Monthly Archives: June 2011

Historic bipartisan legislation passed

This session is one for the history books. Early on we approved SB 301, which allows Oregon small businesses to accelerate depreciation on equipment and free up capital to invest and hire workers. We passed HB 3000, which stimulates local production by giving preference to Oregon products when the state makes purchases. We approved SB [...]

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Session had mixed results

From my perspective, the legislative session that adjourned Thursday resulted in mixed outcomes. We secured significant funding for all three of the regional universities that serve District 28. Oregon Institute of Technology received more than $33 million to consolidate their Wilsonville campus and to expand their geothermal electric generation project at the Klamath Falls campus. [...]

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Progress made on many fronts

We have finally completed the legislative session, and while the economic recession that has slammed our state and our country is still being painfully felt, we have made progress on many fronts. If you had asked me six months ago if we would be able to maintain our programs for seniors and the disabled, create [...]

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Governor showed leadership

This session will go down in history as a session of compromise and bipartisan agreement.  It will also go down with the understanding that we (Oregon) really have a governor who leads.  I am a Republican and our governor is a Democrat, but I have to say that the governor has led us through these [...]

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Down to the last tough negotiations

We’re still in session, and I had sincerely hoped we would be done by now with a fully bipartisan budget, negotiated and agreed to in good faith.  We’re close to completing the work – -it’s down to a disagreement over the last $10 million, believe it or not, in a budget of $14.8 billion.  We’ve [...]

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End of session delayed — indefinitely

I have no idea how long this session will continue. The only substantial budget remaining is for the Department of Corrections (DOC).  The DOC budget had a $21 million hole that has been pared down to $18 million. The Legislative Fiscal Office has identified more than $25 million in 2011-13 savings resulting from unissued bonding. [...]

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Will this lead to a balanced budget?

The Oregon Constitution requires the legislature to accomplish only two tasks. Our first responsibility is to hold a legislative session each year. The second duty is to balance the state budgets. This legislative session is rapidly reaching its concluding days. We have accomplished the first requirement to hold a Legislative session. Unfortunately, a number of [...]

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Legislature made bipartisan healthcare changes

This session the Oregon legislature approved two dramatic and landmark bipartisan changes to Oregon’s healthcare system. These two changes increase access to affordable healthcare for nearly all Oregonians and fundamentally transform the healthcare delivery system while improving quality of care. This change is possible because of the inherent opportunity facilitated by the current budget crisis. [...]

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2011 Legislature made history in many ways

The 2011 session was historic in many ways. This was the first time the Oregon House of Representatives was split between 30 Republicans and 30 Democrats. The session started with the inauguration of a third-term governor, another first.  For all the early predictions of partisan gridlock, the 2011 session was one of the shortest in [...]

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Water quality rules are too strict

Thursday in Pendleton, “Taps” was played for the future of Oregon’s natural resources based economy, and the private sector jobs they sustain. The Oregon Environmental Quality Commission (EQC) adopted, by administrative rule, new Oregon water quality standards for human toxics that are ten times more stringent than anywhere else in the United States, or for [...]

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