Oregon
As Oregon’s legislative session hits the midway point, plenty of big issues remain
FILE – Members of Oregon House of Representatives, Feb. 5, 2024, on the opening of the legislative short session at the Oregon state Capitol in Salem, Ore. Oregon’s legislative session is halfway through, marked by slow progress and looming partisan clashes over major issues.
Kristyna Wentz-Graff / OPB
The halfway point of a long legislative session in Salem often brings clarity.
Not this year.
A recent informal survey of lobbyists and lawmakers hanging around the Capitol halls turned up plenty of adjectives to describe the session’s opening salvo.
“Meandering” and “chaotic” were mentioned. “Slow” and “rudderless” came up more than once. Not mentioned: “Clear” or “purposeful.”
“To a certain extent we are adrift, we are at sea and we’re even rudderless at times,” said Senate Minority Leader Daniel Bonham, R-The Dalles. “In the past, I always felt like we all knew — collectively as a body of 90 — what we were doing.”
State Rep. Rob Nosse, D-Portland, had a more charitable take. “It’s less like the session is boring,” he said. “I just think the more controversial things are still looming.”
There’s no denying lawmakers face plenty of challenges: crises in housing, public defense, mental health care; roads and bridges hurting for attention; an increasing inability to pay for worsening wildfires.
But as this year’s session crosses the halfway point, it’s not clear how the Legislature will respond to any one of those. Bills on some topics seem to have momentum, and others have yet to take shape.
Hanging over it all: a deep uncertainty over how President Donald Trump’s actions will impact the state’s finances.
Here’s what to know midway through this year’s 160-day session.
The session kicked off on a relatively friendly note, and it remains mostly cordial.
The Republican and Democratic leaders in the Senate revealed they’ve hit the pickleball courts together. They’ve suggested a game of cornhole was in their future. They spent a Friday evening chatting on the Warm Springs Indian Reservation.
“The last few years of my tenure in the Senate it’s been a little more dramatic,” Senate President Rob Wagner, D-Lake Oswego, said this week.
During the 2023 legislative session, Republicans staged the longest walkout in state history.
Wagner credits the change in tenor partially to his effort to get to know his colleagues on a more human level.
“It’s jeans and T-shirt and going around the state getting to know people,” he said. “First question, I always ask, ‘tell me about your grandparents and how are your kids doing.‘”
But in Salem, peace is often tenuous.
Republicans in the House have already offered signs of mounting displeasure, forcing Democrats to read all or part of some bills out loud before a floor vote. It’s a tried-and-true delay tactic — and one of the few remaining tools the minority has at its disposal.
House Minority Leader Christine Drazan, R-Canby, said the GOP was registering concern because some Democratic ideas are moving forward, and also because some bills with bipartisan support aren’t. The former group includes bills that Republicans see as giveaways to Democratic allies, such as a proposal that would grant weekly unemployment checks to striking workers. The latter group includes a bill to delay mandatory sales of electric trucks, and to make it easier for cities to regulate homeless camps.
“Reading is a way to slow things down and, frankly, give members of their own party the opportunity to rethink whether or not they want to [vote yes] when they see what we see,” Drazan said.
Even in the comparably placid Senate, clashes loom. Democrats have made clear in recent weeks they plan to press laws further regulating access to firearms, always a source of controversy in the Capitol.
“There’s some disastrous stuff that’s still out there,” said Bonham. “You say, OK, we’re halfway done.’ And I say, ‘It’s a marathon and I’m ready for my cup of water. We still have a lot of running to do.‘”
An undated image provided by Oregon Department of Transportation shows crews at work on the Hall Boulevard overpass in Beaverton. A transportation package remains a key issue in Salem in 2025.
Courtesy of the Oregon Department of Transportation
Where will lawmakers find billions of dollars Democrats say is necessary to pay for routine road and bridge upkeep?
How will they solve the worsening problem of people sitting in jail, or awaiting their legal fate outside it, without attorneys?
Will Oregon make necessary strides to curb the housing crisis?
Can the state figure a way to pay its wildfire bills in a timely manner after stiffing private firefighting crews for months last year?
All of these were leading questions when lawmakers convened on Jan. 21. Two and a half months later, they’re as pressing as ever.
Some of that is the nature of the beast. Weighty matters like approving major new taxes for roads tend to take awhile. And lawmakers’ primary responsibility for the session — passing a new two-year budget — is always among the last tasks.
“A lot of what we’re going to do at the end of the day will be reflected in the budget,” Wagner said this week.
But this year, it is the sheer number of outstanding to-dos that stand out. To date, the Legislature’s signature accomplishment is passing a relatively benign extension of taxes that will help bring in billions in federal Medicaid funding. That passed with bipartisan support.
Here’s a look at some other items on the docket:
To-do: Transportation funding
Last week, after months of work, Democrats unveiled their first suggestion for raising more than $1 billion a year to fund road and bridge upkeep. It’s a package of roughly a dozen tax and fee increases — including an eventual 20-cent hike in the state’s gas tax — that Republicans and business interests have lampooned as tone-deaf.
“It is a massive amount of taxes that I think will be completely unacceptable to taxpayers,” said Bonham. “But it’s a framework. We finally know what we’re talking about.”
Democrats say they’re serious — and they have the supermajority status to back up their ideas. If the party can stick together, it can pass new taxes through each chamber without a single Republican vote.
“The price of inaction in transportation is going to increase costs in the long run,” said Wagner.
To-do: Public defense
For years, Oregon has been violating people’s constitutional right to counsel. And the crisis is deepening.
Not everyone agrees why the system isn’t working. But they largely agree it’s broken.
Some see it as a simple math equation: Paying public defenders more and lowering their caseloads could encourage more people to do the work. Others, like Multnomah County District Attorney Nathan Vasquez, have called it a “work stoppage” and believe public defenders aren’t taking on as many cases as they should be.
In Marion County, a judge is expected to begin so-called forced appointments next week. If an attorney feels they could not take on the appointment ethically, they will have a chance to withdraw.
The governor’s budget recommends directing $720 million in the 2025-27 budget cycle to the state’s public defense commission, representing a nearly 20% increase.
To-do: Housing
Since she was elected governor in 2022, Gov. Tina Kotek has made it clear housing would be one of her top priorities. Each session, she has pushed a few marquee housing bills.
Kotek’s top priority this session piggybacks on previous work to create thousands more duplexes, triplexes, quadplexes, cottage clusters and townhomes throughout the state. The measure, House Bill 2138, builds on a bill from 2019 that the governor pushed for when she was speaker of the statehouse.
The governor is also pushing lawmakers to create a statewide homeless shelter system, urging them to put more than $200 million toward the effort.
Many of the housing efforts underway build on legislation from previous sessions. Lawmakers continue to push for bills that would streamline construction and expedite the permitting process in an effort to build more housing units, faster. Others are hoping for a more targeted approach. There is legislation to specifically help unhoused veterans and another bill aimed at helping seniors facing housing uncertainty.
To-do: Wildfire funding
When it comes to paying for Oregon’s growing wildfire costs, lawmakers have a lot of ideas but little clarity on what can pass. Will they add 5-cents to the state’s 10-cent bottle deposit? Pull money from Oregon Lottery proceeds? Forego a payment to the state’s emergency fund? Withhold the anticipated $1.7 billion kicker refund?
All those ideas have been proposed. None are clearly leading the way.
One apparent certainty this year: Lawmakers look likely to repeal a set of wildfire hazard maps that were despised by property owners whose homes were deemed most likely to burn. A bill to scrap the maps passed out of a Senate committee on Tuesday with a unanimous vote.
To-do: Accountability
Oregon lawmakers have promised to exert more oversight over state agencies and ensure taxpayer dollars are being spent wisely. The effort comes at a time when state agencies have had high-profile problems.
Lawmakers said they plan to hold more oversight hearings; including delving into what’s happening at the Oregon Youth Authority, the Department of Corrections and the Department of Human Services.
They are also considering a measure that would appoint a legislative audit officer. This person would review activities of and oversight of executive branch agencies and conduct performance audits of agencies.
To-do: Civil commitment
Again and again in recent years, lawmakers have considered making it easier to force people with serious mental illness into treatment. It’s a highly emotional debate, with compelling arguments on both sides.
This year, action seems likely. After months of meetings among interested groups, lawmakers on the House Judiciary Committee unveiled a bill last week that would broaden what information judges can take into account when deciding whether to order people into civil commitment.
The bill has backing from top lawmakers and Kotek, and is expected to pass. But its ultimate success will hinge on whether Oregon can create more beds for people who have been committed into the state’s care.
Lawmakers tend to build budgets strategically, figuring out where they can best spend state money to attract far more in federal cash. It’s one reason why money flowing from Washington D.C. accounts for about a third of the state’s spending plan.
This year, though, state budget writers are looking east with more dread than hope. A push by President Donald Trump and congressional Republicans to slash spending has led to widespread worry that the money Oregon typically counts on won’t be there.
A budget framework unveiled by the chairs of the budget-writing Ways and Means Committee offered a bleak picture: even a 10% cut to federal funding for education and health care could blow a more than $2.5 billion hole in the budget.
Trump’s actions on trade in recent days have prompted more concerns.
“What are these tariffs and all the things that the Trump administration is doing to our economy going to mean for a state that is so dependent on exports?” said Nosse, co-chair of an influential budget subcommittee. “That looms over us as well.” (A day after Nosse’s comment, Trump announced he was suspending many tariffs for 90 days.)
The most important signal of what the federal tumult means for Oregon’s finances will come May 14. That’s when the state’s chief economist is scheduled to unveil the revenue forecast lawmakers will use to build their budget.
If that forecast is in line with previous estimates, lawmakers say they’ll have money to pay for many existing services and top priorities like housing and behavioral health. If it’s well under what lawmakers were expecting, the remainder of this year’s session may be a painful exercise in budget cutting.
Oregon
Oregon Supreme Court overturns JonBenét Ramsey photographer conviction
The Oregon Supreme Court has overturned the conviction of a Lane County man who once photographed child beauty queen JonBenét Ramsey and was convicted in 2021 on several child pornography charges.
Randall DeWitt Simons, 73, of Oakridge, was charged in 2019 with 15 counts of first-degree encouraging child sex abuse. He was later convicted on every count and sentenced to 10 years in prison.
Simons was first arrested after authorities began investigating a report from a restaurant in Oakridge that someone had been using the restaurant’s Wi-Fi to download inappropriate and concerning images.
Law enforcement officers directed the business to track, log, and report all of the user’s internet activity to the investigating officer for more than a year, without a warrant.
Police tracked the computer’s IP address from the restaurant’s Wi-Fi system, which led officers to a man who lived near the restaurant and had given Simons a computer, according to a probable cause affidavit filed in Lane County Circuit Court. Investigators obtained a warrant to search the laptop in Simon’s home, relying on information they had collected over time. He was subsequently arrested.
On March 26, the court ruled warrantless internet surveillance on public Wi-Fi violates privacy.
In an opinion written by Justice Bronson D. James, the court held that the Oregon Constitution recognizes people have a right to privacy in their internet browsing activities and the right is not extinguished when they use a publicly accessible wireless network. It’s even true in cases where that access is conditioned on a person accepting a terms-of-service agreement that says a provider may monitor activity and cooperate with law enforcement, James wrote.
During criminal proceedings in the Lane County Circuit Court, Simons moved to controvert the warrant and suppress the evidence obtained by police, arguing the business was a “state actor for purposes of Article I, section 9, and that its year-long warrantless surveillance was an unconstitutional, warrantless search attributable to the state,” the Supreme Court opinion said.
The Circuit Court denied Simon’s motion. The Oregon Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court’s decision in part and stated Simons had no cognizable privacy interest in his internet activities performed on a third-party network.
The Oregon Supreme Court rejected the state’s argument.
“The mere fact that a person accesses the internet through a public network does not eliminate their Article I, section 9, right to privacy in their online activities,” according to James. “Even when access is expressly conditioned on a user’s acceptance of terms-of-service provisions purporting to alert the user that the provider may monitor activity and cooperate with law enforcement.”
Justice K. Bushong suggested in a partial dissent the Court should reconsider its approach in a future case to what constitutes a “search” under the Oregon Constitution. The court’s decision reverses the Court of Appeals and sends the case back to the Lane County Circuit Court for further proceedings.
Simons has maintained his innocence since he was arrested in 2019.
Simons had been a photographer for 6-year-old Colorado beauty queen JonBenét Ramsey a few months before her still-unsolved 1996 murder, the Associated Press reported in 1998.
In October 1998, Simons was arrested on a charge of indecent exposure in Lincoln County, Colorado. According to the book “Perfect Murder, Perfect Town” by Lawrence Schiller, Simons was arrested in 1998 for allegedly walking nude down a residential street in the small town of Genoa, Colorado. Simons allegedly offered to the arresting deputy unprovoked, “I didn’t kill JonBenét.”
Haleigh Kochanski is a breaking news and public safety reporter for The Register-Guard. You may reach her at HKochanski@gannett.com.
Oregon
Umatilla, Morrow counties establish Young Republicans of Oregon chapter – East Oregonian
Umatilla, Morrow counties establish Young Republicans of Oregon chapter
Published 8:00 pm Wednesday, March 25, 2026
IRRIGON — Young Republicans living in Umatilla and Morrow counties now can join a local chapter of the statewide Young Republicans of Oregon organization.
The Umatilla Morrow Young Republicans will advance Republican values and leadership in young residents through political training, networking opportunities and connection to Republican leaders. The group is focused on young adults, generally attracting college-aged people, though it includes people aged 18 to 40.
The five Young Republicans of Oregon members living in Umatilla and Morrow counties elected three officers to lead their new chapter. Irrigon’s Evan Purves was elected chair, with Connor Roberts of Hermiston as his vice chair and Kaelyn Moore of Milton-Freewater serving as secretary.
“I am super grateful for this opportunity to lead my neighbors,” Purves said. “It’s going to be really fun. We have some good events planned.”
Purves, 19, is a student at Blue Mountain Community College who eventually hopes to pursue a four-year degree in public administration. He initially became interested in the Young Republicans during an internship with Oregon state Rep. Greg Smith, of Heppner. He said it was an experience that showed him how the legislature works.
The internship also inspired him to step into a leadership role with the Young Republicans and help establish a local chapter of the organization. The newest chapter of the Young Republicans of Oregon, which was announced Monday, March 23, has been in the works since November 2025.
The Young Republicans of Oregon State Chair, Tanner Elliott, said the new chapter — the fourth chapter statewide — indicates momentum for conservative values.
“In less than a year, we’ve continued expanding because young conservatives are stepping up and getting involved in their communities,” Elliott said. “I want to congratulate the chapter’s leadership team on their election and especially commend their new chair Evan Purves for taking on this role. I’m confident this group will make a meaningful impact in Eastern Oregon and help drive our organization forward.”
Future plans in Umatilla, Morrow counties
The leadership team of UMYR already is making efforts to effect change.
In early May, Purves said, Umatilla Morrow Young Republicans will host a door knocking campaign in support of Smith’s reelection campaign. There also will be an official kickoff event the same weekend celebrating the new chapter and outlining priorities for the future.
“If there’s anything that we might struggle with is membership,” he said. “The recruiting part is us going out there and hosting events and socials, having opportunities for people to come out and do something fun that anybody’s invited to.”
Regarding other priorities, voter engagement is important to Purves,
“Even though we live in a big conservative area, there’s not a lot of politically engaged people, especially in my generation,” he said. “We want to get them involved.”
He said one of his concerns is businesses leaving the state due to policies that aren’t friendly to corporations, a common issue raised by Republican lawmakers. The decisions being made impact every community, he said, and he wants to have a say in what the leaders are doing.
“These bills affect all of us,” he said. “It’s just important to get people involved and get people to vote and be a part of it.”
People interested in updates on the efforts of the Umatilla Morrow Young Republicans can follow the group on Facebook or Instagram or become a member at yro.gop.
Oregon
Video shows ‘fireball’ briefly illuminate Oregon skyline
Doorbell camera shows fireball streaking across the sky over Stow, Ohio,
Thousands of people across eastern Ohio and parts of Pennsylvania heard a loud boom that the National Weather Service (NWS) said may have been caused by a meteor.
Yet another meteor has entered the Earth’s atmosphere.
Onlookers across parts of California, Nevada, Washington and Oregon spotted another space rock streaking across the sky on Monday, March 23.
Jason Jenkins, who spotted the fireball while driving to work, told ABC News that the meteor reminded him of a “lightning strike because it was so bright.”
“The video doesn’t do justice on how bright and close it seemed,” Jenkins added.
The American Meteor Society received 137 witness reports and 11 videos chronicling the brief but dazzling moment.
Watch ‘fireball’ streak across Oregon skyline
Videos show green fireball streaking across night sky
A green fireball was seen crossing the sky in the Pacific Northwest.
From northeast Ohio to Texas, the March 23 event was the latest in a series of sightings across the U.S. this week. Those sightings were characterized by a “loud boom” and a rogue meteor fragment.
Hundreds of people in California, Nevada and Arizona captured another “shooting star” on camera this last weekend. The vast majority of reports came out of California.
A bright, glowing orb zipping through the night sky, trailed closely by a signature fiery “tail,” is seen in various clips shared by awestruck residents over the course of the week. Some even reported a greenish-yellow glow as the space rock lit up the sky for about five seconds.
What is a meteor?
Meteors, like comets or asteroids, are space rocks that orbit the sun, according to NASA.
Often called “shooting stars,” meteors come from meteoroids − small, often pebble-sized pieces that break off asteroids or comets. When a meteoroid enters Earth’s atmosphere, it becomes a meteor.
Because meteors enter the atmosphere at such high speeds, the space rocks burn up as they fall from our sky, creating the streak of light we commonly know as a shooting star or “fireball.”
If a meteor survives the entry and ends up on the ground (or lodged in someone’s roof), it is then called a meteorite.
Contributing: Mary Walrath-Holdridge, USA TODAY
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