not a danger, the are not allowed to use that assessment to defend themselves. Furthermore," he noted “a person who loses his rights and property under and ERPO has not only not been convicted of a crime, they have not even been accused of one.â€
Starret concluded, "The “audit†was not even an official one since it did not meet the Secretary of State’s own qualifications."
The one reference in the report to due process almost treats due process as a stumbling block. The report says,
"While the time related difficulties associated with the ERPO process likely present a barrier for some people in Oregon, they are largely unavoidable because of due process rights. Due process is a fundamental right ensuring fairness and equal treatment in legal matters. For ERPOs this means ensuring that the accused have an opportunity to confront adverse witnesses, be heard before an impartial judge, know opposing evidence, and to present their own evidence at a hearing. Any effort to lessen the impact of the time tax on ERPO processes and proceedings will need to be implemented in a way that ensures the due process rights of ERPO respondents."
The report discusses the risks driving the petitions. "Of the 93 ERPO petitions examined, they found more than 70% of petitions involved respondents with a history of suicidality or reported risk of interpersonal violence, with more than half reported as having a history or risk of both. Researchers also found more than half of the cases were related to threats made within a week of filing the petition, indicating ERPOs were being used in times of immediate crisis. Researchers ultimately concluded ERPOs in Oregon were overwhelmingly being used as intended."
Civil libertarians are troubled by these statistics. One former legislator who voted against
SB 719 asks, "If 78% of the petitions are granted and 70% are "at risk" of suicide or violence, why were the remaining 8% approved? What criteria was used for 'at risk'? One can only assume that the broadest possible criteria were used for 'at risk'"
"What's most troubling about the report is that it fails to acknowledge the rights of firearm owners," the former legislator continued. "It also makes the classic big-government mistake by assuming that all ERPOs are a good thing and that we need more of them. The report claims to have 'undergone the regular quality assurance process,' but it's hard to trust a report that was generated by cheerleaders."
--Staff ReportsPost Date: 2023-09-02 10:43:34 | Last Update: 2023-09-16 16:25:11 |
The demise of Oregon elections
In the wake of President Trump’s fourth indictment on election interference, Mike Lindell hosted the Election Crime Bureau Summit to introduce a plan to help states get back to paper ballots and hand counting ballots. Lindell has data proving that in every state the voting machines are accessed by cell phone that connects to the tabulators. However, the courts have silenced him, so his new plan is a method for states to collect evidence of machine abnormalities in every county that the court can’t refuse. Every state was represented presenting what they are doing to accomplish the goal.
Over 20 Oregonians attended hoping to bring the Lindell plan to Oregon. Janice Dysinger, Oregonians for Fair Elections, and Marc Thielman, Oregon Battleground,
presented for Oregon.
Dysinger explains that even though Oregon is low on accomplishments, we have a law that allows counties to choose to hand count ballots.
ORS 254.485 (1)
Ballots may be tallied by a vote tally system or by a counting board. A counting board may tally ballots at the precinct or in the office of the county clerk. In any event, the ballots shall be tallied and returned by precinct.
The Oregon Constitution supports precinct voting in Article II, Section 17.
Place of voting. All qualified electors shall vote in the election precinct in the County where they may reside, for County Officers, and in any County in the State for State Officers, or in any County of a Congressional District in which such electors may reside, for Members of Congress.—
Oregon started with one day precinct voting requiring voter identification, which required a social security number as proof of citizenship and proof of Oregon residence. In 2020, The Election Law Journal published a
study stating, “We learn that Oregon, which has one of the most progressive automatic voter registration processes and mail-in voting, maintains the first position as the easiest state in which to vote.†In ease of registration, Oregon and Alaska score zero “go[ing] out of their way to find and keep citizens registered when they change addresses.â€
An onslaught of Oregon election “easy†laws demolished Oregon politically beginning in the 80s when Vote by Mail was experimental. Then in January 1996, Oregon became the first state to conduct a general election totally by mail.
Since that time, Dysinger says voters have hit the easy button forgoing accountability and choosing to hit the easy button for ease of registration, ease of voting, choosing not to clean voter rolls, and sadly ease of cheating.
On every national voting website, it states under Oregon – no document needed to vote. When
registering to vote, voters must provide their driver's license number or state ID card number. If voters cannot provide this information, they can submit a paycheck stub, utility bill, bank statement, valid photo identification, or an acceptable government document.
Oregon hasn’t prosecuted an election fraud case since the 2016 election when the Secretary of State forwarded 56 cases to the Oregon Department of Justice. Most were involved in casting duplicate ballots. Ten pleaded guilty that represented a broad spectrum including four Democrats, one Republican, one Libertarian and four not affiliated with a political party. None resulted in jail time. The maximum penalty was $1,000. The remainder were referred back to the Oregon Secretary of State’s office that were not pursued for civil violations.
That same year, Maguel Robleto, Proprietor of the Department of Motor Education, was convicted for the biggest
ID fraud case in history helping over 80,000 Illegal Aliens get a driver’s license. Eight of 12 suspects were convicted (some to be deported after time served) and Robleto let go of a $500,000 home and $400,000 in the bank. The Robleto Brothers' business helped undocumented establish new ID and get voter registration cards without any ID. This was done by purchasing an envelope with an address on it for proof of residence to get an ID card and voter registration.
The outcome was that the Secretary of State and 14 agencies traveled the state to issue government ID cards to legal immigrants before the Governor called a halt. But ORS 260.695 allows a person to return a ballot on behalf of another voter and may set out a collection box if marked unofficial. The Robleto case started a big easing in voter laws.
HB 2177 Oregon Legislature passed Automatic Voter registration through the DMV in 2015.
HB3464 prohibits public bodies from disclosing specified information concerning a person unless required by state or federal law. Passed in 2017 This was primarily about citizenship.
SB 802 allows16-year-olds to register to vote but they cannot vote until they are 18, passed June of 2017
SB 870 passed National Popular Vote Compact, passed May 2019.
HB 2681 prevents inactive voters from being removed from the voter rolls, passed June 2021.
HB 3291 allows late ballots by mail to be counted 7 days post-election day, passed July 2021.
HB 4133 allowed last 4 digits of Social Security number for online voter registration, passed March 2022.
HB 2107 expanded Oregon’s Automatic Voter Registration system to the Oregon Health Plan to register users of that system to be automatically registered as voter, passed June 2023.
SB 166 claims to protect voter privacy, but it prevents observers from getting the ballot images to discover fraud and could make the cast vote record cost up to $700,000 in some counties. The ballot is a public document and voters signing their ballot voluntarily disclose their identity.
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A
Rasmussen poll shows that the results of these laws, people are losing confidence in our elections. That is the basis for Marc Thielman’s lawsuit, Thielman v. Fagan, to show that people are disenfranchised and have lost confidence in elections. His remedy is to go back to one-day voting, presenting ID, signature matching, and count ballots by hand.
In the days following Lindell’s summit, the Republican National Committee (RNC) passed 10 new resolutions calling for the protection of our elections, and the end of voting manipulation schemes! “This ‘Return to Excellence in American Voting’ is power-packed and we could not have asked for anything more,†Lindell stated.
A few RNC highlights:
- The RNC will support Paper Ballot, hand count, single day, precinct level, voter ID elections!
- No more expanded time periods for early or vote-by-mail -- which have turned Election Day into a never-ending election season.
- The RNC supports voter ID laws and calls on states to pass laws to ensure every voter is verified to be the actual voter!
- States and counties will be supported as they move away from easily manipulated electronic voting machines!
- No more unwatched, pop-up ballot drop boxes!
- No paid-for, ballot harvesting system.
If you’re interested in helping your county, contact
Clean Voter Rolls, or sign a county declaration at
Voter's Declaration of Independence From Voting Machines.
--Donna BleilerPost Date: 2023-09-02 01:02:21 | Last Update: 2023-09-02 20:01:45 |
The disgraced former Secretary of State has been quietly paying back her campaign
Former Oregon Secretary of State Shemia Fagan is under investigation by the Oregon Government Ethics Commission for possible violations concerning her handling of expenditures and possible violations of
ORS 244.040(1) and ORS 244.120(2).
On August 11, OGEC concluded a
Preliminary Review and moved to do a full investigation. At issue is Fagan's use of state money used for travel and lodging for her romantic partner, children and pets. The preliminary report also questions whether, "On a number of occasions, Ms. Fagan submitted reimbursement requests to the Secretary of State's Office, but available information appears to show that she may have submitted the same or similar requests for reimbursement or payment by her campaign funds, or by sponsoring entities such as the National Lieutenant Governors Association."
The complaint was filed by former State Representative Julie Parrish on June 13, 2023. On July 1 -- just two and a half weeks later -- Fagan made a
payment to her campaign PAC for $1,573.33 described as "reimbursement of personal expenditure funds," possibly in an attempt to do damage control.
Fagan is already facing an
ethics investigation by OGEC that led to her resignation as Secretary of State on May 8 of this year.
The Oregon Secretary of State is paid $77,000 per year.
--Staff ReportsPost Date: 2023-09-01 10:37:50 | Last Update: 2023-09-01 11:21:15 |
Key changes and investments impacting education
During Oregon’s 2023 Legislative Session, lawmakers made several key changes and investments that will make a positive impact for Oregon students, teachers, school faculty, and parents in the upcoming school year and beyond. These include record investments in school funding and early literacy programs, initiatives to support educators and solve the substitute teacher shortage, upgrades for healthier school ventilation systems, new school safety measures, protections for students with disabilities, and more.
“By investing in our schools and students, we’re investing in Oregon’s future,†said Representative Courtney Neron (D - Wilsonville, Sherwood, King City, Tigard/Bull Mountain & Parrett Mountain), chair of the House Education Committee. “From stable school funding and support for our educator workforces to school safety, the actions we took this session are going to set our students up for success for years to come.â€
K-12 School Funding -
HB 5015 makes a historic $10.2 billion investment in the K-12 State School Fund for the 2023-2025 biennium, nearly $1 billion higher than the current service level. When paired with local property tax revenues, total resources for K-12 schools for this biennium reach an unprecedented $15.3 billion. The State School Fund is the primary funding source for the general operations of school districts and education service districts, paying for a range of needs, including teacher salaries, textbooks, school supplies, desks, and building maintenance. These 197 districts serve more than 552,000 Oregon students in K-12 schools.
Cleaner Air, Heating and Cooling in School Buildings -
HB 3031 helps Oregon schools receive federal funds to upgrade their HVAC systems, assess ventilation systems, place carbon dioxide monitors in each classroom, and submit a report on ventilation and carbon dioxide levels to a mechanical engineer for review. Districts will then implement any improvements recommended by the engineer.
Free or Reduced Cost School Meals for Low-Income Students -
HB 5014 will help cover school meal costs for more students starting this fall, responding to food insecurity across the state and filling in the gap created after federal COVID school funds expired. Students who are on Medicaid will qualify for free or reduced cost meals. Oregon is one of 12 pilot states using Medicaid funds to cover meal costs.
Early Literacy Success Initiative -
HB 3198 invests in culturally-responsive and research-aligned reading instruction in Oregon classrooms. The Initiative invests $144.3 million across three new grant programs: the Early Literacy Success School Grant, the Birth Through Five Literacy Plan, and the Early Literacy Success Community Grant. In-school funding for the initiative goes toward literacy coaching and professional development for educators, tutoring, curriculum implementation and adoption and summer learning programming. Being able to read is what makes all other learning possible. Investing in early literacy has been shown to have long-term positive impacts on state graduation rates, preventing dropouts and helping students succeed.
Strengthening Oregon’s Educator Workforce -
SB 283 addresses Oregon’s K-12 educator workforce shortage. A key part of improving student success is making sure educators have good salaries, healthy working conditions, and the resources they need to help Oregon’s children learn. The bill establishes apprenticeship and mentorship grants, boost pay for teachers and classified staff who work in special education, pay for substitute teacher training, and directs ODE to study and plan for statewide minimum salaries for education workforces.
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Alyssa’s Law,
HB 5014, in memory of Alyssa Alhadeff’s loss of life to gun violence at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in 2017, is $2.5 million included in the K-12 State School Fund. Funds schools to install mobile-based silent panic alarm systems that when activated, will send an immediate alert to law enforcement and Emergency Medical Services when there is a safety threat at a school building. States have also used this system in instances where a student or faculty was experiencing an allergic reaction, seizure, or heart issues.
School Emergency Notifications Act -
HB 3584 directs school districts to electronically notify parents and guardians within 24 hours of students and school district employees experiencing a school emergency and keep them informed throughout the incident. The bill comes in response to the Lane Middle School shut down earlier this year that left many parents in the dark without concrete information or updates.
Abbreviated School Days -
SB 819 requires ODE to enforce the current law by prohibiting school districts from offering students with disabilities fewer hours
than non-disabled peers unless a parent provides written consent. Oregon has over 1,000 students with disabilities in shortened school day placements, denying them access to full-time school. Schools are struggling to find and afford staff needed to implement this bill, while ODE hires investigators.
ODE is currently recruiting investigators to enforce this new law and offers more than 50 hours of training for districts, schools, and families. Parents of students currently on a shortened school day schedule who want their children to attend full time should notify their school districts as soon as possible.
--Donna BleilerPost Date: 2023-08-31 10:11:34 | Last Update: 2023-09-16 16:25:45 |
ODE is proud to have produced equity-minded legislation
The Oregon Department of Education(ODE) release the
2023 Summary of Enacted Education Legislation listing 111 legislative bills that impact education.
The bills passed in the 2023 session with ODE’s urging that they believe will have a positive impact for the agency, school districts, educators and students.
Zoe Larmer, ODE Government Relations Director, wrote, “Our legislative mission is driven by the core belief that equitable and anti-racist policies benefit all students, and the understanding that a system that works only for some is not a system that works at all. ODE is proud to have produced equity-minded legislation and to have collaborated with many partners to continue Oregon’s journey on the path toward equity and justice.â€
The report summary picks eight bills they consider representative of their victories with the support of the Governor’s Office:
- HB 2280, which ensures the definition of consent that students learn in school will be the same definition used in school policies, aligning expectations of behavior and outcomes. What that means is the bill modifies provisions relating to sexual harassment in schools by standardizing the definition of "without consent" to mean acts performed without person's knowledge and agreement or when a person is incapacitated by drugs or alcohol, unconscious, or pressured through force, coercion, or threats. Should a student be harassed, parents are only notified “if applicable.†Applies to acts on or after July 1, 2023.
- HB 2281, requires school districts to identify one or more Civil Rights Coordinators. It passed without a Republican vote and overwhelming testimony in opposition with concerns that it is a way to silence parents in opposition to CRT by sanctioning schools. The bill requires the civil rights coordinator to monitor, coordinate, and oversee district compliance with state and federal antidiscrimination laws, oversee investigations of complaints alleging discrimination, provide guidance and respond to questions on civil rights issues, and satisfy requirements prescribed by State Board of Education. Imposes sanctions, to be established by the State Board of Education, on public elementary or secondary schools found to be in noncompliance.
- HB 3144, develops the Pacific Islander/Native Hawaiian Student Success Plan. The bill requires all statewide education plans to include strategies that provide for alignment with other statewide education plans. While this plan is the latest of many to address specific needs based on a specific minorities, reports are mixed with recommendations of providing more support to make postsecondary education feasible.
- SB 1050 passed unanimously, which implements standard for Holocaust, genocide and ethnic studies, and supports educators with professional development for the new social science standards. Effective July 1, 2023.
- HB 2275 was controversial. It requires applicants for Student Investment Account grants to take into consideration recommendations of advisory groups formed by Department of Education in relation to statewide education plans. Requires grants distributed from Student Investment Account to each site of Youth Corrections Education Program and Juvenile Detention Education Program to be equal to at least minimum amount distributed as grants to school districts. Expands authority of Department of Education to determine how to distribute moneys under statewide education plan related to students who are American Indian or Alaska Native. Grants discretion to Department of Education to determine how to distribute to specified programs appropriations made for accelerated college credit programs.
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- HB 3198 establishes the Early Literacy Success Initiative, the Birth Through Five Literacy Plan, and the Early Literacy Success Community Grant Program. Debates over how to teach reading continued throughout the late 20th century, with the "balanced literacy" approach favored by Dr. Lucy Calkins at Columbia Teachers College influencing reading instruction throughout the United States. This approach arose as a compromise between phonics and whole language. Dr. Calkins recently changed her published reading curriculum to include structured phonics. To date, 30 states have adopted legislation relating to the science of reading.
- SB 215 allows the Department of Education to adjust amounts charged related to distribution of agricultural products received from United States Department of Agriculture for school food programs. Increases the number of licensed speech-language pathologists and certified speech-language pathology assistants employed in education service districts and school districts. Authorizes the Department of Education to issue subpoenas related to certain investigations, and modifies notification and privacy requires when investigation is related to sexual conduct.
- SB 1002 eliminates State School Fund distributions for facility grants. Carves out $3 million each biennium from State School Fund to be used by Department of Education in supporting school districts, education service districts and public charter schools before, during or after threat or hazard to help improve safety and security of students and staff. The opposition didn’t like using school funds when smaller districts don’t have funds to provide special needs services.
Senator Michael Dembrow (D - Portland), chair of the Senate Education Committee comments, “We made tremendous progress this year for Oregon students, teachers, faculties, and families. The legislation we delivered will make our schools safer, healthier, and more effective for every Oregonian. I’m excited for our communities to start seeing and feeling a positive difference.â€
--Donna BleilerPost Date: 2023-08-30 10:32:20 | Last Update: 2023-08-31 10:43:34 |
Quality health education requires age-appropriate teaching
Since June of 2022, the Oregon Department of Education (ODE), led by the statewide Health Education Panel and in collaboration with a diversity of internal and external partners, has been developing updated draft for the
2023 Oregon Health Education Standards. In September of 2023, the draft Oregon K-12 Health Education Standards will be presented to the State Board of Education for a first read.
The draft standards state that the standards were formed using the Oregon’s Student Health Survey from 6th, 8th and 11th graders asking about health and safety, mental and behavioral health, and climate and culture. They admit that survey data only tells part of the story. Data analysis often focuses on disparities and gaps. But data and statistics alone lack context and fail to capture the rich history and culture of many communities. Participatory analysis can provide community-led insight and context to better explain the whys of survey results.
That’s where you come in. ODE is requesting community participation by completing the
2023 Health Education Standards survey. All responses are anonymous and subject to public record. The survey window is from Wednesday, August 9 - September 1, 2023.
Health Education provides students with the knowledge and skills necessary to develop health literacy, so they are able to access valid information, resources and services in order to develop, maintain and promote healthy behaviors.
Health education is built on the foundation of teaching to all dimensions of the whole child. The eight main standards in health education focus on the development of knowledge and skills that students will use throughout their lifetimes – understanding health content and concepts; analyzing influences; interpersonal communication; decision-making; goal setting; self-management; and advocacy.
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The draft outlines these standards:
- Wellness and Health Promotion (WHP) outlines the fundamental knowledge and skills students need to understand what social, familial and community factors influence the dimensions of health.
- Safety and First Aid (SFA) outlines the knowledge and skills students need to feel more prepared and confident to prevent, identify, and address safety and emergency situations at home, at school, and in the community.
- Substance Use, Misuse, and Abuse (SUB) outlines the knowledge and skills students need to make decisions when faced with the pressures of using, misusing and abusing alcohol, tobacco, marijuana, and other substances.
- Food, Nutrition, and Physical Activity outlines the knowledge and skills students need to understand where food comes from, what foods have high nutrient content, and how culture plays an important role in nutrition and food experiences.
- Social, Emotional, and Mental Health outlines the knowledge and skills students need to understand and express feelings, thoughts, and emotions; build healthy relationships with self and others; practice healthy decision-making skills; and support kindness, care, connection, equity, diversity, and inclusion.
- Healthy Relationships and Violence/Abuse Prevention outlines the knowledge and skills students need to develop self-awareness of personal boundaries and bodily autonomy; analyze influences in media and technology; identify characteristics of healthy and affirming interpersonal relationships.
- Growth and Development outlines the knowledge and skills students need to understand the changes that people can experience during puberty and adolescence that impact physical, social, intellectual, and emotional development; understand that sexuality is a normal and positive aspect of development; identify medically accurate, inclusive reproductive anatomy; and support students in developing positive identities and self-esteem across the lifespan.
- Sexual and Reproductive Health outlines the knowledge and skills students need to take care of their bodies and make informed decisions about their health, safety, relationships, and future. This includes decision-making around sexual behavior, pregnancy, and parenting; and the personal, relational, cultural, and historical factors that influence sexuality, sexual and reproductive health, and access to healthcare.
The last two standards have created pushback from parents when schools have allowed the instruction to go beyond age appropriateness and taken to points of illegal exposure. Quality health education requires time for students to develop and practice healthy age-appropriate behaviors.
--Donna BleilerPost Date: 2023-08-29 18:01:55 | Last Update: 2023-08-29 18:36:03 |
“Oregonians are fed up with the state’s attempt to implement tolling”
Oregon Representative Lori Chavez-DeRemer (OR-05)
has introduced the No Tolls on Oregon Roads Act, which would rescind federal tolling authority granted to states specifically on Interstate 5 and Interstate 205 in Oregon. As a result, the legislation would prevent the Oregon Department of Transportation (ODOT) from proceeding with any tolling projects along these two roadways – effectively blocking tolling from being implemented along these interstate highways in Oregon.
“Oregonians are understandably fed up with the state’s attempt to hastily implement tolling, and I want to give drivers peace of mind by making the current ‘pause’ permanent. By blocking tolling along I-5 and I-205, my No Tolls on Oregon Roads Act would protect our communities from traffic congestion, save families from paying a regressive tax, and support businesses by keeping transportation costs lower. As a member of the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee’s Highways and Transit Subcommittee, I’ll continue working closely with my colleagues to put a stop to this unfair interstate tax,†Chavez-DeRemer said.
The No Tolls on Oregon Roads Act prohibits the use of federal funds for tolling on I-5 and I-205 and prohibits the U.S. Department of Transportation (USDOT) from approving I-5 and I-205 tolling projects.
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Full text of the bill is
available here.
Recently, Chavez-DeRemer also introduced the
Tolling Transparency Act, which would require the U.S. Department of Transportation (USDOT) to conduct an Economic Impact Study for any major tolling project and prevent the implementation of tolling until the study is complete.
She also
wrote to Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) Administrator Shailen Bhatt raising concerns that Oregon’s tolling proposal was out of compliance with federal law. Following the letter, Chavez-DeRemer and Bhatt
held a call to discuss the impact the proposal could have on Oregon communities.
--Ben FisherPost Date: 2023-08-29 15:54:23 | Last Update: 2023-09-16 16:26:28 |
“Oregonians deserve better representation than Paul Holvey”
The Oregon Secretary of State
has now determined that United Food and Commercial Workers Local 555 has been successful in its efforts to demand a recall election of State Representative Paul Holvey (D-Eugene). The union-backed campaign was required to submit 4,598 signatures from voters within House District 8, and was found to have 5,055 valid signatures out of more than 10,000 submitted.
The Recall Campaign (officially designated simply as RPH PAC) had been hoping to qualify in July, but was not able to collect the needed amount of signatures that quickly.
“Petitioning for a recall is an extraordinarily high bar, and we couldn’t have done it without the outpouring of support from thousands of my fellow District 8 residents who demanded accountability. For the first time in his career, Rep. Holvey will have a serious challenge at the ballot: his own record.†– Recall Sponsor Nathan Erne, a constituent of Holvey’s.
The Recall effort outlined a long list of what they say are anti-worker actions and questionable conduct by Holvey that warrant his removal, including his opposition to the union's preferred legislation.
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“Oregonians deserve better representation than Paul Holvey provides; this applies especially to working Oregonians who have been left behind by Holvey and the Democratic Party’s Caucus leadership. Paul Holvey knows how to advance or kill legislation on behalf of corporations like La Mota that are owned by rich people; he’s just forgotten how to do it for regular people, like La Mota’s employees.†– Miles Eshaia, UFCW 555’s Communications Coordinator.
It is rare that labor union works against a Democrat Party legislator in general, however, Holvey himself also comes from a union background and
is still with the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America (UBC).
"This recall effort was launched by one special interest group and their lobbyist,"
explained Holvey. "Simply because I asked questions about a potential piece of legislation they were pushing. Asking questions is foundational to the job of being a State Representative and Chair of the Business and Labor Committee; it ensures there are no unintended consequences to our community and the people of Oregon."
If Holvey resigns or is recalled, the Lane County Democratic Party will provide the Lane County Commission a list of 3 to 5 candidates from which to select a replacement.
--Ben FisherPost Date: 2023-08-27 05:47:27 | Last Update: 2023-09-16 16:26:54 |
“Every person has the right to stand up for what they believe and engage in nonviolent resistance”
In an act that some are claiming demonstrates both the hypocrisy and the contempt she has for police, Tina Kotek has appointed Kristina Narayan as a health policy advisor. She is currently serving as Vice President of Public Policy at CareOregon, which according to it's
website, helps more than 500,000 Oregonians access free physical, dental, mental health care and prescription drug coverage through the Oregon Health Plan.
Narayan is well known to Governor Kotek, having served as her Chief of Staff while Kotek was House Speaker, beginning in May of 2018. Her controversy began on November 6, 2020, Narayan was
arrested for interfering with a peace officer, a class A misdemeanor.
At the time, then House Speaker Kotek issued a statement saying, “Every person -- including members of my staff -- has the right to stand up for what they believe and engage in nonviolent resistance,†she said. “Kristina’s experience is similar to what other Portlanders have experienced over the last few months. We need peace and accountability.â€
Just three months after the arrest of Narayan then State Representative Mike Nearman (R-Independence) opened the Capitol doors to members of the public gathered outside during the 2020 Session. Kotek introduced legislation,
HR 3, to have Nearman expelled from office -- the first lawmaker to be expelled in the 182 year history of Oregon.
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At the time, Representative Nearman described his act as an act of civil disobedience and an expensive State Police investigation resulted in his conviction of a Misdemeanor -- similar to Narayan's alleged crime.
Reached for comment at his home near Independence, Nearman said, "I'm proud to live in a country that was founded by men who, in 1773 dressed up as Indians, boarded merchant ships and tossed tea into Boston Harbor. Governor Kotek supports nonviolent resistance, but only when done by her friends."
--Staff ReportsPost Date: 2023-08-26 19:42:13 | Last Update: 2023-09-16 16:27:22 |
Tran and Zimmerman will fill vacancies
Oregon Governor Tina Kotek
has now announced that she will appoint Thanh H. Tran to the Clackamas County Circuit Court and Natasha Zimmerman to the Marion County Circuit Court. Tran will fill the vacancy created by the retirement of Judge Thomas J. Rastetter. Zimmerman will fill the vacancy created by the retirement of Judge David E. Leith.
Kotek says that both of these appointments are effective immediately.
“These are talented individuals who have demonstrated commitment to their communities through their service,†Governor Kotek said. “I look forward to seeing them bring their meaningful legal expertise to continue to serve their communities on the Clackamas and Marion County circuit courts.â€
Tran has a civil litigation practice based in Clackamas County.
Kotek says he will be Oregon’s first Vietnamese American judge and the first Asian American judge on the Clackamas County Circuit Court. He came to the United States as a child refugee from Vietnam and earned his law degree from the University of Washington. He worked in Seattle as a criminal prosecutor and then at civil litigation firms. In 2002, he started his own law practice.
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Zimmerman is a hearings referee at the Marion County Circuit Court. From 2007 to 2020, Zimmerman worked for the City of Salem, as an attorney. For the past two and a half years, Zimmerman has served as a hearings referee in Marion County, where she has presided over criminal cases and cases in the Juvenile Department, where she is currently assigned.
Zimmerman is Co-President of the Mary Leonard Chapter of the Oregon Women Lawyers, and she is active in the Marion County Bar Association and the Willamette Valley American Inns of Court. She has served as a volunteer advocate for the Center for Hope and Safety and has served on the Marion County LGBTQ Foster Youth Workgroup.
--Ben FisherPost Date: 2023-08-25 11:18:55 | Last Update: 2023-08-25 20:22:07 |
“I strongly urge you to consider delaying the waiver”
State Representative Anna Scharf (R-Amity) sent a
letter to Chiquita Brooks-LaSure, the Administrator for Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services at the U.S. Department of Human Services, urging her denial of automatic voter registration to Medicare recipients in Oregon.
“The CMS has the authority to stop this, and they should until Oregon can prove the registration process is secure and will only register eligible voters,†wrote Scharf.
Representative Scharf serves on the House Rules Committee where this legislation was heard during the 2023 Legislative Session. Scharf raised many questions during the hearings, many of which were left unanswered by the Secretary of State’s Office and the Oregon Health Authority.
“During the hearing on
HB 2107, there was little discussion regarding data security with respect to sharing needed information across platforms,†Scharf wrote. “How would OHA determine if the 170,000 people were legal US Citizens prior to registering them? How would the OHA system gather that data and then tie it to the SOS office?â€
Representative Scharf highlighted Oregon’s recent history with public data breaches, most recently at the Oregon Health Authority where 1.7 million Oregon Health Plan members had their private information leaked. Scharf stated the automatic voter registration does not provide for an “opt out†option, but rather automatically shares that individual’s information with the voter registration program.
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“I strongly urge you to consider delaying the waiver to the State of Oregon for this data sharing until they can prove there is no other way to register these recipients AND that they can keep any data transferred by OHA to the SOS secure from breaches,†wrote Scharf.
--Staff ReportsPost Date: 2023-08-24 19:29:30 | Last Update: 2023-09-16 16:27:55 |
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